Analysts update GE Vernova stock price target after investor meeting

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When GE Vernova (GEV) says it's investing in the future, it's not playing around.

The words "Invested in the Future" greet visitors to the recently formed global energy company's website, and that slogan includes providing electricity for the power-hungry artificial-intelligence sector.

Related: AI's surge is sparking demand for an unexpected GE Vernova product

GE Vernova, which held an investor update on Dec. 10, began trading on April 2 and reported its first earnings as a stand-alone company a short time later.

The name is a portmanteau of “verde,” the Spanish word for "green," and “nova,” from the Latin “novus” meaning “new."

The company came into being after the venerable industrial group General Electric split into three publicly traded companies: GE HealthCare, GE Aerospace and GE Vernova, which would focus on electrification and carbonization.

Electrification is a key factor in developing AI.

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The U.S. Department of Energy said in a July study that connection requests for hyperscale facilities of 300 to 1000 megawatts or larger with lead times of one to three years are stretching the capacity of local grids to deliver and supply power. (The hyperscalers, including Amazon and Google, are the major providers of cloud-computing infrastructure and services.)

"The scale of the potential growth of both electricity and the information technology sectors due to AI is extraordinary and represents the leading edge of projected electricity demand growth," the report said.

GE Vernova CEO: Firm just scratching the surface

Earlier this year, Goldman Sachs Research estimated that demand for data-center power will more than double (up 160%) by 2030 as efficiency gains in electricity use slow and the AI revolution gathers steam.

A query using the AI chatbot ChatGPT needs nearly 10 times as much electricity to process as a Google search, the research firm said. “[In] that difference lies a coming sea change in how the US, Europe and the world at large will consume power — and how much that will cost.”

Related: Why the S&P 500 is getting 2 new members this week

GE Vernova CEO Scott Strazik told Bloomberg that his outfit has signed multiple contracts to sell natural gas turbines for data centers.

He said that big tech companies are reserving turbines for their planned 5-gigawatt data-center campuses. The goal is to get them up and running as early as 2028, he added.

In the past 30 days alone, GE Vernova has signed 9 gigawatts of reservations for gas turbines from customers including data-center developers, and “that’s just scratching the surface to what’s coming,” Strazik said,