February 02, 2024
By
Spencer Kimball
Nextracker CEO says ‘solar is
unstoppable’ as market sees ‘unprecedented demand growth’
Nextracker’s stock soared this week after the company reported
earnings that beat expectations by a wide margin.
Nextracker
Key Points
- Nextracker’s stock soared this
week after the company reported earnings that beat
expectations by a wide margin.
- Nextracker manufactures systems
for solar panels to track the direction of the sun.
- While the solar industry is
fighting to emerge from the doldrums, Nextracker is
significantly outperforming the sector.
Solar power is on a path to double every two
to three years amid an “unprecedented period of demand growth” for new
electricity generation, the CEO of
Nextracker
told CNBC.
“Solar is unstoppable,” Nextracker founder and
CEO Dan Shugar said in an interview after the company’s latest
quarterly report. Nextracker manufactures systems for solar panels to
track the direction of the sun.
“The intrinsic economics of utility scale are
phenomenal both in the U.S. and overseas. It has never been as
favorable as it is,” Shugar said.
Nextracker’s stock closed nearly 25% higher
Thursday at $56.50 after the company exceeded Wall Street’s earnings
expectations by a wide margin, raised its guidance and reported a
record order backlog.
The company has been on a tear since its
successful initial public offering in February 2023, beating earnings
expectations and raising its guidance three quarters in a row.
While the solar industry is fighting to emerge
from the doldrums, Nextracker is significantly outperforming the
sector. The company’s stock is up about 24% this year, while the
Invesco Solar ETF
is down nearly 21%.
The residential solar space has taken a beating
as households have been slammed financially by high interest rates,
depressing demand and leaving the installers with too much inventory
on their hands.
But Nextracker’s fiscal third-quarter
revenue has grown 38% year over year to $710 million as demand among
the large utility-scale customers that the company serves continues
to grow. The company’s order backlog on Dec. 31, 2023 “significantly
exceeds” $3 billion, up from $2.6 billion at the end of its fiscal
year in March 2023.
Data centers, the electrification of appliances and
transportation in addition to reindustrialization in the U.S. are
driving a growing need for electricity, Shugar said. Nearly 300
gigawatts of new power plants are needed over the next five years
and 500 gigawatts over the next decade to meet the need, he said.
Solar is faster to build and cheaper than
conventional energy sources and provides insulation from the
volatility of fuel prices, Shugar said. Solar is expected to see 26%
compound annual growth over the next five years and will become the
leading source of U.S. electricity generation in a decade, he said.
Utility-scale solar costs anywhere from $24
to $96 per megawatt hour without subsidies, about 56% cheaper than
nuclear and gas peaking and 42% less expensive than coal at the top
end of the cost estimate range, according to an
April 2023 report from Lazard.
With demand growing, Nextracker has raised
its revenue forecast for fiscal 2024 to a range of $2.43 billion to
$2.48 billion, compared to between $2.3 billion and $2.4 billion
previously.
The company also raised its net income
guidance for the year to $374 million to $429 million, compared to
$237 million to $266 million previously. This includes $50 million
to $80 million in benefits from tax credits under the Inflation
Reduction Act.
Geopolitical, 2024 election risks
The industry faces potential headwinds from
rising geopolitical risks abroad and the 2024 presidential election
at home. There is growing uncertainty about whether the IRA, which
has been a boon for the industry, will survive if Republicans win
unified control of the government.
Shugar said he expects the IRA tax provisions will prove resilient.
Nextracker has invested in 25 gigawatts of domestic manufacturing in
districts across the political spectrum, he said.
“The IRA provisions that are really most
impactful to the market are tax code,” Shugar said. “Those tend to
have a lot of persistence. The day after the election, those don’t
evaporate,” he said.
“Most of the factories that we’re building
are across the political spectrum, so there’s a lot of jobs in a lot
of places,” the CEO said. “We think there’s a lot of political
tailwinds for what we’re doing,” he said.
Nextracker has been affected by shipping
disruptions in the Red Sea from militant attacks on commercial
vessels and the drought that has restricted traffic through the
Panama Canal, Shugar said.
Logistics costs have increased, and
shipments of materials have been delayed in some cases, though the
company has been able to manage so far, he said.
“It is impacting us,” Shugar said. “It’s not
material, meaning it’s factored into our guidance as we understand
the issue today, but we don’t want to see ‘hot wars’ continue
escalating and impacting global markets and financing.”
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