Motley Fool Money - Underappreciated Rule-Breaking Small Caps
Episode Date: September 23, 2025On today’s episode of Motley Fool Money, analysts Emily Flippen, Jason Hall, and Toby Bordelon spotlight three off-the-radar small caps with very different stories. The team dives into: - Why th...e renewable energy industry deserves a second look, even with policy headwinds - If Phinia offers a pragmatic hedge against a slower-than-expected EV transition - A rapidly expanding premium Chinese tea-house that has changing unit economics Companies discussed: ENPH, FLNC, PHIN, TSLA, CHA, LKNCY Host: Emily Flippen, Jason Hall, Toby Bordelon Producer: Anand Chokkavelu Engineer: Bart Shannon, Dan Boyd Disclosure: Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. We’re committed to transparency: All personal opinions in advertisements from Fools are their own. The product advertised in this episode was loaned to TMF and was returned after a test period or the product advertised in this episode was purchased by TMF. Advertiser has paid for the sponsorship of this episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today on Motley Full Money, we're diving into three small cats that are off the most
investors' radars, but not ours. I'm Emily Flippid, and today I'm joined by analyst Jason Hall
and Toby Bordelon to discuss each of our picks for rule-breaking small cats that we expect our
listeners may have never heard of before. We have a rapidly expanding tea house with unit
economics that will make your mouth water, a niece industrial player that I expect Toby thinks is
undervalued. But to start, let's talk about a couple of small caps in an industry that may have been
written off entirely. And Jason, I actually think saying that this sector, which is the energy sector,
saying that it's been ridden off is actually really probably an understatement. It's been one of the
worst performing sectors this year, with green energy in particular, losing a lot of policy
tailwinds as initiatives have been increasingly rolled back. And yet your small cap pick really flies
in the face of that narrative. So why is this sector in renewable energy in general? And
general, we're at a second look right now. Well, I think it's so compelling and in the rule
breakers mindset, I'm going to immediately break the rules and talk about two stocks that I think
are compelling that are part of two different parts of this story here. Renewable energy stocks,
like you said, they've really, it's not just been this year. They've really struggled.
Since interest rates started to be ratcheted higher back in 2022, we saw central banks around the
world take aggressive steps to fight out of control inflation. The reality, and if we look at solar,
Really, there's two different segments.
There's residential, which is call it a third of the market, and then the other two thirds
is utility scale solar.
It's expensive, and the realities that it's almost always funded with debt.
So, interest rates going up, that really hit residential solar extremely hard.
And of the two stocks that I'm going to talk about, in phase, which I'm sure a lot of people
that listen to this show are familiar with, it makes the electronic components of the solar
system, it sent their microinverter unit sales down 70% from the peak to the bottom.
And just when we saw what looked like a bottom, that was last fall, unit sales rebounded
over the summer from those lows. We saw the U.S. federal incentives for renewables get gutted
as part of the big, beautiful bill, right? Now, that's clattered up. What had been a clearing sky,
we look on the utility scale, we can look at Fluence Energy. That's the large scale battery making
Love Child of Siemens and AES, which are two companies that are very much involved in the
energy industry. Its business and stock price has really been whipsawed more over the past year
on a combination of the growth story unraveling while competitors like Tesla saw its battery
business kind of hold up pretty well. And for investors who unfamiliar, N-FASIS's tickers,
ENPH, Influence Energy's tickers, FLNC. It's absolutely crazy that we're sitting here talking about
both of these businesses as small caps. I mean, Toby, you work with me on the Stock Advisor team.
And we have N-Phase Energy, actually, as a recommendation on the rule breaker side of the
Stock Advisor scorecard. When we recommended it, it was very far from being considered a small
cap. And now it's sitting at around a $5 billion market capitalization. When you think about
Jason's pick here, what questions come to mind? Yeah, well, it's really not a surprise. I think,
as Jason noted, as Lexington has been hit, and investors have come skeptical.
on the industry, right? And they're moving on to other place with investment dollars. Not at all
a surprise, given what we've seen in headwinds facing this company right now. Yeah, I think for public
investors, yeah, that are looking at the stocks, that's the case. Because especially if you're not
intimately familiar with these industries, understanding the difference between the cycles,
and we're a brutally down part of the cycle right now versus the secular tailwinds, it does certainly
feel like it's been left for dead right now. But when you start kind of pulling apart the cyclical
manufacturer part of the business and looking at the secular tailwinds, there's a little bit more
to like right now than I think you might think. And for a company like Infase, there's a few things
that I think are really appealing. I think the economics might be better than people realize.
