 Dear Reader, I've just revealed a powerful investing strategy that boils down to "Sell This, Buy That." It's a way to rid yourself of overpriced AI stocks before the tech trade breaks down this summer... And instead move that money into smaller, lesser-known names that are showing real potential to dethrone the "Mag 7". I even give away a Hotlist and Hitlist of buy and sell ideas that you can act on right now. Like my recommendation I call "an upgrade to Tesla stock." It's a little-known company that just inked a groundbreaking partnership with the king of AI, Nvidia. This deal virtually hands this under-the-radar firm the keys to the self-driving industries' biggest customers, putting them miles ahead of Tesla in the autonomous vehicle race. That's why I want to put this stock on your radar before markets open. You can get the name and ticker symbol here. Sincerely, Marc Chaikin
Founder, Chaikin Analytics
More Reading from MarketBeat.com
5 Stocks Solving the AI Power CrisisAuthor: Ryan Hasson. Publication Date: 6/22/2026. 
Key Points
- AI data centers require enormous amounts of electricity, creating a mismatch with the aging U.S. grid that is emerging as a defining investment theme.
- Five companies—Vertiv, GE Vernova, Eaton, Bloom Energy, and Constellation Energy—offer distinct ways to invest across the AI power supply chain.
- Several of these stocks trade at or near consensus price targets, while Constellation Energy stands out as the only name with roughly 35% implied upside.
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For the past couple of years, the AI investment story has been told largely through chips, cloud platforms, and the data centers that house them. But beneath it all sits a problem that could become the single biggest constraint on the entire build-out. AI does not just need compute. It needs power, and enormous amounts of it. A single large AI data center can consume as much electricity as a small city, and the hyperscalers are planning dozens of them. The U.S. grid, much of it built decades ago, was never designed for that level of demand. This mismatch between surging electricity needs and an aging, capacity-constrained grid is becoming one of the defining investment themes of the decade. The companies that generate the power, build the equipment that delivers it, and keep the data centers cool and running are stepping into the spotlight.
Here are five names at the center of efforts to solve the AI power crisis. Vertiv: The Backbone of Data Center Power and CoolingVertiv (NYSE: VRT) sits at the heart of this theme like few other companies on the market. It designs and manufactures the critical power and thermal management systems that keep data centers running, from uninterruptible power supplies and power distribution units to the precision cooling equipment that prevents racks of AI chips from overheating. As chip density climbs and each new generation of accelerators runs hotter than the last, demand for Vertiv's liquid-cooling and power infrastructure has accelerated sharply. The stock reflects that momentum, up close to 105.6% year to date (YTD) and almost 1,400% over the prior three years. The fundamentals support the move, with projected earnings growth above 34%. In its most recent quarter, for Q1 2026, reported on April 22, VRT beat estimates by 17 cents, while quarterly revenue surged more than 30% year-over-year to $2.65 billion. And despite its already impressive multi-year run, analysts remain steadfast, with a Moderate Buy rating based on 29 ratings. However, investors should note that with a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio above 52 and the stock trading just above its consensus price target of $326.39, much of the good news may already be priced in. Vertiv is a high-quality way to play the theme, but it is no longer cheap. GE Vernova: Powering the Grid at ScaleGE Vernova (NYSE: GEV) is the energy business spun out of General Electric, and it has quickly become one of the market's favorite ways to play surging electricity demand. The company builds the gas turbines, grid equipment, and generation technology that utilities rely on to add capacity, and its order books have swelled as data center power demand has collided with an aging grid in need of modernization. The stock has climbed close to 70% YTD and more than 125% over the past year, giving it a market cap approaching $300 billion. Projected earnings growth of nearly 63% is among the strongest in this group, and net margins near 24% reflect the pricing power that comes with being one of a small number of players capable of delivering turbines and grid hardware at scale. In its April 22 earnings release, the company reported a 17% increase in quarterly revenue from the prior year. As with several names here, the stock now trades roughly in line with its consensus