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Entergy Corporation (ETR) Q4 2024 Earnings Call

2025-02-19 01:16

Entergy Corporation (NYSE:ETR) Q4 2024 Earnings Conference Call February 18, 2025 10:00 AM ET

Company Participants

Liz Hunter – Vice President-Investor Relations
Drew Marsh – Chief Executive Officer
Kimberly Fontan – Chief Financial Officer

Conference Call Participants

Shar Pourreza – Guggenheim Partners
Nicholas Campanella – Barclays
David Arcaro – Morgan Stanley
Jeremy Tonet – JPMorgan
Michael Lonegan – Evercore ISI
Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research
Julien Smith – Jefferies
Paul Patterson – Glenrock
Travis Miller – Morningstar

Operator

Good morning. My name is Aaron, and I will be your conference operator for today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Entergy's Fourth Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise and after the speakers' remarks there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please also note that we ask that you limit yourself to an initial question followed with a follow-up question when you were given the opportunity to speak. Thank you.

And with that, I'd like to now turn the call over to Liz Hunter, Vice President of Investor Relations for Entergy Corporation.

Liz Hunter

Good morning and thank you for joining us. We will begin today with comments from Entergy's Chair and CEO, Drew Marsh; and then Kimberly Fontan, our CFO, will review results. In an effort to accommodate everyone who has questions, we request that each person ask no more than two questions.

In today's call, management will make certain forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from these forward-looking statements due to a number of factors, which are set forth in our earnings release, our slide presentation and our SEC filings. Entergy does not assume any obligation to update these forward-looking statements. Management will also discuss non-GAAP financial information. Reconciliations to the applicable GAAP measures are included in today's press release and slide presentation, both of which can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website.

And now I will turn the call over to Drew.

Drew Marsh

Thank you, Liz, and good morning, everyone. 2024 was a transformational year for Entergy. We had strong financial performance while also making meaningful progress to grow and derisk our business. For financial results, we are reporting 2024 adjusted EPS of $3.65, which is in the top half of our guidance range. In addition, we are raising our capital and outlook beyond 2025. Because growth in most years is now greater than our previous range of 8% to 9% and we see additional growth opportunities, we are simplifying our disclosure by removing the top end of the range. To that end, we're now simply noting our long-term growth rate through 2028 as greater than 8%. Kimberly will review the details.

Our achievements in 2024 position us well to capture the growth opportunities we have on the horizon. Starting with the customer, we continue to see strong growth in our industrial segment. Industrial sales were up 8% for the year and 15% for the fourth quarter. We have seen strong growth from the natural advantages of the Gulf South for many years, and we added two large hyperscale data centers to our outlook in 2024. This growth brings important value to our stakeholders, particularly the communities we serve and our existing customer base.

Today, we are announcing a new electric service agreement with a large customer in Mississippi. The customer has not announced their project, so we can't provide additional details at this time. In addition, we anticipate signing an ESA with Meta to expand their capacity needs, as detailed in supplemental testimony submitted by Entergy Louisiana last week. For the combined utility, we see industrial sales compound annual growth at 12% to 13% from 2024 through 2028.

When working with very large potential customers, we aim to find ways to deliver what those companies need when they need it. At the same time, we include protections for existing customers through tools such as minimum bills, contributions in aid of construction and credit terms. These new customers also provide community enhancements through significant ad form taxes and direct investments such as workforce development and infrastructure improvements. Through this work, we continue to have a robust and diverse pipeline for potential growth above our current plan.

Data centers remain the largest growth category, and we continue to have 5 to 10 gigawatts of data center opportunity within our larger pipeline. We also remain well positioned to capture additional projects as a one-stop shop. We have extensive experience, bringing large customers online. Our vertically integrated model allows us to provide complete technical solutions. Our local relationships help our new customers connect with critical stakeholders and our strong partnerships with vendors support additional growth potential.

