CWEN
Clearway Energy Inc Class C
Mentions (24Hr)
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The market is still mislabeling this. These are infrastructure-style contracts.
Multi-day breakout meets real revenue. Rare combo in small caps.
The cold chain failure problem is way bigger than anyone thinks
Just want to see some opinions for my 401k. If there’s any improvements let me know!!
Discussion - How do you personally invest in clean energies?
Mentions
Years ago HASI and CWEN were low then high then low again. Buying them at each low spot paid off a few years later, but they are still reasonable ways to invest in renewable energy. There are a few others, but these 2 are the biggest and best that I am aware of now.
Not sure if you meant oil but i like CWEN own the largest renewable portfolio and yielding around 5% right now. Interest rates will hurt it so do your own dd but i like it. BEPC also been beaten down lately but cant raise prices easily because of long term power agreements.
Look into CWEN. Green energy stock that pays huge dividend.
Not who you asked, but I did the same thing and I went with SO, NEE, and CWEN. They all have purchasing power agreements signed already and are rolling out tons of new power supply over the next few years.
Not trying to block every new renewable project in blue states would be helpful. I bought some [SO](https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/southern-company-receives-historic-department-of-energy-26-5-billion-loan-guarantees-to-increase-grid-reliability-302697140.html), [NEE](https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/nextera-expects-add-up-30-gigawatts-power-data-centers-by-2035-2026-03-03/), and [CWEN](https://www.clearwayenergygroup.com/press-releases/clearway-signs-portfolio-of-power-purchase-agreements-with-google-totaling-nearly-1-2-gw-across-three-states/) recently though anyway as my energy play.
The #1 stock on my list as of today, is ATO. If it dips below $170 I am buying. Why? I am now getting an energy bill from them, I might as well get a kickback of $400 per 100 shares I buy. If it is AI, VGT, I already own that. If it is renewable, it is CWEN. Healthcare, I think I would buy them all, with a mutual fund, VHCIX.
If you want to help build solar, buy HASI, BEPC, CWEN.A, or ENPH, FSLR, or TSLA (if you can stomach the risks and Elon.) The first three finance and build solar farms, the last three make solar components. The first three are fairly safe investments with good dividend yields, the second group are quite speculative currently.
My son is vegan and has expressed a similar concern. While I haven't researched deeply, here is a list I have compiled for him to vet: HASI, ISRG, NEE, CWEN, PMTW, CAVA, CAJPY. You aren't going to find any perfect company in which to invest, but if you can seek the least harm, these might fit your agenda.
For some reason this pattern holds a lot of places- CWEN is worth more than CWEN.A, for example. The votes can't possibly be worth negative intrinsic value, right?
So...is CWEN ripe for picking or what?
CEG, Duke, AEP, BIPC, NEE and CWEN.A. I'm starting with these
Im a pretty new investor(20 years old been investing for 2 years). I have CWEN on my buylist. I like the growth it's having, the dividend, and the outlook of renewable energy. Any words of wisdom or caution with it before next weeks pay day?
I have been building a portfolio of high paying dividend companies (BMY, PFE, STWD, KMI, CWEN to name a few) and they have been doing just fine. Invest better.
ChatGPT deep research told me to bet on MGNI, WDAY, ADTN and CWEN this week. Wish me luck!
Both have equal economic rights in the event of a wind-up and both have equal dividend payments, but the Class A shares get 100 votes per share vs the regular 1 vote per share for CWEN (the class c version). Personally, I always choose CWEN over CWEN.A when trading it because it has more liquidity. Although, both have enough liquidity for my trade sizes, so I guess I'm just being overly cautious there. (744k avg volume vs 180k avg volume). For long term investors, the class a shares would be better, for the extra voting power and slightly higher dividend yield due to the slightly lower market price currently. My source for this info was a seekingalpha article you could easily google...
Yes! CVNA, IRM, CWEN & UNIT
Is anyone following CWEN( clear energy) stock? It’s been going up
O, STAG, and MAIN should be monthly. I believe STAG had the lowest yield, but it's the cheapest and in a pretty solid industry imo. T/CWEN are quarterly.
