Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
Trump's Solar Tariff Confusion Creates An
Opportunity
By Irina Slav
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
October 2, 2017
|
|
|
|
|
|
The solar sector is reeling from confusion, and stock prices
are reeling right along with it. The time it has taken investors and
traders to wrap their heads around Trump's industry tariffs and the
pyrrhic victory of two solar companies in a case against cheap Chinese
imports has seen stocks rally in a big way, and then fall just as hard.
When the International Trade Court
ruled in favor of plaintiffs Suniva and SolarWorld in their case
against cheap Chinese solar module and cell imports, reactions were
polarized: the U.S. solar industry was outraged—as it had been for most
of the duration of the court investigation—and investors, apparently,
were extremely upbeat for the future of this same outraged industry,
sending solar stocks sky-high.
The rally did not last long,
though. While investors' immediate reaction to the court ruling was of
the unsurprising knee-jerk variety, reality started to set in over the
last few days and solar stocks took a nosedive as sharp as the rally
they enjoyed last week. Just what the solar companies needed after the
ruling that threatened their chances of survival.
On the face of
it, the court case doesn't seem like such a big deal, but nothing could
be further from the truth. Narrowly speaking, bankrupt Suniva filed a
complaint with the ITC claiming that cheap Chinese solar panels and
cells were instrumental in the company's declining performance. Suniva,
whose owners are Chinese, was quickly joined by German-based SolarWorld
in its claim. The key word in the case was "flooded": the U.S. market,
the plaintiffs claimed, was flooded with Chinese-made cells and panels.
The solution? A floor price of US$0.78/W for modules and a US$0.40/W
tariff for solar cells—enter the broader picture.
One would
think that these two would effortlessly win the support of their local
sector players, competitors and all. But this is not what happened. What
did happen was exactly the opposite: the Solar Energy Industries
Association came down on Suniva and SolarWorld like a ton of bricks,
claiming that tariffs and floor prices would be a stab in the chest for
the U.S. solar industry, leading to project cancellations worth billions
of dollars and massive layoffs, to the tune of
a third of the total number currently employed in the industry.
Yet it's easy to see why the ruling resonated with traders. Tariffs
and floor prices are, after all, protective measures aimed—on the face
of it—at protecting U.S. solar businesses from cheap imports. The
problem is that sometimes, as in the Suniva/SolarWorld case, this is a
dangerous oversimplification.
Contrary to what the plaintiffs in
the case were claiming, there was no “flooding” of any sort, according
to the solar industry association in response to the court ruling. What
Chinese exporters did was merely provide U.S. solar installations
builders with the necessary materials—namely, cells and modules. In
fact, the SEIA said, the plaintiffs were trying to blame Chinese cell
and module makers for their own failure to turn in a profit because
their products were subpar, while the Chinese suppliers were simply
filling a critical gap amid booming demand for utility-scale solar
installations.
The shares of utility-scale solar companies saw
obvious effects of the investigation and the consequent ruling—chief
among these: First Solar's stock.
First Solar
(NYSE:FSLR)
The country's largest solar panel
manufacturer's shares added a stunning
78 percent between the end of March and last week, hitting US$51.99
on September 22, the day of the ruling.
That was the highest
price for the stock for the past 12 months.
On Monday, First
Solar's stock reversed to US$46.88 as investors started to wrap their
heads around the actual implications of the ITC ruling. As of
late-morning trading on Tuesday, FSLR was at $46.44, down 0.94 percent
on the day and down over 5 percent on the week.
IMG URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com//images/tinymce/fs1.jpg
Last year, First Solar announced it could take an impairment
charge of between US$500 and US$700 million in the phasing out of
the thin-film solar panel model it was producing at the time, its
flagship Series 4, and speed up the development of the new model, Series
6. The Series 6 was expected go into production in 2018, and according
to comments at the time of the announcement, would help First Solar to
gain a competitive edge in a world of falling solar panel costs.
But what about the proposed tariff?
This is where it gets
complicated for First Solar, because it's not black and white—and when
it comes to stock prices, well, it depends who is paying attention and
what they're paying attention to, exactly.
It would seem to
make sense that a tariff on imported solar modules and cells would
benefit First Solar, but not necessarily because it would boost sales by
eliminating lower-cost imports.
On the contrary, a tariff on
Chinese solar module and cell imports would benefit First Solar by
allowing it to continue to produce its own modules and cells in Malaysia
while competitors grapple with higher import prices. Why? Because First
Solar does not use crystalline silicon for its modules. It uses cadmium
telluride for its thin-film PV panels, so the tariffs, which
specifically concern the more popular crystalline silicone solar
products, won't affect it.
But let's not get ahead of ourselves.
First Solar's Series 4 is what is being produced in Malaysia, and that
production capacity is being idled. So this immediate benefit of the
tariff isn't as great at it looks on the surface. It's preparing for the
launch of the Series 6 now, and it may have to reopen one idled factory
in Vietnam to respond effectively to a hoarding urge in response to the
ruling. This would add to the company's cost burden in the short-term,
but over the medium and long term, it could be a benefit—if tariffs go
through.
Right now, the drop in FSLR's stock price reflects the
general confusion as to what this means for all solar stocks, and the
reality hasn't yet set in regarding this company's future in a new
regulatory environment. It also reflects the fact that no one can be
sure if these tariffs are going to see the light of day, given the level
of opposition from the industry they are meant to protect.
In
the medium and long-term, First Solar could turn out to be one of the
very few winners from the Suniva/SolarWorld case, so even though it's
lost over 5 percent this week, there's room for a reversal.
Link
to original article:
http://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Solar-Energy/Trumps-Solar-Tariff-Confusion-Creates-An-Opportunity.html
***
Share the link of this article with your facebook friends
|
|
|