In depth: Yield Companies (#YieldCos) and the development of alternative energy sources

Excerpted from: “Solar company spinoffs lure investors with dividends”, by Reuters

Long shunned by cautious investors, solar companies have hit on a new way, [known as Yield Companies or Yield Cos], to deliver returns to shareholders. that could attract new money to an industry notorious for its stock price volatility.

Yield cos… own and operate solar assets under long-term power-purchase agreements with utilities – a guarantee of stable cash flow.

SunEdison Inc is the first of a wave of companies preparing to bundle up existing solar power plants and then spin them off into separate entities, known as “yield cos”, to raise money to build new plants.

The promise of regular dividend payouts, hitherto unknown in the solar industry, offers an entry point to the sector for retail investors and is expected to generate huge demand when these companies go public, analysts and investors said.

Most of this cash will be paid out as dividends, with the remainder re-invested in new plants, a valuable source of funding for parent companies that will retain a sizeable stake in the new entities.

The only U.S.-listed yield co that currently holds solar assets is power company NRG Energy Inc’s NRG Yield Inc , which made its stock market debut last July [2013].  

The stock for NRG increased from about $30 at its offering to over $50 on July 7, 2014.

Published by

Dwight Steward, Ph.D.

Dr. Steward regularly writes and speaks on topics involving business and individual economic damages, employment audits, and the analysis of payroll and time data in wage and hour investigations. Dr. Steward has also held teaching positions at The University of Texas-Austin in the Department of Economics and in the Red McCombs School of Business, The College of Business at Sam Houston State University, and at The University of Iowa. He has taught numerous courses in statistics, corporate finance, labor economics, business policies, managerial economics, and microeconomics.