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Greetings, and welcome to the Sunrun First Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Mr. Patrick Jobin, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, Hector. Before we begin, please note that certain remarks we will make on this conference call constitute forward-looking statements. Although, we believe these statements reflect our best judgment based on factors currently known to us, actual results may differ materially and adversely. Please refer to the company's filings with the SEC for a more inclusive discussion of risks and other factors that may cause our actual results to differ from projections made in any forward-looking statements. Please also note these statements are being made as of today, and we disclaim any obligation to update or revise them. On the call today are Lynn Jurich, Sunrun’s Co-Founder and CEO; Ed Fenster, Sunrun’s Co-Founder and Executive Chairman; and Tom vonReichbauer, Sunrun’s CFO. I’ll now turn the call over to Lynn.
Thanks Patrick. We are pleased to share Sunrun’s first quarter results, our improving outlook for 2021, and our progress transitioning the country to a clean, affordable and resilient grid. The year is on track to be the best in the company’s history. With an accelerating growth rate, operating scale and expanding market reach, we are leading the country to a clean energy future. We ended Q1 with more than 573,000 customers, reflecting 18% year-over-year growth. We are increasing our new solar capacity installations guidance from 20% to 25% to 25% to 30% for the full year. We are innovating, accelerating growth, and integrating Vivint Solar, while maintaining strong unit margins and performing at a scale that is two times greater than our nearest competitor. Sunrun’s expanding customer value proposition and competitive advantages are delivering market share gains. We delivered all-time record Q1 volumes through our direct-to-home sales channel. And our home builder and our channel partner businesses delivered all-time record volumes. We have an unmatched consumer reach through our multi-channel strategy. We focus on working with a selective group of channel partners and grew the number of partners we work with by over 20% in Q1. Given the value of our brand strength, technology platform, and financing advantages, nearly all of our new channel partners have agreed to exclusive agreements. Our new home business is starting to scale and grew by more than 50% in the first quarter compared to the prior year, pro-forma for Vivint Solar. We are working with 20 of the top 30 homebuilders in California. Our pipeline of new homes spans hundreds of communities across the country. We continue to advance our lead on batteries and virtual power plants. Sunrun has installed nearly 20,000 Brightbox systems nationwide, which offer homeowners the ability to power through blackouts with clean and reliable, locally-produced home energy. On a daily basis, these batteries optimize when power is purchased or supplied to the grid, helping manage energy constraints during peak times. Battery attachment rates increased again from last quarter and are at record levels across the business. Sunrun has already forged 12 virtual power plant opportunities and we continue to grow the pipeline. We now have over $75 million in expected revenue from grid services opportunities that have been awarded or are in late-stage discussions. These opportunities provide incremental recurring revenue and offer an enhanced customer value proposition, while further differentiating Sunrun’s offering from competitors that lack the scale, network density, and the technical capabilities necessary to serve this market. We continue to expect more than 100% growth in battery installations this year, despite supply constraints. As more manufacturers expand battery offerings, we expect costs to improve further and supply constraints to ease, allowing us to meet pent-up demand and accelerate adoption even faster. We are actively exploring ways to help consumers and the grid manage the transition to electric vehicles. We know the country must make the switch to EVs to further reduce carbon emissions, and we believe Sunrun will be a key enabler of this transition. Homes with EVs consume approximately double the amount of electricity. Home solar and batteries are needed to meet this increased strain on the electric system, and Sunrun is well positioned to be a leading provider of these services given our expertise managing and installing at-home energy infrastructure and our national footprint. Electric Vehicles create positive flywheel effects. Homes need larger solar systems to support the increased electricity consumption. These larger systems come at a high incremental margin since the cost to increase the size is relatively low, and EVs can be integrated into a comprehensive home energy management system to maximize the economic benefits and resiliency for families. These compounding benefits will accelerate the transition to a distributed grid with home solar, batteries and EVs even faster than most realize. Turning now to our ESG and sustainability efforts. We are proud to lead one of the fastest growing sectors in the American economy. In Q1 we launched the Sunrun Academy, a set of initiatives and programs that expands job opportunities and enhances career advancement. By investing in our people, we can attract and retain the best workforce with the skills needed to electrify homes across the country. As part of this initiative, all Sunrun employees have access to an expanded tuition reimbursement program to develop career-building skills. The Sunrun Academy will help us develop and train our emerging leaders, with a focus on critical in-demand skills like electrical work. In April, we unveiled sustainability goals in our annual Impact Report. These goals include offsetting more than 600 million metric tons of carbon emissions from the systems we will deploy over the next decade, achieving net zero carbon emissions from our operations by 2040, transitioning our vehicle fleet to one-third electric or hybrid within five years, and deploying at least 500 megawatts of solar to lower income households by 2030. Finally, we aim to create a healthier environment for future generations by aggressively retiring fossil fuel plants with virtual power plants powered by local solar energy. The solar systems we deployed in just Q1 are expected to prevent the emission of over 3.9 million metric tons of CO2 over the next 30 years. Before I turn it over Ed, I’d like to thank our fantastic team for another great quarter. Over to you, Ed.
