Tag Archives: solar

News Digest: June 6, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 6. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • EU To Impose Anti-Dumping Tariffs On Chinese Solar Panels (English article)
  • Ultrapower Loses Exclusive Rights To China Mobile’s (HKEx: 941) Fetion (Chinese article)
  • China Opens Anti-Dumping Probe Into EU Wines (Chinese article)
  • Little Sheep Brings Hollow Returns For Yum (NYSE: YUM) 1 Year Later (Chinese article)
  • Snowball Finance Completes $10 Mln In B Round Funding (Chinese article)

News Digest: May 25-27, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 25-27. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • US Audit Regulator Reaches Deal With China On Document Access (English article)
  • China Approves H.J. Heinz (NYSE: HNZ) Purchase By Berkshire Hathaway (Businesswire)
  • EU Denies Breakdown In Solar Panel Talks With China (English article)
  • Walmart’s (NYSE: WMT) Yihaodian To Try Own-Brand For Some Products (Chinese article)
  • AsiaInfo-Linkage (Nasdaq: ASIA) Sells Interests in 2 Entities (PRNewswire)

Traders Feed On Solar Rumors

Rumors power volatile solar shares

Solar stocks that were once a darling of bullish investors and green energy enthusiasts have found a new patron in short-term traders, who are feeding on the sector’s high volatility. That’s my main conclusion after seeing a huge surge in the shares of many solar stocks despite any major positive catalyst. This surge is one of the biggest I’ve seen this year, but is certainly not the only time that most solar shares have risen or fallen by more than 7 percent on a single trading day on little or no major news from the sector. Read Full Post…

News Digest: May 10, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 10. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • New Zealand One of Huawei’s Most Strategic Markets -CEO Ren (Press release)
  • Jingdong Tests 3-Hour Delivery Service in Beijing (English article)
  • 51job (Nasdaq: JOBS) Reports Q1 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Alibaba To Buy AutoNavi (Nasdaq: AMAP) Stake, Become Top Investor (Chinese article)
  • EU Agrees On China Solar Panel Duties; Beijing Urges Dialogue (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q1 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

More Beijing Anger On EU Solar Tariffs

Solar dispute intensifies in Europe

I’ve been trying to avoid writing about the latest punitive tariffs for Chinese solar panels that look set to come from the European Union this week, since the story has dragged on for more than a year now and the outcome was almost inevitable. But that said, it would be a bit remiss of me not to write at least something on this latest move, which is expected to see European Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht formally recommend the introduction of anti-dumping tariffs for solar panels supplied from China. (English article) Read Full Post…

Canadian Solar, Report Lift Panel Makers

Clouds finally lifting over solar sector?

Solar panel makers are finally seeing signs that the clouds could be lifting from their embattled sector, sparking a stock rally for their volatile shares. Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) led off the upbeat news, releasing preliminary results that included better-than-expected first-quarter sales and margins. But perhaps more importantly, other reports said the industry is seeing some of its first sustained price increases after more than 2 years of declines. Read Full Post…

Yingli Joins State Bail-Out Queue

Yingli gets state lifeline

Yingli (NYSE: YGE) has become the latest player in China’s struggling solar sector to get a lifeline from Beijing, as an interesting picture starts to emerge of the relative health of the sector’s major players and who is likely to lead a coming consolidation. The list of who gets these lifelines could also reflect the relative importance Beijing places on China’s wide and varied field of solar panel and panel component makers, meaning some of these lifeline recipients could emerge as potential leaders to help consolidate the sector in the months ahead. Read Full Post…

India Turns Up Heat on Solar With New Probe

There are a couple of big new developments in the solar space, one from India that bodes poorly for China’s embattled sector, while the other coming the US seems like a diversion that won’t have much impact on an ongoing anti-dumping investigation. All of these developments have the catch phrase “anti-dumping” in common, indicating that perhaps China should wake up to the fact that it probably does provide generous subsidies to its solar cell makers, hurting competitors in other markets, and should take steps to end the practice rather than constantly denying the allegations. In the latest developments in this increasingly global war of words, India has joined the US and Europe by opening its own probe into unfair subsidies by Beijing for its increasingly embattled field of solar cell makers, which have rapidly risen in the last 5 years to now supply over half the world’s output. (English article) I personally don’t know how important India is in terms of global demand for solar cells, but considering its size and demand for clean power to help fuel its economic growth it does seem like any ruling against China in this latest probe will only deal a further setback to China’s solar cell makers, which are already suffering through their industry’s worst-ever downturn that has seen nearly everyone slip into the red. (previous post) Meantime, the other major development comes from the US, where a court has ruled that current laws do not allow the US Commerce Department to impose anti-dumping punitive tariffs on products from non-market economies like China. (English article) The ruling, which will certainly be appealed, would mean the Commerce Department has no power to levy punitive tariffs against China’s solar cell makers, despite its recent preliminary finding that those manufacturers are unfairly subsidized by Beijing. (previous post) While this court ruling looks like a victory for China and its solar cell makers, no one is really celebrating as the decision will definitely be appealed, a process that could take a year or more; and even if the decision was ultimately upheld, most predict the US Congress will quickly act to change the laws to empower the Commerce Department to levy punitive tariffs against any industry that gets unfair support from its government, regardless of whether it’s a market economy. As always, my advice to Beijing is to move quickly to diffuse this crisis rather than waiting for market forces to do their work, which could deal a huge blow to not only China’s industry but the entire global solar power sector.