Regarding our relationships with stakeholders, our focus on stakeholder engagement has helped us move forward with our ongoing journey to be the premier utility. This starts with putting the customer first, and making sure our stakeholders fully understand their potential value. In the last year, we successfully concluded several regulatory processes through this approach. Those include final approvals of the SERI settlements; first phase approvals of more than $2 billion of resilience investment in Louisiana, Texas and New Orleans; LPSC and New Orleans City Council approval of the gas LDC sale, several rate actions across multiple jurisdictions, including the Louisiana formula rate plan renewal and the recent regulatory approval to divest Entergy Louisiana's 16% of Grand Gulf capacity in energy to Entergy Mississippi.

Looking at 2025, our regulatory calendar is busy, but with more customary items. We have several formula rate plan filings. In addition, we could file transmission distribution riders in Texas if needed. We anticipate decisions on new customer-driven generation and transmission investments, including utilization of Louisiana's accelerated review process for renewables. We also expect to clarify cost recovery for the 2024 storms. And lay the groundwork in Louisiana and New Orleans for more timely storm cost recovery, which will benefit customers.

In addition to the regulatory calendar, we are engaging in the legislative processes in both Texas and Arkansas. It's very early in those sessions, and we are looking at options to support investment needed for new growth opportunities to help us create significant value for our communities and to create space for more risk management investments and resilience to benefit customers. Our regulatory calendar supports a strong capital plan to serve customer growth in our region and improve the resilience and reliability of our system for the benefit of customers. We plan to invest $37 billion over the next four years, 2025 through 2028.

Driven by our customer requests, we'll continue to expand our renewables portfolio. We have active requests for proposals for new renewables in Arkansas and Louisiana in addition to the planned 1,500 megawatts associated with the meta project. Our plans include investment in several new modern and efficient gas plants. This includes the Orange County Advanced Power Station in Texas and the Delta Blues facility in Mississippi that are already under construction. We also have pending regulatory approval request for a combustion turbine in Arkansas, three combined cycle facilities in Louisiana and one of each in Texas. We have a strong track record for building a highly efficient combined cycle projects despite external challenges. This gives us confidence in our ability to successfully complete the projects we are undertaking today to serve our customers’ demands.

We have secured critical long lead time equipment with Mitsubishi Power Americas and Siemens Energy. Through these partnerships, we have clear line of sight to acquire additional equipment for subsequent projects beyond our current plan. We also have long-standing relationships with our EPC partners that can support additional projects. Each of our combined cycle plants will be configured to enable future carbon capture and sequestration. Our current capital plan does not include dollars for CCS, but we are actively working on developing projects including customer supported investment and third-party ownership options.

We have a FEED study underway at the Lake Charles Power Station with an expectation to move towards a decision this year.

We are also exploring expansion of our nuclear footprint, including upgrades at each of our nuclear stations and incremental 20-year license extensions. In addition, we continue to evaluate potential new nuclear options with customers and partners.

As we have stated previously, these opportunities are not in our base plan, and we will carefully manage financial risk with any new nuclear investments. While we have been working hard to meet customers’ capacity and energy needs, we have also been actively reducing other risks facing stakeholders.

Our transmission plans have grown supporting growth and improving reliability and resilience. Our current plan includes investment from the most recent MTAP 10-year plan approved in December, which included 49 projects and $1.8 billion of investment to support reliability. Additionally, we have proposed projects totaling $3.7 billion in MTAP 2025 to meet NERC’s reliability standards as we grow.

In addition, work authorized by the accelerated resilience approvals is underway. In 2024, we completed seven projects in Louisiana, one of which was in New Orleans. We expect the number of completed projects will grow exponentially in 2025. We plan to seek approvals for subsequent phases on a time line that would seamlessly ensure ongoing progress.

As you know, we experienced two hurricanes in 2024 and our teams performed admirably, providing safe and efficient restoration. For Francine, we leveraged learning from previous storm responses, including barrel, enabling our crews to restore 90% of our customers within three days. Entergy workers also assisted other utilities in the restoration efforts following devastating storms in the Southeast. Lending over 900 people to support Helene and more than 1,100 to support Milton.

And as many of you have heard, we experienced a winter weather event, Enzo in January, which brought extremely low temperatures. Our operations performed well throughout the event as our system and four of our five operating companies set new winter peak records.

