Inside One Billionaire’s Plan To Bring Solar Power To Every Homeowner (2024)

HAYES BARNARD figured out how to make costly green energy affordable—and it has made him one of the richest people in America.

By Jonathan Ponciano

“What if you were sitting on the antidote for Covid and you didn’t deploy it? That’s how I feel,” says Hayes Barnard as he guides his 2012 Tesla Model S through the sweltering streets of Austin, Texas. The 50-year-old software salesman turned serial entrepreneur is making the case that his fintech, GoodLeap, is helping save the planet—as well as making him rich. Some 40% of U.S. greenhouse emissions come from buildings, compared to 25% from transportation. “We have to electrify the home. We have to!” he exhorts, his voice rising. “If not us, who?”

Of course, GoodLeap isn’t exactly electrifying Americans’ homes. Contractors are doing that. But it is making it possible for ordinary home­owners to instantly finance solar installations, paying the cost over 25 years with their monthly utility bill savings, with a little left over each month. “People don’t want to do it unless they know they’re saving money from day one,” Barnard says. “That guy in Dubuque, Iowa, isn’t thinking about how he can lower his carbon footprint, but he is thinking about how he can save $50 a month.”

GoodLeap now finances a market-leading 28% of all home solar installations nationwide, handing out nearly $1 billion in loans each month, enough to cover 27,000 homeowners. It’s gearing up for even bigger numbers, thanks in part to the tens of billions in expanded tax credits for green home improvements Democrats pushed through in August. With only 4% of American homes having made the switch to solar, Barnard points out that GoodLeap has plenty of room to grow.

Late last year, GoodLeap nabbed a $12 billion valuation in an $800 million funding round led by Michael Dell’s family firm and billionaire investor Byron Trott’s BDT Capital. That makes Barnard’s 40% stake—even after applying a hefty 35% discount to reflect the cratering value of comparable fintech stocks—worth $3.2 billion. Throw in his other holdings and Forbes estimates his net worth at $4 billion, enough to catapult him for the first time into the ranks of the 400 richest Americans.

It’s been a remarkable and sometimes bumpy ride. Raised in a St. Louis suburb by a single mom (his alcoholic father left when he was 3), Barnard struggled in school with dyslexia, got a football scholarship to Central Missouri State, was injured his freshman year and transferred to the University of Missouri, earning a business degree. Upon graduation in 1995, he flew to San Francisco, determined to get in on the tech boom. He started out manning trade show booths. Within a few years he was making millions in sales commissions at Oracle.

Barnard didn’t just idolize Oracle founder Larry Ellison—he wanted to be him. In 2003, at age 30, he persuaded two college friends, Matt Dawson and Jason Walker, who were in the mortgage brokerage business back in Missouri, to join him in launching Paramount Equity Mortgage, an early attempt to take online the paper-intensive business of applying for a mortgage. They scraped together $150,000 and set up shop in Sacramento. They were down to their last $20,000 when Barnard personally recorded a local radio ad. His salesman’s pitch worked magic. “That day, when it hit, we received about 150 phone calls. It was crazy,” he says.

By 2009, Paramount Equity was reeling from the housing bust. As mortgage volume fell 75%, Barnard was forced to fire or furlough more than half of his 600 employees. “They say you’re never a real CEO until you go through a near-death experience. And that one was mine,” he admits.

Yet even then he was hatching his next big idea: selling solar power to homeowners virtually. Barnard started cold-calling solar industry honchos. He left a voicemail for Lyndon Rive, the CEO and cofounder of SolarCity, a company partly funded by Rive’s cousin Elon Musk. Within two weeks, Barnard was pitching execs at SolarCity’s Silicon Valley offices. After hearing his spiel, they kicked him out of the room to caucus. Rive later delivered their verdict: Solar panel installation was too complicated to be sold online. But Barnard was insistent. He and mortgage partner Dawson would build a brand-new online residential solar sales operation all by themselves, so long as SolarCity would handle the installations. Rive agreed. Good move: By 2013, Barnard’s company, Paramount Solar, was bringing in 40% of his business. That year, SolarCity bought Paramount Solar for $120 million and made Barnard its chief revenue officer.

By 2016, SolarCity was struggling and being acquired by Musk’s Tesla. Barnard left to pursue his next brainstorm. Paramount had either leased solar systems to homeowners or sold them outright. Now he wanted to finance homeowner purcha­ses—with no money down. That way, buyers could claim green tax credits while using the energy bill savings for monthly payments.

Barnard shopped his idea to dozens of banks. He found them unwilling to back individual solar loans but interested in buying securitized packages of loans. Barnard launched his solar loan product as part of Paramount Equity Mortgage in 2018 and in 2021 rebranded the whole operation GoodLeap, a somewhat tortured portmanteau of “good for life, earth and prosperity.”

