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Xos Launches the 2.5MWh Power Hub, Delivering Grid-Independent Energy Storage to Data Centers in Days, Not Years

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Xos (NASDAQ:XOS) launched its 2.5MWh Power Hub series, a factory-integrated, behind-the-meter energy storage and hybrid power platform delivering megawatt-scale power in days instead of typical 3–7 year grid interconnection timelines.

The series scales from 1.2 MWh to 4 MWh, ships in standard containers, integrates power conversion and controls, and is built on architecture behind more than 250 MWh of Xos storage deployed across North America, targeting AI data centers, industrial build-outs, and mission-critical facilities.

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AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

Positive

  • Scalable platform from 1.2 MWh to 4 MWh per unit
  • Megawatt-scale power delivered in days vs. 3–7 years grid waits
  • Built on >250 MWh of deployed Xos energy storage and 1,400 assets
  • Factory-integrated unit eliminates separate PCS, controllers, and integration
  • Potentially avoids “hundreds of thousands” in site engineering and integration costs

Negative

  • None.

News Market Reaction – XOS

+234.53% 13.5x vol
62 alerts
+234.53% News Effect
+245.3% Peak in 14 hr 42 min
+$63M Valuation Impact
$90.44M Market Cap
13.5x Rel. Volume

On the day this news was published, XOS gained 234.53%, reflecting a significant positive market reaction. Argus tracked a peak move of +245.3% during that session. Our momentum scanner triggered 62 alerts that day, indicating high trading interest and price volatility. This price movement added approximately $63M to the company's valuation, bringing the market cap to $90.44M at that time. Trading volume was exceptionally heavy at 13.5x the daily average, suggesting very strong buying interest.

Data tracked by StockTitan Argus on the day of publication.

Key Figures

Grid interconnection delay: 3–7 years Power Hub capacity: 2.5 MWh Series capacity range: 1.2–4 MWh +5 more
8 metrics
Grid interconnection delay 3–7 years Typical U.S. grid interconnection timelines cited for data centers
Power Hub capacity 2.5 MWh Flagship configuration of new Xos Power Hub series
Series capacity range 1.2–4 MWh Scalable range across Power Hub configurations
Deployed storage base 250 MWh+ Xos energy storage already operating in North America
Installed asset base 1,400+ assets Xos assets using same architecture as Power Hub
PJM capacity cost $14.7 billion Cost to PJM-region consumers in a single 2025 capacity auction
Prior PJM cost $2.2 billion PJM-region capacity auction cost two years before 2025
Continuous output 1.2 MW Continuous output of 2.5MWh Power Hub configuration

Market Reality Check

Price: $4.74 Vol: Volume 20,941 is only 0.0...
low vol
$4.74 Last Close
Volume Volume 20,941 is only 0.03x the 20-day average of 725,682, indicating limited pre-news participation. low
Technical Shares trade slightly above the 200-day MA, at $2.34 versus a $2.30 200-day moving average.

Peers on Argus

Peers show mixed moves: ARTW (+0.39), HYFM (+1.07) versus HCAI (-0.76), GP (-0.8...

Peers show mixed moves: ARTW (+0.39), HYFM (+1.07) versus HCAI (-0.76), GP (-0.86), and UGRO (-0.28). This pattern does not indicate a unified sector move alongside XOS.

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: May 14 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
May 14 Q1 2026 earnings Positive +7.6% Record gross margin and narrowed operating loss with raised 2026 guidance range.
May 11 Defense charging demo Positive +1.6% Showcase of Charger Hub to U.S. Air Force at capabilities event with live demo.
May 01 Trade show showcase Positive +2.3% ACT Expo exhibit highlighting vehicles, mobile storage, and powertrain solutions.
Apr 30 Earnings date notice Neutral +0.6% Announcement of Q1 2026 release date and conference call logistics.
Apr 08 Defense market entry Positive +5.2% Entry into U.S. defense market with grid-independent mobile charging at TEVCON.
Pattern Detected

Recent news, including financial and commercial updates, has consistently coincided with positive next-day price moves for XOS.

