GHI reported solid GAAP net income in Q1 2024 driven by earnings strength in its mortgage revenue bond (MRB) portfolio and supported by a noncash mark-to-market gain on its interest rate swap portfolio. GAAP net income was $10.6 million ($0.42 per unit), while cash available for distribution (CAD) was $5.2 million ($0.23 per unit). The CAD result excludes the $4.6 million noncash MRB/derivative-related gain that is included in GAAP net income, highlighting the companyβs strong cash-generating capability independent of quarterly fair value swings. Management emphasised that, while book value per unit declined to $14.59 (driven by higher tax-exempt rates reducing MRB valuations), the enterprise remains a net spread business focused on cash generation rather than quarterly mark-to-market gains. The portfolio remains highly asset- and cash-flow-centric: MRBs and government issuer loans totaling roughly $1.37 billion (MRBs ~$1.22B and JV equity ~$145M) underpin ongoing earnings, with occupancy at 92.1% across stabilized MRB properties and no forbearance requests. GHI also continued to deploy capital through JV initiatives (Vantage and Freestone groups) and via an ATM program, while maintaining a solid liquidity runway (unrestricted cash ~ $56.3M and $75M of secured line availability). The company reiterates a long-horizon investment thesis (3β5 year exits for JV assets) and maintains a disciplined capital allocation framework constrained by a 75% asset-investment limit in mortgage investments, with most debt financing fixed-rate or hedged. Looking ahead, management notes a favorable long-term outlook for accretive lending and selective JV opportunities, while acknowledging near-term headwinds from higher rates constraining LIHTC and construction financing. Investors should monitor rate trajectories, JV deployment momentum, redemption cycles, and the evolution of the swap-related cash flow premium to CAD as key drivers of cash generation and NAV trajectory going forward.