First Solar Refills Pipeline After Flat First Quarter

Publié le 7 mai 2013
First Solar 
May 7, 2013 - First Solar Inc. said its pipeline of orders was unchanged in the first quarter and it's pursuing as much as 5.5 gigawatts of prospective sales, mainly in the Americas.

The company had $8 billion in expected revenue at the end of the first quarter, unchanged from the end of 2012, Chief Executive Officer Jim Hughes said during a conference call today.

The company expects results in the second half of the year to be better than in the first half, a reversal of its earlier forecast, as it acquires new solar farms that will use its panels. Of the 5.5 gigawatts of potential orders, about 700 megawatts comes from mid- to late-stage projects that are near construction, Hughes said.

"We are focusing on replenishing our pipeline in 2014 and beyond," Hughes said.

That includes projects in Chile, Canada and a "steady diet" of stranded solar projects that developers can't complete in California and elsewhere in the U.S. Southwest, he said. The company forecasts its results using expected revenue from panels it will install at solar farms it's developing and contracted sales to other developers.

Net income in the quarter was $59.1 million, or 66 cents a share, compared with a year-earlier loss of $449 million, or $5.20 a share, the Tempe, Arizona-based company said today in a statement. Sales climbed 52 percent to $755.2 million. Excluding some one-time expenses related to restructuring expenses, earnings of 69 cents were six cents less than the average of 17 analysts' estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

'Lumpy' Sales

The shortfall in the quarter isn't as important as the long-term prospects, said Sanjay Shrestha, an analyst at Lazard Capital Markets LLC in New York.

"We weren't so focused on the quarter, as numbers will be lumpy due to the nature of project development," Shrestha said in an interview. "The big story here really is, they continue to execute." He has a buy rating on the shares and a $60 price target.

Hughes, who joined the company a year ago, is seeking to expand its pipeline of utility-scale solar farms under development. First Solar's shift to building and selling large projects is driving profits while most of its competitors are losing money by focusing on selling panels.

The company reiterated its forecast of sales of $3.8 billion to $4 billion this year. That will generate 2013 income of $4 to $4.50 a share.

New Markets

Hughes is also steering the company into new regions including Japan, which is expected to become the second-largest solar market this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. First Solar agreed in April to acquire TetraSun. Initial sales are expected to begin next year in Japan.


Source: Bloomberg
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