If You Like Fuel Cell Energy, Bloom Energy Might Be The Safer Bet

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[[Correction: This article was updated on Feb. 14. 2020, to correct details about FuelCell.]]

FuelCell Energy (NASDAQ:FCEL) reported fourth-quarter results on Jan. 22. They were disappointing, sending FCEL stock below $1.60. Thankfully, for anyone betting on the maker of hydrogen fuel cells (HFC), its share price has recovered some of those losses.

Even After a Dismal 2019, FCEL Stock Is Still Overvalued
Even After a Dismal 2019, FCEL Stock Is Still Overvalued

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In January, I called both FuelCell Energy and Plug Power (NASDAQ:PLUG) speculative buys but only for those who could afford to lose their entire investment. Clearly, FuelCell’s stock has been extremely volatile over the past three weeks. Heck, at a market cap of less than $500 million, it’s been this way for more than a year now.

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While I like the market in which FuelCell plays, losing $31.4 million in adjusted EBITDA in fiscal 2019 on $60.8 million in sales doesn’t provide most investors with a warm, fuzzy feeling. By comparison, Bloom Energy (NYSE:BE) through the first nine months of 2019 had positive adjusted EBITDA of $64.8 million from $668 million in revenue.

For speculative investors, I’m not suggesting you abandon your bet on FuelCell’s future. However, for those with an aversion to risk who want to bet on clean energy, Bloom’s energy server platform helps businesses work 24/7 while also keeping their energy requirements affordable.

It’s a win/win energy solution.

What to Expect in the Future

In the markets where Bloom has installations, the company estimates that its serviceable addressable market is $175 billion, up from $21 billion in 2009. On an annualized basis based on Q3 2019, the company’s revenues represent just 0.5% of this market. Assuming it gets to 5% of the market, we’re talking about $8.75 billion,

How fast could it get to that figure?

In Q3 2019, Bloom had 302 acceptances, which represents 30.2 megawatts of power from eight different end customers. That was up from 271 acceptances in the second quarter and 206 a year earlier. For those not wanting to do the math, that’s a 46.6% year over year increase.

What’s attractive about Bloom’s business model is that it has four revenue streams: Product, Installation, Service, and Electricity. So, for each acceptance, it generates approximately 83% of its revenue upfront, with the remaining 17% on an ongoing basis.

Now, I should note that this ongoing revenue currently is at breakeven or even a slight gross-profit loss. However, if it were to get to $8 billion in revenue, the economies of scale generated by that amount of sales would likely deliver gross profits, not losses.