New York, May 13, 2026, 07:06 EDT
- Broadwind shares surged 117.24% to finish Tuesday at $4.41 following its Q1 numbers, and hovered just below that, around $4.40, in the early hours of premarket trading Wednesday.
- It wasn’t so much the reported loss driving action, but rather what’s happening with orders, backlog, and Broadwind’s pivot—less wind tower focus, more gas-turbine and power-infrastructure.
- Bulls are talking up a streamlined, higher-margin industrial play here. Bears point to a shrunken company, scrapped guidance, and a stock that may have priced in too much future upside in just one go.
Broadwind’s shares didn’t jump on tidy quarterly numbers. The spark came from investors slapping a fresh label on the company.
Shares soared Tuesday, finishing at $4.41—more than double the prior close—after Broadwind posted its Q1 numbers and signaled a clearer shift from its wind-tower operations, which have long been shaped by policy swings, oversupply, and a handful of key buyers. Early premarket action Wednesday held steady, with bids close to $4.40.
It’s not complicated, but it matters. Broadwind turned in a per-share loss of $0.02, which topped the $0.07 loss analysts polled by MarketBeat had penciled in. Revenue landed at $34.06 million, also clearing the $32.72 million consensus. Orders jumped 23% year over year to $37.4 million, and adjusted EBITDA — after backing out interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and a few other items — reached $2.2 million.
Traders shrugged off the less flattering details: revenue dropped 7.5% from a year ago and Broadwind is still running at a loss. What got the stock moving? The market’s now seeing Broadwind as a niche domestic precision manufacturer for power gen—not just the old wind-tower story. With a market cap hovering around $103 million, it doesn’t take much fresh buying to move the needle.
A week prior, Broadwind offloaded its Abilene, Texas plant to IES Infrastructure, agreeing to as much as $19.5 million in cash and non-cash proceeds. The company said it would lease the site briefly to wrap up current orders. This isn’t minor: Abilene’s wind business brought in $56.3 million in revenue and $9.7 million adjusted EBITDA for 2025. The move cuts Broadwind’s size right out of the gate.
Management is steering attention to what’s left. CEO Eric Blashford described the businesses sticking around as “higher growth, more predictable, more profitable,” and the Q1 numbers back him up. Gearing orders jumped 66% to $13.2 million. Over at Industrial Solutions, orders climbed 44% to $14.6 million, which pushed backlog to a record $43.3 million. The Motley Fool
Timing works in Broadwind’s favor. The EIA sees U.S. power demand smashing previous highs in 2026 and 2027, citing surging AI data centers, crypto mines, and more electrification. Through those years, natural gas holds steady at about 39% to 40% of the country’s power mix—a key fact for Broadwind, since its fastest-growing segment remains natural gas turbine components.
It’s tough to miss what’s happening with the peer group. Back in April, GE Vernova bumped up guidance for 2026, citing stronger orders from data-center and grid customers—gas turbines and other power gear are moving. Powell Industries? They recently disclosed a $1.8 billion backlog and landed a single data-center order topping $400 million. Over at Array Technologies, the renewable equipment pipeline remains deep. Broadwind, though, is looking to distance itself from those more policy-exposed segments.
The bull thesis hinges on that dynamic. Broadwind’s ability to turn backlog into shipments could push plant utilization higher, nudging margins up as fixed factory costs get diluted over more revenue. “Really about volume and operating leverage,” CFO Thomas Ciccone said of the Gearing segment’s margin gains. Management pointed out that customers have already lined up orders through 2027—and some even further, reaching into 2028. The Motley Fool
The bearish view hardly needs much unpacking. Broadwind yanked its 2026 outlook after unloading the Abilene plant, which still made up $16.4 million from Q1’s revenue and $1.7 million in adjusted EBITDA. The company may have a cleaner narrative now, but it’s also a slimmer one—fewer proven results, and shares just more than doubled in a single session.
Customer timing remains a wild card here. Blashford flagged Q1 as likely the trough for Gearing and Industrial Solutions revenue, but cautioned analysts not to read too much into the latest order pace—some clients are locking in orders for later delivery. That helps with planning, but doesn’t translate to cash in the door this quarter.
Liquidity, at least on paper, looks stronger. Broadwind wrapped up Q1 showing $25.1 million in total cash and credit available—$16.4 million once you factor in minimum requirements. The Abilene sale, according to the company, should pump up liquidity by another $10 million after all credit and debt moves are settled. Management is now floating the idea of bolt-on acquisitions with that added flexibility. The new hurdle: can Broadwind actually buy its way to growth without paying too much?
No one’s pretending Q1 was flawless. The focus has shifted: is Broadwind shaping up as a rare small-cap entry for investors wanting exposure to the power-generation ramp fueled by AI, gas turbines, grid upgrades, and the broader industrial build? Looking ahead, the coming hurdle is less flashy than Tuesday’s price spike—executing the wind exit, maintaining backlog, and proving that the business mix deserves its richer multiple.