The numbers out of Vertiv Holdings (VRT) this morning aren’t just good — they’re the kind that rewrite the investment case for an entire sector.
The data center infrastructure company reported Q4 organic orders growth of 252% year-over-year, a backlog that swelled to $15 billion (up 109%), and 2026 guidance that makes Wall Street’s estimates look quaint. Revenue hit $2.88 billion for the quarter, a 23% jump, while adjusted EPS of $1.36 beat the $1.29 consensus.

Shares surged as much as 18% in premarket trading to above $236, putting VRT at fresh all-time highs.
But here’s the thing: the guidance is what really matters. Vertiv expects 2026 revenue of $13.25 billion to $13.75 billion — the low end of that range tops the highest analyst estimate of $12.39 billion. Adjusted EPS guidance of $5.97 to $6.07 crushes the $5.33 consensus by a cool 12-14%.

This isn’t a company just riding a wave. This is a company building the wave.
The AI Infrastructure Proof Point
For months, the market has debated whether the hundreds of billions in Big Tech AI spending would actually translate into real revenue for the companies building the physical layer of the AI boom. Vertiv just answered that question definitively.
According to the company’s press release, “order growth was broad-based across regions, technologies and customers,” with the Americas and hyperscale/colocation data centers as the primary drivers. The Q4 book-to-bill ratio of roughly 2.9x means Vertiv is booking nearly three dollars in orders for every dollar of revenue it ships. That’s not normal for an industrial company — it’s the kind of demand surge that gives multi-year visibility.
The breakdown tells the story. Americas and hyperscale/colocation data centers drove the bulk of the order explosion, but growth was broad-based across all regions, technologies, and customer types. Trailing twelve-month organic orders grew approximately 81%. Adjusted operating margin expanded 170 basis points year-over-year to 23.2%, powered by operational leverage on higher volume and favorable pricing.
And the cash generation is real: $910 million of adjusted free cash flow in Q4 alone, with full-year 2025 free cash flow hitting a record $1.89 billion.
How to Play the AI Power and Cooling Boom
Vertiv is the most direct play on this theme, but it’s not the only one. Here’s how to position:
Vertiv Holdings (VRT) — around $236 in premarket trading. The stock has roughly quadrupled over the past year, and even after today’s move, the valuation argument isn’t over. At $236, VRT trades at roughly 39x its 2026 EPS guidance midpoint of $6.02. That’s rich by traditional industrial standards but cheap relative to the growth trajectory — revenue is guided to grow 27-29% organically. JPMorgan has a $225 target and Evercore sits at $210, though these were set before today’s blowout. Expect upward revisions. The average analyst target before today’s print was $208.89 with a high of $249.
Eaton Corporation (ETN) — around $377. The power management giant is another direct beneficiary of data center buildouts, with roughly 70% of revenue tied to its electrical segments. CEO Paulo Ruiz has cited “unprecedented demand” in data centers. Eaton’s own Q4 results showed 9% organic sales growth, and its planned spinoff of vehicle/eMobility segments will sharpen its focus on the high-growth electrical infrastructure market. Bernstein recently raised its price target to $428, and the average target sits at $403.80.
Modine Manufacturing (MOD) — around $222. This is the under-the-radar pick. Modine’s data center cooling solutions — particularly its Airedale liquid cooling products — put it squarely in the same demand curve Vertiv is riding. The company raised its fiscal 2026 guidance twice and recently announced a strategic spinoff to focus entirely on climate solutions, including data center cooling. B. Riley raised its target to $250 from $190, and Seeking Alpha analysts have flagged a long-term fair value near $240. With a smaller market cap (around $11 billion), MOD has more room to move on positive data center demand surprises.
Barclays analyst Julian Mitchell, who upgraded VRT to Buy last month with a $200 target, had noted that Vertiv’s revenue exposure to data centers is roughly 80% of total sales — “the highest in our coverage.” Evercore’s Amit Daryanani, who maintained a Buy with a $210 target ahead of earnings, expects “organic sales growth to remain elevated through 2026 and 2027.” Both targets now look conservative.

Global X U.S. Infrastructure Development ETF (PAVE) — For investors who want broad exposure to the infrastructure build without single-stock concentration risk, PAVE holds positions across industrials and materials companies that benefit from both traditional infrastructure and the data center supercycle. It’s the passive option in a very active trend.
The Bull and Bear Cases
The bull case writes itself: AI infrastructure spending is accelerating, not slowing. Vertiv’s 252% order growth and $15 billion backlog provide visibility well into 2027 and possibly beyond. The company’s net leverage is just 0.5x — meaning it has ample firepower for capacity expansion, R&D, and M&A. The recent $1 billion PurgeRite acquisition in December expanded its liquid cooling capabilities, and the new MegaMod HDX solution targets rack densities exceeding 100 kW.
But there are legitimate risks. Valuation is the obvious one — VRT’s trailing P/E ratio was 76x before today’s pop. If AI spending disappoints or Big Tech capex gets trimmed, the premium evaporates fast. Tariffs are another headwind management specifically flagged, and the EMEA region remains a weak spot (revenue was basically flat there while Americas surged). There’s also competitive risk from Schneider Electric and other industrial players eyeing the same opportunity.
That said, the risk-reward still tilts bullish. A 2.9x book-to-bill ratio and $15 billion backlog don’t lie. The demand is real, it’s growing, and Vertiv is positioned at the center of it.
What to Watch
Three catalysts to track from here. First, Vertiv’s Investor Conference on May 19-20 in Greenville, South Carolina, which will include facility tours and a deep dive on its technology roadmap — any new product announcements or capacity expansion plans could move the stock again. Second, the broader AI infrastructure earnings season: if Eaton, Schneider Electric (reporting Feb 26), and power utility companies confirm the same demand signals Vertiv is seeing, the entire sector re-rates higher. Third, watch for analyst upgrades — the consensus $208 price target is stale as of this morning, and banks will be scrambling to update their models.
The market just got its most concrete evidence yet that the AI infrastructure buildout isn’t a narrative — it’s a multi-year spending cycle. Vertiv’s numbers prove it.




















































