This Under-the-Radar Industrial Stock is Actually A Stealth Artificial Intelligence (AI) Play

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There has been a lot of discussion on Wall Street about the growth prospects of energy-related stocks, especially as they relate to the surging demand from AI data centers. According to Goldman Sachs, U.S. electricity demand is set to increase from about flat over the past decade to a 2.4% annualized rate through 2030, in large part thanks to AI data centers.

That's actually a huge increase in power demand, which is sparking a debate among investors as to whether nuclear energy or natural gas will help as a baseload fuel to fill the void as renewable power sources ramp.

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But no matter whether nuclear, natural gas, or even hydrogen power wins out, this industrial equipment stock is primed to benefit.

Chart Industries supplies the goods

Chart Industries (NYSE: GTLS) makes a variety of equipment that cools, heats, or purifies most any type of molecule. Its equipment includes cryogenic tanks, heat exchangers, industrial fans, circulators, turbines, and much more.

Already a leader in the traditional energy and liquefied natural gas (LNG) equipment markets, Chart greatly expanded its portfolio with the 2022 acquisition of Howden.

The good news is that Chart's expanding portfolio and the addition of Howden enabled it to expand into virtually any end-market that produces energy. This includes liquefied natural gas, the growing hydrogen market, and yes, nuclear power, among others. Even in the field of renewables, the Howden acquisition has given Chart exposure to clean mining applications, and therefore exposure to the lithium and copper markets, which are used in solar and electrification.

Recent earnings reveal big wins across the space

Chart just reported third quarter earnings that missed expectations, but that was largely due to the timing of large, high-margin projects. Meanwhile, incoming orders grew and margins expanded. With the stock trading at a bargain price, investors were able to look past the headline "miss" and shares shot up in the aftermath.

Investors may have also been encouraged in the company's early 2025 guidance, which anticipates about 12% revenue growth and a whopping 39% earnings-per-share growth over the company's 2024 outlook. That double-digit growth seems to indicate the delayed 2024 orders will be fulfilled next year.

Many energy sources come back to Chart

During the earnings call, management announced several orders from nuclear customers, including EDF of France. CEO Jill Evanko noted the company counts the, "new leader in the space" as a customer for industrial fans, while Chart also serves newer small modular reactor (SMR) companies with gas circulators, fans, turbines and air coolers.