The hydrogen fuel cell pioneer Plug Power has become a study in contradictions. Its stock has surged more than 40% in April alone and roughly 44% year-to-date, yet the analyst community remains deeply divided. BMO Capital’s Ameet Thakkar slashed his price target to $1.00 with an Underperform rating, while Craig-Hallum’s Eric Stine sees the shares at $7.00 — a chasm that underscores just how uncertain the market is about the company’s trajectory. The average analyst target sits at $2.71 with a Hold consensus, barely above the current price of €2.72.
The rally has been fueled by tangible operational progress. Plug Power reported a fourth-quarter 2025 gross margin of 2.4%, a dramatic swing from the negative 122% recorded in the same period a year earlier. Annual revenue for 2025 climbed 13% to roughly $710 million. CEO Jose Luis Crespo has laid out an aggressive timeline: positive EBITDAS by the end of 2026, operating profit by end-2027, and full profitability by end-2028. The internal cost-cutting program, dubbed “Project Quantum Leap,” is credited with enabling this turnaround.
Now, however, that fragile recovery faces a direct test from US import tariffs. Plug Power sources components for its fuel cell business from China and imports electrolyzers from Europe, both of which now face 20% duties. The company has pledged to halve its reliance on Chinese suppliers within six months and insists its proprietary electrolyzer platform is largely unaffected. But whether the supply chain overhaul can be executed without eroding margins remains an open question.
To shore up its finances, Plug Power has struck a deal with Stream Data Centers that is expected to generate gross proceeds of at least $132.5 million. This forms part of a broader asset monetization program targeting more than $275 million in total liquidity. The cash injection is critical, given the company’s $8.2 billion in total debt and a net loss of $1.63 billion for fiscal 2025.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Plug Power?
Crespo is simultaneously pivoting toward a new growth narrative: hydrogen for AI data centers. The company has signed a non-binding letter of intent with an unnamed US data center developer and is bidding to supply up to 250 megawatts of hydrogen power in a potential PJM auction with contract terms of at least seven years. The backdrop is compelling — data center electricity demand is projected to reach nearly 12% of total US consumption by 2030, up from roughly 4% in 2024. Yet Plug Power has few concrete contracts in this segment, while rivals like Bloom Energy already serve established data center clients.
Dilution remains a structural drag. Shareholders approved a doubling of authorized capital to 3 billion shares in February 2026, and the outstanding share count has risen about 50% over the past twelve months alone. Over the past decade, the number of shares has ballooned by nearly 700%. Even under optimistic scenarios, existing shareholders face significant dilution risk.
The analyst community is not buying into the rally. Susquehanna raised its price target to $2.75 with a Neutral rating, while RBC Capital matched that figure with a Sector Perform call. Both targets offer no upside from current levels.
All eyes are now on the first-quarter 2026 results due May 11. Analysts expect revenue of roughly $141 million and a loss of $0.10 per share. The critical question is whether the newly positive gross margin can withstand the tariff pressure — and whether “Project Quantum Leap” will deliver measurable results that justify the stock’s recent surge.
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