There was a great deal of skepticism when GE Vernova debuted on the New York Stock Exchange following its separation from General Electric in April 2024. For many years, GE’s energy equipment division was plagued by wind losses, restructuring expenses, and an excessive cost base. Investor circles were asking how long it would take for the cleanup to produce tangible results rather than whether the new company would eventually become interesting. It turned out that the answer was less than two years. When GE Vernova released its first-quarter earnings on April 22, 2026, the stock of this market capitalization saw one of the most significant single-day movements in recent memory. The shares reached an all-time intraday high of USD 1,142, closing up 13.75 percent at USD 1,127.56. The stock has returned about 205% since the spin-off.
EPS was the number that caused the most noticeable shock. Compared to a consensus estimate of USD 1.67, GE Vernova reported first-quarter earnings per share of USD 17.44, a beat of roughly 944 percent. The accounting treatment of the February-completed Prolec GE acquisition, which produced approximately USD 4.5 billion in non-cash gains excluded from adjusted EBITDA, is partially responsible for the discrepancy. Even so, the underlying operational performance was outstanding. With margins growing by 390 basis points, adjusted EBITDA increased by 87% year over year to USD 896 million. With a book-to-bill ratio of roughly 2.0, orders for the quarter totaled USD 18.3 billion, up 71% year over year. This indicates that GE Vernova booked about two dollars of new business for every dollar of revenue it recorded in Q1.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION — GE VERNOVA INC. (NYSE: GEV)
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | GE Vernova Inc. |
| Stock Symbol | NYSE: GEV |
| Founded / Spun Off | April 2, 2024 (from General Electric) |
| Headquarters | Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA |
| CEO | Scott Strazik |
| CFO | Ken Parks |
| Employees | 78,000 (2025) |
| Revenue (2024) | USD 34.9 Billion |
| Current Share Price | USD 1,127.56 (April 22, 2026 close) |
| Daily Change | +136.26 (+13.75%) |
| 52-Week High | USD 1,142.00 (April 22, 2026 — intraday record) |
| 52-Week Low | USD 333.19 |
| 1-Year Return | +205% |
| Market Capitalization | ~USD 303 Billion |
| P/E Ratio | ~63.72 |
| Dividend Yield | 0.18% |
| Quarterly Dividend | USD 0.51/share |
| Q1 2026 EPS Actual | USD 17.44 (vs. forecast USD 1.67; +944% surprise) |
| Q1 2026 Revenue | USD 9.34 Billion (up 7% YoY; beat by 0.86%) |
| Q1 2026 Adjusted EBITDA | USD 896 Million (+87% YoY) |
| Q1 2026 Free Cash Flow | USD 4.8 Billion (vs. full-year 2025: USD 3.7 Billion) |
| Q1 2026 Orders | USD 18.3 Billion (+71% YoY; book-to-bill ~2.0x) |
| Total Backlog | USD 163 Billion (up from USD 116B at spin) |
| Backlog Target | USD 200 Billion by 2027 (pulled forward from 2028) |
| Gas Power GW Under Contract | 100 GW (target: 110+ GW by end-2026) |
| 2026 Revenue Guidance (raised) | USD 44.5–45.5 Billion |
| 2026 Adj. EBITDA Margin (raised) | 12–14% |
| 2026 Free Cash Flow Guidance (raised) | USD 6.5–7.5 Billion |
| Tariff Impact Estimate | USD 250–350 Million for 2026 |
| Analyst Average Price Target | USD 1,002.97 (pre-earnings; Baird raised to USD 1,400 post) |
| Analyst Consensus | BUY (35 analysts) |
| Key Segments | Power (51.3%), Electrification (25%), Wind (23.7%) |
| Key Subsidiaries | GE Wind, LM Wind Power, ProlecGE (fully acquired Feb 2026) |

Analysts frequently pause and reread the free cash flow figure. In just one quarter, GE Vernova produced USD 4.8 billion in free cash flow, more than it did in 2025. Down payments on new orders and slot reservations, especially in Gas Power and Electrification, where clients are securing production slots years in advance and paying deposits to hold their place, were a major factor in the surge. Gas Power signed 21 gigawatts of new contracts in Q1, increasing the total GW under contract sequentially from 83 to 100. Gas Power supplies turbines to power plants that range from traditional utility customers in the United States to data center developers in Vietnam and Brazil. With a target of 20 GW of annualized gas turbine production capacity by mid-year, management now anticipates finishing 2026 with at least 110 GW under contract.
In ways that weren’t entirely apparent at the time of GE Vernova’s launch, the electrification segment has grown to be the company’s fastest-growing division, so it merits special attention. With a notable increase in substations, HVDC systems, and transformers, electrification orders increased 86% year over year to roughly USD 7.1 billion in Q1, nearly 2.5 times the segment’s current revenue. Approximately USD 2.4 billion of those orders were for data centers. To put the trajectory into concrete terms, that quarter’s data center orders surpassed the segment’s total for the entire year 2025. Prolec’s early lean manufacturing initiatives have already reduced rework hours by nearly 70% in one sub-assembly process and increased output by 40%, so the acquisition of ProlecGE, which added transformer manufacturing plants in Shreveport, North Carolina, and Wisconsin, came at the perfect time. These gains are not theoretical. They are taking place in real factories.
Observing GE Vernova operate in this setting gives the impression that the company has stumbled into an incredibly advantageous intersection of demand cycles: the development of AI data centers necessitates both power generation and grid infrastructure; the demand for gas turbines is driven by energy security concerns in Asia and Europe; and the global electricity grid hasn’t been significantly upgraded in decades. The duration of these demand tailwinds at their current intensity is still unknown. With estimated EBIT losses of about USD 400 million for the entire year 2026, wind is still a real drag, and tariff headwinds of USD 250 to 350 million are actual expenses that management is controlling but not eliminating. Free cash flow is now estimated at USD 6.5 to 7.5 billion, and full-year revenue guidance has been increased to USD 44.5 to 45.5 billion. That is an impressive set of numbers to be defending for a business that hardly existed two years ago.
Disclaimer
Nothing published on Creative Learning Guild — including news articles, legal news, lawsuit summaries, settlement guides, legal analysis, financial commentary, expert opinion, educational content, or any other material — constitutes legal advice, financial advice, investment advice, or professional counsel of any kind. All content on this website is provided strictly for informational, educational, and news reporting purposes only. Consult your legal or financial advisor before taking any step.
