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RE sector prospects underpinned by steady project rollout

The Star·04/14/2025 04:59:00
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PETALING JAYA: The renewable energy (RE) sector’s long-term growth remains largely shielded from ongoing uncertainties, positioning it as a strong diversification play for investors.

The sector is set to benefit from the rollout of several large-scale utility solar (LSS) programmes, including LSS5 (2 gigawatt (GW), LSS5+ (2GW), and the highly anticipated LSS6 tender.

“LSS5 contract awards have commenced and are expected to gather momentum in the coming months, while the LSS5+ award is likely to take place by end-25,” Phillip Capital Research said.

lt estimated the remaining LSS5 allocations could see an additional RM4bil to RM5bil worth of  engineering, procurement, construction and commissioning (EPCC) opportunities, likely to be awarded this year.

The research house expected the steady rollout of government-backed green initiatives and the surge in RE demand is set to benefit companies including Solarvest Holdings Bhd, BM Greentech Bhd and Pekat Group Bhd.

“We reiterate our ‘overweight’ stance on the sector, backed by the ambitious national energy transition initiatives and a robust tender pipeline driving sector earnings growth of 22%-52% over 2025-26,” it said.

It added that the sector’s valuation is undemanding, currently trading at a forward 2026 price earnings (PE) multiple of 17 times, which is well below the 30-38 times price-earnings (PE)multiple observed during the previous LSS4 award cycle.

The research house added that Solarvest has emerged as the early beneficiary of the LSS5 programme, having been awarded RM504mil in contracts, bringing its total order book to RM1.4bil.

“This translates to a 3.1 times cover of its FY24 revenue, the highest among its peers, with Pekat at 2 times, Samaiden at 2.3 times, and Sunview at 0.9 times.

Phillip Capital pointed out that Solarvest has been awarded a combined 530 megawatt (MW) EPCC contracts and 60MW approved capacity under the asset ownership model via its 60%-owned subsidiary.

“Solarvest is the prime beneficiary of the continued rollout of utility-scale solar projects. Backed by a strong execution track record and holding the largest market share of 30% in LSS projects, we believe Solarvest will continue to secure more contracts under upcoming solar EPCC tenders,” the research house added.

Meanwhile, Samaiden has a tender book valued at RM1.8bil, of which 80% are solar EPCC projects, including multiple bids under LSS5, LSS5+ and the battery energy storage system  (BESS) programme.

Sunview’s tender book stood at RM1bil, including three projects for the Corporate Green Power Programme (CGPP) and 330MW of LSS5 projects.

Phillip Capital said among the RE companies, Solarvest, Pekat, and Samaiden stood out with the highest level of institutional shareholding at 49%, 30%, and 18%, respectively.

“This is partly due to their early market presence and proven track records. BM Green’s institutional shareholding stands at just 1%, based on the most recent data from June 2024.

Moving forward, the research house saw room for valuation to re-rate as key catalysts played out this year, including the continued rollout of LSS5 contracts, LSS5+ quota allocations, and the anticipated launch of LSS6 bidding.

In addition, it said rooftop solar adoption is expected to accelerate, supported by the regular release of quotas under the Net Energy Metering programme and the new Community Renewable Energy Aggregation Mechanism initiative, slated to open in June.