Cloud Infrastructure
•228 stocks
•
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All Stocks (228)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
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CLPS
CLPS Incorporation
Proprietary platform solutions and cloud-like service delivery align with Cloud Infrastructure capabilities.
|
$26.45M |
$0.97
+8.02%
|
|
CLOQ
Cyberloq Technologies, Inc.
Cloud infrastructure provider as the underlying delivery model for CyberloQ Vault and related services.
|
$23.82M |
$0.17
|
|
SKKY
Skkynet Cloud Systems, Inc.
Involvement with cloud-based infrastructure for industrial data connectivity and services.
|
$22.69M |
$0.48
|
|
SNTW
Summit Networks Inc.
Cloud Infrastructure relevance as a platform delivery environment.
|
$17.70M |
$0.26
|
|
IPM
Intelligent Protection Management Corp.
IPM operates a private cloud and provides managed cloud infrastructure for clients, aligning with cloud infrastructure offerings.
|
$16.81M |
$1.83
-1.61%
|
|
GIGM
GigaMedia Limited
Launched cloud-based Desktop-as-a-Service (VDI), a cloud infrastructure offering.
|
$16.63M |
$1.50
-1.64%
|
|
ELWS
Earlyworks Co., Ltd
GLS functions as an infrastructure platform for data processing and blockchain applications, i.e., Cloud Infrastructure.
|
$15.41M |
$5.17
-8.98%
|
|
ARBK
Argo Blockchain plc
Planned HPC expansion to host AI servers and provide data-center compute infrastructure.
|
$14.07M |
$0.23
-0.57%
|
|
ABTS
Abits Group Inc.
Data-center hosting / cloud infrastructure supporting enterprise computing.
|
$13.87M |
$6.41
+13.85%
|
|
HCTI
Healthcare Triangle, Inc.
CloudEz is a multi-cloud transformation/management platform, fitting Cloud Infrastructure.
|
$13.70M |
$2.35
+15.20%
|
|
KTEL
KonaTel, Inc.
Apeiron/KonaTel maintains a national private core network and cloud-like communications infrastructure with APIs.
|
$11.83M |
$0.26
|
|
VASO
Vaso Corporation
Cloud-based SaaS deployments and managed services imply cloud infrastructure relevance for the business.
|
$9.74M |
$0.14
|
|
GLE
Global Engine Group Holding Limited Ordinary Shares
GLE's core offerings include cloud deployment, data center services, and cloud infrastructure management.
|
$8.79M |
$0.52
+20.88%
|
|
CENN
Cenntro Electric Group Limited
Operates cloud-based platforms for vehicle management and control, indicating cloud infrastructure/software usage.
|
$8.63M |
$0.15
-9.93%
|
|
GFAI
Guardforce AI Co., Limited
Cloud Infrastructure: supports AI platform hosting and robot management.
|
$7.88M |
$0.77
+7.84%
|
|
WAFU
Wah Fu Education Group Limited
Cloud Infrastructure: Platform operates on cloud-based infrastructure for education services.
|
$7.50M |
$1.69
+3.68%
|
|
VCIG
VCI Global Limited
CyberSecure Cloud and related AI infrastructure rely on enterprise cloud/infra capabilities.
|
$7.33M |
$1.06
-5.36%
|
|
AIXI
Xiao-I Corporation
Cloud-based AI model delivery and associated cloud services constitute cloud infrastructure for its MaaS offerings.
|
$6.30M |
$0.77
+4.89%
|
|
MODV
ModivCare Inc.
Cloud-based continuity platform and hosted tools suggest Cloud Infrastructure capabilities supporting the software platform.
|
$6.19M |
$0.43
|
|
BKYI
BIO-key International, Inc.
Cloud hosting and AWS Marketplace deployment indicates cloud infrastructure relevance.
|
$5.64M |
$0.82
+2.85%
|
|
MIGI
Mawson Infrastructure Group, Inc.
Provides hosting within data centers and colocation, i.e., cloud infrastructure hosting.
|
$5.36M |
$5.24
+3.66%
|
|
SONM
Sonim Technologies, Inc.
