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PPL Corp's quarterly profit beats estimate on rising data center power demand

PPL Corp, an electric and gas utility company, beat Wall Street's first-quarter estimate on Wednesday thanks to favorable weather conditions in Pennsylvania and Kentucky and higher transmission rates.

Both states saw an increase in electricity sales of 6.6% during the third quarter. This helped offset higher costs, and increased operating revenue by 8.7%.

The U.S. is expected to hit record-high power consumption in 2025 and '26. This will be due to the rapid expansion of data centres and increased use of electricity by homes and businesses for heating and transportation.

According to the company, active data center demands from 2026-2034 in Pennsylvania increased from 48 GW to 50 GW and in Kentucky doubled from 6 GW to 12 GW.

"We are off to a great start in 2025...The continued interest of data center developers from Pennsylvania and Kentucky highlights the crucial role that we continue to play to power progress and innovation," said CEO Vincent Sorgi in a press release.

The company, which operates in Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island, anticipates minimal impact of tariffs on its earnings, but is concerned about potential effects on capital investments.

The company stated that "labor represents the majority of capital costs and O&M expenses, and the majority of materials are domestically sourced."

PPL's operating costs rose from $1.76 to $1.83 billion in the past year.

The company that provides electricity and natural gases to over 3.6 million customers has reaffirmed their full-year adjusted profit prediction of $1.75 - $1.87 per share.

According to data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, the Allentown, Pennsylvania based company reported an adjusted profit per share of 60 cents in the third quarter. This was compared to the estimated 54 cents. (Reporting from Katha Kalia, Bengaluru. Editing by Vijay Kishore.

(source: Reuters)