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Quanta Services Stock Pauses; What’s Next for PWR
30 May 2026
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Quanta Services Stock Pauses; What’s Next for PWR

New York, May 30, 2026, 14:03 (EDT)

  • Quanta ended Friday at $711.73, off 2.5% for the day after three sessions in the red.
  • The shares dropped 1.6% for the Memorial Day-shortened week.
  • Investors start June considering a $1 billion buyback, a positive Oppenheimer call, and some execution risk on power-grid and data-center projects.

Quanta Services heads into June after three straight sessions of losses as the stock stays tied to the U.S. power-infrastructure push.

Quanta shares finished Friday off 2.52% to $711.73, trailing the S&P 500, which was up 0.22%, and the Dow’s 0.72% gain. Quanta ended the week 9.76% under its May 6 peak at $788.75. That’s about the same drop as some infrastructure names, with AECOM down 2.12%, MasTec off 1.29%, and EMCOR down 2.55%.

Quanta shares slipped 1.6% over the four-session week that ended Friday, closing at $723.44 on May 22. The NYSE was shut Monday for Memorial Day. Quanta saw a pop to $742.18 on Tuesday but couldn’t hold the gain.

Quanta is now a cleaner way for stock investors to play demand for grid hardening, data center power, renewable hookups and big “load centers”—places that use a lot of electricity. So when the stock pulls back, it’s a check on whether the market still wants to pay for growth that’s clear but not without risk.

Quanta gave bulls something on May 22, with the board signing off on a $1 billion stock buyback and an $0.11 quarterly dividend. The dividend will go out July 13 to shareholders who own the stock as of July 1. Buybacks let companies purchase their own shares, but Quanta said it doesn’t have to buy a specific number and can adjust or end the plan.

Quanta shares got a lift last week after Oppenheimer’s Brent Thielman bumped his rating on the stock to Outperform from Perform, with an $800 price target, according to StreetInsider on May 28. Outperform is Wall Street’s term for expecting a stock to beat a benchmark or its peers.

Quanta is facing valuation pressure after its strong rally. Shares climbed in late April following first-quarter results, with revenue at $7.87 billion and net income attributable to common stock of $220.6 million. CEO Duke Austin called it an “exceptional first quarter” and pointed to record backlog of $48.5 billion. Backlog is work Quanta expects to turn into revenue. Quanta Services, Inc.

Utilidata added $40 million to its Series C on Thursday, rounding out a $100 million funding run. Earlier, Quanta and Nvidia had joined a previous tranche. The company is focused on power-orchestration tools for data centers. “The AI infrastructure buildout is one of the defining themes of this decade, but power is a fundamental limitation,” said James McIntyre, co-founder and managing partner of Renown Capital Partners. GlobeNewswire

But Quanta’s own filings outline the risks. The company said data centers, reshoring and electrification are driving demand, but flagged supply-chain trouble, policy swings and regulatory snags that have slowed projects and pushed up costs before. Bigger, more complex jobs can help margins but come with greater performance risk. Severe weather is another threat, delaying work or hurting productivity.

Few company events are on the calendar this week. According to Quanta’s investor site, the May 28 Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference is marked as past. Next up, Quanta has appearances set for June 16 at the Truist Securities Industrials and Services Conference in New York, then on June 17 at TD Cowen’s U.S. Corporate Access Day in Toronto.

Quanta’s stock is backed by buybacks, bullish analysts and a hefty order book. Still, execution is the sticking point. The market’s already priced in Quanta’s exposure to the AI power crunch and electrification trend. Even a brief pullback signals that investors want results, not only a backlog.

Jerzy Lewandowski is a senior markets editor at TS2.tech covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global financial markets. He studied economics at the University of Warsaw and previously worked in investment analysis before moving into financial journalism. His daily coverage focuses on the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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