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Don't Miss The Great Solar Debate: Where Does the Global Solar Industry Stand? Click Here to Register! ×

Bankruptcy Fears for China's LDK Solar Due to Market Downturn

Marc Kenneth Howe, Contributor
May 29, 2012  |  18 Comments

Chinese photovoltaics leader LDK Solar is headed for bankruptcy according to industry observers within China, due to its immense debt burden and a global downturn in the solar energy market.

China’s Nanfang Zhoumo reported on May 26 that bankruptcy rumors have plagued LDK in recent months, causing investors to seek to divest themselves of shares in the company and regional clients to suspend orders for the company’s products.

One of LDK’s leading investors, Guokai Jinrong, is believed to have sought buyers for its stake in the company since the start of 2012, with management heavily regretting its decision to invest in LDK in 2011, just prior to the solar energy market entering a slump after riding an unprecedented wave of growth.

LDK’s 2011 Q4 financial report, which at the end of April was delayed for several days, indicates that the company is mired in debt of U.S. $6 billion, and that annual interest payments alone amount to between $200 million and $300 million. Total Q4 losses were $589 million, marking the company’s third successive losing quarter.

This is a dramatic turnaround for LDK, which until recently was a leader in the Chinese solar energy sector, and whose 37 year-old chairman Peng Xiaofeng was once feted as an industry wunderkind. 

Peng was one of the youngest and wealthiest figures in China’s flourishing solar power sector, and LDK was for a brief period the world’s largest producer of photovoltaic multi-crystalline silicon. LDK was also the first company from Jiangxi province to be listed on a U.S. stock exchange, and the province’s second largest source of tax revenue.

The company’s ambitious high-debt growth model made LDK highly vulnerable to market vicissitudes, however, and the recent industry downturn may have done irreparable damage to the company’s prospects.

Despite the company’s woes, Peng has put on a confident front for both the media and investors, taking the stage earlier this month at a banquet for business partners and customers held in a five-star hotel in Shanghai’s financial district. In an interview with Nanfang Zhoumo, Peng dismissed the concerns of analysts by saying that “they have never seen a great company,” and compared LDK’s troubles to those encountered by Apple’s Steve Jobs a decade ago.

Peng has now pinned LDK’s hopes on the release of a new product — the M2 high-efficiency multi-crystalline silicon wafer, and has informed key lenders that customers are willing to pay a premium of over 10 percent for the new product. Although other industry figures, such as Hu Huifeng, senior deputy general manager of Taiwan’s Neo Solar Power, have come out in support of this claim, analysts believe that the company cannot overcome its current predicament with the release of a single new product, and that given the poor state of the market LDK will be unable to service even the interest payments on its debt.

The flamboyant Peng is certainly no stranger to controversy or crisis. His decision to invest in a 15,000 ton silicon factory was criticized heavily by LDK insiders as well as external observers. Departing senior personnel have complained about management problems within LDK, with many decrying Peng’s headstrong style, lack of prudence, and cavalier attitude toward the opinions of others. The company also faced financial difficulties at the end of 2009, when LDK’s Q3 asset-liability ratio hit 85.15 percent, and its total bank loans reached $1.403 billion. Those problems pale in comparison to the company’s current $6 billion debt burden, however.

Rumors reported by Nanfang Zhoumo also allege that LDK Solar has already filed for bankruptcy protection with the Jiangxi province government, but that the application was refused due to the size of the company and its importance for the provincial economy. 

Lead image: Downturn via Shutterstock

18 Comments

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Vyacheslav Mammadov
Vyacheslav Mammadov
June 2, 2012
Lord! Comrades!
Economy on the brink of revolution!
Three years ago, my message to Barack Obama that the economy will inevitably collapse.
Why is this happening: Now is the peak of the deficit, when the store shelves are filled, when the resource deposits were exhausted, when the technology is very low for production fields. Millionaires last year played a pyramid in the financial stocks, all this led to the closure of casinos in the financial markets.
Some countries such as Russia's economy is on the rise temporarily, it is due to monopolization of production, and this is a temporary phenomenon will lead to conclusions
private capital, and then followed by the economic downturn due to the decline of competition.
Is there a way out of a global collapse? My view is unambiguous, the output of a global, global resolve. One World Currency is! This will lead to panic markets, making the mistakes of others.There is a second plan, but alas I am just a person living on this planet.
Slava!
Dharmappa Barki
Dharmappa Barki
June 1, 2012
Attention: Onegreenday!

