Sign in

You're signed outSign in or to get full access.

Constellation Energy - Q1 2023

May 4, 2023

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Constellation Energy Corporation first quarter 2023 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a Q&A answer session and instructions will follow at that time. As a reminder, this call may be recorded. I would like to now introduce your host for today's call, Emily Duncan, Vice President of Investor Relations. Emily, you may begin.

Emily Duncan (VP of Investor Relations)

Thank you, Leah. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining Constellation Energy Corporation's first quarter earnings conference call. Leading the call today are Joe Dominguez, Constellation's President and Chief Executive Officer, and Dan Eggers, Constellation's Chief Financial Officer. They are joined by other members of Constellation's senior management team, who will be available to answer your questions following our prepared remarks. We issued our earnings release this morning, along with the presentation, all of which can be found in the investor relations section of Constellation's website. The earnings release and other matters which we discuss during today's call contain forward-looking statements and estimates regarding Constellation and its subsidiaries that are subject to various risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ from our forward-looking statements based on factors and assumptions discussed in today's material and comments made during this call.

Please refer to today's 8-K and Constellation's other SEC filings for discussions of risk factors and other circumstances and considerations that may cause results to differ from management's projections, forecasts, and expectations. Today's presentation also includes references to Adjusted EBITDA and other non-GAAP measures. Please refer to the information contained in the appendix of our presentation and our earnings release for reconciliations between the non-GAAP measures and the nearest equivalent GAAP measures. I'll now turn it over to the CEO of Constellation, Joe Dominguez.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Thanks, Leah, for getting us started this morning, and thank you, Emily, for that. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our first quarter earnings call. I'm gonna start on slide five of the deck. Once again, we're off to a strong year operationally and financially, thanks to the focus and dedication of the women and men that do their best every day to produce and deliver clean, reliable, and affordable electricity to our customers. For the first quarter, we earned $658 million in Adjusted EBITDA. The top-line story here is that based upon our performance to date, we can project that we will end the year comfortably in the top half of our guidance range, and if we continue to execute, we expect to be at or near the top of that range.

2024 looks better to us than when we reported in February. Our commercial team had a tremendous quarter, not only generating better than planned earnings in the quarter, but they were able to lock in value for the remainder of this year and for next. On the back of their strong execution, our gross margin is up $50 million in 2023 and $100 million in 2024. As Dan will cover, all in, 2023 is up $100 million from where we were in February. For 2024, we expect to come in notably above current consensus, which you could see using our disclosures on page 25 of the presentation. In our gross margin update, you'll also see how the PTC interacts with our portfolio to add value in the face of lower commodity prices.

We think that the message here is pretty simple. Our company had a strong first year, and is on track to have great years two and three. Our business is unique, and we still have many opportunities in front of us to create value for our owners. We're the best operator of nuclear plants and the largest producer of carbon-free clean energy in the United States. We produced approximately 11% of our nation's clean energy last year. Our commercial business serves 25% of the entire competitive C&I market in the United States, 75% of the Fortune 100. Our businesses are essential to addressing climate change and will be needed for decades to come to provide clean and reliable energy as America simultaneously reduces its reliance on fossil fuels and the transportation, industrial, agriculture, and residential sectors all increasingly turn to electrification to reduce harmful pollution.

The Inflation Reduction Act, the IRA, provides unique opportunities for Constellation and its owners. Through the Nuclear Production Tax Credit, the U.S. government has made a long-term commitment to our nation's nuclear assets, recognizing that without them, we simply cannot meet the climate goals. The PTC provides downside commodity risk protection, as you can see in our disclosures today, while ensuring that our plants remain economic and reliable. The PTC protection level rises with inflation, providing us structural inflation risk protection. Other provisions of the IRA create unique growth opportunities like increasing the output from our nuclear plants through upgrades and hydrogen. Finally, it gives us the opportunity to extend the time horizon of our fleet to 80 years. We've made this point, I'll make it again.

