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Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
Peter, it's hard to argue with the logic that raw materials suppliers will prosper as the industry develops. I don't get into analysis of miners because it's an entirely different industry, but that's merely recognizing my own limitations.
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
The real challenge for me is keeping it light enough for the financially oriented and deep enough for the technically oriented.
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
I like to see A123 performing well because so far they seem to have done a pretty good job managing expectations. The market seems to understand that revenue growth over the next couple years will be limited by capacity on the manufacturing side and they're picking up a lot of sales in the grid markets. These are all good things.
One of the big problems in storage is that it's never been seen as a sector and there are no generally accepted valuation metrics. That's part of the reason why Exide trades at 0.2x sales and A123 trades over 20x sales. I don't ever see a cheap sustainable company like Exide trading at parity with its cooler cousins, but a spread that's two orders of magnitude wide seems excessive.
Don, there's a lot of merit to investing in raw materials producers rather than raw materials users, but I think that trying to comment on different but related sectors would be more than I could keep up with. The article you linked is intriguing but does highlight our need to broaden our thinking about what our needs are and how those needs can best be served. It's one thing to know for certain that major change is coming and another entirely to describe the future. The only thing I can say for sure today is that all classes of batteries will be critically important to that unknown future.
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2 [View article]
Fredrick88, thanks for the reference. I don't have a lot of Great Western but it's done well for me so far.
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
Saft is French and doesn't report to the SEC - but it's a great company.
JCI does report but is far from being a pure play.
BYD does not report and is far from being a pure play.
Polypore is materials not batteries.
Wilson Geatbatch is too diversified
Chloride Power is English and doesn't report to the SEC.
A wider net would include more worthy companies, but significantly complicate comparisons.
carey_jim, diversification is always a very good idea. Pick one and the odds are you'll pick wrong. Pick several and the odds are that at least a couple of them will work out, particularly if they have a billion dollar sales book to start with.
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
Tom, CSGH reports that it is a large producer of cobaltosic oxide and lithium cobalt oxide (anode materials for lithium ion batteries) and has the second largest cobalt series production capacity in the PRC. They also also provides substitute products including lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4). It has roughly 53.5 million share outstanding and made $0.16 in the year ended May 31. At yesterday's closing price, the P/E is about 12, the P/S is about 1.4 and the P/B is about 1.6. Those metrics are within the range for the other Chinese battery manufacturers I mentioned in Part 2. I don't talk about CSGH because they're more of a materials company than a battery company.
I'm sure you've seen the reports that early generations of lithium ion batteries had problems with explosions and fires while the newer chemistries were safer. The materials CSGH manufactures and sells are primarily used to make the explosion and fire prone classes of batteries.
I'm a bit of a skeptic when it comes to foreign companies that list their shares in the U.S. but have all of their operations elsewhere. It's done all the time but I've always found that my foreign clients have less respect for US law than my US clients. When I add in the fact that I don't truly understand the business culture in Asia, I tend to shy away from the Chinese companies that trade in the US. The combination leaves me very reluctant to say too much, either positive or negative, about the China class.
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 3 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2 [View article]