TSE:EMA Emera Q1 2026 Earnings Report C$71.63 -0.33 (-0.46%) As of 10:16 AM Eastern ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Emera EPS ResultsActual EPSC$1.37Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/AEmera Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$2.81 billionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/AEmera Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/8/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateFriday, May 8, 2026Conference Call Time8:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress ReleaseEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Emera Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 8, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Record Q1 adjusted EPS of CAD 1.37, up 7% year-over-year, and management says this performance positions Emera to deliver above its 5%–7% adjusted EPS growth target in 2026 and maintain confidence through 2030. Positive Sentiment: Emera Energy had a standout quarter and management raised 2026 earnings expectations to US$60M–$80M, well above its historical range, materially boosting near-term earnings outlook. Positive Sentiment: The Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board approved new rates effective May 1 and a securitization deferral mechanism for about CAD 700 million of retiring thermal assets, and with multi-year frameworks at Tampa Electric and Peoples Gas, management says it has rate clarity through 2027 to support capital investment. Positive Sentiment: Tampa Electric is seeing significant data center interest with roughly 1,300MW of developer interest and the utility able to serve about 300–500MW in the short term, with developer-funded studies and some construction already underway. Negative Sentiment: The planned sale of New Mexico Gas remains subject to the hearing examiner’s recommendation and is expected to close in mid-2026; timing uncertainty could affect expected financing and credit metric benefits if delayed. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallEmera Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Emera Q1 2026 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, note that all participant lines are in a listen-only mode. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. And if at any time during this call you require immediate assistance, please press star zero for the operator. Also note that this call is being recorded on Friday, May 8, 2026. Now I would like to turn the conference over to Dave Bezanson. Please go ahead. Dave BezansonSVP of Capital Markets at Emera00:00:30Thank you, Sylvie. Thank you all for joining us this morning for Emera's first quarter 2026 conference call and live webcast. Emera's first quarter earnings release was distributed this morning via Newswire, and the financial statements, management's discussion and analysis, and the presentation being referenced on this call are available on our website at emera.com. Joining me for this morning's call are Scott Balfour, Emera's President and Chief Executive Officer, Greg Blunden, Emera's Chief Financial Officer, and other members of Emera's management team. Before we begin, I'd like to advise you that this morning's discussion will include forward-looking information, which is subject to the cautionary statement contained in the supporting slide. Dave BezansonSVP of Capital Markets at Emera00:01:10Today's discussion and presentation will also include references to non-GAAP financial measures. You should refer to the appendix for reconciliations of historical non-GAAP measures to the closest GAAP financial measure. Unless otherwise specified, all financial information referenced is in Canadian dollars. Now I will turn things over to Scott. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:01:32Thank you, Dave, and good morning, everyone. This morning, we reported record first quarter adjusted earnings per share of CAD 1.37, up 7% year-over-year. This marks the strongest first quarter result in Emera's history. This performance positions us well to once again deliver above our 5%-7% adjusted earnings per share compound annual growth target in 2026, using 2024 as the base year. Our first quarter results reflect strong execution, meaningful regulatory progress, and solid performance across our regulated utilities. Results were also supported by record performance at Emera Energy. I want to thank our teams across the organization for their focus and discipline in serving our customers and delivering these results for our shareholders. At Tampa Electric, first quarter results benefited from the subsequent year's revenue adjustment, which came into effect on January 1, 2026. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:02:32Results were also supported by colder-than-normal weather early in the year, including Winter Storm Finn, which drove higher demand across the region. The team responded with reliable generation, disciplined operations, and a secure fuel supply, enabling strong contributions in off-system sales in support of our neighboring utilities. Consistent with our approved sharing mechanism, customers benefit from the majority of the revenues generated from these sales. At Peoples Gas, first quarter earnings reflect new rates effective January 1st of 2026 that support ongoing rate base investment supporting growth, system expansion, and reliability across Florida. Favorable market dynamics also supported strong off-system sales execution, with half of those revenues shared directly with customers. Emera Energy had a standout first quarter, supported by favorable market conditions early in the year and the business's ability to capitalize. