The utility industry is not likely to take a bond downgrade lightly.
Distributed Solar vs Utility War About To Heat Up...
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The utility industry is not likely to take a bond downgrade lightly. -
Be interesting to see the moves Barclays made before the article came out - over the past six months.
I expect that this is a word play for some reasons known to Barclays senior management?
They talk about storage - it would be interesting to know what they think they know - what they are referring to. We don't see much happening in distributed generation as of yet.[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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Be interesting to see the moves Barclays made before the article came out - over the past six months.
I expect that this is a word play for some reasons known to Barclays senior management?
They talk about storage - it would be interesting to know what they think they know - what they are referring to. We don't see much happening in distributed generation as of yet.MSEE, PEComment
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Many years back I learned the the Mexican telephone company TFONY was a Merrill Lynch select penny stock. They would sell all they had on hand every six months and then slowly by it back as it tanked. It was guaranteed to go from about 3/16 to 7/8 during the run up.[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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No, no doom involved. However, it gives the utilities more ammo in their war on residential solar. A downgrade in rating often translates into a higher cost of borrowing and I have no doubt that the investor utilities and their fossil foolish allies will be touting that.Comment
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Doesn't Add Up
This article suggests batteries and the tiny fraction of homeowner solar are going to put the bite on electric companies? All I've read here is batteries are way too expensive. With fracking creating cheap natural gas electrical rates could stay low if it were not for greenhouse regulations. The EPA is putting the hurt on coal fired plants that is the big bogey for power companies. Solar is only a great investment for the typical homeowner because of tax incentives and "green power" laws coming to states like California. I'm probably missing the point, but this article is total BS.....maybe I should read it again, nah, who cares.....Comment
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This article suggests batteries and the tiny fraction of homeowner solar are going to put the bite on electric companies? All I've read here is batteries are way too expensive. With fracking creating cheap natural gas electrical rates could stay low if it were not for greenhouse regulations. The EPA is putting the hurt on coal fired plants that is the big bogey for power companies. Solar is only a great investment for the typical homeowner because of tax incentives and "green power" laws coming to states like California. I'm probably missing the point, but this article is total BS.....maybe I should read it again, nah, who cares.....[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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