Bloom Energy stock price slips as big-holder filings land ahead of Feb. 5 earnings

Bloom Energy stock price slips as big-holder filings land ahead of Feb. 5 earnings

New York, Jan 22, 2026, 13:30 (EST) — Regular session.

  • Bloom Energy shares dropped almost 4% in afternoon trading, reversing earlier gains.
  • New U.S. filings revealed stakes held by BlackRock and Kuwait’s sovereign wealth fund.
  • Traders are eyeing Bloom’s Feb. 5 results to gauge demand fueled by data centers.

Shares of Bloom Energy Corp dropped close to 4% on Thursday, retreating from an intraday peak as investors digested fresh ownership disclosures ahead of the company’s upcoming earnings. The stock slipped 3.9% to $144.72 in afternoon trading, after hitting a high of $155.47, with roughly 5.1 million shares traded.

The drop occurred even as U.S. shares climbed, with the S&P 500 rising roughly 0.9% and the Nasdaq gaining around 1.2%. Bloom Energy produces stationary fuel-cell systems and electrolyzers, offering gear for on-site power generation and hydrogen output. (Reuters)

The mismatch matters since Bloom has turned into a high-beta bet on the scramble to power massive data centers, where hooking up to the grid often drags on for years. A stock that’s already sprinted can still whip sharply on positioning and timing.

Bloom released a data-center power report Tuesday, drawing on a November survey of 152 decision-makers. It found roughly one-third of data centers could be fully off-grid by 2030, running entirely on site rather than relying on the utility grid. Natalie Sunderland, Bloom’s chief marketing officer, said developers are targeting “power‑advantaged” areas and building sites to function independently of the grid. (Bloom Energy)

Bloom announced Wednesday it plans to release its fourth-quarter 2025 results after the market close on Feb. 5, followed by a conference call at 5 p.m. ET. Investors will be focused on any guidance and updates regarding the pace at which data-center interest is translating into actual deployments. (Bloom Energy)

BlackRock submitted an amended Schedule 13G revealing ownership of 22.35 million shares of Bloom Energy, representing 9.4% of the outstanding class as of Dec. 31. The Schedule 13G is a U.S. regulatory filing for passive investors who report stakes without showing any control intent. (SEC)

Kuwait Investment Authority and its London branch reported owning 3.25 million shares, or 1.38%, as of Jan. 19, according to another amended Schedule 13G. The filing also contained a table showing the investors held 12.67 million shares by the end of 2024. (SEC)

Elsewhere in the sector, FuelCell Energy surged over 10%, and Plug Power advanced roughly 16%. Ballard Power was up about 4% by midday. Meanwhile, Bloom Energy bucked the trend, moving in the opposite direction from the rest of the fuel-cell group.

Ownership disclosures can swing either way for a stock that’s been on a tear: major shareholders might sell into strength, and liquidity can evaporate quickly if sentiment shifts. For Bloom, the upcoming earnings call will bring renewed scrutiny on margins, cash deployment, and the pace at which big projects start generating revenue.

Investors are eyeing Feb. 5 for fourth-quarter results and management’s initial outlook on 2026 demand, focusing on on-site power at data centers aiming to go off-grid. Any cautious remarks on bookings or timing might keep the stock volatile heading into next week.

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