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Will “Blue Gas” be the “Tesla Killer?”

What's the "little known stock" that Jimmy Mengel teases "may have made electric cars obsolete" in teaser ads for The Crow's Nest?

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, January 29, 2020

The most-requested teaser to start this fresh new year is probably the Blue Gas/Tesla Killer one from Jimmy Mengel, in an ad for The Crow’s Nest ($99/yr) — and today I’m finally getting to it. If you’re keeping track, we first saw these “Blue Gas” iterations of the ad around December 18 (though different “Tesla Killer” ads for different kinds of batteries or motors have cycled through our stories here several times over the past few years).

The spiel is all about something he calls “Blue Gas”, and it’s a little bit reminiscent of all the natural gas vehicle teaser pitches we saw eight or ten years ago… but the technology is a little different. The ad starts out with Mengel’s visit to California to try out a “blue gas” car in person, in a place where it’s poised to, he implies, take over the trucking industry…

“On the road out here you’ll see more Priuses and Teslas than in any other city in America. But this has nothing to do with either.

“In fact, here at this unknown site, salt-of-the-earth truck drivers are making the carbon-free energy revolution possible.

“You see, this gas station is at the epicenter of a $2.5 trillion revolution in energy.

“One that involves a weird form of fuel known as ‘Blue Gas.'”

So what is this magical blue gas?

“It doesn’t involve lithium or batteries or rare earths.

“It doesn’t involve solar, wind, water, biofuels, or any other form of renewable energy you’ve heard of.

“And of course it doesn’t involve oil, coal, or any other fossil fuel.

“Best of all, it’s 100% emissions free…

“It takes moments to fill up…

“And it’s 300% more powerful than oil.”

So that sounds perfect, right? No long recharge waits like for an electric car, not dirty like oil or gas. Magical!

How, then, does one make money from this technology?

“My research shows that one $3 stock at the epicenter of the ‘Blue Gas’ revolution is set to trade higher than Tesla.

“Delivering earth-shattering gains of 11,666%.

“Not nine years down the road. Or even five years.

“A massive catalyst in the next few months, that I’ll reveal today, is ready to launch its share price vertical.”

Drooling yet? Don’t worry, that’s mostly the marketing — these gains never, of course, show up overnight… and, sadly, such information is never held solely in the hand of one dude who’s selling a newsletter for 99 bucks.

Which doesn’t mean it won’t be a worthwhile investment to consider, of course, just that we should get the daydreams of 11,000% returns in a few months out of our heads first.

How about some more clues to lead us to the prize?

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“The ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles, two of the nation’s largest shipping points, are now deploying a fleet of “Blue Gas” trucks…”

So at this point it’s pretty clear that Mengel is talking up hydrogen fuel cells… which he does “reveal” later on. Fuel cells are not particularly new technology, but they have made some jumps forward in recent years.

And like all new transportation fuels or strategies, the easiest way to start is with local fleet vehicles — garbage trucks, delivery trucks, and other vehicles where fuel is a major cost and where they travel in a small enough area that they can depend on a very limited refueling infrastructure.

And this is positioned as competition for electric vehicles, and particularly for Tesla….

“The Budweiser company Anheuser-Busch is now planning a complete makeover of its truck fleet. It wants to be completely emission-free in the next few years.

“And it’s using ‘Blue Gas’ to make that transition possible.

“That’s why the beer giant recently bought 800 tractor trailers fueled by ‘Blue Gas.’

“That’s almost the entire company’s shipping fleet.

“Just to round it out, it purchased a mere 40 trucks from Tesla….

“When it comes to heavy-duty trucking power, ‘Blue Gas’ beats Tesla hands down.”

But it’s not just big fleet trucks that are going to switch over…

“Today there are only 11,000 vehicles powered by ‘Blue Gas.’ We’re on the ground floor.

“But according to the big car giants…

“There will be over 10 million ‘Blue Gas’ vehicles on the road in the next few years.”

