HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc. (HASI)
NYSE: HASI · Real-Time Price · USD
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Apr 24, 2026, 4:00 PM EDT - Market closed
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Earnings Call: Q4 2023

Feb 15, 2024

Neha Gaddam
Senior Director of Investor Relations and Corporate Finance, HASI

Greetings and welcome to HASI's fourth quarter and full year 2023 earnings conference call and webcast. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow a formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Nehal Gaddam, Senior Director, Investor Relations, and Corporate Finance.

Thank you, Operator. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome. Earlier this afternoon, HASI distributed a press release detailing our fourth quarter and full year 2023 results, a copy of which is available on our website. This conference call is being webcast live on the Investor Relations page of our website, where a replay will be available later today. Some of the comments made in this call are forward-looking statements which are subject to risks and uncertainties described in the Risk Factors section of the company's Form 10-K and other filings with the SEC. Actual results may differ materially from those stated. Today's discussion also includes some non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures is available on our posted earnings release and slide presentation. Joining me on today's call are Jeff Lipson, the company's President and CEO, Marc Pangburn, CFO, and Susan Nickey, our Chief Client Officer.

Susan will be available for the Q&A portion of our presentation. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Jeff, who will begin on slide three. Jeff?

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

Thank you, Nehal, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining the call. 2023 was a record year for HASI, producing outstanding results as our non-cyclical and adaptable business model overcame the challenges presented by disruptive capital markets. We increased our distributable earnings by 7% to $2.23 and increased our net investment income by 21%. We were able to close a record volume of $2.3 billion of new investments at a yield greater than 9%. This volume facilitated a 44% increase in our portfolio, which creates a foundation for continued revenue growth. We also declared a dividend of $0.415 for the quarter, an increase of $0.08 on an annualized basis from the prior quarter.

Our ability to achieve these results in spite of the 2023 operating backdrop, including volatile interest rates, provides us ongoing confidence that our long-term business model, driven by our climate-clients asset strategy, is exceedingly resilient and the path forward to achieving our financial and climate goals. Turning to slide 4. As a reminder, our long-term business model is to continue to produce 10% EPS growth, consistent with our first 10 years as a public company. And we have also previously indicated that over the long term, we are targeting a payout ratio of 50%, retaining the remaining 50% of our earnings to reinvest while shifting to less reliance on equity issuance. Today, we are pleased to announce earnings and dividend guidance over the next 3 years, consistent with our long-term business model.

Our earnings guidance reflects reacceleration to 8%-10% compound annual growth through 2026, using a 2023 base year. The midpoint is above our 2023 growth rate but very slightly below our long-term business model due to this period including significant refinancing activity. However, this difference between the guidance and the business model should be viewed as a positive data point, as even in more difficult operating environments, the impact on earnings growth is minimal. Our dividend guidance reflects our continued gradual reduction in the payout ratio as we increase our dividend but at a slower rate than our earnings. We typically paid 100% of our earnings as dividends prior to 2018, gradually reducing the ratio to 71% in 2023.

We expect this gradual reduction to continue to occur during the guidance period, with a payout ratio between 60%-70% as we continue to make progress towards our 50% goal. However, just as the actual dividend per share increased between 2018-2023 while the payout ratio was decreasing, investors should expect our dividend to continue to grow during the guidance period. We would expect to achieve our long-term target of a 50% payout ratio later this decade, after which earnings and dividends are expected to have identical growth rates.

While we believe our base case model that drives guidance is a balanced view of upside opportunities and downside risks, there are scenarios that would result in earnings above our guidance, including a second investment-grade rating, which would presumably reduce our debt costs, or expansion of our investment platform resulting in higher transaction volumes, or improved return on underlying investments. Each of these items would have a positive impact on our margin. In summary, this guidance reflects an enthusiastic and confident vision of our company and strategy over the next three years, and we remain optimistic that we have the talent, client relationships, and market opportunity that will result in continued growth and prosperity. Turning to page five, I'd like to reinforce that for many years, we have consistently accomplished our disclosed objectives.

