GE Vernova stock rallied sharply in morning trading, rising about 4.8% after Jefferies increased its price target on the shares to $1,210 and kept a Buy recommendation in place. Jefferies said the roughly 30% decline from the stock's all-time highs looked like an overextended response to worries around the company’s blade, tower, and module business and expressed confidence that GEV’s order backlog would extend into 2031.
The firm also said the company remained on track to reach its 110 gigawatt combined gas turbine and slot reservation agreement target by year-end, and that positive upward revisions to forecasts were expected through the year. Those projections framed Jefferies’ re-rating as a key catalyst for the move higher in the shares.
Complementing Jefferies’ view, Barclays identified GE Vernova as the leading electrical equipment beneficiary from datacenter operators shifting to higher-voltage 800VDC power architectures. That research emphasized the company’s expanding exposure to AI-related infrastructure work, noting the Electrification segment now contributes more than 40% of GE Vernova’s EBITDA compared with the mid-20% range a few years ago.
William Blair’s concurrent estimate that the U.S. datacenter power supply-demand deficit could reach 28 gigawatts by 2030 added another layer to the argument for continued demand for gas turbines and grid solutions, reinforcing the structural case for parts of GEV’s portfolio.
The broader market backdrop was constructive for the stock move. The S&P 500 rose 0.6%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.7%, and the NASDAQ advanced 0.8% in the same session, lending a risk-on tone that benefited energy and industrial names as well as GEV specifically.
Insider activity has been visible in recent weeks, with several GE Vernova executives selling shares. According to market commentary, those sales have not materially dampened investor sentiment given the strength of the fundamental narrative driving the stock.
GE Vernova was trading at $908.99, roughly 23% below its 52-week high of $1,181.95 at the time of the move, as investors reassessed whether the earlier pullback presented a re-entry point into a company positioned to benefit from datacenter electrification and power infrastructure demand.
Market context and takeaway
Taken together, the intraday gain appears to reflect a convergence of a prominent analyst re-rating, sector-level research highlighting datacenter power requirements, and a supportive broad market. Those pieces combined to lift the stock during a session that favored energy and industrial names.