The rapid rise of the data center industry in the USA reflects a fundamental shift in the understanding of economic infrastructure. While the past three years have marked a significant increase in data center construction, this trend indicates less a cyclical economic recovery and more a structural reevaluation: AI infrastructure is replacing traditional office space as the primary growth driver.



This shift also redefines regional prosperity geographically. No longer are land availability and traffic conditions the main factors determining a location’s attractiveness, but measurable factors such as available electricity, network connections, cooling capacities, and fiber optic infrastructure – all parameters that ultimately enable computing power. Regions are no longer competing for office buildings but for resources to provide computing capacity.

An interesting aspect of this transformation: While electricity was once considered merely an operating cost factor, it is increasingly treated as a primary raw material, and computing power as the main product. This underscores how fundamentally investment logic has changed.

The driving force behind this development lies in intensified competition for network resources. Looking ahead to 2026, current trends suggest continued momentum – and thus growing opportunities for U.S. power stocks, which are likely to benefit from this structural shift.
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