O, STAG, and MAIN are good monthly dividends stocks. Two REIT and then one financial. Pfizer is another good medical one and is pretty cheap right now. I personally like T and CWEN, although their not super popular or well run, they've been good to me.
💰 My 25 weeklies up 200% 😂 CWEN https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbetsOGs/comments/1cn1qwq/comment/l36e361/
The only stock you should by going into earnings $CWEN 20% move coming after hours
Meh. The dividend swings wildly with earnings and I do not see a great case for growth. What about something that pays less but pays more reliably and with stronger earnings? I like VZ, O and CWEN
So what's your point? That I have not given you 13 stocks to buy immediately? Have owned: AES for 5 years CWEN for 6 years and just bought more today UNIT for 4 years SACH for 4 years SPTN for 5 years and just bought more today POWWP for 3 years CC for 4 years The stocks were given as examples as to what I was talking about not a buy list. I listed them because I was familiar with them. I bought them because they were close to 52 week or longer lows and for their dividends. Growth is okay, decent dividends are better, much better. JMO. I notice you do not disparage HASI, BANCpF, KEYpK, ING, HTGC, or TRIN. To save you the trouble ING, HTGC, & TRIN are near all time highs.
AES → looks fairly priced CWEN → looks fairly priced UNIT → not sure whether their business is viable; they have hardly made any money over the last 10 years. SACH → above fair value SPTN → way above fair value POWWP → way above fair value ING → about fairly valued CC → \~15 % above fair value
For waste management really liked a company that not only picked up the trash, they incinerated it & made electricity from it. Loved them until they were sold. For me they ticked 2 boxes - waste management & electrical generation. For infrastructure like fiber. Once they lay a cable, they may have 10 - 20% of it leased. The balance is all gravy for them. Fiber for the internet will eventually become obselete but not for another 10 years probably. Also like buying REIT's that house data centers. No one is giving up their internet & no one is asking for less storage. The key question is when to invest. I prefer tragedy investing. Namely when there is some incident that causes the stock to tank. For instance bought CWEN when CA wildfires knocked out CWEN's largest customer. With ING bought into them when Russia invaded Ukraine & banks took a plunge. With HTGC bought lots more (already owned some) when their CEO got caught trying to buy his kids into name-brand colleges like many Hollywood celebrities did.
I really like investments that are fairly crucial to civilization such as: electrical utes, waste management, & computer infrastructure. Utes since everyone needs to plug in to run their house, soon their cars, etc. Waste management since everyone hates dealing with trash. Computer infrastructure - not software, not building computers, not semi's but the actual cell towers or fiber that carries the signal. Like buying stuff that is not on the bleeding edge but far enough back from the bleeding edge that it is hard to replace. Makes for boring companies for the bulk of the portfolio. Not dying industries, not unexciting companies, just companies that make money in a boring way - day after day, week after week. Companies would include: AES, CWEN, HASI, UNIT, SACH, SPTN, POWWP, BANCpF, KEYpK, ING, HTGC, TRIN, & CC.
Renewables are trading at a bargain. They may continue to face headwinds for a few quarters, but that will change. ENPH, ARRY, SHLS, FLNC, and utilities with renewable assets like NEE and CWEN. Some of these are going to end up being monsters, just a matter of picking wisely or going with an ETF.
Does anyone know why CWEN is suddenly up 10% on no news?
I lump sum bought CWEN.A at $27 a share because I wanted a renewable energy play 💀
Individual stock investing is definitely the way to go if you want long term success. My current top three picks are: OGN, CWEN & ET. Great upside and solid dividend/distribution yields.