No other clean energy asset, except hydro, can run for this long without being replaced. We have many ways to grow and bring more value to our shareholders. Against a baseline earnings level support provided by the PTC over the life of the PTC, we will benefit from floor price inflation that grows with overall inflation in the country. As you can see on slide 18, depending on your assumptions about inflation, there is some meaningful top-line growth opportunity ahead for us in the PTC. We generate strong free cash flow that can be used to fund robust organic growth at double-digit unlevered returns, disciplined M&A, and fund a growing dividend and the buyback of our stock. Each of these will create additional value for our shareholders, and we're already doing this.

We have announced $1.5 billion of growth in upgrades, hydrogen and wind repowering, double the per-share dividend. In March alone, we bought back approximately $250 million of our own stock as part of our authorized $1 billion buyback, which we will execute. There is more we can do. We have $2 billion of unallocated capital in 2023 and 2024 that can be used to further enhance our earnings growth. At our current stock price, I'd be happy to use this capital to continue buying back our stock all day long. We will continue to look for investment opportunities consistent with or adjacent to our core businesses, and we are committed to the energy transition.

However, in the absence of any near-term M&A opportunities or a ramp-up in growth CapEx, we will, in the short term, use the majority of the $2 billion to repurchase our own shares. Constellation cannot be matched anywhere in this marketplace. Our clean, carbon-free nuclear fleet, paired with our customer-facing business, provides us with opportunities to grow and create value for you. It is a unicorn. I'll turn next to our quarterly operational updates beginning on slide six. Nuclear performance was strong and slightly ahead of plan. We produced more than 40 TWh of reliable, affordable, and carbon-free generation from our nuclear plants with an on-plan capacity factor of 92.8%. As some of you may be aware, during routine inspections during our Nine Mile Point One's refueling outage, we identified an issue with a non-safety-related well.

It's not uncommon in the industry, but it did extend Nine Mile's outage to 39 days. The cost of the repair is absorbed within our existing budget. The point I want to make here is that even with the extended outage at Nine Mile, we returned to service roughly in line with the industry average for a standard refueling outage of approximately 39 days. The point here is that at Constellation, a long outage is just average for everyone else. While Nine Mile lagged, our ability to lead the nation in returning units from outages was demonstrated at both Byron and Calvert Cliffs, which completed their refueling outages ahead of plan and at our average duration of 21 days in total. Our renewables and natural gas fleet also performed well with 96.6% renewable energy capture and 98.4% power dispatch match.

The team is presently completing our summer readiness work to make sure that it's ready for the hot summer months to come. Turning to slide seven, I'll talk a little bit about the commercial business, but I already mentioned before they've had an incredible start to the business. It's a business that benefits from the opportunities that volatility in the commodity markets creates. We're able to leverage our expertise to give our customers certainty of their energy costs in this volatile market environment while realizing higher unit margins across both wholesale and retail as risk is more appropriately reflected in pricing. Our balance sheet strength is a key advantage to supporting our customers and being able to capture these healthy margins.

Providers with more constrained balance sheets and less experience with volatile markets are not able to provide customers the certainty and the visibility that our customers desperately want and need. Our balance sheet strength allows us to provide this needed certainty to our customers. We operate our generation and customer businesses symbiotically with each other, supporting and making the whole stronger. As such, we can optimize our positions across the combined generation and load flow portfolios to create additional gross margin, particularly in times of volatility. Again, I'll just hit this. I think the results this quarter and what we've predicted for the remainder of the year and next demonstrate all of this. We have continued success developing and providing sustainability products like CORe to our customers. As I mentioned earlier, this strong performance creates additional value for you both in 2023 and 2024.

Before I turn it over to Dan for a full update on the financial outlook, I want to address our own disclosures from the last call. We're confident in the firmness of our forecast. The entire management team is committed to ensuring that this forecast is met. It will be met. We will always look for additional opportunities to run our business as efficiently as possible. Dan?

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Thank you, Joe. Good morning everyone. Beginning on slide eight, we earned $658 million in Adjusted EBITDA, which is above our plan for the first quarter. The favorability to our expectations came with the strong results of Commercial, plus the update to the PJM winter bonus payment as we have gotten more clarity from PJM. Compared to the first quarter of 2022, our results were lower than the $866 million in Adjusted EBITDA. Our quarterly shaping in 2023 will differ from last year, in part due to our hedge prices that are higher than last year. Comparability will be impacted by the start of the CMC program in June 2022. Timing of opportunities in the Commercial business.