Another risk that we actively manage as financial health is specifically credit. We continue to make positive progress on our credit metrics in 2024, which provides financial flexibility as well as long-term customer benefits through lower cost of capital. Our work in 2024 benefited our stakeholders, including our customers, communities and all of you as owners. None of this could happen without also benefiting the other critical stakeholder, our innovative, hard-working and dedicated employees. Our employees have embraced the opportunities ahead of us. We are building a culture that supports rapid growth and change. I thank each and every employee for all they do to make Entergy successful. This is an exciting time as we continue our journey to be the premier utility. We have a very strong outlook and includes double-digit industrial sales growth and adjusted EPS CAGR well above 8%.

A strong balance sheet and an improving risk profile for all stakeholders. And we continue to talk to potential customers that could bring incremental growth and additional benefits for our stakeholders. Our employees and our partners are excited about our plan and they are ready to meet the opportunities ahead.

I'll now turn the call over to Kimberly.

Kimberly Fontan

Thank you, Drew. Good morning, everyone. As Drew said, 2024 was a very exciting year. I'll provide some additional detail on the financial picture. We'll start by reviewing 2024 results, and then I'll provide an overview for 2025 and our longer term outlook. As a reminder, Entergy executed a 2-for-1 stock split in December, which doubled our share count. The share and per share data throughout our materials reflects this change.

Starting on Slide 5, Entergy adjusted EPS for 2024 was $3.65. Our results reflected the investments we made to benefit our current customers6 and to support new customers and projects. This included regulatory actions across all our operating companies as well as higher depreciation and interest expense. Other income increased mainly from higher AFUDC due to construction work in progress.

Weather-adjusted retail sales grew approximately 4%, driven by strong industrial growth of more than 8%, consistent with our original expectations. Large customers drove this growth primarily in the petroleum refining, chlor-alkali and technology segments.

Moving to Slide 6. We closed 2024 with solid credit metrics. Our book FFO to adjusted debt was 14.7%. We estimate that Moody's and S&P's comparable metrics will be well above their thresholds. Both rating agencies will ultimately perform and publish their own calculations. In December, in response to FERC's approval of the LPSC settlement, S&P upgraded Series issuer credit rating one notch from BBB to BBB- from BB+ higher ratings should result in relatively lower borrowing costs, which benefits our customers.

Given the investment needed to support customer growth, maintaining healthy credit metrics continues to be a key focus. Our current forecast outperforms the rating agency thresholds growing towards a sustainable 15% FFO to debt.

As Drew mentioned, we have a four-year $37 billion capital plan, which is $2.7 billion higher than what we provided at EEI. The increase is primarily in Mississippi and Louisiana. It includes dispatchable and renewable generation capacity to support growth and reliability and customer demand for grain attributes.

The incremental capital also includes distribution investments to support reliability and resilience. With the higher capital plan, we increased our equity needs by $300 million in 2026, as you can see on Slide 7. Using our ATM program, we’ve already secured $1.4 billion of equity, which we plan to exercise in 2025 and 2026. That leaves $3.3 billion to be sourced, 75% of which is not expected to be needed until 2027 and 2028.

Slide 8 summarizes our adjusted earnings per share guidance and outlook. 2025 remains unchanged from EEI. As Drew mentioned, with our higher capital plan, we are raising our longer-term outlooks. Driving our growth rate through 2028 now well above 8%.

As you can see on Slide 9, our adjusted EPS guidance range for 2025 is $3.75 to $3.95. We expect our weather-adjusted retail sales growth in 2025 to be 6%. The largest driver is industrial, which is expected to be very strong at 11% to 12%, driven by several large customers, including primary metals and data centers.

Our guidance also reflects the effects of customer-centric investments. This includes AFUDC during construction and earnings on our investments in rate base after assets are placed in service as well as the associated depreciation expense, interest expense and taxes other than income tax.

Utility O&M is forecasted to be lower for the year as we flexed cost up in 2024. For the first quarter, we expect our O&M to be roughly flat to first quarter last year. Additional information on specific drivers for the year as well as detailed quarterly considerations and earnings sensitivities are included in the appendix of the webcast presentation. Gulf Coast advantages have driven growth for many years, and we expect that to continue.

