Investing.com — In a note to clients on Wednesday, Bernstein analysts assessed the potential downside risks to electrical infrastructure stocks if President-elect Donald Trump repeals the $7,500 electric vehicle (EV) tax credit, a move that is reportedly being considered as part of broader tax reform.
According to Bernstein, while the immediate market reaction caused low single-digit declines in stocks like Eaton (NYSE:), Hubbell (HUBB), and Quanta Services (NYSE:), the longer-term impact may already be largely priced in.
Repealing the EV tax credit would remove a key tailwind for electrical distribution infrastructure spending. “EV charging tends to occur at home, and a step change in the EV installed base was a tailwind for investment on that side of the grid,” Bernstein noted.
They estimate that eliminating the tax credit would reduce electricity demand growth attributable to EVs from a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 0.6% to 0.4% over the next five years.
To quantify the impact, Bernstein compared the situation to Germany’s rollback of EV subsidies in 2023, which led to a 30% drop in demand year-to-date in 2024.
They also reversed their earlier conclusion that the Inflation Reduction Act’s tax credits boosted EV demand by 25%, implying a similar decline if the credits are repealed.
The analysts estimate that lower electricity demand would trim long-term earnings growth for electrical infrastructure companies modestly. Specifically, ETN’s growth would fall from 14% to 13%, HUBB from 16% to 15%, and PWR from 15% to 14%, reducing their five-year earnings power by 3%, 1%, and 3%, respectively.
Despite these risks, Bernstein believes the market has already accounted for much of the downside.
Stock declines of 2% (ETN), 3% (HUBB), and 1% (PWR) following the news suggest that investors have factored in this headwind. The firm concludes, “This risk is largely priced in.”
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