I wouldn’t say that’s the stance of the “car giants” … but it is the goal of some governments and other bodies that are pushing for fuel cell adoption — the last conference included that 10 million vehicle “pledge” (in ten years).

And apparently there is some progress in building out the infrastructure…

“Just a few years ago, there were virtually no “Blue Gas” stations. Today, there are 300 worldwide.

“But as more gas stations switch from serving oil to “Blue Gas”…

“That number is projected to surge to over 5,000 in a few short years.”

That same International conference included the goal of 10,000 fueling stations to serve those ten million vehicles, with a real push from Japan… not surprising, since Toyota is the major automaker that’s most invested in hydrogen fuel cells.

And he goes into why hydrogen fuel cells are a better option…

“Unlike batteries… the engine technology behind ‘Blue Gas’ is:

“Safe and non-explosive.

“Takes under five minutes to refill.

“Lasts days or even weeks.

“And it’s incredibly lightweight.

“In the race for clean trucks, trains, and buses, “Blue Gas” is second to none.”

A big part of the reason why he thinks it’s going to be big is that China is pushing fuel cell tech forward…

“China’s ‘Elon Musk.’ recently made a stunning announcement…

“In short, he called for a complete shift in China to ‘Blue Gas.’

“And when this guy speaks, the Chinese government acts.

“After all, he was responsible for the country’s electric car revolution to begin with.

“The Chinese are committing a stunning $66 billion to back ‘Blue Gas.’

“In fact, the world’s largest ‘Blue Gas’ station just opened in Shanghai.”

And what’s the stock? We finally get a few clues…

“… the $3 tech stock that first began this revolution 40 years ago.”

And some hype, for good measure….

“This Is More Lucrative Than Any Pot Stock I’ve Recommended

“Even more than Bitcoin and other cryptos…

“That’s because it’s moving to the epicenter of the trillion-dollar electric vehicle revolution…

“A historic trillion-dollar energy shift that’s already transforming the way that millions power their cars…”

That “40 years ago” bit is relevant, this company is somehow connected to the “father of fuel cells”…

“… except for a few ‘niche’ markets like submarines or spacecraft, fuel cells weren’t used much.

“They simply weren’t inexpensive and small enough for everyday cars and trucks.

“In 1987, everything changed.

“One energy legend, now known as the ‘father of fuel cell technology’, made a historic discovery that put…

“Fuel Cells on the Inevitable Path to Energy Dominance”

And he talks about some fuel cell stocks that surged last year, Plug Power (PLUG), Proton Power Systems (PPS on the AIM in London), and Hydrogenics… and Hydrogenics was bought by Cummins (CMI), which leads Mengel to anticipate a “buyout surge” that will lead to a takeover frenzy for his favorite secret stock…

“A buyout frenzy is underway on small companies that are deploying the technology.

“And I’ve identified the next big takeout target…

“The tiny $3 stock I mentioned today, the one founded by the innovator behind the fuel cell revolution.”

Other clues about this one $3 stock? We get this…

“… after signing $200 million worth of deals with China’s largest engine and auto parts companies…

“It’s the frontrunner for the world’s biggest fuel cell market…

“In Shandong province alone, it’s rolling out 2,000 fuel cell buses.

“And this company is supplying it all.”

So who’s our little target? What’s “the $3 tech stock that first began this revolution 40 years ago?”

This must be little Ballard Power Systems (BLDP)… which is not a $3 stock anymore, and hasn’t been for more than six months (it was right around $7 the first time I saw this teaser ad, about six weeks ago), but it is connected to (the late) Geoffrey Ballard, the father of the fuel cell and founder of the company… and it would not be surprising if they just repurposed the spiel from a recommendation that was made a few months earlier to Jimmy Mengel’s subscribers (that’s just a guess, but it’s pretty common practice for newsletter ad copywriters).

Geoffrey Ballard left active management at Ballard Power almost 20 years ago, and, in fact, formed another company that was subsequently sold to Plug Power, another oft-touted fuel cell company, but he certainly left a legacy at BLDP.