Now we also have large data centers in our forecast, which has further diversified our customer mix. As Drew said, Entergy Louisiana expects to update its agreement with Meta to increase the capacity requirement of the existing contracts. As noted in the filing, we can serve this load without constructing any additional generation at this time. The increased load will require additional transmission facilities, which are anticipated to be paid for by the customer.

The incremental volume would not have a significant effect on sales in our forecast period. As a reminder, with these very large customers, we take a conservative approach for financial planning. We do not add large customers to our forecast until we have a signed agreement, and our financial planning assumptions are at the minimum bill level for these customers.

We’re very proud of what we have accomplished in 2024, and we look forward to another successful year in 2025. We continue to prioritize the needs of our customers to create value for all of our key stakeholders. We have a unique growth opportunity, and we’re excited about what the future holds. And now the Entergy team is available to answer questions.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

Thank you, Kimberly. [Operator Instructions] Our first question for today comes from the line of Shar Pourreza with Guggenheim Partners. Your line is live.

Shar Pourreza

Hey guys, good morning.

Drew Marsh

Good morning, Shar.

Shar Pourreza

Good morning, Drew. Drew, just to elaborate on the core drivers of the $3 billion CapEx update. It’s skewed to generation and renewables. So does that kind of imply you’re starting to trend towards the high end of that load growth especially as we think about the ramp-up for something like Hub 8, which I think is up to a $12 billion site. Thanks.

Kimberly Fontan

Thanks, Shar. Good morning. As you said in the capital plan, it is largely generation for both dispatchable and renewables, but it does have some distribution investment and there’s some incremental nuclear investments to support the reliability of those as well. All of that is baked into the outlook that we have here. And as you noted, we increased the outlook as we go out into the back end of that period, reflecting those investments and the earnings on those investments.

Shar Pourreza

Got it. Perfect. And then, two, you're not the only CEO that's talking about new nuclear, I'm just kind of curious if you just hone in on just specifically what you mean by new nuclear because one of your commissioners in Louisiana kind of highlighted large scale. And so I'm not sure if there's an appetite for SMRs in the state, and you seem to focus a little bit on the larger scale side. So is there room for large-scale reactors if there's ample risk sharing, either on the federal backstop, et cetera? Or when you mean new nuclear, are you really specific to SMRs? Thanks.

Drew Marsh

Thanks, Shar. That's a good question. We actually are looking at all forms of new nuclear, the large scale, like an AP1000, which as you all know, there are some that exist now in our country and several under construction around the world and several more that are planned. So that is, in some sense, viable supply chain for new nuclear today. And so certainly, we would be looking at that because in a lot of ways, that could derisk entry into the new nuclear space. But we are also looking at SMRs. We have MOU with Holtec to investigate their new technology. And of course, we're looking at others like GE's technology and some of the other ones that are around. So we're not exclusive to any particular new nuclear technology at this point. We are primarily looking at what's going to give our stakeholders the best risk profile and the best value. Those are going to be the driving components for us.

Shar Pourreza

And is there – just to follow-up on that one. Is there conversations at the federal level? Or is there any sort of data points we should be kind of monitoring around that? Thanks.

Drew Marsh

I mean, I think it's – most of our conversations are at the state level internally. Certainly, we're working with NEI on the federal level to facilitate continued conversations. And as you know, at the federal level, things are evolving pretty quickly right now. But there is a lot of bipartisan interest in new nuclear, so I imagine that those conversations will continue and there will be opportunities going forward in the new nuclear space.

Shar Pourreza

Okay. Perfect. Thanks, guys. Congrats on the execution. It's obviously very evident. Congrats.

Drew Marsh

Thanks, Shar.

Operator

Thanks for your questions. Our next question is from the line of Nicholas Campanella with Barclays. Your line is live.

Nicholas Campanella

Hey, good morning and thanks for taking my questions. What an update. Hey, yes. So I guess just – you signed a few more customers, the growth rate is now uncapped per se. And when I think about kind of this 5 to 10 gigawatts in the pipeline. How would you kind of simplistically frame every 1 gigawatt affecting growth? Is it – if you get another gig into the plan with similar frameworks that you just got in Mississippi and Louisiana, could that add another 100 basis points to the CAGR? Or what's kind of the simple way to frame it here since you're kind of letting people dream about where it can go.