Thanks, Lynn. Today, I will touch on some recent political developments, our evolving capital structure strategy, and recap our robust capital runway. Washington is taking note that distributed solar represents about seven in 10 of all jobs in wind and solar development. The Labor Department predicts that job growth for solar installers will exceed any other category of employment through 2026. Even better, our jobs are desirable. We employ people nationwide, throughout local communities, rather than in desolate locations. Our jobs remain consistent year-in and year-out, rather than the feast-or-famine reality of project driven jobs. And the need to automate, scale, and organize our industry’s growth creates a wide range of career advancement opportunities. Over the coming years, distributed energy is uniquely positioned to add 100s of 1,000s of jobs that are secure, well paid, close to home, and don’t require a college degree, exactly the sort that are the focus of our leaders today. We are at a crossroads and believe our vision of an intelligent grid, where power is reliably produced and locally consumed, is the obvious future. Support for our vision within the media and at the state level is strong. Key editorial boards continue to see the intuitive elegance of distributed solar and storage, and to that end, we’ve seen recent compelling editorials in the most influential publications, such as the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Sacramento Bee. These papers recognize that electrifying our vehicles and our heating will require doubling the electricity needs of our communities, and that the major utilities, particularly in California, have fallen decades behind maintaining the grid and are unable alone to deliver against the urgent needs of today, let alone tomorrow. State regulators by and large appreciate this as well. For instance, in South Carolina, we reached a win-win settlement with Duke Energy. When Dominion was unwilling to negotiate in good faith, the public utilities commission that regulates them entirely rejected their request. Our all-in capital costs are at or near all-time lows, despite the increase in Treasuries earlier this year. For now, treasuries have stabilized at very attractive levels, while the spreads to Treasuries we pay continue to fall. While we don’t expect materially higher interest rates in the near-term, I note that Sunrun delivered excellent customer values and cash flow results in recent periods when base rates were at least twice what they are now. And, today, we enjoy lower costs and more revenue sources, like batteries and virtual power plants. A modest inflationary environment, which would further drive up retail electric rates, would frankly be good for us. Meanwhile, our increased scale continues to open new financing opportunities. We expect to leverage that scale into an overall lower cost capital strategy that will increase long-term cash flows available to our common shareholders. We are evaluating a number of possibilities to achieve this vision, and we’ll share updates over the next quarter as we finalize a course of action. We continue to maintain a robust project finance runway. As of May 5, closed transactions and executed term sheets provide us expected tax equity and project debt capacity to fund over 540 megawatts for subscribers beyond what was deployed through the first quarter. I’ll now turn the call over to Tom.
Thanks, Ed. The strong momentum we saw in the fourth quarter has continued into 2021. The Sunrun team again delivered an exceptional quarter with year-over-year volume growth at strong margins. We are proud to post a solid quarter even as we meet the significant ongoing demands of integrating Vivint Solar into our operations. We are leaning in to accelerate our growth even further while enhancing our customer offering and value we bring to our partners. Turning first to volumes. In the first quarter, customer additions were approximately 23,500, including approximately 20,100 subscriber additions. Solar energy capacity installed was 168 megawatts in the first quarter of 2021, a 9% increase from the first quarter last year, pro-forma to include Vivint Solar and down approximately 2% from Q4, a much smaller decline from Q4 into Q1 than what we have historically observed given seasonality in our business. Our networked solar energy capacity was 4.1 gigawatts at the end of Q1, an increase of 18% compared to the prior year. We ended Q1 with over 573,000 customers and nearly 499,000 subscribers. Our subscribers generate significant, recurring revenue with most under 20 or 25 year contracts for the clean energy we provide. At the end of Q1, our annual recurring revenue, or ARR, stood at $683 million with an average contract life remaining of 17 years, representing over $10 billion in revenue visibility just from existing customers. In Q1, subscriber value was approximately $35,700 and creation cost was approximately $27,500, delivering a net subscriber value of approximately $8,200. Total value generated, which is the net subscriber value multiplied by the number of subscriber additions in the period, was $165 million in the first quarter. Turning now to gross and net earning assets and our balance sheet. Gross earning assets were $8.1 billion at the end of the first quarter. Gross earnings assets is the measure of cash flows we expect to receive from customers over time, net of distributions to tax equity partners in partnership-flip structures, project equity financing partners, and operating and maintenance expenses, discounted at a 5% unlevered WACC. Net earnings assets were $4.2 billion at the end of the first quarter. Net earning assets is gross earning assets, plus cash, less all debt. We ended the first quarter with $813 million in total cash. Note that in Q1, we consumed approximately $43 million in cash related to the convert, capped call, and acquisition related costs. Turning now to our outlook. Our team is executing exceptionally well, with strong sales momentum across all of our channels, even as we focus on integrating Vivint Solar. We believe our strengthening brand, investment in customer experience, and expanded sales reach have us well positioned to respond to the market opportunity in front of us. We are increasing our growth outlook for 2021. We now forecast solar energy capacity installed growth to be in a range of 25% to 30% in 2021 for the full year, an increase from the prior guidance of 20% to 25%. Total value generated is now expected to be over $750 million for the full year, up from the prior guidance of more than $700 million. We continue to estimate cost synergies derived from the acquisition of Vivint Solar to be approximately $120 million in run rate synergies exiting this year. While we are very focused on integration in the near-term, we expect to see sequential quarterly growth in solar energy capacity installed in Q2 that is well above 10%. The combination of investments to accelerate growth and our progressive ramp into synergy realization will result in more front-loaded costs, resulting in lower net subscriber values in Q2 but with sequential increases throughout the second half of the year. Consumer demand for alternatives to an old, expensive, and dirty energy infrastructure continues to increase at a rapid pace and we believe we have the products, business model, and operational capabilities to deliver against this demand in 2021 and beyond. With that, let’s open the line for questions please.