And yes, China is a big market for fuel cells (and everything else, pretty much), and Ballard does have an “in” thanks to the fact that they sold out part of the company to form a Chinese joint venture with Weichai Power.

All of the fuel cell stocks have gone bonkers at one point or another in the past few months, driving this particular one up above $10 for a while (the stock touched $12 last week, though it’s below $10 again now)… so what’s the story?

Well, frankly, the most obvious thing you note upon a quick look at the financials is that Ballard is trading like one of the crazy cloud software stocks — at a valuation of $2 billion, it’s trading at more than 20X sales, is nowhere near profitability, and is expected to grow sales at about 35-40% a year as they sell fuel cell stacks into their buses/trucks joint venture in China as well as for existing markets (backup power, forklifts).

The future is very much lined up with China and their technology transfer to their Weichai joint venture (agreed to in early 2018), which is causing some fears and also some profit lust — which probably explains some of the surge in the past few months, as trade war fears have ebbed a bit and the stock has more than doubled in the past six months.

Not for the first time, I should note. The stock has been teased in the past as fuel cell excitement has heated up, and it has surged a few times before — particularly in 2014 and 2017. So the warning signal for investors is that things didn’t work out very well for those who bought Ballard Power the last couple times it surged quickly higher like this.

As with Plug Power and Fuel Cell and the rest of the industry, presumably a lot of the future for Ballard depends on what governments or larger companies do to push forward with hydrogen fueling stations… either in China or the US, or elsewhere… and whether alternative energy makes it far enough that generating, storing and transporting hydrogen ends up being efficient and feasible on a large scale (the government lays out some of the challenges here, in case you’re curious).

There’s some interesting bigger-picture thinking here from a couple years ago that makes some sense to me, though I’m far from being an expert on the science. Hydrogen is a challenge both because of the energy cost to create it, and because it can be challenging to store and transport safely (though natural gas and gasoline are also a challenge on that front, to be fair, and, yes, lithium batteries pose fire risks).

So the dream is that refueling stations will create their own hydrogen from electrolysis instead of having to set up a transportation infrastructure of pipelines or trucks for liquid hydrogen, and that hydrogen generation would take a lot of electricity — hopefully, for the sake of reducing reliance on fossil fuels, electricity from solar and wind and other relatively clean sources… though there are other ways to generate hydrogen as well, of course, with probably the most likely first wave using natural gas as a feedstock and fuel. Though the real hope for the next few years is not from hydrogen-powered cars, it’s all about those predictable and restricted fleet vehicles like port trucks and delivery trucks and buses — which should ring a bell for those who hoped for great riches from the natural gasification of trucking fleets a decade ago.

As an aside… remember Clean Energy Fuels (CLNE) and Westport (WPRT), the standard bearers of the natural gas transportation revolution that was heavily talked up just after the global financial crisis? They’re still around, and still generally growing revenue, but their share prices are down ~90% from their story-driven highs of early 2012, and I’d be surprised if they regain those highs in my lifetime.

So maybe hydrogen ends up being a better solution for a battery-powered fleet (hydrogen fuel cells are essentially batteries that get their charge from hydrogen, with the real advantage being that fuel cell refueling is faster than recharging, and the fuel cells have longer useful lives)… though the established electricity infrastructure (power lines, etc.) and lack of a hydrogen infrastructure means that hydrogen would also presumably have a pretty short time period in which it could “win” over batteries (assuming, of course, that battery technology continues to improve).

Ballard’s latest quarterly presentation is full of future promise but not terribly inspiring on the financial front. Yes, the promise is real, things could work out well… but right now, they aren’t. There’s an interesting Bloomberg interview with Ballard’s CEO Randy MacEwen here, essentially pointing to 2021 or 2022 as the first time investors begin to envision a future profit for BLDP, and 2025 as the forecasted beginning of the rapid growth trajectory that he envisions.

