Fountainheadinvesting

Fountainhead Investing

  • Objective Analysis: Research On High Quality Companies With Sustainable Moats
  • Tech Focused: 60% Allocated To AI, Semiconductors, Technology

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AI Alternative Energy Cloud Service Providers Industry Power and Utilities Stocks

NextEra: The Green Energy Leader Can Benefit From Data Center

NextEra Energy (NEE) $84 has a huge scale of operations. It is the largest green energy producer in the world and the largest player in the U.S. market with more than 20% market share. Long-term revenue of at least 10% a year and dividend growth seem assured, but I would wait for a better entry price.

The U.S. is forecast to experience a significant growth in electricity demand in the coming years, fuelled by the growth in data centers and AI, the proliferation of electric vehicles, the increased use of energy in the home, and the increasing number of extreme weather events, especially prolonged heat spells.

Estimates vary, but NEE is expecting a 38% growth in power demand over the next 20 years (Statistica says 27%); that growth is 4 times higher than the growth seen in the previous 20 years. Clearly, data center demand will outstrip decades of growth, given the hyper scaler Capex.

NEE has a solid balance sheet with an A- credit rating and its unprecedented scale allows it to access huge amounts of capital. Its operating margins are more than 30% – This is a huge competitive advantage especially if data center power generation pans out. The long-term nature of their business and proven ability to generate cash over a long period de-risks the high level of debt.

The stock is up 55% in the past year but is definitely interesting to buy on a pullback.

Categories
AI Alternative Energy Cloud Service Providers Power and Utilities Stocks

Constellation Energy Could Be Interesting To Buy On A Dip

Constellation Energy (CEG) has surged over 130% in the past year to $280 – I would wait for a pullback. 

Constellation Energy (CEG) and NextEra Energy (EEE) are the largest carbon-free / nuclear energy companies in the US today. It’s important to note here that a nuclear power generator can operate cheaper than other energy sources but only if it’s already in commission.

New nuclear plants will take a huge amount of government help, subsidies, permissions, and cost overruns. Future profitability and cash generation will take a long time, so existing players like Constellation and Next Era who have a large nuclear/carbon-free energy share of total power generation have definite competitive advantages.

Microsoft’s deal with Constellation should be accretive to earnings from 2028. (Assuming that the govt okays the deal and it gets on track).

However, analyst haven’t added this to their forecasts, so there is a great deal of skepticism there. Constellation, by itself, is not a very efficient company, with operating margins at 8-12%, much lower than Next Era’s. 

AI needs power: With the renewed focus on nuclear energy power generation, investors likely expect the AI-driven surge to carry on as AI infrastructure investments enter the next scaling stage. OpenAI’s ability to raise more funds at a much higher valuation than the previous year has strengthened the AI growth thesis. Nvidia’s (NVDA) commentary suggests its new Blackwell chips are already sold out over the next twelve months has renewed the market’s interest in the AI theme, potentially benefiting nuclear power generators like CEG.

Money talks: Huge data center operators and hyperscalers have demonstrated their willingness to pay a substantial premium to secure their power requirements. Unless the AI monetization opportunities fail to pan out convincingly over the next few years, it seems reasonable to expect CEG’s much more robust profitability outlook to play out in the medium term.

Regulations remain tight: Possible market structure changes and regulatory hurdles could affect a more robust outlook moving ahead. Despite that, the government seems keen to restart nuclear plants, corroborating the fervor in CEG and its leading nuclear peers.

In addition, Constellation’s ability to obtain a federal loan guarantee (cleared initial review stage) to help finance the restart of the Three Mile Island nuclear plant is expected to provide more confidence to investors. However, investors could consider buying CEG at a dip, and not chase the stock, with so many uncertainties.

