Posts Tagged ‘Energy Stocks’

Buzz Stock of the Day: Energy Conversion Devices (ENER)

Friday, March 13th, 2009

The majority of analysts that cover Energy Conversion Devices (Nasdaq: ENER) rate the stock a “hold,” and for good reason.

Market adoption for the company’s photovoltaic thin film technology is growing. The light-weight, flexible laminates are “ideal for commercial and residential rooftop and building integrated PV installations, both of which offer significant growth opportunities,” according to Raymond James (NYSE: RJF) analyst Pavel Molchanov, who has a $37 price target for ENER and projected an EPS growth rate of 25 percent over the next three-years.

ENER could also be one of the big winners from the Obama administration’s stimulus plan. New federal incentives will allow many Americans to immediately lower the price of electricity by installing solar panels on their rooftops, and recoup 30 percent of the installation costs through U.S. treasury grants.

Market sentiment for the Energy Conversion Devices’ prospects is positive, as well. According to the Motley Fool, roughly 93 percent of CAPS members were bullish on ENER, despite the fact that the company cut its June fiscal year revenue guidance from the $455 million to $485 range to a range in the low $400’s.

Shares of ENER are actually up on a trailing-12-month basis, and have outperformed the S&P 500 over the last . The Company has a 67.6 percent gross profit margin, a 7.3 percent return on equity (yoy) and is sitting on about $433 million in cash.

Buzz Stock of the day: Kinder-Morgan Energy Partners (KMP)

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009


RBC Bank’s Joseph Keating recently summed up Kinder Morgan Energy Partners (NYSE: KMP) in three words: exceptionally high quality.

A “high-class [company] in the pipeline arena,” according to Keating, Kinder Morgan has a dividend yield of 8.4% and a 19.1% return on equity over the last three years.

We love this stock because it has a pretty well-shielded dividend, and performance doesn’t hinge on commodity prices. Regardless of what oil costs, it still has to be moved. That’s where KMP comes in. If you’re looking to add an energy component to your portfolio, Kinder Morgan is definitely an option worth considering.

Energy Buzz Stocks- JCI, ACI, CVA

Friday, January 16th, 2009

In no particular order:

1. Coal makes a comeback: Formed from the compressed plant matter trapped under rocks and dirt for millions of years, coal accounted for about 27 percent of the world’s energy consumption, and is expected to increase by 2.6 percent every year until 2015. It’s cheap, and a lot more available in countries with voracious appetites for energylike the U.S., India, and China. Kiplinger recently published an article hailing coal as the “new black gold,” that will be touted as a “homegrown solution to ease U.S. reliance on oil imports, which now account for nearly two-thirds of daily usage.” Coal-to-fuel technologies are all but here, and it’s only a matter of time before the treehuggers get on the coal bandwagon, as well.

2. Russia gets the cold shoulder from the EU: About 39 percent of the European Union’s natural gas imports come from Russia. The demand for natural gas is expected to increase about 1 percent per-year for OECD countries, and 2.3% for non-OECD countries. Russia knows that it can call the shots when it comes to price from western and central European countries, once business from China picks up. Expect the EU to continue to launch new initiatives aimed at reducing its dependent on Russia including pipelines, and LNG re-gasification terminals to serve as a more reliable substitute for future natural gas supplies.

3. Oil prices stabilize within a narrow band by the end of the year: High oil prices that were buoyed for so long by bottlenecks, a bigger appetite, and speculation, has resulted in lower demand in OECD countries, especially the United States. Market researcher, Global Information, Inc., recently issued a statement predicting lower prices in the short-term, and further efforts by OPEC, which accounts for roughly 40% of the total oil production, to further try and control supply and reduce production.

Here are a few Energy Buzz Stocks we’re keeping an eye on:


Johnson Controls (JCI)
: This clean energy company just signed a joint venture with Saft to produce batteries for hybrid and electric vehicles. Known for its energy saving technology, which has applications in everything from the automotive to the industrial sector, JCI could be a big winner in the coming year.

Arch Coal (NYSE: ACI) – The stock has been crushed lately, and trades near its 52-week low. The company’s Q3 profit tripled over last year, and management was bullish on the long-term fundamental strength of the coal market. Recently trading for about $16.50 a share, ACI seems like a great opportunity at this price.

