If you’ve been watching Clearway Energy stock, chances are you’ve found yourself wondering whether now is the right moment to buy, hold, or just keep an eye on it. At $27.25 a share, the stock has shown some sparks of life, up 0.4% over the past week and treading water over the past month. It’s easy to get caught up in those periodic headlines about renewable energy or shifting market winds. Most investors care about something more fundamental: is Clearway Energy undervalued or overpriced right now?

Let’s look at the numbers. So far this year, the stock is up 10.0%, adding to a solid 51.4% gain over the past five years. However, there has been real volatility along the way, including a 7.4% drop over the past three years. Recent price moves have been influenced by broader market optimism around clean energy and infrastructure, even as investors weigh longer-term risks and shifting growth expectations. While excitement has been tempered by some cautious sentiment in the sector, there is no question that Clearway’s story is still being written.

When it comes to value, here is where things get a bit more interesting: based on six different valuation checks, Clearway gets a score of 2, meaning it is considered undervalued by two of the metrics analysts typically watch. But are these numbers really telling the whole story? Next, we will break down these valuation approaches to see what they reveal, and why there might be an even more insightful way to judge Clearway’s true investment potential.

Clearway Energy scores just 2/6 on our valuation checks. See what other red flags we found in the full valuation breakdown.

The Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model estimates the value of a company by projecting its future cash flows and discounting them back to today’s value. For Clearway Energy, this approach involves looking at expected Free Cash Flow (FCF) over the coming years and aggregating those to arrive at an intrinsic value per share.

Currently, Clearway Energy’s last twelve months of Free Cash Flow stand at $511.5 Million. Based on analyst estimates and extended projections, the company’s FCF is expected to fluctuate over the next decade, reaching approximately $385 Million by 2029. The early analyst projections cover up to 2029, and further estimates beyond this rely on extrapolation. These forecasts use the 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity model, factoring in both short-term analyst opinions and longer-term trends estimated by financial modeling platforms.

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