So, again, this is buying the future — or, more specifically, buying one future in which hydrogen fuel cells build on their early success in forklifts to take a huge market share in heavy trucks and buses, and hoping that Ballard will lead in this future. That’s been promoted many times in Ballard’s history, and past dreams haven’t materialized, but that doesn’t mean it’s impossible this time… just that we should check our assumptions and be skeptical of the promotions. I don’t know whether this hydrogen fuel cell future will come, or if Ballard will remain a leader, but I’d bet on it continuing to be a very volatile ride.

Thoughts, comments, questions? Let ’em loose with a comment below… and thanks for reading!

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Alan Bryce
Guest
January 30, 2020 2:10 pm

One point needs highlighting: Methanol is the ideal hydrogen carrier. Nobel laureate George Olah knew this quite some time ago when he conceived of the methanol economy. Methanol can power methanol fuel cells, or be reformed into hydrogen for hydrogen fuel cells. And methanol can be made renewably by combining hydrogen with carbon dioxide. Methanol has a bright future in the transportation sector.

tanglewood
January 30, 2020 4:45 pm

If the Hydrogen Fuel cell car emits water/water vapor, won’t this be a problem for vehicles running when temperatures are below freezing

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Triple8
Guest
Triple8
January 30, 2020 10:44 pm
Reply to  tanglewood

Toyota seems to have won the car contest with their new cell.
Revolutionary in the fuel cell industry with no coolant and very little degredation of the cells over 5000hrs.

In the standard fuel cell freezing has yet to be over come.
Cold starts being most of the problem.
Contamination is also a major issue any iron, copper or CO that gets into the cell will kill it.
Platinum is at the heart of the cell, even with the lower ratios now, they are still expensive and with the amount of platinum needed for mass production highly doubtful they will see wide spread passenger use in cars .
If fuel cells go in any big way invest in platinum.

Most of the people i worked with in the fuel cell research industry are now either in China or working for them in Vancouver.
China now has a whole city dedicated to fuel cell busses.
Ballard will still make part of the cell but the majority is all going to China.

I knew someone who did concrete work for Jeffery Ballard
Told him that BLRD was a scam,
After he was ousted from the company one CEO after another cashed in.
No profit was ever made and they were the highest paid executives in canada during the tech boom and after.
In later years when BLRD was nearly broke they took less, stock went to under a dollar.
If it was not for VW investing they would be gone.

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aneltomir
Guest
aneltomir
January 31, 2020 12:56 am
Reply to  tanglewood

Excellent point

Dan
Guest
Dan
January 31, 2020 1:52 pm

Matt Badiali just gave Travis a shout-out on his Real Wealth podcast when he was responding a reader’s question on the Blue Gas tease. He directed his subscribers to the Stock Gumshoe website because he said Travis does a great job with the sleuthing. He even said he has respect for Travis because he is very fair with his analysis.

Great job Travis.

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armengaro
Member
armengaro
January 31, 2020 6:28 pm
Reply to  Dan

I concur.

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Joemarko
Member
Joemarko
February 2, 2020 9:01 am

I lost 100% on wort and am out 98% on clone. Presently only out 75% on below, and personally, I would like to see a 1000% gain on this one.

Otis Arron Schmakel
Guest
February 4, 2020 2:20 pm

just don’t be fuel-ish…

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low-priced stock : Pitney Bowes - PBI and Chesapeake - CHK
Nancy
Member
February 4, 2020 4:40 pm

Yes I did get my spouse a science smartie to buy 100 shares on his “retired mutual fund” Fidelity account! The thing is the technology us not new! 50 years old…purportedly suppressed by the highway gasoline internal combustion engine lobbies!
I do not think the refueling duration, and staying power is perfected yet.
Then that non-optional charge process also had to carry the high weight of its own mobility mechanism! So it surely bears an unavoidable heavy payload! Note “lead” batteries, have concept limits, as they are actually using re-cycled stored up already combusted energy then delivered and inserted into the car!

