Bill Paul
My friend Consuelo Mack, host of "Consuelo Mack’s Wealthtrack" on PBS TV, asks her guests for their "one investment pick." What’s my one alternative energy stock pick?
A year ago on Consuelo’s show, I recommended LED lighting developer Cree Inc. (Symbol CREE), because the LED lighting market (part of the burgeoning energy efficiency sector) is expected to hit upwards of $5 billion by 2013 v. $600 million in 2008, according to investment banking firm Merriman, Curhan, Ford, and because Cree was then an attractive takeover candidate. It still is; however, since the stock has since risen something like 300% and its price-to-earnings ratio is now north of 100, it no longer warrants being my "one" investment pick, though it’s still well worth having in a broad portfolio of alternative energy stocks that I think every investor should have.
If I were inclined to pick a stock I think could duplicate Cree’s performance in 2010, it would be Ocean Power Technologies Inc. (Symbol OPTT). In my mind, wave and tidal power is the most overlooked, underrated green energy sector in the world. Pike Research said last summer that by 2015 wave and tidal power could be generating 2.7 gigawatts of electricity worldwide vs. just 264 megawatts in 2009.
Ocean Power is virtually the only publicly-traded firm in this sub-sector. (Look for a number of European firms to go public over the next couple of years.) The company is on the cusp of commercial operation and has a partnership with Lockheed Martin (Symbol LMT) that would seem to guarantee deep-enough pockets to survive any growing pains. And, like Cree, I see Ocean Power as a takeover candidate.
But while Ocean Power is also well worth having in a broad-based portfolio, since it still faces possible regulatory and other issues, it’s just not enough of a sure thing to be my "one" pick. The same situation is true for wind and solar stocks, though for different reasons. Wind has an enormous future and several wind firms belong in your green portfolio. But the giant turbine manufacturers and wind-farm developers are becoming commodity firms; there’s no obvious top pick right now. Solar too has an enormous future, but the technology is developing too quickly for any solar firm to be a sure thing right now, not even much vaunted First Solar (Symbol FSLR), though it too belongs in your green portfolio.
For my one investment pick, I choose a company without which solar and wind’s potential can’t be realized. It’s also a company without which the energy-saving, blackout-avoiding potential of the "smart" grid can’t be realized. The same company is spearheading monumental construction projects that will bring into Europe huge amounts of solar power from North Africa and wind power from the North Sea. The same company is developing rapid recharge infrastructure for electric vehicles and is quickly becoming a leader in demand response and energy management services. This company also is a – if not the – global leader in building and rebuilding thousands of miles of electric transmission lines around the world, a business that will require annual expenditures of $33 billion by 2014 vs. $12 billion in 2008, according to NextGen Research.
In January 2010, my one alternative energy investment pick is Siemens AG (Symbol SI).
DISCLOSURE: No position.
DISCLAIMER: This is a news article. Please read terms and policy.
Bill Paul is Managing Editor of EnergyTechStocks.com.