Earlier this year, solar energy technology company Enphase Energy (ENPH 1.11%) was a favorite with momentum investors. After the company announced its 2019 fourth-quarter earnings on Feb. 18, shares jumped 43%, capping a three-month increase of over 200%.
Now, however, with the bear market initiated by the COVID-19 pandemic, the stock has lost more than half its value from those recent highs. Price moves of that magnitude significantly change the risk level of any investment. But a look at the business itself should be the basis for the decision of whether to invest.
Rising demand and a rising stock price
A focus of the company throughout 2019 was to ramp up production to meet the demand for its products. The company's solar microinverters, which convert energy at the solar panel, have been in high demand as part of a total energy solution including storage and software and network technologies.
In the 2018 fourth quarter, Enphase shipped 820,000 microinverters. One year later, as it ramped up production to meet demand for its latest version, IQ 7, it shipped over 2.1 million units. In that time, the stock price had risen from $5 at the start of 2019, to a peak of $59 at the time of its most recent earnings announcement. The following chart shows the rising output, and (importantly for investors) rising margins that have come with the growing sales.
Metric |
Q4 2019 | Q3 2019 | Q2 2019 | Q1 2019 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Microinverter shipments | 2.113 million | 1.796 million | 1.284 million | 976,000 |
Revenue | $210 million | $180 million | $134.1 million |
$100.2 million |
Gross margin | 37.1% | 35.9% | 33.8% |
33.3% |
Enphase has expanded its offerings with its Ensemble energy management technology, which now includes the new Encharge battery storage system. Pre-orders for Encharge, which are to begin shipping this month, have been strong, according to the company.
Current risk level
The risk level certainly rose with the ascension of the stock price, as well as a rising level of competition. Israeli firm SolarEdge Technologies (SEDG 3.24%) also offers microinverter solutions, and backup-generator maker Generac Holdings (GNRC 1.20%) has also now entered into the solar storage business.
But with the recent market turmoil, the risk level has changed drastically. While there are certainly big-picture concerns with the pandemic and related economic impacts that have to be resolved, if an investor still believes there will be growth in solar technology demand, the valuation looks compelling.
With the anticipation of growing sales in 2019, the P/E ratio for Enphase reached the unsustainable level of 400. But as the sales came to fruition, and with the stock price now retreating, the business looks to be a good value.
The outlook
Enphase has announced plans for its next-generation inverter solution, IQ 8, as well as expansions for its Ensemble offering into India. And a partnership with German solar roof manufacturer Creaton in Europe, and U.S. roofing and solar company PetersenDean promise more growth.
Strong cash flow from operations of $102.3 million in the most recent quarter has resulted in a level of cash and equivalents of $296.1 million on the balance sheet, compared with debt of $105.5 million.
While Enphase Energy has been an expensive momentum growth stock over the past year, the recent significant drop in share price has brought it to a realistic risk/reward balance. The underlying business strength needs to continue. But assuming the current crisis subsides and you believe in the continued growing interest in the residential and commercial solar story, Enphase has reached a level where reward should outweigh the risk.