Preview of FSLR report, from Bloomberg   Top U.S. Solar Company Profits Amid Red for Industry: Energy By Christopher Martin -                 Jul 31, 2012 4:04 PM ET
  bloomberg.com
    First Solar Inc. (FSLR) Chairman  Mike Ahearn has found the best way to make money from photovoltaics is to sell whole power plants to  Warren Buffett and  NextEra Energy Inc. (NEE) instead of competing with  China on panel sales. 
    The biggest U.S. solar company is forecast to report the only profit in  the second quarter among the 17 companies in the BI Global Large Solar  index, according to estimates collected by Bloomberg. The rest, led by  Suntech Power Holdings Co. (STP) of China, are predicted to have losses. 
  Suntech  and the other Chinese manufacturers that dominate the industry have  focused almost exclusively on panel sales, exposing themselves to the  brunt of a 47 percent plunge in prices in the past year. Ahearn has  insulated First Solar by cutting production and expanding sales of the  PV power plants, said  Sanjay Shrestha,  an analyst at Lazard Capital Markets. Buffett and NextEra are among the  company’s best customers. “Their strong project pipeline is helping  them weather the storm that everyone else is caught in,” Shrestha said  in an interview. “That’s buying them time while the rest of the industry  scrambles for the next panel sale.” 
  First Solar will report  net income  of 60.1 cents a share in the second quarter, according to the average  estimate of nine analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. It’s due to report  earnings after trading finishes tomorrow in  New York.  Suntech and its rivals, mainly Chinese companies listed in New York,  are due to report later in August. Yesterday, Suntech said it may delay  its earnings due to a suspected fraud. 
  Shares Underperform  Investors aren’t giving Ahearn credit for the shift yet. First Solar’s  shares have fallen 88 percent in the past year through yesterday,  sharper than the 75 percent decline in the Large Solar index. Ted Meyer,  a First Solar spokesman, declined to comment, citing a quiet period  before its results. They gained 9.4 percent to $15.54 at the close in  New York. 
  “The big risk is that they won’t be able to replace  the pipeline as existing projects are completed,” said Rob Stone, an  analyst at Cowen & Co. in New York who has a neutral rating on the  stock. Many of First Solar’s projects relied on government backing to  make them profitable, and those programs have expired. “How much longer  can their profitability last?” 
  MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co., a unit of Buffett’s  Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/B), agreed on Dec. 7 to buy the Topaz Solar Farm in  California  developed by First Solar. The project’s development budget is $2.5  billion and may generate 550 megawatts of power starting in 2015, making  it one of the world’s largest PV plants. 
  NextEra Deal NextEra, the biggest U.S. generator of power from solar and wind plants, joined a unit of  General Electric Co. (GE)  to buy the 550-megawatt Desert Sunlight project in California and in  March completed the purchase of 40 megawatts of in Ontario. 
  First  Solar typically sells its projects to an energy company once it’s  received permits, arranged financing and completed a deal with a utility  to buy the electricity. It receives an upfront payment for the sale  that’s usually confidential and is typically a small fraction of the  total development budget. Then it continues to receive revenue during  construction, for labor and for supplying the panels. 
  Ahearn  accelerated First Solar’s transition to project development in October,  when he replaced Rob Gillette after a two-year break from leading the  company. By the end of 2011, Ahearn had delayed completion of a factory  in  Vietnam and shut a California R&D unit. 
  Ahearn’s Strategy In April, he announced measures to cut 30 percent of the workforce, idle four production lines in  Malaysia and shut a flagship plant in  Frankfurt an der Oder,  Germany. 
  The  moves were part of First Solar’s “strategy to pursue utility-scale  solar opportunities in sustainable markets,” Chief Financial Officer  Mark Widmar said on a conference call to discuss the restructuring on  April 17. 
  The goal “is to align our business to a demand profile  that is highly reliable and predictable, which largely is our captive  pipeline” of solar farms the company is developing, he said. “Our  pipeline is a competitive advantage.” 
  About 53 percent of First  Solar’s $497 million in first quarter sales came from developing and  selling solar farms. That was up from 30 percent the prior quarter, and  it was the first time panel sales weren’t the top driver for results. 
  Competitors Suntech,  JinkoSolar Holding Co. (JKS) and  Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. (YGE)  get at least 90 percent of their revenue from selling solar panels,  either directly or through distributors. All will probably lose money  every quarter this year, according to Bloomberg data based on analyst  forecasts. They’re all listed in New York and report later in August. 
  China’s  Losses Jinko is expected to lose $7.51 an American depositary receipt  this quarter, the worst performance within the Large Solar index.  Suntech, the world’s biggest panel maker, may lose as much as 45 cents  an ADR and isn’t expected to report a profit until 2014. Analysts expect  Yingli to lose 28 cents. 
  Solar panel prices fell by half last year, which has “killed profitability in module manufacturing,” said  Mark Bachman,  an analyst at Boston-based Avian Securities. “First Solar puts up more  profit over the next year than all the other companies combined.” 
  Ahearn’s  plan to build up project development dates to 2007, when First Solar  bought the construction and engineering company Turner Renewable Energy  LLC for $34 million. That was followed by 2009 purchase of the closely  held developer OptiSolar Inc. for $400 million in stock, and the 2010  acquisition of NextLight Renewable Power LLC for $285 million. 
  ‘Logical  Step’ “Adding these resources, along with their development team, to  First Solar, is our next logical step,” Ahearn said when announcing the  OptiSolar deal on March 2, 2009. 
  Those acquisitions came with  several utility-scale solar farms already under development. OptiSolar  brought the 550- megawatt Desert Sunlight project, which First Solar  sold to NextEra Energy Inc. in September and is scheduled to be complete  in 2015. Also in the purchase was the 550-megawatt Topaz plant that  MidAmerican Energy Holdings bought in December, expected to be finished  in 2014. 
  First Solar had cash and cash equivalents of $610  million at the end of the first quarter, up 72 percent from a year  earlier. Their current ratio, which measures the ability to repay  short-term debt, was 2.48, or 51 percent higher than the average for the  17 companies in the Bloomberg Industry Large Solar Energy index. 
  Contracts Ahead First Solar had contracts to build 2.7 gigawatts of  power plants as of May 23, according to slides executives showed to analysts along with the first-quarter earnings. 
  First  Solar’s anticipated profit this quarter will be followed by earnings of  $1.34 a share for the current quarter and $1.69 in the final three  months of 2012, analysts predict. That won’t be enough to counter a  $5.20 loss in the first quarter, largely due to a $413 million  restructuring charge that came along with Ahearn’s strategy shift. For  the whole of 2012, analysts expect loss of $1.46, according to the  median of 24 forecasts collected by Bloomberg. 
  Even if First  Solar arranges as much as 600 megawatts of new contracts annually, its  factory utilization will drop to about 70 percent by the end of 2014,  Stone said. That may force additional charges and closures that would  cut profitability. 
  “They’ve got some nice projects and nice  prices right now, but any new projects they win will come at much lower  margins,” Stone said. He has a neutral rating on the stock. 
  First  Solar’s production cost averaged 69 cents a watt in the first quarter.  Prices for standard, polysilicon based panels were 76 cents a watt at  the start of July, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. 
  “For  anyone following First Solar it’s always been a game of ‘What’s the  next negative to hit?’” said Lazard’s Shrestha. “But they keep  forgetting about the strong project pipeline.” 
  To contact the reporter on this story: Christopher Martin in New York at   cmartin11@bloomberg.net |