EV Charging Infrastructure
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All Stocks (44)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
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SHEL
Shell plc
EV charging infrastructure deployment as a direct Mobility-related product/service.
|
$237.63B |
$73.30
+0.12%
|
|
BP
BP p.l.c.
EV charging infrastructure development and related services in BP's mobility segment.
|
$97.72B |
$36.03
+0.88%
|
|
F
Ford Motor Company
Ford offers EV charging infrastructure/home charger solutions as part of customer offering.
|
$51.06B |
$12.87
+3.67%
|
|
DIDIY
DiDi Global Inc.
DiDi has built and operates an EV charging network across many cities, enabling electric mobility services.
|
$25.46B |
$5.31
|
|
RIVN
Rivian Automotive, Inc.
Rivian operates an EV charging network (Rivian Adventure Network) and charges for non-Rivian EVs as part of its ecosystem.
|
$18.03B |
$14.83
+1.16%
|
|
LI
Li Auto Inc.
Li Auto operates China's largest automaker‑backed EV charging network with high-speed and urban charging, enabling BEV usability.
|
$17.98B |
$18.09
+2.49%
|
|
LECO
Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc.
Velion 150 kW EV fast charger product places LECO in EV charging infrastructure hardware.
|
$12.64B |
$228.59
+1.12%
|
|
NIO
NIO Inc.
EV charging and battery swapping infrastructure is a core service/product network.
|
$11.47B |
$5.61
+3.89%
|
|
VFS
VinFast Auto Ltd.
V-GREEN charging network and deployment of charging portals in Indonesia indicate a direct charging infrastructure offering.
|
$7.56B |
$3.12
-9.81%
|
|
ZK
ZEEKR Intelligent Technology Holding Limited
Operates ultra-fast EV charging infrastructure (V4 megawatt charger), a core product/service.
|
$6.85B |
$26.77
-0.76%
|
|
VNT
Vontier Corporation
Driivz (EV charging software platform) and Konect (turnkey EV charging solution) directly address EV charging infrastructure and management.
|
$5.12B |
$35.01
+3.12%
|
|
ENPH
Enphase Energy, Inc.
EV Charging Infrastructure: Development of EV chargers including bidirectional V2H/V2G capabilities.
|
$3.52B |
$27.02
+3.46%
|
|
PSNYW
Polestar Automotive Holding UK PLC
Polestar offers EV charging infrastructure and access through Polestar Charge.
|
$3.45B |
$0.22
-4.17%
|
|
NYAX
Nayax Ltd.
Significant expansion in EV charging with UNO Mini embedded in chargers and related partnerships.
|
$1.50B |
$45.30
+1.91%
|
|
GLP
Global Partners LP
Strategic EV charging partnerships indicate engagement in EV charging infrastructure.
|
$1.43B |
$43.32
+1.03%
|
|
EVGO
EVgo, Inc.
EVgo operates and expands a DC fast charging network, owning and operating public charging stalls.
|
$897.87M |
$2.91
+3.93%
|
|
HY
Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc.
Hydrogen fuel cell and mobile charging platform initiatives imply EV charging infrastructure capabilities for industrial use.
|
$498.84M |
$28.25
+6.64%
|
|
CHPT
ChargePoint Holdings, Inc.
ChargePoint's core business is designing, marketing and deploying networked EV charging infrastructure and related services.
|
$181.43M |
$8.00
+1.14%
|
|
MAMO
Massimo Group Common Stock
EV charging infrastructure aligns with the company's EV charger product line.
|
$169.06M |
$3.70
-7.50%
|
|
ALTG
Alta Equipment Group Inc.
Alta is pursuing e-mobility initiatives, including EV charging infrastructure as part of its offering.
|
$142.93M |
$4.51
+7.64%
|
|
BLNK
Blink Charging Co.
Blink directly builds, operates, and monetizes EV charging infrastructure and the associated network software.
|
$136.13M |
$1.28
-2.65%
|
|
NXXT
NextNRG Inc.
