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Some US investors are turning to infrastructure amid the AI sell-off

Wall Street's love for artificial intelligence giants is cooling, and some investors are shifting their focus to infrastructure companies, which they believe will benefit from AI spending. This shift has spawned a number of new products. Shares of AI tech giants like Alphabet and Amazon have seen sharp drops after huge gains over the past few years. Investors are worried that returns on their "massive investments" in developing smarter AI system won't justify these lofty valuations. Asset managers say that investors should focus on companies receiving the checks, such as chipmakers, data centers, and utility firms, which provide the nuts and bolts of the AI revolution. Asset managers say that many of these stocks have seen double-digit growth this year. These include Caterpillar and Lumentum, a provider of optical communications, and Western Digital, a data storage company. The S&P 500 returned 0.52%, and the Roundhill Magical 7 ETF has dropped 7.3%.

NEW INFRASTRUCTURE AI PRODUCTS

This performance has prompted exchange-traded funds providers like BlackRock, VistaShares, and Impax Asset Management, to revamp their offerings and launch brand new products. Some are betting on an increasingly diverse and niche list of AI infrastructure investments.

"Our goal is to have our portfolio ring with cash every time Meta or Amazon invests into a datacenter," said Adam Patti. VistaShares launched its Artificial Intelligence Supercycle Fund in December 2024. It gained 58.4% by 2025, and 16.87% so far this year.

The ETF does include the AI giant Nvidia. However, its weighting is only half of that of South Korea’s SK Hynix whose chips are used by data centers. Other top holdings of the ETF include Micron and Intel.

Patti said, "When Meta says it will spend $100 billion on these companies, that money is going to them."

BlackRock's iShares A.I. Innovation and Tech Active ETF has now invested 74% of its $8.8 Billion?in assets in AI infrastructure, from chipmakers who?train AI to power companies. This is up from 59% one year ago. This is "where the revenue is right now", said Jay Jacobs. BlackRock's U.S. director of equity ETFs.

The fund has seen its returns increase to 3.2% in this year due to the positive returns on investments like Fabrinet, Monolithic Power Systems and others. VettaFi data shows that the BlackRock fund received $7.9 billion of new capital in the past 12 months.

This month, two infrastructure ETFs were launched. Impax Asset Management transformed one of its mutual fund into the Impax Global Infrastructure ETF. Harrison Street Asset Management, a manager of alternatives, launched an AI related ETF focused on electrification.

Robert Becker is the chief investment strategist of Harrison Street. He said that securing reliable power supplies was one of the major obstacles to moving forward in building all the AI data centers required. Ed Farrington said that infrastructure is a great way to diversify equity portfolios and what was for many years a highly concentrated business.

"STEALTH AI PLAYS" The Magnificent Seven Hyperscalers may have delivered consistently high revenues, but investors claim that this is largely due to their core business, which funds AI capital expenditures. This year, the spending on AI will amount to around $630 billion.

Some investors are searching for underpriced infrastructure companies that will benefit from the investment.

Ari Sass is the president and portfolio manager at M.D. Sass Investor Services said that companies which he previously thought were "stealth AI plays" are now coming into the spotlight.

Quanta Services (which provides construction and maintenance for?electric utilities) has seen a 24.17% increase in the first half of this year.

Tortoise AI Infrastructure ETF, launched in October, invests in companies such as Wisconsin's Modine Manufacturing, which began manufacturing radiators for farm machinery and has since shifted to data center cooling systems. The company's shares have risen 19.25% this year.

Some are warning investors to be cautious as they pile more money into the AI infrastructure business. They point out that fiber optic companies in the 1990s collapsed due to over-investment to support Internet firms.

Michael Reynolds, Glenmede's vice president of investment strategies, said: "It appears that the companies spending the most on AI are the ones with the strongest financial standing, but valuations have gotten a little high for any product or service with AI exposure." Everyone needs to be cautious.

(source: Reuters)