Mercom: Total corporate funding for solar falls to lowest level in three years
Both private equity and debt funding were down significantly in Q2 and public market financing remains weak, but distributed solar project funds continue to boom
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Mercom Capital’s latest report on solar funding and merger and acquisition (M&A) activity does not paint a pretty picture of the sector. The report finds that Q2 2016 venture capital funding fell by more than half while debt funding fell 43% from the previous quarter. Public market financing remained at only $179 million, more than double last quarter but less than 10% of the level achieved a year ago.
The result is a 41% collapse to only $1.7 billion in all sources of corporate funding during the quarter, the lowest level of financing in three years.
Sungevity’s plan to go public through a $357 million deal with a Massachusetts-based asset management firm is likely the most significant.
The result is a 41% collapse to only $1.7 billion in all sources of corporate funding during the quarter, the lowest level of financing in three years.
Mercom CEO Raj Prabhu notes that Q2 was a continuation of the decline seen in Q1, and that the ill fortune of the solar industry coincides with a number of factors, citing SunEdison’s bankruptcy and the collapse of yieldcos. However, the biggest factor cited by Prabhu is the ongoing decline in solar stocks, spurred not only by high-profile bankruptcies but also the ongoing collapse in oil prices and other factors.
“All of these things have made the public market valuations lower, and with lower valuations it becomes expensive to go out and raise money,” Prabhu told pv magazine. “We’re hoping that it bottoms out now, because it is as low as it can go.”
“All of these things have made the public market valuations lower, and with lower valuations it becomes expensive to go out and raise money,” Prabhu told pv magazine. “We’re hoping that it bottoms out now, because it is as low as it can go.”
Sungevity’s plan to go public through a $357 million deal with a Massachusetts-based asset management firm is likely the most significant.More than 2 GW of solar projects were acquired in the second quarter, down from 2.4 GW in the first. Mercom notes that project acquisition has slowed due to less activity from yieldcos, three of which are associated with bankrupt solar companies Abengoa and SunEdison.
This slowdown is set against a larger trend of growth in project acquisitions. “We will have to wait for another quarter to see if the trend continues,” notes Prabhu.
This slowdown is set against a larger trend of growth in project acquisitions. “We will have to wait for another quarter to see if the trend continues,” notes Prabhu.
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