Déjà View

BRIGHT IDEAS

Finding light has never been easier: More than 90% of people have access to electricity, per the World Bank, up 12% from 2000. But it wasn’t always this way: From the stone lamps of the Stone Age to today’s ultra-efficient solar panels, here’s how humans cast a glow in four eras.

18000 B.C. Prehistoric people in France burn the midnight oil—animal fat—on slabs of limestone with lichen or juniper wicks while they work on cave drawings.

2000 B.C. Babylon’s markets sell sesame oil as fuel, though it isn’t cheap: A month of labor is good for just 10 liters of the stuff.

1800s Gas lighting debuts in most of Europe, but Shetland Islanders still rely on the oily feathers of storm petrels, threading a wick down the bird’s throat.

2020 The average monthly energy bill for an American home is $118. Roughly 43% run on electricity and 40% on natural gas, followed by petroleum (8%) and renewable energy sources (7%).

There are a lot of parts to this model. Homeowners aren’t sitting alone in their dens buying solar systems. Instead, they’re dealing with 26,000 contractors and salesmen, some working through giants like Lowe’s and Home Depot, who are equipped with a GoodLeap app. That app allows sufficiently creditworthy homeowners to gain instant approval for a fixed-rate loan of up to $135,000 for 20 types of sustainable improvements, including solar panels, home batteries, new HVAC systems, energy-efficient windows and even water-saving artificial lawns.

Fintech nerds will be reminded of GreenSky, the pioneering startup that was acquired by Goldman Sachs for $2.2 billion this year. GreenSky had a similar business model, but without GoodLeap’s extra “It pays for itself” twist. A typical $40,000 solar system in California, financed with a 25-year 3% loan, will cost $190 a month—$30 less than the predicted electricity savings. A homeowner can later easily use the tax credit to reduce the loan principal. (The credit is now 30%—or $12,000 in federal tax savings on a $40,000 system. Savings that can’t be used in the year a system is installed can be carried forward to cut future tax bills.)

HOW TO PLAY IT

By William Baldwin

That “Inflation Reduction Act” is quite the extravaganza of handouts to favored industries. But maybe crony capitalism is tolerable if you own shares in the cronies. While vendors of solar panels are the obvious benefici­aries, there’s also money to be made on the periphery of alternative energy—for example, from companies that supply the batteries, software and grid connections for commercial solar and wind installations.

Fluence Energy and Stem are in this line of work. They are speculative bets. Neither is yet in the black and they’re fairly expensive, with enterprise values, respectively, of 2 and 13 times revenue.

William Baldwin is Forbes’ Investment Strategies columnist.

The buyers of securitized loans and the banks packaging them (Goldman Sachs, Blackstone and Credit Suisse) can track them through GoodLeap’s software. In September, $493 million in loan securities were sold, with an average yield of 5.4% and riskier tranches as high as 8.8%. The overall default rate so far: below 0.8%—less than half the 2% default rate on mortgages.

Driving through Austin’s fashionable South Congress district, where street murals commingle with cowboy-themed boutiques, retro cafes and an Hermès store, Barnard points to GoodLeap’s future offices, a three-story brick building that will have rooftop solar panels. Like Musk, Barnard has changed his legal residence from high-tax California to no-state-income-tax Texas, though GoodLeap’s headquarters and most of its 1,200 employees are still in the Golden State.

Barnard takes a left and parks in front of an industrial complex. He enters a warehouse and opens a shipping container to show a water purification system that runs on solar power and Tesla batteries. It’s headed to Kenya. Eight systems providing clean water to 160,000 people have already been deployed to places like Haiti by GivePower, a nonprofit Barnard founded in 2014 after a trip to an impoverished rural community in Mali, where women walk miles every day to fetch dirty water from a river. The nonprofit has also installed 2,500 solar power systems in schools across 25 different countries.

Says Barnard: “This connects everything, all my efforts into one.”

With additional reporting by Jason Bisnoff

MORE FROM FORBES

MORE FROM FORBESHow To Cash In On Billions In Green Home Improvement Tax Credits And RebatesBy Jonathan PoncianoMORE FROM FORBESThe Definitive Net Worth Of Donald TrumpBy Dan AlexanderMORE FROM FORBESMark Cuban Considering Leaving Shark Tank As He Bets His Legacy On Low-Cost DrugsBy Jemima McEvoyMORE FROM FORBESMeet Billionaire Tennessee Titans Owner Amy Adams Strunk-And Nine Other Women Changing The Game In The NFLBy Amy FeldmanMORE FROM FORBESCrypto Darling Helium Promised A 'People's Network.' Instead, Its Executives Got Rich.By Sarah Emerson

Inside One Billionaire’s Plan To Bring Solar Power To Every Homeowner (2024)

FAQs

What solar company did Bill Gates invest in? ›

CubicPV Inc., a Massachusetts-based solar manufacturing upstart backed by Bill Gates, has halted its ambitious plan to construct a massive crystalline-silicon wafer hub in the US, setting off alarm bells for a sector betting billions of dollars to reform a domestic solar supply chain.

