Monday, December 31, 2007

PV Industry Oversupply in 2008


PV Industry in Oversupply in 2008

I've recently gone from near-term bullish to bearish on the PV stocks based on two trends I see emerging for 2008-2010 - first, that cells and panels will be in major oversupply by year-end 2008 and second, that demand is set for a pause due to declining or delayed incentives in Germany, Spain, and the US.

I've compiled a table of YE capacity for 2008 - 2010 for over 90 manufacturers of solar cells (see bottom of article), indicating my source for each company's number. A solid starting source is the Lehman Bros 11/1/07 report initiating coverage on the sector. However, that report is already outdated and its cell capacity data somewhat incomplete to begin with; I've relied on more current data from a wider set of sources including company earnings reports, presentations, websites, or other press articles.

Supply and Demand

Bottom line: by the end of this year, 2008, cell producers will have installed capacity of 12.2 GW annual production according to present manufacturer plans. When you add in solar thermal capacity (Ausra, Schott) that number grows to 12.9 GW. Looking ahead, the 2009 end-year production capacity is simply enormous, at 17.2 GW. Is this a problem? Oh, yes, when you look at the demand estimates. Match the year-end 2008 capacity of 12.2GW with 2009 demand: the EPIA optimistic ("policy-driven") estimate of 2009 world-wide demand is 4.3GW. Lehman calls it 4.8GW. Merrill Lynch has 5.2GW. A Q-cells presentation referred to a UBS number of 8GW. Even if you de-rate the 12.2GW number to account for "actual" vs. "nameplate" capacity; even if you attempt to adjust for "press-release" vs. "actually built" capacity, the numbers are still very out of balance. Even the most optimistic 2009 demand guesses fall far short of what the industry intends to produce.

The PV industry is heading for at least 50-100% capacity oversupply.

To put that in context, consider that stock prices in the similarly fast-growing LCD panel industry regularly drop in half, or double, as the industry's supply and demand move out of balance (up or down) by a mere 10%. The situation quickly approaching in the PV business is much more dramatic. While there have been recent rumblings about oversupply, I expect the 2008 installed capacity number of 12.2 GW to come as a surprise to many. Lehman, for example, as recently as their 11/1/07 report, has 2008 end-year production capacity at 7.8GW.

What's changed?

While manufacturers have been aggressively ramping for the last 18 months, since October 2007, the rate of capacity increase announcements has recently accelerated to new highs. Not only does everyone want in to PV, but they all know they need to scale up to top-10 status in order to stay viable. In addition, PV has relatively low barriers to entry. Taiwan manucfacturers, for example, see PV as a new opportunity requiring less investment and less risk than offered by the chip/components businesses and are now moving in. They will not abandon a fast-growing market to the mainland. See, for example, Gintech's 2008 plans for 580MW. The Chinese producers have recently been accelerating plans to maintain their scale advantage, and thin-film companies are accelerating plans in order to leverage their cost advantage. Silicon-based manufacturers are increasing thin-film investments as a risk mitigation measure. Second tier players understand the need to achieve scale; I've seen no less than three companies indicating they intend to be #3 in the industry in a couple years. At the same time production plans are accelerating, the world-wide subsidy picture is somewhat slowing. In Germany, feed-in tariffs for new projects decline annually, but there are plans (based on biennial review of the EEG program) to speed up the decrease, ultimately to 9.5% annual declines for large projects. Whether this begins in 2009 or 2010 is unclear, but it will certainly pressure the economics of projects and, thus, the price points of suppliers. The Spanish situation is similar. There is a present burst to get projects turned up by this September in advance of legislative changes to reduce tariffs by roughly one-third. In the US, of course, the demand picture is completely unclear since Congress failed to address PV incentives in the recent energy bill. My guess is that in an election year, with a poor economy, and a recently-demonstrated lack of political support, the industry will be lucky merely to see present incentives extended a few years.

Poly - Enough already!

What about polysilicon? Some industry participants and analysts believe that "constrained" poly supplies will limit cell production to sane levels. Perhaps, in 2008, but not in 2009. Lehman (and other) analysts contend that poly prices will stay strong throughout '08 and that somehow, this is an indicator of a healthy market for PV. I believe that's incorrect. Spot poly prices are a lousy indicator of end demand; they are, however, a good indicator of producer manufacturing plans. To me, they highlight a looming, large margin problem for producers. Given large, unused cell capacity, and rapidly growing poly capacity, I believe the industry will see two distinct margin effects. First, as poly supplies increase, cell production will increase as capacity is enabled. Cell production will rise to an oversupply level as manufacturers must put their recently invested capital to work. Poly prices will remain firm as cell production rises. Cell ASPs will fall as oversupply is reached. Margins will be compressed. The second margin effect will come into play as poly production continues to rise (the industry expects poly production to attain oversupply levels by 2010 or sooner). Spot poly prices will contract severely, possibly below contract poly prices (spot's around $300-$400, but was as low as $35 before the boom. I believe contract is around $70-ish). In this case, as cell ASPs continue to erode, some manufacturers may be trapped between their slow-changing contract poly prices and declining spot cell prices, as other manufacturers compete with cheaper poly purchased on the spot market. This sort of whipsaw price action, as supply/demand trends vacillate, plays havoc with margins. Ultimately, things will settle down with both poly and cell markets in oversupply until demand catches up.

