🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋

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🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋

🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋

@BatteryBuffett

May you live in interesting times

Katılım Temmuz 2023
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🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋@BatteryBuffett·
This is why $EOSE Indensity actually matters. The image makes it clear. On the right is what ~100 MWh per acre looked like with the old Eos cubes. A 1 GWh system needed something like 10 acres, which immediately ruled out data centres and most sites near load, regardless of how safe the chemistry was. On the left is what Indensity changes. Same zinc chemistry, completely different architecture. By building vertically around a steel superstructure, Eos compresses that same 1 GWh into roughly one acre. In hindsight, this was always the plan. There is no way Eos could have seriously targeted data centres while accepting the footprint of the cubes. Zinc’s safety advantage only becomes economically useful once you use it to build up instead of out. I do not think the market has absorbed what this unlocks. This is not just about data centres. It opens up urban deployments, tight substations, constrained grid nodes, and sites next to existing gas generation where land is scarce but firm power is valuable. Indensity lets Eos bring zinc into places lithium struggles, and challenge lithium on one of its historical strengths: density.
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋 tweet media
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋@BatteryBuffett

Very rough estimate of the land usage required to reach similar GWh stored if you used Eos Indensity at 1 GWh / acre instead of Tesla Megapack $EOSE (Green square)

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🇬🇧 FI is awesome 😎
🇬🇧 FI is awesome 😎@GrahamCompton·
I don't normally share actual figures, but here is my T212 Invest account. It's been a good month.
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Thierry from arvy 🇨🇭
Thierry from arvy 🇨🇭@ThierryBorgeat·
The price to rent an Nvidia H200 just collapsed from $7/hr to $4/hr in three weeks. A -40% drop in the cost of the single most strategic asset in tech. When the underlying commodity that powers your entire thesis loses 40% of its value in a month, that usually means one of two things: supply finally caught up, or demand was never as deep as the headlines said. Either way, somebody is selling. So why is the AI trade still pricing in scarcity?
Thierry from arvy 🇨🇭 tweet media
Thierry from arvy 🇨🇭@ThierryBorgeat

🚨 The AI ROI numbers are starting to look very ugly. Even under "best case" assumptions — assuming zero costs, just revenue against capex — the Financial Times calculated the implied return on hyperscaler AI investment from 2025 to 2030. Only one of them clears positive. Implied return on AI investment (FT / Panmure Liberum) – Microsoft: -9.2% – Alphabet: -15.7% – Amazon: +7.2% – Meta: -28.8% – Oracle: -35.6% And remember: that's assuming zero costs. In reality, GPUs depreciate, power bills run, salaries get paid. The real returns are worse. This is exactly why the dot-com comparison keeps coming up. Incredible technology does not automatically mean sustainable economics. The internet survived. Most internet companies didn't. Two anecdotes from this week alone Vivek Garipalli, Fortune 20 insider: a CEO asked for $1B in AI-driven opex savings this year. The team spent $200M on tokens chasing it. The results? Modest customer service savings and slightly less hiring in engineering. The CEO has now ordered token costs to be dramatically slashed because the ROI isn't there. Axios: an AI consultant reported a single client spent half a billion dollars in one month after forgetting to put usage limits on Claude licenses for employees. Right now hyperscalers are spending trillions hoping future demand catches up to present capex. That's not certainty. That's a leveraged bet. The technology is real. The infrastructure buildout is real. The eventual winners will be real. But "AI is transformative" and "every hyperscaler will earn its capex back" are two completely different statements. In 2000, the internet was real too. Cisco has recovered. After 26 years…

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🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋@BatteryBuffett·
@alojohhardcore Also down a little on $PLTR but what you’ve said makes a lot of sense - particularly retail moving on to other names putting downward pressure on the multiple it previously enjoyed. This extra detail is what’s missing when you just look at the corridors
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🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋 retweetledi
Menshaw | Hybrid Investing
$EOSE 🚨Thursday is deal day 😉 “create a path for FPUSA to acquire and convert Stella’s late-stage pipeline of more than 2 GWh of battery energy storage system (“BESS”) development projects” “Stella is one of the most accomplished execution platforms in U.S. utility-scale storage with more than 2 GW and 4.4 GWh of projects developed, built, and operating. Their work alongside FPUSA on the Bimergen portfolio has validated the model. This strategic partnership announced today sets the stage for Stella’s pipeline to begin flowing onto the FPUSA platform—bringing committed manufacturing capacity, institutional capital, and insured performance to a deep set of construction-ready assets in the markets where long-duration storage is needed most.” — Aaron Maczonis, Managing Director at Cerberus Capital Management
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🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋@BatteryBuffett·
@alojohhardcore Very nice 👌 as a recent subscriber - how should I best position myself to get to a solid portfolio? I’ve been building up a decent cash position by trimming winners - this market is making me nervous
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🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋@BatteryBuffett·
@AnishP144 x.com/batterybuffett… I’ve thought about it
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋@BatteryBuffett

