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FirstEnergy's profit beats estimates for the first quarter on higher electricity prices

FirstEnergy's profit beats estimates for the first quarter on higher electricity prices

FirstEnergy, a utility company, beat Wall Street expectations for its first-quarter adjusted profits on Wednesday. The utility was helped by a rate increase.

U.S. Electric utilities are investing more in infrastructure as a result of extreme weather and a growing demand. This is to meet the demand, but also improve resilience.

Rate case proceedings are used by utilities to calculate the cost of electricity, natural gases, private water, and steam according to investments made by customers.

As the demand for electricity from AI data centres, domestic manufacturing and electrification of industry increases, power bills will rise.

The company reported that its total quarterly distribution deliveries increased by more than 4% in comparison to last year when the weather was mild.

The adjusted quarterly profit for its integrated and distribution segments increased by 10 cents each from the previous year.

FirstEnergy provides electricity to about 6,000,000 customers in Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. It also serves West Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, and West Virginia through its three segments: distribution, integrated transmission, and stand-alone.

According to data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, the Akron, Ohio, based company posted an adjusted profit per share of 67 cents in the first three months, compared to analysts' estimates of 61 cents. Reporting by Tanay and Pooja in Bengaluru, editing by Alan Barona

(source: Reuters)