On February 17, 2026, Cannell Capital disclosed a new position in Eos Energy Enterprises (NASDAQ:EOSE), acquiring 13,083 shares in a trade estimated at $14.99 million.
According to a recent SEC filing, Cannell Capital established a new stake in Eos Energy Enterprises (NASDAQ:EOSE) during the fourth quarter by acquiring 13,083 shares. The new position’s value at quarter-end stood at $14.99 million.
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This is a new position, making up 7.27% of the fund’s reportable U.S. equity assets under management following the filing.
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Top five holdings after the quarter:
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NYSE: NOA: $15.45 million
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NASDAQ: EOSE: $14.99 million
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NASDAQ: SNDL: $14.54 million
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NYSE: NPKI: $11.21 million
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NYSE: NGS: $10.98 million
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As of Tuesday, shares of Eos Energy Enterprises were priced at $6.06, up 52% over the past year and well outperforming the S&P 500’s roughly 16% gain in the same period.
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Metric |
Value |
|---|---|
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Price (as of Tuesday) |
$6.06 |
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Market capitalization |
$2 billion |
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Revenue (TTM) |
$63.46 million |
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Net income (TTM) |
($1.12 billion) |
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Eos Energy Enterprises designs and manufactures stationary battery storage solutions, with the Eos Znyth DC battery system as its flagship product.
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The company generates revenue by providing battery storage systems for grid-scale, utility, commercial, and industrial energy storage applications.
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It serves utility companies, renewable energy developers, and commercial and industrial clients seeking large-scale energy storage solutions.
This energy storage firm develops grid-scale battery systems for utilities and renewables, targeting large-scale power applications. Eos Energy Enterprises, Inc. designs, manufactures, and deploys grid-scale battery storage solutions and focuses on the Eos Znyth DC battery system for utility and renewable energy sectors. The company focuses on the development and deployment of its Eos Znyth DC battery system, targeting customers in the utility and renewable energy sectors.
This Eos buy last quarter is interesting because shares are up about 52% this past year, but they’ve had an incredibly volatile run, crashing 53% in 2026 after at one point quadrupling in value last year.
Financially, Eos just delivered more than 7x year over year revenue growth, with full year 2025 sales reaching $114.2 million and fourth quarter revenue alone hitting a record $58 million. The backlog now stands at $701.5 million, representing 2.8 GWh of contracted volume, and the commercial pipeline has swelled to $23.6 billion. Management is guiding to $300 million to $400 million in revenue for 2026.
The balance sheet tells an equally important story. After a major capital raise, the company ended 2025 with $624.6 million in cash and extended debt maturities to 2030 and beyond. Substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern has been removed.
Still, losses remain significant, and adjusted EBITDA was negative $219 million for the year. Within a portfolio that also holds smaller, event-driven, and commodity-exposed names, this position seemingly signals comfort with volatility. For long-term investors, the key question is whether Eos can convert its backlog into higher margin revenue before capital markets patience runs thin.
