New York, January 14, 2026, 12:38 EST — Regular session
Bloom Energy (BE.N) shares fell 2.3% to $136.55 in midday trade on Wednesday, after swinging between $132 and $140 earlier in the session.
The fuel-cell maker has turned into a fast-moving proxy for the hunt for electricity to run artificial intelligence data centers, where power limits and grid queues are starting to show up in project timelines.
That makes even small signals about where Bloom can sell next — and how quickly it can deliver — matter more than usual. The stock has been quick to react to anything that looks like a new lane for demand.
In South Korea, the American Chamber of Commerce in Korea said it signed a memorandum of understanding with Bloom on Jan. 12 to help expand solid oxide fuel cell-based distributed power systems for next-generation AI data centers. “Without stable power, the growth of the AI industry is impossible,” said Choi Joon, CEO of Bloom Energy Korea, in comments carried by The Asia Business Daily. (Asiae)
A memorandum of understanding, or MOU, is typically a non-binding pact that sets out areas of cooperation before any purchase agreements are signed. Solid oxide fuel cells generate electricity through an electrochemical process rather than burning fuel, which supporters say can cut emissions for onsite power. (Data Center Dynamics)
Bloom’s shares surged last week after American Electric Power said it would buy a substantial portion of its option for Bloom’s solid oxide fuel cells in a deal worth about $2.65 billion, part of a planned fuel cell power facility near Cheyenne, Wyoming. AEP said a 20-year offtake deal tied to the project is subject to conditions expected to be met by the second quarter of 2026. (Reuters)
The broader U.S. market was weaker on Wednesday, with investors weighing mixed big-bank earnings and fresh economic data, Reuters reported. (Reuters)
Fuel-cell peers were mixed: Plug Power rose 3.9%, while FuelCell Energy slid 0.7% and Ballard Power edged down 0.7%.
Still, the Korea agreement is early-stage and does not guarantee purchases. Big data center power projects can stall on permitting, financing and customer build schedules, and that can leave revenue lumpy even when headline demand looks strong.
Investors will watch for signs that the Korea work converts into firm contracts, and for the company’s next quarterly update. Nasdaq currently lists Bloom’s next earnings report as an estimate around Feb. 26. (Nasdaq)