For the last year, the attention of analysts has been focused on poly pricing and whether manufacturers have "secured" their poly supply for 07 and 08, as each manufacturer ramps their capacity assuming unlimited demand. This is a dangerously backward-looking view. Analyst focus needs to shift from yesteryear's poly problem to this year's supply/demand imbalance problem. The key question for 2008/2009 margins is this: which ASP declines faster - poly? or cells? I believe that, as increasing poly supplies enable cell overproduction, and as cell manufacturers keep producing, we will see cell ASPs drop much faster than poly. Look at the numbers yourself, and just think through the likely scenarios.

2008 Situation

I've focused on end-year 2008 production capacity with physical oversupply in 2009. What about 2008 supply/demand? Lehman estimates 2008 demand at 3.5GW, growing from 2007's 2.4GW. Lehman sees 2007 endyear capacity at 5.3GW and, to their credit, identifies oversupply as a potential 2008 issue in the cell market. Simply put: 2008 may already see potential oversupply of up to 40-50%. I can only assume many believe that in 2008 actual cell production will still be constrained by poly shortages. I would point out that poly shortages are extremely unlikely to prevent meeting 2008 demand levels (only 3.5GW) although they may prevent suppliers shipping at max capacity levels. Hence, in 2008 investors will already start to see the choice suppliers face in committing to overproduction and weakening margins, or idle capacity... and weakening margins.

Manufacturer Behavior

One should not assume that manufacturers will see the problem coming and adjust their capacity plans accordingly. They will not. In rapidly growing industries (I've personally watched this in ethanol, LCD panels, disk drives, and housing), manufacturers set goals on desired market share several years out. They must plan to achieve sufficient scale and share in the market as it will exist when the capacity is built. This invariably leads to oversupply in the near-term and dropping ASPs and margins as the market shakes out who will ultimately lead the industry. The PV business is no different. Major participants are making GW-level production plans (STP, Sharp, Q-cells; published) in anticipation of grid parity. Someday, it will likely payoff. Near-term, however, there will be oversupply and margin compression. Consider the timeline to reach 2008 end-year capacity. I believe PV capacity has a roughly 18 month timeline from plan to turn-up. Plans, budget, financing for this year's capacity were set last year. Buildings are getting built already. Production equipment orders presumably have 6-9 month leads and have either been placed or will be 1Q08. Capacity turn-up in 3Q-4Q 2008. Basically, unless manufacturers start canceling equipment orders now, the die will be cast. However, I believe no one will cancel anything since, at the moment, the industry is still in a state of Spanish mania.

Stock impact and timing... the ethanol example

So, what to do with the stocks? At the moment, traders and momentum are in control of solar stocks. When will fundamentals start hitting them? I find the ethanol industry provides the best and most recent example. By the end of 2006, it was apparent that the ethanol industry was headed for oversupply as high ethanol prices stimulated investment. Through all of 2007, ethanol prices fell in anticipation, bottoming at cash cost near $1.55 in October '07. Ethanol stocks fell as well, all year long, in anticipation of an oversupply which won't actually be cresting until 1H08 as new plants complete. The stock trend shifted downward a full year before the actual supply/demand imbalance peaked, and the stocks kept moving downward as the situation clarified. Now, ethanol prices and the stocks are both starting to rebound, looking ahead as the new RFS standard and declining investment should restore market balance by 2010 or so. In the case of PV, the Spanish market is working its way through a near-term peak right now as projects need to be turned up by Sep 2008, when tariffs drop from .44 eurocents to perhaps .31 eurocents. Working that wave back in time, panel orders to suppiers are presumably peaking in 4Q07/1Q08 for this hot sector of the market. There is hope for a similar wave of projects in 2H08 in anticipation of German subsidies declining. In both Germany and Spain, I believe 2008 sees installation peaks in anticipation of tariff reductions and the stocks will soon need to start factoring this in. Overall, without attempting to time the market, I don't anticipate having to wait very long before momentum gives way to doubt in these stocks; I think they start looking ahead this quarter (1Q08).

