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SunPower files for bankruptcy, plans to sell or wind down remaining operations
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Dive Brief:

  • SunPower filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy late Monday after announcing plans to sell portions of its operations to Complete Solaria for $45 million. One of the largest residential solar installation companies in the U.S., SunPower was a leading U.S. manufacturer of solar panels before it spun out its manufacturing operations in 2019.

  • According to the company's bankruptcy filings, SunPower encountered an acute liquidity crisis following a steep drop in demand for residential solar and a series of erroneous financial reports that rendered the company unable to secure new financing.

  • The company aims to sell its existing operations and assets as quickly as possible to pay down its outstanding debts, then it plans to wind down any unsold business operations, according to the bankruptcy documents.

Dive Insight:

SunPower's entire residential and energy storage operation appears headed for a fire sale in the wake of what Matthew Henry, SunPower's newly appointed chief transformation officer, described in bankruptcy filings as a “severe liquidity crisis.”

SunPower has faced potential defaults on various financing arrangements since October 2023, Henry said. Inflation and increased interest rates have reduced demand for residential solar, he said, which contributed to the company's decision in late 2023 and early 2024 to take on hundreds of millions in additional debts that were supposed to serve as bridge financing.

However, the company also experienced delays in filing certain financial reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission on account of errors in previous reports, Henry said. This contributed to SunPower’s inability to procure further capital in spring 2024, he said.

“While the company, along with its advisors and stakeholders, worked diligently to address its liquidity crisis, SunPower has been left with no choice but to effectuate a value-maximizing sale process through chapter 11, followed by a winddown of its businesses, for the benefit of all parties in interest,” Henry said in the company's initial bankruptcy filings.

SunPower appointed Henry in August to oversee the bankruptcy proceedings, but he will remain a managing director at Alvarez & Marsal North America. SunPower retained Alvarez & Marsal in late 2023 to help it address its financial difficulties.