Quick Summary
- Eos Energy (EOSE) finished trading up 29.63% at $5.95 on April 9, 2026
- Preliminary Q1 2026 revenue forecast of $56M–$57M exceeded the $55.5M analyst consensus
- Quarterly shipments increased 17% from the previous quarter; battery production rose 10.4%
- Factory Acceptance Testing completed for second production line; potential Q2 2026 launch anticipated
- Daily trading volume reached 60.9 million shares — approximately 157% higher than the three-month average
Eos Energy Enterprises (EOSE) delivered an impressive performance on Thursday, with shares climbing nearly 30% following the release of preliminary first-quarter revenue projections that surpassed analyst forecasts, complemented by record-breaking shipment figures.
Eos Energy Enterprises, Inc., EOSE
The Pittsburgh-headquartered manufacturer of zinc-based battery storage systems projected Q1 2026 revenues between $56 million and $57 million. The Street consensus stood at $55.5 million. While the outperformance wasn’t substantial, it proved sufficient to spark investor enthusiasm — particularly considering the stock’s recent struggles.
EOSE started Thursday’s session down more than 50% for the year, with approximately 28% of its available float sold short. This configuration created a volatile situation primed for any positive catalyst.
Trading activity painted a vivid picture. Approximately 60.9 million shares traded hands — representing a 157% increase over the stock’s three-month daily average of 23.7 million.
First-quarter shipments expanded 17% compared to the previous quarter, while battery manufacturing increased 10.4% sequentially. Bipolar production grew 10.6%, and bi-polar automation yields enhanced by 22% from the prior quarter.
The revenue composition also experienced a shift. This quarter featured a greater concentration of DC-system projects relative to AC-coupled projects — the latter category includes supplementary equipment sales that can fluctuate significantly based on individual customer configurations.
The organization additionally announced two senior leadership appointments. Erik Todd assumed the role of EVP of Sales, contributing over two decades of experience managing a global industrial infrastructure operation exceeding $1 billion in revenue. Cristi Thomas joined as SVP of Projects & Delivery.
Production Line Two Reaches Critical Testing Phase
The more significant long-term development might be the progress on the second battery manufacturing line. Eos verified completion of Factory Acceptance Testing for Line 2, with initial operations planned for late Q2 2026, subject to site acceptance testing completion.
The upgraded line employs a single-piece flow configuration featuring advanced pick-and-place gantry technology. The design aims to reduce battery line footprint by approximately 40% and decrease raw material movement distance by roughly 86%. These improvements could substantially impact the company’s operational economics.
Eos has been consuming cash and reporting gross profit margins of negative 126% across the trailing twelve months. Wall Street analysts don’t anticipate the company achieving profitability during the current fiscal year.
The company went public in 2020, and shares remain approximately 41% below the initial listing price.
Recent Q4 2025 Disappointment Lingers
This turnaround narrative emerges only weeks following a disappointing fourth-quarter 2025 earnings report. The company delivered an EPS of -$0.72 versus analyst expectations of -$0.18 — representing a 300% shortfall. Revenue totaling $58 million also fell short of the $92.82 million projection by more than 37%.
In response to that announcement, Jefferies reduced its price objective from $6.00 to $5.00 while maintaining a Hold recommendation. The research firm highlighted operational execution challenges and observed the stock trading approximately 60% below pre-Q4 2025 levels.
Thursday’s preliminary metrics represent progress in the right trajectory. Complete Q1 2026 financial results are scheduled for release on May 12, 2026.



