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OVHcloud pushes for pan-European AI strategy as revenue grows in Q1

OVHcloud pushes for pan-European AI strategy as revenue grows in Q1

FILE PHOTO: The logo of French cloud computing company OVHcloud is seen on the company's building in Paris, France, January 25, 2023. REUTERS/Sarah Meyssonnier/File Photo

08 Jan 2026 02:08PM (Updated: 12 Jan 2026 01:24PM)

Jan ‌8 : The CEO of OVHcloud said on Thursday that the cloud computing firm was seeking a cross-border solution to the European Union's artificial intelligence infrastructure push, after the group reaffirmed its guidance for the 2026 financial year.

Talking to analysts after OVHcloud reported 6 per cent organic growth in first-quarter revenue, CEO Octave Klaba said the company had been discussing AI gigafactory plans ‌with the European Commission, but expressed concerns over the ‌bloc's "country-by-country approach" to AI initiatives.

The French group has started discussions with potential partners across six or seven European countries to establish cross-border infrastructure with interconnected facilities, he said, while criticizing the lack of focus on customers.

"For the moment, it's just the initiative to create the assets, but nobody talks about how it will be used," ‍Klaba said.

BRAND RECOGNITION KEY FOR LONG-TERM GOAL

OVHcloud's revenue rose to 275.3 million euros ($321.4 million) in the quarter that ended in October. Public cloud services, which make up 21 per cent of its revenue, grew 15.8 per cent to 58.2 million euros, while private cloud services, including dedicated ​servers, increased 4 per cent to 167.2 ‌million euros.

Net revenue retention rate was 105 per cent on a like-for-like basis, demonstrating higher spending by existing customers, it said.

However, its long-term revenue target of ​2 billion euros per year is challenged by muted customer acquisition and brand recognition.

"We are ⁠not good at the acquisition of ‌new customers today," Klaba said, adding that OVHcloud's goal was for every European ​citizen to recognize the company by 2030.

Klaba said that inventory planning shielded OVHcloud from rising memory and disk prices in the 2025 and ‍2026 financial years, but warned component shortages could drive up capital spending in 2027.

OVHcloud ⁠also announced plans to expand its 3-AZ regions—a model where infrastructure is split across three locations ​to prevent outages—to Berlin, ‌following earlier launches in Paris and Milan.

($1 = 0.8565 euros)

Source: Reuters
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