The AI boom is starting to reward proof over promise.

The stocks getting paid now are not just the companies talking about artificial intelligence. They are the ones showing where AI is turning into actual business: servers being ordered, data platforms being used, and power storage being contracted.

That is why Dell Technologies (DELL), Snowflake (SNOW), and Ford (F) suddenly belong in the same conversation. Viewed as an AI infrastructure stack, the divide is clear. Dell is the leader, while Snowflake and Ford are the tells.

Using Yahoo Finance’s AlphaSpace, an equal-weighted portfolio of all three stocks was created with an initial $10,000 allocation on March 30, the most recent major market low and the starting point for the latest leg of the AI trade.

The three-stock AI Stack Tracker is up roughly 86% since that date, with Dell now nearly 44% of the basket. On Friday, the tracker was up nearly 14%, powered by Dell’s surge.

A chart showing each of the three stocks individually tells a similar story.

Since March 30, Dell is up nearly 150%, while Snowflake is up over 60% and Ford is up a little less than that. While all three have easily outperformed the S&P 500 (^GSPC), up 20%, they also show how uneven the AI infrastructure trade has become.

Dell is the proof point.

The stock is having its second-best day ever after the company lifted its AI server revenue outlook to $60 billion for the fiscal year. Dell also booked $24.4 billion in AI orders in the quarter and ended with a $51.3 billion AI server backlog.

That is AI demand turning into hard dollars.

Citi’s Asiya Merchant put it simply: “Demand continues to exceed supply, supporting visibility into a sustained backlog through year-end.”

Snowflake is the data layer.

Its stock notched its best day ever on Thursday after the company reported quarterly revenue that rose 33% to $1.39 billion, product revenue that climbed 34%, and net revenue retention that improved to 126%.

The old fear was that AI models would make software platforms less necessary. Snowflake’s quarter argued the opposite: AI may be making usable enterprise data more valuable.

Evercore ISI called Snowflake “one of the few clear ‘AI winners’ in infrastructure software.”

Ford is the early-stage wrinkle — and the one that needs the biggest caveat.

Ford Energy is not even a standalone financial line item yet, so Ford is not yet an “AI stock.” It is a power-storage option inside a much larger auto company.

Still, Ford’s deal with EDF for up to 20 gigawatt-hours of battery energy storage systems over five years gave investors a concrete reason to care. UBS estimated the deal could equal roughly $720 million per year, or $3.6 billion over its life, under its pricing assumption.

On Yahoo Finance’s Opening Bid on Friday, Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth, said investors need to “start broadening out their approach to investing in the artificial intelligence revolution.”

That is the point of the move. The AI trade is no longer just about who builds the model. It is increasingly about who gets paid when everyone else builds around it.

Jared Blikre is the global markets and data editor for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X at @SPYJared or email him at jaredblikre@yahooinc.com.

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