GDS Holdings Posts Solid Quarter But Shares Slip Despite AI Growth Positioning

MarketDash Editorial Team
18 days ago
GDS Holdings reported third-quarter results with revenue up 10.2% and adjusted EBITDA climbing 11.4%, but shares fell despite management's optimism about capturing AI-driven data center demand.

GDS Holdings Limited (GDS) delivered a decent quarter by most measures, but investors weren't particularly impressed. Shares fell after the data center operator reported third-quarter 2025 results that showed continued growth, though perhaps not the explosive trajectory some might have hoped for in an AI-driven market.

The Numbers

Net revenue climbed 10.2% year over year to 2.89 billion Chinese yuan. In dollar terms, that translated to $405.6 million, which actually edged past the consensus estimate of $404.0 million. The revenue bump came primarily from ongoing ramp-up activities across the company's data center portfolio.

Profitability metrics looked solid. Adjusted gross profit hit 1.47 billion yuan ($206.8 million), up 11.3% from the prior year, with margins ticking up to 51.0% from 50.5%. Adjusted EBITDA rose 11.4% to 1.34 billion yuan, while the margin expanded to 46.5% from 46.0% a year ago.

The most impressive figure was earnings: EPS per ADS came in at 3.21 yuan (45 cents), nearly tripling the 1.12 yuan reported in the third quarter of 2024. The company closed September with a cash balance of 13.4 billion yuan ($1.88 billion), providing plenty of dry powder for future expansion.

Operational Performance

The operational metrics tell a story of steady execution. By the end of the third quarter, total area committed and pre-committed increased 4.8% year over year to 656,729 square meters, while the area actually utilized grew at a faster clip of 10.9% to 486,607 square meters.

The utilization rate for area in service improved to 74.4%, up from 73.6% the previous year. Meanwhile, the area under construction stood at 72,764 square meters (down from 120,422 square meters in the prior year quarter), but the pre-commitment rate jumped to 73.0% from 65.1% a year earlier. That's a positive sign that demand is there before the facilities even come online.

The AI Angle

Chairman and CEO William Huang leaned into the AI narrative, saying, "In the third quarter of 2025, we continued to deliver our backlog and achieved a high level of move-in. We are strategically positioned to capture the accelerating demand from AI, which we view as a significant, long-term growth catalyst for our business."

It's the positioning every data center operator wants right now—being ready when AI workloads need somewhere to live.

Looking Ahead

GDS reiterated its fiscal 2025 guidance, projecting total revenues of 11.29 billion yuan to 11.59 billion yuan, adjusted EBITDA of 5.19 billion yuan to 5.39 billion yuan, and capital expenditure of 2.7 billion yuan.

Despite the beat on revenue and improving margins, shares were trading lower by 1.59% to $28.56 at last check Wednesday. Sometimes good just isn't good enough when expectations run high.

GDS Holdings Posts Solid Quarter But Shares Slip Despite AI Growth Positioning

MarketDash Editorial Team
18 days ago
GDS Holdings reported third-quarter results with revenue up 10.2% and adjusted EBITDA climbing 11.4%, but shares fell despite management's optimism about capturing AI-driven data center demand.

GDS Holdings Limited (GDS) delivered a decent quarter by most measures, but investors weren't particularly impressed. Shares fell after the data center operator reported third-quarter 2025 results that showed continued growth, though perhaps not the explosive trajectory some might have hoped for in an AI-driven market.

The Numbers

Net revenue climbed 10.2% year over year to 2.89 billion Chinese yuan. In dollar terms, that translated to $405.6 million, which actually edged past the consensus estimate of $404.0 million. The revenue bump came primarily from ongoing ramp-up activities across the company's data center portfolio.

Profitability metrics looked solid. Adjusted gross profit hit 1.47 billion yuan ($206.8 million), up 11.3% from the prior year, with margins ticking up to 51.0% from 50.5%. Adjusted EBITDA rose 11.4% to 1.34 billion yuan, while the margin expanded to 46.5% from 46.0% a year ago.

The most impressive figure was earnings: EPS per ADS came in at 3.21 yuan (45 cents), nearly tripling the 1.12 yuan reported in the third quarter of 2024. The company closed September with a cash balance of 13.4 billion yuan ($1.88 billion), providing plenty of dry powder for future expansion.

Operational Performance

The operational metrics tell a story of steady execution. By the end of the third quarter, total area committed and pre-committed increased 4.8% year over year to 656,729 square meters, while the area actually utilized grew at a faster clip of 10.9% to 486,607 square meters.

The utilization rate for area in service improved to 74.4%, up from 73.6% the previous year. Meanwhile, the area under construction stood at 72,764 square meters (down from 120,422 square meters in the prior year quarter), but the pre-commitment rate jumped to 73.0% from 65.1% a year earlier. That's a positive sign that demand is there before the facilities even come online.

The AI Angle

Chairman and CEO William Huang leaned into the AI narrative, saying, "In the third quarter of 2025, we continued to deliver our backlog and achieved a high level of move-in. We are strategically positioned to capture the accelerating demand from AI, which we view as a significant, long-term growth catalyst for our business."

It's the positioning every data center operator wants right now—being ready when AI workloads need somewhere to live.

Looking Ahead

GDS reiterated its fiscal 2025 guidance, projecting total revenues of 11.29 billion yuan to 11.59 billion yuan, adjusted EBITDA of 5.19 billion yuan to 5.39 billion yuan, and capital expenditure of 2.7 billion yuan.

Despite the beat on revenue and improving margins, shares were trading lower by 1.59% to $28.56 at last check Wednesday. Sometimes good just isn't good enough when expectations run high.