Enphase IPO Today: A Newly Public Microinverter Company on the Nasdaq

An inflection point in the greentech and solar IPO status quo?

Photo Credit: Photo courtesy Christine Bennett

After a long drought, a solar company has made it through the IPO window.

Enphase, after lowering its IPO price to $6.00 per share (down from the $10.00 to $12.00 per share range set earlier this month), has crossed over from private to public company. The Petaluma, Calif.-based microinverter startup will trade on the Nasdaq with stock symbol ENPH. The microinverter startup raised $54 million in its initial public offering and has a market cap of approximately $275 million. We'll check in over the course of the day with updates on the price of the stock.  

The IPO is cause for at least a bit of optimism in the solar and cleantech industries. Investors, entrepreneurs and competitors will be watching closely.

The maiden offering comes nine months after the IPO was registered with the SEC. Here's a link to the prospectus.

VC investors in Enphase include Third Point Ventures (with a 19.1 percent pre-IPO stake), Rockport Capital Partners (18.1 percent), Madrone Partners (14.8 percent), Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (7.7 percent), Applied Ventures (6.3 percent) and Bay Partners (5.5 percent). Morgan Stanley, BoA Merrill Lynch, and Deutsche Bank were the underwriters.

Here are some of the new stats from Enphase's recently updated S-1 document:

 

Other microinverter firms include Power-One and SMA and 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.

GTM Research inverter expert MJ Shiao also had these observations:

 

The big challenges for Enphase are to keep this meteoric sales growth going amidst increasing competition and to find a path to profitability in a still difficult market.