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Constellation Energy's first-quarter earnings misses estimates due to rising costs

Constellation Energy, the largest U.S. energy company, missed Wall Street's expectations on first-quarter profits. The major U.S. utility was hit by rising costs for building and operating its electricity infrastructure.

Interest rates that are higher for longer can increase the cost of utilities and make it more costly to invest in electrical grid infrastructure.

The net income of the company fell by around 87% compared to a year ago, and was $118 million for the quarter reported.

Constellation Energy reported that interest expenses increased by nearly 15% compared to a year ago, to $146 millions in the quarter January-March. Total operating expenses increased by 18.5% to reach $6.34 billion. Company executives say that inflation is driving costs up.

Constellation CEO Joseph Dominguez stated on a earnings call that "it's obvious that we're playing a new game in terms of cost." Dominguez stated that certain natural gas plant constructions, for instance, had tripled their cost in some cases over the past decade.

Constellation Energy said it expects the U.S. Tariff to have a 1-2% impact on its capex plan for 2025-2026. This includes fuel.

Constellation continued to move forward with its power deals for data centers. This included the reopening the former Three Mile Island Nuclear Reactor and the $16.4 billion purchase of Calpine, a privately owned natural gas and geothermal energy company.

Constellation shares recovered in early trading, rising by about 6% after a drop of nearly 5% during premarket trade.

Constellation executives stated that the company is on track to complete the deal by the end the year, despite the fact that the Calpine acquisition has been met with opposition from consumer groups based in the Mid-Atlantic region.

Last month, it defended the planned acquisition of Calpine before regulators.

According to data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, the Baltimore-based utility posted a profit adjusted of $2.14 for the three-month period ended March 31. This was below analysts' expectations of $2.22. Reporting by Katha and Sumit in Bengaluru; Laila Kearney, in New York. Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri.

(source: Reuters)