Why Solar Power Stocks Are Still Earthbound
By NORM ALSTER
LONG-SUFFERING investors in solar energy
 stocks had reason to enjoy the first six weeks of 2013. After several 
years of poor performance while the overall market advanced, solar and 
other “green” energy technologies were market leaders early this year.  
      
But by the end of the quarter, most of these stocks had fallen again. 
Was the strong performance of early this year simply a dead-cat bounce? 
What are the prospects for an emerging, relatively expensive technology 
that seeks to displace dirty — but cheap — hydrocarbons?        
At the core of solar’s sorry market performance lies an enigma: solar sells, but it’s tough to turn a profit.        
Global demand for clean, renewable energy is not the issue. “Demand has exceeded by far the projections of even two years ago,” Ben Schuman, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities, said.        
At the end of last year, installed global solar capacity stood at 96.4 
gigawatts, up 43 percent from 2011 and roughly the equivalent capacity 
of 115 typical nuclear plants, according to Shayle Kann, vice president for research at GTM Research. Mr. Kann predicted further growth of 35 percent this year, to 129.7 gigawatts.        
Nevertheless, company profits in the sector have been erratic — and shareholder profits scarce. The Guggenheim Solar exchange-traded fund, which mirrors a portfolio of solar stocks, fell nearly 30 percent in the 12 months through March.        
So what is the most commonly invoked explanation for an industry where 
sizzling demand translates into sinking share prices? “Chinese 
industrial policy,” replied Kevin Landis, manager of the Firsthand Alternative Energy fund.        
Chinese national and local governments have encouraged solar production 
with a grab bag of inducements, including loans, loan guarantees, tax 
breaks and even free land.        
But the solar market, unlike other industries prone to cyclical 
overcapacity and subsequent busts, hasn’t self-corrected. Chinese 
vendors, Mr. Schuman said, haven’t been “as responsive to typical 
indicators” of excess production. “They haven’t closed capacity,” he 
said. “In China, shareholder profit can be a lower priority than 
employment, or the competitive dynamics between provinces and cities.”  
      
So the prices of solar panels have been in free fall. In 2005, panels 
typically cost $3.50 per watt of power. By last year, prices had tumbled
 to 75 cents a watt. This year, Mr. Kann estimates, they will fall to 49
 cents.        
But Ken Abrams, a manager of the Vanguard Explorer
 fund for the last 18 years, says he thinks a looming shakeout of 
suppliers will ease overcapacity. Chinese producers are among the prime 
victims of their own overproduction, he said. And it is unclear how long
 the Chinese will support failing ventures. Eight Chinese banks pushed the main subsidiary of one major panel producer, Suntech Power Holdings, into bankruptcy last month.        
“We see increasing hesitance on the part of Chinese government agencies 
to finance continuing deficits,” Mr. Abrams said. If Chinese authorities
 withhold support, more producers will fail, easing the overcapacity 
that has shredded prices.        
Who would gain in such a shakeout? Mr. Abrams says it is a good time to 
consider industry leaders. The Vanguard fund holds large positions in 
First Solar, a solar systems developer based in Tempe, Ariz., and in 
Solar City, a leader in leasing solar systems; it is based in San Mateo,
 Calif.        
But globally, low-cost producers should prevail, Mr. Schuman said. These would “probably be Asia-based,” he added.        
Some fund managers are looking to a creative business model that can flourish with rock-bottom panel pricing.        
Why lock into selling solar panels that keep getting cheaper? Better to 
buy the panels, install them free and then charge for the electricity 
they generate, gaining a predictable revenue stream. That’s the logic 
behind Solar City — which mainly serves residential and commercial 
customers in the United States — and several private solar leasing 
companies        
“When the price of panels goes down, their business gets better,” Mr. 
Landis said. “The sweet spot is buying the panels and owning the 
output.”        
Leasing is intended to overcome customer resistance to the high upfront 
cost of solar installation. Since a December initial public offering, 
Solar City shares have more than doubled.        
Still, the leasing model requires upfront investment that can obliterate
 earnings until the customer base expands enough to produce offsetting 
lease income. Such is not yet the case with Solar City. which reported a
 larger-than-expected loss in the fourth quarter of last year.        
Solar City is not the only company that employs leasing. SunPower, a 
major panel producer based in San Jose, Calif.,, has built a leasing 
business. And with several smaller private leasing firms, further 
I.P.O.’s are “a good possibility,” Mr. Abrams said.        
“Leasing is going to be 90 percent of the solar business,” he said.        
Colm O’Connor, co-manager of the Calvert Global Alternative Energy
 fund, says he expects the United States, Japan and China to lead this 
year in solar installation growth. Mr. O’Connor has a position in 
Kyocera, the ceramics maker and panel manufacturer, which could benefit 
from adoption of solar power in Japan.        
In most areas, solar power is more expensive than coal and natural gas 
options for electricity generation. But the gap has narrowed, and in 
places like Hawaii, Italy and Japan, he says, solar is now roughly even 
in cost. He has trimmed his overall investment in solar, however, 
preferring other areas of alternative energy. His largest holding is 
Novozymes, the Denmark-based enzyme maker that stands to gain from the 
emergence of cellulosic ethanol, made from sources other than corn. 
Novozymes will capture “a large part” of the cellulosic market, he 
predicted. “We are favorable on the long-term outlook for cellulosic 
ethanol.”        
Mr. O’Connor also favors companies that help manage delivery of energy 
from solar and wind sources. The Prysmian Group, based in Milan, Italy, 
has contracts to connect a North Sea wind park with the mainland grid in
 Germany. The PSI Group, based in Berlin, markets software that helps to
 manage the fluctuations in renewable energy production.        
Frederick Reynolds, who manages the Reynolds Blue Chip Growth
 fund, has stakes in Solar City and First Solar. But, he says: “I don’t 
have much conviction in solar stocks in general at this time. I’m 
running the risk that I’m early.”        
Mr. Reynolds tries to balance long-term optimism with near-term anxiety.
 “I think they can do well long term,” he said, “but until then there’s 
lots of volatility.”        
ONE factor that may eventually help solar stocks is that institutional investors have relatively small holdings.        
For example, they own slightly less than 22 percent of SunPower shares, 
according to Nasdaq. By contrast, institutions, which include pension 
funds, insurance companies and mutual funds, own more than 92 percent of Google’s outstanding shares.        
Asked if low institutional ownership could turn into a positive, because
 so much buying power is untapped, Mr. Reynolds said: “I see it as a 
positive. A lot of institutions may be buying after me.”        
Until then, holders of solar stocks can only nurse their wounds. Those 
who take the lead are often rewarded with arrows in their back. And 
right now, a lot of solar investors have “backs full of arrows,” Mr. 
Landis lamented.        http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/07/business/mutfund/solar-companies-stocks-face-an-uncertain-future.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
 
