The past few weeks have been rough for EVgo (NASDAQ: EVGO), and by extension, for its shareholders. The stock’s now down more than 60% from its late-October peak, and touched a multimonth low just a few days ago.
But the move isn’t exactly surprising. President Donald Trump is not as supportive of electric vehicles as many expected Kamala Harris to be. Just hours after his inauguration, Trump cancelled former President Joe Biden’s executive order that mandated that half of all new cars sold in the United States be zero-emission vehicles by 2030. This policy shift clearly works against EV companies, including EVgo, which owns and operates a charging network.
And yet, if Mack Hogan, deputy editor of industry news website Inside EV, is correct, the stock’s steep sell-off may ultimately prove to be a buying opportunity. As Hogan opined shortly after Trump was elected, “If there’s one thing you need to know about public policy, it’s that inertia is tough to overcome. EVs are 22% of the auto market in California, electrified vehicles are half the market in China and Europe is pushing ahead. There’s nothing the federal government can do to stop it.”
Here’s why you might want to take a stake in up-and-coming EVgo in the wake of its share price plunge.
With a market cap of only about $1 billion, EVgo is certainly no Tesla. It’s not even kind of like Tesla. Rather than making electric vehicles, EVgo manufactures and manages public EV charging solutions. As of the end of September, it was operating around 1,100 fast-charging stations across 40 U.S. states, serving over 1.2 million EV-owning account holders.
That’s still not a lot. As The Motley Fool’s research points out, as of January, the United States was home to 69,632 electric vehicle charging stations, collectively supporting over 195,000 charging ports. ChargePoint currently dominates this arena with nearly 38,000 stations and almost 68,000 chargers. Tesla has just under 7,000 stations, but its individual stations can serve far more vehicles simultaneously than ChargePoint’s can. No matter how you slice it, EVgo is a relatively small player in this business.
Don’t let that deter you, though. Despite Trump’s apparent disinterest in encouraging electric vehicle sales, there are a couple of related reasons this stock is a buy now.
First, electric vehicle purchases are still increasing, and are likely to keep doing so for the indefinite future.
You might have heard that EV sales are slowing down, but what’s been slowing is the growth rate, which fell from nearly 50% in 2023 and 66% in 2022 to only 7.3% last year, according to Cox Automotive’s Kelley Blue Book.