Should You Warm up to Generac Stock for the Winter?

 | Dec 30, 2022 01:38AM ET

  • The aging power grid will need more generator systems for the home electrification trend.
  • Home standby power customer demand is strong, but qualified installers are in short supply.
  • Generac has solar power storage options, has taken a piece of WATT Fuel Cell Corp, and acquired IoT platform Blue Pillar.
  • Shares trade at 11X forward earnings with an 8.64% short interest.
  • Power generation and energy storage systems maker Generac Holdings (NYSE:GNRC) stock has been a heartbreaker. Shares were trading at a high of $524.31 just over a year ago before shares fell to a new weekly lower low of $86.29 in late December, below its pre-pandemic levels.

    With a rare bomb cyclone storm affecting 200 million people in the country, the fear of losing power could be a driver for shares to bounce. Known for manufacturing power generation systems for residential and commercial markets, its products are relatively unappreciated until the power goes out. It owns a 60% share in the telecom backup generation space and competes with heavy equipment and generator manufacturers Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) and Cummins (NYSE:CMI).

    h2 Aging Power Grids/h2

    Just like fire extinguishers are largely ignored until a fire breaks out. Aging power grids have become more vulnerable to high-impact weather-related events, from hurricanes to ice storms and polar vortexes. Global decarbonization efforts have also introduced the clean and renewable energy megatrend combined with home electrification to be a robust future growth driver. It hopes to join the likes of clean energy aggregators like Enphase Energy (NASDAQ:ENPH) and SolarEdge Technologies Inc (NASDAQ:SEDG), participating in the Grid 2.0 megatrend.

    h2 Install and Activation Constraints Capping Growth/h2

    The Company has suffered from a labor shortage of qualified installers to install and activate their home standby generators. Generac CEO Aaron Jagdfeld specified that despite strong end customer demand for home standby generators, the install capacity lagged production output.

    He noted, "The ability to install contractors to fully service the demand for backup power from homeowners continues to be constrained by labor availability, permitting in utility-related delays, and shortages in certain materials needed to complete an installation."

    h2 Installer Remedies/h2

    They are trying to remedy these problems by providing resources for existing dealers to expand labor forces and additional installation training for non-dealer contractors. As a result, its dealer network has grown 40% from pre-pandemic levels from 6,200 to 8,500.

    He stated, "We are working to streamline home standby projects by creating universal permitting packages and replicating past successes in simplifying approval processes from certain local utilities." They are also intensifying efforts to expand their overall dealer count and have shorter production times.

    Get The News You Want
    Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
    Get The App