New York, May 27, 2026, 07:06 (EDT)
Plug Power Inc. is heading into Wednesday’s session on the Nasdaq after shares ended Tuesday up 1.59% at $3.84. The stock traded on heavy volume, much higher than its recent norm. The Nasdaq Composite added 1.19% but the Dow lost 0.23%. Plug had stronger backing from the broader tech tape, though it wasn’t a full risk-on day.
U.S. markets didn’t trade Monday due to Memorial Day. Trading goes back to normal Wednesday, with Nasdaq opening at 9:30 a.m. and closing at 4 p.m. Eastern. U.S. stock futures traded higher ahead of the session as equities showed a risk-on tone.
Plug shares traded around $3.84 in early moves, putting the company’s market cap at roughly $5.34 billion. The stock’s earnings per share stay in the red, which means Plug keeps losing money and there’s no usual price-to-earnings ratio for a profit multiple.
Plug Power’s May 20 update on the Barrow Green Hydrogen project is still in focus for investors. The company said the 30-megawatt project in Cumbria, Britain, has hit final investment decision, moving into execution from planning. Plug will provide six 5 MW GenEco PEM electrolyzers, which split water into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity. “Moving our largest UK project from award into execution,” CEO Jose Luis Crespo said. Plug Power
Plug’s shares have also reacted to its first-quarter results. Barron’s put sales at $163.5 million and an operating loss near $109 million. That beat analyst forecasts for about $140 million in sales and a $110 million loss. Canaccord’s Jason Tilchen said the numbers were “continued signs” the company’s restructuring is working. Barron’s
Analysts split on the stock. Craig-Hallum and H.C. Wainwright call it a Buy, while Wells Fargo and Susquehanna stick with Hold. BMO Capital and Morgan Stanley go with Sell. Price targets in the batch run from $1.20 up to $7.
Peer reads were mixed in premarket action. Ballard Power Systems traded up, but Bloom Energy was about flat to slightly down and FuelCell Energy slipped. The early trade didn’t show a clear, broad move for fuel-cell or hydrogen stocks.
But the bear case is straightforward. Plug’s own first-quarter report listed a net loss of $246.0 million, with operating cash burn at $150.0 million. The company warned of execution risks tied to cost cuts, selling assets, getting tax credits, keeping up hydrogen supply, development, financing and rules. Gross margin got better year-on-year, but it’s still negative.
Wednesday’s open is now straightforward. If trading stays busy and the stock doesn’t slip much from Tuesday’s close, traders might stick with Plug as a turnaround bet on better margins and more projects. But if shares slide, then cash burn, losses, and dilution fears are likely to return.