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Energy Recovery caught my attention after a director made their largest-ever purchase, buying $100,000 of stock. The trade scored highly because it was a dip buy, a cluster buy, and came after the stock had fallen more than 40% from its highs. Another insider also bought shares around the same price level. The company sells energy recovery devices used in water desalination plants, a market that continues to grow as water scarcity becomes a bigger issue. Management also believes demand could benefit from AI-related data center expansion, which requires significant water infrastructure. The biggest issue right now is the Middle East. Roughly half of the company's revenue comes from the region, and ongoing conflict has delayed projects and forced management to withdraw guidance. Since a large portion of revenue comes from major projects, even small delays can have a significant impact on reported results. That's exactly what happened over the last few quarters. The stock was already hit after project delays hurt earnings, then fell again when management pulled guidance because of uncertainty surrounding the conflict. The market is now trying to determine whether these delays are temporary timing issues or signs of deeper problems. The bull case is straightforward. If tensions ease and projects move forward, the company could reinstate guidance and recover much of the lost revenue visibility. The balance sheet is also strong, with roughly $77 million in net cash and no major financial concerns. The bear case is that project delays continue, earnings remain volatile, and investors lose confidence in management's ability to forecast results. Adding to the uncertainty, the CEO recently stepped down, leaving investors to evaluate whether leadership changes will improve execution or create additional disruption.
Energy Recovery caught my attention after a director made their largest-ever purchase, buying $100,000 of stock. The trade scored highly because it was a dip buy, a cluster buy, and came after the stock had fallen more than 40% from its highs. Another insider also bought shares around the same price level. The company sells energy recovery devices used in water desalination plants, a market that continues to grow as water scarcity becomes a bigger issue. Management also believes demand could benefit from AI-related data center expansion, which requires significant water infrastructure. The biggest issue right now is the Middle East. Roughly half of the company's revenue comes from the region, and ongoing conflict has delayed projects and forced management to withdraw guidance. Since a large portion of revenue comes from major projects, even small delays can have a significant impact on reported results. That's exactly what happened over the last few quarters. The stock was already hit after project delays hurt earnings, then fell again when management pulled guidance because of uncertainty surrounding the conflict. The market is now trying to determine whether these delays are temporary timing issues or signs of deeper problems. The bull case is straightforward. If tensions ease and projects move forward, the company could reinstate guidance and recover much of the lost revenue visibility. The balance sheet is also strong, with roughly $77 million in net cash and no major financial concerns. The bear case is that project delays continue, earnings remain volatile, and investors lose confidence in management's ability to forecast results. Adding to the uncertainty, the CEO recently stepped down, leaving investors to evaluate whether leadership changes will improve execution or create additional disruption.

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