NYSE:SPRU Spruce Power Q2 2024 Earnings Report $2.77 -0.07 (-2.32%) Closing price 05/18/2026 03:58 PM EasternExtended Trading$2.74 -0.04 (-1.37%) As of 03:59 AM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Spruce Power EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.46Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/ASpruce Power Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$22.48 millionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ASpruce Power Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date8/14/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateWednesday, August 14, 2024Conference Call Time4:30PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Spruce Power Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 14, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Spruce reported Q2 revenue of $22.5 million and an operating EBITDA of $14.4 million, maintaining a $150 million cash position at quarter end. The company refinanced its Spruce Power IV facility with Barings, securing attractive terms and signaling strong institutional demand for its residential solar assets. Strategic priorities center on scaling through disciplined acquisitions of solar lease and PPA portfolios and expanding its capital-light third-party service offering via SPRuSE Pro. Favorable market dynamics—rising electricity costs, higher interest rates and enhanced tax incentives—are driving increased solar lease origination and robust demand for long-term servicing contracts. Spruce is maintaining its 2024 guidance but expects to track toward the lower end of operating EBITDA and free cash flow ranges due to slower M&A deployment and elevated transition and O&M expenses. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallSpruce Power Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:01Thank you for standing by. My name is Kayla, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I'd like to welcome everyone to the Spruce Power Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question during this time, simply press star, followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you'd like to withdraw your question again, press star and one. I would now like to turn the call over to Bronson Flagg, Head of Investor Relations. You may begin. Bronson FleigHead of Investor Relations at Spruce Power00:00:38Good afternoon, and welcome to Spruce Power's conference call to discuss results for the second quarter of 2024. With me today are Chris Hayes, our Chief Executive Officer, and Sarah Wells, our Chief Financial Officer. Our call this afternoon will include statements that speak to the company's expectations, outlook, and predictions of the future, which are considered forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control, which may cause our actual results to differ materially from those expressed in or implied by these statements. Bronson FleigHead of Investor Relations at Spruce Power00:01:09We are not obliged to revise or update any forward-looking statements except as may be required by law. Please refer to our disclosures regarding risk factors and forward-looking statements in today's earnings release and other SEC filings. A copy of our press release has been posted to the investor relations page of our website for reference. The Non-GAAP financial measures discussed in this call are reconciled to the US GAAP equivalent and can be found in the press release that we issued this afternoon. With that, I will turn the call over to our CEO. Chris, go ahead. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:01:41Thank you, Bronson, and good afternoon to everyone. I want to express how excited I am about the future of Spruce. I can say after these first few months as CEO, we are more confident than ever about the opportunities we have in front of us. As I mentioned in our first call together in May, our strategic priorities center on growth, both through the acquisition of operating residential solar assets and expanding our capital-light third-party service offering. On both fronts, our teams are very busy with due diligence on a rapidly growing opportunity pipeline. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:02:14We are intensely focused on execution to gain scale and drive inflection of free cash flow generation. I'll make more detailed remarks on our outlook, but first, I want to quickly comment on our second quarter results and operations. Our core business continues to deliver solid results, anchored by long-term cash flows from 75,000 rooftops. For Q2, revenue was $22.5 million, and Operating EBITDA was $14.4 million. Our total cash position was $150 million at quarter end, up slightly from Q1. Sarah will give more details to the financial results in her section. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:02:58During the quarter, we refinanced our nearest maturing non-recourse debt, the Spruce Power 4 facility. We're pleased to start a new lending relationship with Barings in this facility. We secured attractive terms, and institutional interest for this paper was very high across the traditional bank loan market, as well as public and private credit markets. This speaks to the quality of and appetite for residential solar-backed debt structuring and Spruce's reputation as a high-quality asset manager. We expect to benefit from this deepening pool of capital over the near future. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:03:34We're also proud to report a historical milestone in the Spruce customer experience. During the quarter, we achieved a Google rating of 3.0 out of 5.0, the highest cumulative rating in our corporate history. Nonetheless, we will strive for even more improvement in customer service. Not only is it the right thing to do, but we get financial benefits in the form of better fleet performance, customer collections, and cross-selling opportunities. I want to sincerely thank our employees across all departments for their hard work, which led to this record achievement in customer satisfaction. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:04:13Next, let's discuss our near-term strategy to grow our owner-operator platform. Shifting dynamics in the residential solar market are very favorable for us. Higher interest rates and better policy incentives, such as Investment Tax Credit adders, are resulting in a noticeable acceleration of solar lease and PPA origination. This is advantageous for Spruce for several reasons. First, there is an insatiable need for long-term capital providers that can own solar lease and PPA contracts, a need that is not being fulfilled by the well-known, publicly traded originators. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:04:53This need presents opportunity for us in both equity sponsor capital commitments and M&A opportunities. This need is exacerbated by the recent exit of a large player from this market. Next, this acceleration of solar lease and PPA contract origination requires robust servicing capabilities for at least 20 to 25 years. Solar servicing is our foundation. This need creates robust opportunity to service third-party solar and other energy assets that we do not own. Keep in mind, these opportunities are in addition to the substantial installed base of residential solar assets in the market today. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:05:37With this market context, I'll speak to how Spruce thinks about execution. As it relates to M&A, we will remain disciplined in our return hurdles. Bid-ask spreads are still somewhat wide, yet we are finding opportunities and are evaluating a robust pipeline of seasoned solar portfolios in the secondary market. Also, we are evaluating what we call programmatic offtake, where Spruce would step in earlier in the asset life cycle, closer to PTO, as the long-term sponsor and owner of solar lease and PPA contracts. To be clear, this would not involve investment in working capital or funding milestone payments. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:06:22Rather, we are looking at off-taking recently installed solar systems by mature installers. On the solar and energy servicing front, we've hit the ground running. In July, we announced the hiring of a general manager for Spruce Pro, Rich DiMatteo. His team is actively developing a pipeline of servicing opportunities, and initial indications of interest remain strong. As a reminder, we view servicing opportunities as capital-light endeavors, where Spruce can leverage its existing investment in people, processes, and service technologies. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:07:02We are well-positioned to capture third-party servicing customers over the near term. Importantly, Spruce is well capitalized to pursue growth. At quarter end, Spruce had $150 million in cash. Keep in mind that we are a levered buyer of assets, so we have substantial runway to fund the equity tranche of prospective transactions. Although we have not had any M&A activity so far in 2024, the opportunity set we see has never been greater. Liquidity and capital market access concerns are clearly very pervasive in the upstream installation market. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:07:42That said, we will be patient and not rush to deploy capital to merely boost our growth metrics. We are focused on underwriting attractive returns and driving toward inflection in free cash flow generation. The beauty of our business model is that we can harvest long-term cash flows while we prudently evaluate investment opportunities. We are, quote, "paid to wait." Given the opportunity set discussed, the ability to be nimble and opportunistic is a priority for Spruce and its board of directors. We want to preserve our cash position to be highly competitive and effective in pursuing near-term growth opportunities. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:08:24We believe this approach will position us well in our pursuit of being the dominant long-term owner and operator of distributed energy assets. We will continue to assess investment opportunities, including share repurchases, on a quarterly basis with our board of directors. Before handing the call to Sarah, I'll make some comments on a public residential solar installer who recently filed for Chapter 11. This event, while unfortunate, underscores the difficult operating environment for residential solar installers. However, we are hopeful that it acts as a positive catalyst for the industry to move towards a more sustainable origination model, focused first on sound economics rather than growth at whatever cost. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:09:12Additionally, this event allows us to contrast the high-risk business model of many large solar companies versus the Spruce model. Spruce only acquires cash-flowing rooftop portfolios. We do not have a large and costly network of salespeople and channel partners, allowing us to pursue a low customer acquisition cost. We do not have substantial working capital requirements, and we are not subject to cost of capital risk associated with the timing lag between installation and raising project-level capital. In summary, the conservative nature of our business model should give you all great comfort in understanding the risks of our business and how we mitigate them. With that, I'll hand the call to Sarah to address second quarter financials. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:10:06Thanks, Chris. I'll provide more details related to our second quarter 2024 financial results, as well as our business outlook for the remainder of the year. Second quarter revenue was $22.5 million, compared to $22.8 million in the prior year period. The modest year-over-year decrease is largely due to lower revenues from Solar Renewable Energy Credits. Second quarter core OpEx, which we define as SG&A and portfolio O&M, was $21.1 million in total, as compared to $19 million for the prior year period. Breaking this out, portfolio O&M expense increased to $4.4 million in the second quarter from $3 million in the prior year period. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:10:49The increase is tied to higher non-routine servicing costs, such as expenses tied to hardware replacements. SG&A expense increased to $16.7 million in the second quarter from $16 million in the prior year period. For the quarter, SG&A was negatively impacted by $1.9 million of expense related to the CEO transition. Spruce generated a GAAP net loss attributable to stockholders of $8.6 million. We consider Operating EBITDA as a key measure in evaluating the company's financial performance. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:11:22Operating EBITDA is defined as adjusted EBITDA plus net proceeds from the company's investment in the SEMTH Master Lease, the interest we earn on our cash investments, and proceeds from system buyouts and prepayments. These items represent material cash inflows from our ongoing business and strategy. Adjusted EBITDA was $5.4 million for the second quarter. Adding the net proceeds from our master lease investment of $5.6 million, $1.5 million of interest earned on cash investments, and $1.9 million of proceeds from system buyouts and prepayments, Operating EBITDA was $14.4 million for the second quarter. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:12:02At the end of the second quarter, total cash, inclusive of unrestricted cash and restricted cash on our balance sheet, was approximately $150 million, unchanged sequentially. Our restricted cash balance increased due to normal seasonality of customer collections. However, our unrestricted cash balance decreased sequentially as a result of higher O&M, partially offset by net proceeds from the refinance of our Spruce Power 4 credit facility during the quarter. The total principal balance of long-term debt was $640 million at the end of the second quarter, with a blended interest rate of 5.9%, including the impact of hedge arrangements. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:12:40As a reminder, all of Spruce's debt is non-recourse and serviced by customer collections of our various portfolio companies. At quarter end, all of our floating rate debt instruments were materially hedged with interest rate swaps, with a mark-to-market on our swaps of positive $30 million. As Chris mentioned, during the quarter, we successfully closed on the refinance of our Spruce Power 4 credit facility. We are proud of the execution, which we believe strikes a good balance of extending tenor while providing flexibility over the medium term to capitalize on our expectation for continued strong performance of the underlying assets, which are predominantly linked to prevailing retail electricity rates in California. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:13:23The transaction represents Spruce's first rated debt issuance since 2016, with Kroll Bond Rating Agency rating the new facility A+. We are proud of the institutional interest this refinance solicited, speaking to the quality and the performance of our assets, and we expect to benefit from these expanded relationships over the long term. Last, moving to full year guidance, which can be found on slide 20 of our investor relations deck. With two quarters of the year complete, we are maintaining our 2024 financial guidance, though we are tracking towards the lower end of the Operating EBITDA and adjusted free cash flow ranges. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:14:01As Chris mentioned, while our M&A pipeline continues to grow, Spruce has not had any M&A activity to date in 2024. For context, the high end of our guidance ranges assumes the acquisition of approximately 6,000 solar lease and PPA contracts in the first half of 2024. We are also experiencing moderately higher operating expenditures than previously anticipated. This is due to unforeseen costs tied to the CEO transition, which we earlier described as having a negative $1.9 million impact to SG&A during the second quarter. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:14:36We also incurred moderate legal spend in connection with a recent contest of our annual proxy and ultimately a cooperation agreement with one of our shareholders. Last, non-routine operations and maintenance expenditures have trended higher thus far in 2024 than we originally anticipated. These are costs tied to rolling trucks to repair or replace hardware. Currently, we believe this O&M dynamic to be transitory in nature. In summary, the pace of M&A versus previous expectations and higher than expected operating expenditures combine to inform our current expectations for our financial guidance metrics to track towards the lower end of their respective ranges. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, please open the line for questions. Operator00:15:24At this time, I'd like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press Star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. Our first question comes from the line of Peter Gastreich with Water Tower Research. Your line is open. Peter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower Research00:15:37Great, thanks. This is Shawn Severson in from Peter, who's traveling right now. Chris, you know, I had a question going back to the bankruptcy of the installer. I mean, and obviously, it highlights the differences in the business models, but does it change anything for you or create opportunities? I'm just wondering on the overall impact in rooftop solar, if any, and specifically how Spruce might benefit from that. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:16:05Yeah, thanks, Shawn. I appreciate the question. Really, what it illustrates to me is that our model of being a third-party owner is the best sector to be in solar. We don't have any of the origination costs associated with customer acquisition. Rather, we grow through acquisitions of large numbers. In fact, we've got several portfolios that we're diligencing at this moment. And, you know, the other piece in terms of opportunity it creates, we are being incredibly judicious with our capital to try and find deals that make sense for us, and we're actively in the market doing it. And as we see sort of chaos like this, we think the opportunity set is expanding. So I think the sky's the limit for Spruce. Peter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower Research00:16:52My next question is related to Spruce Pro. I know you've had a new hire there as well, but I'm trying to understand the go-to-market strategy. What is the marketing strategy around this and building awareness? I know it's still new, but what is the plan for getting the word out on this? Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:17:10Yeah, good question. So you probably heard Rich DiMatteo started this quarter. He's in the seat. We're thrilled to have him. And the first order of business is productizing. The second order of business is commercializing. And so while we have a few existing pipeline candidates that we're working towards closing, we're aggressively trying to pursue our distinctive competence in this servicing space and get to a much larger audience. So we're doing all the things you'd expect, conferences, cold calling, everything in between. And over these next quarters, we think we're going to be building a really robust pipeline. Peter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower Research00:17:51Is that something you think that converts quickly so the efforts translate? I mean, you know what I mean? If you're out there, is this something that has a faster adoption curve, or is there a process here behind it that I'm not understanding? Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:18:06Yeah, so great question. These are longer sales cycle transactions, right? This is just the nature of what an ideal customer prospect looks like... the nature of the selection process and how we fit into it. So, you know, these aren't, these aren't one or 2 month sales cycles, they are longer. And so that's why we're building out the team in a capital-light manner and aggressively starting to pursue the market to grow that pipeline. Peter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower Research00:18:34Right. Thanks, Chris. My last question is kind of, is a bigger picture landscape. I think, you know, the drumbeat's certainly out there that electricity demand is up and probably going to continue to go up for some time, you know, driven by all the things we're well aware of. What I'm trying to get to is a picture of how rooftop solar fits into, let's say, the mega trend of increased demand from AI and EVs and a myriad of things. How does that impact rooftop solar specifically and for Spruce? Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:19:08Yeah, so great question. Look, writ large, it looks like this: Power costs are going to be going up over the next decade. Costs of solar continues to come down, and the economic argument for an average homeowner is super positive. They will save money with rooftop solar. So while all the originators are gonna go out and chase these 1 of customers to put solar on their roof, all that is doing is increasing the opportunity set for us at Spruce Power to acquire these portfolios, either programmatically or through large acquisitions, of which we've had 13 through our history. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:19:46And so as the total addressable market gets bigger, we think our kind of pure play, 3rd party ownership model is the way to go, and we're gonna keep doing it. To the homeowner, this becomes an economic decision, right? This is, you know, electricity costs going up, opportunity to lower my electricity costs. Straight forward. Save costs, kitchen table issue, how can we lower our electricity bill? It goes up year-over-year, and this is a way to lower costs, period.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesBronson FleigHead of Investor RelationsChristian HayesCEOSarah WellsCFOAnalystsPeter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower ResearchPowered by Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Spruce Power Earnings HeadlinesSpruce Power Q1 Earnings Call HighlightsMay 18 at 5:29 AM | americanbankingnews.comSpruce Power Holding Corp (SPRU) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Highlights: Operational Efficiencies ...May 15, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comYour book attachedYour Download Link (Expiring) If you still haven't downloaded the free Simple Options Trading For Beginners guide...please take a few seconds and download it right now before your download link expires. That way, no matter what it costs in the future, you'll have a free copy on your computer. | Profits Run (Ad)Transcript: Spruce Power Holding Q1 2026 Earnings Conference CallMay 15, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comSpruce Power Earnings Call Shows Profits Up, Risks AheadMay 14, 2026 | tipranks.comSpruce Power Holding Corporation (SPRU) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Prepared Remarks TranscriptMay 13, 2026 | seekingalpha.comSee More Spruce Power Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Spruce Power? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Spruce Power and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Spruce PowerSpruce Power (NYSE:SPRU) is a renewable energy company that specializes in the ownership, operation and management of distributed solar energy assets. The company partners with solar developers to acquire residential and small-commercial solar portfolios, providing long-term performance monitoring, maintenance and customer support for system owners. By focusing on turnkey asset management, Spruce Power enables homeowners and businesses to benefit from solar power without the upfront risks and responsibilities of system ownership. Headquartered in San Francisco, California, Spruce Power was founded in 2009 and has grown through strategic acquisitions and partnerships. In May 2021, the company became publicly listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol SPRU following a merger with a special purpose acquisition company. Over the years, Spruce Power has integrated diverse solar portfolios and enhanced its service capabilities to support a rapidly expanding customer base. Spruce Power’s offerings include a range of financing options—such as leases, power purchase agreements and loans—to make solar energy more accessible. Once a system is operational, the company delivers ongoing operations and maintenance, remote performance monitoring, warranty management and customer service. These end-to-end solutions help ensure that solar installations operate efficiently and deliver the expected energy savings over their lifetime. The company is led by a management team with deep expertise in renewable energy, finance and asset management. Drawing on experience in solar development, investment banking and technology, Spruce Power’s leadership oversees the continued expansion of its distributed energy business, supporting the broader transition to clean power across multiple U.S. markets.View Spruce Power ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Why Applied Optoelectronics Stock May Be Near a Turning PointIs Everspin Technologies the Next AI Edge Breakout?Peloton Stock Gives Back Gains After Upbeat Earnings ReportDatavault Gains Traction: 5 Reasons to Sell NowTMC Stock: Why This Pre-Revenue Miner Is Worth WatchingRobinhood, SoFi, and Webull Are Telling Very Different StoriesViking Sails to All-Time Highs—Fundamentals Signal More to Come Upcoming Earnings Analog Devices (5/20/2026)Intuit (5/20/2026)NVIDIA (5/20/2026)Lowe's Companies (5/20/2026)Medtronic (5/20/2026)Target (5/20/2026)TJX Companies (5/20/2026)NetEase (5/21/2026)Ross Stores (5/21/2026)Walmart (5/21/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:01Thank you for standing by. My name is Kayla, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I'd like to welcome everyone to the Spruce Power Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question during this time, simply press star, followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you'd like to withdraw your question again, press star and one. I would now like to turn the call over to Bronson Flagg, Head of Investor Relations. You may begin. Bronson FleigHead of Investor Relations at Spruce Power00:00:38Good afternoon, and welcome to Spruce Power's conference call to discuss results for the second quarter of 2024. With me today are Chris Hayes, our Chief Executive Officer, and Sarah Wells, our Chief Financial Officer. Our call this afternoon will include statements that speak to the company's expectations, outlook, and predictions of the future, which are considered forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control, which may cause our actual results to differ materially from those expressed in or implied by these statements. Bronson FleigHead of Investor Relations at Spruce Power00:01:09We are not obliged to revise or update any forward-looking statements except as may be required by law. Please refer to our disclosures regarding risk factors and forward-looking statements in today's earnings release and other SEC filings. A copy of our press release has been posted to the investor relations page of our website for reference. The Non-GAAP financial measures discussed in this call are reconciled to the US GAAP equivalent and can be found in the press release that we issued this afternoon. With that, I will turn the call over to our CEO. Chris, go ahead. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:01:41Thank you, Bronson, and good afternoon to everyone. I want to express how excited I am about the future of Spruce. I can say after these first few months as CEO, we are more confident than ever about the opportunities we have in front of us. As I mentioned in our first call together in May, our strategic priorities center on growth, both through the acquisition of operating residential solar assets and expanding our capital-light third-party service offering. On both fronts, our teams are very busy with due diligence on a rapidly growing opportunity pipeline. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:02:14We are intensely focused on execution to gain scale and drive inflection of free cash flow generation. I'll make more detailed remarks on our outlook, but first, I want to quickly comment on our second quarter results and operations. Our core business continues to deliver solid results, anchored by long-term cash flows from 75,000 rooftops. For Q2, revenue was $22.5 million, and Operating EBITDA was $14.4 million. Our total cash position was $150 million at quarter end, up slightly from Q1. Sarah will give more details to the financial results in her section. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:02:58During the quarter, we refinanced our nearest maturing non-recourse debt, the Spruce Power 4 facility. We're pleased to start a new lending relationship with Barings in this facility. We secured attractive terms, and institutional interest for this paper was very high across the traditional bank loan market, as well as public and private credit markets. This speaks to the quality of and appetite for residential solar-backed debt structuring and Spruce's reputation as a high-quality asset manager. We expect to benefit from this deepening pool of capital over the near future. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:03:34We're also proud to report a historical milestone in the Spruce customer experience. During the quarter, we achieved a Google rating of 3.0 out of 5.0, the highest cumulative rating in our corporate history. Nonetheless, we will strive for even more improvement in customer service. Not only is it the right thing to do, but we get financial benefits in the form of better fleet performance, customer collections, and cross-selling opportunities. I want to sincerely thank our employees across all departments for their hard work, which led to this record achievement in customer satisfaction. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:04:13Next, let's discuss our near-term strategy to grow our owner-operator platform. Shifting dynamics in the residential solar market are very favorable for us. Higher interest rates and better policy incentives, such as Investment Tax Credit adders, are resulting in a noticeable acceleration of solar lease and PPA origination. This is advantageous for Spruce for several reasons. First, there is an insatiable need for long-term capital providers that can own solar lease and PPA contracts, a need that is not being fulfilled by the well-known, publicly traded originators. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:04:53This need presents opportunity for us in both equity sponsor capital commitments and M&A opportunities. This need is exacerbated by the recent exit of a large player from this market. Next, this acceleration of solar lease and PPA contract origination requires robust servicing capabilities for at least 20 to 25 years. Solar servicing is our foundation. This need creates robust opportunity to service third-party solar and other energy assets that we do not own. Keep in mind, these opportunities are in addition to the substantial installed base of residential solar assets in the market today. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:05:37With this market context, I'll speak to how Spruce thinks about execution. As it relates to M&A, we will remain disciplined in our return hurdles. Bid-ask spreads are still somewhat wide, yet we are finding opportunities and are evaluating a robust pipeline of seasoned solar portfolios in the secondary market. Also, we are evaluating what we call programmatic offtake, where Spruce would step in earlier in the asset life cycle, closer to PTO, as the long-term sponsor and owner of solar lease and PPA contracts. To be clear, this would not involve investment in working capital or funding milestone payments. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:06:22Rather, we are looking at off-taking recently installed solar systems by mature installers. On the solar and energy servicing front, we've hit the ground running. In July, we announced the hiring of a general manager for Spruce Pro, Rich DiMatteo. His team is actively developing a pipeline of servicing opportunities, and initial indications of interest remain strong. As a reminder, we view servicing opportunities as capital-light endeavors, where Spruce can leverage its existing investment in people, processes, and service technologies. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:07:02We are well-positioned to capture third-party servicing customers over the near term. Importantly, Spruce is well capitalized to pursue growth. At quarter end, Spruce had $150 million in cash. Keep in mind that we are a levered buyer of assets, so we have substantial runway to fund the equity tranche of prospective transactions. Although we have not had any M&A activity so far in 2024, the opportunity set we see has never been greater. Liquidity and capital market access concerns are clearly very pervasive in the upstream installation market. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:07:42That said, we will be patient and not rush to deploy capital to merely boost our growth metrics. We are focused on underwriting attractive returns and driving toward inflection in free cash flow generation. The beauty of our business model is that we can harvest long-term cash flows while we prudently evaluate investment opportunities. We are, quote, "paid to wait." Given the opportunity set discussed, the ability to be nimble and opportunistic is a priority for Spruce and its board of directors. We want to preserve our cash position to be highly competitive and effective in pursuing near-term growth opportunities. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:08:24We believe this approach will position us well in our pursuit of being the dominant long-term owner and operator of distributed energy assets. We will continue to assess investment opportunities, including share repurchases, on a quarterly basis with our board of directors. Before handing the call to Sarah, I'll make some comments on a public residential solar installer who recently filed for Chapter 11. This event, while unfortunate, underscores the difficult operating environment for residential solar installers. However, we are hopeful that it acts as a positive catalyst for the industry to move towards a more sustainable origination model, focused first on sound economics rather than growth at whatever cost. