Today: 29 April 2026
Rockwell Automation stock jumps 4.6% — what’s driving ROK before the open
25 February 2026
2 mins read

Rockwell Automation stock jumps 4.6% — what’s driving ROK before the open

New York, Feb 25, 2026, 06:21 (EST) — Premarket

  • After tumbling for a session, Rockwell’s shares surged back on Tuesday.
  • This week, the company introduced new updates across industrial cybersecurity and in Europe.
  • After a volatile run for automation stocks, investors are looking for what might spark the next move.

Rockwell Automation (ROK.N) rebounded sharply Tuesday, shares climbing 4.6% after dropping 2.8% the previous session. That swing put the industrial automation stock back on traders’ radar.

This is notable right now: Rockwell tends to serve as a stand-in for factory capex sentiment—a “just how upbeat are manufacturers?” read. Lately, the tape’s been jittery. These shares don’t need much of a nudge to shift.

The group’s become more sensitive lately, caught between tariff uncertainty and ongoing questions about whether AI spending is actually driving productivity. Investors are scanning orders and margins for proof—not just listening to slogans.

Rockwell ended Tuesday at $405.30, ahead of major peers on what turned out to be a robust session for U.S. equities, with volume topping the stock’s 50-day average, according to MarketWatch data. Honeywell (HON.O) ticked up 0.23%, Emerson Electric (EMR.N) jumped 3.69%, but Rockwell still sat roughly 7.6% off its Feb. 4 52-week high of $438.72.

The company has launched its Bologna Customer Experience Center, calling it a flagship for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. “Manufacturers across EMEA are facing a perfect storm of technology, workforce and supply chain challenges,” said Paolo Butti, a regional president at Rockwell. The firm flagged its own research: unplanned downtime costs an average $92,000 an hour, and top-tier OEMs — original equipment manufacturers — see recovery times improve by 40% when they deploy advanced automation and digital tools. Rockwell Automation

Rockwell has lined up subsessions for the S4x26 ICS Security Conference in Miami, set for Feb. 23-26, and is preparing a fireside chat focused on its SecureOT product. OT—operational technology—covers the tech behind industrial operations, while ICS means industrial control systems.

Rockwell’s Feb. 5 quarterly release showed profit and sales topping expectations for the first quarter, and the company raised the lower end of its full-year adjusted profit guidance. Still, the midpoint of that projection didn’t reach the consensus on Wall Street. CEO Blake Moret described the backdrop as “fluid,” pointing to ongoing geopolitical tensions involving trade, regional conflicts, and supply chain risks. CFO Christian Rothe cited tariffs, which cut about 30 basis points off segment margins from a year earlier. Reuters

Even with Tuesday’s rebound, investors are left wondering: will customer demand for automation hold up as trade policy moves and growth outlooks turn shaky? Security and software do steady revenues to a point, but those benefits fade fast if clients start pushing projects down the line.

Sentiment faces its next hurdle after Wednesday’s close, when Nvidia (NVDA.O) posts results. The chipmaker is at the center of the “AI trade,” but Goldman Sachs analysts point out that “very few companies have quantified the impact on earnings.” Reuters

Stock Market Today

  • Qualcomm Q3 revenue forecast misses estimates; CEO sees end of memory chip crunch
    April 29, 2026, 5:20 PM EDT. Qualcomm forecasted third-quarter revenue and adjusted earnings below Wall Street estimates, citing continued challenges from a global memory chip shortage affecting consumer electronics demand. Shares fell about 4% in after-hours trading. CEO Cristiano Amon expressed confidence that the smartphone market hit its low point and expects a rebound after this quarter. The memory chip crunch, which has driven up prices and curtailed consumer purchases, is pressuring Qualcomm's key smartphone and PC markets, especially in China. Despite the near-term weak outlook, Qualcomm's $20 billion share buyback underscores management's commitment. The company is expanding into data center chips, aiming to ship CPUs, AI accelerators, and ASICs by year-end to diversify revenue streams.

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