Solar-perle aus Kanada
Die enorm hohen Umsätze heute sprechen für weitere shortattacken.
Ich hoffe einfach mal das der Boden jetzt erreicht ist und die 30 wieder angepeilt werden.
Vielleicht setzt es nochmal ein wenig zurück aber dennoch bin ich davon überzeugt das es hier in den nächsten Wochen wieder aufwärts geht
http://seekingalpha.com/article/...-u-s-solar-stocks-lose-their-shine
if we jump forward and look at the last three days of trading, it has been a light period of 1.257M, 2.187M, and 1.791M shares trading hands. Looking at this recent trend makes it appear that the speculative frenzy may finally be dying down. It is possible that we are now transitioning into a period where longer-term investors can start to think about taking a position.
However, short interest increased Wednesday and it currently stands at 14% of the float:....
....The real problem with the stock is short term profiteers looking for a quick buck. When a stock can oscillate almost a dollar a day at this price level, it becomes the target of day traders driven by greed. The average investor, who is looking for value and long-term growth, can look at a stock like Canadian Solar and can get very frustrated. One day its up big, the next day all of its gains are wiped out. After all, frustrated investors were rightly disappointed that Canadian Solar bled red after a strong quarterly earnings report.
The stock fell because of greed and fear. Nothing more, nothing less....
http://seekingalpha.com/article/...nadian-solar-a-bright-future-ahead
CSIQ hat gestern ca. 176 $ Mio Marktkapitalisierung verloren. Das ist ungefähr soviel, wie Renesola insgesamt noch auf die Waage bringt. Und das wegen eines sinkenden Ölpreises.
Dabei hat beides wenig miteinander zu tun.
Schönes WE
JKS sogar +3,49% YGE +1,81%
Yet, solar stocks have traded lower on the price of oil rather than the strong fundamentals in the industry. The price of oil really has nothing to do with the demand for solar energy, but the market seems to think all energy is correlated and recently stocks have gotten crushed.
That's the downside this year, but as I said, the industry is doing very well if you take a more fundamental look......
Solar project developers have been winners on the solar market recently, but it's unknown if that position will last. Long-term, I think manufacturers will start playing a major role in development, taking power away from developers buying panels on the open market. SunPower, Trina Solar, and Canadian Solar have all moved downstream to capture project value from their panels and I think that will continue long-term.
Read more: http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2014/11/29/...spx#ixzz3KdoDl24o
(eigentlich über Sunedison und First Solar ,aber auch generell)
In erster Linie Margin Calls von Hedgefonds ,die der Ölabsturz erwischt hat
zweitens sind die Leute nicht mehr so bereit für alternative Energie Unterstützung zu zahlen wenn Öl billig wird...drittens China
While the Chinese government is presently supporting solar, if China undergoes a hard landing, credit will contract, and the weaker solar companies will suffer significantly. The flip side, however, is if China recovers, crude oil and solar will likely recover as well.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/...why-solar-is-correlated-with-crude
http://www.aktiencheck.de/exklusiv/...legenheit_Aktienanalyse-6158225
klingt fast so schön wie ulm neulich
Bottom line: The recent plunge in solar stocks is the result of panic selling due to falling oil prices, meaning the shares could rebound sharply once the sell-off subsides.
US investors were showing signs of new energy indigestion in the shortened trading day after Thanksgiving, dumping stocks of all the major solar panel makers in a messy post-holiday sell-off. With no major news from any of the companies, the driving force behind the sell-off appears to be the recent plunge in oil prices, which hit new 4-year lows late last week after OPEC declined to cut its daily output quotas.
Investors appear to be worrying that falling oil prices will dampen enthusiasm for building new solar plants, since lower oil prices mean solar power will be less competitive with more traditional power sources derived from fossil fuels. The only problem with that logic is that solar power was never competitive with fossil fuels to begin with, meaning solar stocks could be getting punished for no good reason.........
So the big question now becomes: Is all of this selling justified, and is the industry headed into a new downturn just as it starts to emerge from its previous slump? I'm not a major expert on solar energy policy, but my answer to both of these questions would be a fairly confident "no." The reason is simple, namely that solar and wind were never economically competitive power sources using current technology, even when oil prices were still high. The only reason solar and wind energy plants are being built at all is due to government policies that subsidize their development.
Those policies typically see governments set prices for solar and wind power at artificially high levels, and then force utilities to buy that power at those inflated prices. Thus even if a power company can make its own power at much cheaper costs, it still has to buy all the output from solar energy plants at the government-set prices. That reality means that solar plant construction shouldn't see any major shifts despite the big drop in oil prices, and that solar stocks are likely to rebound strongly once the current round of panic selling subsides.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/...shares-look-oversold-on-oil-plunge