Company directly provides wireless EV charging infrastructure and related energy/charging services as part of its energy platform.
|
$129.17M |
$1.01
-13.25%
|
|
KNDI
Kandi Technologies Group, Inc.
Battery swapping and EV charging infrastructure equipment developed for heavy trucks.
|
$84.02M |
$0.98
+0.34%
|
|
XCH
XCHG Limited American Depositary Share
Company designs, manufactures and sells DC fast EV chargers, i.e., EV charging infrastructure.
|
$64.07M |
$1.09
-6.84%
|
|
SUUN
PowerBank Corporation
Company is expanding to EV charging infrastructure development/operation, a core energy-infrastructure service.
|
$60.60M |
$1.74
+5.79%
|
|
GGR
Gogoro Inc.
Gogoro operates a battery-swapping network and related infrastructure, aligning with EV charging infrastructure as a core ecosystem component.
|
$55.65M |
$3.88
-1.40%
|
|
OESX
Orion Energy Systems, Inc.
Major growth driver: EV charging infrastructure and related turnkey solutions (Voltrek).
|
$52.24M |
$13.60
-7.36%
|
|
PPSI
Pioneer Power Solutions, Inc.
Pioneer Power's core offering is off-grid, mobile DC fast charging (e-Boost), i.e., EV charging infrastructure.
|
$39.61M |
$3.50
+3.86%
|
|
WBX
Wallbox N.V.
Wallbox's core offerings are residential and commercial EV charging hardware (Pulsar series, Supernova) and bidirectional Quasar chargers, defining its EV charging infrastructure business.
|
$33.03M |
$3.02
-0.66%
|
|
BEEM
Beam Global
Beam's EV ARC provides rapidly deployable, off-grid EV charging infrastructure, directly aligning with the EV charging infrastructure investable theme.
|
$30.90M |
$1.73
+2.07%
|
|
VVPR
VivoPower International PLC
Tembo SES mobile charging solutions and EV adoption infrastructure imply EV charging infrastructure offerings.
|
$22.85M |
$2.25
+8.41%
|
|
XOS
Xos, Inc.
Xos Hub is a rapid-deployment mobile charging infrastructure and energy storage solution.
|
$19.73M |
$2.23
+3.72%
|
|
GTEC
Greenland Technologies Holding Corporation
HEVI Energy includes mobile DC charging solutions, constituting EV charging infrastructure hardware/services.
|
$18.09M |
$1.04
-2.34%
|
|
TURB
Turbo Energy, S.A. American Depositary Shares
System supports EV fleet charging infrastructure (Uber Spain project) by enabling higher charging capacity.
|
$14.10M |
$1.35
+3.85%
|
|
HCAI
Hauchen AI Parking Management Technology Holding Co., Ltd.
Expansion into two-wheeled EV charging infrastructure aligns with EV Charging Infrastructure.
|
$11.67M |
$0.40
|
|
TLIH
Ten-League International Holdings Limited Ordinary Shares
Involvement in EV charging infrastructure for port electrification initiatives.
|
$9.77M |
$0.37
+5.80%
|
|
UCAR
U Power Limited
Battery-swapping stations for EVs and related network software.
|
$6.24M |
$1.90
-3.56%
|
|
POLA
Polar Power, Inc.
POLA is expanding mobile EV chargers and CCS-compatible solutions for EV charging infrastructure.
|
$5.45M |
$2.29
-1.08%
|
|
CREG
Smart Powerr Corp.
Part of the integrated PV/energy storage ecosystem includes charging infrastructure components or services.
|
$3.80M |
$1.29
+1.57%
|
|
EVTV
Envirotech Vehicles, Inc.
