Plug Power Sprints Toward Profitability on Non-Dilutive Cash and a UK Hydrogen Milestone
27.05.2026 - 10:43:22 | boerse-global.de
The final investment decision for Plug Power’s 30-megawatt Barrow Green Hydrogen project in the UK, announced on May 20, marks a tangible breakthrough for the company’s electrolyser business in Europe. Six GenEco PEM electrolysers, each with 5 MW of capacity, will supply green hydrogen to a Kimberly-Clark facility in Cumbria. For investors watching Plug Power’s long-touted project pipeline, this is the kind of concrete step that lends weight to the bull case.
That momentum is being reinforced by a cash-management strategy designed to avoid shareholder dilution. The company is closing in on a $39.2 million sale of tax credits from its St. Gabriel joint venture by the end of May, part of a broader $275 million asset monetisation programme. Chief financial officer Paul Middleton has flagged an additional $142 million transaction with Stream Data Centers, expected to close in June. Combined with the $802 million in total liquidity Plug Power reported at the end of the first quarter, management believes these non-dilutive sources — paired with lower capital expenditure — can fund operations through all of 2026 without issuing new equity.
The first-quarter results that provided that liquidity snapshot also showed meaningful operational improvement. Revenue climbed 22% year on year to $163.5 million, well ahead of the consensus estimate of roughly $140 million. The standout line item was electrolyser revenue, which surged from $9.2 million to $40.8 million. Gross margin under GAAP improved from minus 55% to minus 13%, driven by cost reductions, better service execution, and cheaper hydrogen sourcing. Hydrogen sales themselves rose 22%, helped by higher prices and a growing customer base.
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CEO Jose Luis Crespo expects further margin gains as the fuel-procurement network is optimised and federal tax credits are reintroduced. The company is guiding for a gross margin of around 40% for the full year, with revenue growth in the 13-15% range.
Alongside the operational turnaround, a fresh demand narrative has captured investor attention. On May 21, competitor Bloom Energy announced a partnership with AI firm Nebius to power cloud infrastructure. The deal stoked speculation that Plug Power’s integrated hydrogen ecosystem could serve a similar role as a backup power source for data centres, which currently consume about 4% of US electricity. Bain projects that share could more than double to 9% by 2030. For Plug Power, data centre operators willing to pay a premium for reliable, off-grid baseload power look like the ideal customer.
Analyst reaction to the quarterly numbers has been mixed but not dismissive. B. Riley lifted its price target from $3 to $5 and reiterated a buy rating. Canaccord Genuity raised its target from $2.50 to $4 but kept a hold. BMO Capital, more cautious, maintained an underperform rating while nudging its target from $1 to $1.20, citing higher-than-expected cash burn. On the ground, Plug Power has now installed more than 320 MW of electrolyser capacity globally and holds a project pipeline worth over $8 billion, including a 100 MW system with Galp Energia in Portugal and a 25 MW system with Iberdrola and BP in Spain.
The stock traded at around €3.32, having roughly quadrupled over the past twelve months and rallied 73.6% since the start of the year. It sits barely 6% below its 52-week high of €3.51. Management has laid out a clear profitability roadmap: positive EBITDA run-rate by the fourth quarter of 2026, positive operating income in 2027, and full profitability in 2028. With non-dilutive cash in hand, a green-lighted project in the UK, and a burgeoning AI-driven demand story, the next few quarters will determine whether the pace of improvement is fast enough to silence the remaining skeptics.
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Plug Power Stock: New Analysis - 27 May
Fresh Plug Power information released. What's the impact for investors? Our latest independent report examines recent figures and market trends.