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Brian Lee with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.
Hey everyone. Thanks for taking the questions and kudos on the solid execution here and increased guidance. I guess on that topic, just wondering, understandably comps are easy for Q2, but if we assume, let's say 50% growth in Q2, it still implies 30% average growth through Q3 and Q4 on a year-on-year basis to get to your range. Is that kind of the right cadence of how we should be thinking about the run rate here in the second half, given the skew that we’ll see in Q2? And then I had a follow-up.
Thanks, Brian. Yes, that is the right way to think about it.
Okay. And then I guess as a follow-up, just given the better demand outlook two questions here and then I'll pass it on. One on the supply chain, just anything whether panels, inverters, batteries that you're seeing tightness or potential price fluctuations that could impact the guidance for the year. And then on the second part of the question would just be around labor, we are hearing some industries are having challenges getting workers back to work with the increased volume growth outlook, it's a high quality problem to have, but how are you guys thinking about or what sort of visibility do you have on the labor side of things? Thanks a lot.
Sure. Brian. So this is Ed, maybe I'll just kick it off on batteries and then hand it off to Tom to keep going. In terms of battery supply, the good news is we installed more batteries in Q1 than in Q1 – sorry than in Q4, which represented total install growth of more than 100% year-over-year. And we also still expect to grow battery installations over 100% during 2021. The bad news is we could be growing that even faster if not for the tightness in the market. And one impact at the tightness at end pricing for batteries has not fallen alongside, we can put prices for those batteries. We do forecast significant increases in both supply and demand of batteries with supply increasing little faster than demand over the near-term which should help a little bit. Across all manufacturers, we expect to obtain enough batteries to support the growth we forecast, it’s not full intrinsic end customer demand. And we are experiencing a little bit of low inventory levels, but we've been working through that and planning around that successfully so far. Maybe I'll hand it to Tom to talk about inventory.
Yes. Hey Brian. So across the rest of the supply chain, we feel comfortable that we're well insulated to supply chain situation that some manufacturers are highlighting. As we said before, our position as the market leader, we sit in a pretty important customer position for these companies and believe that puts us in a strong position in their pecking order. Given our scale, we have strong supply contracts that in many cases have non – have penalties for non delivery of orders. We've also increased our target inventory levels in response to some of the supply chain disruptions, and we already reached those new buffered levels without difficulty. Finally the diversified supply chain that we manage using multiple suppliers for all of our components helps further mitigate risk here, so we feel pretty good on this issue. Let me pass it over to Lynn for the labor issue.
Yes, sure. Brian, great question. This is something we're extremely vigilant about. As we know electrifying all the homes in the U.S. can add 25 million jobs, so that's why it has the bipartisan support it does. We do feel like we're in a solid position for the foreseeable future, but we're investing a lot here. We talked about some of the external partnerships we've launched like SkillBridge, partnerships with the Department of Defense, which gives us access to a talent pool of 75,000 people. We're launching our Sunrun Academy to develop internal talent and just always offering competitive wages and career pathing and really focusing on building that talent brand model. So short story, we feel solid right now and continuing to invest here.
All right. Thanks everyone so much for the color. I appreciate it.
Your next question comes from the line of Julien Dumoulin-Smith with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good afternoon team. Thanks for the time, perhaps to get on all the updates here. So perhaps to start with that, you talked about $750 million value generated this year, right. And I suppose this flows naturally from the added compounding customer growth to $25 million to $30 million. But how do you think about this trend through the course of the year? It's a little bit like the last one, given that the NEA growth for 1Q I think here was $59 million. How do you think about that trending through the course of the year, really, again, I think the same genre of the question, how do you think about that backend weighted presumably? And then in terms of the percent increase versus customers going from $20 million to $25 million to $25 million to $30 million, I would've thought that going from $700 million as a baseline maybe might be implied a little bit more than $750 million. So both kind of trend and cadence, as well as, how do you think about the customer growth relative to the value addition in terms of the upticks?
Yes, sure. Thanks Julien. So on first on the guidance points, we increased volume guidance at the midpoint of the range by approximately 4%, that increased total value generated by approximately 7%. So you are seeing some of that incremental leverage there as we do bump up volume guidance, if you just kind of look at the midpoint of the range on volume. Throughout the course of the year, we expect to continue to tighten operating costs, continued process improvements reductions in our physical branch footprint as a result of the acquisition, as well as cycle time improvements, and further we reaffirmed the synergy delivery this year of $120 million in exit rate value, that obviously has a ramp throughout the year. And then with the market opportunity that we're seeing in front of us right now, the accelerating growth and investment in that opportunity as the timing of some of these sales costs recognition does create a bit more drag in Q1 and Q2, where we're seeing a higher ratio of sales to installs. But if you look at the results here in Q1, install costs are down in spite of higher battery mix and G&A costs are coming down, so you can see a lot of that beginning to materialize. At the beginning of Q1, we also had a slightly higher mix of 26% ITC eligible projects than we had in 2020. So I think you will see some of that drag here in the first half of the year, but continued ramp throughout the year as synergies are realized. And then I think on NEA and cash, we mentioned in the commentary earlier, that we had about $43 million of onetime cash expenses from the convert the cap call and some integration items that created a bit of a drag on NEA under the new definition which is now inclusive of cash.
All fair points. Thank you. And then if I may, right, I want to sidestep the net metering conversation, but really thinking beyond the current year into 2022 onwards. How do you think about the various puts and takes on value creation levers, right, whether that's again storage deflation returns in terms of costs you got solar panel continue going down, perhaps other scale advantages, et cetera. But at the end of the day, when you think about the DevCo side of the piece here, obviously, perhaps you might have a little bit of pressure from an NEM perspective. What are the offsets when you think about customer value creation sort of beyond the current year?
Thanks. Great question. We’ll look at extremely positive. So on the top end here, you have the grid services markets opening up. So and for those newer to the story grid services are markets where we're able to actually monetize the capacity out of the battery to add another source of value. And if you look at the grid services programs we have in our pipeline right now, that represents about 10% of our – excuse me, the contracts you have represented about 10% of our geographies, but our pipeline shows about 50%. And as the country moved further to intermittent renewable resources, the demands for instantly dispatching power out of the battery will become increasingly valuable, so that's one. And you also have just the additional revenue from the battery and the battery adoption I think were just still on the very early innings of people feeling the resiliency pain around outages like we thought in California and Texas, which will continue to really drive the consumer interest in adding the battery. You also have the further electrification of vehicles and the house, and this is a huge one. So if we just by electrifying your vehicles in your home, you need twice the amount of power to your house. And, so one that increases the potential system size, which is really the most profitable business for us, because a lot of our costs are per home not per KW, so you have that massive increase in the system. So I think what you're really seeing for – what our vision is to help really lead this energy transition and we're really moving from just a solar only company to a company that offers broader electrification both for the home, but then also into the grid to help build a stable grid that can actually hit the carbon goals. So I think, the unit level economics are going to look different going forward because of that. And the overwhelming majority of the trends are tailwinds.
Got it. Excellent. Well, thank you.
Thanks.
Your next question comes from the line of Moses Sutton with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.
Thanks for taking my questions and congrats on seismically beating on what seems like every metric. Is California specifically helping drive the MTB strengths, and simply looking at average realized utility rates in California rising about 7% year-to-date. Wondering if you're capturing this in leased PPA origination pricing.
Thanks for that question. While that'll be a long-term benefit, we have not changed pricing in California, so it's not coming from that.
Great. And then thinking about which States and areas you're actually pushing deeper into. Maybe you could provide an update on high growth markets like Texas and Florida, and really any new States you're looking at where utility rates versus the solar economics are starting to emerge that you're not at yet?
Sure. I think, we are in about 23 States right now, I think some of the places we're really excited about are the Texas, Florida, I think Puerto Rico is poised to deliver some growth for us as well. But I would note that the current growth rate and the current guidance is not predicated on a lot of geographic expansion. I think you will see a return for us to more geographic expansion this year. And particularly like you said the value derivers are enabling that, whereas grid power prices are getting higher, our equipment costs are decreasing, the appeal of batteries is that much more powerful. And then again, this addition of electric vehicles in the bigger system sizes makes that even that much more economical. So we do last year we did not expand into a lot of new geographies and this year we will be doing that. But again, the growth expectations are not reliant on that.
That's very helpful. And maybe one last one, I'll jump in the queue, maybe this one is for Ed. You came to market with an ABS on legacy Vivint assets recently with great terms. It's been maybe 1.5 years now since you came to market with RUN assets. Any update on timing? Could we expect something in the next one to two quarters?
Hi, great question. We obviously periodically access the financing markets in various different formats. And during the pandemic actually raised a number of delayed draw credit facilities that were designed to be delayed to be drawn and used over time as a way to mitigate risk, had things look different than they did ultimately during that period. So we will again continue to avail ourselves of the securitization market, but haven't made any public statements at the moment as to when the next transaction will occur. But we certainly do have a number of obviously funds deploying and a number of refinancing opportunities that are starting to develop this year. And obviously for assets originated recently, there is no delineation between – in the legacy Sunrun assets.
Great. Thanks. Very helpful.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Stephen Byrd with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Hi congratulations on the great results and the excellent update on growth. I wanted to focus on the opportunity for home electrification and Lynn, you spoken quite a bit about this, you all have a couple of very good slides describing it. I wanted to talk about EV charging. And just maybe talk a little bit more about sort of the capabilities you would need to be able to pursue this, that the time period over which this could be very meaningful. I mean, it strikes me as very logical, pretty exciting as you mentioned in terms of the additional value to customers, as well as to shareholders. But wonder if you could just talk a little more about how this might unfold?
Sure. I think there is a couple of dimensions to note. The one just to quickly repeat that the increase in power needed in the house really can drive larger system size, which again, I can't emphasize, how those incremental kilowatt hours are really quite valuable. So I think that's number one. I think you also – it also gives a moment of consideration for the homeowner. So one of the issues of our business is conversion, most people want solar, they like it, it's very popular, but it's a why now there is not often an urgency around that. And so, what the purchase of the electric vehicle can create a moment where it makes sense then to make the investment in the solar, particularly the solar company can then also take care of the car charger installation and you know you're going to have double the electric bill and that you want it to be powered by clean energy. So it's certainly an area that we're investing in business development efforts around and so I do think that our success in that market should parallel the growth rate in EBs. So stay tuned on that one, but we're really excited about, and again, I – because we have the installation footprint, it really, it just makes sense for us to take care of that charging at the same time we install the solar panels.
That's great. And maybe just following up on that Lynn. I mean, the – I very much take your point that at the point of sale, when a consumer buys an EV, that's a logical point for them to consider providing their energy with renewable energy. So sort of awareness of Sunrun at that particular point strikes me as fairly important, is that fair or could it just sort of be…
That’s absolutely fair. And then, what it also – a follow-on effect to is resiliency becomes that much more important as well. And so, I think this is a point that we're starting to talk about, we're starting to see in California with Sunrun Texas, but we will continue to see outages and multi-day outages. And so, the demand for the solar plus the battery to power through that, especially, if you're exposed to electric vehicles, I think that, that also is another potential reason to peak the interest of consumers and to encourage them to convert over.
Yes. And I guess it just strikes me that auto – that there is not a – I guess there is a positive overlap between you and auto OEMs. I mean, you're not competing with them, you can offer quite a bit of value to their customers.
Exactly.
Yes. Okay, that’s all I have.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from line of Kashy Harrison with Simmons Energy. Please proceed with your question.
Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. And I accrued the congrats on the beat and raise. So just looking at your cash balance net of recourse debt, it's grown quite considerably over the past several years. Just wondering, is there a target level of net cash that you're looking for maybe before you start exploring doing something creative with that cash, and then maybe just educate us on what you might be thinking about using any excess cash for to create value for shareholders?
So this is Ed. So that's a great question. And it's one that we've been working on this year and definitely falls into the excellent problem to have category. So as I mentioned on the call, we're looking at what do we think is the right future run rate way to finance new asset growth. And then also to reevaluate our existing credit arrangements to figure out which are most above market, which we should get rid of or maybe refinance or replace. And then as we finish that particular exercise and I think communicate the results of that, we'll then have more opportunity to talk about our general capital allocation strategy. I think, we – I'd like to believe that we have a reputation of being good capital allocators, we have in the past, had at share buyback program, we have no immediate plans at the moment to return that. But I think that the short story right now is we want to nail down the right capital structure for the business and then turn to figure out what we want to do after we achieve that goal. So stay tuned and we'll probably be sharing more in the coming quarters.
That's great. Thanks for that. And then my next question is surrounds the cost structure for resi solar. Looking at the external model that you all provide, customer acquisition costs are still pretty high. And it seems like that's the biggest opportunity for cost reduction which feels even more crucial because net energy metering in its current form is unsustainable. And I know you talked about some of the opportunities to increase value post that, but maybe if you could talk about some opportunities for rapid cost reduction that you think are possible, and maybe give us a sense of a timeline so that we can see how you intend to attack the cost structure of the business moving forward.
Yes. Great question. So a couple things in there. That’s more of a commission costs, one dynamic you're seeing is that the customer lifetime value support a high acquisition cost. So if we didn't spend that next incremental dollar to acquire that next customer, we'd be leaving money on the table, and that's a market force, and the reason – a proof point to support that is, if you actually look in some geographies where maybe the value proposition is a little weaker to the consumer, you can actually see pretty materially lower acquisition costs. So it's highly variable based on that. So that's one, just feature which makes it unlikely really to reduce in the near-term and not something we would target, because again we would want to – that incremental customer is valuable to us. Now, we're still, don't get me wrong, like we're still tightening, our operating playbook and improving our close rates and moving more to virtual selling and expanding and building out sort of online experience. So all of those initiatives are underway and we'll tighten it. But because of these market forces, it's unlikely to see that materially decline in the short-term. Over time, I'm confident it will cut down, because I think the category will be more comfortable for people, the e-comm people will get more comfortable through an e-commerce experience. There will be the – opportunities I highlighted earlier with electric vehicles. The resiliency benefit of batteries is going to get more and more painful than the outages come, which will drive increase adoption. So all those are positive trends going forward. And then the biggest opportunity here is the red tape around local construction of these assets. And we've been talking about this for a long time that the soft costs around permit variations, code variations, delays and [Technical Difficulty] at about $7,000 per customer, including a lot in that CAC area, because you're spending money on customers that don't end up converting, because it's too cumbersome of a process. So the biggest way to eliminate this is to streamline all the bureaucracy around going solar. And we're working on that, it's getting a ton of attention finally from the administration, the Department of Energy in the recent infrastructure bill, there is a proposal for $20 million every year to help fund soft cost reductions. We're – as an industry, we're building a software program called the Solar app to have instant permitting, that's in trial right now, a number that Ed shared. And so then again, as a proof point of how that will be meaningful, if we look at the customer acquisition cost in markets, where there is instantaneous permitting and interconnection, it is dramatically lower than other markets. So that's an initiative we're really excited about. And then if I could, I wanted to go back one more benefit of EVs that I had left off that I think is worth discussing, which is the strain on the grid from EVs will make our batteries and solar that much more valuable. And that is, again, I don't think people really appreciate that yet is that the amount of investment we're going to have to make in the distribution system and locally, it will be served Eastern – more cost effectively with using existing infrastructure of rooftops and batteries. So that'll be another benefit from the electrification of vehicles.
