What happened

Shares of hydrogen fuel cell pioneer Plug Power (PLUG -1.25%) are soaring today, up 28.2% as of 10 a.m. EST, after the company announced a new alliance with South Korean industrial giant SK Group last night.

In a deal valued at $1.5 billion, Plug Power plans to sell a 10% stake in itself to SK Group, valuing new shares issued at $29.29 each -- but investors who already owned Plug are doing much better than that. Their shares are now worth $45.50 apiece in morning trading.  

Origami dollar folded into an arrow pointing up

Image source: Getty Images.

So what

Why are Plug Power investors so excited? As the company explained in last night's announcement, allying with SK Global increases its access to South Korea's "Hydrogen Economy Roadmap through 2040" plan, which envisions putting 6 million hydrogen fuel cell cars on South Korea roads over the next 20 years, building 1,200 refilling stations to fuel them, and producing 5 million tons of hydrogen fuel per year. As a maker of fuel cells and a producer of hydrogen, Plug Power is in a position to profit from at least two of the legs of this hydrogen triad -- and probably all three.

Now what

Wall Street pros are cheering the news. As TheFly.com reports, at least three separate analysts have already raised their price targets on Plug Power stock, with Cowen & Co. valuing it at $50 a share 12 months from now, B. Riley Securities saying $52, and H.C. Wainwright going as high as $60.

Plug Power, which has previously promised investors that by 2024, it will be doing $1.2 billion in annual "gross billings" and earning $200 million a year, is now expected to do significantly better than that, says B. Riley Securities. H.C. Wainwright now projects that by 2030, the company could have $12.9 billion in annual revenue and $3.9 billion in annual operating profit -- twice its previous estimates.