TLDR
- Bloom Energy stock has risen ~194% year-to-date and over 1,100% from a year ago, trading around $271
- Q1 2026 EPS came in at $0.44, crushing the $0.12 estimate; revenue hit $751M, up 130.4% year over year
- Bloom and Brookfield expanded their AI power-financing framework fivefold to $25 billion
- FY 2026 EPS guidance was raised to $1.85–$2.25; institutional ownership stands at 77%
- Analysts hold a consensus “Hold” rating with an average price target of $236.14, below the current price
Bloom Energy (BE) stock is trading around $271, up roughly 194% year-to-date and over 1,100% from this time last year. The fuel cell maker has become one of the standout performers on Wall Street in 2026, riding a surge in demand for on-site power generation from AI data centers.
The stock opened Friday at $271.13. It has traded between $22.81 and $351.28 over the past 52 weeks, with a 50-day moving average of $280.49 and a 200-day moving average of $190.83. Market cap currently sits at $77 billion.
Bloom’s fuel cell systems convert natural gas directly into electricity without combustion. They can be deployed on-site within three months — a key selling point compared to traditional grid connections, which can take years to build out.
The U.S. could face a 19-gigawatt power shortfall by 2028, according to Hewlett Packard Enterprise CEO Antonio Neri. Data centers are expected to account for nearly half of U.S. electricity demand growth through 2030. That gap is a direct tailwind for Bloom.
Strong Q1 Numbers
Q1 product revenue — mostly energy server sales — tripled year over year. Total revenue hit $751 million against a consensus estimate of $539.94 million. EPS came in at $0.44, well above the $0.12 expected. Net margin was 0.25% and return on equity was 21.05%.
Following those results, Bloom raised its full-year 2026 EPS guidance to $1.85–$2.25. Analysts currently forecast $1.34 EPS for the year.
In a deal that raised eyebrows, Bloom and Brookfield expanded their AI power-financing framework from $5 billion to $25 billion. That fivefold increase signals confidence in the pipeline of fuel cell deployments at data centers.
Institutional investors hold 77% of the stock. Leonteq Securities AG increased its position by 396.3% in Q1, picking up 89,185 additional units to bring its total to 111,687, worth around $15.1 million.
Insider Sales and Analyst Caution
Not everyone is all-in. Insiders have been selling. Chief Commercial Officer Aman Joshi sold 8,343 units on July 1 at $300.37, netting around $2.5 million. Director John T. Chambers sold 55,000 units in late May at $297.69, totaling over $16.3 million. Over the past three months, insiders have sold roughly $59.8 million worth of stock.
Analyst sentiment is mixed. Roth MKM rates it “neutral” with a $285 target. Barclays gives it “equal weight” at $276. TD Cowen has a “hold” at $235. BMO Capital Markets stands as an outlier with an “outperform” rating. Zacks recently downgraded it from “strong-buy” to “hold.”
The consensus sits at “Hold” with an average target of $236.14 — roughly 13% below where the stock trades today.
The company carries a debt-to-equity ratio of 2.90 and a negative P/E, reflecting that it is not yet consistently profitable despite the strong revenue growth.
BMO Capital Markets reaffirmed its “outperform” rating on June 9, making it one of the few firms still bullish at current levels.
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