Some investors
might find Enel an unlikely customer for a renewable energy device like the PowerBuoy. Designed to convert the mechanical energy in
ocean waves to electrical energy, the PowerBuoy
has been years under development. Ocean
Power has long touted the potential in the device to generate energy free of
carbon emissions.
Yet the first
commercial customer, Enel, is using the PowerBuoy
power data gathering and communications for its offshore oil and gas
operations. Maintaining communications
with off-shore installations has often been frustrated by the expiration of
power sources, leaving remove installations dark and no longer functional. Extracting power from the ocean itself is a
major step forward in solving this problem for producers with off-shore oil and
gas assets. Yet, it can hardly be
considered a step toward a carbon free world if a renewable power source simply
facilitates fossil fuel extraction.
Disappointment
over the strategic direction of Ocean Power may have played a part in the
dramatic decline in the stock from a high of $7.76 in April 2019, to its
current level under a dollar. Of course,
the stock price today reflects the stress and uncertainly in our economy due to
work stoppages to combat the coronavirus health threat. It also reflects the company’s struggles to
keeps it bills paid until cash begins to flow from operations.
The company has
$9.9 million in cash on its balance sheet at the end of January 2020. That might seem like a tidy sum until
investors consider that management has been using on average $2.9 million in
cash each quarter to support operations.
For the most part, expenditures are for sales and marketing activity as
well as product development work.
The cash kitty
was built up by sales of stock through an equity line of credit and an
at-the-market stock sales agreement. The
company sold 2.3 million shares under these two arrangements in the first nine
months of fiscal year 2020. Shares
outstanding have mushroomed from 5.4 million in April 2019 to 8.7 million at
the end of January 2020. It is likely
the dilutive effect of the stock sales has also been dragging down the OPTT
stock price.
Ocean Power Technologies might be very much like the company's flagship PowerBuoy devices - there is alot more under the water than you might think. That said, worries for one
investor may be creating an opportunity for others. Those who expect Ocean Power to score
additional sales opportunities of the PowerBuoy might find the hand wringing
over dilution as overreaction. For those
with a tolerance for risk at the top-line, the current stock price may be a
compelling value.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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