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AI Alternative Energy Cloud Service Providers Stocks Utilities

The Nuclear Comeback Needs Careful Consideration

10/16/2024

Small Modular Reactors, (SMR) companies are going to be high-risk / high-reward stocks with such large jumps (40% in a day); and on Cloud Service Providers’ involvement, the risks got even higher. Besides Oklo and NuScale, I’ve included a couple of other much larger nuclear power and clean energy companies that could ride the boom if it materializes.

Oklo Inc (OKLO) $16.55  is up 42% today on the Amazon announcement!! 

It’s a Sam Altman (OpenAI) back SPAC, a nuclear power company or, more precisely, a fast-fission clean power technology and nuclear fuel recycling company. MIT graduates Jacob DeWitte and Caroline Cochran co-founded Oklo in 2013.

The growing demand for electricity globally and renewable energy policies will favor Oklo, but it would be prudent to see more progress before making an investment, these are really early stage companies in highly regulated environments.

The Nuclear Comeback:

Nuclear power provides ~9% of total and ~25% of low-carbon electricity globally, making it a major and clean energy source. 22 countries (including the US, the UK, France, Japan, and other influential countries) agreed and declared they would work towards tripling nuclear energy capacity by 2050 during the last COP28 meeting on December 2023, recognizing the key role of nuclear power in the green transition and the global net-zero emissions goal. Hence, we could experience a nuclear power boom, after decades of stalling. The ADVANCE Act also points in that direction regarding the US. Nuclear power rejuvenation could be unfolded from existing and new players in the coming years. Nuclear fission advanced technologies and small modular reactors will play an important role in achieving this goal. Commercialization of nuclear fusion is also expected to debut by the end of the decade.

For the coming quarters/years, the company is expected to burn cash ($40M-$50M 2024 expected operating loss) while revenue should start flowing in 2027 and profits even later. 

Key Risks

  • Regulatory, environmental, political, and application-related issues will cause delays.
  • Additional funding will be needed along the way, and Oklo will dilute shareholders or issue debt.
  • Oklo is an emerging growth, pre-production, unprofitable company; this could result in stock price volatility.

If you have some funds set aside for speculative/high-risk investment, you could allocate a small amount towards it, though  I would wait for a pullback.

NuScale Power Corporation (SMR)

  • NuScale – at $19, just like competitor OKLO is up 40% in a week and 220% in the past year!
  • A baby – it is a pre-commercialisation technology company designing a Small Modular Nuclear reactor, which could become very succesful.
  • It has US government support, and strategic partnerships, but faces intense competition from larger, more established players like Vistra, and better-funded startups with next-generation nuclear technology, like OKLO.
  • A very risky play at this stage

Positives: 

Samsung’s subsidiary, Korea’s No.1 private utility company, will lead the construction and engineering of the new plant.

Negatives: 

Competition is intense; they are up against established large-scale companies like Westinghouse Electric, which built a nuclear reactor over 60 years ago, TerraPower formed by Bill Gates, and BWX Technologies (BWXT) is another major competitor in the US, a second company with more than 100 years of operation and established nuclear divisions.

The Short Seller Report

NuScale was hit by a short seller report update from Iceberg Research last month, claiming that it has no serious customers. Given the charges, it would make sense for the dust to settle, before investing.

Besides the valuation is extremely high. This needs further analysis and investigation.

Categories
Cloud Service Providers Stocks

 A Cloud Storage Titan Struggling to Stay Relevant

Dropbox (DBX) $21.25 – I’m Neutral On This Company

Dropbox has been quite the underperformer, in the last 5 years the stock has lost 7%, and 8% in the past year.

Sales growth has really slowed down from 8-10% to only 3-4% expected for the next 3 years and that’s why there’s no appreciation for the stock. Its a fairly profitable company 15-16% operating margins and cash flow of 30+% because of the high stock-based compensation. Earnings growth is also tepid with just 6-8% expected for the next three years. These are two big reasons why there isn’t much scope for Dropbox to grow.

Dropbox is proving to be less sticky than originally thought. As churn rates have increased over the past year, many investors are re-evaluating the stickiness and value of Dropbox’s subscription revenue base.

