Solar Roundup: Earnings, Expectations and Updates

ReneSola stock falls despite a jump in its 2Q net income, Applied Materials signs a $200 million deal, First Solar expands plant capacity while Green Energy Technology and Concentrix Solar give commercial product updates.

Shares of ReneSola (NYSE: SOL) fell 2.45 percent Tuesday even though the company posted a second-quarter net profit that nearly quadrupled to $23.3 million.

The Shanghai-based solar-wafer company reported a net income of $23.3 million, or 38 cents per American depositary share, compared with $5.9 million, or 12 cents per American depositary share, in the year-ago quarter. Analysts had expected earnings of 32 cents per share on revenue of $141.3 million, according to Thomson Financial

Second-quarter revenue also beat expectations, soaring to $173 million from $44.5 million in the same period last year.

In spite of higher silicon costs, the company said it increased its gross margin to 24.7 percent, or 22.4 percent under the Equity Accounting Method, from 22.1 percent in the first quarter and 21.2 percent in the second quarter of 2007. ReneSola attributes the gain to its reduction of the amount of silicon it uses in its wafers to 6.24 grams per watt from 5.3 grams per watt in the first quarter.

The company also said it made "significant advancements" in the ability to use alternative silicon materials, including metallurgical-grade silicon, for future wafer production. 

ReneSola raised its guidance for the year, forecasting revenue of between $640 million and $670 million based on an expected production output of between 340 and 350 megawatts. The company previously projected revenue of between $570 million and $590 million and production of 330 to 340 megawatts of wafers.

The company said it expects to have the capacity to produce up to 1 gigawatt by the end of 2009 and to manufacture between 650 and 750 megawatts of wafers next year.

During a conference call Tuesday, ReneSola also announced an agreement to supply approximately 1.5 gigawatts of wafers over more than eight years to Suntech Power, according to Lazard Capital Markets, which added that the company has contracts for the sale of 60 to 60 percent of its expected production in 2009.

Shares fell 44 cents to close at $17.49 per share, then fell another 1 percent, or 17 cents, to reach $17.32 per share in after-hours trading. 

ReneSola earnings come a day after Chinese solar-panel manufacturer Trina Solar posted that its quarterly results more than doubled. The earnings missed Wall Street expectations, although the company's revenue exceeded analyst estimates (see Reuters).

In a research note Monday, Lazard analyst Sanjay Shresha said he expects China Sunergy, to post its earnings Friday. Suntech Power Holdings, which is expected to report results Wednesday will also perform decently in earnings this week, said Shresha.

"We expect generally in-line to positive earnings from Asian solar companies reporting [this] week," he wrote. "With relatively tight poly in the near term, strong poly coverage and silicon recycling will be a competitive advantage. Scale, higher efficiency, low processing cost, and quality will be key to long-term success."

Specifically, he forecast that Suntech will have "limited" growth this year because of its silicon supply, but said that the company is "setting a stage for excellent growth into 2009."

Here is some other solar news that broke this week: