Plug Power rocked by accounting errors after 1,400% surge

Plug Power Inc.’s accounting errors sent shares of the fuel-cell maker plunging on Wednesday, dragging down its peers.

The Latham, New York-based company, which soared more than 1,400 percent in the past year through Tuesday, tumbled 14 percent. Its industry counterparts Ballard Power Systems Inc. and FuelCell Energy Inc. also slipped, with the latter posting a first-quarter revenue miss this week.

Plug Power said it found accounting errors in results for 2018, 2019 and the first three quarters of 2020. The disclosure is a setback for the company, which has struck a series of partnerships with companies including Renault SA and South Korea’s SK Group. It also came at a time when growth stocks have been hit by the climb in bond yields. The WilderHill Clean Energy Index is down 1.6 percent this year, following a surge of more than 200 percent in 2020.

A man attaches a charging plug to a GM Chevrolet 2017 Volt hybrid electric vehicle at a charging station.

“Anytime a company needs to restate results, investors shoot first and ask questions later,” said Jeffrey Osborne, a New York-based analyst at Cowen, who maintained a buy-equivalent rating, with a price target of $75 for the shares.

B. Riley’s Christopher Souther also sees a buying opportunity for Plug Power, while Truist Securities downgraded Plug to a hold recommendation.

“Following these disclosures, we expect limited opportunity for outperformance in the near-term,” Truist Securities’ analysts said in a note to clients. “While the company reiterated long-term targets and the accounting issues appear transitory in nature, we see limited upside until resolution.”

It isn’t the first time a major fuel-cell stock has been rocked by accounting errors. Last March, Bloom Energy Corp. tumbled to $3 per share from more than $14 earlier in the year after restating its revenue downward for 2018 and 2019. The stock quickly recovered and soared to $42.65 last month before pulling back.

Investors piled into alternative energy stocks leading into President Joe Biden’s victory, and are now facing concern over high-flying valuations. Hydrogen, which can be generated and used without producing greenhouse gases, has been touted as an alternative form of energy, while some participants remain unconvinced. Carlyle International Energy Partners recently called hydrogen power a “bubble.”

— With assistance from David R. Baker

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