Solar Is Shining: Time to Get TAN

On September 16, 2009, in Green ETFs, Solar, by Garrett Beauvais
0

It’s been a rough ride for investors in solar stocks but now may be the time to get back in and the Claymore/MAC Global Solar Energy Index ETF (TAN) looks like a great way to go.

From its high of over $30 in May 2008, TAN plunged to less than $5 in March of this year. Excess capacity and oversupply in the solar panel business was compounded by the global financial crisis leaving solar companies feeling the pinch of negative leverage. Add to that (1) a dramatic drop in energy prices, (2) reduced subsidies for new solar installations in Spain and Germany, and (3) a failure of the U.S. government to develop an energy policy in 2008 and there was a total meltdown in solar stocks with many falling by as much as 90% from their peaks.

Now many of these conditions have seen dramatic improvement. Solar panel manufacturers have written down and worked off much of their excess inventories, liquidity has returned to capital markets, and energy prices have found some stability. More recently, China announced plans to build the world’s largest solar farm with First Solar (FSLR) and natural gas futures finally look as if they have turned up.

Green energy solutions, and solar in particular, will be natural beneficiaries as the world’s economies return to growth from the recent recessionary period and combined with increasing pressure to restrict greenhouse gases growth in green energy solutions is simply inevitable and to increase equity exposure here is a no-brainer.

The photovoltaic space is crowded and with so many players and competing technologies picking winners will not be easy. TAN shares provide a nice basket of broad solar exposure to several of the leaders and help shelter investors from some of the extreme volatility common to solar stocks. FSLR is the largest holding at nearly 11%. FSLR is the low cost leader and earlier this year became the first volume producer under $1/watt reaching $0.87/watt in the second quarter. With the announcement of the Chinese plan to build the world’s largest solar farm and First Solar’s cost advantage they are clearly in the catbird’s seat. I should note here that FSLR is a recommended stock holding in The Green Investor newsletter, where I am a contributing editor.

The other attractive aspect of TAN shares are the geographic coverage they provide: the holdings are roughly evenly divided between companies in the U.S., in Asia, and in Europe providing both geographic diversification and an inherent currency hedge.

Looking at the price history for TAN since inception you can see that for most of mid-November 2008 through mid-March 2009 TAN shares were trading below the $8 range and subsequently that price now appears to formed a reasonable support level with TAN shares bouncing off that support on significantly higher volume last week.

While current stock market rally may be getting long in the tooth and I would expect TAN shares to pull back along with any broader market weakness, I clearly would see a pullback as an opportunity to increase my TAN exposure.

Tagged with:
 

Geothermal Is Getting Red Hot, Part II

On September 8, 2009, in Geothermal, Green Stocks, by Andreas Schreyer
0

In the first half of this article, “Geothermal Is Getting Red Hot, Part I”, I discussed the key characteristics, advantages and disadvantages of geothermal energy. Part II continues with the key trends and new technologies, as well as a review of the list of publicly traded geothermal companies.

The future for geothermal energy
The crucial advantages of geothermal energy we reviewed last week, namely a mature and proven technology with a very high capacity factor (meaning that geothermal can supply utilities with baseload power around the clock) and low levelized cost of energy, make geothermal one of our high growth renewable energy sectors for the next decade. Recent advances in geothermal technology, such as the binary power plant, have made possible the economic production of electricity from geothermal resources lower than 302°F.

The most promising technology developments are the so-called Enhanced (or Engineered) Geothermal Systems (EGS) which generally refer to natural resources which have to be fully engineered and require artificial stimulation. This really means the creation of a man-made geothermal reservoir in hot dry rocks at depths of 13,000 to 16,500 feet by fracturing the rock with explosives or high pressure water injections. The hot water is then pumped back out of the reservoir and fed to the power plant.

