Washington is coming down hard on Equifax, but the company’s big corporate clients are giving it a pass.

The embattled credit bureau said Friday it hasn’t lost any significant business customers since it announced in September that hackers had breached its systems and made off with the sensitive data of 143 million customers. The number was later bumped to 145.5 million.

Equifax largely does business with banks and other financial institutions — not with the people they collect information on.

“We didn’t lose any contracts,” interim CEO Paulino do Rego Barros Jr. said on a conference call.

While no major customers have cut ties with the credit bureau, some have delayed new contracts until Equifax proves that they’ve done enough to shore up their cybersecurity — a situation that will likely dent sales and earnings for the next few quarters, Barros said.

Meanwhile, executives won’t be receiving any bonuses for 2017 “because of the cybersecurity incident,” Barros said. Last year, the company spent more than $83 million on incentive compensation.

The comments came the day after the company announced that fallout from the hacking, including legal fees and providing free credit monitoring services, cost it $87.5 million for the quarter, denting its profits.

Equifax also spent as much as $75 million on IT upgrades, and investment in cybersecurity could hit next quarter’s earnings, too, said John Gamble, the company’s financial chief.

Even that might not be enough to stop future hacks, the company warned.

“We cannot assure that all potential causes of the incident have been identified and remediated and will not occur again,” Equifax admitted in a regulatory filing Thursday.

The report sent shares down sharply in early Friday trading, but they about flat, to $108.37, by early afternoon.

“In the short-term, management will have to convince skeptical customers and new business prospects that its cybersecurity defenses are ironclad to convert contract deferrals into actual earnings and cash flow,” David Togut, analyst at Evercore ISI, said in a research note.

That probably won’t happen until the end of next year, or early 2019, he added.

Separately this week, Barros and his predecessor, Richard Smith, were hauled before the fifth Capitol Hill hearing on the hacking disaster.

“If we are going to do anything meaningful we must have the political will to hold these companies accountable,” US Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) said during the hearing.

Equifax is currently facing investigations from multiple federal agencies and 50 state attorneys general, as well as hundreds of class-action lawsuits, according to its Thursday regulatory filing.

One of the federal probes is into whether four executives knew about the breach when they sold nearly $2 million in stock — a potential crime.

Last week, Equifax cleared itself after conducting an internal investigation. Government prosecutors are still investigating.

The call on Friday gave few new details about the breach, and demurred when asked if there was an uptick in fraud stemming from the breach.

“We don’t have any direct evidence [of fraud],” Barros said. “But we can’t speak to others with other evidence.”