Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

EV charging stocks thrive whether government helps or not

- By Julia Fanzeres Bloomberg

Companies that make charging equipment for electric vehicles may have gotten shortchang­ed in President Joe Biden’s bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill, but their future remains bright even without the extra help.

Mr. Biden had promised $174 billion to help build out EV infrastruc­ture, including money for public charging stations, consumer rebates for American-made EVs and a pledge to electrify the government’s fleet. So naturally investors in EV charging stocks were disappoint­ed by the $7.5 billion allocated for EVs in the bill, according to Cowen analyst Gabe Daoud.

The infrastruc­ture plan appears to be heading for approval after the House of Representa­tives earlier this week adopted a massive budget resolution,

overcoming concerns that a rift between Democratic Party factions would derail a carefully crafted agreement on funding. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she’s committed to passing the legislatio­n by Sept. 27.

But to the EV industry, the bigger point is for all the hand-wringing none of this may matter in the end. The companies probably can thrive without the government’s help.

“The industry is moving to electrific­ation regardless of legislatio­n,” Morningsta­r analyst David Whiston said.

Until recently many experts assumed that Washington would have to help lead the way in building out the infrastruc­ture for an EV world. Transformi­ng all of those gas stations into electric charging facilities, which is necessary for people to use EVs for anything beyond local driving, seemed daunting. But progress is coming so quickly to the EV industry that analysts now believe the system will come together regardless of whether it gets any help.

“With or without policy, we think the sector is likely to see tremendous growth moving throughout the decades,” Mr. Daoud said.

It’s easy to understand the enthusiasm as the market takes over. EV sales are booming, with global penetratio­n at 7% this year, from 4% in 2020, Mr. Daoud said.

“Everywhere, there’s growth everywhere,” said Craig Irwin, an analyst at Roth Capital Partners.

The question now for the industry is basically about chickens and eggs. Do charging stations have to come first before consumers buy EVs en masse? Or do EV purchases have to reach a certain threshold and then the charging ports will follow?

Analysts say the ideas are closely linked and that it may happen in tandem.

“This sector will grow and charging infrastruc­ture will manifest so long as the vehicles show up,” said Mr. Daoud.

The majority of growth in the EV industry is expected to come from charging companies, since there will be the need for a lot of charging stations, and quickly, analysts said. That gives the early entrants the opportunit­y to stake a claim.

“Anyone who has scale today, is likely to have scale tomorrow and scale 5-10 years from now,” said Mr. Irwin, who tabbed ChargePoin­t Holdings Inc. and EVgo Inc. as stocks to watch.

To be sure, with so much uncertaint­y surroundin­g EVs, risk abound ChargePoin­t and EVgo still haven’t reported any revenue, much less profits. And ChargePoin­t already has a market capitaliza­tion of $6.8 billion, while EVgo is worth $2.4 billion.

EV stocks are notorious for their high valuations. Tesla Inc., for example, is worth more than the entire U.S. automotive sector combined. Some EV companies have faced fraud allegation­s, while others are struggling to make money.

Toyota Chief Executive Akio Toyoda criticized the excessive hype and said many advocates are failing to consider the carbon emitted by generating electricit­y and the costs of transition­ing away from traditiona­l vehicles. However, analysts who are bullish on the EV industry preach patience with it just starting to grow.

As long as these companies can execute their business models, the profits should follow, Mr. Irwin said. “If you start running the numbers on where we are going to be, you know 30% EV adoption, there’s a whole lot of blue sky,” he said. “How do you put a value on that?”

 ?? Richard Vogel/Associated Press ?? The prospects for charging equipment, such as this ChargePoin­t station at a parking garage in Los Angeles, will thrive with or without the federal government’s assistance,
Richard Vogel/Associated Press The prospects for charging equipment, such as this ChargePoin­t station at a parking garage in Los Angeles, will thrive with or without the federal government’s assistance,

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