Tim Silverstein
Management
Somewhat offsetting this was lower DD&A expense at Seneca, which came in at $0.69 per Mcf for the quarter. Given the impairment charge in the third quarter, we had a lower depletable base of capital, which reduced our DD&A rate on a go-forward basis. In our regulated segments, O&M costs were higher than previously projected. The largest impact relates to our pipeline integrity program, where we saw more O&M-related work than originally planned. This was not a function of more activity, but merely a shift from what was originally expected to be capital that, by the nature of the actual work performed, ended up being charged to O&M. We also saw increased costs related to the timing of leak patrols and restoration work at the utility, the latter of which was impacted by prevailing wage requirements in New York, which, as a reminder, were enacted in 2023. The future impact of these new requirements was incorporated into our new New York utility joint proposal, and we expect to recover these incremental costs in our new delivery rates. Lastly, on income taxes, there is a bit of noise. After adjusting for items impacting comparability, our effective tax rate for the year was approximately 24%. This was slightly favorable when compared to our prior guidance. The biggest driver was related to state taxes, where we allocate our income amongst state jurisdictions based upon revenue. At the end of the year, we had less revenue in New York and Pennsylvania relative to other jurisdictions, which reduced our overall effective tax rate. Shifting to 2025, we have revised our guidance for adjusted operating results to a range of $5.50 to $6.00 per share, under the assumption that NYMEX prices average $2.80 per MMBtu for the year. Other than pricing, the only noteworthy change was to reduce our expected DD&A rate to account for the impairment recorded in the fourth quarter. Had natural gas prices remained consistent with last quarter, our guidance would have increased from the previous range. However, as you know, gas price volatility has been elevated, and given the slow start to winter, we have seen the curve trade down. This has led to a wide dispersion among our sell-side estimates, many of which are using natural gas price assumptions that are well above the current strip. To provide additional transparency, we have included multiple sensitivities for our 2025 adjusted operating results at various NYMEX prices. This helps everyone triangulate on where we expect our results to trend as the pricing outlook evolves. While the natural gas strip has meaningfully declined, our hedge portfolio moderated a large portion of the impact. While we already had approximately 60% of our fiscal 2025 production hedged as of last quarter, we stuck to our disciplined approach to hedging. Over the past few months, we added another 3% layer to our hedge book for fiscal 2025.