Shares of FuelCell Energy (FCEL) tumbled 19% following the release of second-quarter earnings that revealed a significantly larger loss and declining top-line performance.
For the fiscal quarter that concluded on April 30, 2026, the company recorded a net loss of $77.6 million—a substantial increase from the $37.7 million loss posted during the comparable period in the previous fiscal year. Total revenue decreased 5% on a year-over-year basis to $35.6 million, falling short of Wall Street projections.
Loss per share reached $1.45, showing improvement from the $1.79 reported in the prior-year quarter. However, this per-share improvement stemmed from dilution due to an increased share count rather than operational improvements.
A significant portion of the quarterly loss—approximately $42.6 million—resulted from an impairment charge. This charge was connected to the company’s strategic decision to upgrade equipment at its 7.4 MW Groton Project facility located in Connecticut, which operates on a U.S. Navy submarine base.
The Groton facility remained offline throughout the quarter for necessary repairs, which negatively impacted generation revenue. Additionally, limited module exchange activities contributed to the decline in service revenue.
Adjusted EBITDA registered at -$17.1 million, showing modest improvement compared to -$19.3 million in the year-ago period. Management attributed this progress to reduced cash operating expenses.
Despite the challenging quarterly results, FCEL continues moving forward with an ambitious manufacturing expansion initiative. The company increased its production target for the Torrington, CT facility from 350 MW to 500 MW of annual manufacturing capacity.
This expanded manufacturing initiative comes with an estimated investment range of $200 million to $275 million and is projected to require 24 months for full completion. Construction activities are already in progress, with the installation of a new high-volume tape caster completed and a new conditioning room commissioned as of May 31, 2026.
Additionally, the company unveiled a standardized 12.5 MW power block product specifically designed for data center operators facing grid capacity limitations. According to the company, this ready-to-deploy solution aims to accelerate time-to-power for AI infrastructure and data center projects.
The company’s sales pipeline experienced remarkable expansion, increasing 267% from the first quarter to reach 4 gigawatts in Q2. Management attributed this substantial growth primarily to heightened interest from data center customers. It’s important to note that this pipeline figure represents ongoing commercial discussions rather than executed contracts.
Meanwhile, the company’s backlog—which reflects signed agreements—decreased approximately 10% to $1.14 billion from $1.26 billion reported one year earlier.
As of April 30, cash and cash equivalents totaled $440.9 million, up from $341.8 million at the end of October 2025. During the quarter, the company raised $100.4 million through the sale of approximately 10.9 million shares at an average price of $9.45 per share.
Following the quarter’s close, FCEL completed an additional equity raise, selling 4.1 million shares at an average price of $13.31 per share, which generated net proceeds of $52.9 million.
Jefferies analysts maintained their Hold rating on the stock while reducing the price target from $9.00 to $7.20 in response to the revenue shortfall. The firm had anticipated $35 million in quarterly revenue; while the company reported $35.6 million for Q2, a previously reported period had delivered only $30.5 million against a consensus estimate of $42 million.
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