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Plug Power stock jumps 12% after vote setback, with Feb 17 share decision in focus
7 February 2026
1 min read

Plug Power stock jumps 12% after vote setback, with Feb 17 share decision in focus

New York, February 7, 2026, 06:32 EST — The market has closed.

  • Plug Power bounced back Friday, finishing 11.6% higher after tumbling the previous session.
  • The shareholder meeting to vote on increasing the company’s authorized shares will pick back up on Feb. 17.
  • CEO Andy Marsh called on international shareholders to cast their ballots, with the company facing a key turnout threshold.

Plug Power Inc surged 11.6% Friday, finishing at $2.08 after losing ground over the previous two sessions. About 109 million shares changed hands as investors eyed a postponed shareholder vote that could be key for the hydrogen firm’s future financing. Ballard Power Systems, another name in fuel cells, added roughly 5.9% for the day.

The upcoming session is critical—this time, the shareholder vote takes center stage. Plug’s ability to boost its authorized stock hinges on the result, a crucial tool for companies like this that frequently turn to equity sales for operating cash.

Plug’s Feb. 5 filing revealed neither proposal made it across the finish line: roughly 49.40% of outstanding shares favored raising the authorized common stock, while about 39.63% backed the shift in voting requirements. The company pushed the special meeting out again, now planning to pick things back up at 4:00 p.m. ET on Feb. 17. Stockholders were told to get their votes in by 11:59 p.m. ET on Feb. 16.

PLUG’s rebound arrived alongside a sweeping risk-on surge across U.S. stocks Friday—the Dow soared over 1,200 points to set a fresh record, while the Nasdaq tacked on roughly 2.2%, the Associated Press reported.

The day before, Plug slid 9.27% to $1.86, putting the stock on a jagged ride—about a 20-point swing in just two sessions, daily pricing figures show.

For investors, “authorized shares” is the phrase to watch. It marks the upper limit of shares a company’s charter allows it to issue. Raising that number opens up options for the company but also puts dilution anxieties back in play; if more shares are sold down the road, everyone’s slice of ownership thins out.

Plug has turned to its retail base for a boost, even calling on overseas holders who often run into added complications. In a Friday note, CEO and Executive Chairman Andy Marsh acknowledged that European shareholders have had a “challenging” time voting, and directed them to the company’s proxy solicitor for assistance getting the control numbers necessary to participate. Plug Power

If shareholders reject the proposal, the specter of a reverse stock split is still hanging over Plug, adding more questions to the vote’s outcome. Plug has already warned: “If Proposal 2 is not approved, the Company will proceed with a reverse stock split.” That maneuver shrinks the number of shares outstanding—without touching the company’s actual value—but it’s known to unsettle investors. Plug Power

Traders are eyeing two things right now: proxy tallies and hints the company is catching up. The major event lands Feb. 17 with the special meeting. Feb. 16, when votes are due, comes first.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

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