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Desalination: China's Next Growth Industry?

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China is working to meet the country's growing demand for fresh water by building and improving desalination plants. In doing so the nation is on a path to growing the next big industry, and attracting plenty of attention from international producers who are prepared to team up.

The New York Times reports a $4 billion plant recently erected in the outskirts of Tianjin, China is funded by the Chinese government, which is a good thing considering desalted water costs twice as much to produce as it sells for.

Economically, the project makes no sense, but the government is claiming it is acting on social responsibility to provide fresh water to its expanding population.

But there are other less humanitarian reasons China is throwing its money into desalination plants: China has once again identified a way to be on the cutting edge of what promises to be a hugely profitable industry.

Today, one billion people lack access to clean drinking water, and that number is continuing to grow to include a wealthier, perhaps more game-changing population.

Kapitall recently reported on the water-shortage crisis that is building across the globe. While issues of clean water access and drought largely plague underdeveloped and developing regions, it is increasingly impacting developed regions that include large parts of Europe, the United States, and Australia. Notably, these regions include a wealthier population that has greater incentive to put money in clean water investments.

China's water demand is expected to grow 63% by 2030. At present, the majority of water desalination technology and equipment, roughly 60%, comes from Israel, but China plans to work toward a goal of 90% in-country production.

Not content to stand on the sidelines, "the list of foreign companies that have plunged into China's desalination industry is long: Hyflux of Singapore, Toray of Japan, Befesa of Spain, Brack of Israel and ERI of the United States, among others," reports the New York Times. For many of these companies the plan to shift factories and headquarters to China is under consideration.

In the words of ERI's chief executive officer Thomas S. Rooney Jr., "You can either fight them or join them, and our philosophy is that China likely is going to be the next big desalination market ... "I would rather develop technology for China in China and take a more open approach than play the secrets game."

Interested in following the trend? We list here the companies involved in desalination trading on the U.S. stock exchange. Do you think these names have something to gain from China's determination (and funds) to grow the desalination industry? (Click here to access free, interactive tools to analyze these ideas.)

1. Consolidated Water (Nasdaq: CWCO  ) : Water Utilities Industry. Market cap of $135.41M. Develops and operates seawater desalination plants and water distribution systems. Share price as of 10/26 at $9.44. The stock has had a good month, gaining 15.53%.

2. Energy Recovery (Nasdaq: ERII  ) : Pollution & Treatment Controls Industry. Market cap of $158.45M. Engages in the development, manufacture, and sale of energy recovery devices and pumps primarily for use in seawater and brackish water desalination worldwide. Share price as of 10/26 at $3.08. The stock is a short squeeze candidate, with a short float at 15.27% (equivalent to 19.88 days of average volume). The stock has lost 21.82% over the last year.

3. Exterran Holdings (NYSE: EXH  ) : Oil & Gas Equipment & Services Industry. Market cap of $580.58M. Provides operations, maintenance, service, and equipment for oil and natural gas industry. Share price as of 10/26 at $8.96. The stock has lost 64.24% over the last year.

4. Graham (NYSE: GHM  ) : Metal Fabrication Industry. Market cap of $175.73M. Engages in the design, manufacture, and sale of vacuum and heat transfer equipment worldwide. Share price as of 10/26 at $18.65. It's been a rough couple of days for the stock, losing 5.94% over the last week.

5. Hercules Technology Growth Capital (Nasdaq: HTGC  ) : Diversified Investments Industry. Market cap of $409.21M. Hercules Technology Growth Capital, is a private equity, venture capital, and venture debt firm specializing in providing debt and equity to privately held venture capital and private equity backed companies and select publicly traded companies. Share price as of 10/26 at $9.43. The stock is a short squeeze candidate, with a short float at 5.64% (equivalent to 8.34 days of average volume). The stock has lost 2% over the last year.

Interactive Chart: Press Play to compare changes in analyst ratings over the last two years for the stocks mentioned above. Analyst ratings sourced from Zacks Investment Research.


Kapitall's Rebecca Lipman does not own any of the shares mentioned above. Data sourced from Finviz.

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Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On November 21, 2011, at 8:56 PM, MHedgeFundTrader wrote:

    The Chinese essentially have an assembly line for cities which runs 24/7. They are really building a Rome a day. That’s what you would expect in a country that is attempting to bring another 400 million into the modern economy.

    What I think is true is that China is in the midst of permanently downshifting from a blistering 11%-13% annualized growth rate to a more sustainable 8%. This is a good thing, and I saw the Japanese economy go through the same teething process over four decades, first growing at 10%, then 7%, 5%, 3%, and finally bottoming out at 1%. More stability in China will lead to less volatility in the global economy. This will be welcomed with open arms by oil and copper traders whose lives have been shortened by the extreme market moves this year.

    The good news for the rest of us is that a China with a GDP today of $5.5 trillion today growing at 8% generates far more GDP growth than it did a decade ago with a $1 trillion economy growing at 10-13%. In fact, a China growing at 8% generates much more new GDP ($440 billion) that a US economy growing at 2% ($290 billion). This means that China is still a great investment for the long term.

    What if it starts to grow less than an 8% rate? Senior government officials refer to this as the “red line” below which the risk of political instability rises. No government fears its own people more than China, which refers to its “bicycle economy”; it must keep moving forward or fall over. And in China they don’t send retiring political leaders off to putter around at country clubs, they put them in front of firing squads.

    Fortunately for the health of the current leadership, they have a lot of resources to head off this worst case scenario. China currently has the largest accumulation of foreign exchange reserves in human history, some $3.2 trillion. During the 2008 crash, they implemented a $500 billion emergency stimulus package, which was three times larger than ours on a per capita GDP basis, and they had a second one on the shelf which they never had to use.

    The Mad Hedge Fund Trader

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