That's great color. Thanks so much for that. I really appreciate it. Have a good one.
Thanks.
Your next question comes from line of James West with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, good afternoon, everyone. Curious if there's any issues that perhaps are out of your control that have driven this, this recent acceleration in growth, things like housing market tightness or fear of inflation and driving up electricity costs. Is there something that's outside of just the pure brand recognition and the drive toward solar?
I don't believe that there's any short-term effect driving these sort of growth rates. I think if anything, it's just accelerating in a sustainable way.
Okay. Makes sense. And then obviously, Lynn, you've driven home how important EVs are for your – will be for your business. How do you think about that with your go-to-market strategy and your sales force? Do you kind of link around where the EV growth is the strongest? And how are you guys thinking about that?
Great question. Again, we have a pretty broad distribution, right now and are taking a ton of share in just our existing business. And so again, not counting on EVs to hit these growth targets or to even kind of sustain this accelerated growth but what we are – but because the cross-selling opportunity here is so makes so much sense. I think you will see us working to link up with fractures to offer programs that are win-wins. So again, stay tuned on that, but that will be a way to sort of cross-sell and reach customers at the moment when they are enticed to power their homes with solar meet that additional need. And one of the other advantages that Sunrun has is that with our nationwide footprint is we're also appealing for those types of partnerships because we have such a broad geographic reach that it makes more sense for large OEMs to choose a scale player.
That's very clear. Thanks, Lynn.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Mark Strouse with J.P. Morgan. Please proceed with your question.
Good afternoon. Thank you very much for taking our question. You mentioned it's kind of record volume across your channels in 1Q. And when you look out to your guidance, the increase that you had is that fairly broad based as well or are you particularly seeing strengthen in one particular channel? And kind of a related follow-up to that is the supply constraints that you're seeing within the industry, do you think that that has accelerated, I mean, I understand it's probably a bit early, but are you starting to see an acceleration in some of the smaller mom-and-pop installers that are looking to partner with a larger installer such as Sunrun?
Great questions, Mark. We are seeing growth across the board, so if you look at our different avenues to market around our direct-to-home business, our online business, our retail business in the Home Depot, Costco stores, our new homes business, our low-income and our channel partner business all will deliver growth. So it's really across the board. And I think we're pretty excited about the sort of brands that we're creating and the consumer mind share that we're creating around being in all those different places. And to your point around the local installers, that has been a growth area for us. If you look at our Q1 result, which is typically – Q1 is typically seasonally the lowest quarter of the year given weather. And we saw a record in our partner business in that quarter. So across all quarters historically. So yes, we are seeing strong growth there. And we believe we uniquely served that installer market with our tech, our financing advantages and the brand that we can offer them.
All right. Makes sense. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from line of Michael Weinstein with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, this is Maheep on behalf of Mike. Thanks for taking the questions. First one, just on the NPV per customer, I know Tom, you spoke about potential decline in Q2 given the higher cost upfront. But just want to understand how should we think about it in the second half? Just looking at the annual guidance seems like in the $7,000 customer range, but just wanted to make sure we got the right number.
Yes, great question. So in Q1, we were just shy of $8,200 per customer. If you take the guidance here of $750 million and midpoint of the range you get to a full year number that's more in the $8,300 range. My suspicion is you're not adjusting for some amount of cash and loan mix in the volumes there and doing it on a – not doing it on a lease customer basis, which is what we guide to.
Yes, that would make sense. And then maybe just on the channel strategy, could you talk about the split of the in-house and channel business? I think the press release, you spoke about channel business growing year-over-year so how should we think about that mix going later this year or into next year.
Great question. What we do is we really look at geography and route our path to market in that geography with the best way to reach consumers. So we don't manage it to a mix of Sunrun sales versus channel partner sales. So we'll give color on how it turned out each quarter, but we don't manage to a mix there. So we don't disclose it or guide to it.
