Doug Young
China’s solar retrenchment has taken a big step forward with word
that a bankruptcy court has chosen Hong Kong-listed Shunfeng
Photovoltaic (HKEx: 1165)
from a field of bidders vying to invest in reorganizing former
solar pioneer Suntech (NYSE: STP).
The decision is interesting both because of who the bankruptcy
court selected, and also because of who lost the bidding.
The
selection of Shunfeng looks particularly significant, as it could
mark the emergence of a new major player as the battered solar
panel sector finally starts to emerge from its 2-year-old
downturn.
The latest reports don’t contain too much information beyond the
fact that Shunfeng was formally selected earlier this week to
provide Suntech some of the key funding it will need to emerge
from bankruptcy. (English article) Others who made it to the
final round of bidding included GCL Poly-Energy
(HKEx: 3800)
and Wuxi Guolian, according to the reports.
Earlier reports had indicated that 2 New York-listed Chinese
manufacturers, Yingli (NYSE: YGE)
and Trina (NYSE: TSL),
were also interested in the bidding at one point..
Shunfeng’s Hong Kong-listed shares rallied nearly 50 percent in
the 2 trading days this week after rumors first emerged that it
was named as Suntech’s investor, though they gave back some of
those gains in the latest session. Even after the rally, the
company’s market value remains relatively small, at just under $1
billion. Rivals like Trina and Yingli were once worth much more at
the height of enthusiasm about the future of solar power 3 years
ago, but most are now valued at similar levels.
Shungfeng’s selection looks particularly noteworthy because the
company is also part of a group that previously purchased 20
percent of LDK (NYSE: LDK),
China’s other major struggling solar player, according to one of
my sources. Whereas Suntech was formally forced into bankruptcy
earlier this year after defaulting on more than $500 million in
bonds, LDK has been slowly reorganizing outside bankruptcy court
by selling off assets and selling shares to new investors.
Many solar shares have started to rally in the last few months as
the sector’s outlook starts to improve, but Suntech and LDK shares
have performed less well due to uncertainty surrounding the pair.
A strong possibility is that shares for both companies could
become worthless, or more likely that existing shareholders will
be strongly diluted when each company issues more stock to new
investors.
Shunfeng’s selection to invest in Suntech, combined with its
existing investments in LDK, certainly make the company an
interesting one to watch as the sector reorganizes. Prior to the
downturn, Suntech was once China’s leading solar panel maker.
Creative accounting and overly aggressive debt issuing ultimately
led to its downfall, but the company still holds good
manufacturing assets that could be quite valuable to a buyer. LDK
faced similar issues with an overly heavy debt load, and is
currently in talks with some of its bond holders after missing a
recent interest payment. (company announcement)
All that said, this latest development looks potentially positive
for Shunfeng, which could emerge as quite a strong player if it
can take control of Suntech’s and LDK’s assets without the huge
debt load held by each of those companies. Shunfeng could also
face integration issues, as local governments would almost
certainly resist any more major layoffs or facility closures at
Suntech’s and LDK’s main facilities. At the end of the day, I
would probably give Shunfeng a 50-50 chance of success if it can
successfully take control of Suntech’s and LDK’s assets, producing
a new big name to watch in the recovering sector.
http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2013/10/shunfeng_could_be_chinas_new_major_solar_ player_1.html
No comments:
Post a Comment