Corporate ChinaCanadian Solar, Chaori cast cloud over solar shares
Shares of major solar panel makers set for a correction this year after a 2013 rally and as their growth slows, while smaller players likely to face a growing cash crunch

After a massive rally over the last year, shares of solar panel makers could be set for a few months of winter following a disappointing earnings announcement from superstar Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) and a debt default from second-tier player Chaori Solar (Shenzhen: 002506). Such a correction was almost inevitable after last year's huge rally and shouldn't be cause for concern among long-term buyers of shares in top players like Canadian Solar. But shareholders of second-tier firms like Chaori might think strongly about selling their stock, as these smaller companies could easily end up getting wiped out or sold for bargain prices in the sector's ongoing consolidation as it emerges from a two-year downturn.
Before we look more closely at Canadian Solar's latest earnings and why they disappointed, it's important that we first review just how much the company's shares have soared over the last year. Canadian Solar's stock traded as low as US$2 as recently as late 2012, before embarking on a massive rally that saw it top the $40 level this year. Other solar panel makers also surged as their sector began to rebound, but Canadian Solar led the rally by becoming the first major player to return to profitability after most players reported two years of losses.
But investors were clearly spooked by Canadian Solar's outlook for the current quarter, in which it expects shipments to reach around 480 megawatts and revenue to hit about $425 million. Both of those figures are down significantly from the fourth quarter, when the company shipped 621 megawatts worth of panels and posted $520 million in revenue. That weak outlook, which Canadian Solar blamed partly on seasonal factors and severe weather in North America, sparked a sell-off in the company's shares, which fell nearly 11 per cent after it announced its results.
The fact that Chaori couldn't make such a relatively small payment reflects the fact that many solar panel makers currently have little or no access to new financing. Most lenders and investors are reluctant to give more funds to these money-losing companies right now, and that's unlikely to change until they return to profitability. But many smaller companies like Chaori lack the scale and resources to compete, meaning they may never return to profitability and we could see more defaults from this group in the year ahead.