Covanta Holdings (NYSE: CVA)– Do you remember how the Flux Capacitor worked after Doc Brown flew back to 1985 from the future? Well, the future is here. This company can burn garbage instead of fossil fuels to produce electricity–clean electricity. Their waste-to-energy technology reduces greenhouse gases, lowers the risk of groundwater contamination, and reduces dependence on fossil fuels. Every year, Covanta converts 16 million tons of waste into 8 million megawatt hours of clean, renewable electricity. The company has had quarterly earnings growth of about 29 percent, and has more than $169 million of cash on hand.

Top 10 Buzz Stocks for 2009- AAPL, AVAV, ENER, FLR, EDU, SPWRA, TER, PEP, STJ, CHU

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Here’s a list of the Top 10 Buzz Stocks (in no particular order) to keep on your radar in 2009:

10. Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL)– best in class in almost every category they compete in; staying power, innovation, and a lot of growth here.

9. AeroVironment (Nasdaq: AVAV)– Promising projects in wind power and unmanned vehicles.

8. Energy Conversion Devices (Nasdaq: ENER)– A company in Obama’s sweet spot.

7. Fluor Corp. (NYSE: FLR)– Major player in engineering, construction, maintenance and procurement.

6. New Oriental Education (NYSE: EDU)– The biggest college prep and English instruction school in China.

5. SunPower (Nasdaq: SPWRA)- Another infrastructure play whose technology could become a mainstay in national energy policy.

4. Teradyne (NYSE: TER)– Chips need testing. This is a company with great semiconductor diagnostic technology that is primed to benefit once the chip market bounces back. Solid balance sheet–a lot more solid than many of its competitors.

3. PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP)– PEP shares have fallen from their January ’08 peak, and are a bargain where they trade right now. The company has also been a corporate leader in the push for green technologies, and is truly a global play.

2. St. Jude Medical (NYSE: STJ)– Life-saving devices that target heart disease. Higher than expected Q3 sales, and well insulated from macro turmoil.

1. China Unicom Ltd. (NYSE: CHU)– Well insulated from global turmoil; Trading at a very low earnings multiple. The company is one of only a handful of telecom players in 31 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions in China. CHU also provides data and Internet services. If you think China will get more connected in the next year, CHU is a great play to ride that wave.

Best infrastructure stocks- ETN, BAM, JEC

Monday, January 12th, 2009

There’s a lot of buzz on the Street about infrastructure stocks leading the bull market’s charge. Irrational exuberance is what got us here in the first place. So it behooves any one thinking about riding the infrastructure ‘boom’ to remain on the side of caution.

What constitutes an infrastructure stock?

Many point to companies that build roads, bridges, high-speed railway systems, water infrastructure, transportation systems, and green infrastructure.

Here are our top 3 infrastructure buzz stocks:

1. Eaton Corp. (NYSE: ETN): This $8 billion power solutions company has a trailing P/E of 6.8, 22 percent quarterly earnings growth (yoy), and gross profit of $3.6 billion. The stock has gotten crushed over 41% over the last year, which could be a sign that it’s ready to pop back up.

2. Brookfield Asset Management (NYSE: BAM): With nearly $50 billion in assets focused on the property, power, and infrastructure sectors, the first noise you hear from the infrastructure boom could be “BAM.” Brookfield has taken a beating, just like Eaton–falling almost 43 percent in the last year. Fundamentally, the company has quarterly earnings growth of about 84 percent, and more than $1 billion of cash.

3. Jacobs Engineering Group (NYSE: JEC):Jacobs provides engineering, architectural, technical, professional, and construction services to industrial and government organizations. The company has an operating margin of about 5.7 percent, and quarterly earnings growth of more than 35 percent. Another battered stock, shares of Jacob are down about 42 percent this year.

The New New Deal

The New New Deal, promises to fix our crumbling pipes, expand our highways, fix our bridges, and lay a foundation for a new way of life.

But is it just a band-aid covering up a festering wound?

Here’s an interesting video on whether or not FDR’s New Deal was a true solution, or just smoke and mirrors:

Is infrastructure the answer? Only time will tell. But if President-Elect Barack Obama is going to follow in the footsteps of FDR, infrastructure stocks will see some gains. How long those gains sustain is anyone’s guess.