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Stock Analyst Note

On April 1, The Australian Financial Review reported that no-moat Neoen hired Bank of America to sell 30% of its Australian business with a price tag of $1.6 billion. This spurred an 8.5% rally in the shares between April 2 and April 5. The $1.6 billion that was reported implies a whopping valuation of EUR 2.4 million per megawatt of installed capacity versus EUR 1.1 million/MW implied in our fair value estimate. All in all, the reported price implies a gross valuation premium (before any taxes on capital gains) of EUR 2.8 per share or 9% of our fair value estimate. We confirm our fair value estimate of EUR 31.50 for Neoen. Due to its young asset base and suitability for a takeover, stemming from its shareholder structure, it's the least undervalued pure renewables developer we cover.
Company Report

Listed since 2018, Neoen is a French renewables developer. The historic shareholder is Impala S.A.S., which holds 42% of the capital. This is the holding of French businessperson Jacques Veyrat. As he might eventually sell the stake, Neoen is suitable for a takeover, which fuels a speculative premium.
Stock Analyst Note

European utilities have reversed their outperformance in the fourth quarter of 2023 because of a fall in wholesale power prices in the wake of gas prices after a very mild winter, and a pickup in interest rates due to inflation receding more slowly than expected. The former led to some of the companies, most exposed to power prices, cutting their guidance for 2024.
Stock Analyst Note

We confirm our EUR 26.50 fair value estimate after no-moat Neoen released its 2023 results and set 2024 EBITDA guidance, which is in line with company-compiled consensus and our expectations. Shares are undervalued, while only 20% of capacity is exposed to merchant power prices.
Stock Analyst Note

European utilities are up by 14% year to date, slightly underperforming the broader European markets. Since the end of September, the sector strongly outperformed thanks to the rally in government bonds and solid third-quarter results that drove multiple guidance upgrades although growth slowed down from the second quarter due to higher comps. All in all, companies that are the most exposed to commodity prices are set to exceed their 2022 record profits in 2023. Meanwhile, firms with big retail businesses that were hit by a margin squeeze because of the energy crisis in 2022 will post a significant rebound in earnings.

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