Market skeptic Jeremy Grantham just called this investment theme 'the most important' one of your life — here are 3 ways to mimic his surprisingly bullish bets

Market skeptic Jeremy Grantham just called this investment theme ‘the most important’ one of your life — here are 3 ways to mimic his surprisingly bullish bets

Legendary investor Jeremy Grantham is generally known for his pessimism about the stock market.

Grantham expects a correction to rock the market in the coming months, but one sector he remains bullish on is green investing.

The rush of capital to businesses searching for solutions to the planet’s environmental challenges creates “an unfair advantage for green investing,” Grantham recently told Bloomberg.

“This is going to be the most important investment theme for the rest of your life,” he said.

Grantham has invested most of his own fortune into the green economy, as well as a fair chunk of the $60 billion he manages for asset management firm Grantham, Mayo & Van Otterloo.

Let’s look at three green energy stocks in the GMO portfolio that might help you make some green of your own. You may even be able to get a piece of them — or stocks like them — with your spare pennies.

1. NextEra Energy (NEE)

A solar tree of solar panels installed by Florida Power & Light among the palm trees at a park

FPL solar tree at a Hollywood, Fla., park | Felix Mizioznikov / Shutterstock

You might expect to see Tesla in this spot, but Grantham believes the electric vehicle leader’s stock is in a bubble of its own. When the company starts facing stiffer competition, he could wind up being right.

Electrical services provider NextEra Energy could have more long-term upside. The energy provider is the world’s largest producer of power from wind and solar, and it plans to double in size by 2023.

As the company ramps up and spends more on critical new tech ventures like energy storage, it should be able to depend on the revenue generated by its portfolio of utilities, including one of the country’s largest, Florida Power & Light, to maintain its upward momentum. FPL alone contributed $836 million to net income in the third quarter of 2021.

NextEra’s stock has had a bumpy ride this year, but it’s up about 14% since the start of 2021.

2. Brookfield Renewable (BEP)

A solar panel field

Nikifor Todorov / Shutterstock

Brookfield Renewable owns and operates an expanding portfolio of solar, wind, hydropower and energy storage facilities across 34 states. The company says it already produces enough electricity to power about 3 million homes annually.

Brookfield has been in the power generating business for more than 120 years. As an experienced partner that can help other companies decarbonize their operations, Brookfield possesses a significant amount of growth potential for such an established entity. According to its Q3 earnings report, the company has more than $3 billion in liquidity to tap into to ensure that growth continues.

Q3 2021 also saw the company bring in $210 million from operations, a 32% increase over the same period last year.

Brookfield’s stock, down 20% this year, hasn’t exactly been killing it lately. But if you believe in the company’s combination of expertise and upside, it might be worth investigating to potentially buy on the dip.

3. Plug Power (PLUG)

A Plug Power hydrogen production facility

Hydrogen production facility | Plug Power

Plug Power is racing to the forefront of the hydrogen fuel cell industry.

Why does that matter for green investors? Hydrogen fuel cells, by powering cars, trucks, and even large facilities like data centers and hospitals, figure to be central in the planet’s pivot away from fossil fuels.

But Plug isn’t just in the fuel cell business. It also produces liquid hydrogen and has projected that it will be the top U.S. producer of sustainable liquid hydrogen by late 2023 or early 2024. As more businesses, homes and vehicles run on hydrogen, Plug could benefit.

Investing in emerging technologies is always a risky venture. Plug’s Q3 revenue was $37 million higher than a year before, but earnings still fell well short of expectations. The company’s stock has shed nearly 17% in the last month in an up-and-down year.

Green investing without the threat of a market correction

A red barn next to a corn field

Patricia Elaine Thomas / Shutterstock

Let’s not forget that Grantham recently said that inflation and overvalued stocks could trigger a correction that puts the crash of 1929 to shame.

If he’s right, you might want to protect your portfolio with an asset detached from the market altogether, one that provides multiple revenue streams and hedges against inflation: farmland.

Don’t worry. You don’t need millions of dollars or farming know-how to invest in America’s rapidly appreciating farmland. A popular app helps you purchase shares in U.S. farm operations.

Farmland investments have been much less volatile than the S&P 500 and demonstrated strong annual returns. And demand for food will only grow with the expanding global population.

This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.

Source: finance.yahoo.com