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SI

SPIRE INC (SR)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q1 FY25 EPS of $1.34 and net income of $81.3M declined year over year on lower Missouri usage and weaker Gas Marketing, but Operating Income rose on lower gas costs and higher infrastructure-related revenues; management reaffirmed FY25 adjusted EPS guidance of $4.40–$4.60 .
  • Segment mix was constructive: Utility and Midstream grew (ISRS in Missouri, RSE resets in Alabama/Gulf, storage capacity and repricing), while Gas Marketing normalized lower; consolidated contribution margin increased ~$13.8M YoY .
  • Regulatory and legislative set-up is a key catalyst: Missouri rate case progressing (discrete adjustments allowed, ISRS filing for +$19M, staff process running to an October effective date); Missouri’s future test year legislation advanced (gas eligible starting July 2026) .
  • Weather drove near-term noise (MO ~18% warmer than normal; residential usage ~4% lower), but management expects recapture over the year and reiterated the long-term 5–7% EPS CAGR on 7–8% rate base growth at Spire Missouri and equity growth in Alabama/Gulf .
  • Wall Street consensus from S&P Global for Q1 FY25 was unavailable at time of analysis; results were assessed against company guidance and qualitative drivers (see Estimates Context).

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

  • What Went Well

    • Utility and Midstream earnings growth: Gas Utility adjusted earnings rose to $77.8M (+$2.0M YoY) on higher ISRS in Missouri and new rates/usage at Alabama/Gulf; Midstream adjusted earnings rose to $12.0M (+$9.6M YoY) on storage capacity and contract renewals at higher rates, plus MoGas .
    • Cost discipline: Utility run-rate O&M was $1.6M lower YoY; interest expense decreased $3.9M; contribution margin rose across utilities .
    • Management tone and strategy: “execution of our strategy,” reaffirmed FY25 EPS ($4.40–$4.60) and long-term 5–7% growth; focus on safety, reliability, and infrastructure investments; quote: “we continue to expect our fiscal 2025 earnings to be in the range of $4.40 to $4.60 per share” (Scott Doyle) .
  • What Went Wrong

    • Weather and usage headwinds in Missouri: Quarter was ~18% warmer than normal in MO; residential usage down 4%, reducing volumetric margin ($3.4M) despite mitigation mechanism .
    • Gas Marketing normalization: Adjusted earnings fell to $2.2M from $7.2M YoY on reduced basis volatility and higher transport/storage fees .
    • Higher depreciation: +$3.9M YoY reflecting increased capital investment; “Other” adjusted loss widened vs prior year largely due to absence of prior-year interest hedge benefit and higher interest expense .

Financial Results

MetricQ1 2024 (Dec 31, 2023)Q4 2024 (Sep 30, 2024)Q1 2025 (Dec 31, 2024)YoY (%)QoQ (%)Consensus (S&P Global)vs Consensus
Operating Revenues ($M)$756.6 $293.8 $669.1 -11.6% (calc from )+127.7% (calc from )N/AN/A
Operating Income ($M)$139.2 $19.8 $148.8 +6.9% (calc from )+651.5% (calc from )N/AN/A
Operating Margin %18.4% (139.2/756.6) 6.7% (19.8/293.8) 22.3% (148.8/669.1) +3.8 pp (calc from )+15.6 pp (calc from )N/AN/A
Net Income ($M)$85.1 $(25.9) $81.3 -4.5% (calc from )N/M (seasonal)N/AN/A
Net Income Margin %11.3% (85.1/756.6) N/M12.1% (81.3/669.1) +0.9 pp (calc from )N/MN/AN/A
Diluted EPS ($)$1.52 $(0.51) $1.34 -11.8% (calc from )N/MN/AN/A

Segment adjusted earnings (non-GAAP):

Segment Adjusted Earnings ($M)Q1 2024Q1 2025YoY ($)
Gas Utility$75.8 $77.8 +$2.0
Gas Marketing$7.2 $2.2 -$5.0
Midstream$2.4 $12.0 +$9.6
Other$(2.7) $(10.9) -$8.2
Total Adjusted Earnings$82.7 $81.1 -$1.6
Adjusted EPS$1.47 $1.34 -$0.13

KPIs and operating drivers:

KPIQ1 2024Q1 2025Commentary
Contribution Margin (Consolidated, $M)$358.5 $372.3 +$13.8M YoY (all utilities higher; marketing down)
Missouri weather vs normalWarmer than normal (similar) ~18% warmer than normal Drove ~4% lower residential usage
MO residential usage changeN/A~-4% YoY Not fully mitigated
Utility run-rate O&M YoYN/A$(1.6)M vs PY Cost management benefits
Depreciation YoY changeN/A+$3.9M Increased capital investment
Interest expense YoY changeN/A$(3.9)M Lower rates and ST debt balances

Non-GAAP disclosure: Adjusted figures reflect exclusions of fair value/timing and other items per company definitions .

