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Dominion Energy's forecasted annual profit is below expectations, and the company has raised its spending plan

Dominion Energy's annual profit forecast was below Wall Street expectations on Monday. However, the utility increased its capital spending plan for five years by almost 30% to meet a soaring electricity demand.

U.S. utilities are adding billions to their capital budgets due to extreme weather conditions, and the demand for more power from data centers that use artificial intelligence?and cryptocurrency.

Dominion Energy, based in Richmond, Virginia, said that it had contracted for nearly 48,5?gigawatts (GW) of data center capacities as of December. This is an increase of 1.4 GW since September.

Customers include Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft and Equinix as well as private companies like CoreWeave or CyrusOne.

Dominion’s Virginia utility service is the world's largest market for data centers, surpassing the combined capacity in the U.S. of the five next largest markets.

Dominion anticipates spending $64.7 billion in capital investments from 2026 to 2030, compared to its previous five-year budget of $50.1billion through 2029.

LSEG data shows that the company's shares dropped 1.4% in premarket hours, after it forecasted fiscal 2026 'operating earnings' of $3.45 to $3.669 per share. The midpoint fell below the average analyst estimate of $3.60.

The company's fourth quarter?operating costs were up 11%, to $3.33 Billion from a year earlier. This?offset a positive quarter.

Dominion's adjusted profit per share for the quarter ended December 31, came in at 68c, just barely beating expectations of 67c. (Reporting by Dharna Bafna in Bengaluru; Editing by Shreya Biswas)

(source: Reuters)