NEW YORK, June 29, 2026, 06:03 EDT
- Bloom Energy was quoted at $267.33 before the open, up 6.07%, after closing Friday at $252.02, down 18.49%.
- Friday volume hit 57.2 million shares, about five times the 65-day average, on the same day Russell index changes took effect after the close.
- FTSE Russell said Bloom is moving from the Russell 2000 to the Russell 1000; Reuters reported it is also moving to the Russell Top 200 megacap index.
Bloom Energy Corporation NYSE:BE bounced in early U.S. trading on Monday, but the stock’s bigger test is whether last week’s selling was a one-day index-flow break or the start of a lower valuation range for one of the year’s most stretched AI-power trades.
The regular NYSE session had not started. The exchange lists its core stock session at 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET.
The tape was not a normal clean-energy move. Bloom fell 18.49% on Friday while the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY) slipped 0.72% and the iShares Global Clean Energy ETF NASDAQ:ICLN NAV fell 3.77%. Bloom’s volume was 504% of its 65-day average.
| Friday / early Monday read | Bloom Energy | SPY | ICLN |
|---|---|---|---|
| Latest relevant price | $267.33 premarket | $728.99 Friday close | $19.50 NAV |
| Last regular-session move | -18.49% | -0.72% | -3.77% |
| Volume signal | 57.2 mln shares, 504% of 65-day average | 71.0 mln shares | Not comparable |
| Read-through | Stock-specific flow plus valuation reset | Broad tape was softer | Clean-energy peer move was smaller |
The index piece matters. FTSE Russell’s June reconstitution summary said 61 companies were being added to the Russell 1000, including 42 moving up from the Russell 2000, and named Bloom as one of the movers. The same report said Bloom was the largest company leaving the Russell 2000 Growth Benchmark Index and joining the Russell 1000 Growth Benchmark Index.
Reuters reported last week that Bloom was moving from the Russell 2000 to the Russell Top 200 megacap index after a gain of more than 1,000% over the prior year, helped by AI data-center power deals. Jefferies analyst Steven DeSanctis called Friday’s reconstitution a “really massive trade,” and Stephens analyst Melissa Roberts called it a “key liquidity day.” Reuters
That means Friday’s close may have mixed two trades: investors selling a stock that had run too far, and index funds changing baskets. The first is a view on Bloom. The second is mechanics. The stock has now moved into pools where large-cap, growth and dynamic-index managers have to measure it against bigger companies with deeper earnings bases.
At $267.33 in premarket trade, Bloom was still 23.9% below its 52-week high of $351.28 and 13.5% below Thursday’s $309.18 close. Friday’s low was $247.74.
| Analyst / firm | Latest listed stance | Target | Gap vs $267.33 premarket |
|---|---|---|---|
| Michael Blum, Wells Fargo | Hold | $240 | -10.2% |
| Christine Cho, Barclays | Hold | $276 | +3.2% |
| Mark Strouse, J.P. Morgan | Buy | $267 | -0.1% |
| Ameet Thakkar, BMO Capital | Hold | $279 | +4.4% |
| Chris Dendrinos, RBC Capital | Buy | $335 | +25.3% |
The target spread is now the trade. TipRanks lists Wells Fargo’s Michael Blum at Hold with a $240 target as of June 25, Barclays’ Christine Cho at Hold with a $276 target on June 23, J.P. Morgan’s Mark Strouse at Buy with a $267 target, BMO Capital’s Ameet Thakkar at Hold with $279, and RBC Capital’s Chris Dendrinos at Buy with $335.
The fundamental base has also shifted. Bloom reported first-quarter revenue of $751.1 million, up 130.4% from a year earlier, and product revenue of $653.3 million, up 208.4%. It raised 2026 revenue guidance to $3.4 billion to $3.8 billion and non-GAAP EPS guidance to $1.85 to $2.25. Chief Executive KR Sridhar said Bloom was becoming the standard and “go-to choice” for on-site power. Bloom Energy
Oracle Corp NYSE:ORCL is the customer investors keep coming back to. In April, Bloom said Oracle intended to buy up to 2.8 gigawatts of fuel-cell systems under a master services agreement, with an initial 1.2 GW contracted and deployment underway. Oracle Cloud Infrastructure executive Mahesh Thiagarajan said Bloom was helping meet customer demand across the United States.
Bloom’s own June data-center survey gave the bull case a number: 61% of data-center developers planned to bring their own power if the grid was not available. Natalie Sunderland, Bloom’s chief marketing officer, said “Access to power remains the biggest constraint” for data-center growth. Bloom Energy
For Monday, the clean price line is narrow. A hold above the $260-$276 target cluster would keep Bloom near the main sell-side range after the index reset. A slide back toward Friday’s $247.74 low would put the premarket bounce inside the same one-day range that came with the Russell trade.