How did Hayes Barnard make his money? ›

In September 2003, Barnard founded Paramount Equity Mortgage (later renamed to Loanpal and subsequently rebranded to GoodLeap), one of the first to provide online residential home loans. In 2008, he founded Paramount Solar, a subsidiary of Paramount Equity Mortgage, and became CEO.

What is the downside of solar panels? ›

Some of the cons of solar energy are: the cost of adding solar, depends on sunlight, space constraints, solar energy storage is expensive, installation can be difficult and environmental impact of manufacturing and disposing panels.

Can you power your entire home with solar? ›

With a modern solar energy system, including power storage, you can definitely run a whole house completely on solar power. Today's high-efficiency solar panels and solar batteries make it cheaper than ever before to power an entire home exclusively using solar energy.

What technology will replace solar panels? ›

In 2022 and 2023, several groups of scientists created perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells that were over 30% efficient. One big benefit of perovskites is their low cost. Not only are the raw materials inexpensive, but they also have a high defect tolerance.

Does Elon Musk own a solar company? ›

The company was founded on July 4, 2006, by Peter and Lyndon Rive, the cousins of SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Tesla acquired SolarCity in 2016, at a cost of approximately US$2.6 billion (equivalent to $3.3 billion in 2023) and reorganized its solar business into Tesla Energy. Acquired by Tesla, Inc.

Who is GoodLeap owned by? ›

Hayes Barnard is an American entrepreneur, business owner, and philanthropist. He is the Founder, Chairman, and CEO of GoodLeap, the largest financial technology company in the U.S. focused on sustainability.

How much is Hayes Barnard worth? ›

What is the history of GoodLeap? ›

GoodLeap started as Paramount Equity Mortgage, founded in 2003 by Hayes Barnard, Jason Walker and Matt Dawson. The company was incorporated in California to provide residential mortgage loans.

What is the average lifespan of a solar panel? ›

The industry standard for most solar panels' lifespans is 25 to 30 years.

Does mold grow under solar panels? ›

However, solar panels do not operate well if they are covered in debris. This can include anything from leaves to dust, and mold can grow under solar panels if the conditions are right. Mold is not a common problem with solar panels, but it is possible for it to occur.

How many solar panels to run a 2000 sq ft house? ›

So, a 2,000 square foot home would be allowed a solar array of 4,000 watts. Depending on the type of panel that you choose, a system of this size would be anywhere from 12-18 solar panels. Keep in mind, this formula to estimate consumption varies depending on who provides your electricity.

How long can a house run on solar power alone? ›

Without running AC or electric heat, a 10 kWh battery alone can power the critical electrical systems in an average house for at least 24 hours, and longer with careful budgeting. When paired with solar panels, battery storage can power more electrical systems and provide backup electricity for even longer.

How many kW to run a house? ›

How Many Kilowatts Does It Take to Power a House? With the average American home consuming 900 kWh a month or 30 kWh a day, that brings the total yearly usage to around 10,800 kWh.

What heat and power technology company backed by Bill Gates? ›

Antora Energy, a thermal battery startup, has launched its first commercial-scale system at a facility in Fresno, California.

What company is most associated with Bill Gates? ›

Microsoft. Microsoft was founded on April 4, 1975, by Bill Gates and his friend Paul Allen. Gates and Allen were both fascinated by computers and were innovators in this customer market. What started as two inventors in a garage in Albuquerque, New Mexico, has become the company in the world.

Who did sunrun buy out? ›

In 2020, Sunrun, another reputable residential solar panel and battery provider, acquired Vivint Solar. The company operated as an independent subsidiary of Sunrun. In 2022, Vivint Solar officially merged under the Sunrun brand.

Does Bill Gates have an investment company? ›

A “Cascading” Series of Personal Investments. In a bid to secure his $12.9 billion worth of assets, Bill Gates founded Cascade Investments, LLC in 1995.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Frankie Dare

Last Updated:

Views: 5720

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (73 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Frankie Dare

Birthday: 2000-01-27

Address: Suite 313 45115 Caridad Freeway, Port Barabaraville, MS 66713

Phone: +3769542039359

Job: Sales Manager

Hobby: Baton twirling, Stand-up comedy, Leather crafting, Rugby, tabletop games, Jigsaw puzzles, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Frankie Dare, I am a funny, beautiful, proud, fair, pleasant, cheerful, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.