BH
BLACK HILLS CORP /SD/ (BKH)·Q2 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2024 diluted EPS was $0.33, down slightly year over year from $0.35 as new rates and rider recovery plus lower O&M largely offset mild weather and the absence of a prior-year tax benefit; 2024 EPS guidance was reaffirmed at $3.80–$4.00 .
- Segment operating income improved at Gas Utilities (Q2 +$5.3M YoY) while Electric Utilities were flat; consolidated operating income rose to $70.6M from $63.5M YoY on disciplined cost control .
- Strategic highlights: Meta’s $800M AI data center to be powered under BKH’s Large Power Contract Service tariff beginning in 2026; management reiterated expectations that hyperscale/data center customers could exceed 10% of total EPS by 2028, using a capital‑light energy procurement model .
- Liquidity and capital markets: $450M 6.00% notes issued in May to refinance August 2024 maturity; ATM equity issuance year‑to‑date reached 1.4M shares ($73M), with full‑year plan of $170–$190M; dividend of $0.65 declared (54 consecutive years of increases) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- New rates and rider recovery plus customer growth drove higher margins; management quantified Q2 drivers at +$0.13 from new rates/riders and +$0.03 from growth/usage, with O&M reduced by $0.04 per share YoY through cost discipline .
- Strategic growth: Meta selected BKH’s Wyoming territory for a 715k sq ft AI data center; management expects data center earnings to exceed 10% of EPS by 2028, supported by the LPCS tariff and capital‑light model: “We’re excited to support their new project… we expect to begin serving Meta’s initial demand in 2026” .
- Regulatory cadence advancing as planned: rate reviews filed for Iowa Gas ($21M) and Colorado Electric ($37M); Arkansas Gas in final stages; Ready Wyoming 260‑mile transmission project construction remains on schedule .
What Went Wrong
- Weather headwinds and outages: mild weather reduced Q2 EPS by $0.07 vs normal and $0.04 vs Q2 2023; unplanned outages at Wygen I and Pueblo units weighed on Electric Utility margin .
- Prior‑year tax benefit created tougher comparisons: effective tax rate rose to 13.0% in Q2 2024 vs (29.8)% in Q2 2023 due to the absence of the prior year $8.2M Nebraska tax rate decrease benefit .
- Lower gas sales volumes (Distribution Dth) and strong insurance cost inflation: Gas Distribution volumes fell to 12.6M Dth (Q2), while higher insurance expenses affected O&M .
Financial Results
Consolidated Results vs Prior Periods
Q2 2024 Actual vs Wall Street Consensus
Note: S&P Global consensus data was unavailable at the time of this analysis due to API limits; comparisons to Street estimates could not be completed.
Segment Breakdown Across Quarters
Segment Margins (Non-GAAP) and Drivers
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We’re on track to deliver on our earnings guidance range of $3.80 to $4 per share… confidence in achieving our long‑term EPS growth target of 4% to 6%” — CEO Linn Evans .
- “We realized $0.13 of higher margins from new rates in rider recovery… and $0.03 of customer growth and usage… delivered lower O&M of $0.04 per share compared to Q2 2023” — CFO Kimberly Nooney .
- “We’re excited to support [Meta’s] new project… we expect to begin serving Meta’s initial demand in 2026” — CEO Linn Evans .
- “We remain confident in our long‑term growth trajectory… invest an average of more than $800 million per year… $1.3 billion in capital investment in 2026” — CEO Linn Evans .
Q&A Highlights
- Data center EPS contribution: Management reiterated expectation that data center/hyperscale customers could exceed 10% of total EPS by 2028, supported by the LPCS tariff and capital‑light procurement, and highlighted potential incremental transmission/generation investments as loads evolve .
- Procurement flexibility: Management affirmed an “all‑of‑the‑above” approach, including potential long‑term contracted capacity outside traditional vertically integrated constructs to serve evolving industrial loads .
- Regulatory cadence: Load growth is analyzed both inclusive/exclusive of data centers in integrated resource plans to align tariffs and rate reviews with system needs .
Estimates Context
- Street consensus comparisons were not available at the time of analysis due to S&P Global API limits; actual Q2 EPS was $0.33 and revenue $402.6M, with guidance reaffirmed at $3.80–$4.00 for FY 2024 .
- With mild weather and outage impacts now quantified, estimates may need to reflect: (i) ongoing insurance cost inflation; (ii) timing of regulatory outcomes (AR Gas, IA Gas, CO Electric); and (iii) incremental data center margins as Meta ramps beginning 2026 .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near‑term: Q2 results were resilient despite weather/tax headwinds; reaffirmed FY EPS guidance supports stability into H2; watch upcoming regulatory milestones (AR 4Q24, CO 1Q25, IA early 2025) as potential catalysts for margin recovery and reduced lag .
- Cost discipline: O&M management is delivering tangible EPS benefits amid insurance inflation; sustained execution is key to offset exogenous weather and outage variability .
- Growth optionality: Meta’s AI data center and broader hyperscale pipeline underpin EPS mix shift toward capital‑light margins by 2026–2028; transmission build (Ready Wyoming) enhances capacity and market access, potentially enabling incremental investments .
- Balance sheet: Recent $450M notes and staged ATM issuances de‑risk 2024 maturities; BBB+ affirmed; liquidity remains strong — supportive of ongoing capex plan .
- Dividend: $0.65 quarterly dividend and 54‑year increase streak remain intact; dividend growth expected to track earnings growth over time .
- Watch weather sensitivity: Degree days and contracted availability remain key variables; outage normalization and insurance trends could drive variance vs run rate .
- Thesis: Medium‑term EPS CAGR of 4%–6% credible given regulatory cadence, base capex, and hyperscale load growth, albeit contingent on timely rate case outcomes and execution on resource plans in CO/SD .