GE Vernova’s business is firing on almost every cylinder. Whether that’s enough to justify the current stock price is a different question.
GE Vernova Inc., GEV
The energy technology company sits at the center of one of the biggest infrastructure stories in the market right now: the world needs more electricity, and it needs it fast. AI data centers are the headline driver, but aging grids, industrial electrification, and rising cooling demands are all pulling in the same direction.
GEV’s technology already helps generate around 25% of global electricity. It has roughly 7,000 gas turbines installed worldwide. That kind of installed base doesn’t get built overnight.
Q1 results backed up the demand story. Orders came in at $18.3 billion, up 71% organically year-over-year. Backlog jumped $13 billion in a single quarter. For a business already this large, those are eye-catching numbers.
The U.S. Department of Energy estimates data centers consumed 176 TWh of electricity in 2023. That figure could reach as high as 580 TWh by 2028. GEV sells the physical infrastructure that sits between energy generation and end use — gas power, grid transfer, storage, and control equipment.
At around $982 per share and a $263 billion market cap, GEV trades at approximately 31x its 2026 free cash flow guidance of $6.5 billion to $7.5 billion. That’s roughly double the sector median of around 15.5x. The forward P/E non-GAAP ratio tells a similar story.
That premium requires near-perfect execution. Backlog needs to convert cleanly, margins need to expand, and the Wind segment needs to stabilize. Any regulatory friction — whether carbon rules for gas plants, tariff exposure on steel and copper, or permitting slowdowns — could put pressure on the cash flow figures underpinning that valuation.
Services, which make up more than 55% of backlog, do provide a cushion. Recurring service revenue is more predictable than equipment sales, and that visibility matters when the market is pricing in a lot.
Bernstein initiated coverage this week with an Outperform rating and a $1,206 price target. The firm called GEV the only scaled, vertically integrated platform serving the global electricity system at a point when demand is “inflecting.” Bernstein also flagged the electrification segment as a long-term growth runway, noting GEV holds relatively low market share of an estimated $300 billion total addressable market there.
Jefferies holds a Buy rating with a $1,210 target, and Raymond James has a Market Perform, noting gas turbine demand has exceeded expectations due to AI infrastructure buildout.
The Wall Street consensus sits at Strong Buy — 18 Buys, 3 Holds, zero Sells. The average price target of $1,252 implies about 27% upside from current levels.
GEV’s stock has returned roughly 101% over the past year.
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