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March 25, 2007

Inverter Stocks: A Backdoor to Solar and Wind Energy

Avoiding the Rush

Whenever there is a gold rush, the people who make the real money are seldom the gold miners, but rather the suppliers to the miners that come home with the lion's share of the profits.   This is not because there is not an incredible amount of money to be made in mining gold, but because the nature of a gold rush is that too many optimistic miners are encouraged by the early profits of a few to rush to pursue too few opportunities.

To many, the rush into solar stocks seems to be just that sort of gold rush.  The boom in solar IPOs certainly reminds me of the type of feeding frenzy in which incautious investors are likely to get burned.  And we are also seeing some other signs of rampant speculation, where investors are buying poorly managed (or even dishonest) companies with almost the same fervor of well managed ones.  There's little doubt that the future is bright for solar power, but picking solar companies that are going to survive and thrive in that bright future is becoming increasingly difficult in an increasingly crowded field.

Things Photovoltaic Makers Need

In a gold rush like this one it makes more sense to look at the suppliers.  The most obvious suppliers for solar photovolatic (PV) manufacturers are the suppliers of solar grade silicon, from which most PV panels are made.  This is what I was doing during last summer, and my favorite silicon supplier, MEMC Electronic Materials (NYSE:WFR) has doubled since then (a much better performance than I was expecting in such a short time.)  I have since taken most of my (and my clients') gains.  With many wondering how long the silicon supply shortage will last, and the explosion of companies advancing thin film and concentrating photovolatic technologies to get around the shortage, it seems simpler to get off the silicon roller coaster than to predict when prices will peak or guessing which PV technology will be the most economic in a couple years.

Thinking about suppliers to PV manufacturers, we might also think of Spire Corp. (NasdaqGM: SPIR), which supplies solar manufacturing equipment, but that stock is also trading at its 52-week highs, and is up about 50% in the last six months, and has tripled in the last five years, yet is still unprofitable. [UPDATE: Applied Materials (NasdaqGS:AMAT) just won a contract to supply a thin-film production line to Spain's T-Solar Global. As a supplier to the PV industry, AMAT is worth inclusion in my Alternative Energy Blue Chip Portfolio.]

While I'm used to investing in unprofitable companies, I prefer to buy out-of-favor unprofitable companies, rather than ones that have recently had a big run-up.  Which brings me to my current favorite supplier to the PV industry: makers of the inverters which convert DC power from PV panels into the AC power used by most of our appliances and the grid.  (Small inverters are also used in campers to provide A/C power for portable TVs and other electronics.)

Wind turbines also use a similar device called a converter, although wind converters convert the "wild AC" produced by wind turbines into the more domesticated variety used on the grid.  Many manufacturers make both PV inverters and wind converters.  Many also make power supplies which convert AC to DC power, since these are basically inverters operating in reverse.

North American Stocks

Here is a run-down of the major manufacturers traded in the US and Canada:

Xantrex (TSX:XTX or Pink Sheets: XARXF): Makes a range of solar inverters from 10 to 225 kW and wind converters for turbines up to 1.5 MW.  They are also well established small inverters for cars and campers and other power conversion products.  And, unlike many other alternative energy companies, they have had profitable years in 2005 and 2006.  This is likely the safest investment among power electronics manufacturers, but, by the same token, has the least possible upside.  Xantrex's stock has been flat for the last couple years (after falling about 40% from its IPO in 2004: not a lot of excitement here, which is exactly when I like to invest.

SatCon Technology Corp. (NasdaqCM:SATC) operates in a broad range of power electronics businesses, including grid support and power quality, as well as power conversion.  Their wind converters are designed for turbines from 250kW to 2MW and larger.  Their PV inverters are designed for systems from 30-500kW in size.   SatCon is not currently profitable, and is unlikely to become profitable in the next couple years, but the earnings trends seem to be in the right direction, and they are in the rapidly growing industrial segment of the market.  SATC also fell immediately after its IPO in 2002, and has been gyrating rather wildly since then.  It's currently down about 60% from its price at the IPO, and seems to be showing some signs of life.

