Here’s the thing about the AI boom that nobody talks about at dinner parties: it’s not actually about the fancy algorithms or the neural networks or whatever. It’s about *plumbing*.
Seriously. While everyone’s obsessing over GPU stocks and which AI company will be the next trillion-dollar wonder, the real money is flowing into something way less sexy—the infrastructure that keeps data centers from literally melting down.
Let me break down what’s happening. AI data centers are basically massive computing clusters where thousands of processors work together. They’re connected by cables. For years, those cables were copper—cheap, reliable, fast enough. But here’s where it gets interesting: as these clusters get bigger and faster, copper hits a wall. Electrical signals degrade over distance, and heat becomes a nightmare. You need more power to push data through copper, which means more cooling, which means more problems.
Enter optical networking. Instead of electricity, you’re moving data with *light*. Faster. Way more efficient. Less power-hungry. It’s like upgrading from a crowded highway to a teleportation device.
A company called POET Technologies is sitting right in the middle of this shift. They design optical engines—basically the technology that makes this light-based data transfer work. Their stock is already up around 20% since February, and according to the analysts tracking this, it could be a multi-bagger. Why? Because Marvell Technology just dropped billions acquiring Celestial AI, a company whose tech was built on POET’s platform. That’s validation from the big boys.
But here’s the bigger picture: this is just one domino in a much longer chain.
The AI infrastructure boom has been a series of bottlenecks. First, it was compute power—hello, Nvidia. Then server buildout. Then cooling and electricity. Now it’s the networking layer inside data centers. And after that? Memory. Energy. Copper. All of it.
Speaking of copper—Eric Fry, one of the macro guys tracking this, thinks copper prices are heading to $8 per pound in 2026. We’re at $5.83 now. Why? Because to sustain AI expansion, we’d need to mine as much copper in the next 18 years as humanity has mined in the last 10,000 years combined. That’s not hyperbole. That’s just math. The supply-demand imbalance is *severe*.
The copper miners ETF (COPX) has more than doubled since early 2025. And Corning, the fiber-optic infrastructure company? Up 242% since it was recommended.
Here’s what matters for your portfolio: when AI systems hit a constraint—whether it’s networking hardware, energy, metals, or memory—the companies solving that problem become the winners. Not the AI companies themselves. The companies fixing their problems.
So while everyone’s arguing about which AI stock to buy, the real opportunity is in the infrastructure layer. The plumbing. The boring stuff that actually makes the whole system work.
That’s where the money is.