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FCEL, BE stocks sink, but only one is worth buying on the dip

FCEL, BE stocks sink, but only one is worth buying on the dip
Wajeeh Khan
09 Jul 2026, 05:34 AM

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BE (Bloom Energy) buy the dip

Buy BE. The drop is mainly “sell-the-news” plus macro risk-off from oil/Trump headlines, not a broken business. The $25B Brookfield AI infrastructure expansion is a financing/deployment runway that should keep hyperscaler demand intact, and the article notes BE’s sell-off is sentiment-driven while the long-term AI power thesis remains intact.

Key Risk: AI data-center buildout slows or Brookfield financing/deployment gets delayed, making the $25B expansion less real than the market expects.

FCEL (FuelCell Energy) avoid after dilution

Sell/avoid FCEL. The stock is falling because of an upsized $225M public offering at a deep discount ($21 vs ~$26 prior close), which mechanically dilutes shareholders and forces repricing. Even if the capital supports capex and working capital, the near-term tape is dominated by dilution math.

Key Risk: The new capital fails to translate into faster manufacturing scale and revenue growth, so dilution keeps weighing on valuation.

  • FuelCell Energy stock slips on upsized public offering.
  • Bloom Energy shares are being hit due to valuation concerns.
  • Here's why BE stock is more attractive than FCEL at current levels.

FuelCell Energy (FCEL) and Bloom Energy BE shares are taking a significant hit on Wednesday morning, but they are declining for completely different, company-specific reasons.

And while both FCEL and BE have their RSIs in the mid-40s after the sell-off, indicating the stocks are headed toward “oversold” territories, only one of them is worth buying on the dip today.

Note that both Bloom Energy and FuelCell stock remain strong performers for 2026, each up well over 100% versus the start of this year.

Why FuelCell stock is under pressure on Wednesday?

FCEL shares are cratering primarily because of an upsized public offering.

The clean energy firm initially announced a $200 million stock offering on July 7 but due to market condition, it immediately upsized it to $225 million, pricing 10.71 million of its common shares at $21 each.

Because this price represents a massive discount to its previous close of nearly $26, investors are aggressively repricing FuelCell Energy down to match the dilutive offering.

According to management, the fresh capital will go toward capital expenditures (capex) to expand manufacturing capacity, working capital, and general corporate purposes.

Why Boom Energy shares are slipping on July 8th?

Bloom Energy stock is slipping sharply primarily because of valuation concerns.

On July 8th, the firm announced a massive $25 billion expansion of its AI infrastructure partnership with Brookfield, a fivefold increase to build out and finance power solutions for AI data centers.

But because BE has surged so massively over the past year on AI power hype, it has become highly sensitive to broader Nasdaq volatility.

Today’s decline is a classic “sell-the-news” profit-taking event combined with macro headwinds – as Trump said the ceasefire deal with Iran is over and the US will hit Tehran “hard” tonight.

The subsequent rise in oil prices on Wednesday is prompting a risk-off sentiment that’s hurting high-flying names like Bloom Energy.

Why BE stock is more attractive to buy on the dip?

While both FuelCell and Bloom Energy are being punished today, only the latter is worth buying on the dip. Why? Because its dip is purely sentiment-driven, a macro pullback.

BE’s core thesis as an essential “picks-and-shovels” play for the global AI infrastructure buildout remains intact.

If anything, the sell-off in Bloom Energy is ignoring this morning’s massive $25 billion expanded financing runway with Brookfield, which may help accelerate its fuel cell deployments for power-hungry hyperscalers.

Backed by an enormous multi-gigawatt pipeline and top-tier analyst price targets sitting up at $350, the San Jose-headquartered clean energy firm is giving long-term investors an institutional-grade entry window on July 8 at a sudden discount.

Note that options pricing also currently signals a continued rally in BE shares to as much as $372 in the final quarter of 2026.