All right. And then just last one from me. And I’ll jump back in the queue. Just on the potential impact of any higher costs in the supply chain so far for this year, you have said it manageable and you have enough inventory or enough contracts to manage the higher cost of modules or other components. But to the extent, they increase later this year or next year, who absorbs that cost, is it something which passes down to the end customer or does the acquisition cost absorb that any higher hardware costs?
Yes, so as we say, I think this year, we feel really well positioned given supply contracts, purchase orders in place, levels of inventory that we have on hand to be well buffered there. And I think longer term, actually, you get back into the general deflationary trends that we've seen on a lot of the equipment, places like batteries, where you'll continue to see new manufacturers bring products to market, that'll increase competition there. I think you'll see similar stories across inverters and a handful of other components. So I think we'll continue to be in this cost of client environment and the economic wedge between distributed residential solar and the local utility will continue to get wider over time. So nothing significant of note there that we're particularly concerned about, we feel pretty well positioned, given rising utility rates in terms of pricing power and the opportunity to have a small amount of buffer there to offset, if needed.
Got you. All right, thanks for taking the question.
Your next question comes from the line of Philip Shen with ROTH Capital Partners. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions. The first one is on the channel partners, the new ones that you've added for those dealers, you highlighted some exclusives. I was wondering if you could provide some color on that. How many new exclusives did you add maybe some color in the structure would be helpful? So how long are they – how are those payments structured, how large are those payments, and when you think about your net subscriber value, with the exclusive payments, do you expect the incremental megawatts from those dealers to be in line lower or higher relative to net subscriber value? Thanks.
Thanks, great question. As we mentioned, we've kept our channel partner business fairly exclusive. So our strategy is to focus on is 80/20 strategy. So focus on the larger regional players that have competitive routes to market and unique routes to market in their communities and high quality customer experience, most importantly. And so we've kept that fairly tight and that's served us well. And so what we said was in the quarter, we grew those numbers by 20%. So we could – certainly, it could have been, there's much more demand than that. We could grow it much faster, but we really, again, manage for who are the really high quality partners that deliver great customer experience that bring something unique in reaching an incremental customer base. And when we strike those relationships, yes, we are quite disciplined at managing to unit level economics, thresholds and targets and maintaining consistency across our different channels and across our network in order to avoid any sort of channel conflict. And you wouldn't expect any material changes in any of the unit-level economics for the results going forward.
Okay. Thanks, Lynn. And then I know we've talked about the EV opportunity for a while now, but just to be very clear it sounds like near-term, there's an opportunity to strike a deal with them, maybe a utility or an auto company, or somebody of that ilk, or maybe a combination to perhaps drive volumes for both solar and EV chargers and at the point of sale perhaps of the EV. Am I characterizing that correctly? And then you talked about, staying tuned, near-term. So any sense of any more color perhaps that you can share on that would be a nice. Thanks.
I'm sorry. Phil, what was the last point, more color on what?
Just if you could share any more color would be fantastic. Thank you, Lynn.
Okay. I think we're – on the utility comment, I think we have a two-pronged approach here for our go-to-market strategy. One is, we go direct to customers and we believe we provide them a superior electricity service with cheaper electricity with clean electricity, with increasingly a battery for distributed – for resiliency. And we try to make that as portable as possible and just compete on a better value proposition. In parallel, we're trying to work with utilities and open markets to enable those, that home to be an energy asset that can plug into the market and get another revenue stream and benefit the entire. However, those – you have to build those. And like we said, we've been working on these grid services programs, and many of these, the incumbent industry can be quite slow to change on those things. And so we're not waiting for that. So we're – but we have the assets in place. We're going to build the market structures to enable us to participate through the grid services and other programs. And increasingly, I think utilities and other load-serving entities recognize that, okay, this is a place. This is the way to get the capacity that we need. And so that's what you see through our programs with the CCAs in California, and some of the other bilateral agreements with utilities. So those are building, they're slow burn but it's a place where we have a head start and continuing to invest and that'll reap a lot of benefits we think in the decades to come. On the EV side, you are correct, again, because it's such a natural time for customers to adopt solar cross-selling relationship there is quite intuitive and accretive to all parties. So we are continuing to work those efforts from a business development standpoint.
Okay. Thanks, Lynn. Congrats on the results and the guidance.
Thanks Phil. Great, thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Tristan Richardson with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question.
Hi. Good afternoon, guys. Appreciate all the comments today. Just one on my end on storage adoption. Certainly, there's a big and obvious value proposition of the customer. I guess though, we've heard of one anecdotal incidents where an installer out there is in instituting sort of a mandatory bundling of solar plus storage almost as one product. That seems a bit one-off in nature, but do you see the installer market moving that direction at all?