The greater number of planned refueling outages in the first half of this year compared to last year, and the shaping of O&M. In 2022, we saw ramping labor costs over the course of the year as we staffed the organization. The difference in staffing levels and costs will be widest in the first quarter and then normalize as we move through this year. As Joe said, we remain committed to our 2023 O&M targets. For the full year, as Joe commented earlier, we expect to be comfortably in the top half of our guidance range of $2.9 billion-$3.3 billion. Turning to slide nine and our gross margin outlook. We are now forecasting to be at $100 million in both 2023 and 2024.

Overall, forward power prices in 2023 and 2024 have seen downward pressure since year-end, following the record warm winter that has created an oversupply situation in natural gas markets. Our existing hedges and the nuclear PTC support in 2024 effectively mitigate much of this pressure. When we look to 2025 and beyond, where we are comparably less hedged, we see prices at or above year-end levels, reflecting natural gas prices that are normalizing in the low $4 per Mcf range and tightening supply demand dynamics with announced plant retirements that are further supporting power prices. The upside to gross margins is coming from the strength in our commercial business, where we are seeing better margins as risk is being more effectively priced given market volatility and higher liquidity requirements.

For 2023, our gross margin forecasts are up $100 million to $8.45 billion due to our existing hedges, strong performance by our commercial team and the increased payment from PJM associated with Winter Storm Elliott. These drivers more than offset the weather-driven downturn in prices since year-end. As a reminder, the power new business to-go line moves into the mark-to-market of hedges line when a transaction is executed, with this row naturally declining as we move through time and deliver on our plan. In the first quarter, we executed $250 million of new business and then increased our target by another $50 million, translating into the $200 million reduction in the new business to-go line.

In 2024, our total gross margin, including PTCs, is up $100 million from our last update to $9.05 billion when we take into account upward revisions to our commercial business outlook of $100 million, our hedge positions, and the PTC downside protection of $100 million. With the drop in forward power prices, the PTC is functioning as it should, stepping in to provide downside protection as some of our non-state supported units fell below the PTC threshold. Taking into account the increase in gross margin and the cost lines we show on slide 25 in the appendix, you can see that our outlook for 2024 is also higher than consensus. Turning to the financing and liquidity update on slide 10. We are delivering on our promise to return value to our shareholders.

Our first quarter dividend has doubled from the level we paid in 2022. We started our billion-dollar share repurchase program that was authorized by the board in mid-February. We view our stock as very attractive at these share price levels. We aggressively initiated our share buyback, completing nearly 25% of the authorized program by repurchasing 3.2 million shares for approximately $250 million in March. We will continue to be opportunistic for the remainder of the authorized program. We still have an additional $2 billion of unallocated capital in 2023 and 2024 that can be used to create additional shareholder value through growth investments, M&A, or additional return of capital to our owners. In the first quarter, we also accomplished most of our financing plans for the year with good demand and at attractive rates.

We remain on track to hit our credit metric targets. We continue to have constructive conversations with the ratings agencies. Both our S&P and Moody's ratings and metrics remain firmly in the mid to high BBB equivalent range. I'll now turn the call back to Joe for his closing remarks.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Thanks, Dan. I'm gonna go to slide 11 and conclude our prepared remarks. I'll just end where I started on the value that Constellation brings to you, our shareholders. We think it's a value that can't be found anywhere else. We own nearly 25% of the U.S. nuclear fleet, producing the most carbon-free energy in the country, nearly twice as much as our next competitor. These plants can run for 80 years. That's a useful life that's longer than any other carbon-free generation that exists today. In the case of renewables, it will operate longer than any renewables that are built in this decade. We're the best operator of nuclear plants, period. We provide power to nearly a quarter of all competitive CNI customers in the U.S., including 3/4 of the Fortune 100.

