On The Insider: Jamie Lynn Out with Baby Maddie Briann

BNET Industries

Energy Industry

Industry news and insights by David Phillips

Submit your own

The Mortgage Crisis Delivers a Hit to Solar Firms

May 13th, 2008 @ 10:10 am

0 Comments

Tags: Consumer, U.S., Mortgage Crisis, Taxes, Fuel Cells, Financial Accounting, Mortgages, Telecom & Utilities, Free Trade, Investment

Akeena Solar logoThe mortgage crisis roiling financial markets is now causing new casualties in an unexpected sector — solar-power firms that cater to the home and small-business markets.

Akeena Solar, one of the largest solar-system installers in the U.S., just reported a wider-than-expected quarterly loss due to higher operating costs and warned of weaker demand for the rest of the year. “Benchmark crude at $125 a barrel is no longer inducing U.S. consumers to seek attractive renewable energy sources, for tightening credit is weighing on consumers’ decisions to invest in residential solar installations,” Akeena CEO Barry Cinnamon said in a release.

“Since the beginning of the second quarter we have seen signs that a looming recession and tightening credit are weighing on consumers’ decisions to invest in residential solar installations — even with the price of energy skyrocketing,” Cinnamon added.

The residential and small commercial markets were expected to grow to approximately $1 billion through 2010, up from an estimated $884 million in 2007, according to SolarBuzz, a research and consulting firm. This guidance is starting to look way too optimistic, however, because declining consumer purchasing power in the slowing U.S. economy is offsetting net metering credits and tax incentives. (These allow companies and homeowners to claim a 30 percent tax credit for investments in solar equipment and fuel cells — unlimited for business, capped at $2,000 for consumers.)

The residential and small-business solar-power boom exists largely thanks to easy financing. “Energy-efficient mortgages,” for instance, offered more generous loan terms to consumers buying energy-efficient homes and in some cases let buyers finance new solar systems and similar improvements. Home-improvement contractors also offered consumer financing through vehicles such as GEO Smart Loans from GE Money’s Sales Finance business.

Both sources of credit, unfortunately, are drying up faster than the Aral Sea. And it seems unlikely that things will turn around until credit markets settle down.

TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic
What do you think?
The following tags are supported in BNET comments: <b></b> <i></i> <u></u> <pre></pre>
You are currently a guest | Login?

Trackbacks

The URI to TrackBack this entry is: http://industry.bnet.com/energy/2008/05/13/the-mortgage-crisis-delivers-a-hit-to-solar-firms/trackback/

No trackbacks yet.

advertisement
Recommended Business Articles
BNET Industry Analyst Profiles
Blogger Thumbnail

David Phillips

David Phillips has more than 25 years' experience on Wall Street, first as a financial consultant and then as an equity analyst for several investment banking firms. He sifts through SEC filings for his blog The 10Q Detective, looking for financial statement soft spots, such as depreciation policies, warranty reserves and restructuring charges. He has been widely quoted in outlets such as BusinessWeek, The International Herald Tribune, Investor's Business Daily, Kiplinger's Personal Finance, and The... more »

AboutEnergy Industry

BNET Energy provides daily news coverage for managers and executives in the energy industry, with coverage on major utilies, oil companies, and clean tech and renewable energy businesses. BNET Energy offers analysis on deal flow, new technology, alliances and partnerships, competitive intelligence, and a host of other critical business issues.

advertisement