Why $TOYO may be a deep-value play trading at an absurd 3x Forward P/E
TOYO Co., Ltd (Ticker: TOYO) looks like a mispriced growth stock that swung to profitability but got slaughtered by retail panic selling. I’m considering opening a position and would love to get this subs opinion on this one.
TOYO is a fast-growing \~$300 million market cap green energy company that manufactures high-efficiency solar equipment. Instead of just selling standard solar panels, TOYO focuses on next-generation Heterojunction Technology (HJT).
Unlike traditional solar cells, HJT panels excel in extreme heat without losing power efficiency. TOYO is pairing this advanced technology with heavy battery storage systems to build 24/7 clean-energy microgrids. They are actively targeting the massive, power-hungry AI data centers popping up across Texas.
The company is highly profitable and is currently expanding its US manufacturing footprint by building a 1.5-gigawatt solar cell facility in Houston, Texas.
Last week, the stock was trading near $13 and crashed 37% down to $7.17 because the company announced a $50 million registered direct offering to institutional investors. Retail dumped the stock but if you do the math, this crash appears to be a severe overreaction.
**Financials**
Small-cap green energy or tech hardware plays tend to be unprofitable cash incinerators. TOYO is the opposite. From their latest Q1 2026 earnings report:
* Revenue was up 177% YOY to $142.8 million.
* Net income swung to a $28.4 million profit from a net loss of $3.7 million in the same quarter of the prior year.
* Management confidently reiterated full-year 2026 adjusted net income guidance of $100 million.
Following the crash, TOYO’s trailing P/E ratio dropped to 6.4x. If they hit their $100 million guidance, they would be trading at a forward P/E of roughly 3x. For a company growing revenue at a triple-digit pace, that seems practically free.
**Dilution Reality vs Reaction**
Insiders and parent company Abalance Corporation control \~80% of the total voting power (making it a stable "controlled company"). Because of this, the visible public trading float is tiny at about 3 million shares. Traders probably saw a "$50M share printing" headline and thought the company was diluting shareholders by 50%+, but here’s the reality.
* TOYO issued 4.55 million new shares against their total corporate structure, not just the float, representing \~12% dilution. A 12% dilution should not equal a 37% price crash.
* Dropping 4.55 million of new shares into the 3 million float would create a temporary supply hangover while the market digests the new shares. However, TOYO was officially added to the Russell 3000 and Russell Microcap Indexes this past Friday and institutional index trackers were forced to step in and buy 2.28 million shares at the close, effectively soaking up half of the excess float.
* The institutions who participated in the capital raise paid $11 per share. So the smart money looked at the books and said "yea, we’ll buy millions of shares at $11." Retail selling suppressed those exact same shares to \~$7 today.
And why did they need to raise the money? A look at their backward-looking balance sheet shows that TOYO had a tight Current Ratio of 0.68, meaning their short-term obligations outpaced their liquid cash. With the incoming $50 million gross proceeds officially closing today (June 29), TOYO's estimated current ratio now sits at around 0.94, clearing their immediate cash squeeze and putting them on a healthy operational footing just in time for their next official balance sheet update in mid-to-late August.
**Houston Factory & AI Data Center Play**
TOYO isn't using this money to fund corporate cash burn. The funds are to be deployed over a rolling 20-month schedule to build the massive 1.5-gigawatt HJT solar cell factory in Houston with the following in mind.
* Hyperscalers are building massive AI data center clusters in Texas. These data centers run 24/7 in intense heat.
* TOYO specializes in HJT solar technology. Unlike standard panels, HJT thriving in extreme heat without losing power efficiency. TOYO is engineering these cells alongside battery storage to sell 24/7 microgrids directly to power-hungry AI server farms.
* TOYO announced this month that they officially executed $185.6 million in master supply agreements with two major US solar energy developers. Under these deals, TOYO is supplying its premium solar modules to back a portfolio of commercial and utility-scale projects across Texas, New York, and Maine.
* Once this factory opens in late 2026, it will generate massive cash flow from lucrative U.S. Section 45X manufacturing tax credits. TOYO can then sell these credits, meaning future expansions can be funded by debt and internal revenue rather than secondary stock dilution.
**Valuation**
Let's look at the post-dilution math based on their $100M net income guidance:
* New Share Count: 38M original + 4.55M new = 42.55 million total shares.
* Post-Dilution EPS: $100,000,000 / 42,550,000 = $2.35 EPS.
If we apply standard sector multiples to that $2.35 EPS:
* Conservative 6x P/E multiple puts the stock at $14.10.
* Fair market 8x P/E multiple puts the stock at $18.80.
* Premium growth 10x PE multiple puts the stock at $23.50.
* Wall Street has a consensus price target of $16.50.
At $7.17, is TOYO a textbook case of market mispricing?