Sustainable Energy Technologies (Toronto Venture: STG; Pink Sheets: STGYF) makes a low voltage inverter suitable for residential sized systems and charging battery backups that they market as having superior efficiency and reliability, which they also market for use with fuel cells.  In addition, they sell a vertical axis wind turbine.   STG is definitely the most speculative of the three, but also the greenest and purest play on alternative energy.  Given its speculative nature, it's probably best to wait for a pullback before investing.

These companies do not have the market to themselves by any means; major competitors include the private German Compaies SMA (Sunnyboy inverters and Windyboy converters) and Fronius.  Nevertheless, there is little excitement around the stocks (except for STG which is such a tiny company that the only limit on its stock price is speculators' greed) and yet they have as much potential to benefit from the growth of Solar as do the much hyped solar stocks.


DISCLOSURE: Tom Konrad and/or his clients have positions in the following stocks mentioned here: WFR, XTX, SATC,STG.

DISCLAIMER: The information and trades provided here are for informational purposes only and are not a solicitation to buy or sell any of these securities. Investing involves substantial risk and you should evaluate your own risk levels before you make any investment. Past results are not an indication of future performance. Please take the time to read the full disclaimer here.

April 24, 2006

Magnetek Aurora(TM) Inverters Complete Manhattan's Largest Building Integrated Solar Power System

MAG_logo.gifMagnetek Inc. (MAG) announced that Manhattan's largest functioning Building Integrated Photovoltaic (BIPV) power system recently began harvesting energy from the sun. [ more ]

February 22, 2006

American Superconductor Receives Order for PowerModule(TM) Systems for 150 Wind Turbines

American Superconductor Corp. (AMSC) announced it has received a follow-on order for its proprietary PowerModule(TM)-based wind turbine generator control systems for 150 wind turbines from Windtec Systemtechnik GmbH (Windtec), a supplier of large wind turbine components and system technology, based in Klagenfurt, Austria. The PowerModule-based control systems will be utilized in the electrical equipment of wind turbine generators -- each rated at 1.5 megawatts -- which Windtec plans to ship to China in calendar 2006. AMSC expects to ship the PowerModule PM1000 power converters, which manage and stabilize electricity produced by wind turbine generators, to Windtec by the end of calendar year 2006. [ more ]

February 01, 2006

Maxwell Technologies Receives 1.5 Million-Unit Ultracapacitor Purchase Order From Enercon for Wind Energy Systems

Maxwell Technologies (MXWL) announced that Enercon GmbH has placed a 1.5 million-unit purchase order for ultracapacitors for wind turbine blade pitch systems. Enercon currently uses BOOSTCAP® ultracapacitors for backup energy storage and power delivery in wind turbines models ranging in output from 300 kW to 6 MW.

Ulrich Neundlinger, Enercon's managing director of switching units, said that the company is expanding its use of ultracapacitors for blade pitch system backup power after initial deployments confirmed their significant advantages over traditional battery solutions. [ more ]

January 26, 2006

Maxwell Technologies Provides Ultracapacitors for General Hydrogen

Maxwell Technologies (MXWL) announced that General Hydrogen Corporation, a leading developer of hydrogen fuel cell-based power systems for electric forklifts, has placed a 200,000 unit, three-year, purchase order for BOOSTCAP® ultracapacitors to enhance performance and energy management in its Hydricity® Pack technology.

The purchase order is part of a strategic supply agreement through which General Hydrogen will source ultracapacitors exclusively from Maxwell and receive strategic pricing if volume thresholds specified in the purchase order are reached. [ more ]

November 22, 2005

Xantrex receives funding from NREL for high power solar inverter development

Xantrex Technology Inc. (XTX.TO) has been awarded US $873,000 from the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) under its Photovoltaics Manufacturing Research and Development Initiative. Xantrex will match the funding from NREL during the course of the project for a total budget of $1.74 Million. This program will take place at the Xantrex facility in Livermore, California.

Xantrex PV inverters are America's leading choice for large-scale solar installations. Presently, utility-interactive, three-phase inverters are available in models ranging from 10 kW to 225 kW, and multiple inverters can be paralleled for larger power installations. [ more ]

Xantrex is one of my favorite companies in the power inverter space. The stock is also acting very well right now and is close to what technicians call a "Golden Cross" with the 50 day MA crossing over the 200 day MA. This is typically a very bullish stock pattern. I would be a buyer of this stock now, but I'm not able to purchase the stock since in only trades on the Toronto exchange.

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