The page doesn't give a rating for max continuous amps.
- ga is a bit wimpy for the 100A "peak" rating if it's average draw. It's rated for 15 when used for house wiring and buried in an insulated wall. Might survive 100A inside the meter minus the covering and insulation - though I wouldn't trust it.
- A at 12V is 1200 W into your inverter - maybe 8A out of it at 120 after converter efficiency is taken into account. 10 100W lightbulbs and you're off-scale as well as risking a fire.
It's obviously intended for use with the small-load, house-battery-conserving 12V appliances in a vehicle - like an RV or boat, not for a homepower system.
I'd look for something purpose built - and with an external shunt. Or if I was going to work on the cheap I'd get one, tear it open, and replace the dinky internal shunt with a sturdy external one (made of wire rated for the current and scaling down the signal delivered to the meter).
Shunts are easy to build and moderately easy to calibrate if you have a decent meter for a reference. Should be easy to make a 10:1 scaled shunt for that one so the amp, watt, and KW hr ratings read the right digits with the decimal shifted.