Now, as a starting point, In phase has actually continued to take market share during the
downturn. It and Solar Edge essentially have a duopoly in the U.S. They have about 90% of
of the residential share and pretty large share in Europe and other parts of EMEA. And they both also
have really good margin in cash profiles. InFace has also done a really smart thing leveraging
contract manufacturing. As a result, it's actually remained cash flow positive every quarter
through this down cycle of the business. We can bring fluence into the conversation here,
really had a brutal first half of the year. After a great 2024, it seems like management just
really missed the mark on understanding what the business flow is going to look like. But here,
as we've gotten into the second half of the year, business is stabilized and management has
kind of reiterated that outlook. Now, its catalysts include continued focus on deploying
utility scale wind and solar and also grid resilience. You think about those are things when we
come to energy storage. And after showing that it had the business model before the first half of this
year, it looks like it's set up to really start generating positive cash flows as we move forward.
Now, that being said, part of me just wonders, like, does it even really matter if there's
no federal incentives or what happens to that cash flow? And Toby, I know the stock pick you have
coming up for us here in just a couple of minutes is kind of the antithesis of this sort of pick.
So when you think about playing devil's advocate to Jason's idea here, what stands out to you
as key risk? Because for me, obviously, federal incentives are the obvious.
play. Yeah, I think that is the obvious one. You can't ignore their political risk with this company.
This administration is simply not as excited about renewables as past administrations have been.
That's a problem, at least over the short term for the company. Now, look, you might say,
who cares? For instance, AI is going to boost our need for energy. So there won't only be a choice
here. We've got to have energy from wherever we can get it. I'm not convinced that's really the case.
though I am worried that we may be in a bit of an AI bubble, and if that collapses, demand overall could go down.
I think on both of those things, you're right to some degree, Toby. There's absolutely no doubt the loss of those tax incentives is going to have an impact. For the rest of 2025, it's actually a catalyst. Homeowners are moving really quickly to get that residential system installed before the credits expire. On the utility side, there's a little bit of a bigger time window for utilities to act. But,
Beyond that, I think we're ignoring a really important thing on the math here.
Utility costs are up more than 40% since 2019 in most U.S. markets.
Now, that's far more than solar system costs have gone up.
So between higher utility costs, helping offset the need of those tax credits,
and then interest rates now starting to creep down.
That was the news cycle last week, right?
It was all about what was the Fed going to do.
I think residential solar, in particular, in phase, is probably in better long-term shape because
of the secular trends than we think. And we haven't even talked about the international opportunity,
which I don't really want to get into very much. Yeah, all that's true. I just wonder,
you know, speaking about the large scale, the industrial side of this, you know, the utility side
of this, a lot of demand right now is coming from AI. If that bubble does burst,
does that mean we're in an energy slump? What if we find ourselves of a bunch of half-built
suddenly unneeded infrastructure here, Jason, because the demand just craters, right?
What does that do to affluence a stock price? I don't think it sends it up, does it?
No, definitely not a go-to-the-moon scenario if that happens. But I think if we look at the
long-tail opportunity, yeah, AI is certainly a part of the thesis. It has to be because that's the
biggest catalyst driving total energy consumption in the U.S. by far. But large-scale energy storage
is about more than just AI. This is about grid resilience. Think about how much we've talked about
You live in the West, Toby.
Grid resilience is a significant issue.
Think about what Texas dealt with with winter storms a few years ago.
We're going to continue to see a transition away from things like coal as a baseload.
That means utilities will need more storage to offset wind and solar intermittency.
So I think meeting the energy demands of the world is going to remain in all of the above or most of the above in terms of the energy sources.
And storage is going to be a really important part of that formula.
Well, I love the debate between you two. And I go back to Dave Meyer, actually, who brought
Fluence Energy to me a number of, I want to say a couple of years ago to the Blastoff team.
And before AI was really a big part of the thesis and said this was just an obvious opportunity.
And while the thesis, I think, has very much changed over the course of the past couple of years,
there is part of me that thinks, while there's so much volatility in the space,
and clearly I think investors who are interested in getting into renewable energy in this entire sector,
Fluence, energy, N-phase, whatever it may be, they need to have a stomach to stand the volatility
that comes with a lot of the political changes that are likely to continue over the course of the next
couple of years. If you believe in the obvious transition and the need for renewable energy and
renewable energy storage, then it sounds like Jason, there's lots of different ways to play this trend,
influence energy, and N-FAS are two to consider adding to your watch list. I think that's exactly right.
