New York, May 24, 2026, 10:04 EDT
- Plug Power ended Friday at $3.78, the same as Thursday’s close and matching the previous Friday. Shares saw big swings earlier in the week but finished flat.
- U.S. stock markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day. PLUG will get its next regular-session trading on Tuesday.
- Main company news this week was a U.K. hydrogen project reaching final investment decision. Plug’s cash burn and margin story are still the bigger issues for the stock.
Plug Power Inc. heads into the holiday week trading at $3.78, right where it closed last Friday. Shares were steady in the last print, though the week wasn’t as quiet as it ended.
The stock slid 8.7% Monday, saw another drop Tuesday, then reversed with a 14.2% jump Thursday and was flat Friday with 71.4 million shares traded. The Nasdaq Composite edged up 0.19% Friday, the S&P 500 added 0.37%, so Plug ended the week flat as the broader tape firmed.
Plug shares don’t just move on clean-energy news anymore. Investors want to see if project wins show up in revenue, cash, and smaller losses — not just press releases. Execution is the focus now.
U.S. stocks won’t trade on Monday. The Nasdaq has Memorial Day, May 25, on its 2026 calendar as a market holiday, so the next regular session will be Tuesday. That will be the first time traders can see if last week’s rally holds.
Plug said this week that the 30-megawatt Barrow Green Hydrogen project in Barrow-in-Furness, England, hit final investment decision, or FID. The company and its partners are now locked in. Plug is set to deliver six 5 MW GenEco PEM electrolyzers for the project. An electrolyzer splits water into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity; PEM stands for proton-exchange membrane tech.
Barrow is set to deliver about 100 GWh per year of green hydrogen to Kimberly-Clark’s local plant, aiming to cut its natural gas use by as much as 50% and slash CO2 emissions by 18,300 tonnes, the company said. Jose Luis Crespo, Plug’s president and chief executive, said Barrow has shifted “from award into execution.” GlobeNewswire
Schroders Greencoat’s Kristian Høeg Madsen called it “a key milestone” for its hydrogen platform. Carlton Power hydrogen director Eric Adams said Plug’s technology made it “a strong partner.” Both were short on detail. Counterparties are still needed for these projects, not just Plug. GlobeNewswire
Plug shares have stayed volatile as investors focus on earnings. The company posted first-quarter revenue of $163.5 million, up 22% year over year. GAAP gross margin improved to negative 13% from negative 55%. Adjusted loss per share was 8 cents, narrower than the 17-cent loss a year ago, after taking out certain non-cash items. CEO Andy Crespo said Plug is on track for its “EBITDAS positive target in Q4 2026”; EBITDAS is earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and share-based expense. Plug Power
Liquidity remains the main focus. Plug finished the quarter holding more than $802 million in total cash, broken out as $223 million of unrestricted cash and about $579 million in restricted cash. The company expects to free up about $50 million of that restricted cash each quarter for the next few years. Plug also flagged future cash from hydrogen asset sales and a planned investment-tax-credit sale tied to its Louisiana project.
Wall Street views remain mixed. Benzinga lists a consensus “Hold” rating and a $3.74 price target. Recent calls include Wells Fargo keeping Equal-Weight and a $2.50 target on May 19, Susquehanna reaffirming Neutral at $3.75 on May 13, and Canaccord Genuity sticking with Hold at $4 on May 12. Benzinga
Clean-power and fuel-cell stocks split directions. Ballard Power Systems gained 2.0% in the latest quotes, while Bloom Energy slipped 1.7%. FuelCell Energy fell 5.2%. The group isn’t trading together.
But the down case is still clear. Plug’s 10-Q showed another quarter of negative operating cash flow and more net losses. The net loss came in around $246 million for Q1 and total deficit stood at $8.5 billion. The filing warned that market conditions could make it harder to get capital at good terms, and pointed to remaining equity-sale capacity, which could hit shareholders if the company needs more cash.
Narrow week ahead, but it matters. U.S. markets are shut Monday, so all eyes are on Tuesday’s open. Investors face a choice: take the Barrow news as a fresh sign that Plug’s electrolyzer pipeline is growing, or sell into last Thursday’s pop and go back to the same issues — cash burn, dilution, project timing, and if the Q4 EBITDAS goal will hold up in real life.