Last week a jury
found in favor of the United States government in a suit brought in 2013 by the Obama Administration
against the Chinese wind turbine producer, Sinovel Wind Group (601558: Shanghai). Sinovel was found guilty of stealing
technology from American Superconductor
(AMSC: Nasdaq) that
had supplied Sinovel with converter hardware and software solutions. Sinovel may have to pay hefty fines when the
final sentencing step is completed in June 2018.
American Superconductor
had already brought a private suit against Sinovel in China two years before
the Justice Department filed its case.
The China court dismissed the case for lack of evidence. An appeal by AMSC in a higher Chinese legal
venue is still pending.
Every technology
company runs a risk that customers will attempt an end-run around their
product. However, in this case more skullduggery
is alleged. AMSC had supplied Sinovel with a software application AMSC called Low Voltage Ride Through. Sinovel wanted to use the application in
their wind turbines to help regulate the flow of electricity produced by
Sinovel wind turbines into the power grid.
However, the
relationship soured within a very short time when Sinovel reneged on its order. Sinovel has been charged with compromising
AMSC employees from the get-go in order to steal the source code for the
software application and then using the bootlegged software on over 1,000
turbines. AMSC executives are likely finding
some vindication in the U.S. jury decision against Sinovel.
AMSC experienced
a dramatic loss in share value when its claims against Sinovel were disclosed. In the midst of the Dot.com bubble AMSC traded
over $700.00 per share in 2000, and in the days of the company’s foray into the
China wind power market the shares soared again. The
stock set another impressive high around $430.00 in late 2010, but quickly saw
this value disappear as the stock plummeted to around $35.00 within a year.
Unfortunately,
the stock has never recovered despite the company’s efforts to move on and find
new inroads to the wind power market. In
the twelve months ending September 2017, the company reported $63.3 million in
total sales, resulting in an operating loss of $7.8 million. Management had to dip into the bank account
to support operations to the tune of $13.8 million over the twelve months
ending September 2017.
Low
profitability appears to be AMSC’s enemy. Gross margin slid to 2% in the most
recently reported quarter ending September 2017. However, direct costs had exceeded revenue in
the previous quarter. During the three
fiscal years 2015, 2016 and 2017, the gross profit margin has averaged
14.9%. The company must achieve much
greater efficiency or drive sales to a substantially higher level to support
operating expenses that averaged just over $43.0 million per year during those
same fiscal years.
AMSC sells power
electronics products and engineering services to wind power operators as well
as electric utilities using wind power.
The grid product portfolio was recently expanded with the acquisition of
Infinia Technology, a provider of cryocoolers to the U.S. Navy and others using
high temperature superconductors. Investors
will get a first look at Infinia’s contribution to a full three months of sales
and earnings when AMSC reports results from its fiscal third quarter ending
December 2017. AMSC is using Infinia’s
products in conjunction with the AMSC solution for Ship Protection Systems
(SPS), allowing the company to capture more of the SPS business with the Navy
and expand profits.
The company had
$30.3 million in cash on the balance sheet at the end of September 2017,
providing a runway of about two years at the current spending rate. The company last visited the capital market
in May 2017, when 4.0 million shares of common stock were sold for $4.00 per
share. Those investors have seen 30%
pick-up in share value since the follow-on offering, some of which was
delivered with the jury verdict against Sinovel. Shares of AMSC rose 12.4% on the news as the
stock rose from a pre-announcement level of $5.07 to $5.70 in the first trading
day following the development.
AMSC needs much
more than a court room victory. Serious
change must be made in AMSC operations to either right-size operations or drive
revenue and efficiency higher. Indeed,
the jury verdict may have accelerated the point at which investors will require
AMSC to get on with its future as the verdict helps close the book on the nightmare
customer relationship.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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