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Data center cooling-related stocks drop after Nvidia CEO Huang's comments

Data center cooling-related stocks drop after Nvidia CEO Huang's comments

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang speaks during a Nvidia keynote address at CES 2026, an annual consumer electronics trade show, in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. January 5, 2026. REUTERS/Steve Marcus

07 Jan 2026 01:27AM (Updated: 12 Jan 2026 01:21PM)

Jan 6 : Shares ‌of U.S. heating, ventilation and air conditioning-related companies dropped on Tuesday after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said that the company's upcoming chips could significantly reduce cooling requirements in data centers.

Johnson Controls International dropped 7.5 per cent to $112.40 and Trane Technologies lost 5.3 per cent to $370.40. Both stocks hit multi-month lows and were among the biggest percentage decliners ‌on the S&P 500.

Speaking at the Consumer Electronics ‌Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday, Huang said Nvidia's next generation of chips is in "full production." The Vera Rubin platform, made up of six separate Nvidia chips, is expected to debut later this year.

When talking about the cooling requirements, Huang said that "no water chillers are necessary for data ‍centres."

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Barclays analysts said in a note led by Julian Mitchell that "given the primacy of Nvidia to the whole AI ecosystem, one should not take their comments lightly, although they seem rather dramatic at first glance."

The analysts said the ​companies that could be most ‌affected include Johnson Controls International, Trane Technologies and Carrier Global.

They estimate that data centers represent a low-double-digit percentage of total sales ​for Johnson Controls and data centers account for about 10 per cent and 5 per cent of ⁠sales for Trane Technologies and Carrier ‌Global, respectively.

Carrier Global shares fell 1.1 per cent.

The analysts also highlighted nVent Electric ​could benefit from these developments as it has "no presence in space cooling/chillers/air handling" but has a "decent position in data center liquid ‍cooling."

Data center power equipment maker Vertiv Holdings could also benefit due to ⁠its "strong historical position in precision air cooling" and "strong position in liquid cooling," the analysts ​said.

Vertiv shares were down ‌2.1 per cent, while nVent shares edged 0.5 per cent higher.

Source: Reuters
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