NEW YORK, July 14, 2026, 17:05 EDT
- Plug Power Inc. NASDAQ:PLUG ended the day at $2.27, gaining 5%. Shares had dropped 17.8% across the last five sessions.
- Plug said the more than $80 million in expected near-term liquidity would be about half its unrestricted cash as of June 30.
- Around 80% of the immediate benefit identified links to a Texas deal, but that’s still pending a buyer inspection period that runs through July 25.
Plug Power stock bounced Tuesday after investors took a fresh look at two asset sales that could bring in over $80 million soon. Most of that—around 80%—hinges on a Texas deal and collateral coming free, but the buyer still has an inspection window to back out. The company needs the cash, but the timeline to close is short.
The denominator is the key. Plug had around $162 million in unrestricted cash as of June 30, a drop of 27% from $223.2 million at the end of March. First-quarter operations burned through $150 million. When the immediate transaction pieces are added, the pro-forma liquidity number is roughly $242.5 million—before factoring in routine business flows post-June 30. The balance sheet needs the bridge.
The deal size looks big next to Plug’s cash but small against its market cap. The $80.5 million in assets named so far is just 2.6% of Plug’s $3.15 billion valuation, but it’s almost half the cash Plug reported in June. Plug’s average share count jumped 47% on the year to 1.39 billion in Q1. Asset sales are a way to bring in money that doesn’t hit shareholders with more dilution. But dilution hangs over the story.
| Liquidity measure | Amount | Investor read-through |
|---|---|---|
| Unrestricted cash as of June 30 | About $162 million | Opening cash position |
| Texas deal proceeds and collateral | About $64 million | Covers roughly 80% of the expected short-term gain |
| New York deposit/escrow released | About $16.5 million | Balance of near-term benefit from deals |
| Pro forma simple cash/liquidity | About $242.5 million | Equals about 1.6x Q1 cash use |
| Total optimization target | More than $275 million | Picks up remaining proceeds, restricted cash and cuts |
Numbers come from company filings and from calculations using the listed parts. The pro-forma benchmark leaves out operations after June 30 and the conditional Texas earnout.
Texas is the center here. Stream US Data Centers has agreed to pay $50 million upfront for Plug’s Graham project. Plug also expects about $14 million in cash collateral once it transfers interconnection obligations. There’s another possible $26.5 million coming if the project’s final interconnection deal hits the 164 megawatt target. Plug says it aims to close on or around July 31.
In New York, Stream’s earlier $6.5 million deposit in escrow is expected to be released, and Stream will add $10 million more for the first piece of the property. The overall project is priced at $142 million. But the closing for the rest of the assets has a deadline stretching to March 31, 2027, as state environmental and regulatory checks are still in progress. Most of the announced value is still tied up in the timeline.
“Monetizing these assets was a key part of our strategy this year,” CEO Jose Luis Crespo said. Crespo said Plug is “on track with our financial goals for 2026.” Plug and Stream are looking at using Plug products in data centers, so these deals could lead to more than just property sales. The companies aren’t treating this only as an asset disposal.
| Company | Tuesday price | Approximate move | Market value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plug Power Inc. NASDAQ:PLUG | $2.27 | up 5.1% | $3.15 billion |
| Bloom Energy Corp. NYSE:BE | $243.40 | rose 4.2% | $77.82 billion |
| Ballard Power Systems Inc. NASDAQ:BLDP | $2.97 | added 0.7% | $0.89 billion |
Data as of Tuesday’s market close.
Plug’s move up outperformed Ballard, slipped just past Bloom, but didn’t cover much of the recent drop. At $2.27, the stock was still 14% under the $2.64 close on July 6, and off nearly 50% from the $4.58 high for the year. This looked like relief, not a real turnaround.
Broker notes haven’t settled the debate over the turnaround’s value. On July 10, Susquehanna’s Biju Perincheril cut his target to $2.50 but left his Neutral call unchanged. Morgan Stanley NYSE:MS analyst Arthur Sitbon lifted his target to $1.65 and kept an Underweight. Shares ended Tuesday around the neutral view, well above the lowest target. Traders want to see real progress.
The cash plan isn’t locked in. Stream can walk away from the Texas deal any time until July 25. The earnout is tied to what the final electric load turns out to be. The New York deal still has regulators to clear. Plug’s bigger target, topping $275 million, counts not just sale proceeds but also restricted cash released and savings on upkeep. Whether they’ll deliver is the question.
Operations is the next focus. First-quarter revenue was up 22% to $163.5 million, while gross margin improved to negative 13% from negative 55%. But operating cash usage jumped to $150 million from $105.6 million last year. Crespo said the numbers “positions us to achieve our EBITDAS positive target in Q4 2026,” pointing to the measure that strips out financing, tax and non-cash items. Cash conversion has overtaken revenue growth as the key metric now.
So investors are watching three dates now: July 25 is the Texas inspection deadline, the expected closing is around July 31, and Plug has until March 31, 2027 for the new extended New York deadline. Plug has turned part of its funding issue into a set of closing targets. Timing will be key.