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Items Tagged With FSLR

FSLR - Two Reasons to Wait for a Pullback, Many Reasons to Buy
Written By: Eben Esterhuizen
2007-06-20 21:17:50

FirstSolar (FSLR - Last trade $80.82) is arguably the brightest solar stock of 2007. The stock has skyrocketed from a January 3 low of $28.20 to a June 19 high of $79.88. Banc of America, Lazard Capital, Piper Jaffray, Cowen & Co and First Albany all have buy ratings on the stock. Jim Cramer, who recently said that solar valuations have become uncomfortably high, said that he won't endorse shorting FSLR. As we pointed out last week, FSLR has recently showed the highest volatility of U.S. listed solar stocks.


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FSLR Earnings: Buy the Rumor, Sell the News
Written By: Eben Esterhuizen
2007-08-03 00:44:30

As an investor, are you more afraid of the fallout from credit spreads or are you more afraid of missing the market bottom? The battle between fear and greed on global stock markets has led to many casualties this week, including FirstSolar (FSLR - Last trade $104.54).


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FSLR Files Secondary Offering: Pullback Provides Great Entry Point
Written By: Eben Esterhuizen
2007-07-20 01:51:29
First Solar (FSLR - Last trade $111.64) on Thursday registered to sell 9.65 million shares, including 5.65 million shares to be sold by selling stockholders. FSLR traded down sharply on the news. We have suggested before that FSLR may go for a secondary offering, and today's sell-off on the news provides a great entry point ahead of Q2 earnings on July 30.
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Happy New Year for Solar?
Written By: Eben Esterhuizen
2008-01-09 22:52:43
Going Solar
Photo:niznoz, Creative Commons, Flickr
Happy new year! May the good fortune bore you in 2008.

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How to Turn The Polysilicon Supply Problem Into a Profitable Solution (Part 1)
Written By: Eben Esterhuizen
2007-10-15 00:28:12
glass is always half full
Photo:bibliogrrl, Creative Commons, Flickr
It looks like the glass is always half full at chip equipment giant Applied Materials (AMAT - Last trade $21.04). The company's Chief Technology Officer, Winfried Hoffmann, said in a recent Reuters interview that he expects tight supplies of polysilicon, a key component in solar cell production, to ease from this year. He projects that the market for solar power will grow by 25%-30% over the next 3-5 years due to the lower costs associated with expanded polysilicon supplies.

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