And again, there is still tremendous uncertainty in risk, but this is also where position-sizing
as investors comes in. It's a way that we can kind of offset some of that risk, still having
exposure, being able to continue to follow the story and see how it pans out and maybe take the most
rule breaker important thing of all to do, and that's the look to add to our winners over time.
Beautifully said. Up next, we're passing the torch to Toby to dig into an automotive business
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Welcome back. Toby, I want to rewind here a minute because in preparation for today's show,
I asked both you and Jason to give me a quick rundown of your thesis so I could ask at least
some semi-intelligent follow-up questions for each of your stocks. And I want to read to our listeners
exactly what I read when I checked it on our show notes. Is everybody ready? You wrote,
buy Finia if you don't want your portfolio to tank when Tesla goes bankrupt. Big words.
Now, I have to imagine there's at least some tongue-in-cheekness there, but I have to know that you
are a bit of a bear on Tesla. So why is Finia, whose ticker, I believe, is P-H-I-N, if I'm not mistaken,
which is almost the antithesis of Tesla? Why is Finia the better buy today?
Yeah, and let's be clear. A lot of that was just me saying, let's stare at some trouble when
Emily gets up in the morning. But in seriousness, this smaller, lesser-known company, I think is a great
way to hedge your portfolio, not just against Tesla, but the whole EV transition, which, let's
face it, is not happening as fast as some of the Technobiles might like it to right now.
Look, Finia is an auto parts manufacturer with Roots to go back over a century. This is an old
company. If you're a car person, you know the brands here, Delphi, Delco, Remy, Hardridge.
The business and the brands have been around forever, right? But the company itself was relatively
new. This is a spin-out of a much larger auto supplier, Borg Warner. About two years ago,
July 2023, they spun out Finneya. The idea here was Borg Warner wanted to focus on the future,
electrification of the industry, EVs and hybrids. They didn't phrase it like this, of course,
but Finia was essentially created to take all the leftover nonsense that they didn't want,
the legacy ICE businesses that was catering to the dying part of the industry. Well, guys, as it turns out,
that part of the industry has refused to die. In fact, since the spinoff, Finia has massively
outperform its former parent, Borg Warner. About a 68% total return in the past two plus years or so
versus less than 8% for Borg Warner. Finney has also outperforming the S&P 500 by a little bit.
Pretty good for unloved the leftovers, I would say. Toby, history is littered with spinoffs that outperform
their former parents. I think a big part of that is that those businesses, they don't have to compete
with their siblings anymore for their parents' attention, really resources. Now, my question for you
is that in the short term, two years, we've seen Finia be the better investment, but will history
continue to be the case here? Or will that future of electrification that Finia can be the hedge
against? Will that render the company obsolete and a losing investment? Yeah, it's a legitimate
concern, Jason, I think. I think it's going to take decades before EVs overtake ICEs.
The future never comes as fast as we think it will. But they're not,
ignoring the inevitable future.
Finney is not at least.
They're investing in things like hydrogen technologies,
remanufacturing, software and calibration tools
for increasing the efficiency of ICE engines, that sort of thing.
Look, if you want to believe that EVs are going to take over the world
within a decade, you go ahead and do you.
But if you subscribe to the reality
that change tends to be more evolutionary across an industry,
then there are many customers who are just fine
with enhancing and improving the existing systems they use.
rather than totally junking in for something new.
And if you think that's the case, Finia is a company that might be for you.
I love that.
If you subscribe to reality, well, here's the reality I subscribe to, Toby.
I take issue with the comparison to Tesla.
And, you know, albeit a whole one for me to really defend Tesla here
because it's a little silly for me to do so.
But I'll try, which is to say, I don't really understand what makes Finia's cash any more durable
than Tesla's.
Because from what I can tell, you know, Finia's profitability is pretty low.
their debts really high, and most of that cash has to be reinvested into their business. And in my opinion,
despite the fact that you're right, I think the transition to electric vehicles will be slow.
Finia is just another example about why auto companies are kind of generally bad investments.
I mean, Tesla's valuation, we can debate that all day, all night, but Tesla has a stalwart balance sheet.
It has profit margins that are more than double Phineas, and its growth rates are even higher.
And yes, I'm aware that both their growth rates are negative.
I just don't understand how either of these companies, how you come out looking and say, yeah,
I like Finney. I'm more here.
I think for me, Finney is not necessarily a pick against Tesla or a pick against any specific
company, right?
I like it as a nice hedge against an EV transition that may be slower than expected.
That appears to be the case right now.
