New York, June 27, 2026, 17:02 (EDT)
- GE Vernova Inc. NYSE:GEV fell 3.71% Friday to $1,045.17, underperforming the S&P 500’s 0.05% drop and the Dow’s 0.09% fall.
- The stock lost 7.31% over five days; Friday’s $40.30 fall erased about 80% of the prior two-session rebound.
- The NYSE is closed Saturday and Sunday; next week is cut short by the July 3 Independence Day observed holiday.
- GE Vernova’s next scheduled company test is its second-quarter earnings webcast on July 22 at 7:30 a.m. EDT.
GE Vernova Inc. NYSE:GEV went into the weekend with a failed bounce, not a clean pullback. The power equipment stock closed Friday at $1,045.17, down $40.30, or 3.71%, while the broader market barely moved. Volume was 3.65 million shares, 34% above its 65-day average, MarketWatch data showed.
The less obvious number is inside the weekly tape. GE Vernova rose Monday, fell 8.21% Tuesday, gained on Wednesday and Thursday, then lost almost all of that rebound on Friday. The stock finished the week 7.31% below Monday’s close of $1,127.59.
The Wednesday-Thursday rebound was $50.49 a share. Friday’s drop was $40.30. That means the final session erased about 80% of the bounce, based on closing prices. That matters because sellers hit the stock after it had already tried to repair the week’s damage.
The Monday-to-Friday price drop was $82.42. Based on MarketWatch’s 268.72 million shares outstanding, that is about $22.1 billion of equity value lost in four trading days. The market cap still stood near $280.86 billion after Friday’s close.
That leaves investors with a split picture. The stock is still up 59.92% this year and 97.52% over one year, but the last week cut into a run that has priced in heavy demand for gas turbines, grid gear and data-center power.
The demand case is not gone. GE Vernova reported first-quarter orders of $18.3 billion, up 71% organically, and backlog growth of $13.0 billion. CEO Scott Strazik said demand for Power and Electrification was “accelerating.” CFO Ken Parks said backlog “grew to $163 billion.” GE Vernova
This week’s biggest order-related item came from outside GE Vernova. Chevron Corp. NYSE:CVX said Monday it signed a 20-year power agreement with Microsoft Corp. NASDAQ:MSFT for Project Kilby in West Texas. The project is expected to ramp to 2.67 gigawatts, with most generation from GE Vernova turbines and added capacity from Caterpillar Inc. NYSE:CAT unit Solar Turbines. Chevron expects a final investment decision by year-end.
The stock did not hold that story by week’s end. Project Kilby points to future turbine demand, but first power is expected in 2028. Friday’s tape says investors want nearer proof that the backlog converts into margins, cash flow and delivery slots.
The week ahead gives traders fewer chances to reset positions. NYSE core trading runs 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET on regular days, and the exchange lists Friday, July 3, as closed for Independence Day observed.
The next company date is July 22, when GE Vernova’s leadership is scheduled to present second-quarter results. A break below Tuesday’s $1,034.98 close would put the stock back at the week’s weakest closing level; a move above Thursday’s $1,085.47 close would retake the failed rebound.