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Southern Co's retail sales beat first-quarter estimates

Southern Co, a power company in South Carolina, beat Wall Street expectations for its first-quarter profits on Thursday. This was due to an increase in retail electricity sales and a higher demand for energy.

Utilities in the U.S. have seen a rise in demand due to the increasing use of artificial intelligence, which is driving the need for larger data centers that consume more energy.

Electricity demand for heating, transportation and business purposes is also increasing.

In February, the U.S. Energy Information Administration predicted that power demand would reach record levels in 2025 and in 2026.

Residential, commercial, and industrial customers accounted for a 4.2% rise in sales of kilowatt hours in the company's first quarter.

The company reported a 11% increase in data center usage for the first three months of this year. It also said that it has a large load-pipeline of over 50 gigawatts, of which 10 GW are committed and 6 GW are contracted.

Total operating revenues for the quarter rose by 17%, to $7.78 Billion from a year ago.

Interest expenses, however, rose 7.3%, to $714 millions, in the first quarter. Operating expenses, meanwhile, increased from $4.9 billion to $5.8 Billion, a jump of $1 billion.

Southern Company is the U.S.'s second largest utility company, measured by its customer base. It provides power to six states: Alabama, Georgia Illinois, Mississippi Tennessee and Virginia.

LSEG data shows that the Atlanta-based company reported an adjusted profit per share of $1.23 for the three-month period ended March 31. This compares to analysts' expectations of $1.20, which were compiled by LSEG. (Reporting from Katha Kalia, Bengaluru. Editing by Leroy Leo.)

(source: Reuters)