I'm not saying EVs are not going anywhere.
I own two electric vehicles myself.
I love them, right?
But we have to, I think, face reality that the Super Bowl cases have not matured,
materialize and probably will not. I like using a supplier like Finia if you're considering
hedging your bets because it actually doesn't require you to pick a winner, right? You don't have to
look at all the consumer-facing companies out there in the automotive industry. This is the
one that's going to win. Who's the number two EV maker to Tesla in a decade? I don't know, right?
Is it GM? Is it Toyota? Is Ford going to be the company that successfully straddles that
line between the EV transition and the legacy world of ICE ease? I don't know. The good news for
Finias shareholders is you don't actually have to make that pick. You can say, look, I'm going to
play in the part space. I'm going to buy a company that sells their parts to anyone and will do well
in a transition, in maybe a slower transition, and will continue to sell parts to the legacy
automakers for systems that are still very much needed in the marketplace. Do sales of new cars
decline and consumers hold onto their older ones a little bit longer in the face of rising
tariff costs. For instance, if that happens, great. Finia's got a thriving after-markets,
part business, take advantage of that trend as well. So I think there are a lot of things to like,
and there are a lot of reasons you might look at Fini and say, this is a company I want, even if I am
a believer in the EV transition ultimately happening. That's a really good point. And there's a false
dichotomy there that it's Finia, in this case versus Tesla. And both actually are recommendations on the
Stock Advisor scorecard, Finia, through that spin-off from Bork Warner, as you mentioned.
And Tesla actually is one of the original kind of Rule Breaker stock picks from Motley Fool co-founder,
David Gardner, who I actually have a little bit of a teaser here for our listeners today.
David Gardner, co-founder of the Motley Fool and Chief Rule Breaker, actually just released
his newest book, Rule Breaker Investing, How to Pick the Best Stocks for the Future and Build
Lasting Wealth.
But there is more alongside this. David will be serving in a strategic advisory capacity
for the Motley Fool's new Supernova service, one of the portfolios of which I will be the co-captain of.
It's a service that closed in 2021, with portfolios averaging a 21.8% annual return across nine years.
And Supernova will be reopening, actually, for the next few days.
You can go to supernova isback.fool.com for all the latest details and to become a VIP for the event.
Coming up next, we're discussing a still small but rapidly expanding high-end Chinese tea chain.
We'll see you in a minute.
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Rangerover.com. For our last stock here, I want to try to pitch you both on a business that you've
likely never heard it before, but I expect you're both going to be rightfully skeptical of.
And that's Chaji Holdings. The ticker is CHA. Now, this is a growing chain of high-end tea
houses out of China. And yes, similar to luck and coffee a la 2020, they're expanding very aggressively
via a franchise model. And I know for a lot of investors, that throws off a lot of red flags.
but I hope you'll hear me out in this little elevator pitch, and then you can cross-examine me.
This is a founder-led company.
It was started in 2017 by a 23-year-old, Zhang Junji, who still owns more than 35 percent of the company, actually,
has a market cap of around $3 billion, and it just went public earlier this year, so it is new to the public markets.
The stock is down, admittedly, nearly 50 percent since the IPO.
But the growth this company has put forth is wild.
Store count up more than 80 percent last year, and a loyalty program that has over 200,
million active members. They don't sell bubble tea. They sell high-end tea lattes, which sell for
higher price points and come with a bit of the like Starbucks-s brand attached to them. Their GMV and
store economics are absolutely incredible. The profitability is actually pretty high. And over the past
12 months, the business has produced nearly $300 million worth of profits on around $2 billion in sales.
The stock trades at less than 12 times price to earnings. Come on, Emily. What's the catch here? A stock
growing at hyper-level rates based in China, trading for 12 times earnings. Let's be honest here.
In investing, if it sounds too good to be true, it almost always is. There's no catch, Jason.
It's the perfect company. Everything's going to go right for it. No, of course. There's always a
catch. If I had to throw something out there, obviously cannibalization. I mean, this is a franchise
model growth. It's leading to a massive slowdown in same-store sales growth. And that's similar
slowdown in same-door sales growth is, of course, leading to a similar slowdown in profits.
So the market is projecting a massive crunch here on the bottom line as the business kind of
right sizes its store account. For context, they have more than 6,000 locations across the world.
They're mostly in mainland China. That's a fraction of the locations of like a luck and coffee
for comparison. But they have massively expanded very, very rapidly. And the store economics that
look so good today, I imagine a couple years from now are going to look a lot less important.
impressive.
