Why GE Vernova’s stock is power surging after just one year of existence

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Storied General Electric doubled down on fossil fuels in the power sector a decade ago with its largest industrial acquisition ever, paying almost $11 billion for the French conglomerate Alstom’s electric business to dramatically grow GE Power.

GE made the purchase just months before the oil and gas sector crashed and the renewable energy sector began to take off. The deal was dubbed a boondoggle and the latest misstep in GE’s many struggles.

Even when GE decided to split into three parts in 2021, including spinning off its power and renewables business, the focus was on clean energy. The name GE Vernova loosely translates to “new green,” meant to reflect a new and innovative low-carbon era.

But the funny thing is that green company holds GE’s massive gas-turbine manufacturing business. And, thus, the once ill-fated GE Power division has hit it big.

After years of seemingly poor timing, GE Vernova struck the zeitgeist when it finally launched as a publicly traded standalone in April 2024. Since then, GE Vernova’s shares have surged nearly 250%, including a massive 65% spike just since the beginning of April to new highs, up to a market cap of about $125 billion.

Just a few years ago, electricity demand was essentially flat, so two factors dominated investment concerns in the mature power generation business: cost and climate impact, giving wind and solar potential advantages. Now, the world is suddenly changed with new data centers for artificial intelligence spurring the fastest growth in power demand in decades. The demand for gas turbines for power plants is booming and they cannot be built quickly enough.

“One of the pinnacle technologies underlying the modern world is the high-temperature, high-efficiency gas turbine, and only a few companies on Earth can make the highest efficiency turbines,” said Mark Nelson, the managing director of the consultancy Radiant Energy Group. “GE Vernova is one of the few.”

The company’s combined backlog of orders for new gas turbines and maintenance services for its existing customers now totals $123 billion.

Hot numbers

GE Vernova reported first-quarter earnings of 91 cents per share from sales of $8 billion, easily beating Wall Street analysts’ estimates of 45 cents on $7.6 billion. Highlighting the dramatic speed of its growth, GE Vernova posted a loss of $106 million, or 47 cents per share, at this point last year.

“Sitting here today, ’26 and ’27 are largely sold out, we are approaching filling out ’28, and starting to sign agreements for later years,” GE Vernova CEO Scott Strazik said on last month’s earnings call. “I give that context to just frame that I continue to see this market normalizing to a higher-for-longer gas market. The world needs more dispatchable power generation to support economic growth and national security.”