Why Bloom Energy Stock Boomed Nearly 13% Today

Rich Smith, The Motley Fool - finance.yahoo.com Posted 5 years ago
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What happened

Shares of fuel-cell company Bloom Energy (NYSE: BE) popped nearly 13% in early trading Wednesday, and remained up a healthy 10.3% as of 12:05 p.m. EST today. You can thank the friendly analysts at Raymond James for that.

This morning, Raymond James -- one of the investment bankers that originally brought Bloom Energy public at an IPO price of $15 a share last year -- announced it is upgrading the stock to outperform. Raymond James also assigned the shares a target price of (wait for it) $13 -- $2 below what the analyst figured it was worth at a minimum just seven months ago.

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Bloom Energy is still losing money, but one analyst is supporting its stock price today. Image source: Getty Images.

So what

Raymond James cited  Bloom's plummeting stock price as a key reason for its recommendation. The stock is down 36% since its July IPO, the analysts noted, and down 24% since mid-January -- a fact Raymond James attributed largely to insiders selling the stock after their lockup periods expired.

Despite all the selling, the analysts argue that little has changed for the worse about Bloom's business over the last seven months, so the stock has been punished unfairly, and should be bought.

Now what

In support of this position, Raymond James made the curious claim  that Bloom reported its "first year of positive cash flow in 2018" -- a statement contradicted by Bloom's own earnings report, which showed net cash used in operating activities in 2018 was $58.4 million.

Raymond James went on to predict that Bloom will achieve "breakeven EPS and a 6% FCF yield in 2019," (i.e., free cash flow equal to 6% of the company's market capitalization, or about $70 million at Bloom's current valuation), "followed by sustained profitability and a 12% FCF yield" (i.e., $140 million in FCF) in 2020.

These are bold claims, given that most analysts  who follow Bloom Energy currently forecast negative cash from operations for Bloom this year (much less free cash flow), less than $40 million in FCF in 2020 -- and no GAAP earnings whatsoever before 2022 at the earliest. Nevertheless, investors appeared to be taking Raymond James' recommendation to heart today, and are bidding Bloom Energy shares higher.

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Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.