| Tesla first in global battery energy storage system financial strength rankings 
 The   latest financial stability ranking from Sinovoltaics keeps Tesla,   Mustang Battery, Kung Long Batteries, Hyundai Electric and Eaton, in the   top five spots in a report that includes 55 manufacturers.
 
 December 10, 2024                                               Valerie Thompson
 
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 From pv magazine Global
 
 Sinovoltaics, a Hong Kong-based technical compliance and quality assurance services provider, has released its   Q4 PV Energy Storage Manufacturer Ranking Report.   Global in scope, it provides financial stability scores tracked over   the past three years. It covers 55 battery energy storage suppliers, a   figure that has remained unchanged since t  he last edition published in July,
 
 The report, which is available to download for free, recorded some   shifts in the rankings, according to the analysts who highlighted   improved scores for three Chinese manufacturers. Specifically, Sacred   Sun (Shandong Sacred Sun Power Sources Co Ltd) moved from spot 15 to   number 10, while   CATL jumped from 26 to 21 and   BYD climbed up to 28 from spot 30.
 
 The top ten segment of the ranking lists U.S.-based   Tesla at the top, followed by China’s Mustang Battery, Taiwan-based Kung Long Batteries,   Hyundai Electric of Korea and   Eaton, based in Ireland, China-based   Sinexcel,   Yuasa Battery and Sanyo, both based in Japan, U.S. based   Enersys, and China’s Sacred Sun.
 
 The latest edition covers December 2021 to September 2024 and is  meant  to provide insight into the changes in the scores over time,  according  to Sinovoltaics.
 
 The financial stability analysis of the  publicly traded battery  producers uses the so-called Altmann Z-scores.  It is a balance  sheet-based model using publicly available financial  information to  track financial strength over the past three years. It  assesses a  company’s financial strength through a credit-strength test  based on  profitability, leverage, liquidity, solvency, and activity  ratios,  according to Sinovoltaics.
 
 A score that is 1.1 or lower  indicates a higher probability of  bankruptcy within the next two  years, while a higher score of 2.6 or  greater. The reports include a  chart that groups manufacturers into  those with scores that put them in  the safe zone, those with lower  scores in the grey zone, and those  with scores that indicate distress.  In the safe zone this quarter there  were 21 companies, compared to 20 in  the last quarter.
 
 pv-magazine-usa.com
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