EV Charging Infrastructure: Vision to offer integrated charging platforms as part of a multi-modal EV ecosystem.
|
$3.67M |
$1.03
+3.50%
|
|
FLYE
Fly-E Group, Inc. Common Stock
Battery swap/charging infrastructure for delivery bikes, a form of EV support infrastructure.
|
$2.44M |
$3.94
+1.81%
|
|
JZXN
Jiuzi Holdings, Inc.
Core business segment involves building, operating, and maintaining high-power EV charging networks.
|
$1.99M |
$0.17
-12.94%
|
|
OZSC
Ozop Energy Solutions, Inc.
Company highlights development of EV charging infrastructure, aligning with EV charging networks and services.
|
$1.94M |
$0.00
|
|
MULN
Mullen Automotive, Inc.
Company is pursuing EV charging infrastructure, including mobile charging units (EnviroCharge) as part of its product/services offering.
|
$1 |
$0.12
|
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# Executive Summary
* The EV charging infrastructure industry's expansion is critically dependent on robust government funding, making regulatory support the most significant near-term growth catalyst and risk factor.
* Intense competition and price pressure are accelerating market consolidation and forcing a necessary strategic pivot away from low-margin hardware sales.
* The most successful players are shifting to high-margin, recurring revenue from software and services, with subscription margins exceeding 60% for market leaders.
* Technological innovation, particularly in universal charging connectors and software-driven reliability, is becoming a key competitive differentiator to attract and retain users.
* A clear divergence in financial health is emerging: profitable, cash-flow positive software/payment specialists are separating from hardware-focused players still facing significant net losses.
* The fundamental demand driver remains strong, with EV sales in North America and Europe growing 16-22% year-over-year, ensuring a long-term tailwind for network utilization.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The EV charging infrastructure industry is in a phase of government-catalyzed expansion, where public funding mechanisms are the most critical determinant of near-term growth. The recent restoration of the $5 billion National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) Formula Program in the U.S. and active deployment of funds like the UK's Local Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Pilot Fund (LEVI) are unlocking capital for rapid network build-outs. This direct funding is essential for the capital-intensive nature of the business, directly improving project economics and accelerating deployment schedules. Companies adept at navigating these programs, such as EVgo through its $1.25 billion U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) loan and ChargePoint via its Sourcewell public agency contract, are positioned to gain significant market share. This reliance also presents the primary risk, as any future funding freezes or policy shifts could immediately stall growth.
This government-fueled growth has attracted numerous entrants, creating a fragmented and intensely competitive landscape. Anecdotal evidence suggests a slowdown and capital reallocation among smaller players, signaling the beginning of a consolidation phase. This environment is exerting significant pressure on hardware pricing and profitability, forcing companies to evolve their business models to survive. Blink Charging's 70% year-over-year drop in product sales in Q1 2025 is a stark example of this pressure.
The primary opportunity lies in transitioning from hardware sales to more profitable, predictable software-as-a-service (SaaS) and network service revenues, as demonstrated by the 60%+ GAAP subscription margins achieved by leaders like ChargePoint. The key risk is execution failure in this transition, where companies burdened by low-margin hardware and high operating costs may be unable to compete with well-capitalized, efficient owner-operators or high-margin software specialists. Companies are also leveraging technological advancements and interoperability to gain a competitive edge, with innovations in charging speed, universal connectors, and AI-driven reliability improving user experience and reducing costs. Underlying these trends, the foundational macro tailwind of increasing EV adoption rates continues to support the industry's long-term growth thesis.
## Competitive Landscape
The EV charging infrastructure market is fragmented but shows signs of consolidation, with players differentiating through distinct business models rather than just technology. ChargePoint, for instance, holds over 60% market share in publicly available networked AC charging ports in North America, indicating concentration in certain segments.
Some of the most visible players, like EVgo, focus on a capital-intensive owner-operator model. Their core strategy involves building, owning, and operating a network of charging stations, capturing revenue directly from electricity sales, subscriptions, and network fees. This approach offers direct control over reliability and customer experience and benefits most directly from rising utilization rates, but it is extremely capital-intensive with long payback periods on assets. EVgo's strategy is centered on building, owning, and operating a network of high-power DC fast chargers in strategic urban and suburban locations, funded by significant debt facilities.
