SunPower rectifies Nasdaq noncompliance, reports first profitable quarter in four years

After regaining Nasdaq compliance, the company announced its first profitable quarter in four years, though its financial results have not yet been audited.

SunPower received an expected deficiency notification from Nasdaq indicating the company was not in compliance with the stock market’s listing rule.

SunPower’s noncompliance was due to its failure to timely file its annual report on Form 10-Kwith the Security Exchange Commission (SEC). SunPower has until June 27 to submit a plan to regain compliance with Nasdaq’s listing rule.

The company said it informed the SEC on Mar. 31 that it was delayed because it required more time to complete its year-end audit and reporting process.

SunPower CEO T.J. Rodgers said the Nasdaq’s warning “can be simplified to ‘we filed our [annual report] with the SEC 16 days late. We and our independent auditors BDO knew of the deadline but needed to spend 14,000 hours of auditing time versus the typical 6,500 hours needed for a more mature company to get the 10K report done right. There is no penalty for the delay and no impact on shareholders.”

This is not the first time Nasdaq warned SunPower of its noncompliance with its listing rule. SunPower also received a Notification of Deficiency on Mar. 20, 2024 for its failure to timely file Form 10-K. SunPower filed for bankruptcy less than six months later.

Technically, SunPower was a different company at the time. Following SunPower’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy, Complete Solaria, owned by former SunPower Chair Rodgers, purchased SunPower’s Blue Raven Solar business, non-installer distribution network and new homes division for $45 million. Last month, Complete Solaria announced it was formally changing its name to SunPower and updated the company’s Nasdaq ticker to SPWR. SunPower sold its leases and lease servicing assets to SunStrong.

(Read: SunPower rises again & End of the line for a U.S. solar giant)

On the same day SunPower filed its annual report with the SEC, SunPower held its earnings call for 2024 and Q1 2025.

The company said it was SunPower’s first profitable quarter in four years. However, only SunPower’s 2024 financial results were audited, while the profitable quarter’s audit is forthcoming. SunPower said it finished Q1 2025 with $14 million in cash versus $13.3 million in Q4 2024.

Since the company acquired many of the former SunPower’s assets, the company said it reduced its workforce from 3,499 employees in October 2024 to 906 (SunPower previously reported the beginning headcount at nearly 3,000).

SunPower said its cost-cutting measure improved its operating income over the last three quarters “from a $39.6 million loss in Q3’24 (unofficial sum of losses for three companies), to a loss of $5.9 million in Q4’24 (audited), to an operating profit of $1.3 million in Q1’25.”

“When these guys ran SunPower, it was a well-run company and the king of the world,” Rodgers said. “For the last three or so years, it wasn’t well run. And when I came in there, I found a pretty sick management structure, expensive, aloof, not detail oriented. Having said that, SunPower has got thousands [sic] of really good people in it, people you couldn’t get anywhere else.”

When asked about SunPower’s revenue growth, margins for the next couple years and the impact of a possible recession, Rodgers said his job is similar to a goalie in hockey. “I stand there and catch the pucks before they get in the net. So can I have a long-term forecast? I can, but it’s based on positioning more so than actually looking at what you project the [profit and loss] to be,” he said. “Right now, we have a very lean workforce and it’s going to get leaner,” he said.

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