The explosive growth in artificial intelligence (AI) is triggering a massive data center investment cycle and fundamentally reshaping infrastructure design.
Nvidia (NVDA) anchors this shift, accelerating a transition toward next-gen 800-volt direct current (VDC) data centers slated for commercial rollout in 2027.
This redesign supports ultra-dense 576-GPU architectures, a quantum leap from today’s 72-GPU standard, by relocating power conversion out of the rack and into standalone power centers.
Barclays’ analyst Julian Mitchell flags this structural shift as a powerful catalyst for infrastructure suppliers – and, according to experts, the following three names are particularly well positioned to benefit.
Vertiv Holdings (VRT)
Vertiv’s specialized power management systems secure its position as Nvidia’s lead architectural collaborator for the 800VDC transition.
The firm engineers the vital hardware that converts grid alternating current to 800VDC, alongside the DC-to-DC power shelves that high-density racks demand.
Financial momentum is already accelerating; first-quarter sales climbed 30% year-over-year to $2.65 billion, while adjusted operating margins expanded 430 basis points to 20.8%.
Driven by an order backlog of about $13 billion, management lifted full-year guidance, projecting roughly 51% earnings growth.
While chief product officer Scott Armul expects a “steady” commercial ramp through 2027, VRT stock offers high-leverage exposure to the precise capacity and density bottlenecks the impending architectural shift aims to resolve.
GE Vernova (GEV)
While internal rack hardware scales, GE Vernova provides the heavy-duty electrical infrastructure linking power grids directly to data center facilities.
As a premier power equipment specialist, the company bridges the widening gap between utility generation and AI campus consumption.
Recent performance highlights a massive backlog acceleration; Q1 sales rose 16% to $9.3 billion, while organic orders surged 71% to $18.3 billion, pushing total backlog to $163 billion.
With orders running at twice the rate of shipments, management pulled forward the firm’s $200 billion backlog target to 2027.
This unprecedented macro-level demand ensures GE Vernova stock captures the upstream energy investments required to sustain dense 576-GPU facility configurations.
nVent Electric (NVT)
Through disciplined acquisitions and divestitures, nVent Electric has transformed into a pure-play provider of electrical protection and advanced thermal management.
Next-generation 800VDC architectures generate extreme heat profiles that render traditional air cooling obsolete – forcing hyperscalers to adopt liquid-cooling and in-rack power distribution systems.
Financial execution underscores this transition: first-quarter revenue leaped 42% to $1.24 billion, propelled by a 76% surge in its data center-linked Systems Protection segment.
Backlog tripled to a record $2.6 billion in fiscal Q1, prompting management to raise full-year sales growth guidance to 26%-28%.
This rapid scaling, backed by a 40% boost in capital spending for capacity expansion, cements a compelling long-term thesis for the 2028 upgrade cycle.
Wall Street currently rates NVT shares to “Strong Buy” with the mean price target of about $193 indicating significant further upside from here.
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