New York, June 3, 2026, 08:04 EDT
- T1 Energy is set to acquire KORE Power for about $32 million, targeting new growth in battery storage and AI data-center infrastructure.
- The stock pointed down in premarket trading, giving back some of its earlier slide after it surged 15.7% on Tuesday.
- Northland began coverage at outperform with a $16 target. Deal execution and funding are still the main variables.
T1 Energy Inc. shares dropped in premarket Wednesday after the U.S. solar manufacturer said it will buy KORE Power for around $32 million. The deal takes T1 further into battery storage and power systems aimed at AI data center markets.
The stock traded at $11.88 ahead of the open, a drop of 1.3% from the $12.04 close on Tuesday, Investing.com data showed. Reuters, in a Boursorama note, quoted an earlier price of $11.15, down 7.4%. Trading hours on the New York Stock Exchange were still ahead.
T1’s shares just rallied hard—up 15.66% at Tuesday’s close and hitting a 52-week peak at $12.25, according to Google Finance. That doesn’t leave much room for taking on deal work and more risk on the balance sheet.
T1 said the deal value covers equity, cash and debt it will take on, and it expects to close in the second quarter. There’s also a potential $9.6 million equity-based earn-out for 2026 and 2027. Most KORE Power shareholders back the deal, according to the company.
KORE Power’s key asset in the deal for T1 is NRI, its unit that handles the design, installation, and running of utility-scale battery storage systems, or BESS. These big batteries store power and discharge it when the grid or customers need it. T1 said NRI has delivered roughly 1,100 BESS projects around the world and worked with a mix of U.S. government, lab, utility, and industrial clients.
T1 is sticking with a profit target from the deal, saying it sees a positive EBITDA in 2026. For 2027, T1 is looking for around $15 million to $20 million more EBITDA. That’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, a way to show profit by skipping some charges.
T1 Chairman and CEO Dan Barcelo said, “We’re excited to welcome the NRI team to T1.” Jay Bellows, CEO of KORE Power, said customers could get “a one-stop solution” with the deal, covering generation, storage and operations. GlobeNewswire
T1’s deal comes as Wall Street weighs how much of the company’s solar-manufacturing plans are priced in. Northland started coverage on T1 with an outperform rating and a $16 target, citing T1’s domestic solar panel production and plans to start making solar cells in Texas by the end of the year, Investing.com said.
Northland is backing T1, but with plenty of cautions. The firm said T1 still has to lock in funding and finish building its solar cell factory this year. Northland also warned yields could start off weak as the new plant gets going.
The competitive set keeps growing. In solar, T1 remains much smaller than First Solar, which is worth about $33.5 billion. On the storage side, the KORE deal pulls T1 closer to Fluence Energy, a listed storage company with a market cap around $3.7 billion. T1 closed Tuesday with a market value of about $3.36 billion.
T1 told investors back in May it would keep its 2026 production forecast at 3.1 to 4.2 gigawatts from G1_Dallas, its solar module site in Texas, as it looked for financing for G2_Austin, its planned solar cell plant. The company also pointed to possible customer demand for U.S.-made modules in 2027 and 2028.
The risk is T1 could add more complexity before its main solar push is set up and financed. The deal still needs KORE shareholder approval and other steps. T1 also said its outlook may take a hit from construction delays, problems with customers or suppliers, tax-credit status, trade policy, debt needs, or trouble raising capital on acceptable terms.