Can this Canadian tech stock fix the U.S. power grid?
Haywood Capital Markets analyst Gianluca Tucci reiterated his “Buy” rating on Tantalus Systems (Tantalus Systems Holding Stock Quote, Chart, News, Analysts, Financials TSX:GRID) and raised his price target to C$8.25 from C$6.50 in a Feb. 2 report, citing strengthening fundamentals and what he described as growing strategic relevance in grid modernization.
Tucci said Tantalus announced three developments that further reinforce its investment thesis, including an expanded supply-chain partnership with Aclara, a key operating milestone, and new intellectual-property protection.
Under the expanded collaboration, Aclara — a division of Hubbell, a roughly US$26-billion market-capitalization industrial conglomerate — will factory-integrate Tantalus’ TRUConnect modules directly into its residential and commercial meters. Tucci said the move removes friction from deployments by eliminating third-party retrofits, reducing lead times and installation costs, improving margin potential, and smoothing the path to revenue recognition. He added that factory integration also positions Tantalus as a native option within Aclara’s large utility customer base.
“With the continued proliferation of connected devices and the adoption of EVs further straining an already outdated utility and power distribution grid, we believe GRID’s positioning should provide comfort to investors,” Tucci said. “The company’s next-generation TRUSense Gateway should add meaningful backlog to a proven business model.”
Tantalus also surpassed four million endpoints delivered through its Grid Modernization Platform, a milestone Tucci described as an important validation point for utility CIOs. He said reaching that scale moves the platform from emerging technology to proven infrastructure, a critical factor when bidding on larger Tier-2 and public-power contracts.
In addition, the company secured a new patent covering its Modular Energy Intelligence Unit, which Tucci said strengthens its competitive moat around edge computing and distributed energy-resource (DER) management. As power grids become increasingly bi-directional with electric vehicles and distributed generation, he said intelligence must move closer to the edge of the network, rather than relying solely on centralized cloud processing.
“With the continued proliferation of connected devices and the adoption of EVs further straining an already outdated utility and power distribution grid, we believe GRID’s positioning should provide comfort to investors,” Tucci said. “The company’s next-generation TRUSense Gateway should add meaningful backlog to a proven business model.”
Tucci reiterated that Tantalus remains one of Haywood’s top picks for 2026, arguing that utilities’ need to modernize grid infrastructure is becoming increasingly disconnected from cyclical demand trends elsewhere in the technology sector. He said while semiconductor demand may fluctuate, the requirement to optimize power distribution is structural and unavoidable, particularly as AI data-centre loads increase.
He also highlighted Tantalus as a potential M&A target, noting that its TRUSense technology is hardware-agnostic and could allow a large industrial acquirer to deploy grid-edge analytics across competitors’ installed meter bases. Tucci said that scarcity value could appeal to global industrial groups seeking to buy growth rather than build it organically.
Haywood modestly raised its forward estimates, increasing its fiscal 2026 revenue forecast to US$62.8-million from US$61.7-million, while maintaining Adjusted EBITDA at US$3.8-million. Fiscal 2027 revenue is now projected at US$77.2-million, with Adjusted EBITDA of US$7.6-million.
Tucci said Tantalus is expected to generate US$2.8-million in Adjusted EBITDA on US$53.7-million of revenue in fiscal 2025.
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Nick Waddell
Founder of Cantech Letter
Cantech Letter founder and editor Nick Waddell has lived in five Canadian provinces and is proud of his country's often overlooked contributions to the world of science and technology. Waddell takes a regular shift on the Canadian media circuit, making appearances on CTV, CBC and BNN, and contributing to publications such as Canadian Business and Business Insider.