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

Duke Energy, a utility company in the United States, exceeded Wall Street's expectations for first-quarter revenue and profit on Tuesday. This was due to?a recovery of infrastructure investments based on rates and favorable weather. U.S. utilities are pushing to raise customer electricity rates in 2026 to 'pay for infrastructure improvements.' Power grids are being strained due to extreme weather, increasing demand from data centers and electrification. Duke said in its most recent earnings call to investors that it has signed agreements with electric companies for 7,6 gigawatts of data center demand since 2024. The majority of these projects are currently under construction. In the quarter ended March 31, 2.7 GW worth of these data center projects was added. Duke executives stated that the company is in advanced talks on?another 15.4 GW data centers. One GW of electricity is enough to power approximately 750,000 U.S. homes.

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

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

The natural gas unit of the company, which services 1.6 million customers across North Carolina, South Carolina Tennessee, Ohio, and Kentucky, reported a quarterly profit in excess of $532 millions, up from $349 million just a year earlier.

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

This segment of the market, which has 7.9 million customers in North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, owns a collective 51,000 megawatts?of energy capacity.

The company based in Charlotte, North Carolina posted an adjusted profit per share of $1.93 for the three-month period ended March 31 compared to estimates of $1.87. Duke Energy asked North Carolina regulators for approval in?April to increase?rates. This was to recover more than $800,000,000 of higher purchase costs during a severe winter cold snap.

The company said it aimed to recover approximately $500 million at Duke Energy Carolinas, and $309 millions?at Duke Energy Progress. If approved, the changes would result in an increase of approximately $6.90 and $8.88 on average for monthly bills, respectively, beginning June 1. Varun Sahay reported from Bengaluru, and Laila Kearney from New York. Shreya Biwas and Joe Bavier edited the article.

(source: Reuters)