Kimberly Fontan

Good morning, Nick. I don't know that you can do a one-for-one math. I would think about it as what investment is needed to support – customers to support the system overall, and the investment is really driving the growth. In this case, we had $2.7 billion that covered a variety of investment types. So I think each new customer would be unique and we'd have to look at what that means relative to the investments and then relative to the overall CAGR.

Drew Marsh

And it also depends on the business model of these data centers. Certainly, the customers that we've been dealing with, like Amazon and Meta that we've announced previously. Those are very large trillion plus dollar companies that have a clear expectation for their utilization of those facilities. There are others in the subscription model format that would be very different and have a very different profile. We are starting to see a little bit of interest in that particular space where we hadn't seen that previously. And so that would be a little bit different rule of thumb, perhaps. So there are different models within the data center space that could give you different outcomes as well.

Nicholas Campanella

Okay. That's great. I appreciate it. And then I just wanted to address – you have a lot of organic opportunities in the growth plan today. I just wanted to acknowledge that there’s an adjacent service territory that’s also kind of running a sale process. And can you just address what your appetite is for anything inorganic at this point, given everything that’s in front of you?

Kimberly Fontan

We certainly don’t comment on specific potential opportunities, but we have the sales gas business going through, and that is an example of how a transaction met our gating criteria of it doesn’t distract, it creates value and it’s executable. So certainly, if something meets that criteria, we would look at it. But again, we wouldn’t address specific opportunities until something met those criteria.

Nicholas Campanella

Thank you.

Drew Marsh

Thank you.

Operator

Thanks for questions. Our next question is from the line of David Arcaro with Morgan Stanley. Your line is live.

David Arcaro

Thanks. Good morning.

Drew Marsh

Good morning.

David Arcaro

I was wondering, would you be able to frame kind of the time to market that you’re able to offer for new data center customers as you look at that pipeline? Do you have – is there a certain amount of available capacity, whether it’s transmission or generation on your system? Or is most of this going to take incremental new infrastructure to enable in terms of future customers?

Kimberly Fontan

Thanks, David. Similar to Nick’s question, I think it’s going to depend on where the customer locates and what’s needed. We have been working with our customers and with a number of stakeholders to work through that time line, whatever is needed. And we do have strong partnerships on availability of equipment as well as availability of vendors and contractors to help support the build process. I think we talked about at Analyst Day, the ability in Mississippi last year to shrink that time relative to working with the legislature and decreasing the time to build, but it’s going to be unique depending on the specific customer needs.

David Arcaro

Got it. Okay. Understood. And then you gave a little bit more color, I think, on the gas turbine landscape and some of the partnerships you have. I was just wondering if there’s any other color you would be able to provide on the availability of production slots for gas turbines and how the pricing has trended just as you’re looking out even further in your generation planning here?

Drew Marsh

That’s a good question, David. So we – something that we’ve been engaged in for quite a while at this point, thinking about those turbine slots and managing them carefully. As I said earlier, we have turbines and transformers and other critical equipment as well as labor to do the work. lined up for everything that we’ve announced, and then we have some capacity beyond what we’ve announced today already lined up. And we’re continuing to work on additional capacity beyond that because there are – we believe there are more opportunities. And so we’re trying to be prepared for those opportunities should they materialize.

It is a much different space than it was 18 months ago for sure. And so we are clearly aware of that. Pricing is getting tougher in some cases, costs are getting more expensive just for the slots. So we’re mindful of that. But at this point, we haven’t seen anything that materially changes our expectations about where we are and what we might be able to accomplish.

David Arcaro

Okay. Great. Appreciate the color. Thank you.

Drew Marsh

Thank you.

Operator

Thanks for your question. Our next question is from the line of Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Your line is live.

Jeremy Tonet

Hi. Good morning.

Drew Marsh

Good morning.

Jeremy Tonet

Thanks for all the detail this morning. I want to pivot towards Arkansas, if I could. And just wanted any thoughts on the economic development working group in efforts to expand the existing, I guess, data center incentives there? And specifically, do you see large C&I customers taking notice of the potential in the state?

