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schrieb am 29.09.10 18:41:33
Research & Analysis | Thin Film
Shyam Mehta: September 29, 2010
The Sharp-Recurrent Deal: What You Didn’t Know
Did First Solar unwittingly bail Recurrent out?
Sharp's recent purchase of U.S. developer Recurrent Energy took
many by surprise, but in the end, we accepted that there must have
been valid reasons for it. After all,
(a) MEMC bought SunEdison. First Solar bought NextLight. It's been
the latest instance of BIg Upstream Player acquiring U.S. Pureplay
Developer. (That only leaves Fotowatio Renewable Ventures from
amongst the pack. You have to wonder how long it will take before a
company like Q-Cells, Solarworld, or REC takes the plunge.)
(b) How else could Sharp enter the U.S. market? Its c-Si modules
are expensive compared to Chinese manufacturers and First Solar.
Amorphous, less expensive, but it's possibly a harder sell, even
for Sharp, given all the negative rep points it has accumulated
thanks to the exit of Applied and the insolvencies of its customers
(Signet, Sunfilm). There is a broad sense that the market in the
U.S. has to be made; project economics for a pureplay developer
given existing prices are still not attractive enough to stimulate
hunders of megawatts in production for a module vendor, at least
not right now. Look at who's really successful here: SunPower and
First Solar, both downstream-integrated. With Germany cooling down
in 2011, success in Italy and the U.S. is absolutely critical.
(c) Sharp does have a lot of capacity (870 MW by the end of 2010:
550 MW in c-Si and 320 MW of tandem-junction Si). It plans on
expanding, too: seems that Sharp believes the key to unlocking
tandem-Si's cost potential is in scaling up, big time. They've
always talked about building this 640 MW factory, and they've
finished a fair bit of it so far. At that scale, you definitely
need some control over your destiny. Mark Osborne from PV-Tech also
ventured that it's more important for thin-film fabs to be
well-utilized than for c-Si from a cost point of view. That sounds
intuitively true (it's always the thin-film firms talking about
throughput), although the explanation is not entirely obvious to me
(in-line manufacturing process for thin film vs. batch for
c-Si?).
(d) There are reasons to be believe it will be successful. As
SunPower has shown, integrating downstream can improve a
technology's competitiveness and overall margins, and drive the
market. SunPower too once bought Powerlight, and one would have to
say the move has been successful. And there is the added fact that
the performance advantage of a-Si (in kWh per kW, due to a lower
temperature coefficient and better low-light performance) can be
hard to communicate to a buyer fixated on $/W. This looks like a
natural move for a rapidly expanding amorphous silicon producer
with a large corporate parent.
The above are all plausible, valid arguments, and I'm sure Sharp
executives made and believe them. But if an industry contact is to
be believed, there were also some more pressing particularities
that drove the decision. This is where First Solar comes in:
apparently, Sharp had 200 MW of tandem-Si modules for the next year
or so "locked away". The would-be buyer? You guessed it. Nextlight.
Then one fine morning, First Solar acquires your biggest potential
customer, and now you have a problem. So that's that. I'm not sure
what it all means, but I figure the world oughta know.
The other thing is the consequences of the Nextlight deal for
Recurrent. It has been mentioned in numerous circles that a number
of Recurrent's projects are stuck in limbo because the project
economics models that determined their bid prices assumed an
unrealistically low cost of capital. It is a safe bet that Sharp
(the corporation) has access to cheaper capital. In any case, it's
prospecting days in the U.S. solar development world, and people
are paying primo dollar for pipeline (regardless of how much sense
that makes: I hope Sharp took a long, hard look at those project
bids), and this makes Recurrent look like geniuses, deservedly or
not.
At the end of the day, though, I have to admit it's not really what
excited me about this development. Rather, it is the fact that
Sharp is making some gutsy moves - with tandem, with Recurrent - to
drive the PV industry and market forward. I just hope it's made the
right choice in both respects.
schrieb am 02.11.10 06:03:35
Guten Morgen,
alle an Bord? Auch bei dieser Aktie sollte eine Trendumkehr nicht
mehr lange auf sich warten lassen.
Gruß
zeitreisen
schrieb am 04.02.11 10:16:42
By Reiji Murai
TOKYO, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Shares in Japan's Sharp Corp jumped on
Friday after an industry source told Reuters it is negotiating
liquid-crystal display panel supply deals with Samsung Electronics
of South Korea and Taiwan's Chimei Innolux.
Sharp expects to reach an agreement soon to supply Samsung with
large panels, said the source, who declined to be identified.
Sharp, the world's fifth-largest producer of large LCD panels, is
also negotiating to provide Chimei with large panels for TV use in
return for a supply of mid-sized panels from the Taiwanese firm,
the source said.
Shares in Sharp touched a high of 888 yen, up nearly 5 percent,
following the news. Markets in Taiwan and South Korea were closed
for the Lunar New Year holiday.
The Nikkei business daily said earlier Sharp and Chimei, a unit of
Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision Industry, had formed a supply tie-up
that would help Sharp cope with the effects of the strong yen,
which is squeezing Japanese exporters' profits.
Sharp, which announced on Thursday it had almost tripled profits in
the nine months to December form the same period a year earlier,
aims to raise production rates at its state-of-the-art panel
factory in Sakai, western Japan.
Media reports have said Sony Corp, which has suffered six years of
losses in its TV business, is reducing its procurement from Sharp
in favour of cheaper manufacturers in other parts of Asia.
Sharp said it would not comment on individual deals. Chimei and
Samsung could not be immediately contacted for comment due to the
holiday.
Separately, Sharp has also reached an agreement to licence Chimei
technology for improving the energy efficiency of LCD panels, the
source said.
schrieb am 08.03.11 21:09:58
Für zwischenzeitlich 7,00 EUR heute in Frankfurt war die Aktie ein
Schnäppchenkauf. Mal sehen, ob es unterhalb der Marke noch gelingt,
einige Aktien abzufischen.
Gruß zeitreisen
schrieb am 17.04.12 20:46:10
Wird Sharp der Produzent vom neuen Apple-TV ? Vorstellbar ja, aber
wann und wie.
Ich bin guter Hoffnung, das sich das Bild bei Sharp aufhellen wird.
Jedenfalls scheint mir diese Strategie sinnvoller als die von Sony
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