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Duke Energy beats revenue and profit estimates due to rate recovery, weather boost

Duke Energy, a utility company, exceeded Wall Street's expectations on Tuesday for its first-quarter revenue and profit. This was due to the?recovery of rate-based investments in infrastructure and favorable weather.

Energy companies are pushing for a?rise in customer electricity rates?in 2026 to pay for infrastructure upgrades, due to extreme weather conditions and the growing demand from data centers and electrification.

Rate case processes are used by regulated utilities to determine the amount customers will be charged for services like electricity, natural gas, and private water and steam.

Duke Energy's revenue for the first quarter was $9.17 billion. This is up from $8.25billiona?a year ago. It also beat analysts' estimates of $8.43billion, according to LSEG data.

The natural gas unit, which services 1.6 million customers across North Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucky, has posted a quarterly profit of 532 million dollars, up from $349 million the year before.

The electric utilities segment, however, saw a decline in income to $1.25 billion from $1.28 million a year earlier.

This segment serves 7,9 million customers across North Carolina, South Carolina?Florida?, Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky. Its collective energy capacity is 51,000 megawatts.

Charlotte, North Carolina based company reported a?adjusted?profit of $1.93 for the three-month period ended March 31, compared with?estimates of $1.87.

Duke Energy asked North Carolina regulators for approval in April to increase rates. This was done 'to recover more than $800,000,000 of higher purchase costs incurred during a severe winter cold snap.

The company said that it wanted to recover about $500 million from Duke Energy - Carolinas and $309 at Duke Energy Progress. If approved, the moves would result in an increase of approximately $6.90 per month for Duke Energy Carolinas and $7.88 per month for Duke Energy Progress, both starting on June 1. (Reporting by Varun Sahay in Bengaluru; Editing by Shreya Biswas)

(source: Reuters)