Enphase Sets Range for PV Microinverter IPO

Is it a sign that the economy is improving and the IPO markets are thawing?

Enphase, the Petaluma, Calif.-based microinverter startup, just set the range of its maiden stock offering at $10 to $12 per share according to an SEC filing. A date for the IPO has not been set.

This comes nine months after the IPO was registered with the SEC. The offer looks to raise approximately $72 million to $87 million in capital.

Timing an IPO is a delicate art, and the underwriters and VC investors behind the offering might have a sense that the market is ready for this event. That, or the company is in need of capital from public rather than private markets. VC investors in Enphase include Rockport Capital, Kleiner Perkins, Applied Ventures, Madrone Capital, and Third Point Management.

Enphase has been planning its IPO with an SEC registration on file since June of 2011. The firm must periodically update that document -- here are some of the new stats:

 

Late last year, Enphase announced that it was invading Europe via France, Belgium and the Netherlands, where its devices have passed Continental standards and are ready to be installed.

Inverters in Germany have their own set of rules and must come with several key grid-balancing capabilities built in. New rules require all inverters introduced to the market to come with power quality, reactive power control and power phase balancing capabilities (it’s all in the new VDE AR-N 4105 rules for generators connected to low-voltage grids, for those interested). The main point is to make sure lots of rooftop solar panels don’t cause imbalance on the grid, a problem that solar-rich German cities may be the first, but certainly won't be the last, to experience.

Other microinverter firms include Enecsys, a British startup with about one-hundredth the number of microinverters deployed as Enphase, Germany’s SMA and Power-One’s microinverter, as well as DC optimizers and other architectures from Direct Grid, SolarEdge, Tigo, eIQ, etc.

Microinverters, DC optimizers and other PV distributed optimization technologies still represented only about 2 percent of the solar inverter market in 2010, according to GTM Research. In other words, the microinverter battle is a small part of the war, and has yet to prove it has staying power.

M.J. Shiao, GTM Research inverter expert, had these observations:

 

The big challenges for Enphase are to keep this meteoric sales growth going amidst increasing competition, find a path to profitability in a still difficult market, and make it through the IPO window while the U.S. solar market grows and the EU market still exists.

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Jeff St. John contributed to this article.