Great stock and company. Pays monthly dividends. It’s only listed on TSX though, so can’t be added at the moment. I’ve been holding it on another platform.
Given the energy crisis, I’ve been looking to invest more into clean energy companies. Across the west, governments have finally woken up to the need for energy independence.
And yet I can’t invest in most of the companies I want to. FT has hardly any of the major wind turbine manufacturers listed. Not even the Wind ETFs like FAN.
I also want to invest into EV ETFs and there’s only a couple like CHRG. C’mon folks this is poor. This is the biggest growth industry of the next 20 years and we have limited choice.
If anyone has ideas or alternative ways to do this I’m all ears.
This one is a US only ETF as it isn’t compliant with disclosure rules.
The market for thematic ETF’s is much larger in the US and for a company to sponsor an EU/UK compliant one isn’t always worth their effort. It’ll have UTICS in the title if it is.
Wind is quite specific vs general clean energy, Greencoat is the only one that springs to mind. If you search for renewables there are wider options. You can also try and request a stock on the forum if you know which ETF you want.
Are there any interesting stocks available that are investing in: nuclear power station construction (as their primary business)? Or companies actively funding fusion research, hydrogen production (especially vis-a-vis electrolysis or a thermochemical reaction), HICEVs, and/or carbon sequestion?
I won’t turn this into a political debate, but imo these will come up trumps in the long-term - which is why I’m enquiring.
TRIG , on UK market. Has a young infrastructure all over UK & in Europe. Healthy company. Quarterly dividend payer. Think they are mostly wind and sea. Available on FT.
The revenue and profit margins that EV’s will generate, more broadly, look to be much lower than ICE cars. They require much less maintenance, fuel from an existing source & charging networks that will only ever be supplementary.
The better choice would be the infrastructure for HV forecourts. EVs will run their course but be seen with the same ‘error in judgement’ contempt as diesel in a few decades. That said, this is a convo on stocks, so those which pertain to EVs I should imagine will yield good short-term and medium-term gains. In which case, the sort of stocks I’d be looking for in that case would be those heavily involved in: mining lithium, developing better battery tech, EV battery replacement (they tend to last about 10 years and cost £10k to replace, currently), EV forecourt dev, and EV car manufacturers.