The arithmetic of artificial intelligence is rewriting the rules of energy procurement. With hyperscalers facing grid bottlenecks and the insatiable electricity demands of data centers, Bloom Energy has positioned itself as an off-grid answer. That narrative just got a $25 billion multiplier.
Brookfield Asset Management has quintupled its financing commitment from an initial $5 billion to $25 billion (roughly €23.3 billion), announced on June 30, 2026. The money will flow into Bloom’s solid-oxide fuel cell installations, which convert natural gas or hydrogen into electricity without combustion — deployable exactly where data centers consume power. Sikander Rashid, Brookfield’s head of AI infrastructure, described the expansion as a testament to the partnership’s strength and the conviction behind the firm’s broader AI strategy.
The deal sits inside a larger play: Brookfield’s dedicated AI infrastructure fund, targeting $100 billion in total commitments. The partnership, which began modestly in October 2025, has become the biggest single financing arrangement for a company whose technology is increasingly seen as a reliable, controllable alternative to straining utility grids.
That reliability argument has won over more than Brookfield. The company’s order book has swelled to an estimated $20 billion, anchored by a master agreement with Oracle for up to 2.8 gigawatts as part of the Project Jupiter AI Campus, and a $2.65 billion contract with American Electric Power. Bloom’s first-quarter 2026 results reflected the momentum: revenue surged 130% to roughly $751 million, prompting management to lift the annual guidance range to $3.4 billion to $3.8 billion.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Bloom Energy?
The stock has responded in kind, though not without turbulence. Shares closed at €245.00 on Friday, up 3.38% on the day, with weekly gains of 10.61% and a year-to-date rally of 191.01%. Over the trailing twelve months, the advance stands at a staggering 1,094.25%. Yet from the 52-week high of €308.50 reached on June 25, the stock remains about 20% adrift, and the annualized 30-day volatility of roughly 114% underscores a persistently choppy ride.
Wall Street analysts have reacted to the Brookfield expansion with upgraded targets. UBS and Evercore ISI both raised their price objectives to $350, with UBS reiterating a buy rating and Evercore maintaining “outperform.” Earlier, Barclays had lifted its target to $254 following the strong quarterly numbers. The consensus seems to be that the financing unlocks a revenue trajectory that would have seemed improbable a year ago.
Adding to the bullish signals, Bloom Energy was recently added to the Russell 1000 index, a market-cap-weighted roster of large U.S. companies that uses objective criteria rather than a committee vote — a recognition that the fuel cell maker now ranks among established large caps.
With second-quarter results expected around July 30, 2026, and a $20 billion backlog providing visibility, the next chapters will test whether execution can keep pace with the financing hype. For now, Bloom Energy has the capital, the contracts, and the index membership to make its case as a cornerstone of AI’s energy future — even if the stock’s wild swings remind investors that turning megawatt ambition into consistent returns is never a straight line.
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