On our Investor Day in March of 2023, we discussed several strategic priorities and, in each case, kept our promise. We executed on a seamless CEO and CFO transition, invested at higher yields without incremental risk, expanded our Fuels, Transport, and Nature segment, continued to access diversified sources of debt, were placed on positive outlook by Fitch, discontinued our REIT election, and migrated the business to be less reliant on capital markets via capital-led initiatives and dividend policy. It is also worth noting that we expect to achieve our prior earnings guidance in 2024, and we are meeting our dividend guidance with today's announcement. We have an unblemished track record of meeting or exceeding our guidance. Achieving our disclosed objectives reflects both the predictability of our lower-risk business model and the reliability of our messaging.

Turning to page 6, I'd like to address 4 items that represent our most frequent investor questions. Beginning with policy, we are attentive to public policy and engage in advocacy efforts. However, we do not fundamentally believe that public policy will have a meaningful impact on our business over the guidance period. Our company has been successful in administrations from either party and thrived prior to the IRA. In addition, clean energy demand continues to grow exponentially, including at the state and corporate level, and the Levelized Cost of Energy supports further development. Our company is also well-positioned to pivot to a variety of investment alternatives, which further provides comfort that public policy changes are not likely to be impactful to our profitability. Regarding interest rate risk, we have prudently navigated this period of interest volatility, which began in 2022.

Since that time, we have not wavered in our execution, implementing a strategy of pricing our investments to produce our targeted margins. These higher-yielding investments do not include higher risk but rather reflect broad industry adaptation to higher rates. We have also deployed a hedging program, which has allowed us to navigate the higher-rate environment successfully and minimize the risk of rates moving further upward. Next, we are often asked about project delays. However, the risk of potential short-term delays in certain asset classes is mitigated by the diversity of our investment strategy, as evidenced by our 2023 investment volumes and our current pipeline. Long-term economic fundamentals will allow our clients to maintain active pipelines. Finally, our ability to fund record volumes in 2023 is proof positive that our liquidity and funding strategy is sound.

Our risk to capital markets volatility has largely been muted for 2024, as we have already pre-financed much of our pipeline with recent debt transactions. If markets are attractive, we will consider early refinancing of upcoming maturities but are otherwise in a strong position related to funding needs over the next 12 months. In summary, and as reflected by our new guidance, we believe the business remains well-positioned to address any perceived headwinds. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Marc.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Thank you, Jeff. I'll start on slide seven. Underpinning the guidance Jeff discussed is our pipeline of over $5 billion, which is highly diversified across three markets, eight asset classes, over 30 programmatic clients, and over 150 unique transactions, a portion of which represent greater than $25 billion of project capex from our 10 largest clients. We continue to be excited about growth in all three markets and the growing number of new clients that we can serve. Our pipeline has grown significantly from $3 billion in 2020 to greater than $5 billion in 2024, a reflection of our success and organizational structure that supports programmatic transactions. A unique element of our business is our ability to pivot between asset classes, seeking the most attractive risk-adjusted returns and adapting to market conditions.

Our annual closings since 2020 confirm the power of a diverse asset strategy as our volumes are consistent while our growth in the underlying end markets are not. We continue to see a vastly expanded opportunity set in front of us, driven by the underlying demand in all of our markets for energy transition assets and services. Moving on to Slide 8. For full year 2023, we are reporting distributable EPS of $2.23. We closed a record volume of new transactions at $2.3 billion. Year-over-year, our volumes increased 28%, distributable NII increased 21%, and gain on sale increased 15%. Notably, our portfolio grew 44%, providing a much larger base for long-term recurring income. Looking to the top right, this portfolio growth is at higher yields with incremental on-balance sheet investments yielding greater than 9%, a material shift up relative to prior years.

