I am an engineer and I sell solar..... Don't buy solar manufacturing companies they are not making money. I looked at their website and saw nothing impressive. A big cost is the installation cost..... A better solar model design is faster to install thus making it less expensive to the buyer thus a better price. Not a stock you can buy but look at tenK solar.....great design and easy to install. Their panel is designed to be wired in series and in parallel thus more production. Also they have a reflector designed with 3m which gives it about 18% more production. Also federal tax credit is scheduled to expire in 2016. Lastly even bigger players in the market are not doing well...look at Solarworld been around since 1977 and they carry a ton of debt
Had this one for over a month as it sat in its base while holding the 200 day mvg avg, and consolidating its move up off the lows mid March. Stopped out a few weeks ago after many false attempts at breaking out higher . I see no rush to revisit this one now, , probably will trade sideways for a little while with 4 and 4.25 providing resistance on the upside Imo
If you think the solar industry is going to take off...which it is there are two main components now.....the panels and the inverters. Eventually batteries will be the next big breakthrough. Elon Musk has a goal for a battery that is $3-5,000 and the size of a microwave. Customers are calling looking to install solar and have this battery as part of their design but it is not out yet. What they can do is install a solar array and add the batteries later. It is as simple as plugging the batteries into the system if it is designed properly initially. To do that there is only one inverter that works: Solar Edge.
There product is great and the stock just went public in 2015. Started in the low $20's and went up to $40 and now is back to low $20's. Check it out. I do know their product is very good and it can be used with any solar panel. Ibought some of their stock in the low $20's but I am an engineer not a stock picker.
One other kind of interesting note. I was asked to speak at a university in town to a class of students. The goal was to see where we are and where we are going. The big game changer I proposed to the students was not new technology in solar panels but battery storage. (right now using current solar technology if we covered just 1/3 of the land we are currently paying farmers not to farm we could produce all of the power the United States needs). If we have an affordable way to store it that will be a huge game changer. I told them I would not have predicted Kodak to be out of business but the world changes and they could see a day in there lifetime with no power companies.
Then just two weeks ago I was invited to lunch by an executive at Xcel Energy (largest in our state and is in over 10 states). They basically reaffirmed the conclusion that the students and I came to when I spoke to them a year before. They call it the death spiral. If people put up arrays with batteries and go off the grid....fewer people will be available to support the grid which will in turn mean higher electric costs.....results in more people investing in solar and leaving the grid....the death spiral for utility companies.
Affordable batteries and an inverter that works with them. Inverter seemed like a logical investment in the future.