NYSE:AWK American Water Works Q2 2025 Earnings Report $145.29 +0.87 (+0.60%) Closing price 08/8/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$144.90 -0.38 (-0.26%) As of 08/8/2025 07:00 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast American Water Works EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.48Consensus EPS $1.53Beat/MissMissed by -$0.05One Year Ago EPS$1.42American Water Works Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.28 billionExpected Revenue$1.22 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$52.30 millionYoY Revenue Growth+11.10%American Water Works Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2025Date7/30/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, July 31, 2025Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsAmerican Water Works' Q3 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, October 29, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, October 30, 2025 at 9:00 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)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by American Water Works Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 31, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Q2 EPS rose to $1.48 versus $1.42 last year and full-year guidance was narrowed to the top half of the range at $5.70–$5.75 per share. Positive Sentiment: The company invested $1.3 billion in capital projects in H1 and remains on track for approximately $3.3 billion of capex in 2025 to support infrastructure renewal. Positive Sentiment: Signed agreement to acquire Nexus Water Group systems, adding ~47,000 customer connections and ~$200 million to rate base, with 87,000 more connections under agreement totaling over $535 million. Positive Sentiment: Achieved key rate case wins in Missouri, Iowa and Hawaii, and has active filings in West Virginia, Kentucky and California to recover infrastructure investments. Positive Sentiment: Reaffirmed long-term targets of 7%–9% EPS and dividend growth, driven by sustained 8%–9% rate base expansion across its regulated footprint. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAmerican Water Works Q2 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to American Water's Second Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, this call will be recorded and is also being webcast with an accompanying slide presentation through the company's Investor Relations website. The audio webcast archive will be available for one year on American Water's Investor Relations website. I would like now to introduce your host for today's call, Aaron Musgrave, Vice President of Investor Relations. Mr. Musgrave, you may begin. Aaron MusgraveVP - IR at American Water Works Company00:00:33Thank you, Alan. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for today's call. At the end of our prepared remarks, we will open the call for your questions. Let me first go over some safe harbor language. Today, we will be making forward looking statements that represent our expectations regarding our future performance or other future events. Aaron MusgraveVP - IR at American Water Works Company00:00:52These statements are predictions based on our current expectations, estimates and assumptions. However, since these statements deal with future events, they are subject to numerous known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from the results indicated or implied by such statements. Additional information regarding these risks, uncertainties and factors as well as a more detailed analysis of our financials and other important information is provided in the second quarter earnings release and Form 10 Q, each filed yesterday with the SEC. And finally, all statements during this presentation related to earnings and earnings per share refer to diluted earnings and diluted earnings per share. With that, I'll turn the call over to American Water's President and CEO, John Griffith. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:01:40Thank you, Aaron, and good morning, everyone. Let's turn to Slide five, and I'll start by covering some highlights of the second quarter and first half of the year. As we announced yesterday, we delivered solid financial results through the 2025. Earnings were $1.48 per share for the second quarter compared to $1.42 for the same period last year. In the first six months of twenty twenty five, earnings were 2.53 per share compared to $2.37 per share in the same period of 2024. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:02:15With this strength across the business, combined with our expectations for the rest of the year, we now expect to achieve the top half of our initial EPS guidance range for 2025, which we've narrowed to $5.7 to $5.75 per share. David will share more about our results and guidance a bit later. Moving on to some of our other key accomplishments so far in 2025. We invested $1,300,000,000 in capital projects year to date, again reflecting great work by our teams responsible for planning and completing these investments. We were also very pleased to announce several new acquisition agreements in the first half of the year, including the NEXUS Water Group systems that will add nearly 47,000 customer connections, which we expect to close by August 2026. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:03:08As Cheryl will discuss, we are continuing to build momentum with our business development platform with 87,000 customer connections under agreement totaling over $500,000,000 across our platform, and we continued our track record of regulatory execution in the 2025 with new rates effective in several states and new cases filed to reflect investments in infrastructure for the benefit of our customers, which leads us to Slide six, which describes the drivers of American Water's very competitive and sustainable shareholder return profile. We have a clear top tier capital growth plan underpinned by decades of fundamental water and wastewater infrastructure renewal and water quality investment. This, combined with our strong regulatory and operational execution, results in a value proposition that we believe is unique in the utility sector. We are again affirming our long term targets for both earnings and dividend growth at 7% to 9%, driven by 8% to 9% rate base growth. We expect to consistently grow earnings and dividends at an industry leading pace over the next five years and beyond. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:04:22With that, I'll hand it over to David to cover our financial results, rate case updates and our 2025 outlook in further detail. David? David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:04:32Thanks, John, and good morning, everyone. Turning to Slide eight, I'll provide further insights on second quarter results. Consolidated earnings were 1.48 per share, up $06 per share versus the same period in 2024. Revenues were higher by $0.50 per share driven by authorized rate increases to recover investment across our states. Revenues were also higher from recently completed water and wastewater acquisitions and organic customer growth. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:05:01Weather on the other hand was unfavorable by an estimated $06 per share year over year. This was due to wet weather in 2025 across many states resulting in an unfavorable $03 impact combined with the $03 unfavorable weather variance from the warm and dry conditions experienced in the 2024. And looking at operating costs, O and M was higher by $0.17 per share driven primarily by employee related expense, increased maintenance and technology cost, as well as costs related to acquisitions completed in 2024, which we expected. Depreciation increased $0.10 per share and financing costs increased $08 per share, both as expected in support of our investment growth. Turning to Slide nine. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:05:50Year to date consolidated earnings were $2.53 per share, up $0.16 per share versus the same period in 2024. On a weather normalized basis, EPS was up 9.4% year to date compared to the prior year. Many of the same drivers I described for the quarter apply to this period as well, including the unfavorable impact of weather. Revenues were higher by $0.94 per share and O and M was higher by $0.32 per share. Depreciation increased $0.21 per share and financing costs increased $0.18 per share, both as expected in support of our investment growth. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:06:27Turning to Slide 10, I'll cover the latest regulatory activity in our states. First on completed cases, we received a final order from the Missouri Commission in May approving our settlement agreement, which we discussed last quarter. In Iowa, we received a final order from the commission approving an annualized revenue increase of $13,000,000 based on an ROE of 9.6% and an equity layer of 52.57%, in line with the Iowa's approved capital structure in its previous rate case. As a reminder, interim rates were effective on 05/11/2024 in the amount of $5,100,000 and final rates will go into effect tomorrow on August 1. In Hawaii, we received a final order last week from the commission approving an annualized revenue increase of $1,500,000 based on an ROE of 9.75% and an equity layer just north of 52%. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:07:23We expect new rates to go into effect in early August. Turning to active cases, you can see we have general rate cases in progress in three jurisdictions. On May 5, we filed a general rate case in West Virginia reflecting $300,000,000 in system investments covering the period March 2024 through February 2027. We are seeking $48,000,000 of additional annual revenue, which would be reflected in two steps, in March 2026 and March 2027. And we expect this case to be completed by the February 2026. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:08:00Intervenor testimony is set for October and rebuttal testimony in November. On May 16, we filed a general rate case in Kentucky, reflecting $212,000,000 in system investments covering February 2025 through December 2026. We're seeking $27,000,000 additional annual revenue and we expect proposed rates to go into effect on an interim basis in December 2025. Intervenor testimony is set for August and rebuttal testimony in September. And finally, on July 1, we filed a general rate case in California, reflecting system investments through 2028. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:08:38We are seeking $63,000,000 of additional annual revenue in 2027 compared to authorized 2025 revenue and a total increase in revenue over the twenty twenty seven to twenty twenty nine period of $111,000,000 If approved by the commission, the new rates would take effect on 01/01/2027, with subsequent increases expected in January 2028 and 2029. As a reminder, our request for a one year extension of our cost of capital filing to 05/01/2026, was approved earlier this year, which maintains our current authorized cost of capital through 2026 absent significant movements in interest rates. Another piece of our filing is decoupling. We currently have partial decoupling in California, but again are requesting full decoupling to promote affordable rates in conservation. On a similar front on the legislative side, a decoupling bill related to water utilities has passed out of the California Senate and is currently awaiting action in the California Assembly Appropriations Committee. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:09:46On Slide 11, as John mentioned, yesterday, we announced that we are narrowing our 2025 EPS guidance to the top half of the range we first disclosed last October. The 2025 EPS guidance range is now $5.7 to $5.75 from $5.65 to $5.75 previously on a weather normalized basis. We are seeing strength in the business across several regulated states so far in 2025, including solid customer usage. Coupled with the fact that we will continue to have revenue increases year over year in several states through Q3, we expect the 2025 to deliver financial results to achieve this narrowed guidance range. This puts us on track to deliver 8.6 EPS growth in 2025 at the midpoint of the narrowed guidance range. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:10:37I'm confident in our team's ability to execute on our financial and operating plans, including delivering cost effective financing, while maintaining our balance sheet strength and credit profile. Our total debt to capital ratio as of the end of the quarter, net of $94,000,000 of cash on hand was 58%, which was within our target of less than 60%. As a reminder, our 2025 financing plans still includes another long term debt issuance of roughly $1,000,000,000 to be completed in the 2025. And finally, on Slide 12, I want to reemphasize that we continue to expect to achieve consistent EPS growth within the 7% to 9% range through 2029 and beyond. We believe our industry leading EPS and dividend growth coupled with our affordability position and sustainability leadership will continue to be highly valued and rewarded by investors. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:11:34We believe these aspects of our business and our position as the largest and most geographically diverse water and wastewater utility in the country distinguishes us from all other utilities. With that, I'll turn it over to Cheryl to talk more about our capital program, our recent acquisition activity. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:11:51Thank you, David, and good morning, everyone. On Slide 14, our capital program delivered $1,300,000,000 of investments in the first half of the year. This result keeps us on pace to hit our goal of approximately $3,300,000,000 of capital investment in 2025. Our low risk annual capital plan is made up of hundreds of individual projects, which our teams do a really great job of executing. As a reminder, the nature of the program also gives us the ability to flex up or flex down our organic CapEx spending annually in order to achieve our overall planned capital spend, including acquisitions. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:12:29We continue to expect these capital investments in infrastructure acquisitions will grow regulated rate base at a long term rate of 8% to 9%. Turning to Slide 15. We continue to be well positioned for growth through acquisitions across many states with about 87,000 customer connections under agreement from deals totaling $535,000,000 In May, we were pleased to announce an agreement with the Nexus Water Group subsidiary to purchase multiple water and wastewater systems located in eight states for $315,000,000 This acquisition will add nearly 47,000 customer connections and approximately $200,000,000 to rate base. Through this transaction, we will grow in eight of our existing regulated states, supporting our long term growth target of 2% for customer additions. As with other acquisitions, we'll be able to leverage our scale and size to deliver safe, clean, reliable and affordable water and wastewater services to these new customers. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:13:33We also believe this expansion will help lead to more growth since it will expand some of our in state geographies. We expect closing will take place by or before August 2026. In addition to the Nexus systems, we currently have 20 acquisitions in seven states under agreement for February that would add about 40,000 customer connections. This represents significant progress on the business development front, including in West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Importantly, we've seen renewed activity in Pennsylvania, including four systems closed so far this year and an additional eight systems under agreement. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:14:11The most recent acquisitions announced were the Pittston Wastewater System and the Indian Creek Valley Water Authority, where we plan to utilize fair market value under the new guidelines set by the commission. We have negotiated purchase prices that we believe will result in approval by our regulators of transactions at full cost recovery. We remain confident in our acquisition pipeline, and we are continuing to invest in regulated acquisition opportunities across our footprint. In all of our states, the acquisition opportunities are driven by the need for system consolidation, infrastructure upgrades, regulatory compliance and operational enhancements. With that, I'll turn it back over to our operator to begin Q and A and take any questions you may have. Operator00:15:15Our first question comes from Richard Sunderland of JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Richard SunderlandEquity Research - North American Utilities & Power at JP Morgan00:15:22Hi, good morning. Thanks for the time today. Good morning, Rich. How are you thinking about Pennsylvania stakeholder relationships and engagements in advance of the next rate case application in the state? Have you been seasoning the timing of an application and are you seeing recognition of that? Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:15:41Hi, Rich, it's Cheryl. Thanks for the question. We really appreciate it. Yeah, we've been doing a whole lot of work in that stakeholder space. First and foremost, we continue to provide really great customer service across the state, and so we know that that is the ultimate way for us to keep our customers happy. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:16:00That's what they expect. But also we have created a stakeholder plan where we continue to reach out and build relationships across all of our stakeholder groups and we feel like we're in a really good spot in Pennsylvania. We are continuing to plan for our rate filing just as you would normally expect and as we've talked about in the past. Richard SunderlandEquity Research - North American Utilities & Power at JP Morgan00:16:25Got it. That's helpful color there. And then on the financing side, I know you've been clear on sort of strategy for the equity with blocks. Curious if you would explore a forward issuance to take care of the 26 equity needs, seeing a lot of peers in the space get ahead of equity. Thank you. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:16:45Hey, Rich, this is David. Yes, thanks for that question. Obviously, we keep I mean, all options on the table and are always evaluating are the options that we have to issue. But our plan is to take proceeds in 2026 and issue the equity in 'twenty six, so. Richard SunderlandEquity Research - North American Utilities & Power at JP Morgan00:17:08Great. I'll leave it there. Thank you. Operator00:17:13The next question comes from Angie Storozynski of Seaport. Please go ahead. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:17:20Thank you. So I wanted to ask about the Nexus acquisition. Anything you guys can provide as basis for the earnings power of this asset and how it compares to municipal M and A that you would typically pursue? And what does it say about the availability of larger municipal targets that you guys are going after a private set of assets? Thank you. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:17:49Thanks, Angie. I'll take a stab at that question. We see the Nexus acquisition. It was a great opportunity for us to get a group of customers in states that we already provide service to, but it does help us to expand our footprint in those states. We don't see it being a lot different than most of our acquisitions. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:18:10We're going to go through the same processes to bring these customers online. We've already started outreach with employees and communities so that we can get to know them and they can get to know us a little bit as we go through the process, which is just typical for what we would do in any acquisition type of scenario. So we see this as being any kind of an indication regarding municipal deals. Those municipal deals are still out there. We're still pursuing them and we're still getting lots of interest across our footprint. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:18:39We think that it's just. Another step in rightsizing the organizations across The U. S. And this consolidation piece that we've been pushing on and seeing all across the footprint is going to continue, and that will happen in various ways. So we're excited about this deal, but it certainly has not taken our eye off the ball on the municipal systems. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:19:04And it's not going to have, you know, diminished profitability because of the goodwill that is being paid and then just a different treatment of privately owned asset acquisitions? Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:19:17No, I don't think that it's going to have a negative impact at all. I think it's going to be again, we'll just roll them right in and we'll just keep moving forward. And I don't see a negative impact at all. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:19:30Okay. Okay, that's all I have. Thank Operator00:19:42Our next question comes from Jonathan Reeder of Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:19:49Hey, good morning team. Congrats on a solid update. I wanted to start first, I guess, piggybacking off of Angie there and say congrats on the Nexus deal as well as a resumption of some Pennsylvania fair market value deals. Cheryl, could you just kind of talk a little bit more on the landscape in Pennsylvania on the fair market value front? Were these deals that are kind of already in the pipeline just waiting to get done once the PUC finalized the revisions to the rules? Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:20:22Or is this just kind of more the tip of the iceberg of the backlog of deals that are kind of waiting to come and we should expect to see a lot more Pennsylvania fair market value activity in the quarters ahead? Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:20:36Yes. Jonathan, thanks for the question. These deals are all long lead time deals. So we've been working on all these deals for quite some time. Nothing happens overnight in the acquisition space. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:20:49But I would say these deals have just gone through the natural progression. I don't think they were necessarily waiting in the wings for these rules to get finalized or anything like that. I think the timing is what it is just based on the conversations that we've been having. And we look at each deal to determine does it make sense to do a fair market value deal or does it make sense to do a more traditional type of deal. And we've had a mixture of those. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:21:15When you talk about all the deals that are happening in Pennsylvania, they're not all fair market value deals. Do we expect more to come to the table? Absolutely. And we'll continue to manage through those deals. We were glad when the commission gave us guidelines that we can follow along so that it makes that process of getting a deal closed smoother and hopefully faster. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:21:36And so we're to follow those guidelines with our fair market value deals so that we can really push all these deals forward whether they're fair market value or not. But yes, we think there's still a lot more deals. There's a lot of consolidation that needs to happen out there. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:21:50Hey, it's John here. I'll just add to Cheryl's comments, and Cheryl is spot on there in terms of the Pennsylvania landscape. We really are seeing additional contribution from across our entire platform as well. So Pennsylvania remains healthy, but those same dynamics that drive Pennsylvania in terms of the need for investment, economies of scale, which leads to the regionalization, those all apply across our platform. And we're really we've spent the last couple of years organizing to be able to move on those dynamics broadly across our states. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:22:31Awesome. That's great to hear the momentum is broad. One other question I had was on your reference to the bill, the decoupling bill in California. Can you kind of expand a little bit more what exactly that says or maybe what's the goals of the bill? Because I believe the legislature in previous year kind of passed the decoupling bill, but it didn't require the commission to adopt decoupling. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:22:53Does this bill like require them to approve decoupling, full decoupling for the California water utilities? Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:23:01Yes, Jonathan, this bill was designed to try to close that gap for us. So we're hopeful that it continues to make its way through and that the governor signs off on it. And we're hoping to have a decision over the next few months. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:23:15Okay. But at this point, it still needs to pass both chambers before even going to the Governor. Is that correct? David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:23:23Yes. Well, it's Jonathan, it's David. It's passed out of the Appropriations Committee. Now it's got to go to the full legislature. And then once it passes there, it goes to the Governor's desk. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:23:37Excellent. All right. Thanks so much for taking the time to answer my questions. And again, congrats on a good update. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:23:44Thanks, Adam. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:23:45Thank you. Operator00:23:47The next question comes from Paul Zimbardo of Jefferies. Please go ahead. Paul ZimbardoMD & Research Analyst - Energy Analyst at Bank of America00:23:54Hi, good morning team. Thank you. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:23:59Good morning, Paul. Paul ZimbardoMD & Research Analyst - Energy Analyst at Bank of America00:23:59I just had one quick one, you're comprehensive before. Just on the strength in the 2025 pushing up the guidance towards the top end, I know you attributed to some stronger usage and just outperformance across the footprint. Is there anything else in particular that kind of drove that strength? And if we should think about that those drivers, whatever they may be contributing in 2026 plus? David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:24:25Paul, this is David. No, I mean, what we disclosed in the call here was really the primary driver. We're just seeing strong usage. We saw that last year, a continuation of that. And that's the main driver. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:24:40Yes. And Paul, just to add to that, it's a lot of consistent regulatory execution and the strength of our diversified platform geographically as well as from a regulatory perspective. Paul ZimbardoMD & Research Analyst - Energy Analyst at Bank of America00:24:53Okay. Understood. Very much. Have a good one. Operator00:25:01This concludes our question and answer session. Our presentation is now finished. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAaron MusgraveVP - IRJohn GriffithPresident, CEO & DirectorDavid BowlerEVP & CFOCheryl NortonEVP & COOAnalystsRichard SunderlandEquity Research - North American Utilities & Power at JP MorganAngie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research PartnersJonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo SecuritiesPaul ZimbardoMD & Research Analyst - Energy Analyst at Bank of AmericaPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) American Water Works Earnings HeadlinesAmerican Water Works Company, Inc. (NYSE:AWK) Receives Average Rating of "Reduce" from BrokeragesAugust 10 at 2:17 AM | americanbankingnews.comAmerican Water Enters New Forward Sale AgreementsAugust 8 at 2:34 PM | tipranks.comHIDDEN IN THE BOOK OF GENESIS…“This land I will give to you…” — a 4,000-year-old line from Genesis may hold the key to unlocking a $150 trillion vault of untapped American wealth. Former CIA advisor Jim Rickards calls it the “Old Testament Wealth Code” — and says it could transform your financial future. He’s revealing everything in a new presentation.August 10 at 2:00 AM | Paradigm Press (Ad)American Water Works Company (AWK) Enters Forward Sale Agreements for 7 Million SharesAugust 6, 2025 | gurufocus.comAmerican Water Finalizes Forward Sale AgreementsAugust 6, 2025 | tipranks.comAmerican Water Works stock falls after pricing 7 million share offeringAugust 6, 2025 | za.investing.comSee More American Water Works Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like American Water Works? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on American Water Works and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About American Water WorksAmerican Water Works (NYSE:AWK), through its subsidiaries, provides water and wastewater services in the United States. It offers water and wastewater services to approximately 1,700 communities in 14 states serving approximately 3.5 million active customers. The company serves residential customers; commercial customers, including food and beverage providers, commercial property developers and proprietors, and energy suppliers; fire service and private fire customers; industrial customers, such as large-scale manufacturers, mining, and production operations; public authorities comprising government buildings and other public sector facilities, such as schools and universities; and other utilities and community water and wastewater systems. It also provides water and wastewater services on military installations; and undertakes contracts with municipal customers, primarily to operate and manage water and wastewater facilities, as well as offers other related services. In addition, the company operates approximately 80 surface water treatment plants; 540 groundwater treatment plants; 175 wastewater treatment plants; 53,700 miles of transmission, distribution, and collection mains and pipes; 1,200 groundwater wells; 1,700 water and wastewater pumping stations; 1,100 treated water storage facilities; and 74 dams. The company was founded in 1886 and is headquartered in Camden, New Jersey.View American Water Works ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Airbnb Beats Earnings, But the Growth Story Is Losing AltitudeDutch Bros Just Flipped the Script With a Massive Earnings BeatIs Eli Lilly’s 14% Post-Earnings Slide a Buy-the-Dip Opportunity?Constellation Energy’s Earnings Beat Signals a New EraRealty Income Rallies Post-Earnings Miss—Here’s What Drove ItDon't Mix the Signal for Noise in Super Micro Computer's EarningsWhy Monolithic Power's Earnings and Guidance Ignited a Rally Upcoming Earnings SEA (8/12/2025)Cisco Systems (8/13/2025)Alibaba Group (8/13/2025)NetEase (8/14/2025)Applied Materials (8/14/2025)Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.- Petrobras (8/14/2025)NU (8/14/2025)Deere & Company (8/14/2025)Palo Alto Networks (8/18/2025)Medtronic (8/19/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to American Water's Second Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, this call will be recorded and is also being webcast with an accompanying slide presentation through the company's Investor Relations website. The audio webcast archive will be available for one year on American Water's Investor Relations website. I would like now to introduce your host for today's call, Aaron Musgrave, Vice President of Investor Relations. Mr. Musgrave, you may begin. Aaron MusgraveVP - IR at American Water Works Company00:00:33Thank you, Alan. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for today's call. At the end of our prepared remarks, we will open the call for your questions. Let me first go over some safe harbor language. Today, we will be making forward looking statements that represent our expectations regarding our future performance or other future events. Aaron MusgraveVP - IR at American Water Works Company00:00:52These statements are predictions based on our current expectations, estimates and assumptions. However, since these statements deal with future events, they are subject to numerous known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from the results indicated or implied by such statements. Additional information regarding these risks, uncertainties and factors as well as a more detailed analysis of our financials and other important information is provided in the second quarter earnings release and Form 10 Q, each filed yesterday with the SEC. And finally, all statements during this presentation related to earnings and earnings per share refer to diluted earnings and diluted earnings per share. With that, I'll turn the call over to American Water's President and CEO, John Griffith. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:01:40Thank you, Aaron, and good morning, everyone. Let's turn to Slide five, and I'll start by covering some highlights of the second quarter and first half of the year. As we announced yesterday, we delivered solid financial results through the 2025. Earnings were $1.48 per share for the second quarter compared to $1.42 for the same period last year. In the first six months of twenty twenty five, earnings were 2.53 per share compared to $2.37 per share in the same period of 2024. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:02:15With this strength across the business, combined with our expectations for the rest of the year, we now expect to achieve the top half of our initial EPS guidance range for 2025, which we've narrowed to $5.7 to $5.75 per share. David will share more about our results and guidance a bit later. Moving on to some of our other key accomplishments so far in 2025. We invested $1,300,000,000 in capital projects year to date, again reflecting great work by our teams responsible for planning and completing these investments. We were also very pleased to announce several new acquisition agreements in the first half of the year, including the NEXUS Water Group systems that will add nearly 47,000 customer connections, which we expect to close by August 2026. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:03:08As Cheryl will discuss, we are continuing to build momentum with our business development platform with 87,000 customer connections under agreement totaling over $500,000,000 across our platform, and we continued our track record of regulatory execution in the 2025 with new rates effective in several states and new cases filed to reflect investments in infrastructure for the benefit of our customers, which leads us to Slide six, which describes the drivers of American Water's very competitive and sustainable shareholder return profile. We have a clear top tier capital growth plan underpinned by decades of fundamental water and wastewater infrastructure renewal and water quality investment. This, combined with our strong regulatory and operational execution, results in a value proposition that we believe is unique in the utility sector. We are again affirming our long term targets for both earnings and dividend growth at 7% to 9%, driven by 8% to 9% rate base growth. We expect to consistently grow earnings and dividends at an industry leading pace over the next five years and beyond. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:04:22With that, I'll hand it over to David to cover our financial results, rate case updates and our 2025 outlook in further detail. David? David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:04:32Thanks, John, and good morning, everyone. Turning to Slide eight, I'll provide further insights on second quarter results. Consolidated earnings were 1.48 per share, up $06 per share versus the same period in 2024. Revenues were higher by $0.50 per share driven by authorized rate increases to recover investment across our states. Revenues were also higher from recently completed water and wastewater acquisitions and organic customer growth. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:05:01Weather on the other hand was unfavorable by an estimated $06 per share year over year. This was due to wet weather in 2025 across many states resulting in an unfavorable $03 impact combined with the $03 unfavorable weather variance from the warm and dry conditions experienced in the 2024. And looking at operating costs, O and M was higher by $0.17 per share driven primarily by employee related expense, increased maintenance and technology cost, as well as costs related to acquisitions completed in 2024, which we expected. Depreciation increased $0.10 per share and financing costs increased $08 per share, both as expected in support of our investment growth. Turning to Slide nine. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:05:50Year to date consolidated earnings were $2.53 per share, up $0.16 per share versus the same period in 2024. On a weather normalized basis, EPS was up 9.4% year to date compared to the prior year. Many of the same drivers I described for the quarter apply to this period as well, including the unfavorable impact of weather. Revenues were higher by $0.94 per share and O and M was higher by $0.32 per share. Depreciation increased $0.21 per share and financing costs increased $0.18 per share, both as expected in support of our investment growth. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:06:27Turning to Slide 10, I'll cover the latest regulatory activity in our states. First on completed cases, we received a final order from the Missouri Commission in May approving our settlement agreement, which we discussed last quarter. In Iowa, we received a final order from the commission approving an annualized revenue increase of $13,000,000 based on an ROE of 9.6% and an equity layer of 52.57%, in line with the Iowa's approved capital structure in its previous rate case. As a reminder, interim rates were effective on 05/11/2024 in the amount of $5,100,000 and final rates will go into effect tomorrow on August 1. In Hawaii, we received a final order last week from the commission approving an annualized revenue increase of $1,500,000 based on an ROE of 9.75% and an equity layer just north of 52%. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:07:23We expect new rates to go into effect in early August. Turning to active cases, you can see we have general rate cases in progress in three jurisdictions. On May 5, we filed a general rate case in West Virginia reflecting $300,000,000 in system investments covering the period March 2024 through February 2027. We are seeking $48,000,000 of additional annual revenue, which would be reflected in two steps, in March 2026 and March 2027. And we expect this case to be completed by the February 2026. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:08:00Intervenor testimony is set for October and rebuttal testimony in November. On May 16, we filed a general rate case in Kentucky, reflecting $212,000,000 in system investments covering February 2025 through December 2026. We're seeking $27,000,000 additional annual revenue and we expect proposed rates to go into effect on an interim basis in December 2025. Intervenor testimony is set for August and rebuttal testimony in September. And finally, on July 1, we filed a general rate case in California, reflecting system investments through 2028. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:08:38We are seeking $63,000,000 of additional annual revenue in 2027 compared to authorized 2025 revenue and a total increase in revenue over the twenty twenty seven to twenty twenty nine period of $111,000,000 If approved by the commission, the new rates would take effect on 01/01/2027, with subsequent increases expected in January 2028 and 2029. As a reminder, our request for a one year extension of our cost of capital filing to 05/01/2026, was approved earlier this year, which maintains our current authorized cost of capital through 2026 absent significant movements in interest rates. Another piece of our filing is decoupling. We currently have partial decoupling in California, but again are requesting full decoupling to promote affordable rates in conservation. On a similar front on the legislative side, a decoupling bill related to water utilities has passed out of the California Senate and is currently awaiting action in the California Assembly Appropriations Committee. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:09:46On Slide 11, as John mentioned, yesterday, we announced that we are narrowing our 2025 EPS guidance to the top half of the range we first disclosed last October. The 2025 EPS guidance range is now $5.7 to $5.75 from $5.65 to $5.75 previously on a weather normalized basis. We are seeing strength in the business across several regulated states so far in 2025, including solid customer usage. Coupled with the fact that we will continue to have revenue increases year over year in several states through Q3, we expect the 2025 to deliver financial results to achieve this narrowed guidance range. This puts us on track to deliver 8.6 EPS growth in 2025 at the midpoint of the narrowed guidance range. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:10:37I'm confident in our team's ability to execute on our financial and operating plans, including delivering cost effective financing, while maintaining our balance sheet strength and credit profile. Our total debt to capital ratio as of the end of the quarter, net of $94,000,000 of cash on hand was 58%, which was within our target of less than 60%. As a reminder, our 2025 financing plans still includes another long term debt issuance of roughly $1,000,000,000 to be completed in the 2025. And finally, on Slide 12, I want to reemphasize that we continue to expect to achieve consistent EPS growth within the 7% to 9% range through 2029 and beyond. We believe our industry leading EPS and dividend growth coupled with our affordability position and sustainability leadership will continue to be highly valued and rewarded by investors. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:11:34We believe these aspects of our business and our position as the largest and most geographically diverse water and wastewater utility in the country distinguishes us from all other utilities. With that, I'll turn it over to Cheryl to talk more about our capital program, our recent acquisition activity. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:11:51Thank you, David, and good morning, everyone. On Slide 14, our capital program delivered $1,300,000,000 of investments in the first half of the year. This result keeps us on pace to hit our goal of approximately $3,300,000,000 of capital investment in 2025. Our low risk annual capital plan is made up of hundreds of individual projects, which our teams do a really great job of executing. As a reminder, the nature of the program also gives us the ability to flex up or flex down our organic CapEx spending annually in order to achieve our overall planned capital spend, including acquisitions. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:12:29We continue to expect these capital investments in infrastructure acquisitions will grow regulated rate base at a long term rate of 8% to 9%. Turning to Slide 15. We continue to be well positioned for growth through acquisitions across many states with about 87,000 customer connections under agreement from deals totaling $535,000,000 In May, we were pleased to announce an agreement with the Nexus Water Group subsidiary to purchase multiple water and wastewater systems located in eight states for $315,000,000 This acquisition will add nearly 47,000 customer connections and approximately $200,000,000 to rate base. Through this transaction, we will grow in eight of our existing regulated states, supporting our long term growth target of 2% for customer additions. As with other acquisitions, we'll be able to leverage our scale and size to deliver safe, clean, reliable and affordable water and wastewater services to these new customers. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:13:33We also believe this expansion will help lead to more growth since it will expand some of our in state geographies. We expect closing will take place by or before August 2026. In addition to the Nexus systems, we currently have 20 acquisitions in seven states under agreement for February that would add about 40,000 customer connections. This represents significant progress on the business development front, including in West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Importantly, we've seen renewed activity in Pennsylvania, including four systems closed so far this year and an additional eight systems under agreement. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:14:11The most recent acquisitions announced were the Pittston Wastewater System and the Indian Creek Valley Water Authority, where we plan to utilize fair market value under the new guidelines set by the commission. We have negotiated purchase prices that we believe will result in approval by our regulators of transactions at full cost recovery. We remain confident in our acquisition pipeline, and we are continuing to invest in regulated acquisition opportunities across our footprint. In all of our states, the acquisition opportunities are driven by the need for system consolidation, infrastructure upgrades, regulatory compliance and operational enhancements. With that, I'll turn it back over to our operator to begin Q and A and take any questions you may have. Operator00:15:15Our first question comes from Richard Sunderland of JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Richard SunderlandEquity Research - North American Utilities & Power at JP Morgan00:15:22Hi, good morning. Thanks for the time today. Good morning, Rich. How are you thinking about Pennsylvania stakeholder relationships and engagements in advance of the next rate case application in the state? Have you been seasoning the timing of an application and are you seeing recognition of that? Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:15:41Hi, Rich, it's Cheryl. Thanks for the question. We really appreciate it. Yeah, we've been doing a whole lot of work in that stakeholder space. First and foremost, we continue to provide really great customer service across the state, and so we know that that is the ultimate way for us to keep our customers happy. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:16:00That's what they expect. But also we have created a stakeholder plan where we continue to reach out and build relationships across all of our stakeholder groups and we feel like we're in a really good spot in Pennsylvania. We are continuing to plan for our rate filing just as you would normally expect and as we've talked about in the past. Richard SunderlandEquity Research - North American Utilities & Power at JP Morgan00:16:25Got it. That's helpful color there. And then on the financing side, I know you've been clear on sort of strategy for the equity with blocks. Curious if you would explore a forward issuance to take care of the 26 equity needs, seeing a lot of peers in the space get ahead of equity. Thank you. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:16:45Hey, Rich, this is David. Yes, thanks for that question. Obviously, we keep I mean, all options on the table and are always evaluating are the options that we have to issue. But our plan is to take proceeds in 2026 and issue the equity in 'twenty six, so. Richard SunderlandEquity Research - North American Utilities & Power at JP Morgan00:17:08Great. I'll leave it there. Thank you. Operator00:17:13The next question comes from Angie Storozynski of Seaport. Please go ahead. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:17:20Thank you. So I wanted to ask about the Nexus acquisition. Anything you guys can provide as basis for the earnings power of this asset and how it compares to municipal M and A that you would typically pursue? And what does it say about the availability of larger municipal targets that you guys are going after a private set of assets? Thank you. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:17:49Thanks, Angie. I'll take a stab at that question. We see the Nexus acquisition. It was a great opportunity for us to get a group of customers in states that we already provide service to, but it does help us to expand our footprint in those states. We don't see it being a lot different than most of our acquisitions. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:18:10We're going to go through the same processes to bring these customers online. We've already started outreach with employees and communities so that we can get to know them and they can get to know us a little bit as we go through the process, which is just typical for what we would do in any acquisition type of scenario. So we see this as being any kind of an indication regarding municipal deals. Those municipal deals are still out there. We're still pursuing them and we're still getting lots of interest across our footprint. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:18:39We think that it's just. Another step in rightsizing the organizations across The U. S. And this consolidation piece that we've been pushing on and seeing all across the footprint is going to continue, and that will happen in various ways. So we're excited about this deal, but it certainly has not taken our eye off the ball on the municipal systems. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:19:04And it's not going to have, you know, diminished profitability because of the goodwill that is being paid and then just a different treatment of privately owned asset acquisitions? Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:19:17No, I don't think that it's going to have a negative impact at all. I think it's going to be again, we'll just roll them right in and we'll just keep moving forward. And I don't see a negative impact at all. Angie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research Partners00:19:30Okay. Okay, that's all I have. Thank Operator00:19:42Our next question comes from Jonathan Reeder of Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:19:49Hey, good morning team. Congrats on a solid update. I wanted to start first, I guess, piggybacking off of Angie there and say congrats on the Nexus deal as well as a resumption of some Pennsylvania fair market value deals. Cheryl, could you just kind of talk a little bit more on the landscape in Pennsylvania on the fair market value front? Were these deals that are kind of already in the pipeline just waiting to get done once the PUC finalized the revisions to the rules? Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:20:22Or is this just kind of more the tip of the iceberg of the backlog of deals that are kind of waiting to come and we should expect to see a lot more Pennsylvania fair market value activity in the quarters ahead? Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:20:36Yes. Jonathan, thanks for the question. These deals are all long lead time deals. So we've been working on all these deals for quite some time. Nothing happens overnight in the acquisition space. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:20:49But I would say these deals have just gone through the natural progression. I don't think they were necessarily waiting in the wings for these rules to get finalized or anything like that. I think the timing is what it is just based on the conversations that we've been having. And we look at each deal to determine does it make sense to do a fair market value deal or does it make sense to do a more traditional type of deal. And we've had a mixture of those. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:21:15When you talk about all the deals that are happening in Pennsylvania, they're not all fair market value deals. Do we expect more to come to the table? Absolutely. And we'll continue to manage through those deals. We were glad when the commission gave us guidelines that we can follow along so that it makes that process of getting a deal closed smoother and hopefully faster. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:21:36And so we're to follow those guidelines with our fair market value deals so that we can really push all these deals forward whether they're fair market value or not. But yes, we think there's still a lot more deals. There's a lot of consolidation that needs to happen out there. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:21:50Hey, it's John here. I'll just add to Cheryl's comments, and Cheryl is spot on there in terms of the Pennsylvania landscape. We really are seeing additional contribution from across our entire platform as well. So Pennsylvania remains healthy, but those same dynamics that drive Pennsylvania in terms of the need for investment, economies of scale, which leads to the regionalization, those all apply across our platform. And we're really we've spent the last couple of years organizing to be able to move on those dynamics broadly across our states. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:22:31Awesome. That's great to hear the momentum is broad. One other question I had was on your reference to the bill, the decoupling bill in California. Can you kind of expand a little bit more what exactly that says or maybe what's the goals of the bill? Because I believe the legislature in previous year kind of passed the decoupling bill, but it didn't require the commission to adopt decoupling. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:22:53Does this bill like require them to approve decoupling, full decoupling for the California water utilities? Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:23:01Yes, Jonathan, this bill was designed to try to close that gap for us. So we're hopeful that it continues to make its way through and that the governor signs off on it. And we're hoping to have a decision over the next few months. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:23:15Okay. But at this point, it still needs to pass both chambers before even going to the Governor. Is that correct? David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:23:23Yes. Well, it's Jonathan, it's David. It's passed out of the Appropriations Committee. Now it's got to go to the full legislature. And then once it passes there, it goes to the Governor's desk. Jonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo Securities00:23:37Excellent. All right. Thanks so much for taking the time to answer my questions. And again, congrats on a good update. Cheryl NortonEVP & COO at American Water Works Company00:23:44Thanks, Adam. David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:23:45Thank you. Operator00:23:47The next question comes from Paul Zimbardo of Jefferies. Please go ahead. Paul ZimbardoMD & Research Analyst - Energy Analyst at Bank of America00:23:54Hi, good morning team. Thank you. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:23:59Good morning, Paul. Paul ZimbardoMD & Research Analyst - Energy Analyst at Bank of America00:23:59I just had one quick one, you're comprehensive before. Just on the strength in the 2025 pushing up the guidance towards the top end, I know you attributed to some stronger usage and just outperformance across the footprint. Is there anything else in particular that kind of drove that strength? And if we should think about that those drivers, whatever they may be contributing in 2026 plus? David BowlerEVP & CFO at American Water Works Company00:24:25Paul, this is David. No, I mean, what we disclosed in the call here was really the primary driver. We're just seeing strong usage. We saw that last year, a continuation of that. And that's the main driver. John GriffithPresident, CEO & Director at American Water Works Company00:24:40Yes. And Paul, just to add to that, it's a lot of consistent regulatory execution and the strength of our diversified platform geographically as well as from a regulatory perspective. Paul ZimbardoMD & Research Analyst - Energy Analyst at Bank of America00:24:53Okay. Understood. Very much. Have a good one. Operator00:25:01This concludes our question and answer session. Our presentation is now finished. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAaron MusgraveVP - IRJohn GriffithPresident, CEO & DirectorDavid BowlerEVP & CFOCheryl NortonEVP & COOAnalystsRichard SunderlandEquity Research - North American Utilities & Power at JP MorganAngie StorozynskiSenior Equity Research Analyst at Seaport Research PartnersJonathan ReederEquities Research Associate Analyst at Wells Fargo SecuritiesPaul ZimbardoMD & Research Analyst - Energy Analyst at Bank of AmericaPowered by