Haffner Energy Stock Plummets 14.86%, Erasing Part of Its Recent Rally
Haffner Energy's stock faces a severe market penalty following the announcement of its annual results. The figures released by the decarbonized energy technology specialist fell significantly short of market expectations, erasing part of the spectacular rally seen in recent months.
Annual Revenue Far Below Expectations, Stock Penalized
Haffner Energy's stock dropped 14.86% to €0.1890 after the release on Thursday of its estimated results for the 2025-2026 fiscal year. The revenue amounted to €1.3 million, significantly lagging behind the consensus expectations as detailed in the annual publication. The company remains deeply unprofitable, despite the commissioning of the H6 platform and the launch of the CORE100 program. During this announcement on June 25, 2026, the group maintained an ambitious guidance of over €300 million in revenue for the 2026-2027 fiscal year, backed by the deployment of CORE100. The gap between this target and the current revenue base largely explains the market's skepticism during the session. The decline erases part of the recent rally, with the stock having risen 185% over three months. Over the week, the drop reaches 33.2%. Over a year, the stock still shows a decline of 54.57%.
Price Falls Below Its 20-Day Moving Average, Approaching Support at €0.14
Today's plunge significantly shifts the stock below its 20-day moving average (€0.26), with a 27.3% gap, indicating a clear break in the short-term upward momentum. However, the price still holds a cushion above its 50-day moving average (€0.18) and 200-day moving average (€0.15), reflecting the rally accumulated since spring. The RSI at 48 returns to a neutral zone, after several sessions in more strained territory. The next area to watch is the support at €0.14, which also corresponds to the level of the 200-day moving average. The effective deployment of the CORE100 program, presented as the pivot of the 2026-2027 guidance, will be a crucial point over the coming quarters to assess the credibility of the €300 million target.