Stocks to Watch: A Look at the 3 Firms Fueling New York’s First All-Electric Skyscraper

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April was a big month to cover New York’s first all-electric skyscraper. It also was a month where some stocks to watch began to show their faces.

Alloy Development is a developer focused on the Brooklyn area of New York City. The developer is building 505 State Street as part of Alloy Block. This will be a five-building development with residential, educational, office, cultural and retail uses.

The structure at 505 State Street is the first tower in the development. Moreover, it is all-electric. More will follow.

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As Bloomberg points out, a water-source heat pump system will provide heating and cooling.

“That means there’s a loop of cold water and a loop of hot water that go to the units that are in the apartments, that then blow air over the loops, and heat and cool the spaces,” Bloomberg reported Alloy President AJ Pires’ comments in April.

If you’re an investor, there are businesses other than Alloy whose products could contribute to this and other innovative and precedent-setting developments in the future. Some are public, and others are private.

Here are three companies who have stocks to watch.

Stocks to Watch: Carrier (CARR)

Momentum stocks: Carrier Sign outside of Carrier Commercial Service office Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
Momentum stocks: Carrier Sign outside of Carrier Commercial Service office Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.

Source: JHVEPhoto / Shutterstock.com

Last May, Barron’s contributor Al Root recommended that investors buy Carrier (NYSE:CARR) stock because it doubled down on the HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air conditioning) industry.

It had just announced a $13.2 billion cash-and-stock acquisition of German heat pump manufacturer Viessmann Climate Solutions.

Root wrote in May 2023, “Carrier also plans to exit most of its refrigeration, fire, and security businesses, leaving it looking like a closer facsimile of Trane when all is said and done.”

In early March, the company announced the sale of its Industrial Fire Business for $1.43 billion. As I said in early April, it was part of the company’s focus on higher-margin growth in climate and energy solutions.

Over the past year, Carrier has underperformed Trane Technologies (NYSE:TT), its largest competitor in the HVAC industry. The same is true year-to-date in 2024.

Carrier reported Q1 2024 results on April 25. Its revenues were $6.18 billion, 17% higher than a year earlier, while its earnings per share were 62 cents, 24% higher than the Zacks Consensus Estimate and 19% higher year over year.

At 2.3 times sales and 21.9 times forward earnings, it is considerably cheaper than Trane’s stock, at 4.0 times sales and 31.0 times forward earnings.

Furthermore, I look for Carrier to sell more of its Aquazone high-capacity water-source heat pumps in the future.