Thanks for your appreciation. There are many in this beautiful world who daily carry on with their great perspective and deeds. Unfortunately, in an inefficient system even the efficient ones are party to the failure. By 2050 it's predicted that we would need two entire earths to meet our natural resource needs. We are stripping the earth of its resources before it can replenish itself. How long we will continue talking on economy and the profits?

I cannot agree more than with Alan Eddison who said "We owe the ecology an apology".

I may not be asking for more if I can request you to reveal your name! I could not recollect about our transaction on a solar project that you wished to transact with. Nevertheless, it's nice we connected; it would have been great if we had met with! As we walk down around this beautiful world, let us smell roses (even if we don't meet), for we only get to play one round...

Warmly,
DT Barki,
www.solarnest.net,
dtbarki@usa.net
Kim Hanna
Kim Hanna
June 1, 2012
Mr. Barki I like your perspective and company.
I contacted your company about a possible solar project in Massachusetts.
Mike Maybury
Mike Maybury
June 1, 2012
Our whole nationalistic system is perhaps wrong. For over 6o years we have had the opportunity to create more international co-operation, ensuring that all the world's population have sufficient energy, water and sanitation.
This cannot be achieved if individual populations in 'nation states' regard themselves as superior and seperate from the rest of humanity.
Cooperation is more important than competition, although this may be a hard lesson for the capitalist chiefs.
How is it defensable for CEOs to earn so much more than their workers, and for western workers salaries to be so glaringly more than those of the poor in other parts of the world?
Are the world's leaders really so dim, that such important firms should be allowed to even get close to bankruptcy when the rest of the world is calling out for cheap natural energy?
ANONYMOUS
May 31, 2012
Bain Capital to the rescue!
ANONYMOUS
May 31, 2012
Vineland, China is not the same as the rest of the world-- the lenders are Chinese and the companies are Chinese. Different rules, customs and objectives.
Andrew Wilkins
Andrew Wilkins
May 31, 2012
Although selective bailouts of banks, insurance and auto companies have occured in N.A., I've never heard of a filing for bankruptcy being refused.

The hard reality is if a company's expenses exceed revenues for an extended period, lenders will simply stop lending as the risk and liability becomes too great. I'd like to think this reality is the same in China as it is in the rest of the world.
ANONYMOUS
May 31, 2012
HT-SAAE.PV Shanghai Aerospace Solar- No bankruptcy risk.
Top Quality Solar Panels made by ISO9001:2008, ISO14001, OHSAS18001, TUV, IEC61215 & IEC61730, UL, Rina, CSA certificate from China State-owned manufacturer
- 10 years warranty agains manship
- 25 years power output warranty.

We provide Reliable and environmentally clean electric power to on-grid and off-grid Residential, Commercial, Industrial and Utility scale applications throughout the world.