Drew Marsh

There is a lot of interest in the state for some of these large customers. And so certainly, we’re working with them there. And we’re working with all the stakeholders as well to facilitate the ability for customers like hyperscale data centers and others to come together to facilitate economic development. We’ve done this before in Arkansas. We have a thriving steel industry on the East – Northeast corner of the state. At this point, there are other opportunities in lithium mining and other areas that we’re paying close attention to. But clearly, the data centers is something that has people's attention in Arkansas. And so we're working with all the stakeholders there to help make that a potential reality so that their communities can also benefit from this investment in growth.

Jeremy Tonet

Got it. Makes sense. And then just want to pivot towards the financing side, if I could. Just wondering if you could walk us through a little bit more how you're able to finance $3 billion of incremental CapEx with only the $300 million of incremental equity here. And just wondering if more of your growth projects hit, how should we think about, I guess, the – any rules of thumb for equity funding going forward?

Kimberly Fontan

Yes. Thanks, Jeremy. We've talked about a run rate of 10% to 15%. I think that's valid over our full forecast period. When we look at how to finance these, we start with operating cash flow and making sure we're optimizing that, whether that is looking at managing against our caps or using mechanisms that we have like cash and CWIP or matching timing of closings. We're making sure we're optimizing in that space. We've also had some help from our pension, which is largely fully funded, which reduces or gives us additional opportunity there in the credit space.

And then with the large customers, we talk about as part of our framework, then paying their fair share. And that really means that even during the ramp period, they are supporting us, whether that is [indiscernible] or minimum bills or those types of things. And all of that together then helps us manage that equity need at the level that we have. that we've added here.

Jeremy Tonet

Got it. Very helpful. I’ll leave it there. Thanks

Operator

Thanks for your question. Our next question is from the line of Michael Lonegan with Evercore ISI. Your line is live.

Michael Lonegan

Hi good morning. Thanks for taking my question. The resiliency programs, Phase 2 totals greater than $2 billion approved and underway. You talked about the timing of Phase 1, Phase 2 request plan when and where can we expect them? And what is included in your capital plan versus what could be incremental?

Drew Marsh

I'll answer the first part, and I'll turn the second part over to Kimberly. But in terms of the timing, we are working through the first phase right now, and we have a number of projects that are ramping up. Our overall program is ramping up right now quite rapidly. We expect to be in a position by the end of the year to begin to seek the next phase. So it could be just before the end of the year or just after the end of the year at this point, but the teams are already starting to gear up to think about what that looks like and prepare for that.

With the goal of making sure that we can continue our programs, and we don't have to ramp down our work teams and then ramp them back up at some point, be much more efficient to just keep that effort moving along much more productive. So – that's where – that's kind of what we're thinking about right now. It'll be sometime the year at the end of the year a little before, perhaps a little after.

And I'll turn it over to Kimberly for the second part.

Kimberly Fontan

And then from a financing perspective, similar to what we did on Phase 1, we added that incremental capital once we had clarity through the regulatory process. And so I would think about that the same way. Louisiana set up mechanism to recover that that's been quite productive. And so we look at that and then we'll get adding that incremental capital at the appropriate time once it goes through the process.

Michael Lonegan

Great. And then on the dividend, you've had a target of 6% per year. Is that a firm commitment you have? You have this 5 gigawatt to 10 gigawatt pipeline, a lot of additional capital could be coming into your plan?

Kimberly Fontan

Yes. We've talked about 6%, and that is an expectation. Obviously, we have a lot of growth there. And so what we've talked about before is from a payout ratio that has historically been 60% to 65%. You could see that decline somewhat over the outlook period, but not a change in the dividend percent necessarily.

Michael Lonegan

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Steve Fleishman with Wolfe Research. Your line is live.

Steve Fleishman

Yes. Hey good morning, thanks and congrats on being continued strong outlook. I guess, first, on the credit metrics we've been waiting, I think, for the nuclear PTC piece of it for you all. Is that still not included in your metrics? And if they don't define it, when would you include it?

