By Pooja Menon and Dharna Bafna Feb 25 (Reuters) – Shares of First Solar slumped 12.8% to its lowest since September last year on Wednesday, after the company forecast annual sales below Wall Street expectations amid U.S. policy environment uncertainty and permitting delays under the Trump administration. The solar panel maker on Tuesday said it […]
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First Solar shares slump after weak sales forecast amid policy uncertainty
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By Pooja Menon and Dharna Bafna
Feb 25 (Reuters) – Shares of First Solar slumped 12.8% to its lowest since September last year on Wednesday, after the company forecast annual sales below Wall Street expectations amid U.S. policy environment uncertainty and permitting delays under the Trump administration.
The solar panel maker on Tuesday said it expects 2026 net sales to be in the range of $4.9 billion to $5.2 billion, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $6 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Executives said in a post-earnings call on Tuesday that the company expects a total tariff impact of $125 million to $135 million this year.
The solar industry faces tariff pressures and a freeze on approvals for major projects under the current administration, as part of an agenda focused on oil, gas, coal and nuclear, diverging from Joe Biden’s green energy policies.
RBC Capital Markets analyst Christopher Dendrinos said the 2026 outlook is below expectations on incremental curtailment activity, but sees this as a clearing event that positions it for a volume recovery next year, assuming no additional tariffs are imposed.
The company added the demand for its Series 6 solar module, designed for utility-scale solar plants and produced in Malaysia and Vietnam, remains constrained.
To address this, it will open a new U.S. finishing line in South Carolina, expected to begin production in the fourth quarter, which will utilize a portion of the front end of these Southeast Asian facilities.
Dendrinos added that this should be net positive as it will lower First Solar’s tariff exposure, but additional manufacturing capacity could face continued pressure if tariffs persist.
The company expects the move to improve freight efficiency, reduce tariff exposure and increase the use of local materials, which will help boost sales in the U.S. market.
“First Solar is well understood to be a 2027 story with several positive catalysts on the way,” said Citi analyst Vikram Bagri.
(Reporting by Pooja Menon and Dharna Bafna in Bengaluru; Editing by Vijay Kishore)