I’m increasingly convinced $EOSE can achieve a $300 share price. The market backdrop is the first part of it. Rystad and BNEF both have 2030 storage installs in the ~400–450 GWh a year range. Those numbers were set before the surge in AI and data centre demand, so even the official forecasts are probably on the low side. Then there’s how Eos scales. Their whole approach is based on modular manufacturing lines they can repeat quickly. They don’t need multi-year, multi-billion $ lithium-ion style gigafactory builds. Once a line is proven, they can add the next one much faster. In a market growing at this speed, that’s a huge advantage that is easily overlooked. They’ve also been talking more about shorter duration and multi-cycle use cases. Their chemistry can handle that without the usual degradation, which moves them from a niche “long duration only” story into a much bigger slice of the storage market. I don’t even think that’s fully necessary to achieve $300 as longer durations have an increasing slice of the market going forwards anyway. The new COO is a massive positive as well. This is exactly the stage where you need someone who’s scaled manufacturing before and can tighten operations, he’s hit the ground running in the 60 days he’s been with Eos and I’m very confident he will continue to bring costs down and help them scale rapidly. The numbers themselves are straightforward. At roughly $250/kWh ASP, ~30% margin, and with Eos qualifying for the full $45/kWh 45X credit, each 1 GWh of annual output comes out to about $120m of earnings power. Use a cautious future share count of around 600m and a normal growth multiple (25x), and you get roughly $5/share per GWh. If they eventually build out to ~60 GWh, you get about 60 × $5 = $300/share. To put that 60 GWh in context, it would only be around 13–15% of the 400–450 GWh market that Rystad/BNEF are forecasting for 2030, and probably an even smaller share if installs end up higher because of AI and data-centre demand. And that’s before you consider that fast-growing manufacturing stories often overshoot on multiples during the ramp. If that ever happens here, the share price could go higher than the basic maths suggests, or it could mean they undershoot 60 GWh but get a more favourable multiple on the way up. I’m not focusing on lines / factories anymore because that seems largely irrelevant at this point. They can scale supply fast enough now to match the demand as it comes in. They still need to execute, obviously. But the path to $300 seems increasingly possible.

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Anish 🪫
Anish 🪫@AnishP144·
$EOSE None of you have any clue how high EOS SP can go in the next few years. My $100 price target will be peanuts if the batteries perform reliably in the field and Line 2 runs efficiently. Huge ifs and a binary bet, but for me the risk/reward is worth it. The company is showing it can scale (proof in much more efficient Line 2), Orders are coming (Frontier Power USA), Field data will follow soon as more projects like Viejas are commissioned and EOS keeps delivering $50-70M worth of cubes every quarter from Line 1. The cost curve of batteries will come down, and EOS will outcompete lithium batteries in grid-scale BESS as the raw material and manufacturing costs for zinc batteries at scale are going to be far cheaper. Listen to what Musk said when he planned Model 3: the current lithium battery price is too high, but we know the raw material cost is far cheaper and improving the manufacturing process will bring prices down closer to the material cost. This is exactly what’s going to happen with EOS Zinc batteries and we already have Cosmos supported by SoftBank trying to copy it. We have at least 5 years of head start, patents and US government behind it. EOS batteries also have unique advantages like fire safety, recyclability, silent operation, long-duration storage (4-16 hours), a 20-year lifetime, and multiple cycles per day compared to lithium batteries. If the story plays out the way I imagine, we are looking at a company that will be selling its batteries to every data center, utility, hospital, military base, factory, shopping malls, and even homes in the future. It could be worth hundreds of billions if not a trillion-dollar market cap in the next 5-10 years. DYOR
Reasonably Approximating 🇺🇸 🇺🇦 🔋 🅰️@bert_gilfoyle

$EOSE "Progress in Thornhill…debugging line #2. We’ve applied learnings from Line #1 that can be retrofitted … couldn’t be prouder of how this team is focused." - Mastrangelo

