The First Trust NASDAQ Clean Edge Smart Grid Infrastructure Index Fund has returned 23.41% year to date, more than tripling the 7.03% gain from the Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund.
The performance gap between the two exchange-traded funds reflects a structural shift in how investors are positioning for AI data center power demand. XLU, the $18.5 billion utilities ETF, holds regulated operators such as NextEra Energy at 13.59%, Southern Co. at 7.47%, and Duke Energy at 7.15%. Those utilities recover capital through rate cases that take years to flow through earnings. GRID, by contrast, owns equipment makers, electrical contractors, and transmission specialists that book revenue when the data center gets built, not when the utility files its next rate case.
"The 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," Scott Strazik, chief executive officer of GE Vernova, said on the company's Q1 2026 earnings call. GE Vernova, a GRID holding, reported revenue of $9.30 billion, up 15.8% year over year, with its Electrification segment booking $2.4 billion in data center equipment orders in the first quarter alone — more than all of 2025 combined. The stock has gained 58.68% year to date.
GRID's top four positions as of the March 2026 NPORT filing are Eaton at 8.28%, Johnson Controls at 7.90%, National Grid at 7.86%, and Schneider Electric at 7.26%. Quanta Services, a 4.24% position, posted Q1 adjusted EPS of $2.68, beating the $2.03 consensus estimate, on revenue of $7.87 billion, up 26.3%. Its backlog hit a record $48.47 billion, and the stock has surged 66.47% year to date. Over one year, GRID has returned 42.41% versus XLU's 14.08%; over five years, the gap is 115.77% against 65.48%.
The Tradeoffs in a Swap
The fee difference is material. GRID charges an expense ratio of 0.56%, compared with XLU's 0.08%, a 48-basis-point gap. GRID's trailing dividend yield is roughly 0.80%, while XLU yields in the mid-2% range. The fund also trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 28, with some components on forward earnings multiples near 40 and 53 — well above typical utility valuations. For income-focused investors, a full swap would mean surrendering the yield profile that justified the XLU position.
What Could Narrow the Gap
A sustained drop in GE Vernova's order intake, a stall in Quanta Services' backlog growth, or a regulatory shift that accelerates utility rate-base recovery would compress the performance differential. A rate-cut cycle that re-rates XLU's bond-proxy holdings could also close the gap. Until any of those catalysts materialize, the equipment and transmission layer is collecting the AI power dollars first.
The outperformance signals that the market is rewarding companies with direct exposure to data center construction spending rather than regulated rate-base returns. Investors will watch GE Vernova's Q2 2026 order numbers and Quanta Services' next backlog update for signs of whether the pace is sustainable.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.