NEW YORK, Jan 29, 2026, 12:47 EST — Market open for regular trading.
Shares of Liberty Energy jumped almost 20% on Thursday, climbing to a session peak of $27.17 before retreating slightly, as investors reacted to the oilfield services company’s latest quarterly results.
This shift is significant as pressure-pumping firms have been stuck with tight margins and unpredictable shale activity, all while pitching steadier earnings to Wall Street. Liberty, meanwhile, has been pushing deeper into power and energy services connected to data centers—a sector known for longer lead times and, potentially, more stable contracts.
This also serves as a real-time test of what traders prioritize: near-term frack margins or a distinct growth narrative. Liberty flagged “pricing headwinds and winter weather disruption,” while outlining plans for a larger pipeline in its power division. (Liberty Energy Investors)
Liberty reported $1.0 billion in revenue and $14 million in net income for the fourth quarter. For the full year, revenue reached $4.0 billion with net income of $148 million. The company also said adjusted EBITDA — a cash-flow measure outside U.S. accounting standards — came to $158 million in the quarter and $634 million for the year. (Liberty Energy Investors)
The quarter outperformed Zacks’ estimates, which anticipated Liberty would report a loss with weaker sales. Instead, Liberty posted adjusted earnings of 5 cents per share on $1.04 billion in revenue. EPS, or earnings per share, is calculated by dividing profit by shares outstanding. (Nasdaq)
Liberty upped its quarterly cash dividend by 13%, now paying 9 cents a share. The company also revealed plans to “deploy approximately 3 GW of power projects by 2029,” highlighting deals linked to data-center power needs. For 2025, capital returns will include both dividends and share buybacks, with roughly $270 million remaining in its buyback authorization. (Liberty Energy Investors)
During the earnings call, Chief Financial Officer Michael Stock told investors, “New technologies and AI-driven software development are making a fundamental difference.” The company is aiming to boost efficiency in its core completion business while expanding its power platform. (Investing)
Elsewhere in the sector, ProPetro, Halliburton, Patterson-UTI, and SLB all saw gains, though none came close to Liberty’s surge.
The rally today doesn’t leave much wiggle room. If winter weather or price cuts hit harder than anticipated in Q1, or if data-center power reservations don’t translate into long-term energy services contracts, the stock could easily lose those gains.
Investors are gearing up for updates on 2026 pricing and activity in U.S. completions, along with any firm milestones on the power pipeline. The closest date to watch is March 4, the record date for the upcoming dividend, which is set to be paid on March 18. (Liberty Energy Investors)