There is a lot of new research in progress spurred in large part by funding from the Department of Energy (DOE) and a recent surge of private investment in early stage exploration/research companies. There are many technical challenges with these new technologies, not the least of which are the potential earthquakes they trigger. A case in point was an EGS project in Basel, Switzerland in which the “hydro fracturing” process was directly linked to a 3.4 magnitude quake under the city, causing the immediate termination of the project. Aftershocks lasted for another 9 months.

Still, if the fracturing process can be controlled (and performed safely, away from large urban centers), the hope is that EGS technologies could help extend the production life of existing fields and make geothermal projects feasible in locations previously out of reach and tap an estimated additional 200,000 MW in the U.S. alone. The $350 million earmarked for geothermal research grants under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) is about to provide one more boost for the geothermal electricity generation sector.

How to take advantage of the geothermal opportunity
As the U.S. is expected to continue to lead geothermal development activities, there are a number of exciting ways to participate in this promising market. With the sector heating up, there are many participants jockeying for position, from drillers to oil and gas companies, turbine manufacturers, utilities and Independent Power Producers (IPPs) both pure-play and diversified, and finally pure-play geothermal developers.

At the small, private end of the scale are the hot pure-play geothermal developers, most of them tiny startups, with little or no revenue, but sky-high ambitions for their EGS research projects. There are a couple of dozen just in Australia. Here in the U.S., you can re-live the fever of the Silicon Valley technology boom of the 1990s, with venture capital firms and other private investment funds fighting to get in on the next big thing. There must be dozens of them, most of them offshoots of academic research, but perhaps the most over-hyped of the bunch is AltaRock Energy which has been getting all the headlines, including for raising $26 million in a second round of private investment from companies like Google (GOOG) and legendary venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. Late last year they also received an EGS research grant of $6.25 million from the Department of Energy. But last week, they made headlines for all the wrong reasons: they announced their drilling project at the Geysers in California had run into problems and was suspended indefinitely.

It is probably just as well that as individual investors we cannot invest in these potential stars of the future, because most of them will not be around in a few years.

Let’s take a look at the publicly traded companies. In Part I, we reviewed companies at the extremes of the investing spectrum: an early stage company that just completed its initial public offering, Magma Energy Corp. (MGMXF.PK) and our preferred pure-play geothermal stock Ormat Technologies, Inc (ORA). We will not discuss these here except for including them in our list of publicly traded geothermal companies in Table 1 below.

Table 1: Publicly traded geothermal companies

Ticker Symbol Geothermal company names

CPN

Calpine Corp.
GTORF.PK GTO Resources Inc.
MGMXF.PK Magma Energy Corp.
NGLPF.OB Nevada Geothermal Power Inc.
ORA Ormat Technologies Inc.
PGTHF.PK Polaris Geothermal Inc.
RZ Raser Technologies Inc.
SRAGF.PK Sierra Geothermal Power Corp.
HTM U.S. Geothermal Inc.
WGPWF.PK Western GeoPower Corp

The list is ranked alphabetically. There are no large caps on the list. The only mid cap companies are Calpine Corp. and Ormat. We include Calpine because they are often mentioned for the many geothermal power plants they operate. They are a utility, and they have about 725 MW of geothermal electricity generation capacity, but since this represents about 3% of their total capacity we are not particularly interested.

Besides Calpine and Ormat, the rest of the list is made up mostly of smaller pure-play geothermal companies, several of them traded on the over-the-counter market or Pink Sheets, and very illiquid. Even those traded on larger exchanges, such as Raser Technologies, have been hurt by the economic downturn. They are experiencing cash flow issues, are forced into dilutive stock offerings or other desperate measures and most on the list are in trouble. In the current financing environment and new project funding as tight as it is, the established, proven low-risk geothermal developer will win deals more often than not.

Raser just got another round of bad news from the DOE which turned them down for a loan guarantee. GTO Resources, a mostly unknown Canadian geothermal company, which previously had a market cap of about $68 million, just announced the completion of a $179 million equity financing deal.

The only one we can really get excited about here at TheGreenInvestor is about to graduate from being an exploration and development stage company to a revenue generating electricity producer. Its multiples are about to change.

Tagged with: