JinkoSolar Rallies as Energy Storage Business Gains Momentum Despite Revenue Miss

MarketDash Editorial Team
20 days ago
JinkoSolar reported better-than-expected losses for Q2 and Q3 2025, with investors cheering sequential margin improvements and the company's growing energy storage segment that management expects will become a major profit driver by 2026.

JinkoSolar Holding Co., Ltd. (JKS) delivered results that look messy on the surface but tell a more interesting story underneath. The Chinese solar giant posted mixed second- and third-quarter 2025 numbers, with weak module pricing still creating headwinds. Yet the stock jumped over 16% after earnings, because sometimes what matters isn't where you are, but which direction you're heading.

Third-quarter adjusted earnings per share came in at a loss of $1.00, which sounds bad until you realize analysts were bracing for a $1.60 loss. Revenue of $2.27 billion missed expectations of $2.514 billion, but investors seemed more interested in the improving profitability trajectory and the growing traction in energy storage.

In the second quarter, adjusted EPS of a $2.29 loss also missed the $1.91 forecast, while revenue of $2.511 billion actually topped the $2.432 billion estimate.

Third Quarter Shows Sequential Progress

Third-quarter revenue fell 34.1% year over year to 16.16 billion Chinese yuan, with shipments declining 16.7% to 21,570 MW. The year-over-year comparisons look rough, but here's what caught investors' attention: gross margin improved to 7.3% from just 2.9% in the prior quarter. That's the kind of sequential improvement that suggests pricing stabilization might finally be happening.

Net loss attributable to shareholders was 749.8 million yuan, while the adjusted net loss narrowed to 373.1 million yuan. Loss per ADS came to 14.32 yuan.

The balance sheet shows cash and equivalents of 23.44 billion yuan against interest-bearing debt of 45.55 billion yuan. Inventories increased to 14.94 billion yuan. In September, JinkoSolar completed the sale of over 300 million A shares of Jiangxi Jinko.

Second Quarter Featured Higher Shipments

Second-quarter revenue declined 25.2% year over year but rose sequentially on higher shipments of 26,446 MW. Gross margin sat at 2.9%, reflecting the tough pricing environment the solar industry has been navigating.

Net loss attributable to shareholders was 876.4 million yuan, with adjusted net loss at 856.4 million yuan and loss per ADS of 16.82 yuan. The board declared a dividend of 32.5 cents per ordinary share, or $1.30 per ADS, in June.

Energy Storage Emerges as Growth Story

Beyond the quarterly numbers, JinkoSolar highlighted some operational achievements that explain investor enthusiasm. The company delivered 61.9 GW of modules through the first three quarters and crossed 370 GW of cumulative global shipments. Its Tiger Neo product line surpassed 200 GW in cumulative shipments.

Mass-produced TOPCon cell efficiency reached 27.2% to 27.4%, and the company began delivering modules exceeding 640W that command a premium of 1 to 2 US cents per watt. That pricing power matters in an industry that's been dealing with compression.

The real excitement centers on energy storage. ESS shipments exceeded 3.3 GWh, with 2025 order visibility surpassing 90%. Chairman and CEO Xiande Li didn't mince words about the opportunity: "With scale efficiency and competitiveness improving, we expect our energy storage business to become our second growth engine and contribute to our profit in 2026."

Li emphasized the company's market leadership, noting that "in the first three quarters of 2025, our global module shipments totaled 61.9 GW, once again ranking No.1 worldwide." He pointed to sequential margin gains and rising ESS profitability, adding that "the global supply chain is reshaping" and high-power products now carry "a premium of 1-2 US cents per watt."

Outlook Points to Continued Scale

JinkoSolar expects fourth-quarter shipments of 18 GW to 33 GW and full-year 2025 shipments of 85 GW to 100 GW, including approximately 6 GWh of ESS shipments.

The company projects year-end production capacity of 120 GW of mono wafer, 95 GW of solar cell, and 130 GW of module output.

Price Action: JKS shares were trading higher by 16.24% to $31.43 at last check Monday.

JinkoSolar Rallies as Energy Storage Business Gains Momentum Despite Revenue Miss

MarketDash Editorial Team
20 days ago
JinkoSolar reported better-than-expected losses for Q2 and Q3 2025, with investors cheering sequential margin improvements and the company's growing energy storage segment that management expects will become a major profit driver by 2026.

JinkoSolar Holding Co., Ltd. (JKS) delivered results that look messy on the surface but tell a more interesting story underneath. The Chinese solar giant posted mixed second- and third-quarter 2025 numbers, with weak module pricing still creating headwinds. Yet the stock jumped over 16% after earnings, because sometimes what matters isn't where you are, but which direction you're heading.

Third-quarter adjusted earnings per share came in at a loss of $1.00, which sounds bad until you realize analysts were bracing for a $1.60 loss. Revenue of $2.27 billion missed expectations of $2.514 billion, but investors seemed more interested in the improving profitability trajectory and the growing traction in energy storage.

In the second quarter, adjusted EPS of a $2.29 loss also missed the $1.91 forecast, while revenue of $2.511 billion actually topped the $2.432 billion estimate.

Third Quarter Shows Sequential Progress

Third-quarter revenue fell 34.1% year over year to 16.16 billion Chinese yuan, with shipments declining 16.7% to 21,570 MW. The year-over-year comparisons look rough, but here's what caught investors' attention: gross margin improved to 7.3% from just 2.9% in the prior quarter. That's the kind of sequential improvement that suggests pricing stabilization might finally be happening.

Net loss attributable to shareholders was 749.8 million yuan, while the adjusted net loss narrowed to 373.1 million yuan. Loss per ADS came to 14.32 yuan.

The balance sheet shows cash and equivalents of 23.44 billion yuan against interest-bearing debt of 45.55 billion yuan. Inventories increased to 14.94 billion yuan. In September, JinkoSolar completed the sale of over 300 million A shares of Jiangxi Jinko.

Second Quarter Featured Higher Shipments

Second-quarter revenue declined 25.2% year over year but rose sequentially on higher shipments of 26,446 MW. Gross margin sat at 2.9%, reflecting the tough pricing environment the solar industry has been navigating.

Net loss attributable to shareholders was 876.4 million yuan, with adjusted net loss at 856.4 million yuan and loss per ADS of 16.82 yuan. The board declared a dividend of 32.5 cents per ordinary share, or $1.30 per ADS, in June.

Energy Storage Emerges as Growth Story

Beyond the quarterly numbers, JinkoSolar highlighted some operational achievements that explain investor enthusiasm. The company delivered 61.9 GW of modules through the first three quarters and crossed 370 GW of cumulative global shipments. Its Tiger Neo product line surpassed 200 GW in cumulative shipments.

Mass-produced TOPCon cell efficiency reached 27.2% to 27.4%, and the company began delivering modules exceeding 640W that command a premium of 1 to 2 US cents per watt. That pricing power matters in an industry that's been dealing with compression.

The real excitement centers on energy storage. ESS shipments exceeded 3.3 GWh, with 2025 order visibility surpassing 90%. Chairman and CEO Xiande Li didn't mince words about the opportunity: "With scale efficiency and competitiveness improving, we expect our energy storage business to become our second growth engine and contribute to our profit in 2026."

Li emphasized the company's market leadership, noting that "in the first three quarters of 2025, our global module shipments totaled 61.9 GW, once again ranking No.1 worldwide." He pointed to sequential margin gains and rising ESS profitability, adding that "the global supply chain is reshaping" and high-power products now carry "a premium of 1-2 US cents per watt."

Outlook Points to Continued Scale

JinkoSolar expects fourth-quarter shipments of 18 GW to 33 GW and full-year 2025 shipments of 85 GW to 100 GW, including approximately 6 GWh of ESS shipments.

The company projects year-end production capacity of 120 GW of mono wafer, 95 GW of solar cell, and 130 GW of module output.

Price Action: JKS shares were trading higher by 16.24% to $31.43 at last check Monday.

    JinkoSolar Rallies as Energy Storage Business Gains Momentum Despite Revenue Miss - MarketDash News