Bloom Energy spikes after vastly expanding its deal to supply fuel cells to Oracle
Bloom Energy spiked 15% in postmarket trading on Monday after expanding its pact to supply power to Oracle.
The hyperscaler has contracted an initial 1.2 gigawatts of fuel cell capacity from Bloom, with plans to procure up to 2.8 gigawatts in order to support the power needs of its data centers.
Shares of Bloom boomed last July after the initial announcement that it would be delivering “onsite power for an entire data center within 90 days,” the first time the fuel cell company booked a direct deal with a hyperscaler. Bloom came through with the delivery in 55 days.
Oracle execs are obviously pleased with the execution and the results — and have another reason to be happy about getting more power from Bloom...
In concert with this announcement, a filing showed that Oracle received warrants to buy 3.53 million shares of Bloom Energy for $113.28 apiece on April 9, as part of an agreement reached between the two sides in October. That would be about 1.25% of Bloom’s current shares outstanding.
“It was a great strategic partnership where both enterprises had a lot to gain,” Bloom founder, chairman, and CEO KR Sridhar said of the warrant deal during the Q4 earnings call in February. “And remember, these were not penny warrants. These were done at market pricing on the day we agreed to, like what we do. So it is not in lieu of something other than both parties enhancing enterprise value.”
So, Bloom’s business gets a massive boost from a hyperscaler moving from a proof of concept to a seal of approval, and Oracle gets power for about $320 million less than the sticker price (based on the gap between Bloom’s postmarket price on Monday, roughly $204, and the exercise price of the warrants).