Brookfield has been seen as the leader in this space for a long time, with the lowest cost of capital, highest-quality lenders and counterparties, and most operational experience. It is definitely true that the whole yieldco complex is selling off indiscriminately and that that could present opportunities, but personally, in such a challenging capital markets environment I would stick with the most experienced, biggest, highest credit rating company which is BEPC without question. AY has a LOT of foreign exchange risk, I think over half of their revenue is outside the US and much of it is from developing economies in Latin America which are subject to a lot of FX downside. Both AY and CWEN used to have larger sponsors for selling them projects that basically abandoned them in 2016 because the sponsors' interests weren't aligned with the yieldcos. For AY it was Abengoa, and for CWEN it was NRG. Without a big sponsor feeding you projects like that, they have a lot less leverage buying projects than say BEPC or even NEP although NEE has frankly proven they will abuse the ownership structure with NEP.
DNNGY has an interesting story, but for me at least, does not pay enough dividend. Also since it is a non-US stock will have to pay a 15% - 25% dividend with holding tax on dividends, as well as a $6.95 ADR fee to buy & a $6.95 ADR fee to buy it through Schwab from the custodial bank. Buying European stocks is not inherently bad just need to know the costs involved, and also the other financial considerations behind the stock in addition to their story. You might want to look closer to home with such stocks as AES, CWEN, or HASI.
No. The closest thing I have to it is a bunch dumped into CWEN.A Which is only barely in the green for net income. Like, only a couple tens of millions for the whole company
Not much small cap except GPP. Around 2 billion market cap AY and HASI. Larger CWEN and BEP.
I’m 15M trying to build a growth portfolio 20% RKLB (kinda confident in this stock) 20% ASML (thinking AMD will increase more due to lower market cap) 20% NET (was thinking about switching to Zscaler, but NET seems to be more beloved) 20% CWEN (think about not investing renewable considering slow growth, but saw the low market cap) 20% DE (established non-AI company dipping their ties into AI, huge upside potential) What do you think about my list and my mindset behind them? Would appreciate criticism or recommendations.
Look at my post on this sub from a few days ago. In it I’m asking for the better pick out of NEE and CWEN, there is a lot of useful i formation you can gather from that.
CWEN is pretty safe and I like the dividend
I really like CWEN. 5% dividend, utilities company
The purpose of this thread was to determine which of the two (CWEN or NEE) were better growth stocks for a growth portfolio. NEP falls under dividends.
The idea behind this post was to determine which stock (NEE or CWEN) was better for a growth portfolio. Are you suggesting that BEP, ORA, FLNC, ERII, or AY are better options, and if you are, then can you single out 1 company?
NEE is enormous and has a substantial amount of legacy fossil fuel holdings and transmission assets. The largest subsidiary is Florida Power & Light Company which seems like a long term liability considering the political climate and climate change risk in Florida. A more comparable company would be AGR with potentially better long term asset locations. CWEN is more focused on relatively new renewable energy assets in diverse locations. A more comparable company is AY with more diverse global assets. Some often overlooked renewable energy sources are under represented in the above companies. There are more specialized companies such as BEP for hydropower and ORA for geothermal that can give you some diversification away from just wind and solar. In terms of riskier renewable growth stocks there is FLNC for energy storage and niche water handling energy efficiency company ERII.
Maybe also look at the non financials a bit. What will you actually own and where are the risks with that. I think that CWEN had some serious problems few years ago due to the portfolio. Pacific Gas & Electric went bankrupt due to forest fires and took CWEN down a bit.
Oh no, I haven’t bought any of these stocks yet, I was actually planning to next week or so due to my father not being in the country rn. Just wanted to ensure I had a proper list of stocks. Hearing that, do you have any recommendations what I should replace CWEN with?
You already bought CWEN, so just think about what I said and research other stocks, then after a year of holding CWEN, based on earnings reports & your research, you can decide whether you should replace it or not. This is not set in stone. Also read the wiki.
What do you recommend that I replace CWEN with?
You're right to target the concept of growth potential, but you added a utility: I know CWEN is a renewable utility, but utilities are often value stocks with little to no growth & price can decay due to large dividend payments which CWEN suffers from. A growth utility would have 0 dividend, large Q/Q sales growth, high P/E.. PAM & FLNC are good examples, but entry might not be the right time to buy, I haven't done much research on these stocks, but I'm using them as examples, just something to keep in mind on growth stocks. You're doing a good job with stocks on US exchanges instead of local stocks like Canadian stocks, not that Canadian stocks are bad, but often they're penny stocks, so stay clear of those.
