Nasdaq stalls, but power stocks keep hitting new highs? The second half of AI, an in-depth analysis of the 2026 U.S. stock grid modernization investment landscape
The End of Computing Power: This Time, It’s Electricity
By 2026, the U.S. stock market is showing an extreme divide: the Nasdaq has failed to reach a new high for four consecutive months, with AI leaders’ valuations suffering in the wait for a new round of rate cuts; meanwhile, industrial, energy, and utility stocks are breaking through amid the roar of the “Old World.”
This divide sends a clear signal: AI competition has shifted from algorithm battles to a fight over physical resources. If 2024 is the “Year of Chips,” then 2026 is the “Year of Power Grid Modernization.”
Currently, the revaluation of power assets is unstoppable. In 2023-2024, the market is buying “brains” (chips), and in 2025-2026, capital is flowing into the “heart and vessels” (electricity and power grids).
This article will provide investors with a comprehensive review of the structural changes, competitive landscape, and opportunities within the U.S. power grid industry.
RockFlow’s research team believes investors should focus on three levels: the high-margin software automation layer represented by GEV, the highly certain equipment manufacturing layer centered around Eaton and Schneider, and the infrastructure dividend harvesters led by PWR.
AI Demand Shock and America’s Power Grid “Aging Disease”
Over the past few decades, Americans have almost forgotten what “power shortage” means. In the early 21st century, thanks to the widespread adoption of LED lighting and the mandatory implementation of EPA’s “Energy Star” certification, despite population growth, energy consumption surprisingly stabilized.
But this stagnation was completely broken in 2025. With exponential growth in large-scale data centers and AI applications, energy demand has experienced an almost vertical inflection point:
Doubling consumption: By 2026, global data center electricity use is expected to reach 1,000-1,050 TWh, more than double the 2022 level.
City-scale demand: By the end of 2026, the power demand of a single data center park will surpass 2 GW—equivalent to the power load of a medium-sized city.
Structural share: In 2023, data centers accounted for only 4.4% of U.S. electricity consumption; by 2028, this is expected to soar to 12%.
Beyond AI, the return of manufacturing and societal electrification (EVs, heat pumps, etc.) are also driving up loads simultaneously. The power industry is shifting from a “zero-growth” dull sector to a new phase of rapid expansion.
In stark contrast, the U.S. power grid suffers from “aging disease.”
The current U.S. grid was not designed for the AI era. It’s more like a “patchwork monster” patched together with mid-20th-century technology.
The grid mainly consists of generation, transmission, and distribution. The current issues include:
Infrastructure aging: As of 2023, 70% of lines and transformers in the U.S. have been in service for over 25 years. Most of the grid was built in the 1960s and 1970s, approaching the 50-80 year design lifespan.
The “last straw” of climate change: In the first half of 2025, dozens of weather disasters costing billions of dollars occurred. High temperatures causing line sag and hurricanes leading to grid failures are becoming routine causes of regional blackouts.
On the other hand, we see a desperate “queue crisis”: nearly 2,600 GW of energy and storage capacity (almost twice the current U.S. grid size) are waiting to connect to the grid.
Delivery times for large transformers have extended to 2.5 years. In the 2026/27 delivery cycle alone, PJM interconnection clients will pay an extra $3.5 billion in capacity costs due to grid connection bottlenecks.
Redefining the Smart Grid
The so-called grid modernization isn’t just about adding more wires; it’s about transforming the traditional unidirectional analog network into a bidirectional, real-time, intelligent digital network.
Neural Endings: Smart Metering (AMI)
Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) is the first step toward modernization. It turns one-way power supply into two-way data exchange. The core is smart meters transmitting data back via RF or cellular networks.
By 2025, the global smart meter market is valued at about $30.9 billion, expected to approach $50 billion by 2030.
Immune System: Automation and Self-Healing Networks (FLISR)
This is a shift from passive to active infrastructure. Using software developed by companies like GE Vernova, upgraded power systems can:
Detect automatically: precisely locate fallen trees or transformer explosions.
Recover automatically: reroute power from neighboring feeders to restore service, achieving “self-healing.”
Energy Democratization: Virtual Power Plants (VPP)
VPP uses cloud software to aggregate residential solar, EV batteries, and other distributed energy resources. Consumers are no longer just buyers but “prosumers,” selling power back to the grid when under stress.
Although the market size is only a few hundred billion dollars, its strategic importance in peak shaving and valley filling is immense.
Who’s Sharing This Massive Cake?
Based on the current industry attributes and profit structure of the U.S. power grid, RockFlow’s research team divides beneficiaries into four tiers:
Software & Automation: The “Brain” of Intelligence
This segment has the highest profit margins and deepest moats.
GE Vernova (GEV): Coordinates the entire energy lifecycle via GridOS platform. As a spin-off from GE, it’s the undisputed leader in grid digitalization.
Siemens (SIEGY): Has a leading Spectrum Power system. Its latest Gridscale X platform sets the standard for distribution digitization.
Itron (ITRI): The king of smart metering. Its “edge intelligence” products can detect outages in real-time without central processing, acting as guardians at the distribution end.
Equipment Manufacturing & Power Electronics: Critical Foundations
Eaton (ETN): A giant in distribution equipment. Its product portfolio covers nearly all physical nodes of grid modernization—from circuit breakers to transformers.
ABB: Global leader in high-voltage products and automation. Its record backlog is mainly driven by grid modernization projects.
Schneider Electric (SBGSY): Focuses on smart grid tech and microgrid solutions, offering end-to-end energy management. Its EcoStruxure platform deeply integrates hardware and digital management, dominating data centers and microgrids.
Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC): Builders
Quanta Services (PWR): North America’s leader in transmission and distribution contracting. Its recent $72 billion deal with AEP exemplifies the grid upgrade trend.
MasTec (MTZ): Focused on renewable energy interconnection. Its $17 billion backlog indicates explosive growth in the next two years.
Regulated Utilities: The “Guardians” of the Old Guard
NextEra Energy (NEE): America’s largest clean energy company, focusing on wind and solar, with extensive renewable assets and stable revenue through long-term PPAs.
Duke Energy (DUK): Owns extensive grid infrastructure across multiple data center clusters. Its modernization efforts enable efficient, low-loss power delivery. DUK is also investing in clean energy generation to meet data centers’ green power needs.
Conclusion: The “Revaluation” of Power Assets Has Begun
By 2026, the power grid will no longer be the forgotten “public utility,” but a core asset related to national security and AI victory.
RockFlow’s research team believes that software-driven automation companies (GEV, ITRI) will command the highest premiums; equipment manufacturers (ETN, ABB) will have the most visible order visibility; and EPC giants (PWR) will be the direct harvesters of infrastructure dividends.
In the next five years, U.S. stocks’ alpha will no longer only exist in code but also in the roaring sound of every smart transformer.
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Nasdaq stalls, but power stocks keep hitting new highs? The second half of AI, an in-depth analysis of the 2026 U.S. stock grid modernization investment landscape
The End of Computing Power: This Time, It’s Electricity
By 2026, the U.S. stock market is showing an extreme divide: the Nasdaq has failed to reach a new high for four consecutive months, with AI leaders’ valuations suffering in the wait for a new round of rate cuts; meanwhile, industrial, energy, and utility stocks are breaking through amid the roar of the “Old World.”
This divide sends a clear signal: AI competition has shifted from algorithm battles to a fight over physical resources. If 2024 is the “Year of Chips,” then 2026 is the “Year of Power Grid Modernization.”
Currently, the revaluation of power assets is unstoppable. In 2023-2024, the market is buying “brains” (chips), and in 2025-2026, capital is flowing into the “heart and vessels” (electricity and power grids).
This article will provide investors with a comprehensive review of the structural changes, competitive landscape, and opportunities within the U.S. power grid industry.
RockFlow’s research team believes investors should focus on three levels: the high-margin software automation layer represented by GEV, the highly certain equipment manufacturing layer centered around Eaton and Schneider, and the infrastructure dividend harvesters led by PWR.
Over the past few decades, Americans have almost forgotten what “power shortage” means. In the early 21st century, thanks to the widespread adoption of LED lighting and the mandatory implementation of EPA’s “Energy Star” certification, despite population growth, energy consumption surprisingly stabilized.
But this stagnation was completely broken in 2025. With exponential growth in large-scale data centers and AI applications, energy demand has experienced an almost vertical inflection point:
Beyond AI, the return of manufacturing and societal electrification (EVs, heat pumps, etc.) are also driving up loads simultaneously. The power industry is shifting from a “zero-growth” dull sector to a new phase of rapid expansion.
In stark contrast, the U.S. power grid suffers from “aging disease.”
The current U.S. grid was not designed for the AI era. It’s more like a “patchwork monster” patched together with mid-20th-century technology.
The grid mainly consists of generation, transmission, and distribution. The current issues include:
On the other hand, we see a desperate “queue crisis”: nearly 2,600 GW of energy and storage capacity (almost twice the current U.S. grid size) are waiting to connect to the grid.
Delivery times for large transformers have extended to 2.5 years. In the 2026/27 delivery cycle alone, PJM interconnection clients will pay an extra $3.5 billion in capacity costs due to grid connection bottlenecks.
The so-called grid modernization isn’t just about adding more wires; it’s about transforming the traditional unidirectional analog network into a bidirectional, real-time, intelligent digital network.
Neural Endings: Smart Metering (AMI)
Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) is the first step toward modernization. It turns one-way power supply into two-way data exchange. The core is smart meters transmitting data back via RF or cellular networks.
By 2025, the global smart meter market is valued at about $30.9 billion, expected to approach $50 billion by 2030.
Immune System: Automation and Self-Healing Networks (FLISR)
This is a shift from passive to active infrastructure. Using software developed by companies like GE Vernova, upgraded power systems can:
Energy Democratization: Virtual Power Plants (VPP)
VPP uses cloud software to aggregate residential solar, EV batteries, and other distributed energy resources. Consumers are no longer just buyers but “prosumers,” selling power back to the grid when under stress.
Although the market size is only a few hundred billion dollars, its strategic importance in peak shaving and valley filling is immense.
Based on the current industry attributes and profit structure of the U.S. power grid, RockFlow’s research team divides beneficiaries into four tiers:
Software & Automation: The “Brain” of Intelligence
This segment has the highest profit margins and deepest moats.
Equipment Manufacturing & Power Electronics: Critical Foundations
Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC): Builders
Regulated Utilities: The “Guardians” of the Old Guard
Conclusion: The “Revaluation” of Power Assets Has Begun
By 2026, the power grid will no longer be the forgotten “public utility,” but a core asset related to national security and AI victory.
RockFlow’s research team believes that software-driven automation companies (GEV, ITRI) will command the highest premiums; equipment manufacturers (ETN, ABB) will have the most visible order visibility; and EPC giants (PWR) will be the direct harvesters of infrastructure dividends.
In the next five years, U.S. stocks’ alpha will no longer only exist in code but also in the roaring sound of every smart transformer.