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:09:12Additionally, this event allows us to contrast the high-risk business model of many large solar companies versus the Spruce model. Spruce only acquires cash-flowing rooftop portfolios. We do not have a large and costly network of salespeople and channel partners, allowing us to pursue a low customer acquisition cost. We do not have substantial working capital requirements, and we are not subject to cost of capital risk associated with the timing lag between installation and raising project-level capital. In summary, the conservative nature of our business model should give you all great comfort in understanding the risks of our business and how we mitigate them. With that, I'll hand the call to Sarah to address second quarter financials. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:10:06Thanks, Chris. I'll provide more details related to our second quarter 2024 financial results, as well as our business outlook for the remainder of the year. Second quarter revenue was $22.5 million, compared to $22.8 million in the prior year period. The modest year-over-year decrease is largely due to lower revenues from Solar Renewable Energy Credits. Second quarter core OpEx, which we define as SG&A and portfolio O&M, was $21.1 million in total, as compared to $19 million for the prior year period. Breaking this out, portfolio O&M expense increased to $4.4 million in the second quarter from $3 million in the prior year period. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:10:49The increase is tied to higher non-routine servicing costs, such as expenses tied to hardware replacements. SG&A expense increased to $16.7 million in the second quarter from $16 million in the prior year period. For the quarter, SG&A was negatively impacted by $1.9 million of expense related to the CEO transition. Spruce generated a GAAP net loss attributable to stockholders of $8.6 million. We consider Operating EBITDA as a key measure in evaluating the company's financial performance. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:11:22Operating EBITDA is defined as adjusted EBITDA plus net proceeds from the company's investment in the SEMTH Master Lease, the interest we earn on our cash investments, and proceeds from system buyouts and prepayments. These items represent material cash inflows from our ongoing business and strategy. Adjusted EBITDA was $5.4 million for the second quarter. Adding the net proceeds from our master lease investment of $5.6 million, $1.5 million of interest earned on cash investments, and $1.9 million of proceeds from system buyouts and prepayments, Operating EBITDA was $14.4 million for the second quarter. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:12:02At the end of the second quarter, total cash, inclusive of unrestricted cash and restricted cash on our balance sheet, was approximately $150 million, unchanged sequentially. Our restricted cash balance increased due to normal seasonality of customer collections. However, our unrestricted cash balance decreased sequentially as a result of higher O&M, partially offset by net proceeds from the refinance of our Spruce Power 4 credit facility during the quarter. The total principal balance of long-term debt was $640 million at the end of the second quarter, with a blended interest rate of 5.9%, including the impact of hedge arrangements. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:12:40As a reminder, all of Spruce's debt is non-recourse and serviced by customer collections of our various portfolio companies. At quarter end, all of our floating rate debt instruments were materially hedged with interest rate swaps, with a mark-to-market on our swaps of positive $30 million. As Chris mentioned, during the quarter, we successfully closed on the refinance of our Spruce Power 4 credit facility. We are proud of the execution, which we believe strikes a good balance of extending tenor while providing flexibility over the medium term to capitalize on our expectation for continued strong performance of the underlying assets, which are predominantly linked to prevailing retail electricity rates in California. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:13:23The transaction represents Spruce's first rated debt issuance since 2016, with Kroll Bond Rating Agency rating the new facility A+. We are proud of the institutional interest this refinance solicited, speaking to the quality and the performance of our assets, and we expect to benefit from these expanded relationships over the long term. Last, moving to full year guidance, which can be found on slide 20 of our investor relations deck. With two quarters of the year complete, we are maintaining our 2024 financial guidance, though we are tracking towards the lower end of the Operating EBITDA and adjusted free cash flow ranges. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:14:01As Chris mentioned, while our M&A pipeline continues to grow, Spruce has not had any M&A activity to date in 2024. For context, the high end of our guidance ranges assumes the acquisition of approximately 6,000 solar lease and PPA contracts in the first half of 2024. We are also experiencing moderately higher operating expenditures than previously anticipated. This is due to unforeseen costs tied to the CEO transition, which we earlier described as having a negative $1.9 million impact to SG&A during the second quarter. Sarah WellsCFO at Spruce Power00:14:36We also incurred moderate legal spend in connection with a recent contest of our annual proxy and ultimately a cooperation agreement with one of our shareholders. Last, non-routine operations and maintenance expenditures have trended higher thus far in 2024 than we originally anticipated. These are costs tied to rolling trucks to repair or replace hardware. Currently, we believe this O&M dynamic to be transitory in nature. In summary, the pace of M&A versus previous expectations and higher than expected operating expenditures combine to inform our current expectations for our financial guidance metrics to track towards the lower end of their respective ranges. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, please open the line for questions. Operator00:15:24At this time, I'd like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press Star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. Our first question comes from the line of Peter Gastreich with Water Tower Research. Your line is open. Peter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower Research00:15:37Great, thanks. This is Shawn Severson in from Peter, who's traveling right now. Chris, you know, I had a question going back to the bankruptcy of the installer. I mean, and obviously, it highlights the differences in the business models, but does it change anything for you or create opportunities? I'm just wondering on the overall impact in rooftop solar, if any, and specifically how Spruce might benefit from that. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:16:05Yeah, thanks, Shawn. I appreciate the question. Really, what it illustrates to me is that our model of being a third-party owner is the best sector to be in solar. We don't have any of the origination costs associated with customer acquisition. Rather, we grow through acquisitions of large numbers. In fact, we've got several portfolios that we're diligencing at this moment. And, you know, the other piece in terms of opportunity it creates, we are being incredibly judicious with our capital to try and find deals that make sense for us, and we're actively in the market doing it. And as we see sort of chaos like this, we think the opportunity set is expanding. So I think the sky's the limit for Spruce. Peter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower Research00:16:52My next question is related to Spruce Pro. I know you've had a new hire there as well, but I'm trying to understand the go-to-market strategy. What is the marketing strategy around this and building awareness? I know it's still new, but what is the plan for getting the word out on this? Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:17:10Yeah, good question. So you probably heard Rich DiMatteo started this quarter. He's in the seat. We're thrilled to have him. And the first order of business is productizing. The second order of business is commercializing. And so while we have a few existing pipeline candidates that we're working towards closing, we're aggressively trying to pursue our distinctive competence in this servicing space and get to a much larger audience. So we're doing all the things you'd expect, conferences, cold calling, everything in between. And over these next quarters, we think we're going to be building a really robust pipeline. Peter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower Research00:17:51Is that something you think that converts quickly so the efforts translate? I mean, you know what I mean? If you're out there, is this something that has a faster adoption curve, or is there a process here behind it that I'm not understanding? Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:18:06Yeah, so great question. These are longer sales cycle transactions, right? This is just the nature of what an ideal customer prospect looks like... the nature of the selection process and how we fit into it. So, you know, these aren't, these aren't one or 2 month sales cycles, they are longer. And so that's why we're building out the team in a capital-light manner and aggressively starting to pursue the market to grow that pipeline. Peter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower Research00:18:34Right. Thanks, Chris. My last question is kind of, is a bigger picture landscape. I think, you know, the drumbeat's certainly out there that electricity demand is up and probably going to continue to go up for some time, you know, driven by all the things we're well aware of. What I'm trying to get to is a picture of how rooftop solar fits into, let's say, the mega trend of increased demand from AI and EVs and a myriad of things. How does that impact rooftop solar specifically and for Spruce? Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:19:08Yeah, so great question. Look, writ large, it looks like this: Power costs are going to be going up over the next decade. Costs of solar continues to come down, and the economic argument for an average homeowner is super positive. They will save money with rooftop solar. So while all the originators are gonna go out and chase these 1 of customers to put solar on their roof, all that is doing is increasing the opportunity set for us at Spruce Power to acquire these portfolios, either programmatically or through large acquisitions, of which we've had 13 through our history. Christian HayesCEO at Spruce Power00:19:46And so as the total addressable market gets bigger, we think our kind of pure play, 3rd party ownership model is the way to go, and we're gonna keep doing it. To the homeowner, this becomes an economic decision, right? This is, you know, electricity costs going up, opportunity to lower my electricity costs. Straight forward. Save costs, kitchen table issue, how can we lower our electricity bill? It goes up year-over-year, and this is a way to lower costs, period.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesBronson FleigHead of Investor RelationsChristian HayesCEOSarah WellsCFOAnalystsPeter GastreichMd & an Energy Transition & Sustainable Investing Analyst at Water Tower ResearchPowered by