Speaking of coffee, Emily, isn't coffee better than tea?
I mean, haven't we heard for so long how China, for instance, right, the biggest tea market
on earth is discovering a love for coffee. It's not just Favux. That other company mentioned
Luckin. They're surging right now. Where does tea fit in in this world in terms of a long-term
growth play? Well, it's a little ironic. I'm drinking a cup of coffee as we record here today.
So obviously, I'm a coffee drinker. But, you know, not everybody loves
coffee and I like tea just as much as I like coffee. And the good thing about tea is you don't have
to worry about the growing conditions in certain regions to make your coffee beans. You don't
have to worry about the tariffs, at least that we're experiencing right now. I will say,
though, this is really, it's honestly more like lattes. You can kind of imagine it. It's more of a
premium brand. So I think the comparison to Luckin Coffee is really misguided. You can almost
compare more to a Starbucks because you can imagine that's more of their competition as opposed
to a luck in coffee.
Caffeine, cream, and sugar.
That's the secret to success here.
Now, Toby mentioned, you mentioned it too.
This is a new public company.
That adds another layer of risk.
How can a company perform in the public spotlight?
So definitely kind of ramping up my normal IPO skepticism.
And then you double it when you're talking about China.
Now, as unfair as that might be, but I'm less concerned about Luckin 2.0,
of course, the big scandal there with fraud, but more thinking about China's demographics.
This is where their base is, and China's getting very, very old, very, very quickly.
Is that potentially something that could unravel the growth story over the longer term?
That's a really good point, and you're concerned about it being a Chinese company,
you listen to U.S. markets, and the concerns about it being newly public, that's all fair.
Big red flags there, of course. You can wait this one out.
Actually, a lot of their expansion has been in East Asia, Malaysia in particular.
So their international expansion is actually one of the United States.
of the bright spots for this company. They only have one location here in the United States.
I believe it's in Los Angeles. So if you're out there, maybe go check it out. I've heard mixed
reviews so far about whether or not people like the product. But East Asia in particular is a
big growth story for them. So it's not just about expanding within China. But I am going to put you
both on the spot here as we wrap up today's show for a little lightning round. If you had to pick
a company, let's say not the one that we brought, obviously, out of the three that we talked about
today. Which one are you talking with or which one are you picking? Toby, I'll start with you.
Despite my skepticism here that I may have been evidencing when Jason was talking,
I think I'm going to go with energy right now.
I do, you know, I have a soft spot for industry that's really been beat up.
And I think there is demand to be had there.
And if you're looking for a great entry point,
it's hard to argue, Jason, that right now is a worse entry point than what we've seen in the recent past.
Jason?
This is one where I have to say those compelling unity economics, the growth rate, and the potential, and that valuation make Chaji actually really compelling.
Because if you find winners in those sorts of businesses and that have some brand strength, they can do really, really well.
But to me it falls back to the history of industrial spinoffs.
And the companies that are just really good at blocking and tackling, Peter Lynch has talked about how businesses and industries that are everybody's turning away from, you can find the biggest winners.
because nobody's going to compete with them.
There's not any VC-funded startup
that's going to try to disrupt Finia.
So I think Finia is the one that I'd pick.
What about you, Emily?
To be honest, both of your picks
do seem like more solid investment foundations
than Chaji, even though I do think
Chaji is way more fun, in my opinion.
But Jay said, I have to go with your energy picks
and Fluence and InFace.
I really like both of those companies,
especially InFace Energy.
And there is something that I love about
contrarian style investing
in really obvious and growing industries.
And energy, especially renewable energy right now, is one of those for me.
And I realize not every investor is willing to stomach.
I think the volatile ride that will be investing in renewable energy for the next couple of years.
But for less risk-adverse investors and people willing to take that leap, I think it could
offer a fair bit of reward for that risk.
So that wraps up today's show.
I hope all of our investors and listeners were able to take something away from these
underappreciated, underrated, small caps. Jason and Toby, thank you both so much for joining.
Listeners, be sure to join us for tomorrow show where Travis will be discussing how the DTC
trend went wrong and what the future of brands like Allbirds, Warby Parker, and Casper
may look like in an agentic shopping world. As always, people in the program may have
interest in the stocks they talk about and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for
or against, so don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. All personal finance
contents follow the Motley Fool editorial standards and is not approved by advertisers.
advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only.
See our full advertising disclosure.
Please check out the show notes.
For Jason Hall and Toby Bordelon and the entire Motley Full Money team,
I'm Emily Flippin.
We'll see you tomorrow.