I am a 15M immigrant in Canada with $2000 from my dad. Next summer break, I will hopefully get my Canadian PR and will finally be able to find a job. My (estimated $4000) earnings from this job per summer break will be invested into stocks/etfs. Keeping all of that in mind, here is my list of stocks I plan to buy with just the $2000 my dad is investing on my behalf: 20% RKLB 20% AMD 20% ASML 20% Zscaler 20% CWEN The idea behind these picks is that they have great growth potential (as far as I know), though I do admit that RKLB’s risk is kind of concerning. Hearing all this, do any of you have any suggestions, corrections, constructive criticisms, or important questions for this plan/portfolio?
I am a 15M immigrant in Canada with $2000 from my dad. Next summer break, I will hopefully get my Canadian PR and will finally be able to find a job. All earnings from this job will be invested into stocks/etfs. Keeping all of that in mind, here is my list of stocks I plan to buy: 20% RKLB 20% AMD 20% ASML 20% Zscaler 20% CWEN The idea behind these picks is that they have great growth potential (as far as I know), though I do admit that RKLB’s risk is concerning. Back when I first started this list I included stable companies like MS and CNQ with moderately high dividends, but I’ve recently come to the realization that dividends for a $2000 investment will be too minuscule to matter that much, so I’ve kind of changed to growth stocks. Hearing all this, do any of you have any suggestions, corrections, constructive criticisms, or important questions for this plan/portfolio?
20% in Rocket Lab (RKLB) 20% in ASML Holdings (ASML) 20% in Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) 20% in Zscaler (ZS) 20% Clearway Energy (CWEN) I am 15 1/2 years old with $2000. My goal is to grow my portfolio with this $2000, and get a job next summer to either add to these stocks or contribute to other Stocks/ETFs. Would appreciate any guidance.
If shit settles down with china then DQ. Massively undervalued and pick and shovel play for solar. I believe solar will have a bigger footprint, especially since it is easily applicable for residential. However, modules have a 20 year design life so you would expect it to slow down eventually hnless there are a lot of repowers. So throw in CWEN for the dividend. Theyre a pure renewables play unlike some of the others.
I think AAPL will still be very strong in 5 years and those who purchase at today's prices ($135/share), will probably see (conservatively) a 30% gain by this time next year. COST is priced to perfection now, but they too have a great long-term strategy and model that's superior to Walmart, Target, and others. The limited, medium to high-end product line and $5 roast chickens is going to survive any Recession. entails. s about as quality of a company as one can own these days. And they're continuing to expand into invaluable services, financial forays, and have a mountain of cash to buffer the down days. I think TSM is going to look really great too and my money is on China keeping their hands off Taiwan. COST is priced to perfection now, but they too have a great long-term strategy and model that's superior to Walmart, Target and others. The limited, medium to high-end product line and $5 roast chickens is going to survive any Recession. CWEN-A (Clearway Energy Group) is a lesser-known favorite of mine that I expect to do well and even if I'm wrong, I feel I have to invest in renewable energy. BEPC is another I'm rooting for. COST is priced to perfection now, but they too have a great long-term strategy and model that's superior to Walmart, Target, and others. The limited, medium to high-end product lines and $5 roast chickens are going to survive any Recession. entails.
Top Energy/Wind companies: Nextera ($NEE) Brookfield ( $BEPC) Clearway ($CWEN) First Solar ( $FSLR) Saloredge ($SEDG) All have an average Market cap of 9 Billion
Renewable energy stocks like FSLR and CWEN/A for me have gonna ape shit with gains honestly Oil sucks
CWEN/A and FSLR are gonna take either a good beating or a Shot up
Investor: TTWO, GOOG, NFLX, META, AEP, MO, F Trader: SNAP, TQQQ, NIO, CWEN, LIT
I’m a dividend investor and own NEP, CWEN, AY and EVA.
