Side-by-side comparison through the lens of GEV exposure. Prices from Massive (1Y daily, last close 2026-04-24). GEV-supplier relationship from Bloomberg SPLC, captured 2026-04-25.
Not investment advice. This is a structured comparison of two businesses to help you understand them. Valuation multiples like P/E, EV/EBITDA, and ROE require a paid Massive plan and aren't shown — for those, use Bloomberg directly (FA, RV functions) or check each company's investor relations page. Always do your own due diligence and consider consulting a licensed advisor.
The companies at a glance
Arcosa, Inc.
ACA · NYSE
$119.44
+48.9% 1Y
Manufacturer of infrastructure products. Three segments — Construction Products (aggregates, asphalt — largest), Engineered Structures (wind towers, utility T&D structures, telecom — this is the GEV-exposed segment), Transportation Products (inland barges, marine hardware).
Market cap
$5.86B
Employees
6,390
HQ
Dallas, TX
Listed
2018 (GE-style spinoff)
Industry SIC
Fabricated structural metal
52-wk range
$80.07 – $128.17
AZZ Inc.
AZZ · NYSE
$143.33
+68.2% 1Y
Provider of metal coatings. Three segments — Precoat Metals (coil coating for steel and aluminum coils — largest), Metal Coatings (hot-dip galvanizing, the wind/utility-tower-relevant segment), Infrastructure Solutions (smaller).
Market cap
$4.28B
Employees
3,767
HQ
Fort Worth, TX
Listed
1973
Industry SIC
Coating, engraving services
52-wk range
$85.21 – $146.59
How GEV's growth flows to each
Arcosa (direct tier-1 supplier)
GEV CAPEX→Arcosa wind towers→~27.5% of GEV's CAPEX flows here (per Bloomberg SPLC)
Arcosa's Engineered Structures segment makes wind towers for GEV. ACA's overall revenue exposure to GEV is reported at 12.2% of ACA's total revenue — meaningful but not dominant. The other ~88% of Arcosa is aggregates, barges, and telecom/utility structures, which respond to broader infrastructure spending and less to GEV specifically.
AZZ (tier-2 — one step removed)
GEV CAPEX→Arcosa & others→AZZ galvanizing→slice of AZZ's Metal Coatings volume
AZZ does not appear in GEV's tier-1 SPLC list. The relationship is via Arcosa's confirmed SPLC (AZZ is one of Arcosa's suppliers — likely galvanizing wind tower steel). AZZ's Metal Coatings segment also serves utility T&D structures, highway, telecom, and industrial — wind-tower galvanizing is a slice, not the whole. AZZ is more of a broad infrastructure/electrification beneficiary than a pure GEV play.
1-year price performance vs GEV
ACAAZZGEV
Bull and bear, side by side
Arcosa
Bull case for ACA
Direct, disclosed GEV exposure — 12% of ACA revenue is from GEV. As GEV ramps wind builds, Engineered Structures grows directly.
Three-segment diversification: aggregates business is a steady cash cow; wind towers are the growth optionality.
US infrastructure spending and reshoring are tailwinds across all three segments.
Recent acquisitions (Stavola, AmeriTex) expanded the aggregates footprint — synergies still emerging.
Bear case for ACA
Wind tower margins are historically thin and volume-cyclical; the unit economics depend heavily on steel prices.
Construction Products (the largest segment) is residential-housing-cycle exposed.
Barge business (Transportation Products) is in secular decline.
Stock has lagged AZZ over 1Y (+49% vs +68%) despite being the more direct GEV beneficiary — market may be rewarding the cleaner electrification narrative.
AZZ
Bull case for AZZ
Largest independent hot-dip galvanizer in North America — scale and density of facilities is hard to replicate.
Diversified end markets: utility T&D, wind, highway, telecom, industrial — protects from any single cycle.
Precoat Metals (their largest segment) benefits from US steel coil reshoring and onshoring of construction.
Galvanizing has structural pricing power because alternatives (paint, stainless) cost more for outdoor steel.
Bear case for AZZ
Zinc input cost is a key margin driver; zinc price spikes squeeze margins faster than they can be passed through.
GEV exposure is indirect and small as a % of total — a "good" thesis on AZZ probably isn't really a GEV thesis.
Higher leverage post-Precoat-Metals acquisition; debt service is a headwind if rates stay elevated.
Less analyst coverage than ACA — disclosure tends to be sparser, harder to triangulate.
How they're different (and how to think about each)
Arcosa is a partial GEV play. About one-eighth of ACA's revenue is GEV-derived. The rest is aggregates and barges. If you want exposure to GEV's growth via Arcosa, you're getting a 12% allocation, with the other 88% being a mostly-unrelated infrastructure-products business. Whether that "dilution" is good or bad depends on your view of US construction and infrastructure broadly.
AZZ is barely a GEV play. Wind-tower galvanizing is a sub-segment of a sub-segment. AZZ doesn't even show up in GEV's tier-1 SPLC. If you're buying AZZ because of GEV, you're stretching. AZZ is a fine business with its own merits (industrial coatings consolidation, US infrastructure CAPEX), but it's a North American infrastructure-electrification story, not a GEV-leveraged story.
The 1Y price action is counterintuitive — AZZ outperformed ACA despite being further removed from GEV. Possible reasons: AZZ has a cleaner narrative ("electrification picks-and-shovels"), Precoat Metals is doing well independent of wind, or the market was already pricing in ACA's wind exposure heading into 2025. Either way, "more exposure to GEV" hasn't translated into more upside historically.
What's missing from this comparison — valuation multiples (P/E, EV/EBITDA, P/FCF), revenue and earnings growth trends, debt levels, and analyst estimates. Those require either a paid market data feed or pulling each company's 10-K. The Massive plan in use here only covers ticker overviews and price aggregates. If you want the financial deep-dive, the next step is Bloomberg's FA function on each ticker, or a financial data provider like Stock Analysis, SimplyWall.St, or a Refinitiv/FactSet feed.