The AI buildout is moving past the fun part where everyone argues about which model wins. Now it is entering the expensive part where companies have to wire it, cool it, and keep it running without downtime.
When a new wave of demand shows up, the market starts rewarding the businesses that make data centers physically work, even if they are not the loudest names in tech.

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What Just Happened
Vertiv Holdings Co (NYSE: VRT) has been one of the clearest winners of the AI data center expansion, and its most recent results poured gasoline on the story.
The company reported a very strong fourth quarter for 2025, and the headline that grabbed investors was orders. Organic orders surged 252%, which is the kind of number that does not show up in normal industrial cycles.
After those results, Bank of America reiterated a Buy rating and raised its price target to $277 from $250. The bigger point was not the target. It was the message around momentum. The firm highlighted that Vertiv expects strong order momentum to continue into 2026.
The CEO also emphasized that the pipeline was not depleted, even after landing many large orders in Q4.
That matters because investors always worry that a blowout quarter is just demand getting pulled forward. In this case, the company’s commentary suggested the opposite: demand is still lining up.
Another detail investors liked came from Vertiv’s filings and commentary around what is changing inside the business.
Beyond tariffs and general macro uncertainty, Vertiv highlighted accelerating AI demand, thermal product expansion, strengthening services capability, strategic deals with Nvidia and Caterpillar, and a push into prefabricated products that can shorten deployment timelines for customers.

What Vertiv Actually Does
Vertiv is a data center infrastructure company, but the easiest way to understand it is to focus on the two enemies every data center fights.
Power instability
Heat
Vertiv sells the equipment and systems that help data centers stay online, efficient, and scalable, including:
Power management: Uninterruptible power supplies, power distribution, and systems that keep facilities running through interruptions and load swings.
Thermal management: Cooling systems that remove heat from racks and rooms. This is becoming more important as AI clusters push power density higher and higher.
Racks, enclosures, and monitoring: The physical layer that houses hardware and helps operators track performance, manage capacity, and avoid failures.
This matters because the AI boom is driving two trends that put pressure on data center infrastructure:
Higher-density racks generate more heat per square foot
New capacity needs to be deployed faster than traditional build cycles
Vertiv sits right in the middle of both problems.

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Why The Stock Has Been So Strong
Vertiv is not rallying because the market suddenly decided cooling is exciting. It is rallying because AI is changing the economics of data centers.
1) The buildout is not evenly constrained
In early AI cycles, the limiting factor is often chips. Then the constraint shifts.
Once companies can buy the hardware, they realize they cannot deploy it at scale without upgrading power and cooling. That is when infrastructure suppliers start to look less optional.
2) Orders and backlog are the real scoreboard
In this part of the cycle, revenue can lag the demand signal. Orders show what customers are committing to, and backlog shows what the company can convert into revenue over the next several quarters. When orders surge and backlog builds, investors start paying up earlier.
3) AI changes the cooling mix
Older data centers were often designed around predictable heat loads. AI clusters are different.
Cooling can become more specialized, more complex, and more valuable per deployment. If Vertiv is expanding its thermal offering and winning the right designs, the mix can improve.
4) Services can turn a project into a relationship
A company that sells hardware once is cyclical. A company that maintains, monitors, and upgrades systems becomes more recurring.
Vertiv has been calling out strengthening services capability as a trend, which is the kind of detail that supports a higher multiple.

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The Bull Case
1) The pipeline still looks full
The key risk after a blowout orders quarter is that it was a one-time spike. The CEO’s commentary that the pipeline was not depleted is a big deal if it holds.
It suggests Vertiv is not just catching a one-quarter wave. It is riding a multi-quarter shift in build plans.
2) Backlog can keep revenue growth durable
If orders stay elevated, backlog becomes the buffer that smooths out the cycle. Even if quarterly orders cool from extreme levels, a large backlog supports steady revenue conversion.
3) Cooling is becoming mission-critical for AI density
AI racks are hotter and harder to manage. If Vertiv keeps expanding liquid cooling and advanced thermal solutions, it can win higher-value deployments and maintain pricing power better than in traditional cycles.
4) Strategic partnerships can widen the funnel
Vertiv has been highlighting strategic deals with Nvidia and Caterpillar. Nvidia matters because it sits at the center of AI infrastructure decision-making.
Caterpillar matters because power generation and on-site energy solutions increasingly matter in constrained grids. Partnerships do not guarantee anything, but they can influence who gets pulled into the short list on large projects.
5) Faster deployment products can win in a rushed buildout
Prefabricated and modular solutions are attractive when customers want to stand up capacity quickly. If Vertiv executes here, it is another lever that can differentiate it beyond selling components.

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The Bear Case
1) Expectations are now extremely high
With the stock up roughly 168% over the past year and trading near its highs, the market is not looking for good results. It is looking for great results, every time. That creates downside risk if guidance is merely solid.
2) Orders can be lumpy, even in a boom
Large data center projects come in waves. A few big quarters can be followed by digestion, not because demand disappeared, but because customers phase deployments. The stock can reprice during those pauses.
3) Tariffs and input costs can hit margins
Vertiv itself has flagged tariff and economic uncertainty as a theme. If costs rise faster than pricing, margins can get pressured, especially when customers are hyperscalers with bargaining power.
4) The mix shift can be harder than it sounds
Growing services and expanding thermal offerings is a great story, but execution matters. If growth comes mainly from lower-margin equipment, investors may start questioning how sustainable margin expansion is.
5) Valuation leaves less room for error
A higher P/E is not automatically wrong in a fast-growing cycle, but it amplifies volatility. If the market broadly rotates away from high-multiple winners, Vertiv can drop even if the business remains strong.

What I’d Watch Next
If you want to stay disciplined with a stock like this, watch the signals that confirm the demand is still real and the economics are improving:
Orders trend in 2026, even if growth normalizes from extreme levels
Backlog growth and conversion pace
Thermal product momentum, especially advanced cooling adoption
Services growth and attach rate, which supports more recurring revenue
Margin trajectory, particularly if tariffs or costs rise
Any commentary that suggests customers are delaying deployments rather than expanding them

Bottom Line
The bull case is that 2026 stays strong enough to keep backlog expanding and margins healthy, with cooling and services becoming a bigger piece of the mix. The bear case is that expectations are now so elevated that any slowing, even normal slowing, triggers a sharp reset.
This is not a quiet stock anymore. It is a high-momentum infrastructure name. If the AI buildout keeps accelerating, Vertiv has a clear runway. If the cycle pauses, it will feel it quickly.

Action Recap
✅ What this is: Data center power and cooling leverage to AI-driven capacity buildout
✅ What to watch: Orders, backlog, thermal mix, services traction, margin durability
⚠️ Main risks: Lumpy orders, tariff and cost pressure, high expectations, valuation resets
🧭 Mindset: Strong trend, but the stock needs continued proof each quarter

That’s all for today. Thank you for reading. If you have any feedback, please reply to this email.
Best Regards,
— Adam Garcia
Elite Trade Club
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