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Vertiv Stock Has Wall Street Raising Targets Again. The AI Data Center Trade Is Getting Harder to Ignore
26 April 2026
2 mins read

Vertiv Stock Has Wall Street Raising Targets Again. The AI Data Center Trade Is Getting Harder to Ignore

New York, April 25, 2026, 18:03 (EDT)

  • Vertiv shares finished Friday in positive territory, with JPMorgan joining the list of firms raising their price target.
  • After topping first-quarter expectations and boosting its 2026 forecast, the company is riding strong demand for artificial intelligence data centers.
  • Here’s the risk: expectations are sky-high, but Vertiv’s second-quarter guidance didn’t satisfy everyone.

Vertiv Holdings Co. shares nudged up Friday, closing at $323.46, a gain of roughly 0.5%. The stock reached $331.64 at its intraday peak. JPMorgan’s Stephen Tusa bumped his price target to $350 from $305 while sticking with an Overweight rating, following a string of upbeat analyst moves since Vertiv boosted its 2026 outlook.

Vertiv stands out as one of the clearer stock-market plays on the AI data center boom. The company’s gear powers and cools the servers behind big AI models—a need that’s showing up in everything from earnings to analyst notes and order updates.

Vertiv reported a 30% jump in first-quarter net sales, reaching $2.65 billion, with 23% organic growth—stripping out impacts from acquisitions and currency. The company boosted its full-year 2026 sales outlook to a range of $13.5 billion to $14.0 billion, and now targets adjusted diluted earnings—excluding certain items—between $6.30 and $6.40 per share.

CEO Giordano Albertazzi noted that as data-center builds get denser and more complicated, customers are prioritizing “optimized design, deployment speed, and operational efficiency.” Over on the financial side, Executive Chairman Dave Cote pointed to Vertiv’s inclusion in the S&P 500 back in March, crediting the move to improved financials and a stronger standing in the market. Vertiv Investors

Vertiv shares slipped following the earnings release, despite numbers topping expectations. That suggests plenty of optimism was baked in beforehand. According to , Citi Research highlighted that the stock faced a high hurdle with investors and flagged worries about cooling organic growth in the Americas—even with analysts calling the higher guidance reasonable.

Several firms wasted no time responding to the news. TD Cowen upped its price target to $347, previously $269, sticking with its Buy call. The firm pointed to management’s Americas pipeline commentary, noting it matched up with strong U.S. data-center leasing indicated by recent checks. Oppenheimer bumped its target to $330 from $320, suggesting there’s still room for guidance to move higher as the year progresses.

Vertiv’s outlook for the second quarter landed in a gray zone. The company projected net sales between $3.25 billion and $3.45 billion, with adjusted diluted EPS coming in at $1.37 to $1.43. While the full-year guidance looked more robust, that conservative quarterly range offered some answers for why shares didn’t just surge after earnings hit.

Vertiv’s latest 10-Q offered up the same broad narrative, only with added specifics: net sales climbed to $2.65 billion, up from $2.04 billion, and operating profit increased to $440.1 million compared to $290.7 million. The report also flagged a notable jump in deferred revenue—$2.46 billion as of March 31, from $1.81 billion at year-end—a backlog that points to booked work waiting to hit the top line.

Still, the deal comes with its share of headaches. Vertiv flagged risks from tariffs, tit-for-tat trade actions, and geopolitical shifts, all of which could disrupt supply chains or push up input, fuel, and shipping costs. Customer demand, currency swings, and capital markets aren’t immune, either. The company is also planning to pour between $425 million and $525 million into capital expenditures in 2026 as it ramps up capacity—a hefty outlay just to keep up.

The competitive landscape is intensifying. Eaton is moving deeper into data-center thermal gear, highlighted by its planned $9.5 billion takeover of Boyd Thermal. Schneider Electric, too, has flagged data-center demand as a key growth driver. Both companies operate alongside Vertiv in the power and cooling chain—though their product lineups aren’t identical.

Right now, execution is what investors are rewarding. Vertiv shares have soared nearly 100% year-to-date, according to MarketScreener figures, after a flurry of price target hikes hit on April 23 and April 24 from the likes of JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, TD Cowen, Citi, RBC and others. But with the stock at these levels, there’s little cushion if AI data-center spending falters, projects get delayed, or if margins don’t keep pace with rising sales.

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