NEW YORK, June 21, 2026, 16:03 EDT
- Plug Power closed at $2.85, up 7.55% on Thursday’s move before U.S. markets went dark Friday for Juneteenth.
- The shares rose roughly 3.3% during the holiday-shortened week, still trading far below their 52-week high.
- The coming week is about cash, financing headroom, project monetization, and if hydrogen stock buyers stick to the trade.
Plug Power Inc. will start the week trading above $2.80 after shares bounced on Thursday. The stock didn’t see any action on Friday, since Nasdaq stayed shut for Juneteenth on June 19. Nasdaq’s regular hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern, Monday through Friday.
This is key for the Plug trade, which remains more focused on liquidity than on single-day swings. Investors are still watching how much cash and financing Plug has to keep the business going, and they’re waiting to see if management can deliver on its pledge to get the hydrogen maker to positive adjusted profit by late this year.
Plug ended Thursday at $2.85, gaining 7.55% after dropping the two sessions before. That put the stock up from $2.76 last week on June 12, a close-to-close rise of about 3.3% for the holiday-shortened stretch. Prices bounced around: $2.80 Monday, then $2.71 Tuesday, $2.65 Wednesday, and finally $2.85 Thursday.
Growth stocks bounced Thursday. The Nasdaq Composite added 1.91%. Ballard Power Systems climbed 5.05%, while Air Products & Chemicals fell 0.55%. Plug finished still 37.77% under its 52-week high of $4.58, according to MarketWatch data.
Plug Power picked up about $39.2 million in cash earlier this month after selling a federal investment tax credit linked to its St. Gabriel, Louisiana hydrogen site. The ITC can go to another investor in exchange for cash under the federal program. CFO Paul Middleton called the deal a way to “enhance liquidity and optimize capital deployment.” Plug Power
Turnaround talk is still front and center. Plug posted first-quarter revenue at $163.5 million, up 22% from the same period last year. Gross margin came in at negative 13%, better than the negative 55% posted a year ago. CEO Jose Luis Crespo said Plug saw “continued progress improving the underlying economics of the business” and is on track for its EBITDAS target in the fourth quarter. That’s the company’s profit figure with interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and share-based compensation added back. Plug Power
Wall Street isn’t convinced yet. Barron’s pointed to Canaccord’s Jason Tilchen, who said after the company’s first-quarter numbers that Plug showed “continued signs” its cost cuts and restructuring are working. That’s the bullish take. But Plug still burns cash and needs asset sales, tax-credit transfers, and stronger margins to all fire together. Barron’s
Project tape gave investors some news to watch. Plug said in May that its 30-megawatt Barrow Green Hydrogen project in the UK hit final investment decision, or FID, moving it into execution. Plug is supplying PEM electrolyzers for the site, equipment that splits water into hydrogen and oxygen. Crespo called it “moving our largest UK project from award into execution.” Plug Power
But it’s a risky trade. Plug’s own filings flag the main problems: cost cuts might not work, hydrogen and logistics could fall short, project sales could slip or close on weaker terms, tax-credit deals might pay less than hoped, and financing could tighten up. Plug burned through $150.0 million of operating cash in the first quarter and finished March with $223.2 million in cash and cash equivalents, not counting restricted cash.
Plug’s week is shaping up as all about the balance sheet, not just stock moves. Bulls want to see proof Thursday’s jump wasn’t just a dead-cat bounce after a two-day slide. For bears, the argument stays the same: as long as Plug can’t show cash burn is slowing and monetization is real, funding worries will come back with every bounce.