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WEC ENERGY GROUP, INC. (WEC)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered clean beats on revenue and EPS versus S&P Global consensus, while EBITDA was modestly below; 2025 EPS guidance was reaffirmed at $5.17–$5.27, assuming normal weather . EPS $0.83 vs $0.81* and revenue $2.104B vs $1.898B*, with EBITDA $0.840B* vs $0.864B* .
- Management unveiled a materially larger 2026–2030 plan: $36.5B capex (+$8.5B vs prior plan) supporting asset base CAGR just over 11% and LT EPS CAGR of 7–8%, with growth skewing higher in 2028–2030 .
- Load growth is increasingly data-center led (Microsoft and Vantage/Oracle) and underpinned by a proposed Very Large Customer (VLC) tariff (ROE 10.48–10.98%, 57% equity ratio), with a PSCW order expected by early May 2026—key regulatory catalyst .
- Capital and funding roadmap is clear: ~$21B operating cash, ~$14B incremental debt, and ~$5B common equity plus additional hybrid securities over five years; dividend growth targeted at 6.5–7% with a 65–70% payout ratio, and a Q4 dividend of $0.8925 payable Dec. 1 was declared .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Revenue and EPS beats versus consensus, with rate base growth, favorable weather, and ATC equity earnings contributing; CEO: “We delivered another solid quarter, and we remain on track for a strong 2025.”
- Strategic growth visibility improved: $36.5B five‑year plan, asset base growth >11% CAGR, LT EPS growth raised to 7–8%, anchored by hyperscale data center demand in Wisconsin .
- Regulatory pathway for serving very large loads advancing: proposed VLC tariff with ROE 10.48–10.98% and 57% equity ratio; expected PSCW order by early May 2026 for June service—terms agreed with customers .
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What Went Wrong
- EBITDA slightly missed S&P Global consensus despite top-line/EPS beats (actual $0.840B* vs $0.864B*), as higher depreciation and O&M offset positives .
- Expense pressure: depreciation and amortization up y/y (Q3: $373.4M vs $340.5M) and interest expense higher y/y (Q3: $223.6M vs $204.2M) .
- Corporate & Other earnings decreased $0.11 per share, driven by tax timing and higher interest expense—an area to monitor as the financing cycle accelerates .
Financial Results
Quarterly performance (actuals)
Notes: Q3 2024 included a $0.06 EPS charge for Illinois QIP disallowances; adjusted EPS was $0.82 for Q3 2024 (non-GAAP) .
Q3 2025 actual vs S&P Global consensus
Estimates detail: EPS estimates (n=14); Revenue estimates (n=7); Target Price consensus $122.68 (n=17)*.
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Income statement components — Q3 YoY
KPIs — retail electricity deliveries trend (ex-iron ore mine)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy and demand: “We continue to see major business building a future in our region… electric demand is expected to grow 3.4 GW between 2026 and 2030” with Microsoft and Vantage as anchors .
- Capital and growth: “We expect to invest $36.5 billion… between 2026 and 2030… With this updated capital plan, we expect asset base growth at an average rate of just over 11% a year,” supporting “updated long term projected EPS growth of 7% to 8%” .
- Regulatory construct: The VLC tariff is designed to meet very large customer needs “while protecting all of our other customers and investors,” with proposed ROE 10.48–10.98% and 57% equity ratio; PSCW order expected by early May 2026 .
- Financing discipline: “Over the next five years, we expect cash from operations to be approximately $21 billion… approximately $14 billion… from incremental debt… [and] approximately $5 billion of common equity” .
- Dividend: “We continue to target a payout ratio of 65% to 70% of earnings… We expect to grow the dividend at a rate of 6.5% to 7%” .
Selected quotes
- CEO: “We delivered another solid quarter, and we remain on track for a strong 2025.”
- CFO: “Rate base growth contributed $0.15 more to earnings… weather had a $0.03 favorable impact… partially offset by $0.06 from higher depreciation and amortization expense and $0.05 from higher day-to-day O&M.”
Q&A Highlights
- Growth cadence and back-half acceleration: Annual EPS growth seen at ~7–8% in 2027, with 2028–2030 closer to 8% as projects enter service; execution pace and approvals drive shape .
- Point Beach negotiations: Discussions with NextEra continue; plan does not assume a specific outcome. If not renewed, dispatchable gas and some renewables are likely alternatives; ample time through 2030/2033 expiries .
- Illinois pipe program: Ramp consistent with prior messaging; ~$1.5B total in plan with ~$500M per year by 2028; pending legislation viewed as not significant for WEC .
- Financing capacity: Billions of capacity for hybrids remain under ratings agency methodologies; common equity issuance cadence tied to capex (2026: ~$0.9–$1.1B) .
- Data center scope: Current plan includes 2.1 GW in SE Wisconsin (incl. Microsoft) and 1.3 GW at Vantage/Oracle’s Lighthouse campus; additional land could support >2 GW future upside beyond plan .
Estimates Context
- EPS: $0.83 vs $0.8105 consensus* (+$0.02, +2.4%); 14 estimates. Actual from company filings .
- Revenue: $2.104B vs $1.898B consensus* (+$0.206B, +10.8%); 7 estimates. Actual from company filings .
- EBITDA: $0.840B* vs $0.864B consensus* (−$0.024B, −2.8%)*.
- Street positioning: Target price consensus $122.68 (n=17)*; 2025 EPS guidance reaffirmation reduces near-term estimate risk .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Where estimates may adjust
- Modest upward EPS/Revenue revisions likely on operational beat and constructive load trend; however, EBITDA miss and higher D&A/interest could cap magnitude of upward EBITDA revisions .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Clean EPS and revenue beats with maintained FY25 guidance should be well‑received; expense pressure (D&A, interest) bears monitoring as the investment cycle ramps .
- The step-up to a $36.5B five‑year plan and a 7–8% LT EPS CAGR reframes the growth narrative for a traditionally defensive utility, with visible hyperscale demand drivers .
- Regulatory clarity is a key catalyst: PSCW decision on the VLC tariff by early May 2026 underpins economics for very large loads without subsidization of other customers .
- Funding plan is balanced and pre‑announced (~$5B common equity, ~$14B debt, hybrids), reducing financing overhang; 2026 common equity needs ~$0.9–$1.1B .
- Data center optionality is meaningful: plan embeds 3.4 GW growth by 2030, with additional land positions potentially enabling further upside beyond the current plan .
- Dividend remains a core pillar: 65–70% payout with 6.5–7% growth and Q4 dividend of $0.8925 declared—income support while growth accelerates .
- Watch items: Point Beach outcome and timing, inflation/interest impacts on O&M and financing, and execution risk as capex ramps .
Appendix: Additional Context and Cross-Checks
- 8‑K/Press release highlights: Net income $271.3M; diluted EPS $0.83; operating revenue $2.104B; operating income $449.6M; equity earnings (ATC) $54.8M .
- Quarterly dividend declared: $0.8925 per share, payable Dec. 1, 2025 (record date Nov. 14, 2025) .
- Guidance explicitly reaffirmed: FY25 $5.17–$5.27, assuming normal weather .
- Prior-quarter trends: Q2 EPS $0.76; revenue $2.0095B; retail deliveries +1.0%; Q1 EPS $2.27; revenue $3.1495B; retail deliveries +2.9% .
Citations
- Q3 2025 8-K and exhibit press materials:
- Q3 2025 press release:
- Q3 2025 earnings call transcript:
- Q2 2025 press release:
- Q1 2025 press release:
- Dividend declaration (Oct. 16, 2025):
S&P Global estimates disclaimer: Asterisks (*) denote values retrieved from S&P Global.