ERock, a maker of gas-fired power generation systems based in Houston, saw its stock decline on its first day of trading in New York as investors remained selective about recent listings. The shares opened at $20.10 each on the New York Stock Exchange - below the company’s $21.50 offering price - and closed the session down 6.5% from that opening level, valuing ERock at $5.49 billion on a fully diluted basis.
The company raised $600 million in its U.S. initial public offering, which priced the night before trading began. The debut comes as activity in the U.S. IPO market has begun to pick up after periods of market volatility and geopolitical uncertainty, yet investor interest in new listings has not been uniform.
ERock’s IPO filing highlights a dramatic increase in contracted power system sales backlog, which rose nearly nine-fold year-over-year to $1.28 billion as of March 31. Management said roughly $1.1 billion of that backlog is associated with AI data center projects, underscoring the company’s growing exposure to the data center segment.
Company chief executive John Carrington noted the changing scale of projects as a factor in the timing of the listing, saying, "We decided that it was the right time (to go public) because our projects were getting bigger and bigger." The filing also identifies a specific commercial relationship in which ERock is working with El Paso Electric to supply 366 megawatts of onsite power generation for Meta’s $10 billion AI data center in El Paso.
ERock’s debut contrasts with the warmer reception enjoyed by at least one peer, Innio, which listed on Nasdaq last week and drew stronger investor demand. The divergence illustrates that even as the IPO market shows signs of revival, individual company performance on listing day can vary significantly based on investor perceptions of growth prospects, backlog composition and market positioning.
Market data accompanying ERock’s listing included commentary and analyses from AI-driven strategy tools that assess stock fundamentals, momentum and valuation. These tools evaluate thousands of companies and highlight examples of past winners, noting realized gains for other technology-related stocks. Such third-party analyses are part of the broader market conversation around whether newly public companies are positioned to benefit from growth in data center and AI infrastructure demand.
Overall, ERock’s first day of public trading combined a strong backlog tied to data center deployments with a share price that opened beneath the IPO price, signaling a cautious investor response even amid renewed interest in energy infrastructure stocks serving AI workloads.