Buying a home is one of the biggest financial decisions you’ll ever make—we’re here to make it easier. At PRMI Home, we combine local expertise with the strength of a national lender to guide you every step of the way.
Between confusing terms, rate shopping, and unclear next steps, it’s easy to feel stuck.
When it comes to financing your home, you deserve more than just a loan—you deserve a partner.
When it comes to financing your home, you deserve more than just a loan—you deserve a partner.
● Personal guidance from a local team who understands your market.
● Flexible loan options designed to fit every buyer’s situation.
● Clear communication so you never feel lost in the process.
● Fast, smooth closings backed by years of lending experience.
Whether you’re buying your first home, upgrading, or refinancing, we’ll help you
find the loan that matches your goals:
Conventional
A classic choice with flexible terms.
FHA Loans
Lower down payments, perfect for first-time buyers.
Lowtility Loan
A unique program that lets you buy your home and roll in solar panels or smart home technology in the same loan, giving you more buying power by reducing utility costs.
VA Loans
Zero down payment options for veterans and service members.
USDA Loans
Affordable financing for rural and suburban areas.
Jumbo Loans
Financing for higher-value homes.
Refinance Options
Lower your rate, consolidate debt, or access equity.
👉 Not sure which loan is right for you? Our team will walk you through the options and find the best fit.
Most lenders only look at your mortgage payment (PITI). But real life includes utilities. With a Lowtility Loan, you can replace your monthly utility costs with buying power—without increasing your budget.
That means you may qualify for more home or smarter upgrades by rolling solar and efficiency improvements into your mortgage.
💡 Imagine buying your home and reducing your utility bills at the same time. That’s the power of Lowtility.
Listen to what over 2,000 of our happy customers had to say about saving thousands of dollars on their financing.
Whether you’re buying your first home, refinancing, or exploring the Lowtility upgrade, PRMI Home is here to make the process stress-free and straightforward.
If a hedge fund buys a utility, it’s not for charity. It’s because the math says power demand (and therefore utility revenues) will keep rising. AI is tilting that math even more. The smarter question for a homeowner isn’t “why are they buying?”—it’s “how should I buy power for my home in this new world?”
Blackstone Infrastructure agreed to acquire TXNM Energy (the parent of PNM in New Mexico and TNMP in Texas) in an $11.5B deal, explicitly citing long‑term grid investments and rising U.S. electricity demand as the thesis. Regulated utilities earn allowed returns on massive, ongoing capital spending—exactly the kind of durable, inflation‑hedged cash flows big funds prize. Reuters
Activist hedge funds are active around utilities, too. Elliott Management pushed for changes at Duke Energyand Sempra in past years, and in 2025 disclosed a ~5% stake in Germany’s RWE to influence capital allocation. Activists tend to show up where they see predictable cash flows and catalysts for value. Reuters+2Reuters+2
Translation: sophisticated capital is moving toward the assets that will collect your future power payments—with upside from growth in demand.
IEA projects global data‑center electricity consumption to more than double by 2030 (~945 TWh), with AI the biggest driver. In many markets, utilities are revising demand forecasts up, not down. IEA
Example: Georgia Power says data centers could triple statewide electricity demand over the next decade; its planning now reflects a surge of “new large loads.” Georgia Recorder
Local rate reality check: Georgia Power customers and other regions are already seeing higher bills as utilities fund new generation and grid upgrades; many expect more to come. Axios
Rising demand + huge capex = pressure on rates for everyone connected to the grid. Hedge funds aren’t guessing—that’s the business model.
Rate design is changing as utilities prepare for an AI‑heavy, electrified economy:
Time‑of‑use (higher prices at peak hours) is spreading. California Public Utilities Commission
Fixed monthly charges are rising to fund grid costs regardless of usage (e.g., California’s income‑graduated fixed charge approved in 2024). Utility Dive
Some utilities pilot demand charges—fees based on your highest hour of use. Expect more “you pay for capacity” logic, not less. EnergySagebentonpud.org
In other words, the grid will look and bill more like a capacity reservation system—because that’s what AI data centers need.
You can think like a hedge fund and still be a homeowner. But first, be clear about the three basic ways to purchase power.
Cons: You’re exposed to future rate hikes, growing fixed charges, and peak pricing. You own none of the asset generating your power, so you capture none of the upside if rates rise. Utility DiveCalifornia Public Utilities Commission
Cons: Contracts often escalate annually; third‑party liens/UCC filings can complicate refinance or resale; the company typically keeps the 30% federal tax credit; and transfer approvals can stall home sales. (Multiple state/federal consumer advisories warn about these issues.) Consumer Financial Protection BureauNew York State Attorney GeneralPender & Coward
Pros: You keep the tax credit, control the system, and owned solar is associated with a resale premium in many markets (Zillow found ~4.1% on average; other analyses show similar results). Zillow
Cons: Upfront cost—unless you finance it smartly (keep reading).
Hedge funds buy utilities to own growing, regulated cash flows. Homeowners can mimic that logic on a micro‑scale: own the asset that displaces rising retail power prices.
Here’s the simple math that Wall Street and homeowners both use—present value:
A steady $100/month reduction in utility bills, at a 6%/30‑yr mortgage rate, is roughly $16,679 of buying power.
$300/month ≈ $50,037. $600/month ≈ $100,075. (It’s just the PV of a monthly payment stream.)
So if your owned solar cuts your utility bill by, say, $300/month, that’s about $50k of “power cash flow” you can capitalize—often by rolling the system into your mortgage so your mortgage payment goes up less than your power bill goes down. (Illustrative: adding $40,000 to a 6%/30‑yr mortgage raises the payment by ≈ $240/month, while a $300/month bill reduction nets ~$60/month positive cash flow.) Actual results vary with rates, loads, incentives, and roof specifics.
