NEW YORK, June 13, 2026, 16:02 EDT
- Quanta Services closed Friday at $707.74, up 3.58%, outperforming broader market and industrial benchmarks.
- The stock is being supported by AI-driven power-grid demand, a record backlog and raised 2026 guidance.
- The next catalyst is management’s June 16–17 investor meetings, followed by the next quarterly earnings update.
Quanta Services, Inc. shares ended the week with a strong rebound, closing Friday at $707.74, up $24.45, or 3.58%, as investors continued to price the infrastructure contractor as a major beneficiary of rising electricity demand tied to data centers and artificial intelligence. The move outpaced the S&P 500 ETF, Nasdaq-100 ETF and Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF, which each rose about 0.6% in the same session.
The latest spark came from renewed attention on Quanta’s AI-linked power-infrastructure story. A fresh Barron’s report said Quanta remains well positioned because Big Tech’s AI spending is expected to require more data centers, grid upgrades and power infrastructure. Barron’s also cited Quanta’s record $48.5 billion backlog and noted that the stock trades at about 42 times next year’s earnings, meaning investors are paying 42 dollars for each dollar of expected future profit.
That valuation matters because PWR is no longer an under-the-radar industrial name. The stock is up nearly 98% over the past 12 months, according to Trading Economics, and remains below but still close to its 52-week high range of roughly $788.75. A premium multiple can be justified when earnings visibility is improving, but it also leaves less room for disappointment if project timing, margins or cash flow fall short.
The bull case rests on Quanta’s role in building and maintaining critical electric-power, utility, communications and energy infrastructure. In its first-quarter results, the company reported revenue of $7.87 billion, up from $6.23 billion a year earlier, and adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.68; adjusted EPS means earnings per share after excluding certain items that management says affect comparability. Chief Executive Duke Austin said Quanta delivered an “exceptional first quarter” and was “increasing our full-year 2026 financial expectations.” Quanta Services, Inc.
For 2026, Quanta raised its outlook to revenue of $34.7 billion to $35.2 billion and adjusted diluted EPS of $13.55 to $14.25. The company also expects adjusted EBITDA of $3.49 billion to $3.65 billion; EBITDA means earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, a common measure of operating profitability. Quanta continues to forecast free cash flow of $1.55 billion to $2.05 billion, with free cash flow defined by the company as operating cash flow minus net capital expenditures.
The bear case is that much of this good news may already be reflected in the stock. Backlog is useful because it points to future work, but Quanta itself says backlog is a non-GAAP measure, meaning it is not defined under standard accounting rules, and project revenue can be affected by timing. The company also flagged weather, regulatory, permitting, supply-chain, inflation, interest-rate and recession risks as factors that could affect results.
Analyst sentiment remains broadly positive, but not without valuation tension. MarketWatch’s analyst-estimate page lists an Overweight average recommendation, an average target price of $802.79, a median target of $800, and a target range from $693 to $901. That leaves upside on average, but the low end of the target range sits below the latest closing price, underscoring that Wall Street’s optimism is not risk-free.
The next event investors should watch is Quanta management’s scheduled institutional investor meetings at the Truist Securities Industrials and Services Conference on June 16 in New York and TD Cowen U.S. Corporate Access Day on June 17 in Toronto. The bigger stock-moving catalyst is the next earnings update, when investors will look for evidence that AI, grid modernization and utility spending are converting backlog into revenue, margins and cash. Based on verified facts today, PWR looks fairly valued to somewhat risky rather than outright cheap: attractive for investors who believe the AI power buildout can sustain high growth, but vulnerable if expectations cool or execution risks rise.