In This Article:
The high point for ChargePoint (NYSE:CHPT) in 2021 was when CHPT stock hit $46.30 in mid-January. Not quite an all-time high ($49.48 on Christmas Eve 2020), it’s clawed back from its March lows below $20.
Source: YuniqueB / Shutterstock.com
Now trading around $28 as I write this, I’m wondering if the electric vehicle (EV) charging network has enough in the tank to get back to the mid-to-high $40s.
InvestorPlace - Stock Market News, Stock Advice & Trading Tips
It needs a big push. Here’s why.
Electrification Appears to Be Taking a Breather
If I were picking a collection of stocks to represent the electrification of transportation, in much the same vein as FANG, I would go with: Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), NextEra Energy (NYSE:NEE), QuantumScape (NYSE:QS), General Motors (NYSE:GM) through BrightDrop, and ChargePoint.
That spells TNQGC. It doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue. Does it? Oh, well.
Here’s the performance of all five stocks so far in 2021.
Company YTD Performance Tesla -6.3% NextEra 4.9% QuantumScape -4.9% General Motors 48.3% ChargePoint -22.3% Average 3.9% S&P 500 10.7% Source: Google Finance, YTD through April 8
You can argue all you want about my choices. Still, it’s harder to argue with the fact that, except for GM (and its performance has a lot to do with its sales in China) these electric-related stocks have been anything but performing so far in 2021, with ChargePoint leading the parade lower by more than 22%.
Not only does ChargePoint need to provide investors with some catalysts in the coming weeks – our own Ian Cooper recently discussed three of them – it’s going to require investors to fully buy into the entire EV thesis.
Canoo (NYSE:GOEV) recently reported its Q4 2020 results. Executive Chairman Tony Aquila led the conference call with analysts. CEO and cofounder Ulrich Kranz was not on the call. Neither was CFO Paul Balciunas. He stepped down to take a job at another company. Executive Vice President Renato Giger is filling in as interim CFO. Giger was also on the call.
Not only did Balciunas step down, but the company’s head of corporate strategy also stepped down several days beforehand. Canoo’s leaking oil at the moment. The lawsuits are starting to fly.
This doesn’t instill confidence in Canoo, nor does it give investors a warm fuzzy feeling about EVs in general. The entire industry, and most especially Canoo – I do believe Aquila, who’s invested $35 million in the company, has the right idea focusing on selling its vehicles to commercial operators – has got to get their act together.
In the meantime, investors wanting to bet on EV stocks will continue to do it through GM, Volkswagen (OTCMKTS:VWAGY), or Tesla. Canoo won’t be on their possibilities list.