EU
Essential Utilities, Inc. (WTRG)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered material beats vs consensus: diluted EPS $1.03 vs S&P Global consensus $0.80* and revenue $783.6M vs $690.0M*, driven by regulatory recoveries, colder-weather gas volumes, and purchased gas pass-throughs. Guidance and long-term targets were reaffirmed. *
- Management underscored disciplined cost control (flat O&M YoY), regulatory momentum (PA water rates effective Feb 22), and progress on PFAS mitigation and funding; capex was $270.5M in Q1 with full-year $1.4–$1.5B reiterated.
- Financing remains proactive: ATM equity raised ~$210M YTD through April toward ~$315M in 2025; commercial paper program established to reduce short-term borrowing costs; weighted avg cost of fixed-rate long-term debt 4.02%.
- Emerging optionality: discussions tied to potential AI/data-center on-site generation in the Pittsburgh region could represent up to 5 GW of needed power; not in guidance but a medium-term upside vector.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- EPS and revenue beats with reaffirmed guidance: “We’re off to a great start to the year… Our investments in infrastructure have set the stage for achieving our expected growth in 2025 and beyond.” Q1 diluted EPS $1.03, revenue $783.6M; FY25 EPS guidance $2.07–$2.11 reaffirmed.
- Cost discipline: O&M was flat YoY despite higher customer assistance surcharges and inflationary pressures; CFO emphasized revenue +28% and O&M flat, EPS +6.2% YoY.
- PFAS execution and funding tailwinds: “Full speed ahead” to be compliant by 2028 with ~$450M cumulative capex; ~ $100M proceeds expected from polluter settlements; Aqua PA awarded $17.3M PENNVEST grants/loans for PFAS and lead line replacement.
What Went Wrong
- Prior-year comp headwind: Q1 2024 included a $0.24 gain from the CHP sale; while EPS still grew 6% YoY, the comp masked even stronger underlying progress.
- O&M mixed drivers: customer assistance rider O&M offsets and higher employee/production costs were partly offset by lower bad debt and outside services; normalized core O&M growth ~2.8% (ex one-time effects).
- Answered why not raise guidance: management cited it’s “premature” four months into the year despite a strong start and tailwinds; potential headwinds ahead justify holding the range for now.
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L – Actuals (oldest → newest)
Note: Margins are calculated from the cited revenue and net income figures.
Estimates vs Actual (S&P Global; current + prior two quarters)
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key beats/misses:
- Q1 2025: Revenue beat by ~$93.6M; EPS beat by ~$0.23. Bold positive surprise on both. *
- Q4 2024: EPS essentially in line/slight beat vs consensus; revenue below consensus. *
- Q3 2024: Modest beats on revenue/EPS. *
Segment Revenue (Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024)
KPIs and Operating Items (Q1 2025)
- O&M expense: $137.8M (flat YoY; mix effects described above).
- Purchased gas: $184.6M (reflecting volume/commodity price mix).
- Capex: $270.5M in Q1 (on track for $1.4–$1.5B in 2025).
- Weighted avg cost of fixed-rate long-term debt: 4.02% (3/31/25).
- Liquidity: $728M available on credit lines (3/31/25).
- Equity financing: ~$63M via ATM in Q1 2025; ~$145M in April; total issued YTD ≈ $210M toward $315M FY25 plan.
Guidance Changes
Note: Guidance excludes DELCORA; signed municipal deals included; expects continued periodic equity/debt issuance as needed.
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We’re off to a great start to the year… Our investments in infrastructure have set the stage for achieving our expected growth in 2025 and beyond.” – CEO Christopher Franklin.
- “Our quarterly performance was strong with revenues up 28% and O&M flat and earnings per share up 6.2%.” – CFO Daniel Schuller.
- “We have moved from the pilot stage to a full implementation plan to install [Intelis] new meters in all residential and small commercial properties… nearly 700,000 customer accounts in the coming years.” – Gas President Michael Huwar.
- “We are in discussions with data center developers that represent up to 5 gigawatts of needed power generation in the Pittsburgh region.” – Gas President Michael Huwar.
- PFAS: “Full speed ahead… we will be fully compliant with the 4 parts per trillion MCL by 2028.” – CEO.
Q&A Highlights
- Equity issuance cadence: Focus on completing ~$315M in 2025; remaining ~$100M will be market-opportunistic; no intent to pull forward 2026 at this time.
- Texas rate case: Filing targeted end of May; expect ask (revenue, equity layer, ROE) to be consistent with other states; first filing in ~20 years may entail learning curve.
- Guidance: Strong start acknowledged; premature to raise with three quarters remaining; possible headwinds later in the year.
- O&M outlook: Normalized core O&M growth ~2.5–3% (≈2.8%); lean program investment near-term, efficiencies later.
- PFAS funding: Pennsylvania spend largely ahead; grants/loans ongoing and incremental to amounts received to date.
- PA M&A adjudication tone (e.g., Beaver Falls): Expect commission-level decision as soon as June; management optimistic on constructive outcome.
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 beats: Reported diluted EPS $1.03 vs S&P consensus $0.80*; revenue $783.6M vs consensus $690.0M*. *
- Prior quarters: Q4 2024 EPS $0.67 vs $0.666* (in-line/slight beat); revenue $604.4M vs $643.2M* (below). Q3 2024 EPS $0.25 vs $0.244* (beat); revenue $435.3M vs $424.4M* (beat). *
- Implications: Estimate revisions should rise for FY25 given the magnitude of the Q1 beat, particularly on gas volumes/purchased gas pass-through and regulatory recoveries. Expense normalization (customer assistance rider offsets, lean ramp) and weather-normalization (WNA) reduce intra-year volatility.
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Strong quarter with broad-based drivers and material beats, while maintaining full-year EPS and capex guidance—supports confidence in 5–7% EPS CAGR through 2027.
- Regulatory execution remains a core competitive advantage (PA water rates in effect; WNA in gas), moderating weather risk and underpinning cash flows.
- PFAS program advancing on-time/on-budget with incremental grant/loan support—net investment anchored around ~$450M by 2028 with growing external funding offsets.
- Balance sheet actions are proactive (ATM, CP program); ~two-thirds of 2025 equity needs already issued by April, reducing financing overhang.
- Optionality from data-center-driven gas load could drive medium-term throughput and/or capital deployment; not in guidance but watch for deal announcements.
- Near-term modeling: Expect softer seasonality in Q2/Q3, consistent with historical earnings cadence and WNA dampening volatility; maintain FY EPS range per management stance.
- Risk checks: Monitor Kentucky gas and North Carolina water/wastewater rate cases, PFAS cost recovery mechanics by state, and any changes in PA administrative outcomes for pending M&A.