! People do not think of that source of fuel that is then re-stored in a battery in that way. Given that the figurative “‘WICK’ on that candle” is just unavoidably SHORT, so the engine thrust to excellerate quickly as high speed traffic driving requires uses upba lit of stored battery energy! Not like that exploded from explosive combustion of carbon fuel! With stored recycled power, that combusted thrusting immediate power to overcome inertia is just not present in the large quantities we love!
Recall the super quiet yellow postal delivery truck in my childhood living abroad, perhaps it was in Switzerland (i think), no speed demons need apply to drive those babies!
In the current USA where on 1-69 some parts are posted at 75.! That is fuel-gobbling speed! I-96 in Mid lower MI, the posted is 70! But the going speed seems at 85-92!! So the same driving necessity/habit of modern high speed “competitive” Interstate-style using highest speeding up slowing down driving required, just must draw down electric charge reserves fast! At least we are sure we know they replenish slowly! And when 5o cars on a same stretch of Interstate road all need charging at at about the same time, WOW THAT’S FUTURE FUN! Not a good picture!
Worry!
So safe driving milage capacity charge ranges (wife and kids on the road at night) are a big issue, can be dangerous! What does one do? Use a cell phone! Get a tech co to roll the charging “pump” out to you! No little red gas cans!

This Thinko-rooter suggests in investing in manufacturers of equally glamorous swooping-shaped tow truck designs, like Teslas, thus they will visually blend together, not make the $50-$100 K roadster stand out though in dry dock! Dignity intact still respectably as good looking. but on the truck bed, fuel tank impaired, but tge not tow-er is fine!
Seems like back to the drawing board!
Best choice =buy up that towing co!
Wait on your own improved alternative fuel cars for home!
Thanks for your good extensive clarification! !
Marion

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Thomas Claridge
Guest
Thomas Claridge
February 5, 2020 8:51 pm

The BIG LIE about Hydrogen is that it is everywhere part of almost every chemical or mineral. That is only 1/2 true as it is also COMBINED chemically with all these many possible sources. It has to be separated from the mineral usually requiring energy or power od some kind. EXAMPLE: The simple
chem lab experiment of taking a quantity of clear water (H2O) and running an electric current through it causing it to separate into it’s parts of two parts Hydrogen (H) and one part Oxygen (O).
So now you have the “Blue Gas” (happens to be clear not blue but whose counting) Hydrogen in two parts and the single part Oxygen also a clear gas. Now if you ignite them they combine and give off heat (energy) of approximately the amount you had to create to generate the electricity to separate them. So that shows it works but the net net of energy is ZERO (0) so what did you gain? In the fuel cell you should think of the Hydrogen as the battery, defined as a storage system, which stores the energy until you choose to use it i.e. just like a lithium battery. So which is better? That is the $64K
question is it not! Suffice it to say that the Fuel Cell is very much more complicated then the simple battery BUT may have less left over “trash” / “poisens” to get rid of later that COULD be a factor??

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mrroberts
Irregular
February 15, 2020 1:37 pm

35 Years ago I was affiliated with the Hydrogen Research Institute (NYC&NJ) as an adjunct of Fusion Energy Corporation at Princeton NJ (Dr. Bogdan Maglich). Hydrogen cars for the many will remain a dream until economical means of producing (and distributing) hydrogen are developed. While solar energy is promising, real lift-off will come when FUSION energy is practical , and fusion has always been “20 years in the future”…

Eugene Gaudreault
Eugene Gaudreault
February 16, 2020 2:03 am

Blue Gas? You are looking at Ballard Fuel Cells for heavy transportation. That seems good, but you might also consider Bloom Energy which sells large fuel cell systems that power large microgrids. They run from natural gas and provide independence from outages of Utilities. The Mall at Danbury, Connecticut has a sizable installation of 42 Bloom Energy Fuel Cell sections at 52 KW per section = 2.184 Mega Watts.

