The hydrogen sector in April 2026 presents a study in extremes, stretching from billion-dollar backlogs to penny-stock potential. As one company approaches a $40 billion valuation, another is just formalizing a research partnership in Japan. This is the landscape defining five key industry players, revealing both their stark differences and their common ground.
A Sector Operating on Three Tiers
Currently, the hydrogen industry functions across three distinct strata. At the pinnacle sits Bloom Energy, commanding a market capitalization of approximately $38 billion and a product backlog of around $6 billion. Plug Power is working to emerge from the red after posting its first positive gross margin quarter. While Nel ASA and Ballard Power Systems show operational progress, they remain unprofitable. SunHydrogen, meanwhile, is still in the development phase.
This divergence is amplified by oil prices breaching the $110 per barrel mark. For fuel cell providers, the relative appeal of decentralized power generation increases. Electrolyzer manufacturers, however, face pressure from higher input costs.
Plug Power: Major Order Meets Legal and Financial Scrutiny
Plug Power secured a significant 275-megawatt electrolyzer order for Hy2gen Canada’s Courant project, marking its largest GenEco deal in years. On April 6, the stock surged 11.6% to $2.69 on heavy volume of 98.5 million shares, about 7% above its three-month average. By Tuesday, shares had retreated to $2.42.
Under new CEO Jose Luis Crespo, management has outlined an ambitious roadmap: positive EBITDA by the end of 2026, positive operating income in 2027, and full profitability by 2028. The company reported roughly $368.5 million in unrestricted liquidity at the end of 2025. A planned sale of the Gateway site to Stream Data Centers is expected to generate at least $132.5 million, part of a broader strategy to mobilize over $275 million.
For the full year 2025, revenue reached about $710 million, with the fourth quarter achieving a positive gross margin for the first time. However, a securities class action lawsuit filed in March by firm Bleichmar Fonti & Auld weighs on sentiment. The suit alleges management misrepresented the likelihood of securing a $1.66 billion loan from the Department of Energy.
The analyst consensus is a “Hold,” with an average 12-month price target of $3. CFO Paul Middleton and VP of Investor Relations Roberto Friedlander are conducting institutional investor meetings in Toronto and Montreal, testing whether the profitability narrative resonates with major investors.
Bloom Energy: Data Centers Fuel Ascent to New Heights
Transforming from a niche player to a favored infrastructure provider for the AI industry, Bloom Energy saw its 2025 annual revenue climb 37.3% to $2.02 billion. Fourth-quarter earnings per share of $0.45 and revenue of $777.7 million both substantially exceeded analyst forecasts.
Key metrics underscore this momentum:
- Product Backlog: Up 140% year-over-year to approximately $6 billion
- Service Backlog: Around $14 billion
- 2026 Revenue Guidance: $3.1 to $3.3 billion
- 2025 Gross Margin: 29.0% (up from 27.5% the prior year)
JPMorgan raised its price target to $166 with an “Overweight” rating. China Renaissance initiated coverage with a “Buy” rating and a $207 target. In contrast, Jefferies moved the opposite direction, lowering its target to $97 in late March. The market will watch closely as Simon Edwards assumes the CFO role on April 13, a change analysts are monitoring given the company’s ambitious valuation.
Shares currently trade near $135.58, having gained over 56% in the past six months. The 52-week low of $15.15 seems a distant memory.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Plug Power?
Nel ASA: Quiet Recovery Precedes Key Events
Nel ASA shares have quietly advanced in recent weeks, gaining roughly 10% week-over-week and nearly 10% month-over-month. Year-to-date, however, the stock remains down over 26%. It trades at €0.19, hovering near its 50-day average and just above its 52-week low.
Two imminent events dominate the calendar. A digital Annual General Meeting on April 10 will see the company urging shareholders to switch to electronic communication via VPS. Twelve days later, on April 22, first-quarter results will provide the first major financial checkpoint following this quiet share price recovery.
Recent quarterly figures were mixed. Revenue of 361 million NOK significantly beat expectations of 268 million NOK. However, EBITDA came in at minus 274.8 million NOK, with an EBITDA margin of minus 28.5%. In March, Citi reduced its price target from 2.70 to 2.40 NOK. Notably, of the seven analysts covering the stock, none recommend a buy—all seven advise selling. The average 12-month price target stands at 2.14 NOK.
SunHydrogen: Establishing a Formal Research Foothold in Japan
SunHydrogen announced the formation of SunHydrogen Japan GK. The new subsidiary will be led by Dr. Taro Yamada, a senior research scientist at the University of Tokyo’s Faculty of Engineering. Dr. Yamada co-authored a 2021 Nature paper on outdoor photocatalytic hydrogen production using a 100-square-meter system, part of Japan’s NEDO-funded ARPChem program.
Collaboration between SunHydrogen and Dr. Yamada dates to December 2023, with his work contributing significantly to efficiency results from Japanese testing sessions published in February 2025. The new corporate structure provides a permanent institutional framework for this work and establishes a local presence to deepen cooperation with Honda R&D and other Japanese industrial partners.
In February 2026, the company also signed a technology and manufacturing agreement with CTF Solar, a subsidiary of Chinese conglomerate CNBM. The near-term goal is the production of 1,000 full-size hydrogen panels (1.92 m² each). The stock trades around $0.02, with a market capitalization of about $125.6 million. Net loss for the past twelve months was $8.2 million. There is no formal analyst coverage, typical for a pre-revenue company.
Ballard Power: Revenue Growth Lacks Technical Confirmation
Ballard Power Systems delivered 2025 revenue growth of 42.5% to $99.4 million. Losses shrank by almost 72%. In the last quarter, a loss per share of $0.06 beat the consensus estimate by one cent, briefly suggesting a potential trend reversal.
The chart tells a different story. Shares trade at $2.55, below the 200-day moving average of $2.72, maintaining a bearish signal. The stock’s range over the past year—from $1.00 to $4.10—reflects persistent investor uncertainty.
Wells Fargo raised its price target from $1.50 to $2.00 but maintained its “Underweight” rating. TD Securities upgraded the stock from “Sell” to “Hold” in January, setting a $2.50 target. The average analyst rating remains “Sell,” with a price target of $2.34. A March supply agreement with New Flyer provides near-term revenue visibility but little else for now.
A Sector Awaiting Catalysts
The coming weeks bring an unusual concentration of potential catalysts. Nel’s AGM on April 10 and Q1 report on April 22 will test the substance behind its quiet recovery. Plug Power’s Canadian roadshow gauges institutional appetite for its turnaround story. Bloom Energy’s new CFO takes the helm on April 13. SunHydrogen must demonstrate its Tokyo subsidiary is more than a press release.
Goldman Sachs forecasts the hydrogen generation market could reach $1 trillion annually by 2050. The distance between that vision and today’s reality varies enormously among these five firms. Bloom Energy appears to have found its trajectory. For Plug Power, Nel ASA, and Ballard Power, endurance is the key question. SunHydrogen, meanwhile, is still building its scientific foundation—not its revenue lines.
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