Vertiv, Nextpower, and Array Shares Plummet, What You Need To Know

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What Happened?

A number of stocks fell in the afternoon session after long-dated Treasury yields pushed to fresh highs, with the 30-year nearing 5.18% and the 10-year hovering around 4.6%. 

The Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLI) was down about 1.25% to $168.62, with airlines, machinery and transports leading the losses. United Airlines slid more than 3% as oil held above $107 a barrel. Industrials are unusually sensitive to this mix: higher borrowing costs lift the price of financing factories, fleets and aircraft, while sticky energy prices eat directly into operating margins. 

The bigger picture for retail investors is that the Iran conflict, heading into its third month with the Strait of Hormuz still blockaded, would keep inflation expectations stubbornly high. That makes Fed rate cuts less likely and pressures cyclicals that lean on healthy capex, transport demand and a global manufacturing cycle already softening across the US, EU and Japan.

The stock market overreacts to news, and big price drops can present good opportunities to buy high-quality stocks.

Among others, the following stocks were impacted:

Zooming In On Array (ARRY)

Array’s shares are extremely volatile and have had 74 moves greater than 5% over the last year. In that context, today’s move indicates the market considers this news meaningful but not something that would fundamentally change its perception of the business.

The previous big move we wrote about was 7 days ago when the stock dropped 5.8% on the news that April CPI hit 3.8% and Brent oil climbed to ~$107 confirming through the consumer data what manufacturers already reported through the ISM survey. 

The ISM Prices Index reached 84.6% in April, a four-year high, with input costs running 25.6 percentage points higher over just three months. The ISM Manufacturing PMI held at 52.7%, fourth straight month of expansion, but 47% of manufacturer comments mentioned the Iran war and 18% mentioned tariffs as price drivers, with sentiment 69% negative. Manufacturers use energy throughout production, powering equipment, running furnaces, fueling delivery fleets. When oil rises, costs also rise, compressing gross margins. 

Rising Treasury yields added a second pressure: capital spending, new equipment, factory expansion, is typically financed with long-term debt whose cost moves with the 10-year yield. The 4.43% level was the highest in months. The hot CPI print also makes it harder for manufacturers to pass costs to customers without triggering further consumer pullback.

Array is down 16.5% since the beginning of the year, and at $8.09 per share, it is trading 32.4% below its 52-week high of $11.96 from February 2026. Investors who bought $1,000 worth of Array’s shares 5 years ago would now be looking at only $554.91.

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