Where will the plug power stock be in 1 year?

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Plug in the power (NASDAQ: PLUG )When it was unveiled in 1999, a hydrogen-powered residential system seemed like a promising green energy play for developers. But the energy plan faltered because producing hydrogen was more expensive than producing oil or natural gas, making it cheaper to expand existing electricity. Instead of building a new hydrogen infrastructure, the grid.

In the two decades since the dot-com bust, Plug Power eventually pivoted to selling hydrogen fuel cells and forklift services in warehouses and fulfillment centers. That new business grew as it landed some big customers, but some major accounting errors — which forced it to revise all of its financial statements from 2018 to 2020 — drove away many of its investors.

The rise in interest rates crushed the speculation and cast a sharp light on the long-term losses.

Image source: Getty Images

Today, Plug’s stock trades 99% below its IPO price. It’s also down about 10 percent over the past 12 months as investors flee the market’s speculative stocks. Let’s see if it can go up or down next year.

They are Plug Power’s two biggest customers. Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ) And Walmart (NYSE: WMT ). It’s closed in on those two retailers, subsidizing fuel cell sales. Stock securities — Options to purchase additional shares at a discount.

That unusual arrangement turned Amazon and Walmart into Plug’s biggest investors, but the company didn’t say exactly how those incentives trumped other customer payments. That’s why Plug had to pay back all of its financing from 2018 to 2020. After restatements, earnings actually turned negative in 2020.

Plug revenue turned positive again in 2021 and grew over the next two years, but much of the growth was driven by two acquisitions that expanded its smaller cryogenic equipment unit rather than its core hydrogen fuel cell and charging systems business – still as of 2018. Macro headwinds have limited the market’s appetite for expensive new hydrogen projects. That slowdown, along with the high cost of integrating new acquisitions, caused net losses to widen at an alarming rate.

Measure

2021

2022

2023

9M 2024

Revenue (in millions)

502 dollars

701 dollars

891 dollars

437 dollars

Working margin

(87%)

(97%)

(151%)

(165%)

Net Income/Loss (in millions)

($460)

($724)

($1,370)

($769)

Data source: Plug Power

That pressure has intensified in the first nine months of 2024. For the full year, analysts expect Plug revenue to decline 20% to $714 million. However, it expects to narrow its net loss to $953 million by cutting staff, cutting costs and selling some of its equipment (on lease) to stabilize cash flow.