This Top High-Yield Dividend Stock Has a Brilliant Strategy to Capitalize on This Growing Value Disconnect

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Brookfield Renewable is always looking for opportunities to grow value for its shareholders.

  • It's seeing a widening disconnect between public and private market values for renewable energy assets.

  • Brookfield is capitalizing on this opportunity through its smart capital recycling strategy.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Brookfield Renewable ›

Brookfield Renewable (NYSE: BEPC)(NYSE: BEP) has a terrific track record of growing value for its shareholders. One evidence of this is its dividend. The global renewable energy producer has grown its payout at a 6% compound annual rate since 2001.

A big factor powering Brookfield's ability to grow its dividend is its brilliant capital recycling strategy. The renewable energy company routinely seeks to capitalize on the value disconnect between the assets it owns and higher-returning new investment opportunities. With that disconnect widening in recent months, the company has ramped up its activities. That puts Brookfield in an even stronger position to grow its more than 5%-yielding dividend in the future.

A person making financial calculations.
Image source: Getty Images.

The growing divergence between fundamentals and value

In his first-quarter letter to shareholders, CEO Connor Teskey wrote about a compelling investment opportunity Brookfield is seeing in the market today. He commented:

Public market valuations for renewable energy companies have trended significantly lower in recent months. At the same time, fundamentals for energy demand are strong and meeting this demand requires significant capital. This is driving incumbent utilities and traditional energy players to refocus on their core businesses or seek scale capital partnerships or solutions, creating significant opportunities for those with access to capital, carve out capabilities and development expertise to acquire renewable platforms and assets for value.

The company recently capitalized on one such opportunity. During Q1, it agreed to buy National Grid Renewables (NGR) from utility National Grid. NGR is a fully integrated U.S. onshore renewable power operator and developer. It has 3.9 gigawatts (GWs) of operating capacity and assets under construction, another 1 GW of construction-ready projects, and a 30 GW development pipeline (primarily utility-scale solar and battery storage systems).

Teskey commented:

Similar to the Deriva Energy (formerly Duke Energy Renewables) transaction we executed two years ago, NGR is a sizable acquisition that involves a corporate carve-out with a large, unregulated operating portfolio, significant near-term operational improvement opportunities, and an attractive growth pipeline of advanced onshore assets. We were able to acquire the platform for value given our access to scale capital, ability to execute a complex carve out, and our operating and development capabilities.