In my view, there will be four levels of stock reactions, from most negative to least negative, basically driven by the company's industry position. Worst hit, IMHO, will be the non-integrated silicon-based producers in the supply chain: LDK, SOLF, WFR, JASO, etc. Vertically integrated crystalline silicon producers will be second worst; the smaller they are the worse off they'll be. ESLR, SPWR, STP, YGE, etc should all react. Thin-film may have the least negative reaction because, as low cost producers, they should fare relatively better in a downturn even though their ASPs will drop as fast as the next guy's. Nonetheless, I think FSLR gets hit hard due to overvaluation and growing recognition that Nanosolar has a fundamentally better approach. (i.e., FSLR is king of a time window). The fourth class of stock reaction is actually positive: companies like Akeena (AKNS) actually benefit from panel price wars. Sunpower, because a significant portion of revenue comes from project business, also benefits and this somewhat offsets the hit they'll take as a manufacturer.

What could prevent oversupply?

What could turn this around? This would require either a large reduction in supply, which I don't see manufacturers planning, or a very large increase in demand. A multi-GW increase in demand would require significant legislative support around the world - in 2008 - relying extensively on new money for feed-in tariffs, in advance of oversupply conditions. Given the likely world economic situation in 2008, I don't see governments deciding to massively increase 20-yr PV subsidy payouts this year. Furthermore, it's in governments' interest to let oversupply work its charms on prices to help reduce the need for further subsidies. China is offered as a multi-GW source of demand, but China's 2007 installations are on the order of 30MW; it will be several years before China is a significant source of demand regardless of government policy initiatives. Grid parity will ultimately solve oversupply, of course, but that's not happening by 2009 and it may never happen for the crystalline silicon-based suppliers. Finally, consider the behavior of large project investors as they sense that prices are starting to fall. Their economic motivation will be to increase project returns by delaying commitments and waiting for lower prices (just like prospective homebuyers in the US housing market are waiting at present); this will of course exacerbate price declines. Basically, I don't see anything solving the situation in 2008; the degree of oversupply is simply too large.

Conclusion

I'm not a pessimist on PV; there's basically infinite demand, post-parity, at sufficiently high scale and low enough prices. But the industry will have its share of booms and busts along the way, and right now, we're heading for a "bust" even as the current headlines all say "boom". It won't happen overnight; it'll take a few quarters to develop, but it is coming.

The PV industry is headed for a margin bust, shake out, and consolidation phase.

Final note: I'm not even going to talk about 2010, with current manufacturer intent in excess of 22 GW capacity. We simply won't get there.

Disclosure: I intend to trade various PV stocks, primarily with a short bias, over the course of 2008.

Source notes: LB – Lehman Bros, PR=Company press release, NREL=National Renewable Energy Lab report on thin-film commercialization, ER=Company earnings release.



SUPPLY

Manufacturing Capacity,

year-end, MW

Sym

Company

Source (capacity)

2008

2009

2010

Advent Solar

PR 2/9/07

25

25

25

asti

Ascent Solar

PR 12/17/2007

1.5

25

25

Avancis

website

20

20

20

Bangkok Solar

LB 11/1

60

70

80

Big Sun Energy

PR 11/13/07

90

90

90

Blue Chip Energy

website, 7/30/07 PR

50

50

50

Blue Square Energy

gunther portfolio blog

20

20

BP Solar

LB 11/1

360

440

600

Brilliant 234

qcells pres 9/30/07

25

25

25

Calyxo

qcells pres 9/30/07

25

25

25

csiq

Canadian Solar

LB 11/15

250

250

250

Central Electronics India

website

10

10

10

China Solar Power

PR 10/25/07, solarbuzz

50

64

64

csun

China Sunergy

IPO filings

392

392

392

CMC/Sunwell

Digitimes 12/12/07,

Taipei Times 8/13/07

50

100

100

CSG Solar AG

qcells pres 9/30/07

25

25

25

dsti

Daystar

3Q07 rpt

25

25

25

DelSolar

website,

25

25

25

Emcore Solar Power

7/11/07 pres., CEUT conf.

50

50

50

ener

Energy Conversion Devices

unisolar 2/16/06 PR

180

180

300

EPV Solar

PR 6/21/07

85

170

255

Ersol

11/16/07 PR

220

220

400

Ersol thin-film

NREL 9/07 report

40

E-Ton

LB 11/1

240

290

320

eslr

Evergreen

company- 12/11/07 investor pres

58

170

170

EverQ JV

eslr 12/11/07 pres

50

200

200

fslr

First Solar

company -11/07 PGE conf, LB 11/6/07

693

910

1302

Flexcell

qcells pres 9/30/07

25

25

25

G24i

ICWales, 12/18/07

Gintech

Taiwan Headlines, 12/07/07

580

580

1500

Global Photonic

website

Green Energy Tech

LB 11/1, Taiwan Headlines, 12/07/07

0

30

60

Heliovolt

PR 12/20/07

20

20

20

Honda

11/12 PR

28

28

28

Isofoton

LB 11/1

170

210

250

jaso

JA Solar

LB 11/26, LB 11/1, LB 10/23

425

600

800

Jetion

website

100

100

100

Kaneka

NREL 9/07, company website, Digitimes 10/19/07

70

70

70

Kenmos/NanoPV

Photon 12/07 article

30

30

30

KPE

website (psec.co.kr)

