The Future of the Inflation Reduction Act

Introduction

Republicans have lashed out at the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), a landmark package of incentives for clean energy, since it was passed two years ago. With the Republican party gaining control of the White House, the Senate, and the House of Representatives, the future of the IRA is in question. The market has reacted by savaging an already beaten-down clean energy sector. While not surprised by the direction of the move, we have been surprised by the magnitude. The market appears to be pricing in a high probability of significant disruption to the IRA, but the situation is rife with uncertainty. We believe clean energy provides investors with a positively skewed distribution of prospective returns, as many companies are trading below what we see as fair value even in a full repeal scenario.

Election Market Reaction

The knee jerk reaction of the market to the Republican sweep has been to punish clean energy. While the broad market rallied in the first five market days after the election (S&P 500 +3.5%, MSCI ACWI +1.7%), the Invesco Solar ETF plummeted almost 20% while the First Trust Global Wind Energy ETF dropped around 10%. Biofuel and electric vehicle (EV) battery companies fell by a similar magnitude, and just about everything touching clean energy tumbled. 1 The market clearly took Donald Trump’s campaign trail promises to “terminate” the IRA to heart.

Tesla, the biggest clean energy company of them all, was notably immune to the pain and suffering, rising over 30% in the first few days after the election. The market seems confident that CEO Elon Musk’s budding relationship with Donald Trump will ensure favorable treatment for the company, but at the end of the day, Tesla is an EV, solar, and energy storage company. Catastrophic changes for these industries would not be good for Tesla.

Regardless, the market’s reaction was quite clear that the election results are terrible for clean energy more generally. Yet, there is great uncertainty about what will actually happen to the IRA, and there are a variety of reasons to believe that Republicans may not be so keen to dismantle it.