ADES: Clean-up Solutions Company Faces Its Biggest Mess Ever - Itself

 | Jul 13, 2014 01:02AM ET

Investing in Advanced Emissions Solutions (ADES) is a little like buying land in Florida, sight unseen.

It looks incredibly gorgeous, “green” and tempting at first. Yet after digging deeper, you discover you’ve bought swampland infested with alligators flashing toothy grins. That’s what TheStreetSweeper found in this Highlands Ranch, Colo. holding company specializing in clean solutions for coal-fired power plants.

A superficial look shows its stock price flying near $23, not very far below its $29 record, as the company peels out optimistic press releases on a plant lease deal and a new finance committee.

But with deeper inspection, ADES’ alligators look awfully ugly and hungry. The company stands knee-deep in class action lawsuits alleging securities law violations and “false and/or misleading” statements tied to financial reports that must be restated – and a NASDAQ delisting threat that ADES can’t seem to shake.

Unfortunately, ADES very efforts to try to clean up three quarters – and likely more - of unreliable, consequently misleading financial statements are already snake-bitten.

ADES has hand-picked a rogues’ gallery of handsome men to fix its financial mess and restore investors’ confidence. We’re calling it a rogues’ gallery because this line-up, includes:

*Directors of companies wallowing in the risky penny stock world.

*Co-founders and former top executives of an emotion-charged company tottering just this side of crash and burn.

*Leaders who suddenly ran out on a company where delinquent financials almost killed its NASDAQ listing.

*Audit team members who oversaw ADES’ messy financials to begin with.

 Yet these are some of the very people ADES selected to fix its financial reports. We’ll explain the details later in this report.

 Investors may find various viewpoints on ADES here . ADES declined to comment.

 Let’s take a closer look at issues that make the ADES denizen-infested swampland look so treacherous to today’s investors:

 * SUPREME COURT RULING TRANSLATES TO CUSTOMER DECLINE.

 The June 23 Supreme Court ruling is likely to further shrink the pool of potential customers for ADES.

 The Court said the EPA can’t require all companies to reduce emissions.

The ruling allows the agency to regulate 83 percent of greenhouse-gas emissions, rather than the 86 percent requested by the EPA, according to Justice Antonin Scalia.

The ruling doesn’t affect certain efforts to cut power plant emissions by 30 percent. However, the big facilities blamed for huffing out most of the pollutants believed responsible for climate change will continue to need federal permits – that 83 percent referenced by Justice Scalia.

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But millions of little guys - such as the little guys that make up ADES’ customer base – will not have to meet those regulations. So there’s no urgent need for ADES.

Unfortunately, it also appears larger companies have no reason to suddenly seek out ADES. That’s because the company is a virtual unknown, up against huge, established companies like General Electric Company (NYSE:GE), Babcock & Wilcox Company (NYSE:BWC), Norit, Seimens and Alstom (PARIS:ALSO), which sell widely acknowledged solutions to big plants.

Any hopes of any new construction of coal-burning units – producing future potential customers for ADES - were dashed in 2010, under President Obama’s Climate Action Plan.

“Can you build a coal plant after this? No. It’s not commercially feasible to build a new coal plant, period,” Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune then bluntly told the L.A. Times.

*MORE PROSPECTS GO UP IN SMOKE

On top of the government’s “war on coal,” ADES’ prospects were already on trend to grow bleaker.

It’s sort of like the way buggy whips got tossed out when the automobile drove horse-drawn buggies off the road. Or the way today’s online companies are rapidly grabbing business away from newspapers.

The decline of coal was set in motion decades ago as innovation sparked a Natural Gas bonanza in the United States. Natural gas production surged, prices fell and many utilities shifted from coal-fired power plants to natural gas, just the way American Electric Power has been eliminating its coal units, according to a representative of that mammoth company.

 “Already, EPA regulations have contributed to the closure of more than 300 coal units in 33 states,” warned the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity last fall.

*STOCK CHARTS TELL SAD STORY

The reality of coal’s loss of power is stunningly clear in coal companies’ stock charts.  

Below, investors can see the sad story illustrated by Arch Coal (ACI). Formerly a major ADES investor, this coal supplier was so anxious to cash in its entire investment in ADES last year that it sold its 262,499 shares for $5.90 per share - even though more than half of those cost Arch Coal $6.95.

The chart shows Arch Coal stock fetched about $74 per share in 2008. Today, it’s just about $3.