Blink Charging (BLNK) Stock Analysis & Winston Score
Blink Charging builds and operates electric vehicle (EV) charging stations across the United States and several other countries. Its main products are charging hardware — the physical stations installed at places like parking lots, hotels, grocery stores, and apartment buildings — along with the software that runs them. The company sells charging equipment to property owners and also owns and operates many stations directly, collecting fees from drivers who plug in. Blink makes money two ways: selling charging hardware to businesses and earning revenue each time a driver pays to charge their car at a Blink-owned station. It operates primarily in the US but has expanded into Europe and the Middle East. With a market cap of roughly $100 million and an operating margin of nearly negative 64%, the company is losing significant money and faces intense competition from larger rivals like ChargePoint and Tesla's Supercharger network. The key risk is whether EV adoption grows fast enough — and whether Blink can cut costs quickly enough — to reach profitability before it needs to raise more cash.
Winston Score: 8/100 — Weak
Weak fundamentals across most pillars.
- Quality: Weak (1/30)
- Growth: Weak (1/20)
- Cash Flow: Weak (0/10)
- Stability: Good (5/10)
- Valuation: Data not available (0/10)
- Ownership: Weak (1/15)
