Fluence Energy (FLNC) has been one of the more eye-catching names in energy storage lately. The stock opened at $22.91 on Friday, sitting on a 69% gain over the past 30 days and a 385.4% return over the past year.
Fluence Energy, Inc., FLNC
That kind of run tends to attract attention — and questions about whether it can last.
The consensus from Wall Street is cautious. Out of 21 analyst firms covering the stock, 12 have a hold rating, five say buy, and four say sell. The average 12-month price target sits at $19.47 — below where the stock is currently trading.
Not everyone is bearish on the target though. Susquehanna raised its price objective to $25 in early May, maintaining a “positive” rating. Citigroup followed with an upgrade to $26, though it kept a “neutral” label. Royal Bank of Canada moved its target up to $16, rating the stock “sector perform.”
On the other side, Barclays cut its target from $20 to $16 in April, keeping an “equal weight” view. Needham started coverage in March with a plain “hold.”
Fluence Energy reported its latest quarterly results on May 6. The company posted a loss of $0.16 per share, beating analyst estimates of -$0.18. Revenue came in at $464.89 million — up 7.7% year over year, but well short of the $614.93 million consensus estimate.
The revenue miss is hard to ignore. That’s roughly a $150 million gap between what analysts expected and what Fluence delivered.
Net margin remains negative at -1.62%, and return on equity is -8.29%. Analysts currently expect the company to post -$0.22 earnings per share for the full fiscal year.
Qatar Investment Authority sold 2.87 million shares on May 15 at an average price of $21.00, bringing in approximately $60.2 million. That reduced their stake by 19.55%, though they still hold around 11.8 million shares.
Director Heynitz Harald Von also sold 10,000 shares in March at $16.50, trimming his holding by 13.6%.
Insider selling doesn’t always signal trouble, but the timing — right into a sharp price rally — is worth noting.
On the institutional side, several funds added to their positions in Q1. Bank of America raised its holding by 24.4%. Edgestream Partners jumped its stake by over 1,000%. Overall, institutional investors own 53.16% of the stock.
A DCF model from Simply Wall St estimates intrinsic value at around $22.69 per share — nearly in line with the current price. That analysis suggests the stock is fairly valued at current levels.
The price-to-sales ratio tells a different story. FLNC trades at 1.18x sales, below the electrical industry average of 2.41x and below a modelled “fair ratio” of 3.86x — pointing to potential undervaluation on that metric.
The 52-week range runs from a low of $4.64 to a high of $33.51, which gives some context to just how much ground this stock has covered — in both directions.
The stock’s 50-day moving average stands at $17.24 and the 200-day at $19.25, both now below the current price.
The post Is Fluence Energy (FLNC) Stock Still Worth Buying After a 385% Year? appeared first on CoinCentral.


