Nvidia was the first poster child of the AI revolution. OpenAI turned ChatGPT into a global phenomenon. Google, Microsoft, and Anthropic have since dominated headlines with ever-more-powerful models.

But throughout history, the biggest fortunes made during a technological revolution rarely went to the most famous names. The California Gold Rush didn't create the most wealth for gold miners. It created fortunes for the people selling picks, shovels, railroads, and infrastructure.

The same dynamic is emerging in AI. The future won't be decided by whoever builds the smartest chatbot. It will be decided by the companies solving the industry's hardest bottlenecks: compute, power, cooling, deployment, and data.

Here are five companies sitting squarely at the center of those constraints. The Compute Play: CoreWeave (NASDAQ: CRWV) If AI is a gold rush, compute is the gold. Every major AI model, from ChatGPT to Claude to Gemini, requires enormous amounts of computing power to train and run.

Demand for those resources has exploded so rapidly that many AI developers simply cannot get access to advanced graphics processing units, or GPUs. That shortage created an opening for CoreWeave. Originally a cryptocurrency mining operation, CoreWeave transformed itself into one of the world's largest independent providers of AI computing infrastructure.

Instead of developing AI models, the company rents access to the massive GPU clusters needed to build them. In the first-quarter 2026, CoreWeave reported a record $99.4 billion revenue backlog and generated $2.08 billion in quarterly revenue, up 112% year-over-year. Management then disclosed that its available 2026 capacity was effectively sold out, underscoring just how constrained compute remains.

CoreWeave is effectively a landlord in the AI economy. As AI models become larger and more sophisticated, compute is becoming an increasingly scarce resource. No matter who wins the AI race, CoreWeave has what they want.

The Power Play: Bitzero (NASDAQ: AIBZ) For years, investors assumed semiconductors would be the defining bottleneck of AI. Increasingly, it looks like the answer is electricity. The IEA projects that global electricity consumption from data centers will more than double by 2030 to roughly 945 terawatt-hours.

McKinsey expects U.S. data center electricity demand to account for nearly 12% of total U.S. power demand by the end of the decade.

That is where Bitzero becomes one of the most interesting companies in AI infrastructure, and one of the least talked about. The company controls more than 1 gigawatt of planned data center capacity across Norway, Finland, and North Dakota, with its Nordic assets powered by low-cost renewable energy. And crucially, much of that capacity was secured before regulators began tightening restrictions on new large-scale data center development.

Bitzero listed on the Nasdaq under the ticker AIBZ on June 9, 2026, just one week ago. The company graduated to Nasdaq with over 1GW of planned capacity and a balance sheet anchored by a single deal that dwarfs its current market cap. In May 2026, Bitzero signed a binding letter agreement with AI cloud provider OneQode for a 15-year lease covering the full 110 megawatts of its Namsskogan, Norway, site.