Recent Company History

Over the last six months, Xos has reported improving fundamentals and expanding commercial activity. Q1 2026 results on May 14 showed higher revenue and record gross margin with a 7.58% next-day gain. Multiple announcements around defense and government opportunities, mobile charging, and ACT Expo participation (news on April 8, May 1, and May 11) each saw positive price reactions. Today’s Power Hub launch extends this theme of leveraging its energy storage platform into larger, grid-constrained markets.

Market Pulse Summary

The stock surged +234.5% in the session following this news. A strong positive reaction aligns with ...
Analysis

The stock surged +234.5% in the session following this news. A strong positive reaction aligns with Xos’s pattern of favorable responses to product and commercial announcements, as seen after prior news with moves of up to 7.58%. The 2.5MWh Power Hub leverages an existing base of over 250 MWh of deployed storage and 1,400+ assets, which may support credibility. However, past filings noted going-concern risks and a need for financing, so balance-sheet constraints could temper the durability of any sharp rally.

Key Terms

behind-the-meter, intermodal container, reciprocating engines, gensets, +4 more
8 terms
behind-the-meter technical
"a family of fully integrated, behind-the-meter energy storage and hybrid power systems"
Equipment or systems located on a customer’s side of the electricity meter—such as rooftop solar panels, battery storage, electric vehicle chargers, or energy controls—that generate, store, or manage power for use on-site rather than being supplied through the utility’s grid. Investors care because behind-the-meter assets change how much power a customer buys, can create new revenue or savings streams, affect demand patterns, and shift regulatory or business models in the energy market, much like a homeowner installing their own water tank reduces municipal supply needs.
intermodal container technical
"ships inside a standard intermodal container, energizing industrial sites"
An intermodal container is a standardized, lockable metal box used to move goods seamlessly between ships, trains, and trucks without unloading the cargo, much like using the same LEGO brick across different toy sets. For investors, these containers matter because they lower shipping time and costs, boost reliability in global supply chains, and influence the revenue and capital needs of carriers, ports, freight forwarders and logistics equipment firms.
reciprocating engines technical
"Natural gas reciprocating engines are the fastest-available power source"
Reciprocating engines are machines that produce power by moving pistons back and forth inside cylinders, like the up-and-down motion of a bicycle pump but driving a crankshaft to create rotational force. Investors care because they are a core technology in industries such as transportation, power generation, and equipment manufacturing; their efficiency, reliability, fuel type and maintenance costs directly affect operating profits, capital spending and competitive position.
gensets technical
"GPU-driven and transient-heavy workloads force gensets to run inefficiently"
Gensets are packaged machines that produce electricity, typically combining an engine (often diesel, natural gas or petrol) with an electric generator and controls — essentially a mobile or standby power plant. Investors watch genset demand because they power hospitals, data centers, factories and construction sites during outages or where grid power is scarce, so sales and rental trends signal infrastructure spending, reliability risks and revenue opportunities for manufacturers and service providers.
battery energy storage technical
"Conventional BESS deployments require separately procured DC battery blocks"
A system that stores electrical energy in rechargeable batteries so power can be used later, like a large-scale rechargeable power bank for homes, businesses, or the electricity grid. It matters to investors because it helps smooth out supply and demand, lets operators sell power when prices are higher, backs up critical services during outages, and supports more renewable generation — all of which can create new revenue streams and reduce operational risk.
microgrid controller technical
"energize without a microgrid controller, and make every kilowatt-hour"
A microgrid controller is the software and hardware system that acts like a conductor for a small local power network, coordinating batteries, solar panels, generators and the connection to the main grid so supply and demand stay balanced and reliable. For investors it matters because the controller determines how efficiently a microgrid runs, how much energy it can sell or save, and how resilient and compliant the project will be—factors that directly affect operating costs, revenue and long‑term value.
dual-fuel technical
"Hybrid operation with optional 500 kWe dual-fuel genset, intermodal-ready"
Dual-fuel describes equipment, vehicles, or power systems designed to run on two different types of fuel—typically a conventional fuel (like diesel) and an alternative fuel (like natural gas or hydrogen). For investors, dual-fuel capability matters because it acts like a built-in hedge: it can lower operating costs and regulatory risk by switching to the cheaper or cleaner fuel as conditions change, though it may require higher upfront investment and different maintenance.
capacity auction financial
"cost PJM-region consumers $14.7 billion in a single capacity auction in 2025"
A capacity auction is a market process where power providers bid to guarantee they will have enough electricity generation or demand-reduction available at a future date, and winners receive payments for that reserved ability. Think of it like companies reserving seats on a flight to ensure there won’t be a shortage: for investors, results affect predictable revenue streams, future profitability and the value of power plants or grid assets because auction outcomes set long‑term price signals and investment incentives.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

