Radio
Now Playing
Quickyla Radio โ€” Click to play
Open โ†’
3 min left
Back to News

2 Pick-and-Shovel AI Stocks Powering the Data Center Boom

Written by John Ballard for The Motley Fool -> Vertiv sales surged 30% last quarter on growing demand for power management and cooling solutions. Texas Instruments said its data center revenue nearl

2 Pick-and-Shovel AI Stocks Powering the Data Center Boom
Nasdaq News โ€” 19 June 2026
Text:
11 0 0

Vertiv sales surged 30% last quarter on growing demand for power management and cooling solutions. Texas Instruments said its data center revenue nea

Read Full Story at Nasdaq News โ†’
โšก Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context โ€” not sourced from the article above
The surge in demand for data center infrastructure has quietly become one of the most durable themes in the tech economy, and the latest earnings from Vertiv and Texas Instruments underscore just how foundational the shift has become. These arenโ€™t flashy AI startups trading on hypeโ€”theyโ€™re industrial suppliers feeding the literal backbone of the artificial intelligence revolution. Vertivโ€™s 30% revenue jump last quarter wasnโ€™t a one-off; it reflects a structural reality: power density in data centers is rising faster than grids can reliably supply it, creating a bottleneck thatโ€™s driving spending across the entire supply chain. Cooling systems, uninterrupted power supplies, and thermal management are no longer ancillary concernsโ€”theyโ€™re strategic priorities as chips like Nvidiaโ€™s Blackwell demand more electricity per unit than entire server racks did a decade ago. Whatโ€™s less understood is how tightly this trend is tethered to geopolitical and regulatory pressures. The CHIPS Act and similar industrial policies in Europe and Asia arenโ€™t just about semiconductor fabricationโ€”theyโ€™re accelerating the construction of hyperscale facilities closer to end users, which in turn increases the need for localized power solutions. Texas Instrumentsโ€™ data center revenue spike, meanwhile, hints at another layer: the analog chips that regulate and distribute electricity are becoming as critical as the processors they support. These are the unsung heroes of the AI buildout, and their scarcity is reshaping supply chains in ways that could outlast any single AI modelโ€™s lifecycle. The open question is whether this infrastructure boom can sustain itself amid rising interest rates and energy costs. Data centers already consume about 1% of global electricity, and projections suggest that figure could triple by 2030. If power prices spike or grid capacity lags, the very companies fueling this growth could face margin pressureโ€”or worse, become acquisition targets for vertically integrated giants like Microsoft or Meta. For now, though, the market is sending a clear signal: the AI gold rush isnโ€™t just about software and chips. Itโ€™s about the brute-force physical systems that keep the lights on.
Advertisement
React:
Sources
Sponsored

More to Read

Sam Altman says OpenAI's top token spender uses 100 billionโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
Sam Altman says OpenAI's top token spender uses 100 billion tokens a month โ€” and they're โ€ฆ
Business Insider Mkt ยท 16 days ago
Intel, AMD, Micron shares sink as Broadcom results spark seโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
Intel, AMD, Micron shares sink as Broadcom results spark semiconductor sector sell-off
Yahoo Finance ยท 15 days ago
This Smartโ€‘Money Legend Won Big on Intel. The Rest of His Pโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
This Smartโ€‘Money Legend Won Big on Intel. The Rest of His Portfolio Might Be Even More Reโ€ฆ
Yahoo Finance ยท 18 days ago
'Astonishing': James Webb telescope spots the most chemicalโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ”ฌ Science
'Astonishing': James Webb telescope spots the most chemically primitive galaxy in the ancโ€ฆ
Live Science ยท 19 days ago
You can now beat ChatGPT Codex rate limits, if you have friโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ’ป Technology
You can now beat ChatGPT Codex rate limits, if you have friends
Android Authority ยท 7 days ago
El Niรฑo Is Underway
๐Ÿ”ฌ Science
El Niรฑo Is Underway
NASA ยท 2 days ago
Full view