Cloud-hosted services (Sonim Cloud) for device management and software; aligns with Cloud Infrastructure tag.
|
$5.17M |
$5.28
-7.29%
|
|
YOUL
Youlife Group Inc. American Depositary Shares
YOUL’s cloud-related platform for vocational education aligns with Cloud Infrastructure/software offerings.
|
$5.09M |
N/A
|
|
SUIC
Suic Worldwide Holdings Ltd.
Pivot towards cloud computing and data-center infrastructure services (Cloud Infrastructure).
|
$4.54M |
$0.40
|
|
SOS
SOS Limited
SOS is investing in and deploying hosting services as part of its infrastructure offerings (cloud hosting).
|
$3.25M |
$1.20
|
|
CETXP
Cemtrex, Inc.
Anavio's cloud-based security offering implicates Cloud Infrastructure capabilities.
|
$1.51M |
$0.30
|
|
CHR
Cheer Holding, Inc.
Polaris cloud service powers CHEERS Telepathy, indicating CHEERS relies on cloud infrastructure.
|
$463779 |
$0.05
|
|
MGTI
MGT Capital Investments, Inc.
Hosting infrastructure / data-center services for third-party miners leveraging MGTI's owned facility and power capacity.
|
$144754 |
$0.00
|
Showing page 3 of 3 (228 total stocks)
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## Executive Summary
* The cloud infrastructure industry is undergoing a massive transformation, driven by an insatiable and unprecedented demand for AI compute that is fueling a multi-trillion dollar infrastructure build-out.
* This demand has ignited intense competition, pitting established hyperscalers (Microsoft, Google) against a new class of fast-growing, specialized AI cloud providers (CoreWeave) that offer purpose-built performance advantages.
* Meeting this demand requires staggering capital expenditures, forcing companies to take on significant debt and seek innovative financing structures amidst a challenging macroeconomic environment.
* Technological differentiation is the key competitive battleground, with leaders investing heavily in custom silicon (Google's TPUs), advanced cooling technologies (Applied Digital's liquid cooling), and full-stack AI software platforms.
* Financial performance is bifurcating, with specialized AI players seeing hyper-growth (400%+) while established hyperscalers maintain strong profitability and re-accelerating growth in their cloud segments.
* The critical dependency on massive power consumption is elevating sustainability and energy efficiency from a compliance issue to a core strategic and technological advantage.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The cloud infrastructure market is being fundamentally reshaped by the "insatiable" demand for AI compute, triggering a capital investment cycle projected to reach $3 to $4 trillion by the end of the decade. This demand has created a critical bottleneck: a shortage of specialized "AI factories" with the requisite power and cooling, leading publicly traded hyperscalers to project over $350 billion in AI data center investment in 2025 alone. This supply-demand imbalance directly fuels revenue growth for companies that can deliver this capacity. Specialized providers are seeing explosive growth, exemplified by CoreWeave's (CRWV) 420% year-over-year revenue increase in Q1 2025, while hyperscalers like Alphabet (GOOG) are seeing cloud backlogs swell to a record $155 billion, driven by enterprise AI demand. This trend is happening now and is expected to be the primary industry driver for the next three to five years.
The battle for AI workloads is intensifying, with hyperscalers like Microsoft (MSFT) and Alphabet (GOOG) competing on the basis of their comprehensive ecosystems and custom silicon, while specialized players like CoreWeave (CRWV) differentiate on purpose-built performance. This competition necessitates massive capital investment to secure cutting-edge technology and build capacity. For example, Alphabet (GOOG) plans $91-$93 billion in 2025 capital expenditures, largely funded by a recent $22.48 billion bond issuance, highlighting the immense financial commitment required to stay competitive.
The primary opportunity lies in addressing the specialized data center shortage, where providers with differentiated technology in power efficiency and cooling, such as Applied Digital (APLD), can secure long-term, high-value contracts. The key risk is financial discipline; companies must balance aggressive, debt-fueled capital expenditures with maintaining a healthy balance sheet and a clear path to profitability, a challenge amplified by rising interest rates and increasing regulatory compliance costs. Energy consumption and sustainability concerns are also becoming a key technological battleground and cost driver, linking directly to the need for specialized, efficient infrastructure.