price target of $1,089.88, and MarketBeat data shows some recent insider selling worth watching. Still, the structural demand story behind GE Vernova remains as compelling as any in the energy space. Eaton: The Quiet Power Management WorkhorseEaton (NYSE: ETN) is the least flashy name on this list, and that is rather the point. The diversified power management company makes the switchgear, circuit breakers, transformers, and power distribution equipment that physically move electricity through data centers and the grid. It is essential, unglamorous infrastructure, and demand for it is booming. The stock is up an impressive nearly 33% YTD, a more measured gain than the others here. That, in itself, arguably makes its risk-reward profile more balanced. From a technical perspective, the stock may have room to run. ETN has spent several months consolidating near its 52-week high. If it can break above that pivot point, a momentum move higher could follow. While the technical setup is encouraging, the fundamentals continue to improve. Earlier this year, Eaton acquired Boyd Thermal to deepen its data center cooling capabilities, a clear signal that management is leaning further into the AI infrastructure opportunity. With a forward P/E near 32, Eaton trades at a more reasonable multiple than Vertiv or GE Vernova while offering exposure to the same powerful tailwind. Bloom Energy: On-Site Power for a Grid That Can't Keep UpBloom Energy (NYSE: BE) offers a different and more aggressive way to play the theme. The company makes solid oxide fuel cells that generate electricity on-site from natural gas, biogas, or hydrogen, allowing data centers to sidestep grid delays entirely and power themselves directly. As utilities struggle to connect new projects quickly enough, the ability to bypass the grid has made Bloom one of the hottest names in the entire energy complex. The stock has exploded, up close to 279% YTD and a staggering 1,816% over the prior three years. That includes an almost 15% surge in a single session on Thursday, June 18, following a bullish AI power report. The move also signaled a bullish breakout on the longer-term chart, potentially marking the start of a fresh leg higher. Projected earnings growth of 165% reflects how quickly the business is scaling. But this is unambiguously the highest-risk name on the list. Bloom carries a beta of approximately 3.7, making it extremely volatile, and trades far above its consensus price target of $220.14, implying meaningful downside if sentiment cools. For investors with a higher risk appetite and conviction in the on-site power thesis, Bloom offers the most explosive upside here, but it also carries the most risk. Constellation Energy: The Contrarian Nuclear PlayConstellation Energy (NASDAQ: CEG) is the most interesting name on this list precisely because it has not run with the others. The largest nuclear power plant operator in the United States, Constellation provides exactly the kind of reliable, carbon-free baseload electricity that AI data centers need around the clock. Nuclear has rapidly emerged as a preferred long-term answer to the AI power problem, and Constellation sits at the center of that shift. Yet the stock is down around 22.4% YTD, making it the clear outlier in this group. That pullback is what makes it interesting. Constellation scored in the 97th percentile of MarketBeat's MarketRank, ranking 12th out of 252 energy stocks, and is the only name on this list with meaningful upside to its consensus price target of $370.41, implying roughly 35% upside. The company is set to become the top U.S. power producer after announcing plans to restart its Three Mile Island facility, now rebranded and contracted to supply power to data centers. The caution to note is that the stock's TradeSmith Health Indicator is currently in the Red Zone, reflecting its weak recent price trend. For value-oriented investors who believe nuclear is the long-term backbone of AI power, Constellation offers a compelling entry point that the rest of this group does not. The AI Power Crisis Is Not a Distant-Future ThemeThe AI power crisis is not a distant-future theme. It is unfolding right now, and it touches every layer of the energy stack, from generation to grid hardware to on-site power and cooling. These five names offer distinct ways to play it, from the steady infrastructure exposure of Eaton to the explosive momentum of Bloom Energy to the contrarian value setup in Constellation. As always, the strongest theme in the market is not an excuse to ignore valuation. Several of these stocks have run hard and now trade at or above their price targets, while others offer more room to run. For investors, the opportunity is real, but discipline around entry points matters as much here as anywhere.
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