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GRID has tripled XLU's year-to-date return by owning equipment makers and contractors instead of slow-moving regulated utilities, gaining 23% compared to XLU's 7%.

GE Vernova booked $2.4 billion in data center equipment orders in Q1 2026 alone, while Quanta Services hit a record $48 billion backlog.

GRID's 0.56% expense ratio and roughly 1% dividend yield make it a poor full swap for income-focused XLU investors.

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If you own the Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEARCA:XLU) as your AI power play, the logic is straightforward: data centers need electricity, regulated utilities sell electricity, so XLU should capture the demand wave. The fund holds NextEra Energy at 13.59%, Southern Company at 7.47%, and Duke Energy at 7.15%, charges an expense ratio of roughly 0.08%, and pays a respectable dividend. It is doing its job. The problem is that XLU is up 7.03% year-to-date, while a more direct grid play has roughly tripled that return. That fund is the First Trust NASDAQ Clean Edge Smart Grid Infrastructure Index Fund (NASDAQ:GRID).

Regulated utilities recover capital through rate cases. When a hyperscaler signs a load deal, the utility files for cost recovery, regulators rule, and the earnings show up over a 10 to 30-year rate base. That is a real but slow tailwind. The Bureau of Economic Analysis shows the utilities sector growing value added at just 1.5% in Q4 2025, slower than information services at 2.5%. Rate sensitivity does not help either: an Alpha Vantage sentiment scan flagged a somewhat bearish reading on XLU in early February 2026, tied to bond-yield concerns, with later coverage warning that much of the AI growth story "might already be priced in."

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This fund tracks equipment makers, electrical contractors, and transmission specialists rather than rate-based utility operators. According to the March 2026 NPORT filing, the top four positions are Eaton at 8.28%, Johnson Controls at 7.90%, National Grid at 7.86%, and Schneider Electric at 7.26%. The whole thesis here flows through corporate earnings and equipment demand, not through regulatory rate cases and approved returns on equity.

GE Vernova (NYSE:GEV) reported Q1 2026 revenue of $9.30 billion, up 15.8% year over year, with orders climbing 71% organically to $18.30 billion. Its Electrification segment booked $2.4 billion in data center equipment orders in Q1 alone, more than all of 2025 combined. CEO Scott Strazik framed it directly: "Demand is accelerating for our Power and Electrification solutions from a diverse set of customers, with our backlog growing by more than $13 billion quarter-over-quarter." GEV is up 58.68% year-to-date.

Quanta Services (NYSE:PWR), a 4.24% GRID position, posted Q1 adjusted EPS of $2.68, beating the $2.03 estimate, on revenue of $7.87 billion, up 26.3%. Backlog hit a record $48.47 billion. The stock is up 66.47% year to date. CEO Duke Austin identified a $2.4 trillion total addressable market through 2030 across utility, generation, and large-load customers.

Through June 23, this fund has returned 23.41% year to date, compared with the utilities ETF's 7.03%. Over one year, the first fund is up 42.41% versus 14.08% for the utilities fund, and over five years, the totals are 115.77% against 65.48%. That performance gap really reflects where money is flowing right now: equipment, engineering and construction, and transmission gear, rather than regulated rate base returns.

There are real tradeoffs here, though. The expense ratio comes in at 0.56%, compared with 0.08% for the utilities fund, representing roughly a 48-basis-point fee difference. The trailing dividend yield is around 0.80%, with a price-to-earnings ratio of 28, while the utilities fund offers a yield in the mid-2 % range. The first fund is also more cyclical, since it holds industrial equipment makers and contractors that tend to get marked down whenever capital spending pauses. A couple of its larger components trade on forward earnings multiples near 40 and 53, respectively, both well above typical utility valuations. For a retiree who depends on the utilities fund for income, making a full swap would mean giving up the yield profile that originally justified the position.

For investors holding XLU specifically as an AI power proxy in a tax-advantaged account, a partial reallocation to GRID captures the equipment-cycle leg of the same trend at a lower-yield, higher-beta cost. In a taxable account, embedded gains in XLU after its 144.33% ten-year run argue for trimming rather than full liquidation. For investors who own XLU primarily for defensive yield, the swap case applies only to the AI-thematic slice, not the full position.

A sustained drop in GEV order intake, a stall in PWR's backlog growth, or a regulatory shift that accelerates utility rate-base recovery would narrow the gap. So would a rate-cut cycle that re-rates XLU's bond proxy holdings. Until any of that shows up in filings, the equipment, EPC, and transmission layer is collecting the AI power dollars first, and GRID is the cleanest way to own it.

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