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Global Server Market Surges to $112.4 Billion As AI And Accelerated Servers Drive Unprecedented Growth

Record Revenue Milestone in Q3 2025

The global server market achieved a historic milestone in the third quarter of 2025, generating an impressive $112.4 billion in revenue. According to the International Data Corporation (IDC), this latest period marked another round of high double-digit growth, with overall vendor revenue surging 61% year-over-year compared to the same quarter in 2024.

Robust Growth Across Server Architectures

Breaking down the figures by architecture, x86 servers recorded a strong 32.8% increase in revenue, reaching $76.3 billion. Notably, non-x86 servers experienced an even more dramatic expansion, posting a 192.7% increase to hit $36.2 billion. Servers equipped with embedded GPUs also played a pivotal role, with revenue climbing 49.4% and accounting for more than half of the total server market revenue.

AI and Cloud Adoption Fueling Expansion

Hyperscalers and major cloud service providers have been quick to embrace servers featuring embedded GPUs, a trend that has significantly fueled market growth. Consequently, the cumulative server market revenue for the first three quarters of 2025 nearly doubled, reaching an astonishing $314.2 billion. Juan Seminara, Research Director at IDC Worldwide Enterprise Infrastructure Trackers, noted, “IDC expects AI adoption to keep growing at an outstanding pace as major vendors continue reporting record orders and showing strong backlogs. Hyperscalers and cloud providers are still ahead with new, large deployments that require much higher compute density.” He further added that emerging AI-based research and education initiatives are set to bolster the market further.

Regional Leaders and Sectoral Growth

Regionally, the United States led the charge with an impressive 79.1% growth compared to Q3 2024, driven by an extraordinary 105.5% increase in the accelerated server segment. Canada followed closely with 69.8% growth, also powered by accelerated server innovations. Meanwhile, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) experienced a 37.6% year-over-year increase, contributing nearly one-fifth to the global quarterly revenue. Other regions, including APeJC, EMEA, and Japan, registered healthy double-digit growth of 37.4%, 31.0%, and 28.1% respectively, whereas Latin America saw a modest 4.1% increase.

Competitive Landscape Among OEMs

In terms of corporate performance, Dell Technologies emerged as the leader in the OEM market with an 8.3% revenue share, significantly propelled by accelerated server growth. Supermicro secured the second spot with a 4.0% revenue share, even though it faced a 13.2% decline compared to Q3 2024. IEIT Systems and Lenovo closely contended for third place with 3.7% and 3.6% shares respectively, while Hewlett Packard Enterprise captured a 3.0% share, rounding out the top five players.

EU Mercosur Agreement Sparks Political Battle Over Cyprus Agriculture

A political battleground emerged in the Parliamentary Agriculture Committee’s latest session, as fierce debates broke out over the controversial trade deal between the European Union and Latin American nations under the Mercosur framework. Lawmakers voiced deep concerns regarding food safety and the prospects for local agriculture, particularly following the high-profile absence of the Minister of Trade.

Minister Absence And Parliamentary Integrity

Committee Chair Giannakis Gabriel expressed strong disapproval over the Minister’s no-show, noting that the extraordinary session was scheduled at midday at the Minister’s own request. “His absence undermines the authority of the parliament,” Mr. Gabriel declared. Given that the Minister is not abroad, it was expected that he would be present to clarify why Cyprus supported an agreement widely criticized as disadvantaging the agricultural sector.

Trade Deal Under Scrutiny

In his address, A.C.E.L General Secretary Stefanos Stefanos described the pact as a “dangerous agreement” imposed under the pressure of multinational conglomerates. He especially critiqued the contrasting sanitary standards whereby, while the EU bans our farmers from using certain pesticides and antibiotics, the Mercosur deal appears to allow imports produced with these very substances. His remarks underscored the possibility of double standards in safety measures and the potential long-term impacts on Cypriot agriculture.

Economic And Safety Concerns

Legislators questioned the basis of government studies that justified backing the agreement, even as Cyprus’ agricultural sustainability is increasingly threatened by water scarcity and soaring production costs. Representatives from various political factions pointed to insufficient controls over import volumes and tariff structures. For example, Christos Orphanidis (DIKO) demanded precise data on imports from Latin America, citing honey as a case in point, and pressed for clear explanations regarding the tariff regime.

Legal And Health Implications

Questions about legal authority were raised by Elias Myriantounos (EDEK), who inquired whether parliament can reject or amend the agreement should economic studies forecast negative outcomes. Environmental advocates, like Haralambos Theopemptou of the Movement of Ecologists, emphasized the need to safeguard traditional products such as halloumi, highlighting concerns over how rigorous food safety controls will be maintained. Meanwhile, Linos Papagiannis (ELAM) cautioned against unfair competition, drawing parallels with challenges posed by lower-standard goods from occupied territories.

Protecting Local Interests

The overarching message from lawmakers was clear: the future of Cyprus’ farming community and the well-being of its citizens should not be sacrificed at the altar of commercial trade. Agricultural organizations have voiced alarm over the importation of goods potentially contaminated with banned substances, the risk of market distortion by low-quality products, and the lack of localized impact studies. They argue that the agreement is biased in favor of select corporate interests, ultimately undermining consumer safety and the livelihood of European farmers.

As this debate continues to unfold, the outcome of these deliberations will be pivotal in determining not only trade policy but also the long-term economic and food security landscape of Cyprus.

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Economic Impact Discussion

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