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Plug Power Stock Returns to $3 as Traders Zero In on Key Level
9 June 2026
2 mins read

Plug Power Stock Returns to $3 as Traders Zero In on Key Level

New York, June 9, 2026, 07:02 EDT

  • Plug Power was last seen at about $3.19 ahead of the U.S. open, holding where it finished on June 8.
  • The stock is down about 22% since the June 2 close, as cash and dilution concerns return.
  • Investors are looking at the June 11 shareholder meeting, a new Form 144 sale notice, and the company’s latest move to raise cash through tax credits.

Plug Power Inc. (PLUG) traded flat to a little down ahead of the bell Tuesday, sticking close to $3.19. Shares have fallen sharply, raising questions again about the hydrogen firm’s liquidity strategy. This activity was all in premarket hours, with the regular U.S. cash market still closed.

Plug’s struggles stood out against a firmer market. Reuters said Nasdaq 100 futures gained 0.81% at 5:57 a.m. ET, getting a lift from chip stock gains and less tension in the Middle East, all of which put more focus on Plug’s own problems.

Plug has jumped off last year’s lows, but traders are watching again to see if the company can fund growth without too much new stock. Shares finished at $3.19 on June 8, down 22% from $4.09 on June 2, with the slide coming over just four sessions.

Plug Power saw a Form 144 notice filed after Monday’s close for a planned sale of 50,000 common shares, valued at $160,750. The filing listed Morgan Stanley Smith Barney as broker and Nasdaq as the exchange. A Form 144 signals an intent to sell but doesn’t confirm the shares have been sold.

Plug’s annual shareholder meeting is coming up soon. The company said it will webcast the event on June 11 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern. CEO and President Jose Luis Crespo will lead a corporate overview before taking questions from shareholders.

Cash is still the main issue here. Plug said June 2 it closed the sale of a federal investment tax credit for about $39.2 million, connected to its St. Gabriel, Louisiana hydrogen liquefaction site. Crespo called it part of “capital efficiency initiatives.” CFO Paul Middleton said it was a “disciplined financial strategy.” Plug Power

Plug’s latest quarterly report gave a mixed picture. Revenue for the first quarter climbed 22% to $163.5 million, while gross margin improved to negative 13% from negative 55% a year ago. Still, Plug posted a GAAP net loss of 18 cents a share. The company finished the quarter holding over $802 million in cash, with $223 million of that unrestricted. Plug expects to bring in around $275 million through hydrogen project asset monetization initiatives.

Dilution is the main worry. When Plug issues more shares, current owners see their stake shrink. Investors have been watching Plug’s rising share count for a while as the company works to fund its hydrogen plants, cover equipment sales, and deal with ongoing losses.

Peer action was mixed early Tuesday. Bloom Energy dipped in the premarket, but Ballard Power Systems was up. Fuel-cell and hydrogen stocks didn’t move as a group.

Plug calls itself an end-to-end hydrogen company, covering production, storage, delivery, and power generation. It says it has rolled out over 74,000 fuel-cell systems and more than 280 fueling stations. That puts it ahead of most hydrogen rivals in scale, but leaves it with big capital demands.

But things can turn. The trade sours if asset sales lag, if restricted cash doesn’t free up as fast, or if the market weighs the share count over the margin improvements. The stock might keep feeling that pressure. A sharper message at Thursday’s meeting, or word that June’s asset monetization is moving as planned, would push back on those concerns.

Plug trades under $4 again on Tuesday, slipping to just over $3 ahead of its shareholder meeting set for two days from now. Some investors keep questioning the cash demands for the company’s hydrogen expansion.

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the founder and CEO of TS2 Space, a satellite communications company serving customers around the world. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he has more than two decades of experience in telecommunications, satellite services and technology ventures. He writes about satellite communications, space technology, artificial intelligence and the stock market, with a particular focus on technology companies, semiconductors, emerging industries and the trends shaping global innovation.

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