$500 million can't buy many jobs thees days. with all the cash the doe piled on them and the government contracts they still going under.
http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/2011/08/ ... &hpt=hp_t2
Solar panel maker Solyndra today said that it will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, after failing to successfully compete against lower-cost Chinese manufacturers. It is one of largest failures ever suffered by venture capitalists, and a major black eye for a U.S. Department of Energy that loaned the company more than $500 million.
The company has not yet filed its bankruptcy papers, but did say in a press release that it plans to evaluate options that could include a sale of its business and licensing of its technology. It also said that 1,100 full-time and part-time employees will be laid off, effective immediately.
Since being founded in 2005 to build solar panels for commercial rooftops, Solyndra had raised nearly $1 billion in private equity financing. The biggest backer was the George Kaiser Family Foundation, which was listed as holding more than a 35% equity stake when Solyndra filed for a $300 million IPO in late 2009 (it would later cancel the offering, due to "adverse market conditions). Other significant shareholders included Madrone Partners, a VC firm affiliated with Wal-Mart's Walton family, with an 11% stake, U.S. Venture Partners (10.19%), RockPort Capital Partners (7.5%), CMEA Ventures (6.81%) and Redpoint Ventures (5.94%).
Some of those positions were subsequently diluted, when a new debt financing this past spring reportedly converted certain existing shares from preferred into common.
Solyndra's $535 million loan guarantee was made in 2009 by the Department of Energy, and has since come under scrutiny by House Republicans who have suggested that not enough due diligence was conducted. DoE already is pushing back against the meme today, with a blog post that argues the company was felled, in part, by slashed European subsidies for solar cells (an argument Solyndra CEO Brian Harrison also makes in the company's press release).