The stock of T1 Energy has become a playground for extremes. At €7.35, the shares have shed 22% in the past month and are trading far below the June peak of €11.00. Yet the price remains well above the trough, and the annualized 30-day volatility hovers near an extraordinary 151%. The market is pricing in a binary outcome: two unresolved questions will determine whether this Texas solar champion soars or collapses.
The Clock on Austin
The more immediate of the two uncertainties is a financing deadline. T1 Energy needs to secure a $225 million package for the first phase of its G2 cell factory in Austin, and the target date is the end of the second quarter. At a mid-June shareholder meeting, investors approved doubling the authorized share count to one billion, giving management room to use equity as part of the mix. The company has indicated the bulk of the funding will come from debt, but the market’s nervous reaction — the stock slid from highs above $12 to around €7.90 — underscores the stakes.
Management insists the G2 plant will begin production on schedule in late 2026, creating 1,800 jobs. Short-seller Fuzzy Panda Research disputes this, citing drone footage that it says shows construction is 12 to 18 months behind. T1 Energy has not commented on the footage directly, but the timeline remains a critical variable.
Operational Surprise in Dallas
Amid the financing drama, the core business delivered a headline-grabbing quarter. Revenue surged 232% year-over-year to a record $177.6 million in the first quarter of 2026. Net income from continuing operations reached $3.9 million, and adjusted EBITDA came in at $9.1 million. The overall net loss of $21.4 million was almost entirely attributable to discontinued operations — $24.3 million from the abandoned Norwegian battery ambitions — not the solar business.
The G1 module plant in Dallas, with 5 gigawatts of capacity, is now self-sustaining. T1 has been locking in fixed-price and cost-plus contracts, reducing exposure to spot-market volatility. A further validation came from Intertek CEA, which awarded the G1 facility an “A” bankability rating, a seal that should ease negotiations with large utility buyers.
The Tax-Credit Bomb
The second and far more existential risk stems from a report by Fuzzy Panda Research published in the spring. The short seller alleges that T1 Energy bought $65 million worth of solar cells from China’s Trina Solar in the first quarter, directly contradicting management’s assurances that it had severed ties with Chinese suppliers. The allegation is especially dangerous because T1’s entire business model relies on U.S. tax credits under Section 45X, which require that no more than 50% of the value added comes from foreign companies.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying T1 Energy?
If the credits are revoked, the math turns ugly. The operating margin would swing from an expected plus-5.1% to a negative-18.2%. Without steep price increases, the company would be unprofitable. The short seller also claims that T1 transferred intellectual property to Evervolt, a Singapore-based entity whose owner has had close business ties with Trina Solar for 15 years.
Defending the Narrative
T1 Energy has mounted a vigorous defense. Management says its own analyses have been confirmed by U.S. authorities. Roth Capital analysts sided with the company, issuing a buy recommendation that sent the stock surging 26% on heavy volume. The RSI currently sits at 47.7 — neither panic nor euphoria — but the volatility speaks to a market that sees the outcome as a coin flip.
On the legal front, a separate patent lawsuit from First Solar over TOPCon technology remains unresolved, adding another layer of uncertainty.
A New Growth Engine
Even as these battles play out, T1 is pressing ahead with a $32 million acquisition of KORE Power, a developer of battery storage systems and infrastructure for AI data centers. Management expects KORE to turn EBITDA-positive in 2026 and deliver between $15 million and $20 million in EBITDA by 2027. The deal would open a second revenue stream and reduce reliance on a single factory and a single subsidy program.
For now, the production guidance for the full year remains 3.1 to 4.2 gigawatts. Whether that target holds depends entirely on the next two weeks: the $225 million funding must come together by June 30, and any regulatory update on the tax-credit eligibility could send the shares into another violent swing. T1 Energy has placed its entire Texas solar vision on a single legislative lever. If that lever holds, the upside is substantial. If it breaks, the consequences will be just as dramatic.
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