Solar demand for large projects is still strong, but investors have learned to stop celebrating revenue growth by itself. For hardware suppliers, the real question is whether higher volume turns into durable profit, or whether tariffs, shipping costs, and regional disruptions wipe out the benefit. That is why this solar-tracker leader is being judged more on its order book and margin path than on last quarter’s sales.

The opportunity comes from asymmetry. The company has visibility from a record backlog, reported a sharp year-over-year revenue jump, and even raised its 2026 outlook. If it can convert the $2.2B order base into deliveries without giving up pricing, the stock can re-rate quickly. If tariffs bite or execution slips, the same backlog can turn into lower-margin work.
Top points of the analysis
It's not a question of whether solar farms will be built, but who can deliver the "iron" on time and at margin when tariffs and regional barriers come into play.
The key argument for the…