On July 10, FuelCell Energy declined 8.48% in regular trading, trading at $21.075/share, with turnover of $30.85 million. The stock has now retreated to near the $21 offering price established during the company's recent public offering.
On the news front, the company previously priced an underwritten public offering of approximately 10.7 million common shares at $21 each, raising gross proceeds of approximately $225 million. The ongoing equity dilution pressure from this offering continues to suppress the stock price. Additionally, company insiders previously filed Form 144 indicating plans to sell shares, further dampening market sentiment.
The decline also reflects profit-taking following the prior session's 8.21% rebound driven by the Siemens collaboration announcement. That partnership, which involves joint development of distributed energy systems integrating fuel cells, battery storage, and microgrid controls, had temporarily lifted sentiment but failed to sustain buying momentum. The stock has surged approximately 307% year-to-date from its 52-week low of $3.78, creating substantial short-term profit-taking pressure that compounds the dilution overhang.
(The above content is based on publicly available market information, generated by a program or algorithm, and is intended solely as a stock movement alert. It does not constitute investment advice or a basis for trading decisions.)