Shanghai Aerospace Solar is a pioneer in designing, manufacturing and supplies Highly efficient and cost effective terrestrial crystalline Solar Photovoltaic Modules. Its activities are centered in three technology categories: Photovoltaic, Gallium arsenide solar array for satellite and High Concentration Photovoltaic. ( SNEC stand N5-310, and Intersolar germany A1- 630.)
Stronger, safer Leading PV Supplier - Shanghai Aerospace Solar since 1960s,
Real Reliable and Responsible China government holding company- it's our country national strategy new energy, 900MW plants doing.
Innovation and Cost Saving Strategy - Since Vertical produces silicon, ingots, wafers, cells, solar modules
Manufactures and supplies Highly efficient and cost effective terrestrial crystalline solar photovoltaic modules
OEM for SHARP Solar 120MW yearly since 2004, to be one of our Distributors
Awaiting for your comments. jeffsolare at gmail dot com
ANONYMOUS
May 30, 2012
Western values are different. Profit is a low priority for Communist Chinese companies that are more focused on gaining market share and employing workers. In the western world the boards of LDK or Suntech would have replaced the ego-maniacal CEOs long ago. The only idiots are the investors and non-Chinese employees who hang on for the ride downhill.
ANONYMOUS
May 30, 2012
The goal of economic growth "forever" is simply not realistic, yet the metric is used to gauge economic health by so many economists. If carried out to fruition, simply logic tells you that quality of life will suffer dramatically.
Rather than growth for growth's sake, how about we focus on "doing more with less".
MARK SMITH
MARK SMITH
May 30, 2012
Mr.Howe, why are you so negative? Have you ever built anything?
What do you do for a living?
MARK SMITH
MARK SMITH
May 30, 2012
It sounds like LDK would be a great candidate for reorganization, not dissolution. If Mr. Trump has profited by it, why can't LDK? Why be so pessimistic?
Dharmappa Barki
Dharmappa Barki
May 30, 2012
The world is now spinning in its misplaced priorities. The modern jargons such as growth, economy, share market, bankruptcy, global downturn and so on have lost their intrinsic meaning on the face of the priorities of true Human Development where ecological growth would be central theme of the world order.

What message we give to our younger generations when world's top economists, Nobel Laureates do not come to rescue nor they understand the situation that we are in today. What conclusion one will draw after the continued debacles of mega ventures such as Solyndra, Evergreen in the US and now LDK in China?
There must be some flaw in the basic exposition of 'global economy'. If everything is failing in the domain of sustainable technology fronts towards making a sustainable business, it's better to turn the table the other side by scrapping the modern economy model: After all, we are just giving some names and jargons to attribute the wrong-doings of the modern business. Are you listening, HBS? (Harvard Business School).

We are quite too much hung on to the growth of economy than shifting our attention to the true growth of ecology. It's unfortunate that anything in this world is turned towards 'profitability', 'growth' 'scrip' and in the melee the 'sustainable' growth riding on ecology have lost its sheen.

Which is wrong?: Economy? Economists? Or economics itself? It's time to redefine all of them in today's context. If I have confused most readers, I have done my job, as those who have tried to 'convince' the people on world economy order with their 'theories' and 'practices' have left more confusion.

There can be economy only where there is ecology.

Let the giant bicycle of economy move, but let's keep our feet on the ecology pedals. Shift the focus from economy to ecology by re-defining the definition of profitability. Wealthy Peng is in poor health! Say no to creating more poorly rich Pengs! Enrich!
Kim Hanna
Kim Hanna
May 30, 2012
Jens is so right on the health issues in China. If you add the cost of future medical care & societal loss due to coal; solar is a no-brainer..and keeps their own solar industry humming just feeding their power plants.
Jens Stubbe
Jens Stubbe
May 30, 2012
It seems Peng is going for the classic too big to fail strategy and that a lot of investors have been very careless.

Best guess is a reconstruction where the stockholders stand to lose all or at least a substantial share of the company to the the unfortunate banks who approved loans.

PV LCOE will continue to drop and those who cant compete will be die of.

Just look to the much larger display business where giant after giant have been savagely put to the ground by fiercer competitors.

Chinese PV producers are very close to a LCOE price point where they can begin to win utility contracts over heavily polluting coal power constructors and the Communist party is realizing that exponential growth and sickening pollution does not add up to a good future - they need to go RE ASAP.
bruce gladstone
bruce gladstone
May 30, 2012
Agreed, the author just got his words wrong. I want to believe he understands the difference! Fantastic growth doesn't feel like a good investment when the capacity growth is super duper fantastic.
Fred Widicus
Fred Widicus
May 29, 2012
The party appears to be over for LDK.
William Brown
William Brown
May 29, 2012
The term "global downturn in the solar energy market" seems very misleading to me. The solar industry is one of the faster growing industries on the planet. Demand is growing fast and supply is growing fast, but they are not in-sync. In 2010, demand out-stripped supply and module makers enjoyed fat margins. In 2011, as companies over-compensated, supply out-stripped demand, and margins were compressed. This is basic Econ 101 stuff.
Does "global downturn" refer to this scenario? Or does the author only understand the "demand" side of the equation?

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