Bottom line: A new unfair subsidy probe by India is a further setback for China’s solar sector, while a US court ruling that appears to help Chinese manufacturers is largely meaningless.

Related postings 相关文章:

Beijing Boosts Solar In Latest Mixed Signal 中国扩张太阳能行业发展 解决与美争端立场混乱

China Retaliates With Own US Solar Probe 中国启动对美可再生能源补贴调查

Solar Slips Squarely Into the Red 太阳能行业陷入全线亏损

China Rescues LDK With New Financing 中国拯救赛维LDK举动与未提供不公补贴说法相左

If China was trying to convince the world and the US that it doesn’t unfairly subsidize its solar panel makers, it has a strange way of doing that, as reflected by a recent series of high-profile moves that seem to say just the opposite. In the latest of those moves, Chinese investors — most likely local governments or financial institutions — have purchased a hefty 3 billion yuan, or nearly $500 million, worth of LDK Solar (NYSE: LDK) short-term notes at a meager interest rate of just 6.8 percent. (company announcement) That rate looks like a huge bargain for LDK, which reported a massive $115 million loss in the third quarter and whose other debt issued earlier this year to global investors now trades at about 50 cents on the dollar. Of course all this shows that LDK is able to borrow money at highly favorable rates from the Chinese government or government-backed entities, even as Beijing vehemently denies it unfairly supports to its solar companies amid a US anti-dumping probe that is likely to result in punitive tariffs against Chinese solar cell makers. (previous post) This latest contradiction comes on the heels of other similar gaffs, including wind power equipment maker Ming Yang’s (NYSE: MY) October announcement that Beijing will provide it with up to $5 billion to help finance its sales (previous post); and a top government official’s announcement in November of a new campaign to help developing countries build new solar plants. (previous post) I suspect that these moves from Beijing and local governments are less a deliberate attempt to anger Washington, and more a reflection of the longer term reality that China does strongly support its solar sector and is having a difficult time changing its ways. Regardless of the reasons, Beijing needs to stop this kind of action and even take one or 2 steps in the other direction — for example by letting a weak player like LDK fail — if it wants to ever resolve its solar trade dispute with Washington.

Bottom line: The latest government rescue for LDK underscores China’s ongoing support for its solar sector, undermining Beijing’s claims that it doesn’t provide unfair subsidies to the industry.

Related postings 相关文章:

China Retaliates With Own US Solar Probe 中国启动对美可再生能源补贴调查

Beijing, Yingli Send Mixed Solar Signals 英利和中国政府似乎“背道而驰”

Solar Fight Sees Accusations Flying 中美太阳能纠纷引发口水大战

News Digest: October 22-24, 2011

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 22-24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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◙ China Slams US Over Solar Complaint (English article)

Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo Unveils On-Deck Search Site (English article)

Huawei to Break Into US Through Innovation – Executive (Chinese article)

Yingli Green Energy (NYSE: YGE) Statement on SolarWorld America’s Petitions (PRNewswire)

Saab’s Survival Chances Dwindle as Chinese Investors Cut Offer (English article)

China Brushes Off Western Protest With New Ming Yang Support 明阳获巨额融资 表明中国不理会西方反对

If China plans to cut back its subsidies to its alternate power sector in response to complaints from the West, it sure isn’t showing its intentions in a new announcement about a massive new loan support program for leading wind power equipment maker Ming Yang. (company announcement)  According to the announcement, China Development Bank, a major government policy lender, will provide Ming Yang with up to $5 billion in financing to help its customers both at home and abroad purchase its wind generation equipment. This is exactly the kind of state-backed subsidy that is at the center of a debate in both the US and Europe over solar energy, which has seen Western governments finally sit up and take notice of China’s massive support for its alternate energy sector. Punitive tariffs against China’s solar sector look almost inevitable as a result of Beijing’s huge support policies (previous post), and this kind of announcement of yet even more support for Ming Yang, even though its focus is wind and not solar power, will hardly help China’s case if it really wants to avoid such punitive tariffs, which would send a chill through its solar firms already suffering through their worst-ever downturn. If this kind of high-profile announcement is Beijing’s way of saying it has no intent to stop offering strong backing for its alternative energy makers, I would look for new punitive tariffs to come sooner rather than later and for a drawn-out standoff as neither the West nor China yields to pressure to compromise. Of course, there’s also the possibility that Ming Yang’s announcement is just very poorly timed, and China might still be willing  to curb its support for its solar energy firms. Time will tell. Meantime, one of the many struggling solar firms, Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) has just issued updated guidance that is very mixed. (company announcement) It says it will meet its unit sales targets for the third quarter, but that its margins will come in well below previous guidance due to stiff competition that has resulted in sharply falling prices. All this means the crisis could be easing, but it’s not over yet and it could heat up all over again if either the US or Europe issues punitive tariffs.

Bottom line: A new announcement of massive state loan support for a top Chinese wind power firm indicates China will keep strongly supporting its alternate energy sector despite Western protests.

Related postings 相关文章:

◙ More Solar Woes With Plunging Prices

US Congress Turns Up Heat in China Solar Debate

Tech, Environmental Issues Cast New Clouds Over Solar Firms