Continuing to the next slide, we have a track record of stable growth along all notable metrics. Since 2019, we have grown our distributable EPS by a 12% CAGR, distributable NII by a 28% CAGR, and gain on sale by a 23% CAGR. The total managed assets has almost doubled to $12.3 billion, highlighting the increasing scale in the business. One key ratio reflecting the benefit of scale is the growth in our key performance metrics relative to SG&A. Year-over-year, combined NII and gain on sale increased by 19% while SG&A only increased by 2%. While we are happy with this result directionally, we believe there are more benefits to gain as we scale. On slide 10, our portfolio yield increased to 7.9% while the portfolio grew by $1.9 billion. This growth compares to the previous three-year annual average of $700 million.

In the fourth quarter, we funded $609 million of new and previously closed investments and anticipate funding additional commitments of $500 million through 2024. Additionally, with the growth in FTN and community solar, our portfolio has attained a higher level of diversification in 2023. On slide 11, our focus on profitable growth has contributed to maintaining healthy margins throughout 2023, with a portfolio yield of 7.9 compared to interest expense of 5.0. In 2023, we made incremental investments at an average yield greater than 9% with new cost of debt of 7%. We expect that over time, we will benefit from improved cost of funds if a second investment-grade rating can be attained. To provide another data point, in our recent corporate debt offering materials, we identified near-term investment opportunities, which are anticipated to yield 11%.

This results in ROEs of mid- to high-teens relative to where the offering priced. Looking along the bottom of the slide, in past quarters, we've provided additional context to address questions on our 2025 and 2026 bond refinancings. As a reminder, the base rate for the expected bond refinancings are currently hedged around 3%. Based on market spreads, a theoretical refinancing would result in a blended cost of debt of 5.6%, resulting in a 12.5% ROE. Turning to slide 12, our funding platform was critical to our success in 2023. Starting on the top left with over $930 million, our liquidity remains robust. The total liquidity includes approximately $300 million of corporate unsecured debt and non-recourse secured debt, both of which closed in January. Our current leverage is 2x debt to equity, and 92% is either fixed or hedged.

Over the past 12 months, we've raised $1.9 billion of debt, a vast majority of which was used to fund portfolio growth. Importantly, we utilized all sources of debt available to us, highlighting our diverse funding platform. The recent high-yield offering, secured debt raise, and existing liquidity substantially address our growth debt capital needs for 2024. We will consider opportunistic windows for refinancing or extending our 2025 debt maturities throughout the course of this year. While liquidity for balance sheet funding remains strong, we continue to progress our capital-led initiatives to further diversify our funding platform. In summary, our execution to date, current liquidity, and go-forward plan position us extremely well to capitalize on the opportunity ahead. I'm now turning the call back to Jeff.

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

Thanks, Marc. Turning to slide 13, we summarize a few of our sustainability and impact highlights from 2023, including our alignment with the EU Taxonomy and other items related to advocacy, disclosure, and philanthropic priorities, as well as summarizing the impact of our investments as measured by our CarbonCount metric. We'll conclude on slide 14. As I reflect on my first year as CEO of HASI, I am extremely proud of our many accomplishments in 2023, and I remain confident that our three-year business planning process has concluded that all of the components of long-term success are in place. As I said on Investor Day back in March, HASI is the preeminent climate pureplay with a differentiated strategy that allows investors to access the growth trajectory of the energy transition in a low-risk business model.

This strategy of focusing on climate-positive asset-level investing with the leading sponsors and developers continues to be successful and provide ongoing shareholder value. Our business model has proven resilient despite many headwinds, and our new guidance reflects a path forward to consistent profitability and less reliance on capital markets. I thank our dedicated team for their outstanding achievements in 2023 and their enthusiasm and commitment to our future success. Thank you for joining the call, and I'll ask the operator to open the line for questions.

Operator

Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. The confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star key. Our first question is from Brian Lee with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.

Brian Lee
Equity Research Analyst, Clean Energy, Goldman Sachs

Hey, good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. You know, maybe just starting off with the longer-term, you know, three-year earnings growth outlook, can you kind of give us a sense? I don't know if you think about it in that context, but, you know, you mentioned how, you know, portfolio yields have moved higher. You gave us an indication of kind of what cost capital is today. Sort of what are you baking into your sort of medium to longer-term, maybe tail end of that, forecast in terms of where you think yields kind of settle out and then, where also you think cost of capital and then obviously spreads could ultimately sort of settle in, in that forecast horizon?

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

So thanks for the question, Brian. I would say in our base case, we primarily use the forward curve rather than making any of our own predictions related to rates. And from a credit spread perspective, we're using credit spreads on both the investment side and the debt side fairly similar to where they are today and projecting that forward, you know, with obviously some range on that as we build out the guidance. And that's in part why guidance has some range to it. But I would say as our general baseline, those are the numbers we're using for rates and credit spreads.

Brian Lee
Equity Research Analyst, Clean Energy, Goldman Sachs

Okay, Jeff. I guess my question was more around, you know, it sounds like there's some opportunistic assets, and I know there's been some segment mix shift, you know, namely more FTN versus historical. Like, is there opportunity in that three-year horizon to kind of drive portfolio yields higher and hence, you know, earn kind of a higher, you know, return spread from that vantage point? I guess that was sort of the angle I was taking with that question, just given mix shift and, you know, potential for, I guess, refinancing at the same time.

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

Sure. And I think I did, and I'll just reiterate what I said in my prepared remarks. I think I did say there's upside to guidance, and it's mostly around, you know, debt costs could be lower than we forecasted, especially if we get that second investment-grade rating. Volumes could be higher, particularly if we go into some new markets that are, not necessarily into our base plan but that we're thinking about. And then the third one I identified was that the return at the individual investment level could be higher than we forecasted, which I think is the one that's responsive to your question. So yes, there is an opportunity for yields over the next three years, to be a bit wider than we forecasted, and that would be an upside to our guidance.

Brian Lee
Equity Research Analyst, Clean Energy, Goldman Sachs

Okay, fair enough. Then, maybe one more question for me, and I'll pass it along. You know, there's been a lot made in the, you know, press about some of the challenges in the residential solar segment in the U.S., and I know you have some hot exposure there. Can you remind us kind of, as you head into 2024, where, you know, that mix lies in your portfolio, what you're embedding in kind of the near-term view as to additional growth there? And then, with some of these, you know, publicized bankruptcies and developers having some challenges in the marketplace, how are you sort of navigating that credit risk? What's embedded in kind of your portfolio exposure, if you will? Thank you.

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

Sure. And maybe what I'll do, Brian, is I'll start out, and Marc and Susan may add to my answer as well. But I would say as a baseline, first of all, that our resi solar portfolio itself is performing very well. And we are at the asset level, and the homeowners continue to make payments on their leases, and we are very comfortable with our exposure, and it is performing. I will say, obviously, some of the sponsors are going through some challenges, mostly related to cost structure and other business challenges at the corporate level. And we've been very supportive working with them. We are involved with SunPower over the past several weeks, getting various waivers in place, as they reported this morning. And we remain a supportive partner.

We do think it will be an ongoing portion of our business but a relatively modest portion of the business going forward given some of those challenges. So I do think we will close certain transactions in 2024 related to resi solar , very similar in risk profile to what we've done in the past. But if there's a bit of a slowdown there as those companies do some restructuring and different things and maybe see lower demand, that won't have a meaningful impact on our business, and it really won't affect what we've put out there in terms of guidance.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

I think, Jeff, you covered that well. Just two additional details. All of our investments, whether it is within ResiSolar or other asset classes, are structured to have some level of replaceability of the operator. And so that is how that is the primary means by which our risk is really isolated at the asset level. The other and, I think Jeff covered the portfolio exposure already. In terms of the pipeline, it's really just not a material part of our pipeline. As Jeff mentioned, we do anticipate it will continue to be a part of our go-forward business on a new closings basis. But as you look at the expansion and diversification of our business across multiple different asset classes, it, it has shrunk in terms of its pipeline exposure for us.

