Shanghai, Jan 19, 2026, 07:48 GMT+8 — Premarket
- Sungrow Power Supply (300274.SZ) ended Friday up 3.3%, closing at 170.99 yuan. (Investing)
- A report indicates the EU is drafting a proposal set for Jan. 20 that might require phasing out Chinese gear in sectors like solar energy systems. (mint)
- Quarterly reports on China funds have singled out Sungrow as a key holding within several new-energy portfolios. (Sina Finance)
Sungrow Power Supply’s Shenzhen-listed A-shares drew attention before Monday’s session following a report that Brussels plans to phase out Chinese-made gear from key European infrastructure, including solar energy systems. (MarketScreener)
The reason this matters now is straightforward: Sungrow makes solar inverters—gear that converts solar panels’ direct current into electricity suitable for the grid—and energy storage systems. Both segments lean heavily on overseas markets. Europe, in particular, has emerged as a crucial front in the sector’s competition. (Reuters)
Investors are rapidly repricing clean-energy stocks based on policy cues, particularly when terms like “high-risk vendor” creep from telecom into power equipment. This shift can hit valuations hard, often before any actual developments occur.
Sungrow shares closed Friday up 3.34% at 170.99 yuan, recovering from an earlier dip during the week. The stock bounced back late in the session. Friday’s trading volume hit roughly 72.0 million shares, according to market data. (StockAnalysis)
The Financial Times reports the European Commission plans to unveil a cybersecurity proposal on Tuesday that would likely impose mandatory restrictions on high-risk vendors instead of keeping them voluntary. According to the report, the timing will vary based on sector-specific risks, costs, and how easily alternative suppliers can be sourced. (Reuters)
Sungrow is pushing its global expansion narrative hard. At the World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi, it unveiled a next-gen utility-scale inverter along with an integrated hybrid solar-and-storage system, a company briefing revealed. (Solarbytes)
Back on domestic soil, positioning played a role as well. Securities Times noted that Huafu New Energy, led by Shen Cheng, bumped Sungrow up to its largest holding in Q4, trimming back on other sectors. Shen pointed out that AI-fueled data-centre power needs are ramping up fast, with storage emerging as “a viable solution” since it can be deployed quicker than grid upgrades. (STCN)
Yang Delong, chief economist at Qianhai Open Source Fund, cautioned against viewing tech stocks as a guaranteed winner. “Tech shares remain a key theme in 2026, but they are no longer the only one,” he said. (Sina Finance)
Europe’s position is crucial for Sungrow and other inverter makers, given the region’s sizable demand for new solar installations and grid upgrades integrating solar with batteries. Changes to procurement policies or compliance inspections could disrupt project schedules.
But the full impact remains uncertain. Experts warn that wide-ranging limits on imported inverters might throw a wrench into solar and battery projects, possibly requiring costly replacements or narrowing choices for upcoming installations. (PV Tech)
Traders are eyeing the European Commission’s anticipated proposal set for Tuesday, Jan. 20. They’ll also be closely following any initial reactions from China’s commerce ministry and EU member states that have pushed back against stricter rules before. (ETTelecom.com)