Maybe 2005 - 2006, in retrospect, will have signaled the beginning of the solar boom and be remembered in the history books as the "Dawn of the Solar Age".
Booming Renewable Energy Stocks
J. Peter Lynch
Maybe 2005 - 2006, in retrospect, will have signaled the beginning of the solar boom and be remembered in the history books as the "Dawn of the Solar Age". |
by J. Peter Lynch |
For the most part 2005 and early 2006 have been a lackluster period for the majority of U.S. common stocks. The market mostly went sideways to nowhere and was generally an unusually boring period for investors.
But quietly in the background, 2005 may also have been the beginning of a trend of more and more solar related companies becoming public companies and as a result the solar industry gaining a much "brighter" profile with the American investing public. Below is a comparison of 2005 and year to date 2006 performance of 7 solar related public companies and one exchange-traded fund (ETF) that trade on major US markets verses a number of other indices that are commonly used in the financial press for comparisons. These companies and the ETF are listed in alphabetical order and followed by their stock market trading symbol: Distributed Energy Systems Corporation - DESC Commonly Followed Indexes vs Renewable Energy Stocks
As you can see from the table, there was nothing "lackluster" about solar related stocks in 2005 and early 2006. They clearly and substantially outperformed all the comparative indices. Admittedly there are only a small number of stocks and they are almost totally focused in the Photovoltaics sector of the industry, but it is certainly a beginning and a "stellar" beginning at that. Their growth has slowed in the first quarter of 2006 and at the present time most of the stocks in the solar sector are undergoing a price correction, after having advanced for so long, this is a normal corrective phase and should lead to better entry points in many stocks. Hopefully this superior stock performance will generate a greater awareness on the part of the American public of renewable technologies and thereafter more positive action and attention directed at the most critical topics of our lifetime:
Maybe 2005 - 2006, in retrospect, will have signaled the beginning of the solar boom and be remembered in the history books as the "Dawn of the Solar Age". I certainly hope so. J. Peter Lynch has worked, for 29 years as a Wall Street analyst, an independent equity analyst and private investor, and a merchant banker in small emerging technology companies. He has been actively involved in following developments in the renewable energy sector since 1977and is regarded as an expert in this area. He is currently a financial and technology consultant to a number of companies, among them, DaystarTechnologies, Inc. which is listed in the accompanying table. He can be reached via e-mail at Solarjpl@aol.com. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The content & opinions in this article are the author’s and do not necessarily represent the views of AltEnergyMag
Comments (0)
This post does not have any comments. Be the first to leave a comment below.