All of this puts us in the best position to meet the growing demand for clean energy and reliable, sustainable products. Our balance sheet strength is an advantage over others in the market. We have unique opportunities to create additional value for our shareholders, the increasing value of the PTC over time through the inflation adjustment that's embedded in the law, and our strong free cash flow allows us to fund a growing dividend, robust organic growth. Where we could find compelling M&A, we'll do it. If we can't find those opportunities, then we're happy to return capital to you through share buybacks. I'll now open the call to questions.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. At this time, ladies and gentlemen, if you have a question, please press the star then one on your touch tone telephone. If your question has been answered or you wish you, please press star one one again. One moment as we compile our questions. Our first question is from David Arcaro from Morgan Stanley.

David Arcaro (Executive Director of Equity Research)

Oh, hey, good morning.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Morning, David.

David Arcaro (Executive Director of Equity Research)

Thanks for taking my question. Morning. Maybe starting out with the commercial re-results, they were very strong. You had some good success in new business creation. I'm wondering if you could just elaborate on what you're seeing or where you're seeing the strength and maybe more broadly, the competitive environment in retail? What are you seeing for churn and any changes in market share there?

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Yeah, you know, I think the financial retail and wholesale markets and in turn margin is really a reflection of the underlying physical power generation stack and the demand fundamentals. When we see that physical stack get tight, when it's under weather-related stress or demand is increasing, then we see higher volatility and markedly higher retail and wholesale prices. Of course, we all know this relationship between the physical stack and the financial markets and the weather events in Elliott, Uri and many other unnamed storms demonstrate that effect every year. The physical stack is undergoing a rapid change from coal to other resources that are less reliable because they don't have on-site fuel or introduce intermittency risk in the case of renewables. That physical stack is changing today.

Today, I think when you participate in either the retail markets or the wholesale markets, you have to ask yourself really three basic questions. Do I have physical generation? Is it the kind of physical generation that's going to show up in extreme events? Do I have the financial balance sheet to deal with negative outcomes? Many folks who haven't asked those questions historically have been hurt, some driven out of business entirely. This is where I think our fleet really shines. This is where our business model really shines. We have the physical assets that operate in extreme weather events. They're clean energy assets that are going to live for a long time. Our commercial business is both smart and benefited by the fact that we have a strong balance sheet.

In effect, we have physical generation that runs, we have a commercial business that has a competitive advantage of others. When others see risk of volatility, they add those costs into the price that they're willing to offer in wholesale and retail markets. We don't have those risks, that translates into incremental margins in our businesses. That's what we're seeing. I think that's really been the story of the first quarter, and really it's been an evolving story. I think it's going to continue for some time. At some point, people don't price in risk and they'll get hurt again. Right now they're pricing in the risk. For us, that's margin expansion because we have the right fleet and the right business model.

David Arcaro (Executive Director of Equity Research)

Got it. That's helpful. I appreciate that perspective. Wondering if you could also give an update on the inflationary pressures that you're seeing just in terms of labor, contract and material costs. Was 1Q consistent with your expectations heading into the year? How do you see it, trending for the year? You know, I heard your confidence in being able to achieve it. Wondering if you're seeing any difference in the pressures, on the business this year so far?

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

No, I think we predicted it well in our plan, and we're right on plan.

David Arcaro (Executive Director of Equity Research)

Okay, got it. Straightforward enough. I'll leave it there. Thanks so much.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Operator, we're ready for the next set of questions.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question comes from Steve Fleishman of Wolfe. Your line is open.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Morning, Steve.

Steve Fleishman (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)

Good morning. Thanks. Just on the commercial upside you're seeing, I'm just, you know, the 2024 gross margin is a lot better than we would have expected just on power prices. Does some of this benefit the way you contract go into 2025 even, just given the way you contract? Or is it-

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Yes.

Steve Fleishman (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)

Is it more kind of 2023, 2024?

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Yeah, Steve, you know, we're obviously not putting numbers out there for 2025, yes, this trend doesn't end in 2024.

Steve Fleishman (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)

Okay. great. Big picture question. just, any concerns you have about IRA related to just this debt ceiling issue with the, you know, Republicans having IRA removing the bill? Just any thoughts on likelihood that that is a real risk?