I'm a fan of CWEN. Fairly large footprint, reasonable development plan, nice mix of wind and solar, and high dividend. They seem like a solid company with consistent cash flows of a utility company with a nice potential upside in their development pipeline.
I'm into CWEN, advent technologies inc., Sundial Growers Inc. and a few others. CWEN or Clearway Energy Inc. just announced a purchase to expand out of California into Texas, Nebraska and Wyoming as a clean energy company.
I like where GOEV is going, and I've had nothing but good results with CWEN
CWEN. mixed energy between solar and wind. Solid dividend yield with cashflow from ops and debt fueled growth development projects for capital gains.
Looks like 90% of the comments missed the small and mid cap requirement. I have a few that I like; CROX, ABST, OPRA, AI, ABR and CWEN. My criteria typically is low debt, a good price to sales ratio, and I like to see a decent return on equity/investment and solid margins. Some of these companies don't fit within all of those constraints, in fact from my own examples ABST looks like crap on the financials side, but I listen to their earnings calls and I feel solid about the company and its future.
Divs are long term holds. Abbv, apam, ENB, CWEN, epr, gsk, JXN, pru, o, saft, TD, UL, vici, wba.
What green energy stocks have you invested in that are own 90%? I assume they are speculative growth stocks that are basically doing just research and development or possibly are doing things like manufacturing solar panels which is a historically difficult business. There are plenty of less speculative options out there for renewable energy. You might want to look at YieldCos, which are often used to hold long term utility operations that have consistent and predictable cash flow. I own shares in CWEN, which has done decently over the years. These will not make you rich, but they are reasonable and generally safe investments that you can expect to continue to pay out reasonably consistent dividends for years to come. I will also say this is not without risk. I held CWEN through the PGE wildfire issues in California, and due to PGE being one of the largest customers of CWEN they were forced to cut their dividend when PGE declared bankruptcy. But they have since restored it and the stock price has increased significantly.
Did this with $CWEN. They are an electric utility. Bought in when the California wildfires ravaged PGE the electric utility and the ute was being sued. $CWEN is a wholesale ute and sold power to PGE. $CWEN's price dropped and dividend was cut. Bought lots more. Since then the divie is restored & the stock price is way above what I initially bought at (100% more). So this technique can work but in select circumstances. Ergo, patience & lots of DD is required to find the right set-up.
CHPT is my biggest play in this area along with STEM. I might get into CWEN too
MVST, FCEL, CWEN, and anything uranium could pop off
Tech, copper, EVs and solar, especially ones with high dividend yields like SCCO, BEP/BEPC, NEE, CWEN.
Old portfolio is CWEN with 6%, followed closely by SEA. New portfolio will start with 20 stocks 5% each and drip all, gotta wait before I can name a new biggest position.
I mean if you want to mix it up a bit you could throw 15k in to TQQQ (this is a 3x leveraged Nasdaq100 etf) but only do that if you fully understand what can happen in leveraged holdings. If you're going for a bit more fun than sanity, some of my picks are AI, S, RKLB, FSLY, ABST, FLNC and CWEN. A few of these actually have solid revenue already, some.. don't.
Harvested some losses, trimmed back my biggest winner. Sitting on almost 50% cash now. Aside from my big winner for the year (LIACF), modest positions in AMRC, LTHM, CWEN, CHPT and some RIVN puts are all I've got left outside the megacaps/indexes.
CWEN won’t stop.. nothing like selling a 10+ bagger for 100% a couple weeks ago 😂
I didn't do too bad. I would have done better had I not sold a bunch of stocks earlier in the year to be able to afford a down payment on a house. So, I have about 14 stocks at the moment. My big clean energy ones are BLNK, CWEN, ENPH, PLUG, SIEGY, and SPWR.
I’ve been looking to add some renewable energy to my portfolio, and I’ve narrowed it down to NEE or CWEN but I wanted to get a second opinion. It seems like NEE is more stable, but CWEN has a lot of room for growth. What do you guys think?
