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Sunrun’s Connection to SVB May Be Hurting Its Stock

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SVB Financial Group has promoted its relationship with Sunrun on its website, noting it was an early believer in its business model.


Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images



SVB Financial Group
,

shut down by regulators on Friday after a run on deposits, is known for its close partnerships with tech companies. But it’s also a lender to clean energy firms, including



Sunrun

(ticker: RUN), the largest residential solar developer in the U.S. That relationship appears to be impacting



Sunrun
’s

stock, which was down as much as 8.9% on Friday.

The bank has promoted its relationship with Sunrun on its website, noting that it was an early believer in Sunrun’s business model. It lent the company money in 2014, a year before Sunrun went public.

That relationship has continued. SVB (SVIB) was one of the lead banks arranging a $575 million loan for Sunrun in January that’s expected to finance solar panels the company places on people’s homes. Neither Sunrun nor the bank immediately responded to requests for comment on what the bank’s troubles might mean for their relationship.

Other solar developers, including



Sunnova Energy International

(NOVA) and



SunPower

(SPWR), don’t mention SVB in their most recent annual reports.

“The potential risk here is Sunrun loses some of its credit facility funding ability,” wrote Gordon Johnson, an analyst at GLJ Research who has been skeptical of Sunrun’s business model.

Sunrun depends on outside lenders to finance its projects, because it pays for the equipment that gets installed on clients’ roofs in advance. Homeowners then pay Sunrun fees every month for the power their panels produce through contracts that can last 20 years. One analyst said that other banks are likely to step in even if



SVB Financial Group

is forced to slow its lending, so investors shouldn’t worry.

“SVB has been involved in lending to countless renewable energy companies… this is nothing unique with Sunrun,” wrote Raymond James analyst Pavel Molchanov in an email to Barron’s. “Even more to the point, the banking industry across the board has very strong appetite for lending to solar and other renewable energy projects. Banks love lending to these kinds of businesses because of the generally low risk involved, and also because it improves their ESG scores. So, if one lender exits the market, there is plenty of capacity elsewhere.”

Write to Avi Salzman at avi.salzman@barrons.com

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