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Adjusted EPSFY2025$4.40–$4.60 (Nov 2024) $4.40–$4.60 (Feb 2025) Maintained
Long-term EPS growthMulti-year5–7% 5–7% Maintained
CapExFY2025$790M $790M Maintained
10-year CapEx planThrough FY2034$7.4B $7.4B Maintained
Common dividend (quarterly)Ongoing$0.755 (FY24 Q4) $0.785 (declared Jan 30, 2025) Raised

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q4 FY24)Current Period (Q1 FY25)Trend
Missouri rate case strategyFiling planned; focus on cost recovery, weather mechanism; ISRS to bridge between cases Case filed; procedural schedule targets Oct effective rates; staff allowing discrete adjustments; ISRS filed for +$19M rider (annualized to $72.6M if approved) Constructive process developing; discrete adjustments positive
Weather normalization/decouplingAcknowledged normalization mechanism; assumed “normalized weather” in FY25 guide MO ~18% warmer than normal; mechanism not fully effective vs usage; company proposing fixes incl. decoupling/updating period Elevated priority in case; fix could reduce volatility
Cost discipline (O&M)FY24 utility O&M -3% YoY; flat in FY25 guide Utility run-rate O&M -$1.6M YoY in Q1; reiterates flat FY25 utilities O&M Continuing execution
CapEx and rate base growthFY25 CapEx $790M; 10-year plan $7.4B (98% utility); 7–8% MO rate base growth Reaffirmed $790M for FY25 and $7.4B plan; Q1 CapEx $260M, focus on infra and AMI On plan
Midstream storage expansionStep-up expected as capacity and repricing roll through Material YoY earnings lift; additional capacity/renewals at higher rates Run-rate uplift emerging
Gas Marketing volatilityFY24 ended below FY23; normalized outlook Q1 down on low basis volatility; management confident in FY trajectory Normalizing; Q2 started constructive
Legislative update (MO)Future test year advocacy underway Senate Bill 4 advancing; gas utilities eligible to file FTU starting July 2026 Positive regulatory construct

Management Commentary

  • “Our results for the first quarter reflect execution of our strategy while maintaining a focus on safety and strong operational performance… we continue to expect our fiscal 2025 earnings to be in the range of $4.40 to $4.60 per share.” — Scott Doyle, Acting President & CEO (press release) .
  • “We are reaffirming our long-term EPS growth target of 5–7% and our fiscal 2025 earnings guidance of $4.40 to $4.60 per share.” — Scott Doyle (call) .
  • On Missouri rate case: “We’re encouraged by the order that… allows for the proposal of discrete adjustments… it works to balance those out.” — Scott Doyle .
  • On weather and marketing: “We feel very comfortable… we’re comfortable with the plan… [and] recapture [MO margin]… achievable over the course of the year.” — Adam Woodard .

Q&A Highlights

  • Weather impact and recapture: Management emphasized early winter timing and potential for later-quarter normalization; Missouri usage down ~4% with warm weather, with recapture achievable over the year .
  • Gas Marketing outlook: Despite Q1 softness, team expects to meet segment guidance; January volatility provided a constructive backdrop .
  • Missouri rate case mechanics: Discrete adjustments allowed; multiple windows for settlement before/after hearings; no impact from proposed legislation on current case; FTU bill (SB 4) progressing for future cases .
  • O&M inflation and guidance: Utilities’ O&M expected flat for FY25 despite cost pressures; continued focus on cost control .

Estimates Context

  • Effort to retrieve S&P Global consensus (EPS and revenue) for Q1 FY25 failed due to request limit; consensus was therefore unavailable at time of analysis, and we cannot definitively classify beat/miss vs Street for revenue or EPS [GetEstimates error].
  • Management reaffirmed FY25 adjusted EPS guidance ($4.40–$4.60) in Q1 and again delivered strong Q2 results subsequently (Q2 adjusted EPS $3.60, reaffirming full-year guidance), which likely stabilizes estimate trajectories into the rate case and late-winter weather tailwinds .

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Underlying trajectory is intact: Utility and Midstream are growing; cost discipline continues; guidance and long-term 5–7% EPS CAGR reaffirmed, supporting medium-term multiple stability .
  • Weather/usage headwinds were the main Q1 drag; fix to MO weather mechanism (potential decoupling/update) within the rate case is a material de-risking catalyst for 2026 earnings quality .
  • Missouri rate case path is constructive (discrete adjustments, ISRS cadence, October target for new rates); legislative progress (future test year) is a longer-term structural positive .
  • Midstream uplift looks durable: higher storage capacity/renewals at higher rates expanded segment earnings; provides counter-seasonal ballast to utilities .
  • Gas Marketing normalized lower on basis volatility; management still expects full-year within prior plan—reduces downside risk, but investors should not over-rely on this profit stream .
  • Short-term trading: stock likely responds to signs of a constructive MO case (staff testimony milestones, settlement signals) and any evidence the weather mechanism fix is gaining consensus; Q2’s strong print (post period) supports FY guide carry .
  • Medium-term: execution on $7.4B capex (98% utility), rate base growth (7–8% in MO), and O&M control underpin earnings power normalization as MO returns approach authorized levels by FY26 .

Sources: Q1 FY25 8-K/press release and exhibits ; Q1 FY25 press release ; Q1 FY25 earnings call transcript ; FY24 results materials ; Q2 FY25 materials for trend context .