In contrast, other major firms like ChargePoint pursue a more capital-light approach, providing the underlying hardware and open software platform for others to operate. Their core strategy involves selling charging hardware and a cloud-based software platform to a wide range of customers, with revenue coming from initial hardware sales and recurring, high-margin software subscriptions. This model scales quickly and generates predictable, high-margin software revenue, but it is reliant on hardware sales, which are subject to intense price competition. ChargePoint dominates the North American Level 2 AC market by selling hardware and its open ChargePoint Platform, with 40% of its revenue now coming from high-margin (61%) software subscriptions.
A third group of highly profitable companies, such as Nayax, acts as specialized enablers, providing critical components like embedded payment systems. Their core strategy is to provide a critical component of the value chain—typically payment systems or operational software—to charger manufacturers (OEMs) and network operators. This "picks and shovels" play on the entire industry's growth offers the highest margins and is very capital-light, creating customer stickiness once technology is embedded. Nayax provides embedded payment solutions (UNO Mini) for EV chargers, driving high-margin (52.8%) recurring SaaS and payment processing revenue that now constitutes 74% of its total revenue.
Beyond these models, unique, closed-ecosystem models like NIO's battery-swapping network represent a differentiated but less common strategy. NIO operates 3,542 Power Swap stations worldwide, having completed over 84 million swaps.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth is sharply bifurcating, separating companies successfully capturing recurring service revenue from those exposed to volatile and declining hardware sales. This bifurcation is a direct result of the intense competition and strategic pivots identified as key industry trends. Companies insulated by high-margin, recurring software and payment contracts, such as Nayax, are showing resilient growth, with its revenue increasing by 22% year-over-year organically in Q2 2025. In contrast, companies still heavily reliant on one-time hardware sales, like Blink Charging, are suffering from intense price pressure and customer project delays, leading to sharp revenue declines. Blink Charging's total revenue declined by 45% year-over-year in Q1 2025, primarily driven by a 70% drop in product sales.
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A significant divergence in profitability is evident, with specialized software/payment players achieving strong positive net income and high margins, while most infrastructure operators remain unprofitable but are on different trajectories toward breakeven. The divergence is explained by the inherent economics of the business models. The software/enabler model, exemplified by Nayax, is inherently higher margin and has already reached scale and profitability, reporting $11.7 million in net income and a 48.3% gross margin in Q2 2025.
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The platform model, as seen with ChargePoint, shows a clear path to profitability through its high-margin subscription segment, which achieved a record GAAP subscription margin of 61% in Q2 FY26. The owner-operator model, represented by EVgo, is improving profitability as utilization increases and is now generating positive operating cash flow of $3.8 million in Q2 2025. However, it still reports negative net income due to high depreciation from its large asset base, though it is nearing Adjusted EBITDA breakeven at -$1.9 million in Q2 2025.
The dominant theme in capital allocation is aggressive investment in growth, funded primarily by debt and equity raises rather than internal cash flow. Given the early stage of the market build-out and the catalyst of government funding, companies are prioritizing network expansion and technology development over shareholder returns. Capital is being raised externally to capture land-grab opportunities. EVgo exemplifies this theme perfectly, securing a $1.25 billion loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Energy and a $225 million commercial bank loan facility specifically to accelerate stall deployment.
The industry's financial health is mixed and directly reflects the capital intensity of each business model. Balance sheet strength is a function of profitability and capital needs. Capital-light, profitable companies like Nayax are generating cash, reporting $172 million in cash and cash equivalents as of June 30, 2025. Capital-intensive but well-managed companies, such as ChargePoint, have secured large cash buffers to fund operations, with $195 million in cash on hand, an undrawn $150 million revolving credit facility, and cash usage of less than $2 million for Q2 FY26.
{{chart_2}}