NASDAQ:CEG Constellation Energy Q1 2025 Earnings Report $292.40 -1.62 (-0.55%) As of 05/20/2025 04:00 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Constellation Energy EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.14Consensus EPS $2.03Beat/MissBeat by +$0.11One Year Ago EPS$2.78Constellation Energy Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$6.79 billionExpected Revenue$5.24 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$1.55 billionYoY Revenue Growth+10.20%Constellation Energy Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date5/6/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, May 6, 2025Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsConstellation Energy's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, August 5, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 10:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Constellation Energy Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 6, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Constellation Energy Corporation First Quarter Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session and instructions will follow at that time. As a reminder, this call may be recorded. I would now like to introduce your host for today's call, Emily Duncan, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic Initiatives. Operator00:00:27You may begin. Emily DuncanSenior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic Initiatives at Constellation Energy00:00:28Thank you, Towanda. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining Constellation Energy Corporation's first quarter earnings conference call. Leading the call today are Joe Dominguez, Constellation's President and Chief Executive Officer and Dan Eggers, Constellation's Chief Financial Officer. They are joined by other members of Constellation's senior management team who will be available to answer your questions following our prepared remarks. We issued our earnings release this morning along with the presentation, all of which can be found in the Investor Relations section of Constellation's website. Emily DuncanSenior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic Initiatives at Constellation Energy00:01:01The earnings release and other matters which we will discuss during today's call contain forward looking statements and estimates regarding Constellation and its subsidiaries that are subject to various risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ from our forward looking statements based on factors and assumptions discussed in today's materials and comments made during this call. Please refer to today's eight ks and Constellation's other SEC filings for discussions of risk factors and other circumstances and considerations that may cause results to differ from management's projections, forecasts, and expectations. Today's presentation also includes references to adjusted operating earnings and other non GAAP measures. Please refer to the information contained in the appendix of our presentation and our earnings release for reconciliations between the non GAAP measures and the nearest equivalent GAAP measures. Emily DuncanSenior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic Initiatives at Constellation Energy00:01:55I'll now turn the call over to Joe Dominguez. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:01:58Thanks, Emily. First of all, let me thank Tawanda for getting started. You know, in our three short years, we've had a couple occasions where the bridge call failed. So Tawanda, stay on your toes. Hopefully, we won't need you. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:02:11Morning, everyone. Let me first thank the incredible team here Constellation for getting us off to a strong operational and financial start. We are exactly where we want to be through the first quarter and we will meet our commitments this year. We delivered GAAP earnings of $0.38 per share and adjusted operating earnings of $2.14 per share. As usual, Dan will walk you through the details in his section. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:02:39I want to spend some time providing some higher level thoughts on what we're seeing in the market and what it means for Constellation's data economy strategy. The short story here is that we're seeing a very, very favorable environment. The business updates from the big tech companies where they've essentially doubled down on their capital and growth strategies reinforces Constellation's overall strategic plan, the importance of America's nuclear energy to meet the coming demand and the strong logic of the Calpine acquisition. While we think there are some out there who overstated the amount of new demand for their own reasons, we're confident that the demand could be met and that the markets will respond with demand response and new generation as needed. But importantly, even a more rational view of new demand will give us ample opportunity to support both in front of and behind the meter data center development at significant scale. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:03:43And as we look at both the cost of new entry as well as the amount of time it takes to bring new power generation on, we believe that the options for clean and reliable energy from our assets will be a compelling and durable strategic advantage for decades. This opportunity in turn will allow us to make needed investments in clean and reliable nuclear energy so that we can relicense and keep running these one of a kind assets through 02/1960 and beyond for America. Now in summary, here's what we're seeing in the marketplace. First, the business updates from the tech companies are telling us that Americans are putting AI technology to work in their businesses and in their lives. AI technology makes businesses stronger and helps them offer better products and services. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:04:38We're seeing that right here at Constellation. For families, it helps them manage their daily lives and educate their children. We see our data economy customers maintaining and often expanding their needs to build new data centers to provide these products and services to customers. Now it's our job as an energy industry to provide the necessary power, and that is precisely what Constellation will make happen. In fact, we're making tremendous progress today toward reaching agreements with our customers, which I'll describe a little bit more in a moment. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:05:15The second dynamic we're seeing is that it's clear that the cost of new entry, whether that be for combined cycle machines or solar with storage has gone up substantially as has the time to build and site these assets. Now at the end of the day, in a tightening market, we compete with the cost of new entry as market new entry prices converge. And we believe our offerings for clean and reliable generation are far more attractive from a time and pricing standpoint than any competing option, whether that's used to support on grid data center development or behind the meter development. Locating AI facilities proximate to large, clean and reliable power plants continues to make all the sense in the world. But critically, we do not need to have load co located or behind the meter for us to achieve compelling pricing. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:06:13To be perfectly candid, we weren't sure about that at the beginning of this strategic effort. Initially, we were somewhat concerned that fair pricing might only be available in behind the meter transactions structured like the Talend deal. But we are now convinced that we could achieve fair pricing at levels consistent with our owner's expectations regardless of whether a client chooses to be in front of the meter or behind it, whether a client chooses to be near our plant or in a remote area. We demonstrated that when we achieved the Crane Clean Energy Center restart. We demonstrated that when we achieved the Landmark GSA transaction that we announced in January and we've demonstrated that time and again with CFE deals. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:07:03And we certainly see further evidence in the deals we're working on now. On grid sales are increasingly attractive to us and to our customers for other reasons too. The behind the meter approach depends on the cooperation of the local utility, where our assets are part of the grid, and their willingness to facilitate studies and collaborate. Now it's been no secret that hasn't happened easily and the regulatory process is presently tied up at FERC where the industry desperately needs some clarity. But I will tell you there have been some benefits from the controversy over colocation. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:07:43It's caused utilities to speed up the interconnection process because they came to understand that the studies were taking far too long. We want to take a moment to applaud the efforts of utilities to move more quickly and we thank them. One of the benefits of on grid sales for us is that we could work with utilities anywhere in the RTO. We could partner where it makes most sense and where they could bring these grid resources online as quickly as possible. This eliminates the need for extensive regulatory processes, eliminates the complexity around behind the meter colocation, and it simply treats these customers like we've been treating all of our retail customers for decades. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:08:31I do wanna make clear that we still believe that behind the meter configurations will make sense for some customers, and we continue to get inbound in that area. It may be the case at the end of the day the day that the largest and perhaps the most important data centers from a national security standpoint will involve grid configurations where part of the data center operates behind the grid and part of it operates in front of the meter. President Trump highlighted a configuration like that recently in one of his remarks. We urge FERC to provide clarity on the rules for behind the meter configurations and to provide latitude so that there could be innovation here following the President's lead. The third thing we're seeing is that the encouraging data center growth updates and the cost of new entry all reinforce the strong logic of what we did with Calpine in that deal. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:09:31As I'll discuss, that deal looks better to us every day. We acquired Calpine because it was an awesome company run by terrific people. The combination of Constellation and Calpine people and assets will create new capabilities for our customers, large and small across America. But as we discussed, we were also mindful of value when we negotiated that Calpine deal. And if you now consider the cost of new combined cycle machines that Constellation, NextEra and many others have reported, one can easily make the argument that Calpine was worth twice as much as what we paid for. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:10:17Now of course you might challenge me and say that the comparison of new CCGTs to the Calpine fleet does not completely square. You can say that the Calpine assets aren't brand new and I'd have to agree with that, that is true. But you might also agree that unlike hypothetical new assets that face an uncertain world of interconnection queues, tariffs, supply chain issues and delivery dates that are sometimes years away, having a fleet of new plants that are up and running exceptionally well with a good team running them might offset a couple of years of age. Anyway, we love the deal. On the other hand, we don't so much love the equity volatility that our owners have experienced this quarter, but so much of that is driven by macroeconomic factors that we cannot control. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:11:10In our opinion, our stock price does not reflect the full value of the particular opportunities we have here. The double digit base earnings growth through the end of the decade or the prospect of securing additional above the PTC pricing deals. As you can see from the disclosures, we have about $1,000,000,000 left in our buyback authorization from the board. I'll tell you, we would have loved to have been in the market buying at these prices during the quarter, but as you've seen before, there are times where we have been unable to be in the market due to possessing material non public information. We do look forward to sharing great news with you soon and resuming our buyback program at these compelling stock price levels. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:12:08Turning to slide six, at the beginning of the call, I started with the big picture narrative we're seeing today. I now want to dig in a little bit. On slide six, we see the demand from data centers is coming and that The US will rise to meet this challenge. The Trump administration has made clear that The US must win the AI race and the administration is taking steps to ensure that we will. They understand that the data economy is critically important to national security and to our economies and will be an important driver of America's success. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:12:42I can tell you that I've been in Washington a lot and I haven't had a single conversation with anyone from the administration or any member of congress where the importance of AI leadership has not come up. And notwithstanding news and rumors to the contrary, that we've seen, the major tech companies get it too. And they've increased or recommitted to their capital plans for data center build out. They are making these investments because AI is delivering for customers, and you could see it in their business results. Businesses and families are looking at the possibility of what AI could do for them. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:13:21You know, we have a number of projects here at Constellation where we're utilizing AI, and I could tell you the tools are marvelously effective. They're gonna change operations at plants, gonna change our relationship with customers, we are gonna discover new ways to do things that are gonna bring enormous value to our customers and to our owners. We're a microcosm of the demand that is coming, there's just no doubt about that. And I've said this before, while the demand is strong, we have to be a bit cautious here that there are some claims that are a bit outsized in terms of the extent or amount of that demand. Claims that are difficult to substantiate either mathematically or logically. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:14:10And that's why we put slide seven in here. As I said, electric demand will be big for our industry, no doubt about that. But to be fair, some of the hyperbole about the size of the growth is coming from stakeholders who have their own motivations, including a desire to keep building out the wire system or competitive market utilities that simply want the right or permission to go back and build generation in a competitive market. We've been seeing that in a few places. But we also see policymakers becoming skeptical about these claims. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:14:48That skepticism is warranted in our view. We know from conversations from our customers and end users that the same data center need is being considered in multiple jurisdictions across The United States at the same time. Just like fishing. If you've ever been a fisherman, you put a bunch of lines in the water to try to catch fish. And the data center developers are doing exactly the same thing. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:15:14So sometimes the same project is showing up in multiple queues simultaneously. Same thing happens with renewable development, where we see these massive queues, but we know through experience that a fraction of what is in the queue gets built. I'll give you a few examples. In ERCOT, the large load interconnection queue grows from 20 gigawatts in 2025 to more than 100 gigawatts by 02/1930, a more than five fold increase. Looking at the chart on the left, you could see the comparison of MISO, PJM and ERCOT forecast for load compared to forecast on national load growth. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:15:59These three ISOs account for less than half of the total U. S. Power demand, but they alone are projecting demand growth notably higher than a wide range of consultants for the entirety of The U. S. It's hard not to conclude that the headlines are inflated. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:16:15In fact, we've done the math, and if NVIDIA were able to double its output and every single chip went to ERCOT, it still wouldn't be enough chips to support some of the load forecasts in ERCOT. There's been a history of over forecasting. We've seen this before with electric vehicles. We've seen it before with the Internet. And utilities have historically overestimated their load forecasts. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:16:43The Rocky Mountain Institute, for example, recently put out a study based on FERC data and determined that in the last ten years, utilities have overstated long term demand forecast by 23% on average compared to what actually happened. We get it. Utilities have to plan to ensure that the system is reliable. But when I listened to some of the comments on these calls, I just have to tell you folks, I think the load is being overstated. We need to pump the brakes here. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:17:16Moving to slide eight, in the early days of our data economy strategy, we heard concerns that the so called window for our strategic execution would eventually close because low cost new resources would be added to meet the data center load and that our existing resources would lose out to these opportunities. We've also heard that we would lose out because we weren't incremental. Let me deal with that last issue first. As a number of the data center companies have noted in their plans, relicensing nuclear plants is incremental. We've seen that in policy space. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:17:57Everyone gets it. We either include nuclear within the category of resources that participate in these sales or nuclear will fail to exist. But just focusing on costs of new generation, it's clear that we're in a whole new ballgame on cost. The estimates for new build CCGTs consistently exceed $2,000 with some estimates being closer to $3,000 a KW. And those are higher in certain locations in which we operate. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:18:32For context, this is about three times as much as we spent on Wolf Hollow and the Colorado Bend plants less than ten years ago. So 300% increase in less than ten years. And as I alluded to earlier, if we were to rebuild just the Alpine fleet, it would cost about $65,000,000,000 significantly higher for what we paid for the best operating natural gas fleet in the country. Solar is no exception to these increases. Solar plus storage is in a similar boat with costs now exceeding $2,500 per kw. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:19:12And that's even without the tariffs. If we estimate what the tariffs would do to CCGTs and solar plus storage, we could easily see costs going another $5 to $10 higher for CCGTs on a megawatt hour basis and another $30 to $50 higher for storage and solar put together. Important strategic point here is that Constellation's fleet ultimately will compete with these new entrants for the right to serve the growing needs of America. Early days of the discussion of the AI powered dynamic, and I got to tell you, I smile a little bit when I say early days. I mean, when we were talking about this last year. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:19:57We often described our competitive advantage at Constellation in terms of speed and reliability as compared to new renewables because renewables are not reliable. And we thought our competitive advantage over new natural gas in terms of speed and sustainability because gas met CO2. Implicit was this unspoken assumption that new power, either renewables or CCGTs, would be less expensive for hyperscalered customers as an alternative option to our plants. But that some we would be faster for new data centers and offer more reliability than renewables and more sustainability than gas. It turns out that we were just thinking about old cost data. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:20:42With the new cost data firming up, it's pretty clear that nuclear simply wins the match in every single dimension. Cost, reliability, predictability of firm prices for twenty years. What other resource could offer a twenty year fixed price? I can't do that with my gas machines. I can't do that with renewables. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:21:04The speed to execution, the sustainability value, the resilience value, the durability and policy support, all of that makes nuclear the clear winner. And folks, that's why I think people are wanting to contract with us and they don't care whether it's in front of the meter or behind the meter. Let me turn to slide nine. One of the reasons we know that the competitive market will respond to the growing demand is because it always has. We are seeing that in response to the expedited program that FERC and PJM approved for new dispatchable generation in PJM, pardon me. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:21:43And remember, a big product that historically was used to deal with peak hour demand was demand response. And we saw that go from 15 gigawatts of demand response in auctions that were held just a handful of years ago to four to six gigawatts of demand response in the recent auctions. We also know the reason that demand response didn't happen. It didn't happen because the capacity market was broken and prices were ridiculously low. But now FERC has fixed those capacity markets and we believe that demand response once again is gonna come back in the picture as early as this next auction. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:22:26Remember, our grid was built for peak usage at the hottest or coldest hours of the year, but in most hours, we dramatically underutilized the grid. The chart that you have here on slide nine is what we would call load dispatch diagram. It's pretty common diagram to everyone in the business. And the colored lines here are every one of the different RTOs. Let me explain how it works. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:22:53The x axis is a % of the hours of the year. So we take 8,760 of the year, and that's the x axis. The y axis is how many of the power plants or how much of the existing power gen are you using during those hours. And if you study this, what you quickly see here is that for the vast majority of time, we don't utilize the grid. In fact, 80% of the time or so, a third of the grid is not being used. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:23:27And that means we have plenty of room, most hours to accommodate new generation. The Nichols Institute at Duke did a pretty cool study on this just recently, and it's been in the news ever since. And it basically said this, that if we got customers to shave 25% at peak, we could add 76 gigawatts of new load. Right? 76 gigawatts of data center just by getting customers curtail 25% of the time. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:24:04So Doctor is an incredibly powerful tool to meet all of this data center demand. What it'll do is, it will utilize the slack in the system most hours and cover those peak hours where there is a gap. We're seeing our data economy customers also pitch in with new curtailment methodologies, just, I think it was just this week that we saw the EPA relax the rules on backup generation at data centers, so that backup generation could be co optimized for the grid and take the pressure off these key hours. The point is, there's a lot of tools out there, and we expect those tools to be used, And again, I think we'll see some of that here in this upcoming auction, it'll put some downward pressure on the strain that we've seen in the prior auction in my view. Now, let me turn to slide 10. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:25:05Constellation has some unique advantages that will ensure we're a large player in this space. We've talked about this. But again, we have existing megawatts that are available to deliver power now. We have clean and sustainable energy, which is going to be useful just now in this environment, but also in the future as concerns about climate continue to resurface. We could offer price certainty that is very different than any price certainty we could offer from any other resource. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:25:39We've talked about speed and we've talked about the ability to work anywhere with any customer, any part of the grid. We could bring additional megawatts to bear, whether that's restarting nuclear plants, life extensions, and of course, up rates the plants. After Calpine closes, we're gonna be able to provide this capability coast to coast. And finally, just as we look for partners, our investment grade credit rating is a huge competitive advantage, because it gives customers confidence that we will be there and stand behind our contracts in the long term. We're well positioned to create additional value for our owners through our role serving the data economy customers, and we're super excited about that. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:26:28Now, me close out with the Calpine transaction. It's been a few months since we announced the deal, so I wanna tell people what we've been up to. But remember, what we're building here is the largest fleet of clean and reliable zero and low carbon resources in the nation. We believe this will enable us to better serve families and businesses with new products and services at the best prices. And as we spend more time with the Calpine team and get to know them better, we're even more excited every day about the talent, the combination of talent and skill we're gonna have as a combined team. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:27:12We're making very good progress towards closing the deal and integrating the two companies. We have set up integration teams and we're doing the work to get ready to close this year. The teams are energized and we're looking forward to being one company and seeing what two very good companies could do when they aim to be great. On the regulatory front, we've made all the required filings at this point. We received a deficiency notice from FERC and a second request for data from the DOJ. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:27:44As you know, in large transactions, things like that should be anticipated. We filed our answer to the FERC deficiency notice on April 28, and we remain on track to close the transaction by the end of the year. Again, incredibly excited for that. With that, let me flip it over to Dan. Dan will cover the financials and then again, I'll talk to you a little bit more and we'll get to your questions. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:28:08Go ahead, Dan. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:28:08Thanks, Joe. Good morning, everyone. Beginning on Page 12, we are in $0.38 per share in GAAP earnings and $2.14 per share in adjusted operating earnings for the first quarter, which was $0.32 per share higher than last year. We have seen strong performance from our commercial business over the last several years, and the start of this year continues that trend. The team did a great job positioning our portfolio in a colder than average winter, captured value from serving more load versus the first quarter of twenty twenty four and managing market prices. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:28:41During the quarter, we locked in margins that exceed our ten year average, supporting 2025 and benefiting future backlog. As expected, we also realized higher prices for the Illinois ZEC and CMC programs when compared to the first quarter of twenty twenty four, partially offset by lower nuclear PTCs recognized during the quarter. We continue to see this means tested PTC program working as intended. As you know, the PTC is determined on an annual basis and each quarter is booked based on actual revenues plus forwards for the remainder of the year. As of March 31, we anticipate that gross receipts for the full year will be above the PTC floor across our entire fleet, whereas at the start of the year, part of the fleet was projected to collect some PTCs. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:29:34This full year expectation of higher prices resulted in us not booking PTC revenues in the first quarter, whereas we did book some in the first quarter last year. While this is a good outcome on a full year basis, it can create noise in quarterly results and impacts the year over year comparability. We are happy with the start of our 2025 in context of our plan and are reaffirming our full year operating EPS guidance range of $8.9 to $9.6 per share. Now moving on to our first quarter operational performance on Slide 11. Nuclear performance was strong. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:30:13We produced more than 41,000,000 megawatt hours of reliable, available and emissions free generation from our nuclear plants with a capacity factor of 94.1%. The team continues to deliver industry leading refueling outage performance. We completed three refueling outages during the quarter, averaging twenty four days compared to the industry average of nearly forty days. Our renewables and natural gas fleet also performed well with 96.2% renewable energy capture and 99.2% power dispatch match. As you know, Constellation continues to do our part to bring clean, reliable, firm megawatts to the grid. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:30:58Last Friday, PJM announced that more than eleven fifty new nuclear megawatts, including the Crane Clean Energy Center and other constellation nuclear upgrades, were chosen for the accelerated interconnection process. We are pleased that PJM recognized the importance of getting these projects on the grid quickly, and I wanna thank our team for advocating for this important change. And on Crane, we are pleased with the progress we are making. Our re staffing is going more quickly than expected. We are getting multiple superb candidates applying for each position. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:31:34To date, we have already over half of the roughly 600 permitted employees we will need to run the plant and the majority of them have been working at the site. I am happy to share our first operator class is underway with the second one on course to start this fall. As the days pass and we address long lead time items like the PJM interconnect and staff training, we are confident that we will meet and potentially beat our targets for both total cost and time to bring this plant back online. Turning to Slide 14, our commercial team is off to another strong start this year, creating value by optimizing our portfolio and locking in higher than average margins, which are benefiting from continued market volatility as well as sales of value added products around the clean attributes of our nuclear plants. Our renewal rates remain strong with both electric and gas customers, reflecting the durable relationships we have with our customers. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:32:36Turning to Slide 15, it's understandable there is a lot of focus in the market right now on the risk of a recession and concern about how power producers may fare in such an environment. Before I offer our perspective, let me start by noting that each recession is unique and carries its own impact on power demand in terms of duration and magnitude. More recent recessions have temporarily impacted power demand by 1% to 4%, although the year over year data is also complicated by weather, which is more complicated to normalize on a national basis. Generally, we have seen a strong bounce back in power demand on the other side of recession. In today's environment, we view a temporary slowdown in the economy and lower power demand as likely being offset by the very real demand growth we are seeing across the nation, considering the impacts of ongoing electrification, onshoring of manufacturing and demand associated with the build out of the data economy, we see counterbalances to any temporary slowdown or reduced power demand from other parts of the economy. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:33:42The biggest risk to our business in a recessionary environment has been the power price. Fortunately, compared to last recessions, we now have the Nuclear PTC which provides downside protection from a drop in commodity prices due to a recession. As you know, the Nuclear PTC Credit is means tested to ensure the continued operation of these critical power resources when prices are depressed while not compensating them in higher price environments. We've also looked at other major potential risks associated with a recession, including lower retail volumes, bad debt, as well as debt refinancing, and we are confident in our ability to manage these collective headwinds with limited financial drag for our owners if the recession were to occur. Constellation remains in strong financial health, especially when you think about our investment grade balance sheet, ample liquidity and cash flows supported by the nuclear PTCs as well as existing forward customer sales. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:34:42Before moving on, I also want to comment briefly on the current tariff environment. While the ultimate impact will depend upon trade policy that goes into effect after this ninety day pause and anticipated negotiations, we estimate a negligible impact on O and M and roughly a 1% to 2% impact on our CapEx, including fuel, for 2025 and 2026. We will continue to monitor and mitigate the impacts to both costs and our supply chain. Finally, turning to slide 16, I want to spend a little more time on the PTC now that it has been in place for a year and we are seeing some updates to key inputs, reminding us of the inflationary protections it provides. As a reminder, we have assumed that the PTC floor and actual credit grow at a 2% inflation adjustment as part of our base earnings forecast. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:35:36So if the adjustment was more than 2%, our base earnings would increase. While the official rate used in the calculation is not yet published, we estimate the inflation adjustment for 2025 to be between 2.32.6%. With the 2025 inflation adjustment in this range and then returning to our 2% assumption for 2026 and beyond, we will see an earlier step up in prices that adds an incremental $500,000,000 in revenues to base earnings for 2028. This adjustment both demonstrates the benefits of the nuclear PTC in providing economic visibility for the nuclear industry and reinforces the unique benefit of an inflation hedge in our business model compared to most other companies in the market. With that, I'll thank you all and turn the call back to Joe. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:36:28Thanks, Dan. Among Dan's many talents is his ability to multitask. So while reading the script, also wrote to me a note giving me a correction. I think I said 25% on the Duke study met 0.25%, but the study, again, remind you demonstrates with quite modest demand response at levels that we've easily achieved in the past, we could accommodate all new load on the system from the data economy using that tool. When we think about the backup, reciprocating engines at the sites, and then we see the new generation that the competitive market will bring as needed, we see no reasonable concern in that area. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:37:14So just to recap here, we're off the fantastic start. We're exactly where we wanna be. We're focused on closing Calpine and integrating the business. We like that combination more and more each day. We have a business here that is very different, very unique, and stronger than we think anything else that is out there in the industry. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:37:37We produce robust cash flow and base earnings, which are protected by nuclear b t VTC, a a tax credit that has significant bipartisan support. Our earnings grow at 13% through the decade, and any long term deal we do from here on will be additive to that base earnings growth. I think we have demonstrated a track record of continuing to improve earnings and to surprise you from time to time with things like Crane, Calpine and the GSA. Calpine will add at least $2 in EPS and $2,000,000,000 of free cash flow before growth starting next year. And not only does the PTC provide protection to the nuclear fleet, but we're beneficiaries of higher inflation through higher PTC floors, and Dan just covered that. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:38:28So we're poised to build on the foundation by capturing value from the opportunities that we see in the data economy and in the overall economy as load continues to grow and industries are onshore. Our existing fleet is vital to America. We understand that. We're gonna continue to make investments in making that fleet better, longer lived, increase the output. But, we're in a position right now to meet the demands of the time and to support America at this critical point. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:39:01I gotta tell you, I couldn't be prouder of the team we have here. With that, we'll close down our prepared remarks and take your questions. Operator00:39:10Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan Securities. Your line is open. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:39:35Good morning, Jeremy. Jeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase00:39:37Hi, good morning. Thank you for all the details this morning, especially the behind the meter, front the meter and potential combinations thereof. And just wondering if you could pick up on some of the details in the slides here. If you could provide more details on the progress towards long term customer agreements as you talked about in the slides a bit there. Are you seeing incremental customer comfort around structures kind of independent of FERC clarity at this point? Jeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase00:40:02Or do we still need policy clarity here to get deals inked? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:40:07Jeremy, I think policy clarity would be welcome. But look, I think like anyone else, when they're trying to grow and they run into a delay or roadblock, people start figuring out ways around it. And I've indicated on earlier calls that I think some sharing of the cost made a lot of sense. I've talked about that with regard to ancillary services. And I think I indicated quite clearly that I didn't think our customers were so price sensitive that they wanted to try to avoid all costs. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:40:41They've always been willing to cover fair costs. So that's not been the issue. The issue has been speed at different times and location. So the utilities have sped up interconnection process. We see utilities out there leaning into it, and our customers have too. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:41:00So they're going to those utilities. If they could get into in it interconnected, then they're looking to us to provide the power wherever they might be on the grid for those applications. So it's not like they've grown disinterested in behind the meter, they still wanna see that as an option. If you think about every single data center that exists today, that's a perfect illustration of what I'm talking about with some combination of behind the meter and in front of the meter. They get a lot of their power in front of the meter, but at certain times they use the backup generation at the site, which is effectively behind the meter generation. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:41:38This is not anything new. We've been doing it in the industry since the 1980s with cogen, But for right now, given the uncertainty, our customers pivoted and they said, okay, Constellation, let's go on grid. Let's do what you're doing with GSA. Let's do what you're doing with crane, and let's see if we could make something happen with utilities that are inclined to move studies quickly. That's exactly what we've done. Jeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase00:42:03Got it. That's helpful. Thank you. And then just kind of rounding out here, what is the expected path and timing to resolve the FERC two zero six proceeding here? And how do you think about settlement at this juncture? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:42:15Look, we think there's enough information right now in the FERC docket. There's enough robust information for the FERC to provide clarity. I'll flip it over to David for the process, but although we did ask for a settlement process, as it turns out, what we've seen in the docket should be sufficient for them to make a final decision on this. And they should look. When you've got the president of The United States basically saying the grid is too slow, too antiquated, that that should be a kick in the pants to everybody in this business to get their act together and figure out rules of the road so that we're not having any uncertainty around what could be the most important technology of our lifetime, not only for our economy, but for our national security. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:43:03I'll give David a moment here to talk a little bit about the process going forward. David DardisExecutive VP & Chief Legal and Policy Officer at Constellation Energy00:43:08Yeah, sure. So the vast majority of the parties in the proceeding, which is quite notable, have argued to FERC and made a case to FERC that the existing PJM tariff is not just and reasonable and needs to be amended to create the clarity and speed that Joe's been talking about. And while we said we would support a quick settlement process, we also would welcome FERC to call balls and strikes very quickly on the merits of the case pending before it. In either case, speed and clarity together are quite important. And we think that whether it's a settlement under a fast track proceeding to let the parties see if they can work it out or whether or not the commission directs PJM to amend its tariff to address the gap in some of these rules, we think all of that can be done in really a handful of months and should be done in a handful of months. David DardisExecutive VP & Chief Legal and Policy Officer at Constellation Energy00:43:58So there's a path forward under either approach. And as Joe said, we think the record is quite clear for establishing the rules to allow these critically important loads and customers to get on the system as quickly as possible. Jeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase00:44:14Got it. Speed would be great. No one likes the regulatory sausage making. Thank you. Operator00:44:20Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Steve Fleishman with Wolfe. Your line is open. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:44:30Good morning, Steve. Steve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLC00:44:31Yes. Hey, good morning. Hi. Just first, a couple of questions on the potential new power agreements. I guess, first of all, any sense on whether the pricing we've seen is an indicator of pricing? Steve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLC00:44:48And I assume transmission in front of the meter would be paid by the customer, not by you? And then lastly, just it sounds like when you talk about you're talking about basically selling even beyond kind of the local utility where the in zones beyond the local utility where the plants are. So can you just clarify that commentary and your ability to do that? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:45:20Yes, sure. I mean, the last one, Steve, we've been doing for twenty years, right? We sell to customers everywhere in PJM. We have national accounts with customers where we supply all of their businesses in a variety of areas. As you saw, for example, I'll give you a great example of this. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:45:39When saw us do the Crane Clean Energy Center restart, you know there's no data center right there in Pennsylvania. So Microsoft was quite clear they were using that power in multiple states, And one of the strengths of our commercial team is being able to move power around the system. Again, is nothing new. We've been doing it for twenty years. And because of our geographic reach, especially in areas like PJM where we have a lot of West Hub, lot of NiHub power, could kind of fill in the blanks in all different places. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:46:13So that allows us really to work with the utility that has got the most advanced projects. And when I said before that we see the same project in multiple utilities plans, it's really because we have visibility in understanding where the client may want to use the power, and that's how we understand that we have a lot of duplicates going on in the system. In terms of your first question about level of pricing, look, we're gonna have to be careful here. Our clients are pretty clear with us about two things. They don't want for their own reasons to reveal pricing, and they don't necessarily want to reveal all of the locations in which they intend to do business, because this would be tantamount to sharing with their competitors what they believe to be competitively sensitive information. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:47:06We likewise have a concern about putting pricing data out there, which inhibits our ability to negotiate the best terms on future deals. So look, I'm trying to hint at in the script is, you've seen the talent pricing, you've seen what we're talking about in terms of cost of new entry. We think our pricing should be consistent with those levels. And beyond that, I'm not I'm just simply not gonna say. As to wires charges and who bears those costs, your assumption is a % on that. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:47:42That's not a cost that we bear in any relationships with our customers today nor will we in the future. Steve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLC00:47:51Thank you. One other question just on the IRA and nuclear. So obviously, we have the reconciliation process. And one of the issues that's come up is transferability and how to you know, whether they they keep transferability. I know one of the laws allowed it still for nuclear, but in the event it wasn't allowed going forward, what would that mean, if at all, for you monetizing credits? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:48:21We see that as a de minimis impact to us because, in particular, post Calpine, we have plenty of tax capacity. So it's it's I I know it is for others not a big hot issue for us. I but you did raise the IRA, and you did note the strong support for nuclear. In the most recent letter, we saw 26 congressmen come out in support of the continuation of the 45U credit for existing nuclear, as well as 45 y to expand and relicings existing nuclear. That's 26 congressmen. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:49:04You put that together with the earlier letter, and there was just not a complete duplication of signatures. There were 12 additional members in that early earlier letter supporting the tax credits that were not included in this last letter that had 26 members. So all told, we have 38 members of congress, Republican members of congress supporting the tax credit. That makes sense because if you remember, the tax credit was actually created by Republicans. These were Republican ideas for the nuclear tax credit. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:49:40And even in the bill by senator Kramer and congresswoman Fedorchak, we're seeing the same thing, a recognition that it's important to keep the nuclear plants alive. And so I'm not seeing anything impacting transferability or frankly nuclear being discussed. And I am spending a lot of time on the hill to make sure I got my ear to the ground on anything that might happen. So we're very pleased with the support. The reconciliation process will no doubt be bumpy, and we'll see some ups and downs and twists and turns. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:50:15But I think we're as well positioned as anyone. Dan, do you have any other thoughts on Yeah. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:50:21Mean, just for clarity, Steve, when we look at the forwards where they are today, we do not, a, need to transfer any credits. And we actually might be with our tax position looking to buy other people's credits if they came available at a discount. So, we feel comfortable with the fours where they are today. Steve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLC00:50:39Thank you. Operator00:50:42Thank you. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:50:42Thanks, Steve. Operator00:50:44Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of David O'Carroll with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:50:52Good morning, David. Thanks so much. Good morning. Know, on behind the meter and I appreciate all your comments here on front of the meter, behind the meter. I guess just maybe drilling into the behind the meter opportunity, is that diminishing here? David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:51:08Are you seeing those conversations shift and kind of move over to front of the meter? Or do you still have a significant level of interest kind of waiting for FERC clarity that might open up that path? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:51:21Yeah, David, I'll just say, think these folks wanna get on with the show and start construction. And so with the current situation around behind the meter and no one knowing exactly when we're gonna have the necessary clarity, The discussions are in front of the meter with the utilities and with the customers. The logic behind the meter, in particular for these massive training data centers of the kind like the president was talking about in Texas, in my view, are still going to need behind the meter support. Because you're not gonna accumulate four and five gigawatts of power on the grid. Just not gonna happen. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:52:10So you're gonna see things, I think, in the fullness of time that are gonna have front of the meter connections, but you might actually supplement and build more power plants at the same site that'll never touch the grid, and they'll be behind the meter. And that's why I Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:52:26was Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:52:26saying, this is more in the category of brainstorming, but it's important that FERC not constrain innovation for cogeneration and co location. Imagine had we done that in the 1980s and said, we're not gonna consider. Imagine how much cogen we would have lost in this country. So we're gonna see some combinations, combinations that frankly we're not aware of here. But right now the conversation is where there is clarity. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:52:58And where there is clarity is front of the meter. And because we go anywhere in the RTO, that suits us just fine. David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:53:08Got it. Great. Yeah, that's really helpful color. Then maybe I was curious if you could synthesize some of your thoughts on just the demand outlook for data centers, the supply outlook as you've noted is challenging, then considering demand response, kind of what is your view on power prices from here looking at the market? A number of parties have gotten concerned about affordability as an example. David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:53:34So how do you kind of that fear, but also your underlying views of the fundamentals of the market here? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:53:42Yeah, David, when I think about affordability, if I were to flash any chart back up on the screen, it would be that load dispatch curve. Because whether you're talking about affordability, reliability issues, when emissions concern actually occur in bulk, you're really talking about those peak hours in the system. You're not talking about days like today, right? There's no issue. You're talking about those peak events. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:54:13So having the tools available to manage those peak events, whether it's allowing the backup gen at the data centers be a grid resource during those events. I think that's a fantastic idea. We were very supportive of where EPA went. The Flex program that EPRI has spearheaded with the data economy customers, been deeply involved with. That's made huge progress in terms of the hyperscalers managing those events. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:54:42And then demand response, which simply means the hyperscalers are gonna pay a little dough in addition to what the capacity market might yield to get other industrial and commercial customers to back off in critical hours. If we're able to do that, then we're gonna manage the capacity market pressures on Bill, We're gonna manage some of the higher costs on bills, right? And we're gonna manage at the same time some of the emissions issues that drive climate and other considerations. That's why we focus on that. There's a tendency, I think, from lay people to look at this as we need energy at all times on the grid. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:55:23These charts should tell you that's absolutely not true. Most of the time, we have an abundance of energy. So I think that's part of managing the story. You want to put off to the extent possible unnecessary investments in generation. So I think I'm a little bit of an outlier here, but as I see the world, the next five, six, seven years ought to be quite manageable, and I think storage is gonna be a part of this answer. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:55:53What I worry about is the period after that. What happens ten, fifteen years down the road? What happens if we then come back and we think about things like climate differently than the administration presently is thinking about them today? What happens if we have climate events that bring that all back? And I think the answer that we offer and that we've encouraged to the administration is, let's spend some money on research and development, so that if we do build gas machines, they don't become stranded in an environment where climate becomes a major consideration. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:56:30We continue to invest in sequestration and other technologies. So I think, look, that's the way we're gonna have to manage the cost. But the biggest and best thing we could do is not overreact and start building things that are unnecessary. And frankly, with a lot of the hyperbole in the system, I think it's aimed at exactly doing the wrong thing. David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:56:52Got it. Thanks so much. Appreciate your viewpoints. Operator00:56:55Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Paul Zimbardo with Jefferies. Your line is open. Paul ZimbardoManaging Director at Jefferies00:57:05Good morning, Paul. Hi, good morning. Thanks for squeezing me in. Just from your comment about having an NPI and the emphasis on not waiting for clarity, is it a fair expectation that kind of you're pretty close to a deal and maybe within the next quarter or kind of not to read too much into that commentary and it's sometime later this year? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:57:29Well, I'm not I just I don't want to touch that because we're at a very good stage in the process. I'll simply put it that way. And the deals will get announced when they're ready to rock and roll. And that's as far as we decided we're going to go on this call. Paul ZimbardoManaging Director at Jefferies00:57:52Okay, fair. Then when you mentioned kind of a need to have a good partnership with the regulated utility, what's the timeline for some of the interconnection studies with your local PGM utilities? Just how have the discussions with utility evolved holistically over the past few months? Thank you. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:58:10Well, they've they've some, you know, it's still a little bit all over the board, but some of them, are getting done here in what you know, I I could see six months, seven months of time. And if you consider that, some of the customers that we're talking to have started that interconnection process even before our conversations have matured into a level. It's not it doesn't seem to be the constraint at this point. So look, wanna test it some more, but I think months instead of years is probably a good answer at this point. And the utilities, again, I give them a lot of credit. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:58:56And I'm seeing this with all the utilities, even ones that we haven't had agreements with in the past. Everyone seems to be wanting to get these studies done and get this load connected. And that makes all the sense in the world to us, and we'll work with them as best we can. Paul ZimbardoManaging Director at Jefferies00:59:12Thank you. Operator00:59:14Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Angie Storozynski with Seaport. Your line is open. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:24Thank you. So I have a Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:26question Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:26about recent demand from data centers for power. So it seems like we've, at least listening to the hyperscalers, there's been a shift away from training facilities more to inference. And so it seems like location matters again. So do you actually see that there's more demand for some of Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:50your Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:50assets closer to load centers and sort of smaller in size? And again, I don't care if it's front or back of the meter, but has there been a shift in what hyperscalers are looking for? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:00:05No, Angie, I wouldn't say that. I think I may have this wrong, but my recollection of the statistics is that about 85% of the expected load was always going to come from inference data centers. So you're going to see the lion's share is going to be inference data centers. But even those data centers are getting quite large relative to the size they were. I remember when they were five and ten megawatts, I thought, oh my god, that's huge. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:00:36Now we're talking 100 to 150 megawatts, even for these inference data centers. So to a certain extent, they're just getting bigger. And that means they have to go to where there's available power more so than the fiber concerns that I think were dominated when we were talking about smaller data centers that were more easy to connect. I think probably the bigger shift I've seen, Angie, and there's not enough data points to draw any firm conclusions is, I think there's been some rationalization that these super large data centers, 10 gigawatts, seven to 10 gigawatts that were talked about quite liberally at the beginning of the AI phase. I find people are speaking less about that and thinking about how to cobble together more still what we would think of as large, 500,000 megawatt data centers, and do some of the training. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:01:34But I think it continues to evolve. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners01:01:39Okay. Separately, just looking at forward power curves, especially in Northern Illinois, there's been quite a dramatic pullback in those curves even post recent recovery. We have, it seems like a number of data centers shifted away from the state. And I'm wondering if you have a view why that is, is there any sort of a regulatory slash political backlash against large loads in the state? And and what's your view on long term power prices in Illinois? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:02:15No. I don't think so, Angie. I just think I think people are to go where they could connect the easiest. I don't see anything in particular with regard to Illinois necessarily or an opposition in Illinois that's driving folks. But, if you're a data center and you're thinking about Illinois, you probably are thinking about Iowa and Indiana and Michigan too. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:02:38It goes back, I think, to your first question. In the early days of the data economy world where we're seeing more modestly sized data centers, proximity to big, centers, big population centers was the thing. Now that's kind of moved away because I think power is the key element, and interconnection speed is the key element. So I think that just that just widens the aperture for our customers to look at multiple locations. I think there's just kind of another reality here too, that data centers were going where there were data centers to take advantage again of fiber and other things. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:03:19And certainly, we've seen a shift in appetite to be able to explore Pennsylvania as an example, whereas before there was relatively light activity in those areas. So I just think that the world has continued to shift, the geographies these customers are looking at has broadened. And again, for us, that's actually pretty good, because of the scale, the unique scale we have and our ability to reach all of these different places, including twenty years of experience in knowing how to move power around the system and accommodate clients like this, it should be right up our alley. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners01:04:02Very good. Thank you. Operator01:04:04Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, I would like to turn the call back over to Joe for closing remarks. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:04:12Well, thanks everybody for participating. Again, thanks. Just give another call out to the team here at Constellation. You make us all proud every single day. We've had a very good extensive discussion. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:04:25We look forward to the opportunity to provide additional updates on our business strategy. And with that, Tawanda, I'll close the call. Operator01:04:32Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesEmily DuncanSenior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic InitiativesJoseph DominguezPresident , CEO & DirectorDaniel EggersEVP & CFODavid DardisExecutive VP & Chief Legal and Policy OfficerAnalystsJeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan ChaseSteve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLCDavid ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan StanleyPaul ZimbardoManaging Director at JefferiesAngie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research PartnersPowered by Key Takeaways Constellation reported GAAP earnings of $0.38 per share and adjusted operating earnings of $2.14 per share in Q1, and reaffirmed full-year guidance of $8.90–$9.60 per share. The company sees a “very favorable” data economy environment as AI-driven demand from hyperscale and enterprise data centers grows, and is securing both front-of-meter and behind-the-meter agreements to provide clean, reliable power. With the cost of new entry for combined-cycle and solar-plus-storage now exceeding $2,000–$2,500 per kW, Constellation’s existing nuclear and gas fleet offers faster delivery, long-term fixed pricing and sustainability advantages. The planned Calpine acquisition will create the nation’s largest fleet of low-carbon resources, is on track to close by year-end, and is expected to add at least $2.00 in EPS and $2 billion of free cash flow before growth next year. Regulatory developments—utilities accelerating interconnection studies and FERC’s pending 206 proceeding—and the nuclear Production Tax Credit provide downside price protection, an inflation hedge and broad bipartisan support for existing plants. A.I. generated. May contain errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallConstellation Energy Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipants Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Constellation Energy Earnings HeadlinesJim Cramer on Constellation Energy Corporation (CEG): ‘I’ve Been Recommending It Practically The Whole Way’May 16, 2025 | insidermonkey.comIs Constellation Energy (CEG) The Most Crowded Hedge Fund Stock That is Targeted by Short Sellers?May 13, 2025 | msn.comCollect $7k per month from Tesla’s SECRET dividendI just uncovered a strategy that could pay out up to $7,013 every month—without needing a traditional dividend. It’s a legal income shortcut tied to Tesla and other tech giants. This backdoor is already live—and it could change the way you earn.May 21, 2025 | Investors Alley (Ad)3 Brilliant Nuclear Stocks to Buy Now and Hold for the Long TermMay 11, 2025 | fool.comConstellation Energy Corporation (CEG): One of the Best Energy Stocks to Buy Right NowMay 10, 2025 | msn.comNew Long-Term Deals Boost Constellation EnergyMay 9, 2025 | forbes.comSee More Constellation Energy Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Constellation Energy? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Constellation Energy and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Constellation EnergyConstellation Energy (NASDAQ:CEG) generates and sells electricity in the United States. It operates through five segments: Mid-Atlantic, Midwest, New York, ERCOT, and Other Power Regions. The company sells natural gas, energy-related products, and sustainable solutions. It has approximately 33,094 megawatts of generating capacity consisting of nuclear, wind, solar, natural gas, and hydroelectric assets. It serves distribution utilities; municipalities; cooperatives; and commercial, industrial, governmental, and residential customers. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Constellation Energy Corporation First Quarter Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session and instructions will follow at that time. As a reminder, this call may be recorded. I would now like to introduce your host for today's call, Emily Duncan, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic Initiatives. Operator00:00:27You may begin. Emily DuncanSenior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic Initiatives at Constellation Energy00:00:28Thank you, Towanda. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining Constellation Energy Corporation's first quarter earnings conference call. Leading the call today are Joe Dominguez, Constellation's President and Chief Executive Officer and Dan Eggers, Constellation's Chief Financial Officer. They are joined by other members of Constellation's senior management team who will be available to answer your questions following our prepared remarks. We issued our earnings release this morning along with the presentation, all of which can be found in the Investor Relations section of Constellation's website. Emily DuncanSenior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic Initiatives at Constellation Energy00:01:01The earnings release and other matters which we will discuss during today's call contain forward looking statements and estimates regarding Constellation and its subsidiaries that are subject to various risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ from our forward looking statements based on factors and assumptions discussed in today's materials and comments made during this call. Please refer to today's eight ks and Constellation's other SEC filings for discussions of risk factors and other circumstances and considerations that may cause results to differ from management's projections, forecasts, and expectations. Today's presentation also includes references to adjusted operating earnings and other non GAAP measures. Please refer to the information contained in the appendix of our presentation and our earnings release for reconciliations between the non GAAP measures and the nearest equivalent GAAP measures. Emily DuncanSenior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic Initiatives at Constellation Energy00:01:55I'll now turn the call over to Joe Dominguez. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:01:58Thanks, Emily. First of all, let me thank Tawanda for getting started. You know, in our three short years, we've had a couple occasions where the bridge call failed. So Tawanda, stay on your toes. Hopefully, we won't need you. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:02:11Morning, everyone. Let me first thank the incredible team here Constellation for getting us off to a strong operational and financial start. We are exactly where we want to be through the first quarter and we will meet our commitments this year. We delivered GAAP earnings of $0.38 per share and adjusted operating earnings of $2.14 per share. As usual, Dan will walk you through the details in his section. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:02:39I want to spend some time providing some higher level thoughts on what we're seeing in the market and what it means for Constellation's data economy strategy. The short story here is that we're seeing a very, very favorable environment. The business updates from the big tech companies where they've essentially doubled down on their capital and growth strategies reinforces Constellation's overall strategic plan, the importance of America's nuclear energy to meet the coming demand and the strong logic of the Calpine acquisition. While we think there are some out there who overstated the amount of new demand for their own reasons, we're confident that the demand could be met and that the markets will respond with demand response and new generation as needed. But importantly, even a more rational view of new demand will give us ample opportunity to support both in front of and behind the meter data center development at significant scale. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:03:43And as we look at both the cost of new entry as well as the amount of time it takes to bring new power generation on, we believe that the options for clean and reliable energy from our assets will be a compelling and durable strategic advantage for decades. This opportunity in turn will allow us to make needed investments in clean and reliable nuclear energy so that we can relicense and keep running these one of a kind assets through 02/1960 and beyond for America. Now in summary, here's what we're seeing in the marketplace. First, the business updates from the tech companies are telling us that Americans are putting AI technology to work in their businesses and in their lives. AI technology makes businesses stronger and helps them offer better products and services. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:04:38We're seeing that right here at Constellation. For families, it helps them manage their daily lives and educate their children. We see our data economy customers maintaining and often expanding their needs to build new data centers to provide these products and services to customers. Now it's our job as an energy industry to provide the necessary power, and that is precisely what Constellation will make happen. In fact, we're making tremendous progress today toward reaching agreements with our customers, which I'll describe a little bit more in a moment. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:05:15The second dynamic we're seeing is that it's clear that the cost of new entry, whether that be for combined cycle machines or solar with storage has gone up substantially as has the time to build and site these assets. Now at the end of the day, in a tightening market, we compete with the cost of new entry as market new entry prices converge. And we believe our offerings for clean and reliable generation are far more attractive from a time and pricing standpoint than any competing option, whether that's used to support on grid data center development or behind the meter development. Locating AI facilities proximate to large, clean and reliable power plants continues to make all the sense in the world. But critically, we do not need to have load co located or behind the meter for us to achieve compelling pricing. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:06:13To be perfectly candid, we weren't sure about that at the beginning of this strategic effort. Initially, we were somewhat concerned that fair pricing might only be available in behind the meter transactions structured like the Talend deal. But we are now convinced that we could achieve fair pricing at levels consistent with our owner's expectations regardless of whether a client chooses to be in front of the meter or behind it, whether a client chooses to be near our plant or in a remote area. We demonstrated that when we achieved the Crane Clean Energy Center restart. We demonstrated that when we achieved the Landmark GSA transaction that we announced in January and we've demonstrated that time and again with CFE deals. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:07:03And we certainly see further evidence in the deals we're working on now. On grid sales are increasingly attractive to us and to our customers for other reasons too. The behind the meter approach depends on the cooperation of the local utility, where our assets are part of the grid, and their willingness to facilitate studies and collaborate. Now it's been no secret that hasn't happened easily and the regulatory process is presently tied up at FERC where the industry desperately needs some clarity. But I will tell you there have been some benefits from the controversy over colocation. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:07:43It's caused utilities to speed up the interconnection process because they came to understand that the studies were taking far too long. We want to take a moment to applaud the efforts of utilities to move more quickly and we thank them. One of the benefits of on grid sales for us is that we could work with utilities anywhere in the RTO. We could partner where it makes most sense and where they could bring these grid resources online as quickly as possible. This eliminates the need for extensive regulatory processes, eliminates the complexity around behind the meter colocation, and it simply treats these customers like we've been treating all of our retail customers for decades. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:08:31I do wanna make clear that we still believe that behind the meter configurations will make sense for some customers, and we continue to get inbound in that area. It may be the case at the end of the day the day that the largest and perhaps the most important data centers from a national security standpoint will involve grid configurations where part of the data center operates behind the grid and part of it operates in front of the meter. President Trump highlighted a configuration like that recently in one of his remarks. We urge FERC to provide clarity on the rules for behind the meter configurations and to provide latitude so that there could be innovation here following the President's lead. The third thing we're seeing is that the encouraging data center growth updates and the cost of new entry all reinforce the strong logic of what we did with Calpine in that deal. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:09:31As I'll discuss, that deal looks better to us every day. We acquired Calpine because it was an awesome company run by terrific people. The combination of Constellation and Calpine people and assets will create new capabilities for our customers, large and small across America. But as we discussed, we were also mindful of value when we negotiated that Calpine deal. And if you now consider the cost of new combined cycle machines that Constellation, NextEra and many others have reported, one can easily make the argument that Calpine was worth twice as much as what we paid for. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:10:17Now of course you might challenge me and say that the comparison of new CCGTs to the Calpine fleet does not completely square. You can say that the Calpine assets aren't brand new and I'd have to agree with that, that is true. But you might also agree that unlike hypothetical new assets that face an uncertain world of interconnection queues, tariffs, supply chain issues and delivery dates that are sometimes years away, having a fleet of new plants that are up and running exceptionally well with a good team running them might offset a couple of years of age. Anyway, we love the deal. On the other hand, we don't so much love the equity volatility that our owners have experienced this quarter, but so much of that is driven by macroeconomic factors that we cannot control. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:11:10In our opinion, our stock price does not reflect the full value of the particular opportunities we have here. The double digit base earnings growth through the end of the decade or the prospect of securing additional above the PTC pricing deals. As you can see from the disclosures, we have about $1,000,000,000 left in our buyback authorization from the board. I'll tell you, we would have loved to have been in the market buying at these prices during the quarter, but as you've seen before, there are times where we have been unable to be in the market due to possessing material non public information. We do look forward to sharing great news with you soon and resuming our buyback program at these compelling stock price levels. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:12:08Turning to slide six, at the beginning of the call, I started with the big picture narrative we're seeing today. I now want to dig in a little bit. On slide six, we see the demand from data centers is coming and that The US will rise to meet this challenge. The Trump administration has made clear that The US must win the AI race and the administration is taking steps to ensure that we will. They understand that the data economy is critically important to national security and to our economies and will be an important driver of America's success. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:12:42I can tell you that I've been in Washington a lot and I haven't had a single conversation with anyone from the administration or any member of congress where the importance of AI leadership has not come up. And notwithstanding news and rumors to the contrary, that we've seen, the major tech companies get it too. And they've increased or recommitted to their capital plans for data center build out. They are making these investments because AI is delivering for customers, and you could see it in their business results. Businesses and families are looking at the possibility of what AI could do for them. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:13:21You know, we have a number of projects here at Constellation where we're utilizing AI, and I could tell you the tools are marvelously effective. They're gonna change operations at plants, gonna change our relationship with customers, we are gonna discover new ways to do things that are gonna bring enormous value to our customers and to our owners. We're a microcosm of the demand that is coming, there's just no doubt about that. And I've said this before, while the demand is strong, we have to be a bit cautious here that there are some claims that are a bit outsized in terms of the extent or amount of that demand. Claims that are difficult to substantiate either mathematically or logically. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:14:10And that's why we put slide seven in here. As I said, electric demand will be big for our industry, no doubt about that. But to be fair, some of the hyperbole about the size of the growth is coming from stakeholders who have their own motivations, including a desire to keep building out the wire system or competitive market utilities that simply want the right or permission to go back and build generation in a competitive market. We've been seeing that in a few places. But we also see policymakers becoming skeptical about these claims. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:14:48That skepticism is warranted in our view. We know from conversations from our customers and end users that the same data center need is being considered in multiple jurisdictions across The United States at the same time. Just like fishing. If you've ever been a fisherman, you put a bunch of lines in the water to try to catch fish. And the data center developers are doing exactly the same thing. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:15:14So sometimes the same project is showing up in multiple queues simultaneously. Same thing happens with renewable development, where we see these massive queues, but we know through experience that a fraction of what is in the queue gets built. I'll give you a few examples. In ERCOT, the large load interconnection queue grows from 20 gigawatts in 2025 to more than 100 gigawatts by 02/1930, a more than five fold increase. Looking at the chart on the left, you could see the comparison of MISO, PJM and ERCOT forecast for load compared to forecast on national load growth. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:15:59These three ISOs account for less than half of the total U. S. Power demand, but they alone are projecting demand growth notably higher than a wide range of consultants for the entirety of The U. S. It's hard not to conclude that the headlines are inflated. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:16:15In fact, we've done the math, and if NVIDIA were able to double its output and every single chip went to ERCOT, it still wouldn't be enough chips to support some of the load forecasts in ERCOT. There's been a history of over forecasting. We've seen this before with electric vehicles. We've seen it before with the Internet. And utilities have historically overestimated their load forecasts. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:16:43The Rocky Mountain Institute, for example, recently put out a study based on FERC data and determined that in the last ten years, utilities have overstated long term demand forecast by 23% on average compared to what actually happened. We get it. Utilities have to plan to ensure that the system is reliable. But when I listened to some of the comments on these calls, I just have to tell you folks, I think the load is being overstated. We need to pump the brakes here. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:17:16Moving to slide eight, in the early days of our data economy strategy, we heard concerns that the so called window for our strategic execution would eventually close because low cost new resources would be added to meet the data center load and that our existing resources would lose out to these opportunities. We've also heard that we would lose out because we weren't incremental. Let me deal with that last issue first. As a number of the data center companies have noted in their plans, relicensing nuclear plants is incremental. We've seen that in policy space. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:17:57Everyone gets it. We either include nuclear within the category of resources that participate in these sales or nuclear will fail to exist. But just focusing on costs of new generation, it's clear that we're in a whole new ballgame on cost. The estimates for new build CCGTs consistently exceed $2,000 with some estimates being closer to $3,000 a KW. And those are higher in certain locations in which we operate. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:18:32For context, this is about three times as much as we spent on Wolf Hollow and the Colorado Bend plants less than ten years ago. So 300% increase in less than ten years. And as I alluded to earlier, if we were to rebuild just the Alpine fleet, it would cost about $65,000,000,000 significantly higher for what we paid for the best operating natural gas fleet in the country. Solar is no exception to these increases. Solar plus storage is in a similar boat with costs now exceeding $2,500 per kw. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:19:12And that's even without the tariffs. If we estimate what the tariffs would do to CCGTs and solar plus storage, we could easily see costs going another $5 to $10 higher for CCGTs on a megawatt hour basis and another $30 to $50 higher for storage and solar put together. Important strategic point here is that Constellation's fleet ultimately will compete with these new entrants for the right to serve the growing needs of America. Early days of the discussion of the AI powered dynamic, and I got to tell you, I smile a little bit when I say early days. I mean, when we were talking about this last year. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:19:57We often described our competitive advantage at Constellation in terms of speed and reliability as compared to new renewables because renewables are not reliable. And we thought our competitive advantage over new natural gas in terms of speed and sustainability because gas met CO2. Implicit was this unspoken assumption that new power, either renewables or CCGTs, would be less expensive for hyperscalered customers as an alternative option to our plants. But that some we would be faster for new data centers and offer more reliability than renewables and more sustainability than gas. It turns out that we were just thinking about old cost data. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:20:42With the new cost data firming up, it's pretty clear that nuclear simply wins the match in every single dimension. Cost, reliability, predictability of firm prices for twenty years. What other resource could offer a twenty year fixed price? I can't do that with my gas machines. I can't do that with renewables. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:21:04The speed to execution, the sustainability value, the resilience value, the durability and policy support, all of that makes nuclear the clear winner. And folks, that's why I think people are wanting to contract with us and they don't care whether it's in front of the meter or behind the meter. Let me turn to slide nine. One of the reasons we know that the competitive market will respond to the growing demand is because it always has. We are seeing that in response to the expedited program that FERC and PJM approved for new dispatchable generation in PJM, pardon me. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:21:43And remember, a big product that historically was used to deal with peak hour demand was demand response. And we saw that go from 15 gigawatts of demand response in auctions that were held just a handful of years ago to four to six gigawatts of demand response in the recent auctions. We also know the reason that demand response didn't happen. It didn't happen because the capacity market was broken and prices were ridiculously low. But now FERC has fixed those capacity markets and we believe that demand response once again is gonna come back in the picture as early as this next auction. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:22:26Remember, our grid was built for peak usage at the hottest or coldest hours of the year, but in most hours, we dramatically underutilized the grid. The chart that you have here on slide nine is what we would call load dispatch diagram. It's pretty common diagram to everyone in the business. And the colored lines here are every one of the different RTOs. Let me explain how it works. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:22:53The x axis is a % of the hours of the year. So we take 8,760 of the year, and that's the x axis. The y axis is how many of the power plants or how much of the existing power gen are you using during those hours. And if you study this, what you quickly see here is that for the vast majority of time, we don't utilize the grid. In fact, 80% of the time or so, a third of the grid is not being used. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:23:27And that means we have plenty of room, most hours to accommodate new generation. The Nichols Institute at Duke did a pretty cool study on this just recently, and it's been in the news ever since. And it basically said this, that if we got customers to shave 25% at peak, we could add 76 gigawatts of new load. Right? 76 gigawatts of data center just by getting customers curtail 25% of the time. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:24:04So Doctor is an incredibly powerful tool to meet all of this data center demand. What it'll do is, it will utilize the slack in the system most hours and cover those peak hours where there is a gap. We're seeing our data economy customers also pitch in with new curtailment methodologies, just, I think it was just this week that we saw the EPA relax the rules on backup generation at data centers, so that backup generation could be co optimized for the grid and take the pressure off these key hours. The point is, there's a lot of tools out there, and we expect those tools to be used, And again, I think we'll see some of that here in this upcoming auction, it'll put some downward pressure on the strain that we've seen in the prior auction in my view. Now, let me turn to slide 10. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:25:05Constellation has some unique advantages that will ensure we're a large player in this space. We've talked about this. But again, we have existing megawatts that are available to deliver power now. We have clean and sustainable energy, which is going to be useful just now in this environment, but also in the future as concerns about climate continue to resurface. We could offer price certainty that is very different than any price certainty we could offer from any other resource. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:25:39We've talked about speed and we've talked about the ability to work anywhere with any customer, any part of the grid. We could bring additional megawatts to bear, whether that's restarting nuclear plants, life extensions, and of course, up rates the plants. After Calpine closes, we're gonna be able to provide this capability coast to coast. And finally, just as we look for partners, our investment grade credit rating is a huge competitive advantage, because it gives customers confidence that we will be there and stand behind our contracts in the long term. We're well positioned to create additional value for our owners through our role serving the data economy customers, and we're super excited about that. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:26:28Now, me close out with the Calpine transaction. It's been a few months since we announced the deal, so I wanna tell people what we've been up to. But remember, what we're building here is the largest fleet of clean and reliable zero and low carbon resources in the nation. We believe this will enable us to better serve families and businesses with new products and services at the best prices. And as we spend more time with the Calpine team and get to know them better, we're even more excited every day about the talent, the combination of talent and skill we're gonna have as a combined team. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:27:12We're making very good progress towards closing the deal and integrating the two companies. We have set up integration teams and we're doing the work to get ready to close this year. The teams are energized and we're looking forward to being one company and seeing what two very good companies could do when they aim to be great. On the regulatory front, we've made all the required filings at this point. We received a deficiency notice from FERC and a second request for data from the DOJ. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:27:44As you know, in large transactions, things like that should be anticipated. We filed our answer to the FERC deficiency notice on April 28, and we remain on track to close the transaction by the end of the year. Again, incredibly excited for that. With that, let me flip it over to Dan. Dan will cover the financials and then again, I'll talk to you a little bit more and we'll get to your questions. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:28:08Go ahead, Dan. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:28:08Thanks, Joe. Good morning, everyone. Beginning on Page 12, we are in $0.38 per share in GAAP earnings and $2.14 per share in adjusted operating earnings for the first quarter, which was $0.32 per share higher than last year. We have seen strong performance from our commercial business over the last several years, and the start of this year continues that trend. The team did a great job positioning our portfolio in a colder than average winter, captured value from serving more load versus the first quarter of twenty twenty four and managing market prices. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:28:41During the quarter, we locked in margins that exceed our ten year average, supporting 2025 and benefiting future backlog. As expected, we also realized higher prices for the Illinois ZEC and CMC programs when compared to the first quarter of twenty twenty four, partially offset by lower nuclear PTCs recognized during the quarter. We continue to see this means tested PTC program working as intended. As you know, the PTC is determined on an annual basis and each quarter is booked based on actual revenues plus forwards for the remainder of the year. As of March 31, we anticipate that gross receipts for the full year will be above the PTC floor across our entire fleet, whereas at the start of the year, part of the fleet was projected to collect some PTCs. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:29:34This full year expectation of higher prices resulted in us not booking PTC revenues in the first quarter, whereas we did book some in the first quarter last year. While this is a good outcome on a full year basis, it can create noise in quarterly results and impacts the year over year comparability. We are happy with the start of our 2025 in context of our plan and are reaffirming our full year operating EPS guidance range of $8.9 to $9.6 per share. Now moving on to our first quarter operational performance on Slide 11. Nuclear performance was strong. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:30:13We produced more than 41,000,000 megawatt hours of reliable, available and emissions free generation from our nuclear plants with a capacity factor of 94.1%. The team continues to deliver industry leading refueling outage performance. We completed three refueling outages during the quarter, averaging twenty four days compared to the industry average of nearly forty days. Our renewables and natural gas fleet also performed well with 96.2% renewable energy capture and 99.2% power dispatch match. As you know, Constellation continues to do our part to bring clean, reliable, firm megawatts to the grid. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:30:58Last Friday, PJM announced that more than eleven fifty new nuclear megawatts, including the Crane Clean Energy Center and other constellation nuclear upgrades, were chosen for the accelerated interconnection process. We are pleased that PJM recognized the importance of getting these projects on the grid quickly, and I wanna thank our team for advocating for this important change. And on Crane, we are pleased with the progress we are making. Our re staffing is going more quickly than expected. We are getting multiple superb candidates applying for each position. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:31:34To date, we have already over half of the roughly 600 permitted employees we will need to run the plant and the majority of them have been working at the site. I am happy to share our first operator class is underway with the second one on course to start this fall. As the days pass and we address long lead time items like the PJM interconnect and staff training, we are confident that we will meet and potentially beat our targets for both total cost and time to bring this plant back online. Turning to Slide 14, our commercial team is off to another strong start this year, creating value by optimizing our portfolio and locking in higher than average margins, which are benefiting from continued market volatility as well as sales of value added products around the clean attributes of our nuclear plants. Our renewal rates remain strong with both electric and gas customers, reflecting the durable relationships we have with our customers. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:32:36Turning to Slide 15, it's understandable there is a lot of focus in the market right now on the risk of a recession and concern about how power producers may fare in such an environment. Before I offer our perspective, let me start by noting that each recession is unique and carries its own impact on power demand in terms of duration and magnitude. More recent recessions have temporarily impacted power demand by 1% to 4%, although the year over year data is also complicated by weather, which is more complicated to normalize on a national basis. Generally, we have seen a strong bounce back in power demand on the other side of recession. In today's environment, we view a temporary slowdown in the economy and lower power demand as likely being offset by the very real demand growth we are seeing across the nation, considering the impacts of ongoing electrification, onshoring of manufacturing and demand associated with the build out of the data economy, we see counterbalances to any temporary slowdown or reduced power demand from other parts of the economy. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:33:42The biggest risk to our business in a recessionary environment has been the power price. Fortunately, compared to last recessions, we now have the Nuclear PTC which provides downside protection from a drop in commodity prices due to a recession. As you know, the Nuclear PTC Credit is means tested to ensure the continued operation of these critical power resources when prices are depressed while not compensating them in higher price environments. We've also looked at other major potential risks associated with a recession, including lower retail volumes, bad debt, as well as debt refinancing, and we are confident in our ability to manage these collective headwinds with limited financial drag for our owners if the recession were to occur. Constellation remains in strong financial health, especially when you think about our investment grade balance sheet, ample liquidity and cash flows supported by the nuclear PTCs as well as existing forward customer sales. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:34:42Before moving on, I also want to comment briefly on the current tariff environment. While the ultimate impact will depend upon trade policy that goes into effect after this ninety day pause and anticipated negotiations, we estimate a negligible impact on O and M and roughly a 1% to 2% impact on our CapEx, including fuel, for 2025 and 2026. We will continue to monitor and mitigate the impacts to both costs and our supply chain. Finally, turning to slide 16, I want to spend a little more time on the PTC now that it has been in place for a year and we are seeing some updates to key inputs, reminding us of the inflationary protections it provides. As a reminder, we have assumed that the PTC floor and actual credit grow at a 2% inflation adjustment as part of our base earnings forecast. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:35:36So if the adjustment was more than 2%, our base earnings would increase. While the official rate used in the calculation is not yet published, we estimate the inflation adjustment for 2025 to be between 2.32.6%. With the 2025 inflation adjustment in this range and then returning to our 2% assumption for 2026 and beyond, we will see an earlier step up in prices that adds an incremental $500,000,000 in revenues to base earnings for 2028. This adjustment both demonstrates the benefits of the nuclear PTC in providing economic visibility for the nuclear industry and reinforces the unique benefit of an inflation hedge in our business model compared to most other companies in the market. With that, I'll thank you all and turn the call back to Joe. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:36:28Thanks, Dan. Among Dan's many talents is his ability to multitask. So while reading the script, also wrote to me a note giving me a correction. I think I said 25% on the Duke study met 0.25%, but the study, again, remind you demonstrates with quite modest demand response at levels that we've easily achieved in the past, we could accommodate all new load on the system from the data economy using that tool. When we think about the backup, reciprocating engines at the sites, and then we see the new generation that the competitive market will bring as needed, we see no reasonable concern in that area. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:37:14So just to recap here, we're off the fantastic start. We're exactly where we wanna be. We're focused on closing Calpine and integrating the business. We like that combination more and more each day. We have a business here that is very different, very unique, and stronger than we think anything else that is out there in the industry. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:37:37We produce robust cash flow and base earnings, which are protected by nuclear b t VTC, a a tax credit that has significant bipartisan support. Our earnings grow at 13% through the decade, and any long term deal we do from here on will be additive to that base earnings growth. I think we have demonstrated a track record of continuing to improve earnings and to surprise you from time to time with things like Crane, Calpine and the GSA. Calpine will add at least $2 in EPS and $2,000,000,000 of free cash flow before growth starting next year. And not only does the PTC provide protection to the nuclear fleet, but we're beneficiaries of higher inflation through higher PTC floors, and Dan just covered that. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:38:28So we're poised to build on the foundation by capturing value from the opportunities that we see in the data economy and in the overall economy as load continues to grow and industries are onshore. Our existing fleet is vital to America. We understand that. We're gonna continue to make investments in making that fleet better, longer lived, increase the output. But, we're in a position right now to meet the demands of the time and to support America at this critical point. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:39:01I gotta tell you, I couldn't be prouder of the team we have here. With that, we'll close down our prepared remarks and take your questions. Operator00:39:10Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan Securities. Your line is open. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:39:35Good morning, Jeremy. Jeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase00:39:37Hi, good morning. Thank you for all the details this morning, especially the behind the meter, front the meter and potential combinations thereof. And just wondering if you could pick up on some of the details in the slides here. If you could provide more details on the progress towards long term customer agreements as you talked about in the slides a bit there. Are you seeing incremental customer comfort around structures kind of independent of FERC clarity at this point? Jeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase00:40:02Or do we still need policy clarity here to get deals inked? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:40:07Jeremy, I think policy clarity would be welcome. But look, I think like anyone else, when they're trying to grow and they run into a delay or roadblock, people start figuring out ways around it. And I've indicated on earlier calls that I think some sharing of the cost made a lot of sense. I've talked about that with regard to ancillary services. And I think I indicated quite clearly that I didn't think our customers were so price sensitive that they wanted to try to avoid all costs. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:40:41They've always been willing to cover fair costs. So that's not been the issue. The issue has been speed at different times and location. So the utilities have sped up interconnection process. We see utilities out there leaning into it, and our customers have too. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:41:00So they're going to those utilities. If they could get into in it interconnected, then they're looking to us to provide the power wherever they might be on the grid for those applications. So it's not like they've grown disinterested in behind the meter, they still wanna see that as an option. If you think about every single data center that exists today, that's a perfect illustration of what I'm talking about with some combination of behind the meter and in front of the meter. They get a lot of their power in front of the meter, but at certain times they use the backup generation at the site, which is effectively behind the meter generation. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:41:38This is not anything new. We've been doing it in the industry since the 1980s with cogen, But for right now, given the uncertainty, our customers pivoted and they said, okay, Constellation, let's go on grid. Let's do what you're doing with GSA. Let's do what you're doing with crane, and let's see if we could make something happen with utilities that are inclined to move studies quickly. That's exactly what we've done. Jeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase00:42:03Got it. That's helpful. Thank you. And then just kind of rounding out here, what is the expected path and timing to resolve the FERC two zero six proceeding here? And how do you think about settlement at this juncture? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:42:15Look, we think there's enough information right now in the FERC docket. There's enough robust information for the FERC to provide clarity. I'll flip it over to David for the process, but although we did ask for a settlement process, as it turns out, what we've seen in the docket should be sufficient for them to make a final decision on this. And they should look. When you've got the president of The United States basically saying the grid is too slow, too antiquated, that that should be a kick in the pants to everybody in this business to get their act together and figure out rules of the road so that we're not having any uncertainty around what could be the most important technology of our lifetime, not only for our economy, but for our national security. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:43:03I'll give David a moment here to talk a little bit about the process going forward. David DardisExecutive VP & Chief Legal and Policy Officer at Constellation Energy00:43:08Yeah, sure. So the vast majority of the parties in the proceeding, which is quite notable, have argued to FERC and made a case to FERC that the existing PJM tariff is not just and reasonable and needs to be amended to create the clarity and speed that Joe's been talking about. And while we said we would support a quick settlement process, we also would welcome FERC to call balls and strikes very quickly on the merits of the case pending before it. In either case, speed and clarity together are quite important. And we think that whether it's a settlement under a fast track proceeding to let the parties see if they can work it out or whether or not the commission directs PJM to amend its tariff to address the gap in some of these rules, we think all of that can be done in really a handful of months and should be done in a handful of months. David DardisExecutive VP & Chief Legal and Policy Officer at Constellation Energy00:43:58So there's a path forward under either approach. And as Joe said, we think the record is quite clear for establishing the rules to allow these critically important loads and customers to get on the system as quickly as possible. Jeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase00:44:14Got it. Speed would be great. No one likes the regulatory sausage making. Thank you. Operator00:44:20Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Steve Fleishman with Wolfe. Your line is open. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:44:30Good morning, Steve. Steve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLC00:44:31Yes. Hey, good morning. Hi. Just first, a couple of questions on the potential new power agreements. I guess, first of all, any sense on whether the pricing we've seen is an indicator of pricing? Steve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLC00:44:48And I assume transmission in front of the meter would be paid by the customer, not by you? And then lastly, just it sounds like when you talk about you're talking about basically selling even beyond kind of the local utility where the in zones beyond the local utility where the plants are. So can you just clarify that commentary and your ability to do that? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:45:20Yes, sure. I mean, the last one, Steve, we've been doing for twenty years, right? We sell to customers everywhere in PJM. We have national accounts with customers where we supply all of their businesses in a variety of areas. As you saw, for example, I'll give you a great example of this. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:45:39When saw us do the Crane Clean Energy Center restart, you know there's no data center right there in Pennsylvania. So Microsoft was quite clear they were using that power in multiple states, And one of the strengths of our commercial team is being able to move power around the system. Again, is nothing new. We've been doing it for twenty years. And because of our geographic reach, especially in areas like PJM where we have a lot of West Hub, lot of NiHub power, could kind of fill in the blanks in all different places. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:46:13So that allows us really to work with the utility that has got the most advanced projects. And when I said before that we see the same project in multiple utilities plans, it's really because we have visibility in understanding where the client may want to use the power, and that's how we understand that we have a lot of duplicates going on in the system. In terms of your first question about level of pricing, look, we're gonna have to be careful here. Our clients are pretty clear with us about two things. They don't want for their own reasons to reveal pricing, and they don't necessarily want to reveal all of the locations in which they intend to do business, because this would be tantamount to sharing with their competitors what they believe to be competitively sensitive information. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:47:06We likewise have a concern about putting pricing data out there, which inhibits our ability to negotiate the best terms on future deals. So look, I'm trying to hint at in the script is, you've seen the talent pricing, you've seen what we're talking about in terms of cost of new entry. We think our pricing should be consistent with those levels. And beyond that, I'm not I'm just simply not gonna say. As to wires charges and who bears those costs, your assumption is a % on that. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:47:42That's not a cost that we bear in any relationships with our customers today nor will we in the future. Steve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLC00:47:51Thank you. One other question just on the IRA and nuclear. So obviously, we have the reconciliation process. And one of the issues that's come up is transferability and how to you know, whether they they keep transferability. I know one of the laws allowed it still for nuclear, but in the event it wasn't allowed going forward, what would that mean, if at all, for you monetizing credits? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:48:21We see that as a de minimis impact to us because, in particular, post Calpine, we have plenty of tax capacity. So it's it's I I know it is for others not a big hot issue for us. I but you did raise the IRA, and you did note the strong support for nuclear. In the most recent letter, we saw 26 congressmen come out in support of the continuation of the 45U credit for existing nuclear, as well as 45 y to expand and relicings existing nuclear. That's 26 congressmen. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:49:04You put that together with the earlier letter, and there was just not a complete duplication of signatures. There were 12 additional members in that early earlier letter supporting the tax credits that were not included in this last letter that had 26 members. So all told, we have 38 members of congress, Republican members of congress supporting the tax credit. That makes sense because if you remember, the tax credit was actually created by Republicans. These were Republican ideas for the nuclear tax credit. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:49:40And even in the bill by senator Kramer and congresswoman Fedorchak, we're seeing the same thing, a recognition that it's important to keep the nuclear plants alive. And so I'm not seeing anything impacting transferability or frankly nuclear being discussed. And I am spending a lot of time on the hill to make sure I got my ear to the ground on anything that might happen. So we're very pleased with the support. The reconciliation process will no doubt be bumpy, and we'll see some ups and downs and twists and turns. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:50:15But I think we're as well positioned as anyone. Dan, do you have any other thoughts on Yeah. Daniel EggersEVP & CFO at Constellation Energy00:50:21Mean, just for clarity, Steve, when we look at the forwards where they are today, we do not, a, need to transfer any credits. And we actually might be with our tax position looking to buy other people's credits if they came available at a discount. So, we feel comfortable with the fours where they are today. Steve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLC00:50:39Thank you. Operator00:50:42Thank you. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:50:42Thanks, Steve. Operator00:50:44Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of David O'Carroll with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:50:52Good morning, David. Thanks so much. Good morning. Know, on behind the meter and I appreciate all your comments here on front of the meter, behind the meter. I guess just maybe drilling into the behind the meter opportunity, is that diminishing here? David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:51:08Are you seeing those conversations shift and kind of move over to front of the meter? Or do you still have a significant level of interest kind of waiting for FERC clarity that might open up that path? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:51:21Yeah, David, I'll just say, think these folks wanna get on with the show and start construction. And so with the current situation around behind the meter and no one knowing exactly when we're gonna have the necessary clarity, The discussions are in front of the meter with the utilities and with the customers. The logic behind the meter, in particular for these massive training data centers of the kind like the president was talking about in Texas, in my view, are still going to need behind the meter support. Because you're not gonna accumulate four and five gigawatts of power on the grid. Just not gonna happen. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:52:10So you're gonna see things, I think, in the fullness of time that are gonna have front of the meter connections, but you might actually supplement and build more power plants at the same site that'll never touch the grid, and they'll be behind the meter. And that's why I Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:52:26was Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:52:26saying, this is more in the category of brainstorming, but it's important that FERC not constrain innovation for cogeneration and co location. Imagine had we done that in the 1980s and said, we're not gonna consider. Imagine how much cogen we would have lost in this country. So we're gonna see some combinations, combinations that frankly we're not aware of here. But right now the conversation is where there is clarity. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:52:58And where there is clarity is front of the meter. And because we go anywhere in the RTO, that suits us just fine. David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:53:08Got it. Great. Yeah, that's really helpful color. Then maybe I was curious if you could synthesize some of your thoughts on just the demand outlook for data centers, the supply outlook as you've noted is challenging, then considering demand response, kind of what is your view on power prices from here looking at the market? A number of parties have gotten concerned about affordability as an example. David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:53:34So how do you kind of that fear, but also your underlying views of the fundamentals of the market here? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:53:42Yeah, David, when I think about affordability, if I were to flash any chart back up on the screen, it would be that load dispatch curve. Because whether you're talking about affordability, reliability issues, when emissions concern actually occur in bulk, you're really talking about those peak hours in the system. You're not talking about days like today, right? There's no issue. You're talking about those peak events. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:54:13So having the tools available to manage those peak events, whether it's allowing the backup gen at the data centers be a grid resource during those events. I think that's a fantastic idea. We were very supportive of where EPA went. The Flex program that EPRI has spearheaded with the data economy customers, been deeply involved with. That's made huge progress in terms of the hyperscalers managing those events. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:54:42And then demand response, which simply means the hyperscalers are gonna pay a little dough in addition to what the capacity market might yield to get other industrial and commercial customers to back off in critical hours. If we're able to do that, then we're gonna manage the capacity market pressures on Bill, We're gonna manage some of the higher costs on bills, right? And we're gonna manage at the same time some of the emissions issues that drive climate and other considerations. That's why we focus on that. There's a tendency, I think, from lay people to look at this as we need energy at all times on the grid. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:55:23These charts should tell you that's absolutely not true. Most of the time, we have an abundance of energy. So I think that's part of managing the story. You want to put off to the extent possible unnecessary investments in generation. So I think I'm a little bit of an outlier here, but as I see the world, the next five, six, seven years ought to be quite manageable, and I think storage is gonna be a part of this answer. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:55:53What I worry about is the period after that. What happens ten, fifteen years down the road? What happens if we then come back and we think about things like climate differently than the administration presently is thinking about them today? What happens if we have climate events that bring that all back? And I think the answer that we offer and that we've encouraged to the administration is, let's spend some money on research and development, so that if we do build gas machines, they don't become stranded in an environment where climate becomes a major consideration. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:56:30We continue to invest in sequestration and other technologies. So I think, look, that's the way we're gonna have to manage the cost. But the biggest and best thing we could do is not overreact and start building things that are unnecessary. And frankly, with a lot of the hyperbole in the system, I think it's aimed at exactly doing the wrong thing. David ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan Stanley00:56:52Got it. Thanks so much. Appreciate your viewpoints. Operator00:56:55Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Paul Zimbardo with Jefferies. Your line is open. Paul ZimbardoManaging Director at Jefferies00:57:05Good morning, Paul. Hi, good morning. Thanks for squeezing me in. Just from your comment about having an NPI and the emphasis on not waiting for clarity, is it a fair expectation that kind of you're pretty close to a deal and maybe within the next quarter or kind of not to read too much into that commentary and it's sometime later this year? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:57:29Well, I'm not I just I don't want to touch that because we're at a very good stage in the process. I'll simply put it that way. And the deals will get announced when they're ready to rock and roll. And that's as far as we decided we're going to go on this call. Paul ZimbardoManaging Director at Jefferies00:57:52Okay, fair. Then when you mentioned kind of a need to have a good partnership with the regulated utility, what's the timeline for some of the interconnection studies with your local PGM utilities? Just how have the discussions with utility evolved holistically over the past few months? Thank you. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:58:10Well, they've they've some, you know, it's still a little bit all over the board, but some of them, are getting done here in what you know, I I could see six months, seven months of time. And if you consider that, some of the customers that we're talking to have started that interconnection process even before our conversations have matured into a level. It's not it doesn't seem to be the constraint at this point. So look, wanna test it some more, but I think months instead of years is probably a good answer at this point. And the utilities, again, I give them a lot of credit. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy00:58:56And I'm seeing this with all the utilities, even ones that we haven't had agreements with in the past. Everyone seems to be wanting to get these studies done and get this load connected. And that makes all the sense in the world to us, and we'll work with them as best we can. Paul ZimbardoManaging Director at Jefferies00:59:12Thank you. Operator00:59:14Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Angie Storozynski with Seaport. Your line is open. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:24Thank you. So I have a Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:26question Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:26about recent demand from data centers for power. So it seems like we've, at least listening to the hyperscalers, there's been a shift away from training facilities more to inference. And so it seems like location matters again. So do you actually see that there's more demand for some of Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:50your Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:59:50assets closer to load centers and sort of smaller in size? And again, I don't care if it's front or back of the meter, but has there been a shift in what hyperscalers are looking for? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:00:05No, Angie, I wouldn't say that. I think I may have this wrong, but my recollection of the statistics is that about 85% of the expected load was always going to come from inference data centers. So you're going to see the lion's share is going to be inference data centers. But even those data centers are getting quite large relative to the size they were. I remember when they were five and ten megawatts, I thought, oh my god, that's huge. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:00:36Now we're talking 100 to 150 megawatts, even for these inference data centers. So to a certain extent, they're just getting bigger. And that means they have to go to where there's available power more so than the fiber concerns that I think were dominated when we were talking about smaller data centers that were more easy to connect. I think probably the bigger shift I've seen, Angie, and there's not enough data points to draw any firm conclusions is, I think there's been some rationalization that these super large data centers, 10 gigawatts, seven to 10 gigawatts that were talked about quite liberally at the beginning of the AI phase. I find people are speaking less about that and thinking about how to cobble together more still what we would think of as large, 500,000 megawatt data centers, and do some of the training. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:01:34But I think it continues to evolve. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners01:01:39Okay. Separately, just looking at forward power curves, especially in Northern Illinois, there's been quite a dramatic pullback in those curves even post recent recovery. We have, it seems like a number of data centers shifted away from the state. And I'm wondering if you have a view why that is, is there any sort of a regulatory slash political backlash against large loads in the state? And and what's your view on long term power prices in Illinois? Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:02:15No. I don't think so, Angie. I just think I think people are to go where they could connect the easiest. I don't see anything in particular with regard to Illinois necessarily or an opposition in Illinois that's driving folks. But, if you're a data center and you're thinking about Illinois, you probably are thinking about Iowa and Indiana and Michigan too. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:02:38It goes back, I think, to your first question. In the early days of the data economy world where we're seeing more modestly sized data centers, proximity to big, centers, big population centers was the thing. Now that's kind of moved away because I think power is the key element, and interconnection speed is the key element. So I think that just that just widens the aperture for our customers to look at multiple locations. I think there's just kind of another reality here too, that data centers were going where there were data centers to take advantage again of fiber and other things. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:03:19And certainly, we've seen a shift in appetite to be able to explore Pennsylvania as an example, whereas before there was relatively light activity in those areas. So I just think that the world has continued to shift, the geographies these customers are looking at has broadened. And again, for us, that's actually pretty good, because of the scale, the unique scale we have and our ability to reach all of these different places, including twenty years of experience in knowing how to move power around the system and accommodate clients like this, it should be right up our alley. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners01:04:02Very good. Thank you. Operator01:04:04Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, I would like to turn the call back over to Joe for closing remarks. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:04:12Well, thanks everybody for participating. Again, thanks. Just give another call out to the team here at Constellation. You make us all proud every single day. We've had a very good extensive discussion. Joseph DominguezPresident , CEO & Director at Constellation Energy01:04:25We look forward to the opportunity to provide additional updates on our business strategy. And with that, Tawanda, I'll close the call. Operator01:04:32Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesEmily DuncanSenior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategic InitiativesJoseph DominguezPresident , CEO & DirectorDaniel EggersEVP & CFODavid DardisExecutive VP & Chief Legal and Policy OfficerAnalystsJeremy TonetED - Equity Research Analyst at JPMorgan ChaseSteve FleishmanManaging Director and Senior Analyst at Wolfe Research LLCDavid ArcaroExecutive Director - Equity Research at Morgan StanleyPaul ZimbardoManaging Director at JefferiesAngie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research PartnersPowered by