GE Vernova (GEV) shares began Friday’s session at $935.26, marking a significant retreat from the 12-month peak of $1,181.95, following a 10.6% decline throughout May that has persisted into June.
GE Vernova Inc., GEV
The selloff appears contradictory when examining the fundamentals. First quarter performance exceeded expectations dramatically — earnings per share of $17.44 demolished the consensus forecast of $1.95. Revenues reached $9.34 billion, representing 17% year-over-year expansion. Management elevated its 2026 revenue growth projection to 18% at the midpoint and disclosed a comprehensive backlog totaling $263 billion.
What triggered the downturn?
Two separate developments emerged almost simultaneously — and both unsettled a market that had already built in exceptional expectations.
GEV had surged 255% during the twelve months ending April 2026. At such elevated valuations, minimal tolerance existed for anything short of perfect operational delivery.
During the Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference toward the end of May, CEO Scott Strazik highlighted an emerging concern investors had underestimated. He pointed out that several U.S. states are starting to resist new data center construction, referencing electrical grid constraints and escalating power costs affecting residential consumers.
Certain clients are encountering difficulties advancing projects due to local community and regulatory opposition. This revelation proved sufficient to unsettle market participants.
Investors interpreted the comments as a dose of reality. Following an almost vertical ascent, any obstacles to the growth narrative provided justification for profit-taking.
The second challenge involves ongoing legal proceedings with Spain-based Iberdrola regarding the Vineyard Wind offshore development. GE Vernova attempted to withdraw from the project, referencing $360 million in outstanding invoices. Iberdrola responded with a countersuit, asserting damages exceeding $1 billion connected to a 2024 wind turbine blade malfunction.
A Massachusetts court has mandated GE Vernova continue participation in the project or pursue resolution via arbitration. The litigation introduces additional uncertainty surrounding operational execution and potential financial exposure.
Regarding insider activity, CEO Victor Abate divested 4,819 shares on June 1st at an average of $948.08, decreasing his direct holdings by 72.42%. CAO Matthew Potvin similarly sold shares during May. While these transactions contributed to cautious market sentiment, insider sales of this magnitude aren’t uncommon among highly-valued companies.
Capital Group Investment Management reduced its GEV holdings by 30.1% during Q4, liquidating 1,174 shares. Conversely, major institutional investors including Vanguard, State Street, and Geode Capital all expanded their positions.
Notwithstanding the recent pullback, analyst conviction remains intact. Susquehanna established a $1,300 price objective. Oppenheimer aligned with that assessment at $1,303. TD Cowen elevated its target from $780 to $1,220. Royal Bank of Canada increased its projection to $1,195 alongside an Outperform designation.
Among 29 analysts tracking the equity, 22 maintain Buy ratings, two recommend Strong Buy, and five hold neutral stances. The average price target stands at $1,090.76.
GEV’s gas power order backlog has expanded from 83 GW to 100 GW, with management anticipating it will surpass 110 GW before year-end. New customers placing orders today encounter delivery schedules extending into 2029.
The company announced a quarterly dividend of $0.50 per share, distributed July 14th to shareholders registered as of June 16th.
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