NEW YORK, January 2, 2026, 12:35 ET — Regular session
GE Vernova Inc. shares rose 3.3% to $675.14 in early afternoon trading on Friday, outperforming a mixed U.S. market as investors returned for the first full session after the New Year holiday. The stock traded as high as $676 and as low as $659.62.
The move matters because investors have started 2026 looking for beneficiaries of a tightening power system, where utilities are being pushed to add generation and upgrade transmission. The U.S. Energy Information Administration has forecast record U.S. power consumption in 2025 and 2026, citing data centers among the drivers. Reuters
Rob Spivey at Altimetry Research said in a MarketBeat interview published on Thursday that rising electricity bills can pull forward spending on generation and grid upgrades. “Price at the meter is the new price at the pump,” he said. Investing
Broader trading was uneven: the SPDR S&P 500 ETF was up about 0.1%, while the Invesco QQQ slipped about 0.2% and the SPDR Dow ETF gained roughly 0.3%.
Dividend positioning set another near-term marker for the stock. GE Vernova is set to trade ex-dividend on Jan. 5 for its 50-cent quarterly payout, meaning buyers on or after that date will not receive the upcoming dividend, Dividend Channel said in a note carried by Nasdaq.com. Nasdaq
The company said in December its board doubled the quarterly dividend to $0.50 a share and lifted its share repurchase authorization to $10 billion. The dividend is payable Feb. 2 to shareholders of record Jan. 5, the company said. GE Vernova
At its December investor update, GE Vernova forecast 2026 revenue of $41 billion to $42 billion and free cash flow — cash left after operating costs and capital spending — of $4.5 billion to $5.0 billion. It also projected an adjusted EBITDA margin of 11% to 13%, a common proxy for operating profitability.
GE Vernova’s December outlook helped propel the stock to a record high, and a William Blair analyst wrote that production slots for its gas turbines were sold out through 2028, Reuters reported. Reuters also cited a separate filing saying the company estimated 80 gigawatts of signed combined-cycle gas-turbine contracts by year-end, and said rivals Siemens Energy and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries had lifted their own targets.
Traders will watch whether the stock holds up through next week’s ex-dividend date and into earnings season, when management will be pressed on order momentum and cash generation. Last year, GE Vernova reported fourth-quarter results before the market opened in late January and held a webcast at 7:30 a.m. ET.
The next catalyst for the shares will be any update that either reinforces — or challenges — expectations for sustained grid spending and fast-rising electricity load from large power users. For investors, the key question remains whether demand converts into margins and cash at the pace implied by management’s December targets.