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Archive for November 1st, 2005

Railpower reports Q3 results: revenue rising along with losses

Tuesday, November 1st, 2005

Railpower Technologies, the hybrid locomotive company, reported a 50 per cent rise in revenues in its third quarter, compared to its second quarter, but higher than expected production and re-engineering costs saw losses jump as well. The company had $6.44 million in revenues and a loss of $7.24 million.

The good news is that the company is getting a strong pipeline of orders from high-profile railway operators. It has also begun to expand into other locomotive markets and strike partnerships in the marine and other markets.

“We are looking ahead to 2006 with confidence and excitement,” said CEO Jim Maier. “We are installing processes and manufacturing discipline that we believe will result in improved margins in future quarters.”

The future may look good, but I’m not sure analysts were so happy with these unanticipated cost overruns. This is a great story, but investors have never been ones to be patient.

(UPDATE: Railpower’s stock is also holding up, so investors remain patient for now. The company also announced Thursday a memorandum of understanding with Mitsui Bussan Transportation System Co. to explore market opportunities in Japan. Certainly can’t hurt.)

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Wallace stays as Xantrex CEO, plus Clipper order grows

Tuesday, November 1st, 2005

In late July you’ll recall that Xantrex Technology turfed its chief executive Ray Rosewell and appointed director John Wallace as interim CEO. Well, this evening the company announced that Wallace, formerly a Ford executive who oversaw the automaker’s hybrid/fuel cell/electric vehicle program, will stay on as permanent chief. “My most urgent priorities are profitable growth, controlling cost, improving customer service and product quality, and increasing efficiency, speed and nimbleness,” said Wallace in a statement.

It will be interesting to see how analysts react to this news. When Rosewell was squeezed out and Wallace stepped in, the response was generally favourable. But this was on the assumption that Wallace’s appointment was temporary. Is the company settling? Did it search long enough? Did it have problems attracting other candidates? Or is Wallace the right man?

Chairman Mossadiq Umedaly said in a statement announcing the company’s third-quarter earnings (released after the close of markets) that he is impressed with Wallace’s leadership so far. “Xantrex’s focus on operational imperatives has sharpened noticeably, and there is a tangible sense of momentum building throughout the enterprise.”

Momentum is one thing; profitability is another. The company reported yet another money-losing quarter. It lost $349,000 (U.S.) during the period, compared to a profit of $2.3 million a year earlier. Revenue was flat at $36.4 million.

That said, Umedaly’s comments were somewhat encouraging relative to past earnings reports. He said new solar markets in Europe and North America are now being tapped, led by the signing of a $10 million (U.S.) deal with Germany’s Solon AG, a leading solar PV module maker. The company is also seeing renewed traction in the wind market, announcing last night that a deal with Clipper Windpower Technology to supply $10 million worth of inverters over two years has been expanded to $12 million to be delivered in 2006.

Has Xantrex turned a corner? Given the stock plunged 14 per cent today (talk about blatant insider trading) it doesn’t appear investors think so. We’ll see what analysts say after the company holds a conference call tomorrow morning…

(UPDATE: Xantrex’s stock rebounded the following day by 11 per cent, so it seems there may have been an overreaction to the earnings and that there is sufficient confidence in Wallace as permanent CEO.)

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  • Tyler Hamilton

    tyler Tyler Hamilton is editor-in-chief of Corporate Knights magazine and a business columnist for the Toronto Star, Canada's largest daily newspaper. In addition to this Clean Break blog, Tyler writes a weekly column of the same name that discusses trends, happenings and innovators in the clean technology and green energy market. This blog is a personal project started in April 2005. It is not an official blog of the newspaper.


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