Christopher Foster
Analyst · Truist Securities
Thanks, Jason. This morning, I will cover 4 areas of focus. First, the details of our strong first quarter financial results and how they position us for the rest of the year. Second, I'll provide a brief regulatory update and our progress with respect to timely recovery of our capital investments through the filing of our interim capital trackers. Third, I will touch on our planned capital deployment in 2026, which is right on track as we target to invest $6.8 billion this year for the benefit of our customers and communities. And finally, I will provide an update on our derisked financing plan, balance sheet health and credit metrics. Now starting with our strong financial results on Slide 6. On a GAAP EPS basis, we reported $0.48 for the first quarter of 2026. On a non-GAAP EPS basis, we reported $0.56 for the quarter. Our non-GAAP EPS excludes the impacts from the tax gain and other expenses related to the sale of our Ohio LDC, which is on track to close in the fourth quarter of this year. In addition, we continue to exclude the impacts of removing our temporary generation units from base rates as they are no longer part of our regulated utility business. As a reminder, we expect to start marketing these units for either a sublease or sale later this year in anticipation of getting those units back no later than spring of next year. Taking a closer look at the drivers of our first quarter earnings. Growth in rate recovery contributed $0.11 when compared to the same quarter last year. driven by a full quarter impact of updated rates, reflecting the interim filing mechanisms that went into effect late last year. Weather and usage were $0.02 unfavorable when compared to the comparable quarter last year, driven by milder weather across our Texas and Indiana service territories. Additionally, higher interest expense was $0.04 unfavorable, reflecting new issuances, slightly offset by lower commercial paper balances and favorable pricing on the convertible debt we issued during the quarter. O&M was flat for the quarter as we continue to accelerate our peer-leading vegetation management program to enhance the customer experience, and improve customer outcomes during severe weather events. Lastly, the absence of earnings from our Louisiana and Mississippi businesses post divestiture resulted in $0.05 of unfavorability when compared to the first quarter of 2025. The divested rate base has already been replaced by the acceleration of investments in our Texas businesses. These results reinforce our confidence in delivering on our full year 2026 non-GAAP EPS guidance range of $1.89 to $1.91. The accelerated growth that Jason highlighted and the work we've done to derisk our financing needs and more efficiently execute are additional tailwinds that further position us well to deliver and could continue to provide upside as we move through the year. Over the long term, we continue to expect to grow non-GAAP EPS at the mid- to high end of our 7% to 9% long-term annual guidance range through 2028 and 7% to 9% annually thereafter through 2035. Now turning to a broader regulatory update. As a reminder, we continue to recover approximately 85% of our investments through capital trackers, several of which we filed this quarter. I'll start with Houston Electric. In February, we submitted the first of our 2 permitted filings of our Distribution Capital Recovery Factor, or DCRF, and our Transmission Cost of Service tracker or TCOS. The DCRF filing requested a revenue requirement increase of approximately $108 million, capturing incremental distribution investments over the last 6 months. I'm pleased to share that we entered into a settlement agreement earlier this month and requested new rates to be effective in June, ahead of our planned timing. The TCOS filing requested a revenue requirement increase of approximately $36 million, incorporating transmission investments made between July and December of last year. During this quarter, the filing was approved and new rates went into effect just last week. Turning now to Texas Gas. In February, we also filed our annual capital investment recovery mechanism, or GRIP, requesting a revenue requirement increase of approximately $62 million, capturing capital investments made through 2025. Pending approval, we expect these investments to be reflected in customer rates in June. Lastly, as a reminder, we plan to file rate case applications for our gas businesses in Minnesota and Indiana later this year, which in the aggregate, represent less than 20% of the earnings power of our consolidated base. Next, I will touch on our continued execution against our planned capital investments for 2026 as shown on Slide 7. We invested $1.2 billion in the first quarter for the benefit of our customers and communities. The quantum of capital deployed in the first quarter is consistent with the seasonal timing of our capital plan as we expect larger construction and resiliency projects to ramp throughout the year. In short, we remain firmly on track to execute the $6.8 billion of planned work this year as we continue to make investments to strengthen our system, improve customer outcomes and build the most resilient coastal grid and safest gas systems in the nation. Beyond our base 10-year $65.5 billion plan, we will continue to fold in the over $10 billion of incremental capital investment opportunities as we gain better clarity on project costs currently embedded in our plan. as well as line of sight to new projects required to meet the unprecedented load growth across our service territories. And in addition, we'll potentially discover more capital investment opportunities as we refresh our transmission planning later this year, which we are targeting to complete in the second half of this year. These additional investments will continue to provide upside to our over $65 billion base plan through 2035, further increasing the earnings power of the company. Lastly, I want to touch on our credit metrics and balance sheet. As of the end of the first quarter, our adjusted FFO to debt ratio based on Moody's rating methodology was 12.5%. This metric reflects temporary timing pressure from opportunistically pulling forward planned debt issuances in the quarter to take advantage of attractive market conditions. As that capital is deployed and financing normalizes, we expect this impact to reverse over the course of the year. And as a reminder, we expect to end the year at the high end of our targeted cushion in light of the corporate AMT revised guidance. Importantly, we have filed for a refund of some of the previous paid cash taxes and expect to receive a refund later this year. We expect to incorporate the impacts of this favorable guidance into our financing plan later this year. Overall, from a financing standpoint, we have completed nearly 70% of our planned 2026 financing needs, significantly derisking this year's financing plan. I also want to highlight that the $650 million convertible debt issuances we executed in February has allowed us to reduce near-term exposure to floating interest rates. I would like to highlight that our commercial paper balance at the parent at the end of the first quarter was 0 compared to our normal average balance of approximately $1 billion. In summary, we are confident in our ability to execute in the near term and beyond given the derisked nature of our plan. We are reiterating our 2026 non-GAAP earnings guidance targeting at least the midpoint of $1.89 to $1.91. At the midpoint, this would represent an 8% increase over 2025 delivered results. Looking ahead, we expect to grow non-GAAP EPS at the mid- to high end of our 7% to 9% range from 2026 through 2028. And over the long term, we expect to grow non-GAAP EPS at 7% to 9% annually through 2035. We remain committed to investing to improve customer outcomes and enabling growth across the states that we have the privilege to serve. And with that, I'll now turn the call over to Jason.