HE
HAWAIIAN ELECTRIC INDUSTRIES INC (HE)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025: revenue $744.1M and diluted EPS (continuing ops) $0.15; Core EPS was $0.23 as management excluded wildfire-related items and a Pacific Current loss; EPS missed S&P Global consensus of $0.23* .
- Utility core performance improved: Hawaiian Electric net income rose to $47.8M (from $39.2M y/y) on higher ARA revenues and better heat rate; consolidated results included a $13M pre‑tax loss on Hamakua sale and ~$4.5M pre‑tax net wildfire costs .
- Legislative catalysts advanced: SB 897 (PUC‑set wildfire liability cap and securitization for mitigation), HB 1001 (state settlement funding) and SB 1501 (IPP backstop) passed Legislature and awaited Governor’s signature; management sees these as credit positives and risk‑reducing .
- Balance sheet actions: $384M of holding company debt was retired in April using ASB sale proceeds; utility dividend to HEI reinstated at $10M for Q1 2025 .
- Settlement timing: remaining administrative steps expected to complete in early 2026, triggering the first ~$479M payment; restricted cash for the first payment remains in place .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Core utility earnings growth: Hawaiian Electric core net income rose to $49.7M vs $44.2M in Q1’24, driven by higher ARA revenues, improved heat rate, and lower bad debt expense (partially offset by wildfire mitigation and insurance costs) .
- Legislative progress: “This month, the Hawaii State Legislature passed legislation directing the Public Utilities Commission to establish a liability cap for future wildfires… [and] authorizing securitization to finance wildfire safety improvements,” supporting affordability and decarbonization goals .
- De‑risking and simplification: Completed sale of Hamakua Energy and used ASB proceeds to retire $384M of holding company debt; management emphasized a simpler, utility‑focused model and improved financial flexibility .
What Went Wrong
- EPS miss vs consensus: Q1’25 diluted EPS (cont. ops) $0.15 vs S&P Global consensus $0.23*; limited coverage (2 EPS estimates)* .
- Non‑core charges and wildfire costs: $13.2M pre‑tax loss on Hamakua sale at Pacific Current and ~$4.5M pre‑tax net wildfire expenses (about $2.5M at the utility) weighed on consolidated results .
- Revenue down y/y: Consolidated revenue fell to $744.1M from $792.0M in Q1’24; while operating income improved, higher wildfire mitigation and insurance costs persisted .
Financial Results
Consolidated headline metrics (oldest → newest)
Notes: Asterisked consensus values are from S&P Global; limited analyst coverage for HE in Q1 2025.*
Profitability ratios (S&P Global fundamentals)
Values marked * retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment breakdown (income for common stock)
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our core operations performed well during the quarter… We’ve also made further strides in our efforts to regain HEI’s financial strength and emerge a stronger, more resilient company” — Scott Seu, CEO .
- “With this critical supportive Supreme Court decision, the remaining administrative steps required to finalize the settlement are expected to be completed early next year… after which we’ll make our first $479 million payment” .
- On legislation: “Senate Bill 897 is a milestone… that can reduce wildfire liability risk exposure for the utility… and allows for lower‑cost financing so the utility can implement wildfire mitigation plans” .
- On PBR rebasing: “We expect to file an application to rebase target revenues towards the later part of this year… looking at a 2026 test year” .
Q&A Highlights
- Ratings and legislation: Management expects SB 897 (liability cap) to be viewed as a credit positive by rating agencies once signed, among other milestones including final settlement approval .
- Liability cap mechanics: PUC to set an aggregate cap after rulemaking; forms considered include flat dollar amounts, % of market cap or rate base; legislative discussions ranged around $500M–$1B as examples; cap must balance utility solvency and ratepayer impact .
- Financing settlement tranches: First payment due early 2026; company will use a mix of debt and equity over time, but no near‑term equity plans; may be opportunistic based on market conditions; securitization is for utility CapEx, not settlement .
- PBR/rebasing: “Rate case‑like” proceeding; filing later in 2025; 2026 test year; allowed ROE and equity ratio will be reassessed and could move positively or negatively .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus: Q1 2025 Primary EPS Consensus Mean $0.23 (2 estimates)* vs actual $0.15; indicates a miss and potential downward estimate revisions in near term.*
- Revenue/EBITDA consensus data were not available for Q1 2025 in S&P Global (actuals only surfaced via filings).*
Values marked * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q1 print was operationally solid at the utility (ARA uplift, heat‑rate gains), but consolidated EPS missed a light consensus and remains sensitive to wildfire/legal items and non‑core losses .
- Legislative progress (SB 897 liability cap + securitization; HB 1001 state funding; SB 1501 IPP backstop) is a material de‑risking catalyst that could improve credit view and reduce tail risk once signed and implemented .
- Balance sheet de‑risking continues (retired $384M debt; utility dividend to HEI reinstated), enhancing flexibility ahead of 2026 settlement outflow and a multiyear CapEx cycle .
- Settlement timeline clarity (first payment early 2026) reduces near‑term funding urgency; company indicates a mix of debt/equity over time with no immediate equity needs; securitization reserved for wildfire CapEx, not settlement .
- PBR rebasing in 2025 (2026 test year) is a medium‑term earnings trajectory catalyst; watch for proposals on allowed ROE/equity ratio and wildfire cost recovery mechanics .
- Fuel cost tailwind and volume uptick supported margins; sustained mitigation and insurance costs remain headwinds to O&M .
- Near‑term trading: sentiment likely hinges on gubernatorial signature of SB 897/HB 1001/SB 1501 and any rating agency commentary; medium‑term thesis centers on regulated utility earnings normalization, securitized wildfire investments, and settlement overhang resolution .
Additional Detail From Q1 2025 8‑K and Press Releases
- Consolidated revenue $744.1M (vs $792.0M y/y); operating income $62.4M (vs $50.9M y/y); diluted EPS continuing ops $0.15 (vs $0.19 y/y) .
- Utility net income for common stock $47.8M (vs $39.2M y/y); kWh sales 1,965MM (vs 1,906MM); average fuel oil $104.55/bbl (vs $121.84/bbl) .
- Core non‑GAAP reconciliations: consolidated core income continuing ops $39.8M ($0.23 per diluted share) vs $28.4M ($0.26 per diluted share) in Q1’24; after‑tax adjustments include wildfire items and loss on sale .
- Board declared $10M utility dividend to HEI for Q1 2025 .
All document data are sourced as cited above. Values marked * retrieved from S&P Global.