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  • With U.S. grid interconnection timelines stretching three to seven years, data centers are losing billions in delayed capacity. The 2.5MWh Power Hub is engineered for rapid deployment, delivering megawatt-scale power within days of arrival.
  • Scaling from 1.2 MWh to 4 MWh, the 2.5MWh Power Hub series serves AI data centers, industrial build-outs, and mission-critical facilities, replacing years of infrastructure planning with a single factory-integrated unit that plugs in and powers on.
  • Built on the same architecture behind more than 250 MWh of Xos energy storage already operating in commercial service across North America, the Power Hub is a productized platform with a proven track record, not a launch promise.

LOS ANGELES, June 02, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Xos, Inc. (NASDAQ: XOS) (“Xos” or the “Company”), a leader in electric commercial vehicles and mobile charging solutions, today announced the launch of its 2.5MWh Power Hub series, a family of fully integrated, behind-the-meter energy storage and hybrid power systems engineered to deliver megawatt-scale power where the U.S. grid cannot. Built on the same proven architecture as the Xos Hub™ mobile EV charging platform, the Power Hub series scales from 1.2 MWh to 4 MWh and ships inside a standard intermodal container, energizing industrial sites, data centers, and mission-critical facilities within days, not the three to seven years that grid interconnection now routinely demands.

The Xos Hub production facility in Tennessee where the new 2.5MWh Xos Hub will be manufactured.

The Xos Hub production facility in Tennessee where the new 2.5MWh Xos Hub will be manufactured.

The IEA projects global data center electricity consumption will roughly double by 2030, with AI as the primary driver, yet the transformers, switchgear, and grid connections required to serve that demand carry lead times of up to five years. Behind-the-meter power has shifted from contingency to strategic necessity, and the 2.5MWh Power Hub was engineered to meet that moment.

A New Category of Industrial Power Infrastructure

  • Industrial sites and data centers face multi-year grid bottlenecks: Grid bottlenecks driven by data center demand cost PJM-region consumers $14.7 billion in a single capacity auction in 2025, up from $2.2 billion just two years earlier. The IEA projects global data center electricity consumption will roughly double by 2030 with AI as the primary driver, yet for industrial operators who cannot wait years for a grid connection, behind-the-meter generation has become the only viable path forward.
  • Generators need storage to perform: Natural gas reciprocating engines are the fastest-available power source for new industrial loads, but GPU-driven and transient-heavy workloads force gensets to run inefficiently at partial load. The 2.5MWh Power Hub pairs with these generators, absorbing load swings and allowing continuous operation at peak efficiency, meaningfully reducing fuel consumption and emissions per megawatt-hour delivered.
  • The 2.5MWh Power Hub eliminates the integration tax: Conventional BESS deployments require separately procured DC battery blocks, power conversion systems, and microgrid controllers, adding months of project timeline and hundreds of thousands of dollars in integration costs. The 2.5MWh Power Hub ships as a single, factory-integrated unit with power conversion, plant controls, and generator dispatch logic all included and standard 480V three-phase output. No proprietary interfaces. No separate controllers. No multi-vendor specification process.
  • The 2.5 MWh flagship configuration is engineered for rapid deployment: The 2.5MWh Power Hub 2500 ships in a standard intermodal container, so a unit that boards a truck today can be energizing a site within days, compressing time-to-power by an order of magnitude versus traditional infrastructure buildout.
  • Scales to any load, from single site to multi-megawatt campus: All configurations can be combined through an external power combiner to create multi-megawatt-hour, multi-megawatt power plants from standardized factory-built blocks, without the multi-year engineering and commissioning cycle of conventional utility-scale projects.

