Anita Zhu
Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners
Thank you, Jessie. Hello, everyone. This is Anita. I'll now deliver our management remarks on behalf of our CEO, Mr. Xu. In the first quarter of 2026, market sentiment across the solar PV industry remained cautious amid seasonal softness and elevated inventory levels. It was further exacerbated by rising module prices driven by higher silver, aluminum, and glass costs, which led to a market slowdown in China. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East also weighed on end market demand in the region. Against this backdrop, persistent industry overcapacity continued to exert downward pressure on polysilicon prices, resulting in quarterly operating and net losses. Notwithstanding these headwinds, we continue to maintain a robust and healthy balance sheet with 0 debt. As of March 31, 2026, we held a cash balance of USD 559.4 million, short-term investments of USD 288.3 million, bank notes receivable of $20.8 million, held-to-maturity investment of $50.3 million, and a fixed-term bank deposit balance of USD 1.1 billion. In total, these assets that can be converted into cash stood at USD 2 billion, providing us with ample liquidity. This solid financial position gives us the confidence and strategic flexibility to navigate the current market downturn. On the operational front, we continue to take proactive measures to navigate challenging market conditions and weak selling prices with nameplate capacity utilization rate operating at approximately 57%. Total production volume at our 2 polysilicon facilities was 43,402 metric tons for the quarter, exceeding our guidance range of 35,000 metric tons to 40,000 metric tons. With market prices for polysilicon experiencing a notable decline to be below production cost during the quarter, we adhered to the Chinese authorities' self-regulation guidelines by declining to engage in below-cost sales. We adopted a disciplined wait-and-see approach, pending further implementation of the national anti-involution policies we highlighted last quarter. As a result, our sales volume dropped to 4,482 metric tons, while average selling price increased 2.3% sequentially to USD 5.96 per kilogram. On the cost side, total production and cash costs increased marginally by 2% and 3% respectively on a sequential basis, primarily driven by exchange rate movements. However, despite higher silicon metal costs, manufacturing costs in RMB terms actually declined slightly on a sequential basis, reflecting our continued improvements in manufacturing efficiency. In light of the current market dynamics, we expect total polysilicon production volume in the second quarter of 2026 to be approximately 35,000 metric tons to 40,000 metric tons. For the full year of 2026, we expect production volume to remain in the range of 140,000 to 170,000 metric tons. With the solar market impacted by seasonality surrounding the Chinese New Year holidays and the absence of concrete updates on capacity rationalization policies, polysilicon transactions and shipment volumes remained low during the quarter. N-type polysilicon prices dropped from RMB 48 to RMB 55 per kilogram at the end of 2025 to RMB 35 to RMB 37 per kilogram by the end of the first quarter. However, polysilicon prices heading into the second quarter are showing signs of bottoming out with weekly declines gradually easing. While producers await clear guidelines from authorities to tack overcapacity, a weak demand outlook, industry inventory buildup and financial pressure forced several peers to adjust their production pricing strategies toward a more market-oriented approach. As a result, industry-level polysilicon monthly supply fell to approximately 93,000 metric tons during the quarter, representing an industry average utilization rate of just 39%. Looking ahead, we expect government authorities to strengthen the anti-involution policies necessary to address these industry-wide overcapacity issues. As an encouraging move on April 17, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the National Development and Reform Commission, the State Administration for Market Regulation, the National Energy Administration and other key national departments jointly had a symposium on regulating market competition within the solar PV sector, reinforcing the urgent need to address irrational competition and curb destructive revolution. Additionally, all relevant authorities are now required to deploy concerted measures to strengthen industry governance and promote the high-quality development of the solar PV industry, including in respect of capacity regulation, standards guidelines [Technical Difficulty]