
Megaport Ltd (ASX: MP1) may not be the first ASX 200 share investors think of when they hear artificial intelligence (AI).
It does not make chips. It does not build large language models. It is not trying to become the next global software giant.
But I think Megaport could still be a hidden winner from the AI boom.
The reason is that AI needs more than algorithms. It needs infrastructure.
The plumbing behind digital growth
Megaport provides network-as-a-service technology.
In simple terms, it helps businesses connect more flexibly to cloud platforms, data centres, and digital services.
That may not sound as exciting as AI models or semiconductors. But as more companies use cloud computing, cybersecurity tools, data-heavy applications, and AI workloads, the need for fast and flexible connectivity becomes more important.
Businesses do not want slow, rigid, outdated network setups. They want the ability to connect to the right digital services quickly and scale as their needs change.
Megaport sits in that part of the market. That is why I think investors should look beyond the obvious AI names. The companies helping businesses connect, move data, and access infrastructure could also benefit from the next stage of digital investment.
Latitude.sh changes the story
I think Megaport has also become more interesting since acquiring Latitude.sh.
That acquisition added compute and storage capabilities to the business. This means Megaport is no longer just about connectivity. It now has a broader digital infrastructure offering.
That could be important as demand grows for AI inference, GPU capacity, distributed infrastructure, and cloud-adjacent services.
Since completing the acquisition, Megaport has announced several large contracts through Latitude.sh across GPU, CPU, network, and storage services.
I think that contract momentum is one reason investors have become more optimistic. It suggests the broader platform is starting to win work in areas linked to AI and high-performance digital workloads.
A higher-risk growth idea
There are risks to consider. Megaport still needs to execute well, integrate Latitude.sh successfully, and prove that these newer opportunities can translate into strong long-term returns.
Digital infrastructure can also require investment, and the market can be unforgiving if growth stocks miss expectations.
But I like the direction of travel. The company has moved from being a flexible connectivity provider to something with a broader role in digital infrastructure. If AI demand keeps expanding, that could make Megaport more useful to customers.
Foolish takeaway
The AI opportunity is not limited to the companies with the most obvious labels.
Megaport is not a pure AI stock. Its opportunity is to support the infrastructure layer that businesses may need as AI, cloud, data, and automation become more important.
That makes it a higher-risk ASX 200 tech share, but also an interesting one. If the company can keep winning contracts and expanding its platform, I think Megaport could have a much larger role to play in the digital economy over time.
The post Could this ASX 200 tech share be a hidden AI winner? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Grace Alvino has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Megaport. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.