Built on Proven, In-Field Energy Storage at Scale

The 2.5MWh Power Hub is built on the same battery, power electronics, and controls architecture powering more than 1,400 Xos assets and over 250 MWh of deployed energy storage across North America today. This is not a new platform built for this launch; it is a proven one, scaled into a new form factor.

That installed base operates in some of the most demanding duty cycles on the continent, including fleet charging for autonomous vehicle operators, utility-fleet equipment, and emergency-response applications where fast-cycle endurance and continuous availability are non-negotiable. The 2.5MWh Power Hub takes that track record and puts it to work for industrial power delivery.

“In order to win in today's competitive landscape, it is important for any company to make every dollar count. For our business, one of the major costs we are constantly analyzing is power consumption, as we operate six industrial-sized paint booths continuously. Xos has been a great partner in helping us control those costs and bring those savings directly to the bottom line.” said Robert Fitzgerald, Founder and CEO, Fitzgerald Collision and Repair.

“The single biggest constraint in US industry right now is the inability to deliver power where it’s needed, when it’s needed. We engineered this product to do three things that conventional energy storage systems cannot: arrive on a standard truck, energize without a microgrid controller, and make every kilowatt-hour of fuel-fired generation cleaner and more efficient. This is not a battery. It is a deployable power plant.” said Dakota Semler, Chief Executive Officer, Xos

Product Configurations

The 2.5MWh Power Hub series will be offered in three core configurations:

ConfigurationCapacityOutputBest for
1.2MWh Power Hub1.2 MWh0.6 MW continuousHybrid operation with optional genset (scalable to match any application)
2.5MWh Power Hub2.5 MWh1.2 MW continuousHybrid operation with optional 500 kWe dual-fuel genset, intermodal-ready
4.0MWh Power Hub4 MWhMax stored energy per sq ftApplications requiring maximum stored energy per square foot
    

Every configuration is designed to scale: units can be combined through an external power combiner to create multi-megawatt-hour, multi-megawatt power plants from standardized factory-built blocks, without the multi-year engineering and commissioning cycle of conventional utility-scale projects.

The 2.5MWh Power Hub incorporates integrated power conversion, controls, and packaging that conventional containerized BESS solutions sell as separate systems. A comparable utility-scale deployment combining a 2.5 MWh DC battery block, a 1.2 MW power conversion system, a microgrid controller, and balance-of-system engineering typically requires additional equipment plus several hundred thousand dollars of incremental site engineering, integration, and commissioning costs, with project timelines measured in quarters rather than days. The Xos Power Hub ships as a single, factory-integrated unit, eliminating the multi-vendor integration burden and compressing time-to-power by an order of magnitude.

Target Applications

The 2.5MWh Power Hub series addresses markets where power cannot wait for the grid:

  • AI data centers and industrial build-outs facing multi-year grid delays, requiring bridge power or permanent behind-the-meter generation to keep projects on schedule
  • Commercial and industrial sites expanding ahead of grid upgrades, where a conventional interconnection timeline would stall construction by years
  • Utility-scale deployments where multiple units operate in series to create multi-megawatt power plants without the engineering and commissioning burden of traditional BESS projects
  • Defense, government, and mission-critical installations requiring rapid-deploy, fuel-flexible, grid-independent power where reliability is non-negotiable
  • Mobile and event power through short-term rental and leasing channels, serving temporary but high-demand applications

Rendering of multiple 2.5MWh Power Hub units deployed at an AI data center facility, delivering grid-independent megawatt-scale power without waiting years for grid interconnection.

Rendering of multiple 2.5MWh Power Hub units deployed at an AI data center facility, delivering grid-independent megawatt-scale power without waiting years for grid interconnection.

"Our customers are committing hundreds of millions of dollars to projects that cannot afford to wait. They do not buy promises, they buy proof. Xos has put over 250 megawatt-hours of energy storage to work in the most demanding industrial environments in North America, and those systems are running right now, every day, in conditions where failure is not an option. The Power Hub is that same proven platform, built for the scale this market demands," said Dakota Semler, Chief Executive Officer, Xos.

