New York, Jan 14, 2026, 19:10 EST — After-hours
- Shares of GE Vernova slipped 1.2% on Wednesday, erasing some of the gains seen earlier this week.
- GLJ Research raised its price target to $1,087, while cautioning about “limited positive catalysts” in the near term.
- Attention turns to the company’s results and outlook scheduled for Jan. 28.
Shares of GE Vernova slipped 1.2% to $644.18 during Wednesday’s regular session, as traders balanced renewed analyst enthusiasm with a wary short-term outlook for the power-equipment firm.
The stock has turned into a crowded bet on a tight market for large power gear, where even small changes in order forecasts, pricing, or project schedules can send shares moving fast.
Vernova’s upcoming quarterly results have caught investors’ attention, eager to see if service pricing and turbine demand continue to climb into 2026.
GLJ Research’s Austin Wang bumped his price target on GE Vernova to $1,087 from $805, maintaining a buy rating. Still, he flagged growing caution on the near-term outlook, citing “limited positive catalysts” and “data center headline risk.” (TipRanks)
Put simply, “headline risk” refers to concerns that fresh reports of slower data-center construction or reduced power requirements per facility might dampen the market’s outlook for electricity demand growth.
GE Vernova, a key player in gas turbines and grid equipment, has seen gains thanks to a wider push to boost generation and upgrade transmission networks. Demand for its turbines and grid gear has been driven up by rising power consumption from AI and crypto data centers, Reuters reports. (Reuters)
GE Vernova is gearing up to report its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 numbers on Jan. 28, ahead of the U.S. market open. Management will hold a webcast at 7:30 a.m. ET, the company confirmed. (GE Vernova)
Investors will zero in on bookings and the pipeline of turbine “slots”—manufacturing capacity booked years ahead. They’ll also watch closely for any updates on service margins and cash flow generation.
Timing remains a major risk. Big power projects often face delays in permits, supply chains, or customer financing. If expectations for data-center demand shift suddenly, sentiment could sour quicker than the underlying fundamentals change.
The next big moment for the stock arrives Jan. 28, when the company reports results, provides guidance, and shares updates on orders and pricing as 2026 kicks off.