Today: 13 May 2026
EOSE stock: Eos Energy slips again premarket after brutal earnings selloff and softer 2026 outlook
27 February 2026
2 mins read

EOSE stock: Eos Energy slips again premarket after brutal earnings selloff and softer 2026 outlook

New York, Feb 27, 2026, 06:49 (EST) — Premarket

• Shares slipped another 2.5% before the bell, adding to Thursday’s steep 39.4% drop.
• Eos delivered record Q4 revenue, yet set its 2026 revenue guidance under what analysts had been looking for.
• Roth Capital lowered its price target, citing execution risk following the Q4 release.

Eos Energy Enterprises shares slipped another 2.5% before the bell Friday, adding to a brutal 39.4% plunge in the previous session as investors dumped the battery maker following its latest quarterly numbers and 2026 guidance. The stock was recently quoted at $6.57. It had settled at $6.74 Thursday, with around 151 million shares changing hands.

This volatility comes as Eos pushes its zinc-based energy storage systems to utilities and commercial buyers—a crowd that hasn’t hesitated to hit the stock for delays or heavy spending. These days, shares react sharply to every update. How things open Friday could signal if investors are buying the post-earnings pivot.

The core of the argument boils down to this: Can Eos actually get those booked orders out the door quickly enough to shrink its losses, or is another capital raise coming? Traders are eyeing the company’s first full-year revenue forecast, trying to decide if it’s the baseline—or just out of reach.

Eos posted its highest-ever fourth-quarter revenue at $58.0 million, with full-year sales climbing to $114.2 million, according to a regulatory filing. Even so, the company logged a net loss to shareholders of $120.5 million for the quarter and $969.6 million for the year—mostly tied to non-cash fair-value and capital-structure effects. Looking ahead, Eos rolled out a 2026 revenue target between $300 million and $400 million. That earlier “substantial doubt” over its ability to keep operating? Gone, the company said, dropping the going-concern warning. CEO Joe Mastrangelo described 2025 as a “structural turning point,” though he acknowledged revenue results fell short of what they’d hoped. SEC

Wall Street zeroed in on the shortfall between the company’s outlook and consensus numbers. Roth Capital’s Chip Moore dropped his price target down to $6 from $12, maintaining a neutral stance. “Execution risks remain high,” Moore wrote, warning the shares may continue reacting to specific events. TheFly’s figures showed consensus revenue for 2026 at $471.26 million; analysts had penciled in a fourth-quarter loss of 84 cents a share, far wider than the 24-cent loss expected. TipRanks

Eos has turned to capital markets for breathing room as it works to scale up production. The company is using convertible notes—debt instruments that may eventually convert into equity, potentially diluting current shareholders. For now, they extend debt maturities and help bolster short-term liquidity.

During the earnings call, Mastrangelo flagged capacity and factory throughput as the areas to watch next, telling analysts the Turtle Creek facility “hit its nameplate capacity” after 2025. He said putting up a new building would “change the game” for both cost and efficiency. Investing.com

The firm is leaning hard on its Indensity product architecture these days, hoping to shift investor focus away from choppy quarterly swings. Management keeps steering attention to the backlog and pipeline, but ultimately, it’s going to come down to deliveries and margin—no amount of slides will change that.

Eos goes up against big lithium-ion names and other storage players, with price cuts landing hard whenever buyers have choices. Eos sells its chemistry on safety and longer storage, but for investors, the whole thing hangs on whether the numbers at the factory add up.

But the downside is clear enough: gross losses are still big, and if production yields slip, supply costs climb, or customers struggle with financing, revenue could get delayed while cash burn keeps running high. Shares could tumble again even without a big headline—something as routine as a delayed shipment or softer margins might be enough.

Stock Market Today

  • Zoetis Climbs to 5th Spot in S&P 500 Analyst Rankings
    May 13, 2026, 1:23 PM EDT. Zoetis (ZTS) has risen to the #5 position among S&P 500 stocks in the latest analyst ranking, moving up one spot. This rank is calculated by averaging opinions from major brokerage firms for all 500 components. Despite the jump in analyst favor, Zoetis's stock price has dipped approximately 1.9% year to date. The ranking reflects collective broker sentiment, providing investors insight into which stocks analysts currently favor within the index.

Latest articles

POET Technologies Stock Is Back in Focus After COO Hire, Marvell Fallout and Class-Action Deadline

POET Technologies Stock Is Back in Focus After COO Hire, Marvell Fallout and Class-Action Deadline

13 May 2026
POET Technologies appointed Sandeep Kumar chief operating officer on May 11 as it prepares its Malaysia plant for higher-volume production. The move comes after Marvell Semiconductor canceled all Celestial AI purchase orders and a U.S. securities lawsuit was filed against POET and two executives. POET shares rose 1.4% to $13.92 in early afternoon trading, with volume above 26 million shares.
Ondas Stock on Watch After SkyLance Test and Mistral Share Filing Before Q1 Earnings

Ondas Stock on Watch After SkyLance Test and Mistral Share Filing Before Q1 Earnings

13 May 2026
Ondas Inc.’s Rotron Aerospace completed a firing demo of its SkyLance long-range one-way effector ahead of Ondas’s Q1 results release. Ondas shares fell 12 cents to $8.92 after the company filed for resale of 2.77 million shares tied to its $175 million Mistral acquisition. The Mistral deal boosted Ondas’s backlog to $457 million as of March 31. Rotron was acquired in March for $6.7 million cash and 3.33 million shares.
Gold Price Drop Deepens as Hot Inflation Shakes Fed Bets Before Trump-Xi Talks

Gold Price Drop Deepens as Hot Inflation Shakes Fed Bets Before Trump-Xi Talks

13 May 2026
Spot gold fell 0.6% to $4,686.99 an ounce Wednesday after U.S. inflation data fueled bets on higher-for-longer interest rates, pressuring bullion. U.S. gold futures edged up 0.2%. India raised gold and silver import tariffs to 15%, sending local gold futures up 7.2%. Treasury yields climbed toward their highest since July, adding further drag for gold.

Popular

Melrose Industries share price sinks 13% as 2026 outlook spooks investors
Previous Story

Melrose Industries share price sinks 13% as 2026 outlook spooks investors

PENN Entertainment stock edges down in premarket after 17% jump on Q4 results — what Wall Street watches next
Next Story

PENN Entertainment stock edges down in premarket after 17% jump on Q4 results — what Wall Street watches next

Go toTop