Energy Education Series

How to Clean Up With Clean Energy

Stock quotes in this article: FCEL , FSLR , ORA , SI , GLW , TAN , PBW  

Even within attractive sectors, investors must be very careful to choose attractive companies that will survive and prosper over the long-haul. In that regard, investors should focus on the larger clean energy players that have the best technology and R&D and will therefore be best-positioned to roll out mass production and drive prices lower in coming years. These are the companies that will be best-positioned to capture the massive demand for clean energy solutions that is likely to emerge over the next several decades. For example, in the solar energy market, Norway-based Renewable Energy Corp. (Oslo Stock Exchange ticker: REC) is building new polysilicon plants, using its proprietary "fluidized bed reactor" technology, which will allow REC to produce polysilicon at a cost of 30% less than the industry-standard Siemens technology. This will allow REC to undercut competitors on price, maintain strong profit margins and build its market share.

Lots of Choices in Clean Energy ETFs and Mutual Funds

In order to participate in the sector, investors can buy stocks of companies that focus on clean energy. However, a safer strategy is to diversify risk by buying a green exchange-traded fund (ETF) or mutual fund. The clean energy ETF with the largest amount of assets is currently the PowerShares WilderHill Clean Energy Portfolio (PBW Quote) with about $1.3 billion in assets. This ETF's current top stock holdings include FuelCell Energy (FCEL Quote), First Solar (FSLR Quote) and Ormat Technologies (ORA Quote).

As an investor, you should consider green ETFs and mutual funds that are global in nature since many of the world's clean energy companies are outside the U.S. This gives you exposure to the sizeable clean energy companies that are based in Europe and Asia. The PowerShares Cleantech Portfolio (PZD Quote) , for example, just went global and added a large number of global stocks. This ETF's current largest stock holdings include First Solar, Siemens (SI Quote) and Corning (GLW Quote)..

There are now six mutual funds and six ETFs covering the clean energy space. In addition, there are also two ETFs that specialize in solar energy and two ETFs that are currently in registration that specialize in wind power. There is a complete list of these mutual funds and ETFs on the book's companion Website at http://www.ProfitingFromCleanEnergy.com/ETFs.

In the solar energy space, for example, the Claymore/MAC Global Solar Energy ETF (TAN Quote) tracks the global solar energy industry. In just the past two years, the solar industry has grown large enough to be an investment sector in its own right. The Claymore/MAC Solar ETF has 25 of the world's largest "pure-play" solar companies that are listed in the U.S. and Europe. This ETF was just launched in April and already has over $150 million in assets, making it one of the fastest growing ETFs launched in 2008 so far, according to Claymore.

ETF Stock Market Performance

Clean energy ETF prices have fallen this year, mainly because of the broad market correction. However, the clean energy ETFs have far outperformed the S&P 500 and Russell 2000 over the past several years as clean energy investing has proven its mettle as an attractive investment sector.

The volatility in clean energy stocks makes it a sector where it is important for most investors to stick to a longer-term investment strategy. With a longer-term investment horizon, an investor can weather the inevitable short-term ups and downs and ride the larger trend of the double-digit revenue growth that the industry is likely to produce in coming decades.

More Online

My book's companion Web site, ProfitingFromCleanEnergy.com, has more information on regulation, conferences, resources, green jobs and links to clean energy videos. The site has the latest news headlines on the clean energy industry, as well as profiles of the main U.S.-listed publicly-traded companies that focus on clean energy.

  • Loading Comments...
  •  
1 2
Next >

SHARE:

  • email
  • print
  • comment
  • digg
  • delicious
  • linkedin
TheStreet.com has a revenue-sharing relationship with Amazon.com under which it receives a portion of the revenue from Amazon.com book purchases by customers directed there from TheStreet.com.

Richard Asplund is the author of the book entitled, Profiting from Clean Energy: A Complete Guide to Trading Green in the Solar, Wind, Ethanol, Fuel Cell, Carbon Credit Industries, and More. The companion Website for the book is www.ProfitingFromCleanEnergy.com. Richard is a professional investment analyst and advisor with twenty-five years of experience. He received an MBA cum laude from the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business, a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a Bachelor of Science degree cum laude in Industrial Engineering from the University of Minnesota. Richard founded his own investment research firm in 1983 and is currently a professional equity analyst and advisor specializing in Clean Energy stocks. Richard has been interviewed on CNBC, Fox, Bloomberg TV, Japanese NHK TV and National Public Radio, and has been quoted in print publications such as Dow Jones, Reuters, USA Today and Newsweek. Richard was instrumental in building the MAC Global Solar Energy Index, which is licensed to Claymore Securities as the tracking index for the Claymore/MAC Global Solar Energy Index (NYSE: TAN).





Connect with TheStreet

Dow Jones S&P 500 NASDAQ 10-Year Note
10,270.47 1,093.48 2,167.88 34.29
Oil *
75.55
UP
73.00
UP
6.24
UP
18.86
DOWN
0.17
10 Yr
3.43%
SPDR Gold
109.74
+0.72%
+0.57%
+0.88%
-0.49%
Data delayed 20 minutes

Brokerage Partners

TheStreet Premium Services

All Services