General Fusion vs Halliburton

Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities

General Fusion logo

General Fusion

ChallengerClimate & Energy

Magnetized Target Fusion Energy

General Fusion achieved first plasma with its LM26 Magnetized Target Fusion machine in March 2025; announced SPAC deal to list on Nasdaq as "GFUZ" in January 2026; targeting commercial fusion power to the grid by the early-to-mid 2030s.

About

General Fusion is a Canadian fusion energy company developing a commercially viable fusion power system based on Magnetized Target Fusion (MTF) technology. Founded with backing from Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and other investors, the company is pursuing a practical path to fusion energy that it believes can be delivered at lower cost than competing approaches (such as laser-driven inertial confinement or superconducting tokamaks) by using liquid metal compression to implode a magnetized plasma.

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Halliburton logo

Halliburton

LeaderEnergy & Utilities

Enterprise

Houston oilfield completions and drilling (NYSE: HAL) $22.9B FY2024 revenue; #1 US hydraulic fracturing, Zeus E-frac, international expansion, $4.0B adj. operating income competing with SLB and Baker Hughes.

AI VisibilityBeta
Overall Score
A92
Category Rank
#248 of 290
AI Consensus
59%
Trend
up
Per Platform
ChatGPT
98
Perplexity
88
Gemini
93

About

Halliburton Company is a Houston, Texas-based oilfield services company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: HAL) as an S&P 500 Energy component — providing products and services for the exploration, development, and production of oil and natural gas through two segments: Completion and Production (hydraulic fracturing, cementing, artificial lift, wireline logging) and Drilling and Evaluation (drill bits, directional drilling, formation evaluation, well construction planning) through approximately 50,000 employees in 70+ countries. In fiscal year 2024, Halliburton reported revenues of $22.9 billion and adjusted operating income of $4.0 billion, with North America (the most important market — driven by US shale completions) generating $8.6 billion and international operations (Middle East, Latin America, Africa, Europe) generating $14.3 billion. CEO Jeff Miller has led Halliburton's return to strong profitability following the COVID-19 oil demand collapse with a disciplined capital-light model: rather than owning all completion equipment (pressure pumping fleets, cementing units), Halliburton has entered long-term customer partnerships where major E&P operators (Pioneer, EOG, Devon, ConocoPhillips) commit multi-year completion work to Halliburton in exchange for deployment priority and dedicated crew relationships — reducing equipment idle time and Halliburton's capital requirements while securing predictable activity levels. Halliburton's Zeus electric fracturing fleet (E-frac using natural gas-powered electric motors to drive frac pumps rather than diesel engines) reduces NOx emissions and fuel cost for US shale operators — achieving 40-50% fuel cost reduction that operators increasingly specify as a sustainability requirement.

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Key Details

Category
Magnetized Target Fusion Energy
Enterprise
Tier
Challenger
Leader
Entity Type
brand
company

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