Investing in Alternative Energy Stocks
Alternative energy stock portfolios are a great part of a
modern investor's financial plan, due to the fac that there is
so much upward potential. These make excellent long term growth
investment vehicles, and the money put into them by you, the
investor, serves to further the cause of implementing the
alternative energy power sources that we need as we sail into
the 21st century and beyond.
Analysts predict that by 2013, the alternative energy
industry will be a $13 billion dollar industry in today's
dollars. This figure bespeaks an enormous return on investment.
Indeed, if you were to invest in a start-up alternative energy
company, you might find yourself having invested in the next
Microsoft in terms of return on investment. People are fed up
with the rising costs of gasoline—while this alone is not
sufficient understanding of the need for developing alternative
energy sources, it is a factor which can act as a market
maker—meaning for you that investments in alternative energy
companies makes a lot of financial sense.
However, this does not mean that you don't first want to do
some careful research into alternative energy stocks, perhaps
with the help of a financial planner. “A few alternative-energy
companies are going after the right markets but that doesn't
mean you should go buy every name in the sector. Investors need
to be cautious about chasing the stocks,” says Sanjay Shrestha,
who is an analyst at First Albany Capital. And if you are an
investor, then you know that the problem in this sector is that
nearly every single one of the major players in the alternative
energy for profit game are start-ups or in the very early
stages of growth. This means for you that they have relatively
minuscule (even if rapidly growing) sales, and no expected
profitability in the near term or history of earnings for you
to be able to research. This can lead to some bubbling, as with
what happened to the dot-com industry at the turn of the 21st
century. Bubbling in the stock market is not a good thing for
investors.
Ananlysts and financial planners can play a crucial role in
helping you get it right with alternative energy investing. “We
don't play around in the tiny cap stocks that have technology
and not much revenue—the 'hope' stocks. We invest in companies
with clear cash-generation plans in place,” are the words of
Ben walker, who is a senior portfolio manager at the Gartmore
Global Utilities fund out of London.
Still, the outlook is very positive overall—and healthy. “It
is good to see that the number of renewable energy funds and
the amount of money flowing into these funds is increasing,”
according to chief executive of UK alternative elecricity
supplier Good Energy Juliet Davenport. “The renewable
generation market is at an important stage in its development;
it needs the continued support of the consumer, investor and
government to ensure that it reaches its potential and really
starts to make a difference to climate change.”
|