New York, June 16, 2026, 09:07 (ET)
- BEEM jumped 27.97% to $1.51 in premarket trading after Beam said it was awarded a new patent in Europe.
- Beam’s new patent adds to its battery thermal-management IP, but that alone isn’t proof of any near-term revenue growth.
- Next up, Beam has to turn its $9.0 million backlog into Q2 sales and post better margins.
Beam Global shares moved higher in early Tuesday action after the company announced it received a European patent, EP 4 348 756 B1, for its Smart Phase Change Composite for Passive Thermal Management invention. According to StockAnalysis, BEEM traded at $1.51, up $0.33, or 27.97%, before the bell at 9:06 a.m. EDT. Premarket trading is when stocks are bought and sold before the main U.S. market hours and can be volatile because there may be fewer shares available. StockAnalysis
Beam announced a patent for its Smart Phase Change Composite (PCC) tech for lithium-ion batteries. The material helps batteries control heat. Beam said it keeps batteries insulated when it’s cold and helps them lose heat when it’s hot. For the stock, investors tend to value IP if it looks like it could boost product edge, licensing, or pricing. CEO Desmond Wheatley called the battery-systems IP portfolio a “core aspect of our growth philosophy” and said the patent adds customer value and puts up a “barrier to entry for our competitors.” GlobeNewswire
BEEM is coming off a low level. It’s a small-cap, so headlines can move the stock fast. Bulls point to Beam’s battery and off-grid charging tech targeting markets where safety and form factor matter—stuff like robotics, drones, defense, electric mobility. Last month, the company said backlog hit $9.0 million as of March 31, up from $6.0 million at year-end. Q2 revenue as of May 15 already topped the full Q1 number. GlobeNewswire
Financial execution is still the main bear case. Beam’s Q1 revenue dropped 51% to $3.1 million from a year ago. The company pointed to order timing, seasonal weakness in Europe, and no new U.S. federal EV infrastructure spending. Gross margin went negative at 13.3% for Q1, meaning costs were higher than revenue. GlobeNewswire
The analyst call on Beam Global is still split. StockAnalysis shows three analysts rate it a “Buy,” with a 12-month average price target of $2.67. But in May, Freedom Capital Markets’ Dmitriy Pozdnyakov moved Beam to Hold, dropping his target to $1.50 on the Q1 revenue slump and negative margins. TipRanks quoted Pozdnyakov: Beam needs “stronger backlog conversion, margin recovery and a clearer path to sustainable cash generation.” StockAnalysis TipRanks
Right now, the stock is risky rather than clearly cheap. The patent lets traders revalue the shares, and the backlog could move the price soon. But the key test is the next quarterly report from Beam—investors are waiting to see if the backlog actually brings in revenue and if margins bounce back. Until that happens, Tuesday’s move on the patent looks like a technical jump, not the start of a lasting re-rate.