We found a bullish thesis on HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc. in The Financial Pen Substack. In this article we will summarize the bulls’ thesis on HASI. HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc. stock was trading at $35.15 on February 5. HASI’s trailing and forward P/E were 15.45 and 12.32 respectively according to Yahoo Finance.
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HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc., through its subsidiaries, engages in investments in the energy efficiency, renewable energy and sustainable infrastructure markets in the United States. HASI represents a case where market volatility largely reflects accounting complexity rather than underlying economic instability. The company operates as a specialist infrastructure financier focused on energy efficiency, renewable energy and climate-related assets, earning predictable interest and rental income from long-term contracted projects with high-quality counterparties.
While reported GAAP earnings appear volatile due to the use of hypothetical liquidation to book value (HLBV) accounting for tax equity partnerships, underlying cash flows are stable and have been consistently collected as expected. Viewed from a cash perspective, HASI’s business model is simple: contractual payments accrue over time, obligations are met, and value accumulates gradually.
Strategically, HASI occupies an attractive niche between traditional bank lending and private equity, benefiting from reduced competition as banks withdraw from complex, long-dated infrastructure financing. This has allowed the company to maintain attractive investment spreads even amid higher interest rates. About half of the portfolio is focused on behind-the-meter assets such as on-site solar projects, storage and energy efficiency, a segment poised to benefit from accelerating electricity demand driven by data centers and AI workloads without exposing HASI to operational or commodity risks.
The transition to a C Corporation has further strengthened the model by enabling retained earnings, reducing reliance on outside capital, and supporting a capital-less growth strategy through partnerships such as CarbonCount with KKR. At current valuation levels (around 13x adjusted earnings and a dividend yield of ~5%) the market appears to underestimate HASI’s durability, growth potential, and improving earnings quality. As the accounting noise fades and cash flows become more visible, the stock is positioned for a potential rerating that better reflects its stable economics and long-term compound profile.