
Corning and Nvidia have announced a major partnership to significantly expand U.S. production of fiber-optic and optical connectivity products used in artificial intelligence data centers, as demand for AI infrastructure continues to surge globally.
The collaboration will dramatically increase Corning’s domestic manufacturing capabilities. The company said it plans to expand its U.S.-based optical connectivity manufacturing capacity tenfold while increasing domestic fiber production capacity by more than 50%. The expansion will include three new advanced manufacturing facilities across North Carolina and Texas and is expected to create more than 3,000 jobs.
The deal highlights how the AI boom is driving demand far beyond GPUs and chips alone. As AI data centers scale to support increasingly complex models, high-speed fiber-optic infrastructure has become essential for transferring massive amounts of data between thousands of processors with minimal latency.
Reports indicate Nvidia is making a substantial financial commitment as part of the partnership. Multiple outlets reported that Nvidia plans to invest approximately $500 million in Corning and has secured warrants to purchase millions of Corning shares, further deepening the strategic relationship between the two companies.
The partnership also reflects a broader push toward strengthening domestic AI supply chains and reducing dependence on overseas manufacturing. Industry analysts note that optical technologies are becoming increasingly critical as hyperscale AI infrastructure transitions from traditional copper-based systems to high-bandwidth optical interconnects that improve energy efficiency and computing performance.
Following the announcement, Corning’s stock surged sharply, with shares rising more than 17% in early trading. The company also raised its long-term financial outlook, targeting a $20 billion annualized sales run rate by the end of 2026, with ambitions to reach $30 billion by 2028 and $40 billion by 2030.
The agreement further underscores how AI infrastructure spending is reshaping multiple industries, benefiting not only semiconductor companies but also suppliers involved in networking, optics, manufacturing, energy, and large-scale data center construction.