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Steve, at this point, we just see that as kind of, it's hard to use the word normal, but the political back and forth that's occurring. I don't think there's any prospect that President Biden is gonna cut or gut the IRA to deal with this issue. At the end of the day, we're confident it'll get solved.

Steve Fleishman (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)

Yeah. Okay. Thank you. Lastly, just on upgrades. You know, I know you kind of came out with some gross investment for upgrades that were, I think, more ones that were a little more normal course, but I think you're still working on kind of the potential for others over time. Just any update on how you're thinking about upgrade opportunities?

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Nothing that we're ready to announce today, Steve, but to your point, we are working through some other opportunities, and we think there will be.

Steve Fleishman (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)

Okay, great. I'll leave it there. Thank you.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Thanks, Steve.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Shar Pourreza of Guggenheim Partners. Your line is now open.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Morning, Shar.

Shar Pourreza (Senior Managing Director)

Good morning, guys. Morning, Dan. Good morning, Joe. Quick ones here. I know, Joe, you guys mentioned on the fourth quarter call that you were working with kind of state policymakers to potentially reduce their support in light of sort of the federal PTC. Any updates on those efforts, especially as we look at states like New York?

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Now, Shar, the only thing I'd say on that, you know, those conversations have continued to evolve. Nothing unexpected. There's nothing that is different about the way they're looking at it than the way we're looking at it based on the conversations we've had. We just haven't those agreements haven't been memorialized, and in some cases might not get memorialized until after the guidance is actually issued because it's obviously we still have a whole year really to go before we get to it. I think those conversations are progressing very well.

Shar Pourreza (Senior Managing Director)

Okay. Perfect. Then on the gross margin side, obviously you talked about a little bit, you know, you're now looking at about $100 million in PTC credits for the non-state supported plants. Could we get a little bit more detail on where that is coming from? I mean, it looks like from the sensitivities it might be weighted towards LaSalle. Any additional color you can provide here as we see this creep up in gross margin for the first time? Thanks.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Yeah, Shar, this is Dan. I think if you look at.

Shar Pourreza (Senior Managing Director)

Yeah.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Good morning. The sensitivity table on page 23, you can see the moves up or down would affect both NI Hub and the PJM West fleets, which would suggest that we're having plants in both markets, where at the bus, they're gonna be a little below the PTC threshold, would be getting picked up there. Remember that our PTC sensitivity is only for the plants that do not have state support. So to narrow that down, right, is gonna be LaSalle in the Midwest and then Limerick, Peach, and Calvert in the East. So it is affecting on both sides. You can see the sensitivity to prices there, which hopefully is a useful tool for you guys to synthesize your models.

Shar Pourreza (Senior Managing Director)

Okay. Perfect. Then just last thing, sorry to ask, and I'm getting questions on it, this morning, but I guess, would you have guided to the top half without the additional PJM invoice uplift? Thanks.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Yes.

Shar Pourreza (Senior Managing Director)

Fantastic. All right, guys. Appreciate it. Congrats. See you soon.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Paul Zimbardo of Bank of America. Your line is open.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Hey, morning, Paul.

Paul Zimbardo (Equity Research Analyst)

Hi. Good morning. Thank you, team. Nice update across the board. Well done.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Thank you.

Paul Zimbardo (Equity Research Analyst)

Just following up on the capital allocation discussion, I see reference growth and potential consolidation is influencing the timing. Just are there things discrete that you're watching for? Just in general, when should we expect you to start to move some of that unallocated to the allocated bucket?

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Let me flip that to Dan.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Hey, Paul, good morning. You know, I think. You know, Joe talked about the upgrade. I was asked earlier, we're looking at a number of growth opportunities that, you know, take a little time to manifest. We're gonna continue to work through those. We continue to look at the market for potential, you know, M&A opportunities. I think nuclear generally comes to the top of that list. You know, we're gonna be, you know, pretty focused there. We have, you know, the $750 million of buyback to work our way through. I think we have a little time to get through there, and we'll continue to analyze both the scope of opportunity and then, you know, when we can put that out.