Kimberly Fontan

Yes. That’s right, Steve. We have not included that in our metrics. We are still waiting on treasury guidance. I don’t know when that will come out. And we do view that as credit positive. We’ll have to look at if they don’t define it, we’ll have to make a decision later this year on what to – how to proceed there. But it is not in our forecast as you noted.

Steve Fleishman

Okay, great. And then, Drew, I think you mentioned legislative activity in Texas and Arkansas to support growth. Could you talk to a little bit more what you’re either seeing or where you’re supporting in those states?

Drew Marsh

Well, I think the main thing that’s that we’re focusing on right now is growth elements, things that can support growth in both states. We had a question earlier about Arkansas in particular. So there are potential – there is the potential for bills to show up in Arkansas that could help facilitate economic development within the state, and we would hope to be a part of that.

In Texas, there’s similar activity to support it. But also we’re looking at risk opportunities, particularly around the resilience space that could help us. Things like accelerated cost recovery that could benefit customers would be something that we would be hoping to see as a potential bill. Things like managing the recovery of assets that are taking out of service when resilience investments are made perhaps a little differently than where they are today to help manage our credit in that scenario. Those are examples of things. But it’s still very early in the process. There isn’t really anything filed at this point. I think that we expect several thousand bills to be filed ultimately in Texas. I think there’s maybe 100 that are out there at this point. So it’s still very early in the process.

Steve Fleishman

Okay. One last clarification. So the updated plan does include this unnamed Mississippi customer and the – and then the expansion at Meta, although some of that might be going beyond 2028 in terms of some of the benefits because the sales growth didn’t change that much? Yes.

Kimberly Fontan

That’s right, Steve. The forecast includes the both updated customers with the note that as you noted in the sales volume, the Meta is largely outside this period from a volume perspective.

Drew Marsh

So you’re seeing like AFUDC and some other things in the EPS.

Steve Fleishman

So as you’re building the investment for it, okay.

Drew Marsh

Yes.

Steve Fleishman

Thank you. Appreciate it.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Julien Smith with Jefferies. Your line is live.

Julien Smith

Hey, good morning, team. Very nicely done. Really kudos to all of you. Maybe to follow up.

Drew Marsh

Thanks.

Julien Smith

Absolutely, really. Maybe just to follow up a little bit on the conversation on the cash flows. You all provide a little bit of a slide showing at least as present, your Moody's and S&P projections and a little bit of a downtick in 2026. Can you speak a little bit to how you think about earned ROEs as you lean into this ramp in spend? Are you thinking that there could be some pressure on earned returns? Or do you think when you look at the outlook that you'll be able to manage through the uptick in spending without having an impact on earned returns given some of the dynamics, whether it's legislative or otherwise?

Kimberly Fontan

Yes. Thanks, Julien. I'll start with credit and then switch to ROEs. On your note on credit, you can see that it builds towards 15%. There's a couple of onetime items in 2026, including the change in the Louisiana state tax rate that drives some adjustments happening in 2026 that you noted in that downturn.

In the – from an ROE perspective, I would think about what we talked about at Analyst Day that the ROEs are improving over the forecast period from 9% to 9.5%. That is still our expectation. And we are working that with all of our stakeholders. So I think we continue to expect to see that over this period?

Julien Smith

Well, truly incredible on both fronts. And then maybe a little bit of a nuanced follow-up here. You talked about the nuclear earlier. It seems like Texas is really contemplating a new nuclear fund of sorts. Any thoughts about tapping into that? Is that driving some of the accelerated thought process in your mind as you talk about it today?

Drew Marsh

Certainly, it's something that if they actually created a fund for new nuclear, it's something that we would look at as another tool in the toolkit to help manage risk. So that is – that is interesting to us. We'll see if that materializes, if that comes out of legislation or however it goes. But our focus is going to be on risk management, and anything that's available out there to help us with that at the state, the federal level with customers, with vendors or with a consortium of owners, maybe other utilities. There's lots of different opportunities out there to help manage the risk, diversify the risks that are out there, such that it's something that we could manage within our frameworks. So that's – that would be an interesting tool, but it's just one of many ways for us to manage the overall effort.

Julien Smith

Yes. I appreciate the risk emphasis. Thank you, guys, very much. All the best.

