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GEV Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis
GE Vernova delivered strong Q1 2026 with $18.3B orders (+71% YoY), $163B backlog (+$13B sequential), and raised full-year guidance on robust Power and Electrification momentum, particularly from data center demand.
Key Metrics
Wichtigste Erkenntnisse
- Q1 orders surged 71% to $18.3B with 2.0x book-to-bill; backlog grew $13B sequentially to $163B, targeting $200B in 2027 vs. prior 2028 guidance.
- Electrification orders nearly tripled in North America/Asia; data center orders of $2.4B in Q1 exceeded full-year 2025; Prolec backlog grew 25% to $5B since acquisition.
- 2026 guidance raised: revenue $44.5-45.5B, adj. EBITDA margin 12-14%, free cash flow $6.5-7.5B; Power pricing expected 10-20% above Q4 2025 levels.
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Transcript
// Full episode scriptBETA FINCH PODCAST SCRIPT
Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown where we dive deep into quarterly results to help you understand what's really driving the markets. I'm Alex, and joining me as always is Jordan.
Hey everyone! Today we're breaking down GE Vernova's absolutely explosive Q1 2026 results. And Alex, before we jump in, I know we need to mention—
Absolutely. This podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Now Jordan, let's talk about these numbers because wow—GE Vernova just delivered what might be one of the most impressive quarters we've seen in the industrial space.
Alex, where do I even start? Orders up 71% year-over-year to $18.3 billion, with a book-to-bill ratio of 2.0. That means for every dollar of revenue they recognized, they booked two dollars in new orders. Their backlog is now sitting at $163 billion—that's billion with a 'B'—and they're saying they'll hit $200 billion in backlog by 2027, a full year ahead of schedule.
The cash generation story here is just phenomenal. They generated $4.8 billion in free cash flow in just one quarter—that's more than their entire 2025 full-year free cash flow of $3.7 billion. What's driving this massive cash generation?
It's really the working capital dynamics. When you're booking orders this aggressively, especially in long-cycle businesses like power generation, you're getting significant down payments upfront. They had $5.3 billion in working capital benefits, primarily from higher down payments on those Power and Electrification orders. It's like getting paid before you do most of the work—a beautiful business model when demand is this strong.
Let's break down the segments because each one tells a different story. Starting with Power—their bread and butter—revenue up 10%, but EBITDA margins expanded a massive 500 basis points to 16.3%.
The Power segment is firing on all cylinders. They shipped 25 gas turbines in the quarter, up 32% year-over-year, and their pricing is getting significantly better. CEO Scott Strazik said their 2026 orders are priced 10-20% higher than Q4 2025 levels on a dollar-per-kilowatt basis. When you have three-year lead times and customers desperate for power generation capacity, you can command premium pricing.
And this isn't just traditional utility demand. About 20% of their 100 gigawatts under contract are directly supporting data centers. The AI boom is creating this massive secondary demand for power infrastructure that I don't think many investors fully appreciate yet.
Exactly! And speaking of underappreciated, let's talk Electrification—this segment is becoming a monster. Orders up 86% year-over-year, and here's the kicker: their Q1 data center orders alone were $2.4 billion, which is more than their entire full-year 2025 data center business.
The Prolec acquisition is paying off big time. They bought the remaining 50% stake for $5.3 billion in February, and Prolec's backlog has grown 25% just since they announced the deal at Q3 earnings. That's incredible customer enthusiasm for the combined entity.
What I love about the Electrification story is the portfolio breadth. They're not just selling transformers—they've got HVDC systems, substations, grid automation software. CFO Ken Parks mentioned they closed their first Energy Management System order, which combines power conversion, substation equipment, and grid software into an integrated solution for data centers.
The company is really positioning itself as the one-stop shop for electrification. Strazik gave this great example of a project where they're providing the gas turbine for power generation, the substation electrical equipment, AND the energy management system. It's that integration that's driving their pricing power and margin expansion.
Let's address the elephant in the room though—Wind. Still losing money with $382 million in EBITDA losses, though that was in line with expectations. The onshore market in the U.S. remains soft due to permitting delays and tariff uncertainty.
But even in Wind, there are bright spots. Their onshore services business saw double-digit margin expansion for the second quarter in a row. And they successfully completed installation at both Dogger Bank A and Vineyard Wind offshore projects. The key is they're focused on what they can control while the market works through its challenges.
The guidance raise tells the whole story about management's confidence. They bumped revenue guidance by $500 million to $44.5-45.5 billion, raised EBITDA margin guidance by a full percentage point to 12-14%, and increased free cash flow guidance from $5.0-5.5 billion to $6.5-7.5 billion. That's a massive free cash flow revision.
One thing that impressed me from the Q&A was the discussion about capacity and lead times. They've installed 280 new machines in their gas power factories and added about 1,800 production workers. But they're not just throwing bodies at the problem—they're heavily investing in AI and lean manufacturing to drive productivity gains.
Strazik mentioned they're targeting over $100 million in EBITDA improvement from their Kaizen lean manufacturing initiatives. At one Prolec facility, they reduced rework hours by 70% and improved output by 40% in their transformer tank assembly process. These aren't just financial engineering gains—this is operational excellence.
The nuclear story is also developing nicely. Their small modular reactor project in Canada hit a major milestone with regulatory approval for the basemat installation. And the announcement of up to $40 billion in U.S.-Japan government support for SMR development shows this isn't just a pipe dream.
Looking at the balance sheet, they ended with $10.2 billion in cash after returning $1.4 billion to shareholders through buybacks and dividends. They're maintaining their investment-grade rating while investing heavily in R&D—up about 25% year-over-year—and capacity expansion.
What's your take on the valuation here, Jordan? The stock jumped over 13% after these results.
Well, when you're trading at what appears to be reasonable multiples relative to this explosive growth trajectory, and you've got a $163 billion backlog providing multi-year revenue visibility, the risk-reward looks compelling. But investors need to understand this is a cyclical business, and we're clearly in a peak demand cycle right now.
The secular trends are powerful though—data center power demand, grid modernization, the energy transition. These aren't temporary tailwinds.
Agreed. And GE Vernova's scale advantages are becoming more apparent. When you have the largest installed base of gas turbines globally, that provides a natural service revenue floor that gives you flexibility to invest aggressively for growth. Most competitors can't match that financial foundation.
Any risks investors should be watching?
Execution risk is number one. They're scaling production rapidly while maintaining quality standards. Supply chain constraints could become an issue if this demand surge continues. And there's always the risk that we're in a peak cycle that could normalize. But for now, the fundamentals look very strong.
Before we wrap up, Jordan, what's your key takeaway for investors?
GE Vernova is essentially a leveraged play on electrification and the AI-driven power demand boom. They're executing incredibly well operationally while benefiting from powerful secular tailwinds. The combination of pricing power, margin expansion, and cash generation is impressive, but investors should remember this is a cyclical business at what appears to be a cyclical peak.
Well said. Everything discussed today is AI-generated analysis for educational purposes. Past performance doesn't guarantee future results. Please do your own due diligence.
That's a wrap on GE Vernova's Q1 2026 results. Thanks for listening to Beta Finch, and we'll see you next time for another AI-powered earnings breakdown! --- *Total word count: approximately 1,200 words*