Today: 11 July 2026
Vertiv Climbs 6% After Tumultuous 18% Swing; 50x Earnings Level In Sight
11 July 2026
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Vertiv Climbs 6% After Tumultuous 18% Swing; 50x Earnings Level In Sight

New York, July 11, 2026, 17:09 (EDT)

Vertiv Holdings Co finished the week up 6.1% at $318.86, even as shares dropped 1.6% on Friday. The S&P 500 rose 1.2% for the week. VRT traded between a low of $287.11 on Tuesday and a high of $338.88 on Thursday, an 18.0% swing from low to high with Wall Street closed for the weekend.

The swing matters for Vertiv, as investors now seem to see it less like a regular equipment company and more as a rare way to play the artificial-intelligence data center boom. The stock closed Friday at about 50.2 times the midpoint of management’s 2026 adjusted EPS forecast. Adjusted EPS is profit per share after stripping out one-off items. Vertiv is guiding for 29%-31% organic sales growth, excluding acquisitions and currency effects. First-quarter sales climbed 30% to $2.65 billion, with adjusted operating margin reaching 20.8%. CEO Giordano Albertazzi said customers want “optimized design, deployment speed, and operational efficiency.” Vertiv Investors

SecurityJuly 10 closeWeekly moveWeekly low-to-high spread
Vertiv Holdings Co $318.86up 6.1%18.0%
nVent Electric plc $160.72up 5.6%11.6%
Eaton Corporation plc $407.28up 2.2%8.3%
S&P 5007,575.39up 1.2%

Weekly changes track July 10 and July 2 close. The spread measures the percent gap between a stock’s highest and lowest price inside the week.

Vertiv’s broader swings show its shareholders are responding more to each new headline on AI capital spending compared to the electrical-equipment sector as a whole. The best example was Thursday, when Meta Platforms Inc announced it would build its own AI chip. That news pushed up chip-equipment and infrastructure stocks, including Vertiv, before Vertiv shares pulled back some on Friday.

nVent is tracking closest for growth. The company bumped up its 2026 adjusted EPS target to $4.45-$4.55 and now expects organic sales growth in the 21%-23% range after reporting a first-quarter backlog at $2.6 billion. Backlog refers to orders on the books that haven’t shipped yet. CEO Beth Wozniak said they saw “growth across all verticals, with infrastructure leading.”

Eaton is aiming for 9%-11% organic growth and adjusted earnings per share between $13.05 and $13.50 for the year. The company’s data-center business sits within a broader power management and aerospace operation, which makes its business mix more diverse and helps account for its lower valuation. Eaton’s growth targets are slower in the near term.

Company2026 adjusted EPS guidance midpointJuly 10 price ÷ guided EPS2026 organic sales-growth guide
Vertiv$6.3550.2 times29%-31%
nVent$4.5035.7 times21%-23%
Eaton$13.2830.7 times9%-11%

Price divided by guided EPS uses each company’s current forecast and isn’t based on consensus. It doesn’t factor in cash, debt or accounting differences.

The premium isn’t all upside. Vertiv notes that customers can cut or postpone some backlog orders. Long sales cycles, fixed-price deals, and tech spending swings can make it harder to turn orders into revenue. Trading at about 50 times its guided adjusted earnings, even a small delay or a miss on margins could hit Vertiv’s valuation harder than its peers.

Investors will see the June consumer-price index Tuesday, July 14, at 8:30 a.m. EDT, right before Vertiv reports. Big banks kick off earnings season and Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh is also set for a Congressional appearance. “A high-bar quarter with a narrow margin of error,” said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management. Hotter inflation or a hawkish Fed tone could hit multiples for fast-growers first. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Vertiv still has to keep its growth ahead of its valuation, or the bet doesn’t work. Shares rose 6% last week, a sign investors think the gap holds. But an 18% trading range shows markets aren’t pricing in much certainty yet.

Roman Perkowski is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Cracow University of Economics, he previously worked in investment research and corporate finance. His coverage helps readers understand the key forces driving global financial markets and emerging industries.

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