Drew Marsh

Thanks Julien.

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our next question is from the line of Paul Patterson with Glenrock. Your line is live.

Paul Patterson

Hey. Congratulations, guys.

Drew Marsh

Thanks Paul.

Paul Patterson

Just – I know you guys are focused on and I apologize if I missed this, I know you guys are focused on affordability, and you mentioned the – these large customers paying for themselves. Could you would this update sort of give a flavor where you see rates kind of going through this forecast period?

Kimberly Fontan

Yes, Paul, we do focus heavily on affordability. We do have the forward curve on gas in our forecast, which is going to drive some increase. I think at Analyst Day, we had talked about occur without fuel of about 3.5%, and we are in that range, slightly above that range here. What you're seeing is increase in investment. And then as Steve noted, the sales come in after that, and so you'll see some moderation of that when the sales come in.

Paul Patterson

Okay. And then just on the new nuke, when do you think we might see potential announcement? What's the earliest that we could maybe hear something on that?

Drew Marsh

I don't think there's – there's let me just say there's nothing imminent around new nuclear. We are working on it. We're thinking about it, but it will take us a while to put that framework together. But it is something that we are working on and we are interested in and our customers are interested in. So we are having ongoing conversations, but I wouldn't anticipate anything this year in terms of an announcement.

Paul Patterson

Awesome. Thanks so much.

Drew Marsh

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you for your question. We have a final question from today from the line of Travis Miller with Morningstar. Your line is live.

Travis Miller

Thank you. Good morning.

Drew Marsh

Good morning.

Travis Miller

A quick one here. The Amazon facility. Wonder if you had any update on progress there, filings, et cetera. The Mississippi?

Drew Marsh

Yes. So, their work is under construction and its ongoing right now. We have constructed our first substation and it is live and serving them. And so, it's underway and we hope that, that's the first phase of a lot of growth for Amazon in the state of Mississippi.

Travis Miller

Great. Okay. And then higher level, when you're going out there and talking with not just data centers but any of the large load customers, who's the competition? What o are their services are they looking at? Is it on site, is it some other provider? Just want to earn kind of very high level with the large load customers who you're competing against essentially for these large contracts?

Drew Marsh

Well, I think, I would say we're competing against with everybody. I mean, these data centers can locate anywhere in the world, quite literally. And so we, I think that means that everybody could compete with us.

We offer what we believe is a great value proposition around our ability to serve large load customers. We have a lot of experience with that. We have, since we're a vertically integrated utility, we can provide a complete technical solution.

That means that we can provide a transmission element, we can provide generation elements that includes green attributes. We can interface with the RTO, we can provide the retail access, we can do everything that they need from a technical perspective. And then of course, since we are regulated utility in vertically integrated, we have tremendous relationships within the communities that we operate in, which means that we can make introductions to all the key stakeholders, critical stakeholders that be part of a large economic development project.

And we've done that for a long time. That's not actually a new thing. It goes with kind of the first bullet, but it is, an emphasis of ours around stakeholder engagement to be able to do that. And so, those things we believe create a very competitive offering for us relative to other folks literally around the world.

Travis Miller

Yes. Okay, well, very good, that's helpful. Thank you.

Drew Marsh

Thank you.

Operator

Thanks for your questions. And ladies and gentlemen, that will conclude our Q&A session for today. Liz, I'd like to turn the call back over to you.

Liz Hunter

Thank you, Aaron and thanks to everyone for participating this morning. Our annual report on Form 10-K is due to the SEC on March 3rd and provides more details and disclosures about our financial statements. Events that occur prior to the date of our 10-K filing that provide additional evidence of conditions that existed at the date of the balance sheet would be reflected in our financial statements in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.

Also, as a reminder, we maintain a webpage as part of Entergy's investor relations website called Regulatory and Other Information, which provides key updates of regulatory proceedings and important milestones on our strategic execution. While some of this information may be considered material information, you should not rely exclusively on this page for all relevant company information. And this concludes our call. Thank you very much.

安特吉
安特吉公司(ETR.US)2024年第四季度业绩电话会
开始时间
2025-02-19 01:16
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