Just above nothing 😆 And I hit a little play on CWEN .. went into Dec 35’s when it got killed like a week ago and options got decimated, sold today at like +115%
Nice to see PLUG and CWEN rise again. Not sure whether to sell or hold them overnight
Decided to take a loss on CWEN and reinvest when it's fallen some more
Bought CWEN and its only decreased, time to cash out?
My current holdings atm Percent of equity: MSFT @ 36.70% NVDA @25.98% AMD @13.71% CWEN @8.48% F @7.78% KO @6.73% All stocks are making me money apart from small recent losses on F and CWEN, but they have good EOY projections so I'm hopefully they'll increase.
My Microsoft share and Nvidia share is doing great for me. Not sure whether to keep Ford and CWEN, but I think if I hold them it could benefit.
My only negative stocks rn are Ford and CWEN, decent day in the end
It's a great company. I have no idea why AY or CWEN were pumped to the moon in renewables/small cap palooza season. AQN is best value of them all and well off its highs right now. It's the only utilities stock I own. I think there's good upside in the share price, too, in addition to significant dividends
SOFI LCID NOK F ELY CWEN Those have a bright future and way undervalued.
Because the clean energy bubble popped, and only the ones that generate profit (incl AMRC, CWEN) regained their value. Speculation hit a fever pitch, retail investors were getting high on market anomalies like that one brick and mortar gaming retailer that had just gone nuts. Framing your question in relation to the change in administration is bullcrap. Whoever told you there are no stupid questions lied to you. This is a stupid question. Ask better questions.
ENZ, ICGN and CWEN. 
AMRC and CWEN for individual plays. TPIC for a higher risk, but still sane option. PBW for the speculative play ETF, ICLN for international exposure that actually owns revenue-generating companies.
Add more dividend stocks. CWEN , TGT , KO 💰💰💰
I’ve been searching for some solid dividend companies the past couple weeks as well. I picked up some shares of CWEN, a clean energy company with a 4.98% yield. I also got some BXMT shares, a mortgage trust with a 7.87% yield. I got my eye on NGG and ITW as well.
Buy a ton of Palantir!! Buy some Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia and/or Tesla Buy some gold and/or silver (get physical coins, don’t get shares of the ETFs) Renewable energy is a great long term play. Some of my favorite companies in this sector are AY, BEP, CWEN, FSLR, NEE and NEP If you don’t have any moral issues with investing in defense companies, LMT, BA, NOC and RTX are all great long term plays ***Don’t get any ETFs or other types of funds. They charge you a fee and those fees really add up, if you’re holding as a long term investment. If you’re interested in a particular ETF, go on their website and look at their holdings. Find the specific companies you like in their portfolio and buy stocks of those companies. For example, I’m a big fan of Cathie Wood and I love what she’s doing with her ARK ETFs but I just look through her holdings and specifically buy the companies I like
I'm diversified across a few industries/sectors, including banks. The bank pullback hasn't fazed me at all, but literally five seconds before finding your post, I was eyeballing my positions in JPM and BAC, and deciding that now is a decent time to increase my share count by 5 or 10 percent. Also on my to-do list tonight is to refresh my DD on CWEN, a profitable clean energy-utility hybrid that has been beaten down this year, and I am likely to add to that as well. So tl;dr, you're on the right track imo. Don't fear ATHs, but always look for opportunities, and I think banks and energy have a little bit to offer at the moment.
Could check out yieldcos such as CWEN.
What are thoughts about CWEN.A with a 5.5% div ?
Taxable Brokerage Account 12,997.40 INTC 24.06 % HD 24.05 % VZ 11.83% DFS 9.05% CWEN 8.58 % MSFT 7.19 % NEE 5.67 % I have a margin account so I have been selling puts to generate income 2 JBLU May 21st 19 dollar puts 1 CRSR June 18 30 dollar put ​ Roth IRA 962.18 SCHG 100%