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Constellation Energy misses quarterly profit estimates, narrows 2025 forecast

Constellation Energy, a U.S. utility company, narrowed its forecast for the full year after it missed third-quarter expectations due to higher operating costs.

Following the results, shares of the Baltimore-based company dropped 4% during premarket trading.

Constellation Energy's margins are squeezed by higher operating costs, which are driven by maintenance and infrastructure investments.

U.S. utilities argue that higher electricity prices are necessary due to the rapid increase in power consumption caused by the expansion of AI data centres, the rise of domestic production, and the electrification industries.

Utilities are raising customer bills to pay for infrastructure upgrades as the electrical grids in the United States face extreme weather and a growing demand from industry electrification, data centers and industrial electrification.

Constellation expects adjusted operating earnings for the full year in a range between $9.05 and $9.45, up from an earlier view of $8.90 - $9.60.

Economic uncertainties fueled by U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff policies could prompt companies to rethink how they spend the billions of dollars earmarked for developing artificial-intelligence infrastructure.

Investors are becoming more skeptical of tech companies that spend billions on AI infrastructure because the returns are lower than expected.

Constellation's operating expenses increased 7.8% in the quarter July-September to $5.48 Billion.

It reported total operating revenue for the quarter of $6.57 Billion, an increase from $6.55 Billion a year ago.

LSEG data shows that the utility reported an adjusted profit per share of $3.04 for the three-month period ended September 30. This compares to analysts' average estimates of $3.12, which were based on LSEG data. Varun Sahay, Katha Kalia and Shreya Biwas contributed to the reporting; Shreya biswas edited.

(source: Reuters)