The Denver Post

Panel purchases going through the roof as leases drop

- By Christophe­r Martin

It’s tough to argue with free. That’s why the no-money-down solar lease became the most popular choice for U.S. rooftop power.

Now, though, the equation is changing. Falling costs are making it easier for consumers to buy solar systems outright, and banks and solar installers are promoting loans with no upfront payments. That’s a threat to companies such as SolarCity, Sunrun and Vivint Solar, which built their businesses on people signing decades-long contracts.

Installati­on growth is slowing for the big three U.S. rooftop solar installers, and GTM Research, an industry consultant, is forecastin­g the percentage of consumers buying rather than leasing residentia­l systems will expand to 45 percent this year, from 38 percent in 2014. Shares in all three companies have plunged more than 40 percent this year for a variety of reasons, including a failed acquisitio­n bid for Vivint and questions about SolarCity’s strategy.

“Leasing was the major game, but that’s changing quickly,” said Patrick Jobin, an analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG. “Consumers are starting to realize there are better options.”

Greg Gill, a retired IBM employee, was looking for ways to cut his $400 monthly utility bill. He considered leasing but decided to pay $32,370 for a 7.3-kilowatt system that was installed in September at his home outside Sacramento, Calif.

Gill charged it on a credit card (to earn rewards) and then paid it off in cash, he said. His April utility bill was $1.18, he earned a $10,000 tax credit, and he’s expecting an 11 percent return on the investment.

“A tree-hugger friend of mine was dead-set on SolarCity,” Gill said. After talking to five installers, he crunched the numbers and concluded that buying was a better deal.

“It really was a no-brainer,” he said. “Even if you financed it at 3 percent, you still come out ahead over leasing.”

He’s not alone. By next year, customers who own their systems will make up the majority of the U.S. residentia­l solar market for the first time since 2011, according to Boston-based GTM. Third-party companies, mainly lease providers, will account for the rest. And that shift is accelerati­ng. In July, Nicole Litvak, a GTM analyst, predicted that owning wouldn’t become the top choice until 2020.

Leasing companies are aware of the trend, including SolarCity, the biggest U.S. rooftop installer, which rolled out a no-moneydown loan program this month. That replaced a more complicate­d financing program introduced in 2014 that ended this year.

“We anticipate loans will continue to be very popular,” Kady Cooper, a spokeswoma­n, said by e-mail. The financing deals offer returns to SolarCity that are comparable to leases, she said, in part because the company’s volume helps it negotiate terms with lenders. A 10-year loan comes with a 2.99 percent fixed interest rate, and 20 years gets 4.99 percent.

SolarCity’s growth is slowing. It expects to install about 1 gigawatt of panels this year, about 15 percent more than last year. In February, the company said 2016 installati­ons would increase as much as 40 percent.

Vivint announced in November that it was offering loans in Utah, its home state, through a partnershi­p with the financing company Solar Mosaic, with plans to expand to other states.

“There is some increasing demand from customers that would like to own their own system,” Casey Briggs, a spokeswoma­n, said in an e-mail, although leases remain “the primary driver in the market for residentia­l solar.”

At Sunrun, leasing will make up about 80 percent of its business in the fourth quarter, down from 85 percent now. It introduced a loan program in September. The San Francisco-based company installed 60 megawatts of panels in the first quarter, up 63 percent from a year earlier. In the fourth quarter, it added 68 megawatts, an 83 percent increase from the same period a year earlier.

 ??  ?? The percentage of consumers buying residentia­l solar systems will expand to 45 percent this year. Jeremy Papasso, Daily Camera file
The percentage of consumers buying residentia­l solar systems will expand to 45 percent this year. Jeremy Papasso, Daily Camera file

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