TYGO Tigo Energy, Inc.
CATEGORY BREAKDOWN
METRIC BREAKDOWN
Revenue Growth (YoY)
Year-over-year revenue growth rate
> 50% strong
Gross Margin
Revenue retained after direct costs
> 50% strong
Cash Runway
Months of cash at current burn rate
> 24 months ideal
Debt / Equity
Total debt relative to shareholder equity
< 25% strong
Price / Sales
Market cap relative to trailing revenue
< 3x strong
Rule of 40
Growth rate plus operating margin
> 40 excellent
Insider Ownership
Percentage of shares held by insiders
> 20% strong
Share Dilution (12M)
Share count increase over last 12 months
< 5% ideal
SCORE HISTORY
RESEARCH NOTE
BUSINESS SUMMARY
Tigo Energy makes module-level power electronics (MLPE) for solar installations — small electronic devices attached to each solar panel that perform DC optimization, monitoring, and rapid shutdown. The flagship product line is the TS4 platform, which sits between solar panels and the inverter.
The competitive landscape is dominated by Enphase Energy (ENPH) and SolarEdge (SEDG) — both significantly larger. Tigo's positioning is the panel-agnostic, inverter-agnostic alternative: its TS4 modules work with any panel manufacturer and any inverter brand, where Enphase and SolarEdge typically lock customers into their broader system architecture.
Revenue is product sales to solar-installer channels and panel-manufacturer partnerships. The customer is rarely the end-user homeowner; it is the installer or distributor who specs MLPE into a project.
MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The global MLPE market is structurally driven by safety regulation and performance optimization:
- NEC 2017+ rapid-shutdown requirements in the US mandate panel-level shutdown capability — MLPE is one of the standard solutions
- European and APAC residential solar growth drives MLPE attach rates as installation safety standards converge
- Commercial-and-industrial solar is a higher-volume but lower-margin segment with longer sales cycles
Where Tigo is positioned:
- Installer-channel relationships in distributed residential markets
- Panel-manufacturer partnerships that pre-integrate Tigo's MLPE at the factory
- International markets where Enphase has less coverage
Macro context: the global solar industry went through a deep destocking cycle in 2023-2024 after the 2020-2022 boom. By 2025, residential solar installations had begun to recover, though commercial-and-utility-scale segments are still navigating tax-credit and tariff uncertainty.
REVENUE QUALITY
The numbers reflect a recovery-stage hardware business:
- Gross margin 43% — moderate for hardware; reflects component-cost normalization and pricing pressure from larger competitors
- Operating margin — recovering but still cyclically pressured; the 2023-2024 destocking left structural overhead
- Revenue $104M TTM, growth 92% YoY — recovery off the destocking trough rather than steady-state growth
- P/S ~3.4 — reflects expectation that recovery continues; expensive if growth normalizes
What hides in the data: the 92% growth is largely base-effect from the 2023-2024 industry-wide destocking. The relevant question for forward-looking investors is what Tigo's revenue looks like in normalized inventory conditions, not the recovery trajectory.
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
The defensible asset is the panel-agnostic positioning and the installer-channel relationships:
- Universal compatibility — TS4 works with any panel and inverter, which is genuinely valuable to installers managing multiple brand inventories
- Factory-integrated panel partnerships — when a panel manufacturer ships pre-integrated Tigo MLPE, it creates structural specification advantages
- Cost-positioning below Enphase microinverter pricing, with the trade-off being less integration
What it is not: a moat against Enphase or SolarEdge in their core integrated-system markets. Both have meaningfully larger R&D budgets, broader product portfolios, and stronger end-customer brand recognition.
GROWTH THESIS
Three things have to work:
- Solar-industry recovery continues. Residential and commercial installation volume drives MLPE attach rates. A second destocking cycle would compress Tigo's revenue mechanically.
- Installer-channel relationships deepen rather than fragmenting back to Enphase / SolarEdge full-system specs.
- Cost discipline holds as revenue scales. Tigo's gross margin needs to expand from 43% toward 50%+ to support a sustainable operating-margin recovery.
KEY RISKS
Three specific risks:
-
Solar-industry second destocking cycle. Tariff changes, tax-credit modifications, or residential-financing-rate changes could trigger another inventory correction that compresses Tigo's revenue without anything changing operationally.
-
Enphase / SolarEdge competitive response. Both larger competitors could undercut on MLPE pricing if either decided to defend market share more aggressively. Tigo has limited cost-cutting flexibility.
-
Recovery-trajectory mean-reversion. The 92% YoY growth flatters; if normalized growth proves to be 15-20% rather than continuing trajectory, the multiple compresses meaningfully.
VERDICT
The 86.4/100 score captures the recovery-trajectory and the just-positive operational economics, but materially overstates through-cycle quality by treating recovery growth as steady-state. Once the base-effect from destocking lapses (call it Q4 2026 at the earliest), the score will compress mechanically.
For investors who believe the solar-industry recovery has multi-year runway and want a smaller, more agile MLPE-pure-play below Enphase scale, TYGO is a credible name. For investors needing scale-protected market position or wanting solar-industry-pure-exposure via the largest player, ENPH is the more defensible name and TYGO is the higher-beta alternative.
The single metric to watch next is gross margin trajectory through subsequent quarters. Above 45% suggests the cost-discipline thesis is working; below 40% signals competitive pricing pressure is compressing the operational recovery.
Report last updated: May 5, 2026
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DATA INFO
Last updated: May 4, 2026
Sources: SEC EDGAR, Financial Modeling Prep, Yahoo Finance. Not financial advice.