## Competitive Landscape
The cloud infrastructure market, while historically dominated by three hyperscalers—Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud—which collectively control over 60% of the global enterprise cloud infrastructure services market, is experiencing a structural shift. The rise of AI has created a new, highly-specialized segment, allowing focused players to gain significant traction and challenge the status quo.
Some of the largest players, like Microsoft, compete by offering a deeply integrated, full-stack ecosystem. Their strategy is to leverage a massive global data center footprint across over 70 regions to provide everything from foundational infrastructure (IaaS) and development platforms (PaaS) to end-user AI applications like Copilot. The key advantage is the powerful network effect and customer lock-in of this ecosystem, though it can be less nimble than more focused competitors. Microsoft is also the first cloud to bring up NVIDIA's Blackwell system with GB200-powered AI servers, alongside its first-party Maia 100 accelerator.
In contrast, a new wave of companies like CoreWeave is built exclusively for the AI era. Their approach is to provide a purpose-built, highly optimized stack using the latest NVIDIA GPUs (H100s, H200s, GB200) and proprietary software to deliver superior performance and cost-efficiency for AI training and inference workloads. This specialization is their core advantage, as evidenced by their $11.9 billion contract with OpenAI, but it also creates dependency on the singular AI market and key suppliers like NVIDIA.
A third, emerging model focuses on owning and integrating the underlying real assets. For instance, Brookfield Asset Management leverages its vast holdings in renewable energy, its ownership of nuclear technology provider Westinghouse, and its real estate development expertise to build entire "sovereign scale" AI campuses. Brookfield owns and operates 2,000 megawatts of data center capacity for AI infrastructure and is partnering with Bloom Energy, committing up to $5 billion to deploy fuel-cell technology in AI data centers. Their advantage is unparalleled control over the largest cost and constraint—power—creating a durable, long-term competitive moat. The key competitive battlegrounds are technological differentiation in custom silicon and cooling, access to low-cost power, and the ability to secure strategic partnerships with leading AI model developers.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth in the cloud infrastructure industry is dramatically bifurcating based on a company's exposure and specialization in AI infrastructure. This divergence is a direct result of the AI demand supercycle, where companies providing the specialized, high-performance compute that AI models require are capturing demand at an explosive rate. This pattern is best illustrated by comparing CoreWeave's (CRWV) +420% year-over-year revenue growth in Q1 2025, which is purely driven by AI demand, to the still-impressive but more moderate re-acceleration of Amazon's (AMZN) AWS segment to +20.2% year-over-year in Q3 2025.
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Profitability diverges between established, at-scale hyperscalers and high-growth, investment-phase specialized providers. The economic logic is clear: hyperscalers benefit from decades of investment and economies of scale across a diversified service portfolio. In contrast, specialized players are in a land-grab phase, sacrificing near-term profitability for market share by investing heavily in capital expenditures, which pressures margins. Microsoft (MSFT) exemplifies the high-margin leader, with a 45% operating margin in Q4 FY25 reflecting its scale and pricing power. CoreWeave (CRWV), with a -$314.64 million net loss in Q1 2025 despite soaring revenue, perfectly illustrates the investment phase where growth is prioritized over current profit.
Capital allocation across the industry is overwhelmingly focused on a single priority: building AI infrastructure. Companies are in an "arms race" to build out AI capacity to capture the current demand wave. This strategic priority is causing a massive reallocation of capital towards data centers and GPUs. The scale of this trend is shown by Alphabet's (GOOG) plan to spend $91-$93 billion on capital expenditures in 2025. The innovative financing required is demonstrated by Applied Digital's (APLD) $5 billion perpetual preferred equity facility with Macquarie Asset Management, a move to fund massive growth without traditional debt or equity dilution.
The industry's financial health is mixed and reflects strategic priorities. Balance sheets are a direct reflection of a company's business model and maturity. Established hyperscalers have built up massive cash reserves from years of profitable operations, while newer players are intentionally taking on significant leverage to fund their growth. Alphabet's (GOOG) balance sheet, with $98.5 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities as of September 30, 2025, even after issuing $22.48 billion in bonds, is representative of the financial strength of the hyperscalers, which allows them to fund the AI arms race.
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