(Reuters) - Chinese solar companies plan to run their plants below capacity in  order to shed inventory and slow capital spending as the sector battles  shrinking profit margins amid tepid demand and depressed panel  prices.
   Solar makers such as JA Solar and Suntech Power Holdings Co will temporarily  idle some equipment at factories to halt a build-up in inventory over the last  three quarters, setting aside a long-held view that demand could return in a big  way in a seasonally strong fourth quarter.
   "We're slowing the pace of expansion because we think there is enough  capacity to meet demand," Liu Yong, JA Solar's senior vice-president and chief  technology officer, told Reuters on the sidelines of an industry  conference.
   JA Solar, the world's largest solar cell maker, plans to lower utilization in  coming months, said Liu, citing high inventories and seasonality.
   Utilization at some solar factories has gone down to 75 percent, but industry  experts say mid-sized players in the sector have been running capacity at below  half in the last quarter, and many of the much smaller producers have shut  down.
   "The price has been coming down, we're losing too much. Everyone in the  industry is losing," said JianHua Zhao, chief technology officer at  China Sunergy (Nanjing) Co,  adding that his firm has lowered capacity utilization by about 25  percent.
   Analysts say more downsizing measures may ensue on a weaker-than-expected  fourth quarter, setting the stage for some companies to lower full-year shipment  guidance marked by layoffs and spending cuts.
   "Fourth quarter demand could be worse than third quarter. Suppliers will  further reduce their utilization to burn inventories," said Jesse Pichel, an  analyst at Jefferies Equity Research in a report.
   Overproduction and the subsidy cuts in Italy and  Germany led to a collapse of  more than 40 percent in panel prices this year, squeezing profit margins across  the industry and driving at least three U.S. companies, including Fremont,  California-based Solyndra, into bankruptcy.
   PRICE DIP
   Moves to slow expansion and curb production could be the only way for the  industry to stem a slide in prices, said analysts, though the damage caused by  overproduction was likely to still be felt in the coming few quarters, with  prices likely to slip further into the new year.
   "Falling prices into the first half of 2012 across the value chain will  likely take their toll on margins, resulting in lower than expected  earnings across the board,"  said Piper Jaffray analyst Ahmar Zaman, citing companies like Suntech Power as  likely to be hurt more than most due to its tight margins.
   Average selling prices of solar panels, at more than $1.00 per watt may fall  to 90 cents in the first quarter next year, said Zaman.
   For how long market weakness will persist is much harder to predict amid a  worsening economic outlook and the uncertainty of a European bailout. Europe  accounts for more than 90 percent of sales of Chinese solar companies.
   The future appears bleaker after Britain announced a plan to roll back  generous subsidies to the sector.
   "If the markets get worse we may need to review our plans," said China  Sunergy's Zhao. |