New York, June 7, 2026, 10:05 EDT
Plug Power Inc. heads into the new week bruised after its Nasdaq-listed shares closed Friday at $3.215, down 10.69%, leaving the stock about 18.6% below its May 29 close. U.S. stock trading was shut for the weekend; regular Nasdaq trading runs Monday through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern time.
That is why the timing matters. The slide came days before Plug’s June 11 virtual annual meeting, where shareholders are due to vote on directors, executive pay, the auditor and an amendment adding 25 million shares to its 2021 Stock Option and Incentive Plan, a pool used for equity awards. If those shares are later issued, holders can face dilution, meaning each existing share represents a smaller ownership slice.
Plug gave investors some cash-related news earlier in the week. On June 2, it said it closed the sale of a federal investment tax credit, or ITC — a clean-energy tax benefit that can be transferred to a third-party investor — for about $39.2 million tied to its St. Gabriel, Louisiana hydrogen liquefaction facility. Chief Executive Jose Luis Crespo said the deal added “financial flexibility,” while Chief Financial Officer Paul Middleton pointed to “capital deployment.” Plug Power
The market gave little help. Reuters reported that Wall Street’s nine-week winning streak ended Friday after stronger U.S. jobs data pushed investors to reassess interest-rate risk, with the Nasdaq Composite down 4.18%, the S&P 500 off 2.64% and the Dow lower by 1.35%. Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, said “the dam just broke today,” while Wells Fargo strategist Ohsung Kwon said semiconductors had been “way overbought.” Reuters
Plug’s own trading tape turned worse as the week went on. Friday marked its third straight loss, and the shares finished about 29.8% below their 52-week high, according to market data.
The pressure was not isolated to PLUG. Ballard Power Systems fell 18.95% on Friday, FuelCell Energy lost 19.07% and Bloom Energy dropped 9.53%, putting Plug’s move inside a broader selloff in fuel-cell and clean-power shares rather than a company-only break.
But the trade can cut both ways. Plug reported first-quarter revenue growth of 22% to $163.5 million, yet its net loss attributable to the company widened to $245.3 million; it ended March with $802 million in total cash, including restricted cash. A broad rebound or fresh proof of asset monetization could steady the stock, but slower cash releases, higher rates, weaker demand or policy changes could put sellers back in control; the company itself lists capital availability, asset-sale timing, project delays, demand and government policy among risks around its targets.
For the week ahead, PLUG’s first test is Monday’s open after the Nasdaq’s sharp Friday break. The next fixed company event is Thursday’s shareholder meeting. Until Plug gives investors a fresh operating update, the stock may trade less on hydrogen demand and more on two blunt questions: how fast cash comes in, and how much new equity could eventually go out.