Great question. I do believe that over time, all – effectively all solar will be paired with storage because the battery prices will come down and it will be proven that aggregating these batteries is the most effective way to reach to deliver peaking power and to really actually help smooth out some of the intermittency that's going to come from a big renewable based system. So I do believe that those markets will develop and independent of what the consumer value prop is. There will be enough value in those that battery capacity to in delivering to the grid for that to be a large market. In terms of Tesla's announcement, I think again, I like the purity of the announcement. I think that is where the industry is going. However, the reality of today is it's not appropriate for every customer to have a battery. If you're in a place where you have a resilient grid and there isn't this opportunity to monetize the battery versus with a virtual power plant, you may not – it may not make sense right now. And that is the case in many places. And one of the realities of our business is that it does require a bit of customization at the home because just the physical nature of homes are different. And so one way we've differentiated, why we've emerged as the market leader is that we can attack that customization with process with technology that we built over a decade plus to serve a more – the more customized need that a residential project demands.
That makes a lot of sense. Thank you all very much. Appreciate it.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from line of Colin Rusch with Oppenheimer. Please proceed with your question.
Thanks so much, guys. Could you speak to what the key gating factors on growth right now? It seems like there's an awful lot of opportunity and you're building capacity. So I'm wondering what's slowing you down at this point?
Well, we think we're going pretty fast. I think the – one, we're a physical business and there's just the reality of that. I think the – one of the ways we can really even not have that be a concern is to continue to expand that channel partner business as well. So I think that's pretty unique about us is that we're building the operating infrastructure and our own sales force and avenues to market. And we're also have the partner business where we can get some scale efficiencies there and increase reach and really a market that's still way under penetrated. So that's been our strategy there. But you're right. I think the growth is an acceleration this year, we've said for many years that this industry can deliver a 10% compounded annual growth rate for a decade without reaching with a reasonable penetration. And there's no reason why that shouldn't be faster. And particularly with the electrification I've discussed in the home needing to and two times and more electricity and the unit value is increasing that much more too. So it's not only just additional units and capacity but it's also just the home, the wallet share of the energy footprint. So I think there's opportunities on both those dimensions and you still have to sustainably and remember that, of course this is a physical business. It's not a software business.
Yes. No, understood. And thanks for the color on the utility scale partners. And can you guys speak to internal targets around ROE and how that's evolving as you look at the potential for partnering with utilities that are really looking for additional resiliency again deployment partners around distributed assets?
So our returns on those types of programs is your question?
No, no. Is it changing how you think about your targeted ROE as you move forward into incremental programs over the next few years?
Well, so Ed, you can chime in here. But right now, we have an infinite ROE because we're actually pulling more cash out, has really pulled more cash out of systems than we've invested. That's one of the really financial highlights of our business.
All right, I'll take it offline, guys. Thanks so much.
Okay.
Your next question comes from the line of Sophie Karp with KeyBanc. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, good afternoon. Congrats on the quarter and thank you for squeezing me in here. Just a question on cash flows, if I may, you guys highlighted to occur in revenue metric. Would it make sense to also bridge that to the current cash flows and sort of use that on a go-forward basis? And maybe if you could also in this context discuss how you think about the capital structure moving forward now that your scale is growing rapidly and with the addition of events and such? Thank you.
Hey, Sophie, it's Ed. That's a great question. I think one of the reasons that Tom has been talking about the recurring revenue is that it's a clean growing metric that doesn't vary significantly quarter-to-quarter. A number of our credit facilities, as you know either mature inside of the customer contract life or we'll refinance them inside of their maturity proactively due to declining capital costs. And so the cash flow forecast from existing assets varies from year-to-year and depends significantly on the timeline on which we execute those transactions. So we do expect significant cash flows from our existing assets and distributions from those assets and refinancing proceeds from those assets. But it's not a simple, clean, linear growth over time. On the development side of the business, with increasing margins over time and increasing volumes, we'll expect to see a nice, steady growth in there as well. And again, exactly how much of that cash flow we realized in the first period, when we install the asset or later over time is analysis review that we're going through now to see if we have the right balance there. But either way, as Lynn just mentioned, we do expect all of our systems, on average, when they go into service, we're receiving proceeds from non-recourse finance and exceed the cost to install the company – the customers, and also pay all of our G&A. So I think we'll hopefully be able to talk more about cash flow soon, particularly once we're more buttoned up on the project that I described, but probably how we'll be able to do that is more giving multi-year cash flow views rather than sort of periodic quarterly number that compounds cleanly at a certain rate over a one period of time.
Yes, that's super helpful color. Thank you. And the last one real quick, if I may. Do you anticipate this virtual power plant business will grow to be sizable enough to kind of separate line item on the P&L or a separate segment may be any time soon?
Great question. I would say not anytime soon. Sophie, again, you look at the value we have under the contracts that are booked or near booked, it's about $75 million. So again, I think these bills, they take a while to develop. But it's not anytime soon that it'll be meaningful enough to break it up. I think the other benefit of the – the other benefit of that grid services relationship independent of what the financial contribution maybe, which right now it's looking about $2,000 per customer of incremental value. The other value of it is it really just differentiates you to the customer. And again, provides the – moves the market more to a winner take most market with, with companies that have the technical capabilities of doing that on the network effects. So that in many cases will be a bigger financial driver than the actual revenues that come off of programs in the near-term.
Perfect. Thank you so much. Appreciate the comments.
Thanks Sophie.
Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. And this does conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you all for your participation.
Thank you. A very robust discussion. Appreciate it.