Here's Why Data Center Equipment Company Vertiv's Stock Soared Today
Nvidia partner Vertiv's (NYSE: VRT) stock rose by as much as 21% in early morning trading as the company's first-quarter earnings report confirmed that there's nothing wrong with demand for data center equipment. The stock was up 10.5% around 12:30 p.m. ET. The report contained plenty of positives, and Vertiv continues to offer investors an excellent way to get exposure to AI-led demand for data center capacity.The two major pluses from the earnings report this morning were the hike in full-year sales guidance and the return to impressive yearly order growth. Starting with order growth, investors were disappointed in February when management reported that fourth-quarter orders were flat compared to the same quarter of the previous year. Even though its trailing-12-month orders were up 30% in the fourth quarter, the weak order performance in the quarter raised fears of deterioration in 2025.Fortunately, those fears were dispelled by the 13% growth in orders in the first quarter compared to the same period of 2024. Moreover, trailing-12-month orders were up 20%, and the book-to-bill ratio (a key indicator of growth) was 1.4 in the quarter.Continue reading

Nvidia partner Vertiv's (NYSE: VRT) stock rose by as much as 21% in early morning trading as the company's first-quarter earnings report confirmed that there's nothing wrong with demand for data center equipment. The stock was up 10.5% around 12:30 p.m. ET. The report contained plenty of positives, and Vertiv continues to offer investors an excellent way to get exposure to AI-led demand for data center capacity.
The two major pluses from the earnings report this morning were the hike in full-year sales guidance and the return to impressive yearly order growth. Starting with order growth, investors were disappointed in February when management reported that fourth-quarter orders were flat compared to the same quarter of the previous year. Even though its trailing-12-month orders were up 30% in the fourth quarter, the weak order performance in the quarter raised fears of deterioration in 2025.
Fortunately, those fears were dispelled by the 13% growth in orders in the first quarter compared to the same period of 2024. Moreover, trailing-12-month orders were up 20%, and the book-to-bill ratio (a key indicator of growth) was 1.4 in the quarter.