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Here's Why ChargePoint Stock Is a Buy Before the End of May

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ChargePoint (NYSE: CHPT), a leading builder of electric vehicle charging stations in North America and Europe, has disappointed a lot of investors. It went public by merging with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) just over four years ago, and it opened at $32.30 per share on its first day. Today, it trades at less than $0.60.

It's easy to see why the bears mauled ChargePoint's stock. Its top-line growth decelerated, it racked up steep losses, and it faced more competition from Tesla's (NASDAQ: TSLA) Superchargers and smaller competitors like EVgo (NASDAQ: EVGO). It's also increased its outstanding shares by 65% since its public debut to cover its stock-based compensation and secondary offerings, and it's still burning lots of cash. Its stock could even be delisted if its price stays below the $1 threshold.

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A driver charges an EV at a charging stall.
Image source: Getty Images.

But as Warren Buffett famously said, investors should be "greedy only when others are fearful" -- and there's plenty of fear baked into ChargePoint's stock price right now.

I'll take a look at the contrarian case for ChargePoint -- and why it might be worth buying before it posts its next earnings report in late May or early June.

Understanding ChargePoint's business model

ChargePoint builds EV charging stalls for residential and commercial customers. At the end of fiscal 2025 (which ended this January), it managed 342,000 charging ports. More than 33,000 of those ports were DC (Level 3) fast chargers, while the rest were slower Level 2 chargers. By comparison, Tesla operates more than 60,000 Level 3 Superchargers globally.

Tesla might seem like a major threat to ChargePoint, but the two companies have different business models. ChargePoint mainly sells connected charging stations to properties that want to host their own charging stations and set their own prices. It also provides those hosts with network access, billing, and customer support services. Tesla's Superchargers are stand-alone stalls that don't offer any of those connected services.

Therefore, ChargePoint's chargers and Tesla's Superchargers aren't really interchangeable. Instead, ChargePoint's main competitor is EVgo, which operates a similar business model across its smaller network of more than 4,000 chargers.

What happened to ChargePoint over the past three years?

ChargePoint grew like a weed in fiscal 2022 and fiscal 2023 as the EV market heated up after the pandemic. But in fiscal 2024, high interest rates chilled the EV market and curbed the market's appetite for new charging stations. As a result, its adjusted gross margins plunged, its operating and net losses widened on a generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) basis, and its adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) sank deeper into negative territory.