Brian Lee
Equity Research Analyst, Clean Energy, Goldman Sachs

Okay, great. Appreciate all the color. I'll pass it on. Thank you.

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

Thanks, Brian.

Operator

Our next question is from Chris Souther with B. Riley Securities. Please proceed with your question.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe you could just break down some assumptions around why the growth components here going from 2024 to 2026 within the guidance between distributable NII and some of the episodic pieces. I know, I know in the past, you've kind of given a little bit more granularity there, but just curious, you know, how we should be thinking about, you know, from those two components standpoint.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Sure. Thanks, Chris. So I think the primary area to focus on when trying to think about our business as either NII or gain-on-sale as it relates to guidance is that we do not need to see any incremental growth in gain-on-sale to achieve guidance. So we'll, of course, continue to work to maximize that to the best we can, but it is not baked into guidance.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Got it. That's great to hear. And then maybe just housekeeping, can you talk about the GAAP income from equity method investments there? That was, you know, a lot higher than it's ever been. So I'm just kind of curious, you know, if you could walk us through that piece.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Sure. So the primary driver for that is the HLBV pass-through from some of our solar projects. That generally happens at initiation of an investment, primarily related to the tax credits coming through.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Okay. That makes sense. I'll hop in the queue. Thanks, guys.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Thanks, Chris. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question is from Noah Kaye at Oppenheimer & Company. Please proceed with your question.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Yeah. Thanks for taking the questions. You know, I think if we looked back to the start of 2023, and looked to where 2023 ended, we would have been surprised that fuels, transport, and nature was 30% of the origination mix. You know, clearly, you're giving some information on the pipeline mix as always. But talk to us about in terms of the incremental growers this year. Where are you bullish by asset class? And you know, what, if I think back to your Investor Day presentation, are some watch items in terms of you know, either new asset classes or maturing asset classes where you expect more participation?

Susan Nickey
EVP and Chief Client Officer, HASI

Hey, thanks, Noah. This is Susan Nickey. I think as we talked about in our Investor Day presentation, we're very client-centric-focused, and not only with our existing clients, but as we add new clients and sectors, we look for the leading you know, the strategic and industrial companies that will do not only the first transaction but programmatic repeats of, of transactions in existing asset classes but also as they themselves expand into new sectors. And I see that's what you see represented as we look going forward. We're as we look at the pipeline, that follows from a top-down approach of looking at where our clients are forecasting their growth and then how we fit into that capital stack in their projects.

So we have a diversified base, and we're seeing strong demand in energy and as well as fuel as companies and states want to continue to see growth in demand but also in decarbonization.

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

You know, I'd add one thing to, to Susan's answer. Looking at page 7, we hopefully have the deck with you there. Our cadence is such that we have different leading asset classes in, in subsequent years. I actually don't think we ourselves would have necessarily, in your hypothetical do if we dialed back to the beginning of 2023, predicted that FTN would have been 30%, community solar 18%. You know, the pace of closings you know, we obviously know our pipeline very well, but the pace of closings is outside of our control. Therefore, that short-term prediction of what's gonna hit in 2024 can be a little difficult. But think of our pipeline as more than 2 times what we need to be successful. Therefore, it gives us the confidence that enough will hit, that, that we will, we will meet our guidance.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Mm-hmm. Thanks, Jeff and Susan. This is slightly around clarifying the cadence of distributable EPS. If I look at the dividend guidance for this year of $1.66, you know, if we just took the midpoint of the payout ratio guidance, it would, you know, imply distributable EPS for 2024 a fair bit north of the prior midpoint. And so without putting too much of a fine point on it and understanding EPS can be lumpy, should we think about a potentially higher greater growth rate in 2024 versus the 8%-10%, based off of your, you know, pipeline and funding visibility?

