Battery & Energy Storage
Power  Demand vs supply & the price of exposure · unit of demand: GWh of storage capacity
FSLRENPHSEDGFLNCSTEM
V2 · factsJun 2026
Sector scan: Energy & Power Group-level demand/supply Updated Jun 2, 2026 Facts only · no recommendation
Snapshot Product Demand Supply The gap The players The price Deep-dive next Sources

Snapshot

The US installed a record 18.9 GW / 51 GWh of battery energy storage in 2025, up 52% from 37.1 GWh in 2024 (Wood Mackenzie). Globally, BloombergNEF forecasts 92 GW / 247 GWh of new storage in 2025 and 123 GW / 360 GWh in 2026. The five tickers grouped here span three distinct businesses: utility-scale battery system integration (FLNC), residential solar-attached batteries (ENPH, SEDG), AI-software optimization of storage assets (STEM), and solar module manufacturing with no current storage product (FSLR). Of the five, only Fluence (FLNC) is a pure-play storage company; the others derive most or all revenue from solar equipment.

51 GWh
US storage installed in 2025 (record, +52% YoY)
247 GWh
Global storage forecast 2025 est.
$70/kWh
Stationary storage pack price, 2025 (BNEF, down 45% YoY)
152 GW
US utility-scale storage pipeline (project databases, Q4 2025)
500 GWh
US additions forecast 2026-2031 est.
$52.9B
Combined mkt cap, all 5 tickers (Jun 2, 2026)
Battery storage cell prices collapsed 45% in one year to $70/kWh for stationary packs (BNEF, Dec 2025), driven by Chinese LFP oversupply. That makes batteries cheaper to deploy but crushes margins for anyone who resells cells rather than makes them. The US installed 51 GWh in 2025 and has a 152 GW pipeline in interconnection queues — but Wood Mackenzie forecasts a near-term dip (2026-2027) before double-digit growth resumes through decade-end, partly because the Section 25D residential tax credit expired and tariff policy is unstable.

The product & how money is made

Battery energy storage systems (BESS) store electricity in lithium-ion cells (overwhelmingly lithium iron phosphate / LFP chemistry for stationary use) and discharge it later. The product is measured in GWh of storage capacity. A 4-hour / 100 MW system stores 400 MWh. Money is made in four different ways across these five companies:

Sources: FLNC FY2025 earnings release (Nov 2025); ENPH Q1-2026 8-K (Apr 2026); SEDG FY2025 earnings release (Feb 2026); STEM FY2025 earnings release (Feb 2026); FSLR Q1-2026 earnings release (Apr 2026).

Demand

Contracted / already committed

Forecast demand (not contracted)

Supply

Capacity

Bottlenecks

Sources: BNEF lithium-ion battery price survey (Dec 2025); Wood Mackenzie US Energy Storage Monitor Q4-2025 and Q1-2026; FLNC FY2025 10-K; ENPH Q1-2026 8-K; FSLR Q1-2026 earnings release.

The gap

MeasureDemand sideSupply sideDirection
US annual installs (GWh)51 GWh (2025 actual)530 GW in interconnection queues; cell supply unconstrainedGrowing but 2026-27 dip expected
Global annual installs247 GWh (2025 est.), 360 GWh (2026 est.)Chinese cell oversupply; >1 TWh/yr mfg capacity est.Surplus — prices falling
Battery cell prices$70/kWh stationary (2025)Down 45% YoYFalling; BNEF expects further decline in 2026
US residential storage2.7 GW installed 2025 (+92% YoY, tax-credit pull-forward)Manufacturing unconstrainedContracting ~2% in 2026 (25D credit expired) est.
Utility-scale pipeline152 GW in project databases (US)Interconnection queue: 530 GW, 3-5 yr waitDemand enormous; interconnection is the bottleneck

Cell-level prices are in structural decline from Chinese overcapacity. For system integrators like Fluence, cheaper inputs help margins if contract prices hold, but competition from Chinese integrators (BYD, Sungrow, CATL) compresses the system-level markup. For residential battery sellers (ENPH, SEDG), falling cell costs help unit economics but the demand driver (homeowner payback period) depends on electricity rates and policy, not just hardware cost. Supply surplus at the cell level, demand growth at the system level, with interconnection as the physical bottleneck.

The players

TickerBusinessMkt CapFY2025 RevNet IncCashDebtStorage exposure
FSLRSolar module mfg (CdTe thin-film)$33.4B$5.22B$1.53B$2.8B$0.5BNone. Zero storage product or revenue. 47.9 GW solar backlog.
ENPHMicroinverters + residential batteries$9.5B$1.47B~$174M$0.9B$0.6B706 MWh batteries shipped FY2025 (+36%). Storage is ~15-20% of revenue est. (not separately disclosed).
FLNCUtility-scale BESS integration + software$5.1B$2.26B($68M)$0.7B$0.4BPure-play. 17.8 GWh deployed cumulative, 6.8 GW. $5.3B backlog. 122 GWh pipeline.
SEDGSolar inverters + optimizers + batteries$4.8B$1.18B($405M)$0.5B$0.3B928 MWh batteries recognized FY2025. Storage is a minority of revenue (not separately broken out).
STEMAI software for storage optimization$0.09B$156M$138M*$49M$356M1.7 GWh storage AUM. Software-only model. *Net income includes $220M gain on debt extinguishment.

Sources: market data Jun 2, 2026 (stockanalysis.com, companiesmarketcap.com); FSLR FY2025 10-K and Q1-2026 8-K; ENPH FY2025 10-K and Q1-2026 8-K; FLNC FY2025 earnings release (Nov 2025); SEDG FY2025 earnings release (Feb 2026); STEM FY2025 earnings release (Feb 2026).

Key distinctions

The price of exposure

TickerPriceMkt CapEV (approx)Trailing P/EEV / FY2025 RevNet Cash (Debt)
FSLR$311.01$33.4B$31.1B21.9x6.0x+$2.3B net cash
ENPH$72.33$9.5B$9.2B~55x6.3x+$0.4B net cash
FLNC$27.91$5.1B$4.8BN/A (loss)2.1x+$0.3B net cash
SEDG$78.51$4.8B$4.6BN/A (loss)3.9x+$0.2B net cash
STEM$10.02$0.09B$0.4BN/A*2.6x($0.3B) net debt

*STEM’s FY2025 “profit” was a one-time debt extinguishment gain. On an operating basis, the business is roughly breakeven.

Sources: market data Jun 2, 2026; company filings as cited above. EV calculated as mkt cap minus cash plus debt (simplified).

What to deep-dive next

Sources & confidence