XE
XCEL ENERGY INC (XEL)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 ongoing EPS was $1.24, down slightly year over year (vs $1.25) and below S&P Global consensus ($1.32), while GAAP EPS of $0.88 reflected a non-recurring Marshall Wildfire settlement charge; revenue grew 7.7% year over year to $3.915B but modestly missed consensus ($3.948B). *
- Management reaffirmed 2025 ongoing EPS guidance ($3.75–$3.85) and initiated 2026 guidance ($4.04–$4.16), with an updated 5-year capital plan of $60B targeting ~11% annualized rate base growth; long-term EPS growth objective raised to 6–8%+ with ~9% expected through 2030.
- Sequentially, ongoing EPS rose sharply versus Q2 ($0.75) and revenue increased 19%, driven by regulatory outcomes, sales growth, and higher AFUDC, partially offset by higher O&M, depreciation, and financing costs.
- Catalysts: data center load contracting progress (targeting ~3 GW in base plan), Colorado/SPS RFP outcomes, and constructive regulatory settlements; headwinds include wildfire-related claims and rising benefit/insurance costs.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Regulatory outcomes and sales growth added $0.18 to EPS; AFUDC contributed $0.08, supporting ongoing EPS of $1.24 despite cost pressures.
- Updated 5-year, $60B infrastructure plan with safe-harbored renewable/storage projects and 19 natural gas CTs on order to secure equipment amid extended lead times.
- Strong progress with large-load economic development: energized Meta’s Minnesota data center and moved additional data center load from pipeline to contracts; management emphasized customer bill affordability and “lowest share of wallet.”
What Went Wrong
- O&M increased $37M in Q3, including ~$25M higher health and benefit costs; 2025 O&M outlook raised to ~5% (from ~4%).
- Financing costs rose $58M year over year in Q3 (pressure from higher debt levels and rates); depreciation rose $69M with system investment.
- Non-recurring Marshall Wildfire settlement recognized ($287M), reducing GAAP EPS to $0.88; note the call referenced $290M charge, a minor discrepancy with the 8‑K.
Financial Results
YoY and sequential comparisons (Q3 2025 focus):
Segment revenue breakdown (Q3):
KPI stack (Q3 2025 vs Q3 2024):
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We expect this plan to deliver 7,500 MW of zero carbon renewable generation, 3,000 MW of natural gas fired generation, and almost 2,000 MW of energy storage… and approximately $5 billion of investment in our distribution and transmission systems to improve resiliency.”
- “Over the past five years, our residential electricity and natural gas bills have been 28% and 12% below the national average… a typical residential bill is 14% and 20% lower than it was in 2014 when adjusted for inflation.”
- “In the third quarter, we also energized Meta’s new data center in Minnesota… we continue to forecast 3% weather-normalized electric sales growth.”
- “We have 19 natural gas CTs on order… ensuring certainty of equipment and labor in a tight market.”
- “We reaffirm our 2025 EPS guidance of $3.75 to $3.85 and have initiated 2026 EPS guidance of $4.04 to $4.16… we expect to deliver 9% EPS growth on average through 2030.”
Q&A Highlights
- Growth profile: 9% EPS CAGR through 2030 includes 2026; capital plan front-end loaded with upside from Colorado generation and future MISO/SPP transmission tranches (~$10B+ pipeline, some beyond 2030).
- Load growth: SPS strength driven by Permian electrification; diversified sales growth with only ~3% of 5% growth from data centers and ~1.5% from SPS oil & gas; remaining from customer growth/electrification.
- Transmission cost allocation: Lateral lines for data centers typically customer-funded; regional/super-regional transmission costs allocated through SPP/MISO, not fully borne by retail customers.
- Credit metrics: Target ~17% FFO/debt over the plan; equity content (~40%) and debt (~60%) balanced to maintain strong metrics.
- Equipment/labor: Long lead times for turbines/transformers; proactive ordering and EPC relationships to ensure speed-to-power for large loads.
Estimates Context
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Slight miss vs consensus on Q3 ongoing EPS and revenue amid elevated O&M/interest costs, but trajectory vs Q2 is strong with substantial sequential EPS/revenue gains and margin improvement. *
- Reaffirmed 2025 EPS and initiated 2026 guidance signal confidence in regulatory recovery and load growth; watch for near-term Colorado/SPS procurement decisions and data center contract conversions.
- The $60B capex plan underpins ~11% rate base growth; incremental pipeline (Colorado generation, MISO/SPP transmission, additional data centers) could extend the growth runway.
- Cost pressures (benefits, insurance) and higher financing costs remain a headwind, but AFUDC, regulatory mechanisms, and capital rider revenue help offset earnings impact.
- Wildfire risks are being de-risked (Marshall settlements in principle; Texas claims progress), yet residual uncertainty persists; monitor insurance recoveries and regulatory securitization outcomes.
- Capital structure/credit: Planned ~$23B debt and ~$7B equity content (2026–2030) should support growth while maintaining targeted credit metrics (~17% FFO/debt longer term).
- Near-term stock drivers: procurement outcomes (visibility on capex/adders), data center contracting cadence, MN/ND/WI rate case milestones, and evidence of O&M normalization versus elevated Q3 benefits costs.