The 5 Stocks Powering the AI Infrastructure Buildout
As trillions pour into AI infrastructure, one portfolio manager identifies five companies positioned to capture the spending wave — from memory chips to cooling systems to missile interceptors. The picks span semiconductors, power management, and defense, with some names already up more than 50% year-to-date. But with valuations stretched and rotation out of tech underway, the critical question is whether these stocks can sustain their momentum — and which pose the greatest risk if the AI buildout stalls.
Key Takeaways
Micron is the top pick among AI plays, driven by insatiable demand for memory chips — especially from Nvidia's next-generation Rubin chip — despite trading 40% higher year-to-date.
Data center infrastructure players like Eaton and Vertiv offer backdoor AI exposure through power management and cooling solutions, with Vertiv up over 50% but facing valuation concerns.
Taiwan Semiconductor remains attractive at only 10% gains year-to-date, benefiting from 60% market share in chip fabrication and mitigating geopolitical risk through its Phoenix, Arizona plant.
L3 Harris provides portfolio diversification through aerospace and defense exposure, positioned to benefit from NATO's 5% GDP defense spending commitment and potential U.S. Iron Dome development.
Eaton is the safest pick if tech rotation continues, having existed profitably before the AI revolution with core infrastructure businesses that don't depend on AI demand.
In a Nutshell
Follow the money into AI infrastructure: the real opportunity lies not in the headline AI names, but in the power, memory, cooling, and construction companies making the data center boom physically possible.
The Memory Backbone: Micron's AI Advantage
Insatiable demand for memory chips makes Micron a core AI infrastructure play.
The AI revolution cannot proceed without sufficient memory capacity, and Micron dominates that space as a leading memory provider to chip fabricators worldwide. The company significantly beat earnings and revenue estimates last week, then guided higher — a signal that demand continues to outpace supply. Nvidia, Micron's largest client, is demanding even more memory for its next-generation Rubin AI chip launching this year, followed by an enhanced version in the following year.
Despite trading up 40% year-to-date — and actually down from its highs after recent earnings — Mahn argues valuation concerns don't preclude further upside. The fundamental driver is clear: memory demand isn't going away, and Micron can't keep up with existing order flow. When forced to choose between Micron and Nvidia, Mahn picks Micron, viewing it as the essential enabler that the entire AI ecosystem depends on.
Power and Construction: Eaton's Infrastructure Play
Key Numbers: Portfolio Metrics and Market Data
Performance figures and valuation benchmarks across the five AI infrastructure picks.
Cooling Solutions: Vertiv's «Box» Innovation
Vertiv pivots from HVAC to data center cooling with turnkey power solutions.
Vertiv entered the AI infrastructure conversation as a pick-and-shovels play, leveraging its long history providing HVAC solutions to office buildings and commercial properties. The company now serves as a backdoor AI investment by addressing the critical cooling challenge data centers face as they consume tremendous power and generate intense heat. Vertiv's core competency in thermal management translates directly to data center infrastructure needs.
The company's recent collaboration with Generate Capital represents a significant innovation: «power and cooling solutions in a box» — essentially turnkey, bring-your-own-power systems designed specifically for data centers. This modular approach allows for rapid deployment and scalability. Despite trading at rich valuations on both current and forward price-to-earnings metrics, Mahn sees continued growth potential. However, he acknowledges Vertiv faces the biggest valuation risk among the five picks, with increasing competition from companies like Modine Manufacturing and Comfort Systems, which recently attempted to acquire another cooling solutions provider.
Taiwan Semi: Geopolitical Risk vs. Market Dominance
TSMC addresses China concerns with Arizona plant while maintaining chip fabrication leadership.
Defense Diversifier: L3 Harris Beyond AI
L3 Harris offers non-AI exposure through missile systems and potential Iron Dome contracts.
L3 Harris stands apart from the other four picks as an aerospace and defense play that benefits from an entirely different spending wave: global military modernization. NATO countries have committed to spending up to 5% of their respective GDP on defense by the end of 2035, while President Trump plans to allocate up to $1.5 trillion to upgrade, modernize, and replenish U.S. military capabilities next year. The conflict in Iran has depleted U.S. missile and missile interceptor stockpiles, creating immediate replacement demand.
L3 Harris specializes in missile and missile interceptor systems, positioning it as a primary beneficiary if the United States pursues an Iron Dome-style missile defense capability similar to Israel's system. The company pays a dividend of approximately 1.3% and trades at less than 30 times forward earnings — not cheap, but not overly expensive relative to growth prospects. Importantly, Mahn identifies L3 Harris as his single favorite pick among the five if forced to choose, and the stock he'd buy if given only one selection, providing portfolio diversification beyond the concentrated AI infrastructure theme.
Risk Assessment: Where the Picks Are Vulnerable
Valuation concerns center on Vertiv; tech rotation favors Eaton's diversified business.
Risk Assessment: Where the Picks Are Vulnerable
Among the five picks, Vertiv poses the biggest valuation risk, trading at elevated multiples despite strong cooling demand and facing intensifying competition. If money continues rotating out of AI and technology stocks, Eaton emerges as the most defensive choice — it existed profitably before the AI revolution with core infrastructure and connectivity businesses that persist regardless of AI spending cycles. Micron, while carrying the biggest single-stock risk given its memory focus, simultaneously represents the biggest current beneficiary because the company can't keep up with existing order flow.
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