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Politics UK
Politics UK@PolitlcsUK·
🚨 BREAKING: Net migration to the UK fell to 171,000 from 331,000 in the year to December 2025 - the lowest point since 2012
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🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋@BatteryBuffett·
It’s pretty clear why they no longer talk about factory 2 or AMAZE - they can’t sell the product as easily as they’d predicted. Why is that? Well the product has two big problems. First, it seems the cubes they shipped early to get field data for new customers had big issues. They’ve just told us that they were seeing 35% RTE on one project which is obviously horrendous. It’s not exactly the kind of field data potential customers are going to look at and decide to place a big order. Second, the energy density per acre. Cubes are at about 100MWh / acre. Data centre customer don’t want to take up more land they could fill with GPUs with batteries (see my pinned tweet) The good news is it seems they’ve largely solved these problems, with DawnOS and Indensity. The problem is Indensity doesn’t exist yet, beyond some renders and a prototype. They’ve not explained where it will be manufactured but I’m assuming Marshal will product it. Are customers going to be happy using generic Z3 field data from cubes to purchase Indensity cores? Don’t know. So we’re back to taking a leap of faith on what now seems to be a great product. It seems they’re also not confident enough about the demand side to take any more risks by ramping Amaze more quickly. In summary, where are the fucking orders?
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Reasonably Approximating 🇺🇸 🇺🇦 🔋 🅰️
$EOSE I'll be frank. I have no idea how to valuate Eos now. I did in the past, because it was all messaged to us through the strategic outlook statements, Project AMAZE and the DOE validation of that, and some very simple calculations that followed from that. At this point, Project AMAZE seems to be in question. The company is not signaling 8 GWH/yr in 2027, let alone 2026. Factory 2 Works hasn't been mentioned lately at all. The company has never walked back their previous statements. Either they are afraid to, or they're hoping we've forgotten. There have been lots of concerns about quality and rework. Even so, to the extent the company can execute with excellence on the manufacturing front, it's still gated by customer delivery windows going forward. Indensity is a new design concept that appears to obviate much of the strategic plan laid out in late 2023. We have no idea idea what COGS are for those, or how long it will take to achieve those. Maybe it's much better. Presumably it is. But we've been given zero details or guidance about it. At the same time, the company is forming Frontier Power USA, a new infrastructure financing / development / IPP vehicle. It sounds promising, but we have no numerical guidance into the service revenue or multiplying effects that vehicle will provide. I feel like I don't actually know what I own. I can't see the future 2 years from now anymore. Literally no one is showing their spreadsheets these days, because they have no clue how to quantify any of this either. There nevertheless seems to be this unquantifiable hope that they never would have leased this huge building that can house 4 lines with single-piece flow efficiency, and the Nova Place office space in downtown Pittsburgh to host a software hub and hire smart guys from Carnegie Melon and MIT to continually improve their battery performance, if it somehow didn't have a huge payoff. All with the continued support of DOE and the state of PA. I feel like nearly every investor still in this today are flying blind and continuing the struggle on palpable but intangible hopium.
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🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋
🔋 Battery Buffett 🔋@BatteryBuffett·
@SXSouthLamar Yeah, this blew my mind. They did say this was one specific site so I’m assuming this was a site with some issues and not typical
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South By South Lamar
South By South Lamar@SXSouthLamar·
For what it’s worth, no way I would have started buying $EOSE two years ago if i knew these were the RTEs. Shout out to my blind luck and DawnOS 😂
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Reasonably Approximating 🇺🇸 🇺🇦 🔋 🅰️
It would be classic $EOSE to miss numbers after already announcing them early. "Revenue for Q1 was $35 million. Regrettably, a calculation error in previously disclosed revenue estimates was discovered. That's on me, and we have already taken steps to ensure this won't happen again. While we are disappointed with the year's start, we ended the quarter with just over $670 million in backlog, booking nearly $1.8 million in new orders across 3 different customers. We are exciting about getting field data for these diverse use cases, sometime in the next 18 to 36 months."
Reasonably Approximating 🇺🇸 🇺🇦 🔋 🅰️ tweet media
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Anon Opin.
Anon Opin.@anon_opin·
Civil servant here. If Farage wins the next GE, he'll call us all back to the office 5 days a week. The CS will then be on the verge of collapse, as thousands of people will either retire immediately or quit, due to the removal of WFH. Cheap optics will meet reality.
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Phil Roberts 🔋☀️🔌
Phil Roberts 🔋☀️🔌@philroberts·
Good product, good company, well made, can count the number of issues I’ve had in 15 yrs on one hand Generally very little profit in retailing solar panels, commoditised market, few real USP’s for any solar companies let alone CSI it’s more often a relationship or price business Canadian have everything they need to compete but nothing particularly standout in the industry Bit of a change in the solar market at the moment as they have started applying tariffs on Chinese exports of solar at 9% I think it is It’s a Chinese solar company despite what the name might suggest I generally don’t invest in solar companies as they all kill each other for growth and fail to capture any profit but will have another look
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Politics UK
Politics UK@PolitlcsUK·
🚨 NEW: A Cabinet Minister says they have now lost confidence in Keir Starmer and expect the Cabinet to move against him [@theipaper]
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Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer·
It’s good news that the Strait of Hormuz has now reopened. This must be a long lasting and workable solution, without tolls or restrictions on routes. Today we announced our joint plan with France and other international partners to protect freedom of navigation. We need to see a return to peace and stability, and a permanent ceasefire.
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British Bastard 🇬🇧
British Bastard 🇬🇧@BritishBastardX·
🚨A small dinghy full of illegal migrants has capsized in the English Channel after reportedly losing control in rough conditions. Authorities confirm that 23 people are currently missing, while 3 individuals have been rescued safely and are receiving urgent care. I wont lose no sleep, will you?
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Ezra Cohen
Ezra Cohen@Ezra_Cohen_·
No one should lose out by working more, but the UK’s tax cliffs can mean exactly that for low & high earners. In a new @britishprogress paper, we show how the government can end this at no extra cost. And we built a tool to show how it would affect you: tax-cliffs.vercel.app
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