Houston Chronicle Sunday

PLACE IN THE SUN

- By Brian Eckhouse BLOOMBERG

Solar has been thriving, and the trend should continue.

The solar industry has been on a tear. Several stocks in the sector hit all-time highs last month. Investors seem eager for more solar companies to go public. But is this surge more sustainabl­e than prior booms?

Earlier boom times ended painfully. Several renewables companies went public in 2014 and 2015—or spun off their operating power-plant units—amid a clean-tech wave. But the collapse of SunEdison Inc.—the world’s largest renewables company before its 2016 bankruptcy—stung the solar industry.

Some investors began prioritizi­ng profitabil­ity over growth. No solar companies went public in the U.S. between late 2016 and early 2019, according to Bloomberg data.

Now, clean-tech companies are going public at a dizzying pace. Since October, at least two solar companies have gone public via initial offerings and another agreed last month to do so through a merger with a blank-check company. They join several electric-vehicle and battery companies that have also gone public with special purpose

acquisitio­n companies.

There have been 32 cleantech deals through blankcheck firms over the past 12 months, according to Pavel Molchanov, an equity analyst at Raymond James.

One big reason: It became clear early in the pandemic that solar wouldn’t just weather this difficult time, but possibly thrive during it. By mid-December, the U.S. was projected to install a record 19 gigawatts of new solar capacity last year, according to Wood Mackenzie and the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n.

Meanwhile, a sustainabi­lity-focused index that includes some solar companies, the WilderHill Clean Energy Index, last year surged more than 200 percent, topping the 58 percent gain in 2019. California-based SunPower Corp. rose as much as 14 percent on Friday, and is up about 70 percent this year.

And the underlying drivers propelling clean tech look sturdy in the near-term: supportive policies in Europe and the U.S., a push to green electric grids as well as trillions of dollars in funds focused on the energy transition.

“It’s a mega-trend that’s essential for the future of this world,” says Jeff McDermott, head of Nomura Greentech.

Ups and downs

But the success and future promise of the industry doesn’t mean that solar has become an easy business for executives—or for investors. Active Solar, for instance, was the best-performing stock-picker in Europe last year with a 183 percent return, but did so after twice losing most of its investors’ money.

Guinness Atkinson Asset Management, an investment management firm, found that the total rate of return of the median stock among solarequip­ment companies was 98 percent last year, but minus 32 percent in 2018. In fact, among all of the cleantech sub-sectors it studied, the total rate of return for solar equipment was the lowest between 2010 and 2020 at 65 percent.

Installati­on “volumes are going through the roof, but profitabil­ity can be quite different,” Molchanov says. “We have seen countless companies that have grown revenue rapidly over the years but profitabil­ity has been pressured.” There remains “relentless commoditiz­ation including margin compressio­n” that affects multiple solar segments,

including modules, inverters and power-supply agreements.

The overlappin­g trends of decarboniz­ation and electrific­ation—plus the struggles of oil—attracted many investors to solar last year. That’s a far cry from 2016, when the experience of SunEdison soured many on the industry. The company had fueled its ascent on financial engineerin­g and cheap debt before its

2016 bankruptcy.

Nearly five years later, the price of solar power has fallen markedly, such that the resource is now the cheapest in many markets. (This is obviously a plus for solar’s competitiv­eness, but not necessaril­y the best developmen­t for manufactur­ers).

Solar companies are increasing­ly confident that investors will reward them for focusing on just a few things—power-plant ownership, installati­ons, panelmakin­g, or components—rather than feeling the need to be vertically integrated like once before.

One major change is how clean power and other climate-forward businesses are now seen outside the industry. More than ever before, these companies are seen as a financial opportunit­y—not just good public relations.

 ??  ??
 ?? J. Emilio Flores / New York Times ?? Solar stocks are booming, in part because the pandemic proved that solar is a reliable energy source.
J. Emilio Flores / New York Times Solar stocks are booming, in part because the pandemic proved that solar is a reliable energy source.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States