Deep competition- Dropbox has always been in an eternal tug-of-war with competitors Google Drive (which has an advantage in pricing and integration with consumer email accounts) and Box, Inc. (BOX), which is better known for its enterprise-grade features and security.

Confidence in Dropbox faltered even more after the company reported rather dismal Q1 results – Analysts have an average hold rating.

Box (BOX), which is about 40% the size of Dropbox, not surprisingly, has a better growth profile with 6-7% revenue growth and 11-12% earnings growth expected in the next 3-4 years. It has a similar valuation multiple, so it’s not like that the markets have given it too much of a premium. 

The main thing is that growth will likely be in the low to mid-single digits in this industry, so can’t expect too much in terms of return from either. 

The one thing Dropbox/Box could do is to put their cash to better use (both generate in excess of 30% cash margins) and buyback shares, the valuations are low enough, which would help them and also help investors. For now, its neutral – don’t see much scope for expansion.

Categories
Cloud Service Providers

Amazon Q1 Earnings: Solid Revenue and AWS Growth, But Lower Guidance for Q2

Source:Seeking Alpha

  • Amazon press release (NASDAQ: AMZN): Q1 EPS of $0.98 may not be comparable to consensus of $0.83.
  • Revenue of $143.3B (+12.5% Y/Y) beats by $750M – Positive.
  • AWS segment sales increased 17% year-over-year to $25.0 billion – That’s a good sized growth compared to Google Cloud and Azure since it’s so much bigger.
  • Second Quarter 2024 Guidance
  • Lower guidance – Net sales are expected to be between $144.0 billion and $149.0 billion vs. $150.09B consensus, or to grow between 7% and 11% compared with the second quarter of 2023. This guidance anticipates an unfavorable impact of approximately 60 basis points from foreign exchange rates. In the first quarter of 2024, the impact from Leap Year added approximately 120 basis points to the year-over-year net sales growth rate.
  • Operating income is expected to be between $10.0 billion and $14.0 billion, compared with $7.7 billion in the second quarter of 2023.

The stock is up about 3% to $180, but that’s not even recovered the 4% that it lost in the day.

Categories
Cloud Service Providers

Microsoft Q3 Earnings: Strong Revenue Growth Across Key Segments, Stock Rises 5%

  • Microsoft press release (NASDAQ: MSFT): Q3 GAAP EPS of $2.94 beats by $0.11.
  • Revenue of $61.9B (+17.1% Y/Y) beats by $1.01B.
  • Shares +5%.
  • Revenue in Productivity and Business Processes was $19.6 billion and increased 12% (up 11% in constant currency)
  • Revenue in Intelligent Cloud was $26.7 billion and increased 21%
  • Revenue in More Personal Computing was $15.6 billion and increased 17%
  • Microsoft will provide forward-looking guidance in connection with this quarterly earnings announcement on its earnings conference call and webcast.
Categories
Cloud Service Providers

Alphabet Surges 12% on Strong Q1 Earnings: YouTube, Cloud, and Search Drive Growth

Alphabet stock surged by double digits — (NASDAQ: GOOG) +12%, — after its first-quarter earnings easily cleared analyst expectations as revenues jumped 15% with strong performance, particularly at YouTube.

Revenues rose to $80.54B, easily topping consensus for $78.7B. Advertising revenue rose 13% to $61.7B.

Meanwhile, YouTube ads revenue — previously an area of concern — rose a full 21% to $8.09B. Subscriptions, platforms, and devices revenue jumped 18%.

And the momentum in Cloud continued, with 28% revenue growth and operating income that more than quadrupled year-over-year.

Operating income jumped 46% year-over-year, to $25.47B. Earnings per share landed at $1.89 vs. $1.50 expected by Wall Street.

The operating margin also expanded, to 32% from a year-ago 25%.

“Our results in the first quarter reflect strong performance from Search, YouTube, and Cloud,” said CEO Sundar Pichai. “We are well underway with our Gemini era and there’s great momentum across the company.”