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

No, I don't think so. It certainly could turn out that way, but that's not the way I would propose you think about it. I do think if we stick somewhere near the midpoint of the guidance over the next three years and have dividend increases that I, I can't quite, you know, articulate right now publicly, of course, but, but something in, in terms of future dividend increases, you would the math would be that you would end up in that 60%-70%, you know, through 2024, 2025, and 2026. So I think that's the math on how that was built.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Yeah. Yeah.

Jeffrey W. Lipson
President and CEO, HASI

Bill, you mentioned the mid.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Go ahead. Go ahead, Marc. Sorry. Sure. No worries. You mentioned midpoint of payout. I would think of it more as a midpoint of EPS with payout fluctuating to achieve the guidelines that Jeff already laid out. Yep. Yep. So I would argue for a little bit higher payout in 2024. Last sort of housekeeping questions. You know, it looked like portfolio cash inflows all in were down slightly year-over-year. Primary delta or one of them seemed to be collections from the equity method affiliates. So just trying to understand the timing on that. Is there a catch-up in 2024? Any color there would be helpful. Sure. So, just as a, for some context, the total portfolio collections was higher and around $500 million. And that is relative to an average portfolio of $5.3 billion, which is roughly a 10% cash yield.

That has been somewhat consistent over time. The two primary drivers that you mentioned is we've discussed before, new transactions, the cash expectation during the tax equity window is a little bit lower, and then it flips to be higher thereafter. Given the substantial growth in the portfolio, that dynamic's on display here. The other dynamic, which we've actually talked about, a few times throughout the course of the year, and you might have seen in some other asset owners, is wind performance. So in 2023, wind, we've seen poor wind performance. It was a P99 year, which means we would not expect it to continue. And additionally, given our preference, we expect it's a, as you already identified, a delay of distributions and not a loss. So, yes, we do see line of sight into those into those starting to catch up.

We've already reflected any updates into our guidance and our portfolio yield. Very helpful.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Noah, if I'm.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Oh, sorry. Go ahead, Jeff.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Noah, if I might, I just wanna make sure we're not talking past each other on guidance and there's good understanding. So, to get more specific on your math question a moment ago, if we hit the midpoint of our guidance in 2024, that would be 9% growth, which would be $2.43. If I divide the $1.66 dividend by $2.43, I get 68%, which is right in that 60%-70% range. So.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Yep.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Hopefully, that holds together. I just wanna make sure we're not talking past each other.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Yeah, absolutely. It's at the higher end of the payout. But that makes perfect sense. Thanks, Jeff.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Okay.

Operator

Our next question is from Davis Sunderland with Baird. Please proceed with your question.

Davis Sunderland
Equity Research Analyst, Baird

Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Brian and Noah kinda already asked in a different roundabout way, so I don't mean to beat a dead horse here. But I guess maybe asking from the perspective of willingness to assume risk or risk appetite, has the higher-rate environment had any impact on appetite for risk in any particular asset class? And I guess just asking a bit more about maybe have yields become too attractive to ignore for anyone in particular or any details there would be helpful.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

I think as a general matter, we've not changed our risk appetite. I think our underwriting has been very consistent. I think the higher yields, as I think we said in the prepared remarks, are mostly the market adapting to higher rates, some economics at the project level, some credit spread dynamics in the market. But I think we've fundamentally kept a very stable risk profile that we're very comfortable with and results in an enormous amount of opportunity. So we haven't really felt the need to change the risk profile. And we found these higher-yielding investments and this ongoing margin expansion available to us without changing our risk parameters.

Davis Sunderland
Equity Research Analyst, Baird

Perfect. That's all from me. Thanks, guys.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Thank you.

Marc Pangburn
CFO, HASI

Thank you.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation. This does conclude today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines and have a wonderful day.

Noah Kaye
Equity Research Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Thank you.

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