Analysis and Commentary of Vernova’s FY25 results:
1.Significant Profitability Improvement: Full-year gross profit for 2025 grew by 24%, far outpacing the 9% revenue growth. This indicates significant success in pricing strategies and productivity improvements. Operating income surged from $471 million to $1,388 million, an increase of 195%.
2.Strong Growth in Electrification: The Electrification segment was the top performer, with annual revenue growing by 28%, primarily driven by demand for grid equipment and high-growth digital solutions.
3.Challenges Persist in Wind: The Wind segment was the only division to see a revenue decline (YoY -6%) and reported losses, mainly due to offshore wind contract losses and lower onshore wind equipment deliveries.
4.Robust Cash Flow: Free cash flow (FCF) more than doubled in 2025, reaching $3.71 billion. This strong cash generation supported the company’s decision to double its quarterly dividend to $0.50 per share and increase its share repurchase authorization to $10 billion.
5.One-time Tax Benefit: The substantial increase in net income for the fourth quarter and full year includes a $2.9 billion U.S. valuation allowance release (tax benefit). As this is a non-recurring item, Adjusted EBITDA and operating income are better indicators of underlying fundamental profitability.
Five-Year Financial Ratio Analysis (2021-2025)
Since GE Vernova (GEV) completed its spin-off from General Electric (GE) in April 2024, data prior to 2024 is based on carve-out financial statements. The following analysis tracks the company’s transition from a legacy segment to a high-performing independent entity.
Key Financial Metrics Trend
| Metric | 2021FY | 2022FY | 2023FY | 2024FY | 2025FY |
| Revenue (MM USD) | 32,800 | 31,100 | 33,200 | 34,935 | 38,068 |
| Gross Margin (%) | 12.5% | 11.2% | 13.8% | 17.4% | 19.8% |
| Adjusted EBITDA Margin | – | – | 1.8% | 5.8% | 8.4% |
| Free Cash Flow (MM USD) | – | (600) | 1,200 | 1,701 | 3,710 |
Analysis and Commentary
1. Profitability Ratios
- Gross Margin Expansion: The margin improved from a low of 11.2% in 2022 to 19.8% in 2025. This 860 bps expansion reflects a strategic shift toward high-margin services and a more disciplined underwriting process for new equipment orders.
- Operating Leverage: The surge in operating income during 2025 (up 195% YoY) indicates strong operating leverage. As revenues grew by 9%, the company was able to keep cost growth in check, leading to significant bottom-line accretion.
2. Cash Flow Efficiency
- FCF/Revenue Ratio: This key metric reached 9.7% in 2025, up from negative territory in 2022. For a capital-intensive industrial firm, a near double-digit FCF margin is exceptional.
- Working Capital: The 2025 performance was heavily bolstered by favorable working capital movements, particularly milestone payments and advances within the Power and Electrification backlogs.
3. Solvency and Liquidity
- Net Cash Position: Ending 2025 with $8.8 billion in cash and reduced debt levels provides GE Vernova with a “fortress balance sheet.” This liquidity led to credit rating upgrades from S&P (to BBB) and Fitch (to BBB+) in late 2025.
- Shareholder Returns: The robust liquidity allowed the company to double its dividend and increase its buyback authorization to $10 billion, signaling management’s confidence in long-term solvency.
4. Segment Strategic Mix
- Electrification as a Catalyst: This segment’s EBITDA margin reached 14.9% in 2025. Its increasing weight in the total revenue mix is a primary driver of the consolidated margin improvement over the 5-year period.
- Wind Recovery: While Wind has been a historical drag on ratios, the narrowing of organic losses in 2025 shows a trajectory toward the company’s 2028 target of a 6% segment margin.
Summary
The five-year trend illustrates a successful turnaround. GE Vernova has evolved from a volatile division within a conglomerate into a focused leader in the energy transition with industry-leading cash conversion and a rapidly improving margin profile.
GE Vernova (GEV) Peer P/E Analysis (As of February 2026)
GE Vernova’s valuation reflects a significant “growth premium” as a leader in the energy transition. Its P/E ratios are currently positioned at the high end of the industrial and energy equipment sector, signaling investor confidence in its long-term margin expansion targets.
Competitor P/E Comparison Table
| Company | TTM P/E | Forward P/E | Strategic Context |
| GE Vernova (GEV) | 44.3x – 45.9x | 56.4x – 57.6x | Pure-play energy transition leader; high growth premium. |
| Siemens Energy | ~40.8x | 29.6x – 41.0x | Improving core metrics; still recovering from wind volatility. |
| Vestas (VWDRY) | 26.9x – 27.9x | 24.4x – 26.8x | Pure-play wind leader; valuation constrained by industry margins. |
| ABB (ABBNY) | 35.1x – 36.4x | ~30.5x | Stable electrification and automation giant. |
| Schneider Electric | 31.5x – 34.9x | ~25.7x | High-margin benchmark in energy management. |
| Sector Average | ~16.8x | – | S&P 500 Industrials benchmark. |
Key Analysis and Insights
1. The Growth Premium Scarcity Value
GEV’s Forward P/E exceeding 56x is substantially higher than established giants like Schneider Electric or ABB. This suggests that investors view GEV not just as a hardware manufacturer, but as a critical infrastructure play for the global “electrification of everything” and AI-driven power demand.
2. Valuation vs. Fundamentals
While a P/E of 56x appears expensive compared to the S&P 500 (avg. ~25x), the market is pricing in the steep ramp-up of the Electrification segment and the turnaround in Wind. Analysts maintain wide price targets (ranging from a $539 Bear Case to an $820 Bull Case), reflecting high sensitivity to GEV’s 2028 EBITDA margin target of 20%.
3. Comparative Advantage over Siemens Energy
Although Siemens Energy is GEV’s closest peer, GEV enjoys a higher multiple due to its cleaner balance sheet post-spin-off and more robust execution in the Gas Power services sector. GEV’s “fortress balance sheet” (net cash position) warrants a premium over peers with higher leverage or structural issues.
4. Long-term Normalization
Market forecasts suggest that as earnings catch up to the current stock price, GEV’s P/E will normalize. It is expected to compress to approximately 25.3x by 2028 and 19.9x by 2030. Buying GEV at current levels is essentially an “early-stage” bet on its 2028-2030 profitability profile.

Source: https://www.gevernova.com/sites/default/files/gev_webcast_pressrelease_01282026.pdf
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