February 05, 2024
By
Rich Smith, The Motley Fool
Why Plug
Power, SunPower, and Brookfield Renewable Stocks All Dropped Today
Monday is shaping up to be a be a bad day to
own renewable energy stocks. Shares of hydroelectric, wind, and solar
power plant operator Brookfield Renewable Energy (NYSE:
BEPC) fell 4.1% through 11:20 a.m. ET, while smaller hydrogen
company Plug Power (NASDAQ:
PLUG) and solar power provider SunPower (NASDAQ:
SPWR) sank 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.
To find out why, let's open up the pages of
USA Today's Sunday edition, which reported that "U.S.
counties are blocking the future of renewable energy."
The vast potential of American
renewable energy
This story starts out happy, with USA
Today reminding readers that America is a potential
renewable energy powerhouse (so to speak). Out of the 2.9 million
square miles that comprise American territory, if we were to cover
just 10,424 of those square miles -- about one-third of 1% of
America's landmass -- with solar panels and wind turbines, this would
generate enough clean energy to cover 100% of our electricity needs.
And the Biden administration has proposed doing just that, setting a
goal of generating 100% of America's energy from non-fossil fuel
renewable energy sources by 2035 -- barely a decade away.
Now here's the bad news: According to the U.S.
Energy Information Administration (EIA), we're not going to hit that
goal.
Despite data showing that the cost per
megawatt hour of producing utility-scale wind and solar power is now
cheaper than producing power from coal,
natural gas, or even nuclear power, a NIMBY (not in my backyard)
movement is sweeping the country. In 2023, nearly as many counties
passed legislation blocking new solar farms as began producing solar
power within their bounds, while in 2022, more counties
blocked wind farms than began producing it.
As of today, through a combination of
moratoriums, bans, project permitting regulations, and other
restrictions, new utility-scale solar and wind projects are
effectively banned in 15% of U.S. counties. And these include some of
the counties best situated for generating solar power (i.e., the sunny
Southwest), as well as those best situated for generating wind power
(i.e., the windy Midwest).
What does this mean for renewable
energy stocks?
Now, it's not all bad news. While
NIMBY movements are curtailing green energy development in 15% of U.S.
counties, that still leaves the vast majority of the country open to
development -- and new projects are being announced all the
time. Plus, what can be banned can also be unbanned, if voters can be
convinced that clean, cheap electricity might actually be a good thing
-- good enough that they don't mind having a plant built right next
door.
For today, however, renewable energy investors
may be feeling like the wind has been taken out of their sails (so to
speak). If you've been buying shares of Brookfield Renewable, for
example, on the theory that it's a renewable energy utility, and in
just 11 short years the whole U.S. is going to be renewable, well,
it's probably depressing to hear EIA tell you that this is not, in
fact, going to happen. It kind of blows up the investment thesis a
little bit -- or at least delays it. Similar worries probably afflict
you if you were betting on just the solar side of this thesis, and
buying shares of SunPower.
I'm not as clear on why USA Today's
renewable energy article would be worrying Plug Power shareholders
today. The paper didn't say one word about hydrogen power or fuel
cells, after all. Then again, in contrast to Brookfield and SunPower
-- both of which were profitable as recently as 2022, and could become
so again -- Plug Power is a kind of pie-in-the-sky stock that hasn't
had a profitable year ever in its 27-year history.
As for buying opportunities, if you're
inclined to look at today's trading action as an overreaction and a
chance to buy and hold, of the three stocks named here, I think
Brookfield probably has the most potential.
Even with its sizable debt load, the stock
sells for an enterprise value only 17 times the profit it earned in
2022. And while (barely) unprofitable in 2023, Brookfield still
managed to generate positive free cash flow of $572 million last year
-- which was even more cash than it generated when
"profitable" in 2022. (And growth is good.) Plus, with a portfolio of
energy assets ranging from hydro to solar to wind, Brookfield gives
you a more diversified bet on renewable energy in general.
To me, it seems to be the safest way to take
advantage of the situation presenting itself today.
Should you invest $1,000 in Brookfield
Renewable right now?
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Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The
Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Brookfield Renewable. The
Motley Fool has a
disclosure policy.
Why Plug Power, SunPower, and Brookfield Renewable Stocks All Dropped
Today was originally published by The Motley Fool
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