Go Pro

3 Energy Stocks Racing to Fix AI's Power Problem

Key Points

  • Geothermal energy is emerging as a faster, cheaper solution to the AI sector's power demands than nuclear, solar or batteries, yet remains largely overlooked by investors.
  • Fervo Energy has secured major contracts with Google tied to its Cape Station project, while Ormat Technologies already shows strong revenue and earnings growth from hyperscaler demand.
  • Baker Hughes offers indirect geothermal exposure by supplying drilling equipment, and investors should watch how quickly contracts convert into reported revenue for these companies.
  • MarketBeat previews top five stocks to own in August.

The AI buildout has a power problem, and most investors are still looking in the wrong place for the fix. Nuclear gets the headlines. Solar and batteries get the subsidies. But the fastest, cheapest new power source hitting the grid right now is one most portfolios don't own at all: geothermal.

That gap is exactly why it matters. Dylan Jovine, CEO of Behind the Markets, argues that every major tech cycle has been driven by an energy breakthrough, and this one is no different. He's laid out the full case in his dedicated geothermal energy report, and the short version is that data center demand is outpacing the grid, with the companies solving that bottleneck first positioned to capture outsized value before Wall Street catches up.

Why the AI Race Is Really an Energy Race

Hyperscalers need power now, not in a decade. Nuclear plants can cost upward of $14 billion and take years to permit, which puts them years away from meeting today's data center load. Geothermal energy projects, by contrast, can come online for a fraction of that cost and in a fraction of the time.

Jovine frames the stakes in geopolitical terms, too. China has built a commanding lead in battery and clean energy manufacturing, while the United States still holds the edge in oil and gas infrastructure built up over more than a century. Geothermal, in his view, is one of the few energy categories still up for grabs, which is exactly why the companies moving fastest right now matter more than the headlines suggest.

That math is why Alphabet NASDAQ: GOOGL, NVIDIA NASDAQ: NVDA and Berkshire Hathaway NYSE: BRK.B have been signing multibillion-dollar geothermal partnerships with little public attention. The technology draws on heat from the earth's core, a resource that doesn't fluctuate with commodity prices and produces a cleaner emissions profile than coal or gas. It just hasn't had its moment in the headlines yet.

Fervo Energy Locks in Billions Before It Earns a Dime

Fervo Energy Today

Fervo Energy Company stock logo
FRVOFRVO 90-day performance
Fervo Energy
$25.15 -0.71 (-2.75%)
As of 12:39 PM Eastern
52-Week Range
$23.10
$42.65
Price Target
$46.25

Fervo Energy NASDAQ: FRVO went public earlier this year and, like many fresh IPOs, has spent recent months working through post-listing volatility as early lockup-related selling pressure works its way out of the stock. That volatility says little about the underlying business.

What stands out is the customer list. Fervo has already secured contracts with Google and other major technology players tied to its Cape Station project in Utah, with additional plants expected to come online through 2026 and 2027. Jovine expects those contracts to begin flowing through the income statement in the back half of 2026, which he argues could force a re-rating as the stock moves from a story to one backed by reported earnings. He puts the window for that shift at 12 to 18 months, the timeline he sees as most worth tracking.

Ormat Technologies Shows What Fervo Could Become

Ormat Technologies Today

Ormat Technologies, Inc. stock logo
ORAORA 90-day performance
Ormat Technologies
$108.98 +2.17 (+2.03%)
As of 12:58 PM Eastern
This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more.
52-Week Range
$84.13
$146.39
Dividend Yield
0.44%
P/E Ratio
52.91
Price Target
$131.67

Ormat Technologies NYSE: ORA has been building geothermal plants for years, and its results offer a preview of where a maturing operator can land. The company has been growing its top line by roughly 50% and its bottom line by about 30%, evidence that hyperscaler demand for geothermal power is translating into real financial performance, not just headlines.

Shares have pulled back from their 2026 highs, which could make for a more attractive entry for investors who missed the initial run.

Jovine sees Ormat's bigger, more established hyperscaler contracts as a preview of where Fervo could land in a few years, and views scale and a multi-decade track record as Ormat's real edge when hyperscalers are choosing long-term power partners.

Baker Hughes Sells the Equipment Behind the Buildout

Baker Hughes Today

Baker Hughes Company stock logo
BKRBKR 90-day performance
Baker Hughes
$57.38 -0.28 (-0.48%)
As of 12:58 PM Eastern
This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more.
52-Week Range
$38.37
$70.41
Dividend Yield
1.60%
P/E Ratio
18.33
Price Target
$70.09

Not every way to invest in geothermal means picking the operator. Baker Hughes NASDAQ: BKR supplies the drilling technology and equipment that companies like Fervo rely on to build new plants, giving it exposure to the entire sector's growth rather than any single project's execution risk.

Shares pulled back sharply this year alongside a broader rotation out of momentum sectors, and Jovine argues the stock now trades at a discount to its underlying cash flow. He frames it as a classic value setup, a picks-and-shovels position in a growing niche trading below what the opportunity is worth.

What Investors Should Watch Next

Geothermal doesn't need to replace nuclear or solar to matter. It just needs to keep winning contracts every time a hyperscaler needs power fast and cheap. The risk is execution: drilling projects can run into delays, and newer entrants like Fervo still carry more uncertainty than established names like Ormat. It's also worth remembering this isn't a winner-take-all race. Demand for power is so large right now that multiple energy sources, from geothermal to natural gas to solar, are all finding buyers at once.

The upside is that almost nobody is pricing this in yet. Stay focused on how quickly these contracts convert into reported revenue, because that's what will ultimately move these stocks.

Should You Invest $1,000 in Fervo Energy Right Now?

Before you consider Fervo Energy, you'll want to hear this.

MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis. MarketBeat has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and Fervo Energy wasn't on the list.

While Fervo Energy currently has a Moderate Buy rating among analysts, top-rated analysts believe these five stocks are better buys.

View The Five Stocks Here

Options Trading Made Easy - Download Now Cover

Learn the basics of options trading and how to use them to boost returns and manage risk with this free report from MarketBeat. Click the link below to get your free copy.

Get This Free Report
Bridget Bennett
About The Author

Bridget Bennett

Digital Media Producer

Like this article? Share it with a colleague.

Companies Mentioned in This Article

CompanyMarketRank™Current PricePrice ChangeDividend YieldP/E RatioConsensus RatingConsensus Price Target
Fervo Energy (FRVO)N/A$25.13-2.8%N/AN/AModerate Buy$46.25
Ormat Technologies (ORA)
3.4285 of 5 stars
$109.002.0%0.44%52.91Moderate Buy$131.67
Baker Hughes (BKR)
4.9737 of 5 stars
$57.37-0.5%1.60%18.33Moderate Buy$70.09
Compare These Stocks  Add These Stocks to My Watchlist 

Featured Articles and Offers

Recent Videos

Stock Lists

All Stock Lists

Investing Tools

Calendars and Tools

Search Headlines