The market spent this week paying up for AI chips again — Nvidia rose about 8% and Broadcom about 11%. But the real shortage in artificial intelligence isn’t silicon. It’s the power to run the chips and the cooling to keep them alive. And three quiet suppliers are selling straight into that bottleneck.
Here’s the thing most investors miss: a GPU you can’t power or can’t cool doesn’t compute. As AI racks push past 100 kilowatts, the binding constraint has quietly shifted from the processor to the electrical and mechanical infrastructure around it. The front-page names get the attention. The companies delivering the power and pulling off the heat get the contracts.
This is the core idea behind our Silent Supplier framework: don’t buy the hype — buy what the hype is forced to buy. In this week’s MTC Investing Analyst report, that means three under-covered names wiring and cooling the data-center boom: Powell Industries (POWL), nVent Electric (NVT), and Comfort Systems USA (FIX).
Over the past year these “boring” infrastructure names quietly compounded harder than most of the chips — POWL and FIX roughly tripled, NVT more than doubled. Indexed to 100. Source: Yahoo Finance weekly closes.
The framework: buy the supply chain, not the story
Every hot name has a supply chain, and the unglamorous company three layers down often has better margins, less crowding, and more room to run. A name only earns a spot in our spotlight if it passes four tests: it sells into a hot buyer, it’s under-covered, it has real pricing power, and — most important — there’s a verifiable demand link. A named contract, a backlog, a customer disclosure. No link, no pick.
Pick 1 — Powell Industries (POWL): the switchgear
Powell makes heavy electrical switchgear and power-distribution equipment — the gear that safely moves large amounts of power into a facility. It’s the electrical spine of a data center, sitting well behind the GPU headlines.
Pick 2 — nVent Electric (NVT): the liquid cooling
nVent makes liquid-cooling systems, power-distribution units, cable management and electrical fastening for high-density AI racks and the grids feeding them. It’s the thermal-and-connection plumbing at the rack — genuinely under-covered next to Vertiv.
Pick 3 — Comfort Systems USA (FIX): the builder
Comfort Systems provides the mechanical, HVAC and process-cooling systems that physically build and cool the data center. A “boring HVAC contractor” that quietly became an AI-infrastructure compounder.
The AI story is real, but the crowd is stacked in the same handful of chips. The durable edge this week isn’t the name that ran 8% in five days — it’s the power-and-cooling layer every one of those chips depends on. Own it on your level, not on a green day. Patience is a position.
The market this week, in brief
The S&P 500 rose about 1.2% to ~7,575 and the Nasdaq gained ~1.7%, while the Dow slipped 0.5% after touching a record above 53,000 midweek. Leadership was narrow — Nvidia and Broadcom did most of the index’s work. The Fed held rates at 3.50–3.75% in June, and the July 8 minutes revealed a genuinely split committee. June payrolls came in soft at +57,000. The 10-year yield sits near 4.57%, gold is parked near record territory around $4,130, and oil rebounded 4%. The next big catalyst is June CPI on Tuesday, July 14.
We grade our own calls
Across 32 graded picks, the track record stands at a 65.6% win rate and +0.6% average return. Our best call is Adobe (+14.6%); our worst is Oracle (−23.7%), and we own that one plainly — the heavy-capex thesis cracked and the tape agreed. No track record, no authority. That’s the point of publishing the scorecard every week.
Frequently asked questions
What are “AI power” or “silent supplier” stocks?
They’re the under-covered companies that sell the physical infrastructure AI needs — electrical switchgear, liquid cooling, power distribution and mechanical build-out — rather than the chips themselves. POWL, NVT and FIX are three examples with verifiable data-center demand.
Why buy suppliers instead of Nvidia?
You don’t have to choose — but the chip trade is crowded, while the power-and-cooling layer is under-owned relative to the contracted demand flowing to it. Suppliers often carry booked backlogs that give clearer revenue visibility.
Is this financial advice?
No. This is educational analysis from Meta Trading Club. Every level is a framework for your own research, not a recommendation. Do your own due diligence.
MTC builds independent investors — structure, risk management, and execution over signals and hype. If you want mentorship that teaches you the framework instead of feeding you picks, see if the MTC Incubator is a fit.
Disclaimer — educational purposes only. This article is produced by Meta Trading Club for education and is not financial advice, not a recommendation to buy or sell any security, and not an offer or solicitation. Markets carry risk and you can lose money. Prices are approximate and as of the July 10, 2026 close; figures were sourced from public data (Yahoo Finance, company filings, BLS and Federal Reserve releases, and news reporting) and may contain errors or become stale. Past performance and any track record shown are not indicative of future results. Do your own research and consult a licensed professional before investing.







