SolarCity: Short-Term Cost Reductions Include Layoffs; Rives Reduce Their Annual Salary to $1

The company had a net loss of $250 million last quarter and is making an unspecified number of layoffs to adjust costs.

It's been a tumultuous 2016 for SolarCity.

Independent board members have approved Tesla's bid to acquire SolarCity in an all-stock transition worth $2.6 billion. And that means the most recent earnings might be its last as a freestanding solar company.

Last week's earnings call had the residential solar leader beating forecast or consensus on metrics such as revenue, EPS and installs -- but the company had a net loss of $250 million.

In order to slow the bleeding, SolarCity is making an unspecified number of layoffs, and in a symbolic gesture, CEO Lyndon Rive and CTO Peter Rive are reducing their salaries to $1 per year, from $275,000.

The company noted that it is "launching two new products in the coming months -- one focused on residential solar and storage and the other on new residential roofing," adding, "We are also gaining good traction from our recent grid services launch with projects underway with PG&E, Southern California Edison, and the California Energy Commission, and we are now evaluating a pipeline in excess of $100 million."

The layoffs come upon news of a reduced guidance for megawatts installed in 2016 and will mean $3 million to $5 million in restructuring charges, according to an SEC filing. 

A SolarCity spokesperson noted, "While sales improved significantly in the second quarter as compared to the first, we still fell short of our overall expectations for the first half of the year. We’ve been adjusting our costs to align with the amount of solar we expect to install in the second half of the year, and unfortunately that also includes headcount reductions. Out of respect for those impacted, we’re not going to provide additional details. We’ll be launching two new products in integrated storage and solar roofing that have no equal in the market, and we expect them to significantly expand the number of customers we can serve next year. We fully expect to grow again in 2017, but we must reduce costs in the short term to be in position to do so."

Here are the details from last week's call.

Overall year-end guidance has been reduced to 900 to 1,000 megawatts.