Author Archives: Scalper1

Canadian Solar’s Sales, EPS Expected To Decline For Fifth Time

Canadian Solar ( CSIQ ) stock continued a nine-day losing streak Tuesday — toppling amid a broad solar inferno — ahead of its Q1 report slated early Wednesday when analysts expect the panel-maker to report a fifth straight quarter of declining sales and earnings. Midday on the stock market today , Canadian Solar stock fell 2%, drawn down on SolarCity ( SCTY ) and Vivint Solar ‘s ( VSLR ) disappointing Q1 reports late Monday. SolarCity and Vivint Solar stocks fell 25% and 5%, respectively. Year-to-date, Canadian Solar stock is down 47%. For Q1, the consensus of 10 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expects Canadian Solar to report $663.7 million in sales and 14 cents earnings per share minus items, down 23% and 87%, respectively, vs. the year-earlier quarter. Canadian Solar’s sales and EPS have declined for four straight quarters, on a year-over-year basis. Previously, Canadian Solar guided to $645 million to $695 million in Q1 sales, and 1.085 gigawatts to 1.135 GW in module shipments, which would be down 10% at the midpoint vs. the year-earlier quarter. The company also expects 15 megawatts in shipments to its utility-scale solar projects, but revenue from that may not be recognized in Q1.

Facebook Fights Back Against Onslaught Of Liberal Bias Accusations

Facebook ( FB ) is responding aggressively to a news report that suggests employees suppress news stories from conservative media outlets from appearing on the social network’s influential “Trending” news section. The report from Gizmodo , published Monday, says the claims were made by a former contractor, described as politically conservative, who worked with Facebook. The contractor said stories on conservative topics were prevented from appearing in the Trending section on Facebook even though they were organically trending among the site’s users, allegations that Facebook denied. Conservatives and the Republican Party chewed on the red meat with harsh accusations, including from the Republican National Committee. “It is beyond disturbing to learn that this power is being used to silence view points and stories that don’t fit someone else’s agenda,” said a blog post on GOP.com. “Censorship in any form should give Americans who value their fundamental freedoms great pause.” Alexander Marlow, editor-in-chief of the conservative Breitbart News website, said that the report confirmed a long-standing suspicion among conservatives. The political blog site RedState also weighed in. “It would not be tremendously surprising to any of us to learn that the behavior that is discussed in the Gizmodo article is occurring,” contributor Leon Wolf  said in a post. “It’s a good thing that Facebook’s editorial practices receive more scrutiny, because of the immense power that Facebook yields.” Journalist Glenn Greenwald said in a Twitter post, “Aside from fueling right-wing persecution, this is a key reminder of dangers of Silicon Valley controlling content.” The Trending section posts stories that have recently become popular on Facebook on five categories: news, politics, science, technology and sports and entertainment. Facebook initially responded with an email statement on Monday saying it has “rigorous guidelines in place” for its review team, seeking to ensure consistency and neutrality. “We take allegations of bias very seriously,” a Facebook spokeswoman said in the statement, adding that Facebook is a platform for people and perspectives from across the political spectrum. Facebook amplified its position Tuesday with a Facebook post by Tom Stocky , who heads the Trending Topics group that curates the news. “We take these reports extremely seriously, and have found no evidence that the anonymous allegations are true,” he wrote. “There are rigorous guidelines in place for the review team to ensure consistency and neutrality,” Stocky said. “These guidelines do not permit the suppression of political perspectives. Nor do they permit the prioritization of one viewpoint over another or one news outlet over another.”

SolarCity Burns On ‘Alarmingly Weak’ Q1; Vivint Joins SunEd Case

IBD’s 20-company Energy-Solar industry group hit a three-year low Tuesday after No. 1 residential installer SolarCity ( SCTY ) cut its 2016 guidance on slow Q1 bookings and rival Vivint Solar ( VSLR ) missed quarterly views on growing losses. Late Monday, Vivint Solar said it would participate in the bankruptcy case against ex-acquirer SunEdison “to maximize the recovery from claims against SunEdison.” Vivint scrapped the sale four months before SunEd filed for bankruptcy, an expected move. Midday on the stock market today , SolarCity stock crashed 25.2%, leading an industrywide 5.5% dip. Shares of top rivals Sunrun ( RUN ) and Vivint Solar trailed, down 7.4% and 6.7%, respectively. Yieldco TerraForm Power ( TERP ) stock slid 2.6%. SolarCity Q1 Booking Topple 33% For Q1, SolarCity reported $123 million in sales, up 82% vs. the year-earlier quarter, and topping the consensus for $108.4 million. But losses per-share minus items deepened to $2.56 vs. $1.53 in the year-ago period and analyst views for $2.31. Installations grew 40% year over year to 214 megawatts, topping guidance for 180 MW, but 160 MW in bookings fell 33% vs. the year-earlier quarter, SolarCity said Monday. For Q2, SolarCity expects 185 MW in installations, down 2% year over year. Current-quarter losses guidance for $2.70-$2.80 per-share ex items missed the consensus for $2.13 and would widen from $1.61 in the year-earlier quarter. SolarCity also cut its 2016 guidance to a range of 1 gigawatt to 1.1 GW in installations vs. earlier views for 1.25 GW, citing slow Q1 bookings related to Nevada’s decision to cut net-metering payments to solar customers. The Nevada decision spooked potential customers, SolarCity said. Vivint Solar Bookings Growth Tops SolarCity Credit Suisse analyst Patrick Jobin cut his price target on SolarCity stock to 38 from 62, but reiterated an outperform rating. SolarCity’s “alarmingly weak bookings (will) derail 40% growth outlook,” he wrote in a research report. “SolarCity seems to be faced with reproving the merits of their business model each quarter — facing either operational, regulatory, capital or competitive challenges — in addition to painfully, yet gradually, transitioning the strategy more toward value than growth,” he wrote. Jobin lowered his 2016 installation view to 16% MW growth. Also late Monday, Vivint Solar reported $16.6 million in Q1 sales on a 65-cent per-share loss minus items, missing Wall Street views for $17.6 million and a 61-cent loss. Sales grew 93% year over year, but losses deepened from 61 cents in the year-ago quarter. But, Vivint’s Q1 bookings grew 33% year over year to 66 MW, leading 19% growth in installations to 55 MW.