Revenues by segment: Google search and other, $46.16B (up 14.4%); YouTube ads, $8.09B (up 20.9%); Google Network, $7.41B (down 1.1%); Google subscriptions, platforms and devices, $8.74B (up 17.9%); Google Cloud, $9.57B (up 28.4%); Other Bets, $495M (up 71.9%).

Operating income by segment: Google Services, $27.9B (up 28.3%); Google Cloud, $900M (up 371%); Other Bets, -$1.02B (vs. year-ago -$1.23B); Alphabet-level activities, -$2.3B (vs. year-ago -$3.3B).

The company also authorized the buyback of up to an additional $70B worth of shares and declared a cash dividend of $0.20 per share.

Categories
Cloud Service Providers

Microsoft (NASDAQ) Q2 Earnings Preview: AI Growth and Cloud Performance in Focus

Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) is scheduled to report its second-quarter results on Tuesday, January 30th, after market close, kicking off tech earnings.
Analysts expect a year-over-year increase in both the top and bottom lines, with earnings per share of $2.77 on revenues of $61.13 billion.

The Redmond, Washington-based company recently became the second tech giant, after Apple (AAPL), to cross the $3 trillion mark, buoyed by its artificial intelligence products. Its shares have surged nearly 63% in the last 12-months.

Microsoft (MSFT) has poured billions of dollars into OpenAI, making it the startup’s largest investor. This has let it get ahead of rivals Alphabet (GOOG)(GOOGL), Amazon.com (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META) in the AI race.

The technology underlying OpenAI’s ChatGPT has become entwined in Microsoft (MSFT) products.

The Windows maker recently expanded access to its generative AI offering Copilot. The subscription plan is now offered to individuals and small businesses.

Copilot, which Microsoft (MSFT) dubs as an “everyday AI companion,” is intended to assist writers, programmers, creators, and designers.

According to investment firm Citi, a 5% adoption rate by its 77M customers using Microsoft 365 could add $925 million in revenue by fiscal year 2025. An adoption rate of 15% could add $2.7 billion in sales.

Analysts at Wedbush believe Microsoft (MSFT) will be the most important earnings report and conference call in all of earnings season.

The company is expected to handily beat expectations for the December quarter. Investors will be focusing on the Azure growth metric and the performance of its cloud business.

While AI be a dominant theme in 2024, analysts are of the opinion that 2025 will be the true inflection year.

Last week, Microsoft (MSFT) announced it was laying off 1,900 employees at its gaming division, primarily impacting employees at Activision Blizzard and Xbox.

Over the last three months, the company’s estimates have seen substantial upgrades. Its earnings per share estimates have been revised upwards seven times vs. one downward move, while revenue estimates have seen seven upward moves, compared to two downward revisions.

Seeking Alpha analysts at large consider MSFT a Buy. This compares with average Wall Street rating of Strong Buy and SA Quant rating of Hold.

Categories
Cloud Service Providers

Microsoft (MSFT) Hold at $407 – Impressive Earnings, Awaiting Guidance

Microsoft (MSFT) Hold $407

Earnings: $2.93 per share, vs. $2.78 per share expected, 33% Higher YoY

Revenue: $62.02 billion, vs. $61.12 billion expected, 18% Higher YoY.

CLOUD DOES WELL – Intelligent Cloud revenue $25.88Bn V 25.29Bn expected, 20% Higher YoY contains Azure cloud infrastructure, SQL Server, Windows Server, Nuance, GitHub and enterprise services. Within that segment, revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew 30%. Analysts polled by CNBC had expected 27.7% growth, and the StreetAccount consensus was 27.5%. The metric for the previous quarter was 29%.

This is impressive growth – but most of it is already in the current price.

I own Microsoft but haven’t had a chance to add Microsoft during this rally, and it’s already up 9% this year.

The guidance will be out during the earnings call starting at 5:30 and will update after the call.