40

40

40

Kyocera

LB 11/1

330

400

475

Martifer Group

PR 9/24/07

50

50

50

Miasole

LB 11/1

20

40

50

Mitsubishi

LB 11/1

300

360

500

Mitsubishi thin-film

NREL 9/07

15

15

70

Mosel

Taipei Times 8/13/07

30

30

30

Moser Baer PV

MBPV PR, 8/29/06. Elec News 3/5/07. MBPV PR 11/30/07.

80

200

500

Motech

LB 11/1

330

450

600

Nanosolar

globe street, 6/24/06

430

430

430

Nantong Qiangsheng PV (QS Solar)

china daily,12/11/07

75

300

500

Neo Solar Power (powerchip)

Taiwan Economic News, 10/18/07

210

210

570

Nexpower /UMC

Taiwan Headlines, 12/07/07, company website

25

25

100

Ningbo Solar Power

Chinese Academy of Science, Wenjing pres.

100

100

100

OptiSolar

website, gunther blog

0

0

40

PhotoVoltech

PR 11/21/07

80

140

140

Photowatt International

website

25

25

25

Powercom

PR 2/26/07

30

30

90

Prime Star

Prosperity Solar

Spire PR 10/16/06

10

10

10

Qcells

LB 11/1, Qcells 3q07 rpt 11/14/07

700

850

1100

Qcells thin-film

qcells pres 9/30/07; 09/10 expansions only; see subsidiaries for 2008.

250

500

REC

LB 11/1

80

150

280

sanyo

LB 11/1

300

400

475

Schott solar

PR 9/19/07

130

190

450

Schott solar, thin-film

PR 11/7/07

33

33

100

Sharp - Katsuragi

Pvtech,11/27

710

710

710

Sharp- Sakai,

sharp PR, Reuters 12/15/07

1000

1000

Showa Shell

NREL 9/07 report

20

20

80

Signet Solar

PR 6/7/07

Sinonar

amer chamber commerce taiwan, v37 n9

15

15

40

soen

Solar EnerTech

PR 12/18/07

25

50

50

Solar Morph

PR (equation) - 7/11/07 LB 11/1

0

20

60

Solar Systems (Australia, CPV)

PR 10/4/07

300

300

Solar-Fabrik/ SEP subsid

website

25

25

25

solf

Solarfun

LB 11/1

250

300

350

Solarmer

website

Solarworld AG

LB 11/1

338

390

475

SolFocus

website

Solibro

qcells pres 9/30/07

25

25

25

Solland Solar

11/15 PR

170

170

500

Solopower

PR 7/12/07, cnet news 7/07

20

20

20

Spectrolab (Boeing)

Sunfilm

PR 11/8/07

30

60

60

spwr

Sunpower

3Q07 ER

414

574

574

stp

Suntech

LB 11/1, company PR 12/11/07

1100

1400

2000

Sunways

3Q07 rpt, unicredit analyst report

116

116

116

tsl

Trina Solar

3Q07 ER

350

350

350

T-Solar Global

AMAT PR,3/20/07

40

40

40

Unitech

Taipei Times 8/13/07

30

30

30

Wurth Solar

PR 10/27/06

15

15

15

XsunX

PR 12/3/07

25

25

100

yge

Yingli Green Energy

12/11 PR

400

600

600

Yunnan Tianda

Chinese Academy of Science, Wenjing pres., website

50

50

50

Zhejiang Sunflower

Chinese Academy of Science, Wenjing pres., website

100

100

100

Subtotal -Solar PV

12198.5

16697

22666

Cf. supply, LB 11/1 report

7789

10200

13237

SUPPLY - Solar Thermal

Ausra

Renewable Energy Access,12/14/07

700

700

700

Schott solar thermal

PR 6/8/07 - no data

Subtotal - Solar Thermal

700

700

700

SUPPLY - Total

12898.5

17397

23366

Demand, MW

Author

Source

2008

2009

2010

UBS

Q-cells 11/14/07 pres.

5000

8000

Merrill Lynch

EMCORE 7/11/07 pres.

3500

5200

7000

Lehman Bros

LB 11/1 report

3500

4800

EPIA - policy driven scenario

epia.org

3100

4300

5600

Average

3775

5575

6300