Regulated returns: Utilities earn allowed returns (often around 9–10% ROE) on big, long‑lived investments.
Secular demand growth: AI data centers, EVs, and electrification push load up for years. IEA
Asset scarcity: Building new generation/transmission is slow and expensive, which boosts the value of existing capacity; many 2025 deals target gas generation precisely because it’s dispatchable and cheaper to buy than build today. Barron's
Hedge‑fund translation: stable, growing, price‑protected cash flows. Homeowner translation: if power companies will keep earning from your rising bills, consider owning the part of your life that generates power.
Goal: treat your home like the wealth‑building asset it is—and treat power as a line item you can optimize, not endure.
If you stay purely on the grid: Plan for more time‑of‑use, higher fixed charges, and bills that reflect the AI era’s capacity needs. Budget accordingly. Utility DiveCalifornia Public Utilities Commission
If you rent power from a solar financier (lease/PPA): Understand escalators, adders, and lien/UCC impacts; ask who keeps the tax credit; and ask your future self how a transfer approval will feel when you sell or refi. Consumer Financial Protection BureauNew York State Attorney General
If you own (Lowtility model): Integrate solar (and storage) into your mortgage so you (a) keep the 30% ITC, (b) avoid second‑lien lease headaches, and (c) aim for a setup where your utility savings ≥ mortgage increase—turning your home into a micro‑power plant with little to no net monthly cost difference vs. doing nothing. (As always, real outcomes depend on usage, roof, sun hours, pricing, rate design, and credit.)
Your home doesn’t just power lights anymore; it powers mobility. Charging an EV on your rooftop + your battery can lock in fuel costs for years—another reason to own generation instead of renting it or buying 100% from a grid whose pricing is shifting to capacity and peaks. Policies like California’s fixed charge paired with lower per‑kWh rates specifically try to make home charging cheaper—owning generation can amplify that. Utility Dive
Hedge funds are buying utilities because power demand is going up and the returns look durable. AI didn’t just change tech—it changed the power business. You can’t (and shouldn’t) become a monopoly utility. But you can adopt the part of the strategy that matters: own the asset that throws off the cash flow.
If you’re a homeowner or homebuyer, that likely means:
Structure it in your mortgage so the bill drop ≥ payment bump, and
Capture the long‑term upside in your home’s value and monthly cash flow rather than handing it to someone else.
When the smartest money on earth buys power companies, it’s a signal. You don’t need billions to act on it—you just need to decide how you buy power.
We’ll help you understand your solar + mortgage options and see if a Lowtility loan is right for you. Let’s find the smartest way to own your energy.
👉 GET A FREE QUOTE TODAY or schedule a free call to explore your options.
IEA: Data centers & AI set to more than double electricity demand by 2030.
Georgia Power: Data centers could triple statewide electricity demand this decade.
Reuters: Blackstone Infrastructure to acquire TXNM Energy for $11.5B amid rising U.S. demand.
Reuters/FT: Elliott Management activism at Sempra/Duke and new ~5% stake in RWE.
Barron’s: 2025 buyout wave targeting dispatchable power amid AI‑driven demand surge.
CPUC: Income‑graduated fixed charge approved; TOU rate design background.
CFPB & NY AG: Consumer advisories on solar financing, liens, and third‑party ownership issues.
Zillow: Owned solar associated with ~4.1% home value premium (varies by market).
There's no such thing as a bad question!
There are several types of home loans available, including conventional loans, FHA loans, VA loans, and USDA loans. Each has its own eligibility criteria, down payment requirements, and benefits. We can discuss which option best suits your needs during our consultation.
Pre-qualification is an initial assessment of your financial situation to estimate how much you may be able to borrow. Pre-approval, on the other hand, involves a more thorough review of your finances by a lender, including verification of income, assets, and credit history. Pre-approval gives you a more accurate idea of the loan amount you qualify for and strengthens your offer when making an offer on a home.
The down payment requirement varies depending on the type of loan you choose and your financial situation. Conventional loans typically require a down payment of 3% to 20% of the home's purchase price, while FHA loans may require as little as 3.5% down. VA loans and USDA loans offer 100% financing options for eligible borrowers. We can explore the options available to you based on your circumstances.
A fixed-rate mortgage has a constant interest rate and monthly payment throughout the life of the loan, providing predictability and stability. An adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) has an interest rate that may change periodically based on market conditions, which can result in fluctuating monthly payments. We can discuss which type of mortgage aligns best with your financial goals and risk tolerance.
The homebuying process can vary depending on various factors such as market conditions, the complexity of the transaction, and individual circumstances. On average, it takes about 30 to 45 days to close on a home after the purchase agreement is signed. However, it's essential to be prepared for potential delays and work closely with your lender and real estate agent to navigate the process smoothly.
The documentation required for a home loan application typically includes proof of income (such as pay stubs or tax returns), asset statements (such as bank statements), employment verification, identification (such as a driver's license or passport), and information about any debts you owe. We'll guide you through the documentation process and help ensure you have everything you need for a smooth application process.
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by Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc. NMLS#: 919520 Utah DRE Mortgage Office License # 8335595. MLO 0117736. MC3094-122. All loans subject to credit and property approval. PRMI NMLS 3094. PRMI is an Equal Housing Lender. Some products and services may not be available in all states. Credit and collateral are subject to approval. Terms and conditions apply. This is not a commitment to lend. Programs, rates, terms and conditions are subject to change without notice. Privacy Notice: By submitting your information via our website forms, you are opting in to receive communications from PRMIHome.com. This includes but is not limited to Email and SMS communications. We value your privacy and assure you that your information will be handled with care. You may opt-out of these communications at any time by contacting us or using the unsubscribe link in our messages.