I'm not gonna give you an exact timeline, but we're certainly keeping a close eye on how quickly we can deploy opportunities that come to term.

Paul Zimbardo (Equity Research Analyst)

Okay. Great. Then I heard the opening commentary on your view on 2023 and 2024. Is it still a fair expectation 2024 formal EBITDA guidance would come on the fourth quarter call, or could that come sooner?

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Yeah.

Paul Zimbardo (Equity Research Analyst)

Thank you.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Yeah. It'll come, the formal guidance will come on the fourth quarter call. Paul, what we've been trying to do with these new disclosures is to kinda give you all of the moving pieces which we'll update quarter-to-quarter. You'll see the formal guidance, but you can start to piece together the story obviously.

Paul Zimbardo (Equity Research Analyst)

Yes. Yes, for sure. Thank you all.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Thanks, Paul.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question is from Durgesh Chopra of Evercore ISI. Your line is open.

Durgesh Chopra (Managing Director)

Hey, good morning, team. Thanks for giving me time. Just, Joe, finer point on capital allocation. You talked about, you know, the attractiveness of the share price. I just wanna be clear in terms of the unallocated $2 billion for 2023 and 2024, could that potentially go towards an upside share buyback?

Dan Eggers (CFO)

It could, sure. It would mean that the other opportunity sets that we've talked about, whether that be organic or inorganic growth opportunities, didn't materialize in the timeframe. you know, we have, and we understand it's kind of a short time period to execute in 2023 and 2024 on those opportunities. If they don't occur, you know, as I said, in the prepared remarks, all day long, we buy the stock price at this level.

Durgesh Chopra (Managing Director)

Thanks. Just maybe, Dan, going back to the PTC, the $100 million accretion gross margin, is there a way for us to get to what a dollar PTC value you're using to get to that, like an average across the different assets that you have?

Dan Eggers (CFO)

No, I'm not gonna. I'm kinda not the place to give you a specific, you know, unit or price comparison 'cause of the bus, you know, bus bar differences of the plants. What I would say, you know, if you can look back at the sensitivities on 2023 at a ±$5 move, and you can see how much the PTC would change from where we are. You can price out, you know, on those effectively four plants in some way, you could price out how much move you would have to get the PTC back to zero. That's probably the best way of thinking about it right now.

Durgesh Chopra (Managing Director)

Okay. Thanks, guys. I appreciate the time.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Ross Fowler of UBS. Your line is open.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Morning, Ross.

Ross Fowler (Head of North America Power and Utilities Equity Research)

Morning, Joe. Morning, Dan. How are you?

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Very good, thank you.

Ross Fowler (Head of North America Power and Utilities Equity Research)

Congrats on the good quarter. Joe, I heard your earlier comments. I just wanted to follow up on Paul's question a little bit. If I kinda look, there's a lot of puts and takes left before we get to the fourth quarter call and sort of guidance for 2024. If I kinda go back to slide 25, where you're pointing us to, and I kinda take gross margin less the Adjusted O&M and the TOTI, I'm sort of at, you know, $3.7 billion-$3.8 billion. Of course, there's a lot of puts and takes. There'll be a range around that. That's the context of your comments that you're materially higher than consensus expectations? 'Cause consensus.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

That's right.

Ross Fowler (Head of North America Power and Utilities Equity Research)

is kind of $3.4 billion. Okay. Okay. Just wanted to make sure.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

You got it.

Ross Fowler (Head of North America Power and Utilities Equity Research)

I'm thinking about that correctly.

Dan Eggers (CFO)

Yeah, you got it. Look, like I said, I think all the pieces are right there in front of you.

Ross Fowler (Head of North America Power and Utilities Equity Research)

Perfect. Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. I would now like to turn it back to Joe Dominguez for final remarks.

Joe Dominguez (President and CEO)

Well, thanks again for joining. It really has been kind of a remarkable quarter and the progress we've seen in the business that points to really a nice outcome for us this year and next is very exciting to all of us. We look forward to our next quarterly call, and we'll conclude the call. Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today's conference. This concludes today's program. You may all disconnect, and everyone, have a great day.