The Power Hub series marks the next chapter in Xos's energy storage journey, scaling the same proven architecture behind the Xos Hub mobile charging platform into a stationary, industrial-grade power system built for the demands of the modern grid crisis. As U.S. industry races to secure power ahead of multi-year grid constraints, Xos is expanding its network of rental, leasing, and deployment partners to put Power Hub units where demand is greatest, with initial partner announcements expected in the coming quarters.

About Xos

Xos, Inc. (NASDAQ: XOS) is a Los Angeles-based clean energy and commercial vehicle technology company specializing in mobile energy storage, EV charging infrastructure, and battery-electric commercial vehicles. Founded in 2016 and publicly traded since 2021, Xos has emerged as one of North America’s leading deployers of behind-the-meter mobile energy storage systems, with over 250 megawatt-hours of deployed energy storage capacity across utility, fleet, government, and industrial customers.

Xos designs, engineers, and manufactures its energy storage and charging platforms in-house with proprietary electric architecture and proprietary energy management software. Products are designed in California and manufactured in Tennessee and available through federal procurement vehicles including the GSA Schedule, Sourcewell, and OMNIA Partners. For more information, visit www.xostrucks.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Forward-looking statements generally are identified by the words “believe,” “project,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “intend,” “strategy,” “future,” “opportunity,” “plan,” “may,” “should,” “will,” “would,” “will be,” “will continue,” “will likely result,” and similar expressions. These statements are based on the current expectations and beliefs of Xos management and are subject to uncertainty and changes in circumstances. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements due to risks and uncertainties, including market demand, competitive conditions, manufacturing capabilities, supply chain constraints, tariff impacts, regulatory changes, product specification finalization, pricing, customer adoption, partner availability, and other factors described in Xos’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its Annual Report on Form 10-K and Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q. Xos undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

Media Contact:

Diana Carvajal
Marketing, Communications, and Public Relations
press@xostrucks.com

Investor Contact:

Xos Investor Relations
ir@xostrucks.com

Photos accompanying this announcement are available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0c93b086-6527-4b6c-af25-4c59af866c54
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/ee499875-1cb5-4d69-ab8d-55fb7dad45cf


FAQ

What is the Xos (NASDAQ:XOS) 2.5MWh Power Hub and what does it provide?

The Xos 2.5MWh Power Hub is a factory-integrated, behind-the-meter energy storage and hybrid power system delivering megawatt-scale power. According to Xos, it combines batteries, power conversion, and controls in one containerized unit to support data centers, industrial sites, and mission-critical facilities.

How quickly can the Xos 2.5MWh Power Hub deliver power for AI data centers?

The 2.5MWh Power Hub can energize a site within days of arrival. According to Xos, this contrasts with typical U.S. grid interconnection timelines of three to seven years, helping AI data centers bypass grid bottlenecks and keep capacity projects on schedule.

What configurations are available in the Xos (XOS) Power Hub series?

The Power Hub series is offered in 1.2 MWh, 2.5 MWh, and 4 MWh configurations. According to Xos, the 1.2 MWh unit provides 0.6 MW continuous output, while the 2.5 MWh flagship offers 1.2 MW continuous output and the 4 MWh option maximizes stored energy per square foot.

How does the Xos 2.5MWh Power Hub work with generators to improve efficiency?

The 2.5MWh Power Hub pairs with natural gas or dual-fuel generators to smooth load swings and enable peak-efficiency operation. According to Xos, this hybrid setup can meaningfully reduce fuel consumption and emissions per megawatt-hour for GPU-heavy, transient industrial and data center workloads.

Which industries and applications is the Xos 2.5MWh Power Hub targeting in 2026?

The Power Hub targets AI data centers, industrial build-outs, commercial sites, utilities, and mission-critical government or defense facilities. According to Xos, it also serves mobile and event power through rental and leasing channels where rapid, grid-independent, fuel-flexible power is required.

How does the Xos Power Hub differ from conventional containerized battery energy storage systems?

Xos Power Hub ships as a single, factory-integrated unit with batteries, power conversion, and controls included. According to Xos, comparable conventional deployments often require separate DC batteries, PCS, microgrid controllers, and added engineering, costing several hundred thousand dollars and adding months to project timelines.