Have you seen these analysis of Hydrogen as a transportation fuel:

Professional presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7MzFfuNOtY

Tiring presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gu1v7d7-Wh0

Tiring presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOntMxYA29U

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Joe Pandit
Member
Joe Pandit
February 23, 2020 1:40 pm

In India, there are many gas stations that are equipped with Clean Natural Gas (CNG) filling for cars

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Garth Wilson
Guest
Garth Wilson
March 3, 2020 12:14 am

Has anyone researched the storyline though. A 5min snap search and already there seem to be some discrepancies:
Liu Ruopeng is known as China’s Elon Musk and he is an entrepreneur billionaire not a high ranking official and there is no evidence of any involvement in blue gas;

There is also no reference (other than from this article) of Jeff Bezos’ involvement in blue gas;

Our due diligence stops at 2 inaccuracies; does anyone have more to add or to correct us?

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ktve35
ktve35
March 4, 2020 1:17 am

There was an individual who stated in another posting that the name of the company was True Zero but that it wasn’t publicly traded. True Zero is the brand name for the product that is owned by FirstElement Fuel. I haven’t finished my research/due diligence on this company and I would like to know if anyone has taken a look at this company to see if it may be the one Jimmy Mengel is referring to in his articles?

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Cliff du Fresne
Guest
Cliff du Fresne
March 4, 2020 11:13 am
Reply to  ktve35

The company is Ballard Power in Vancouver, who were the original player behind fuel cells. Since the hype, the stock has gone from $3 to a high of $16, now back down to $14. It is a legitimate player in fuel cells, selling them to China for busses, and for stand alone power plants, but I don’t know how much they will benefit if fuel cells do displace batteries.

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DENZIL
Guest
DENZIL
March 20, 2020 5:38 pm

THANK YOU FOR A INSIGHTFUL DISCUSSION OF “BLUE GAS”.

jonah_in_the_whale
jonah_in_the_whale
May 5, 2020 4:56 am
Reply to  DENZIL

Why is it blue?

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GeneH
GeneH
March 22, 2020 2:56 pm

I remember several years ago when the Chinese purchased some bldp products. I assume that was done to tear them down and copy. Do any of these companies ever show huge growth in their sales?

Looking at it Ballard price at 18 times sales while Plug is about 4 times; however. both show negative values for just about every other measure of how the company is doing in spite of a recent spike in revenue.

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Glen cannon
Guest
Glen cannon
March 23, 2020 12:16 pm

What do you know about small company called Hydrogen engine

JayBee1
Guest
JayBee1
May 10, 2020 7:51 pm
Reply to  Glen cannon

Glen,

Read my January 30th post above about Hydrogen Engine Center (HYEG) that now goes by the name of HEC-TINA.

cccaz123
Member
cccaz123
March 28, 2020 6:27 pm

What failures in the past are you referring to with Ballard?

Paul Michael
Guest
Paul Michael
April 21, 2020 6:31 pm

what about VTIQ – soon to merge and become NKLA (Nikola Motor) This is a stock that I can get excited about. Semi Trucks on a fixed route are the best use of Fuel Cells.

Broke-broker
Guest
Broke-broker
April 28, 2020 10:36 am

HOLY CRAP! I remember pumping this stock when I was a retail broker back in the late 90s!! I like the technology idea but apparently this never caught on. I forgot about it in fact. Cant believe this is the “hype of the day” again. Guess it’s a generational thing. Etrade and $10 trades finally put me out of business as a retail broker, but I remember this little gem. Wow. Blast from the past. Thanks for the research on this hype newsletter sales pitch thing.

billhouston
billhouston
May 3, 2020 4:34 pm

Your the best Travis thanks again.

Roger Souvage
Member
Roger Souvage
May 14, 2020 6:45 am

I am looking already almost 10 years at PLUG , they started making fuel cells for use in forklifts , I thought they should have Caterpillar , Komatsu , Toyota forklifts and all the others becoming customers , think that could be a billion dollar company in less than 10 year..

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