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:03:33As a result, Emera Energy delivered another record first quarter for the second year in a row, with earnings expectations for this business now in the range of $60 million-$80 million for 2026, well above its traditional range of $15 million-$30 million. Building on Emera Energy's strong start and with the solid performance across the rest of the business, we are well-positioned to earn above our guidance range in 2026 and remain confident in our long-term average EPS growth guidance of 5%-7% through 2030. We continue to see customer growth across our portfolio that will support our ability to affordably invest in our utilities. We're also seeing meaningful interest from multiple data center developers in Tampa Electric's service territory. A number of developer-funded system impact studies are advancing, and in some cases, developer-funded construction work is underway. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:04:30Overall, we're pleased with how 2026 is shaping up. First quarter results reflect strong execution across the business and continued momentum in our regulated utilities. From a regulatory perspective, we saw good progress early in 2026 with the approval of new rates by the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board. The decision was largely aligned with the consensus settlement agreement by all customer groups. New rates took effect May 1. A key element of the board's decision was the approval of a securitization deferral mechanism for approximately CAD 700 million of retiring thermal assets. This allows related costs, including depreciation, to be deferred during the rate period, pending proposed securitization, helping to manage the timing of cost recovery. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:05:20The regulator agreed with Nova Scotia Power and customer representatives that securitization would deliver meaningful long-term savings for customers while supporting the Nova Scotia Independent System Operator work to meet the federal mandate to retire coal plants by 2030 and the province's target of achieving 80% renewables by 2030. While work remains to fully implement securitization, the Nova Scotia Power team will continue to work with the province to advance the process and ensure the substantial customer and policy benefits are realized. Turning to New Mexico, we continue to await the hearing examiner's recommendation following the hearing that concluded in November. While the duration of this part of the regulatory process is not in our control, our view of the outcome remains unchanged. The key elements remain in place to support a successful transaction, and we now expect the sale to close in mid-2026. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:06:15In the first quarter, our teams safely executed more than CAD 870 million of customer-focused capital investment, keeping us firmly on track to deliver our CAD 4 billion capital plan for 2026, supporting our targeted 7% to 8% rate base growth. Across the portfolio, major projects continue to advance as planned. At Tampa Electric, we're progressing solar investments, grid modernization, and reliability upgrades. In Nova Scotia, we're moving forward on energy storage, transmission, and system reliability investments. At Peoples Gas, the team continues to execute on critical infrastructure expansion supported by strong customer growth. At its core, our capital program is focused on delivering customer value by enhancing reliability, strengthening system resilience, and supporting growth in the communities we serve. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:07:08We remain disciplined in how we pace these investments, carefully balancing timing and execution to help manage customer rate impacts while positioning our systems for long-term value enhancement for customers. With new rates now in place at Nova Scotia Power and multi-year rate frameworks already established at Tampa Electric and Peoples Gas, we have rate clarity across our three largest utilities through 2027. This regulatory clarity gives us greater confidence to continue investing in essential infrastructure while providing a more predictable path for earnings and cash flow growth over time. Before I hand it over to Jared, I want to highlight that earlier this week, we reached an agreement to sell Grand Bahama Power Company to the government of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas. The transaction is expected to close by the end of May. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:07:59While not a material financial impact, it is a further example of our focus on optimizing Emera's portfolio and focusing our efforts on our core utility operations in Florida and Atlantic Canada. While it is never easy to part ways with a company and team that have been part of the Emera family for 15 years, this sale provides support for the government's national energy policy while, at the same time, further simplifying and de-risking Emera's portfolio. We want to thank the Grand Bahama team for their unwavering commitment to delivering safe and reliable energy to customers. We thank each of you for your commitment, your excellence, and your hard work. With that, I'll turn the call over to Jared to discuss our financial results. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:08:47Thank you, Scott, and thank you all for joining us this morning. I am very glad to be with you. Turning to our financial highlights, this morning we reported first quarter adjusted earnings of CAD 415 million or CAD 1.37 per share, representing a 7% or CAD 0.09 increase year-over-year. As Scott noted, this marks a record first quarter for the company. Strong earnings growth drove a 6% increase in operating cash flow, excluding working capital. From a credit metrics perspective, we remain on track to achieve Moody's 12% operating cash flow pre-working capital to debt target for 2026, which would be further enhanced by an expected sustained 50 basis point contribution from the close of New Mexico Gas. I'll now walk through the key drivers of our financial results. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:09:42Starting with Emera Energy, the business delivered a record first quarter with earnings up 57% year-over-year. Results were supported by favorable market conditions early in the year and strong execution by the team. At Tampa Electric, earnings benefited from new rates following the 2024 rate filing, including an $88 million subsequent-year adjustment for 2026, as well as colder than normal weather earlier in the year. These factors, combined with strong operational execution, also supported higher off-system sales. Turning to our gas utilities, Peoples Gas delivered a solid quarter, supported by new rates effective January 1 this year. Similar to Tampa Electric, results also benefited from favorable market conditions that supported higher off-system sales in the first quarter. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:10:34For our other electric segment, results at our Caribbean utilities benefited from lower fuel costs as well as lower income tax expense related to a deferred tax liability recognized in the first quarter of last year. Corporate costs were largely in line with the prior year. We saw a modestly higher O&M expense and a lower gain on the long-term incentive hedge, partially offset by higher income tax recovery and an increase in the deferred income tax asset valuation allowance adjustment. During the quarter, a higher average share count reduced adjusted earnings per share by CAD 0.03, and a stronger Canadian dollar reduced EPS by CAD 0.06. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:11:15Finally, in our Canadian electric segment, earnings were lower, primarily because of a lower income tax recovery compared to the first quarter of 2025 and higher regulatory lag as new rates were not in place for the first quarter as we would have expected, though this was partially offset by higher sales volumes. Before I hand it back over to Scott, I'll briefly touch on our recent financing activities. In the first quarter, we issued $750 million US dollars of hybrid securities. Together with the $750 million US dollars hybrid issued late last year, these proceeds will refinance Emera's $1.2 billion US dollar hybrid, which we do plan to redeem in June. Following the planned redemption, we will have added approximately $300 million US dollars of incremental hybrid capital to our structure. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:12:07This provides about 10 basis points of credit metric benefit. Hybrid capital will continue to be part of our long-term growth funding strategy. Also in the first quarter, we issued $750 million of senior notes to refinance a $750 million maturity coming due in June. With that, I'll turn it back to Scott for his closing remarks. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:12:31Thank you, Jared. Before I close, I want to recognize that this is Judy Steele's final earnings call as CEO of Emera Energy, marking 14 years leading the business and 26 years with Emera. Judy, thank you for your leadership, strategic insight, and deep commitment to the organization. We are grateful for the lasting impact you've had on Emera Energy and, of course, on Emera more broadly. To close, we're encouraged by the way the year started and by the consistent execution we're seeing across the business. Our first quarter results reflect continued progress in executing our strategy and the underlying strength of our regulated utilities and position us well to deliver above our adjusted earnings per share growth target of 5%-7% this year. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:13:20We remain focused on investing to deliver safe, reliable energy for customers while maintaining disciplined capital execution, constructive stakeholder engagement, and a strengthening balance sheet to support predictable long-term growth. We appreciate your continued interest in Emera and your time today and will now open the line for questions. Operator00:13:41Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, if you do have any questions at this time, please press the star followed by one on your touch-tone phone. You will then hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press the star followed by two. If using a speakerphone, you will need to lift the handset first before pressing any keys. One moment, please, for your first question. You will hear first from Rob Hope at Scotiabank. Please go ahead, Rob. Rob HopeAnalyst at Scotiabank00:14:13Morning, everyone. First question is on the funding plan. What are the expected proceeds from the Grand Bahama sale, and was that in the prior funding plan? I'm assuming it was not. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:14:32Good morning, Rob. We haven't stated what the profit levels are at this point in time, so they are still confidential during the closing side. You would be correct. The proceeds on that wouldn't have been in our original funding plan. We will use the funds, though, to just go into the normal corporate funding. It will go to repaying debt, and we will still be executing our capital program and the rest of the funding plan as originally stated. Rob HopeAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:01Sorry. Then maybe just to clarify, do you think that this sale will reduce your equity funding needs and potentially lower the ATM? Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:15:08I don't think this is gonna make a material difference on the overall funding plan. Rob HopeAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:13All right. Appreciate that. Maybe moving over to Nova Scotia, can you provide an update on how the securitization conversations are going for the decarbonization initiatives up there? Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:15:26Rob, Jared here again. Discussions are ongoing with the government. The team is working with them. We do still need to have the regulations put in place. Those are continuing forward. Timing-wise, we're still optimistic and hopeful that we will be able to get through those steps and have the securitization approved and in place in this calendar year. Discussions are ongoing. Rob HopeAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:53All right. Thanks for that. Judy, all the best. It's been enjoyable. Thank you. Judy SteelePresident and COO at Emera Energy00:15:58Thank you. Operator00:16:01Next question will come from Maurice Choy at RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead, Maurice. Maurice ChoyAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:16:07Thank you very much. Good morning, everyone. Just sticking with the Nova Scotia theme, it feels like all the stakeholders have been able to move on following the recent rate case approval. If you agree with that, how do you see the opportunity for incremental growth opportunities for the utility, given all the energy and economic objectives laid out by the government recently? Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:16:36Thanks, Maurice. I mean, yes, there's certainly, you know, not unlike other jurisdictions, the reality is there is a lot of investment opportunity and investment required in electric systems. That's, you know, that's certainly true in Nova Scotia. Of course, with the Independent System Operator in place, it's continuing to proceed with the generation procurement while Nova Scotia Power continues to proceed with investments in poles and wires and the transmission and distribution aspects of the system. There are, you know, as you know, some major project initiatives there, including the New Brunswick, Nova Scotia Intertie, and other system upgrades. There's also synchronous condenser work that the utility is doing, which helps to support the intermittent renewables that are being added onto the system. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:17:28Continues to be a lot of investment. At this point in time, we're not looking at any adjustments to the rate base growth profile for Nova Scotia Power. Of course, we'll, you know, typically update those rate base growth profiles in the fall. But with the rate profile that's in place now, we have the benefit of agreement with all the stakeholders, including the regulator and customer interveners, as to not only the rate profile but also the capital profile that supports it. There's great clarity for Nova Scotia Power on the execution path ahead. Maurice ChoyAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:18:05Understood. If I could, I'd finish off with NMGC. I know you mentioned that where the process is right now is out of your control. Are you made aware as to what may be causing the slight delay? Maybe just thinking bigger picture, are there any reasons you think it is worthwhile keeping this utility, particularly from a growth perspective? Karen HuttEVP of Corporate Development at Emera00:18:33Good morning, Maurice Choy. It's Karen Hutt. no, we don't have any specific reason to, you know, go in terms of the timing. This is an open docket in front of the commission, so that means that there are specific rules for how you can engage. That means we need to wait to hear from them. you know, as Scott said, we continue to feel confident in our case, and we continue to feel confident in our ability to move forward with the transaction. At this point, we're waiting for word from the hearing examiner, and the rest of the team is ready to go in terms of transition. It's full steam ahead. Maurice ChoyAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:19:21Understood. My thank you, of course, to Judy Steele for the many years of help, and congrats to Karen Hutt on your additional role. Judy SteelePresident and COO at Emera Energy00:19:29Thanks. We're sitting next to each other. Karen says thank you, too. Operator00:19:36Next question will be from John Mould at TD Cowen. Please go ahead, John. John MouldAnalyst at TD Cowen00:19:42Hi. morning, everybody. Maybe, going back to Florida, your comments on data center discussions there. Can you maybe just provide a little more color around the scale of the conversations you're having, you know, what the timing could look like, and any key gating items that you're seeing in those conversations? Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:20:07Archie, over to you. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:20:11Good morning, John. Good morning, everyone. John, I guess what I would say is, you know, interest from data centers has certainly been quite elevated for us over the last six to nine months. Lots of interest in our region in West Central Florida, given the fact that we kind of span that I-4 corridor between Tampa and Orlando. Lots of interest in there. You know, one of the gating items is, you know, that certainly was everyone waiting to see whether or not the governor was going to sign Senate Bill 484 into law, and he did that yesterday. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:20:55That certainly makes it clearer to the data center investment community that Florida is in fact open for business as long as certain guidelines are respected in the process. I will say, you know, the guidelines that are embedded within that bill are guidelines that we've agreed with all along. They're rooted in the principles of transparency, fairness of cost allocation, and environmental stewardship. So we certainly, we collectively, whether it's us as the utility or the data center developers, are feeling confident about the support from the community and from the government. Lots of interest. I would say that certainly discussions with multiple parties are much further advanced. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:21:46From a scale perspective, you know, I would say we've got about 1,300MW of interested data center counterparties. That's a collection of them as opposed to any single entity. Those discussions are much further advanced. They've acquired the land. They're pursuing permits. They, as Scott said, have funded very detailed system impact studies, and they're backing a lot of capital work that we're currently undertaking to meet their interconnection timelines and ramp rates. Lots happening. We're feeling confident. We're pleased to see that the governor has signed Senate Bill 484. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:22:30You know, expect that we'll have more to say on, you know, who these counterparties are and what the ramp rates are over the next couple of months. The only other point I would make on this is, like, for a utility our size, you know, the growth potential here is meaningful. 100MW of data center revenue is about 2% load growth on an annual basis. You, you know, you start doing the math, and it's a significant opportunity for a utility like ours. John MouldAnalyst at TD Cowen00:23:07Thanks. Thanks for that. Maybe just continuing because you raised it at the end there. Can you just, you know, talk about your supply picture and ability to, you know, if you are able to land a couple of these over the midterm, you know, what does that look like in terms of incremental generation and potential additions to the capital plan? Appreciate you probably don't want to get too far ahead of yourself, but I'm just trying to get a sense. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:23:34I don't- John MouldAnalyst at TD Cowen00:23:34of the room that you have in the system. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:23:37Yeah. I do have to be careful here. Of course, it's a function of the desired ramp rates from the counterparties and a function of our ability to meet those ramp rates while continuing to respect our regulatory obligations vis-a-vis, you know, reserve margin requirements. You know, we're well-positioned in the short term to serve in the neighborhood of 300MW to 500MW of data centers. We're working with the counterparties to firm up, you know, their commitment and their ramp rate and manage our exposure so that we can make other decisions as far as shoring up the generation side of the equation. In the short term, we're well-positioned for 300MW to 500MW over the next couple of years. John MouldAnalyst at TD Cowen00:24:38Okay. That was great detail. Thank you. I'll get back in the queue. Operator00:24:44Thank you. Next question will be from Ben Pham at BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead, Ben. Ben PhamAnalyst at BMO Capital Markets00:24:51Hi. Thanks. Good morning. I just want to start off by congratulating Judy and Karen on the next steps. I just want to go back to the New Mexico Gas Company sale. Given that it's taken about a year and a half or so since the announcement, I assume the outside dates have been extended with parties. If this transaction is delayed beyond mid-year, does this really open up a potential renegotiation of the deal? Karen HuttEVP of Corporate Development at Emera00:25:21Hi, Ben. It's Karen. You're right. We did deal with the outside date as it relates to the contract. We'll deal with that again to the extent that we need to, but we wouldn't anticipate any other discussions beyond that. Ben PhamAnalyst at BMO Capital Markets00:25:37Got it. I just want to go back to the marketing results, just given the strength in the quarter and your new guidance. Can you talk about results from other infrastructure names? Some have done well from the storm results, some have done not as well, and some have actually been negatively impacted depending on your position. Can you remind us how your trading works in that area with the transmission bids you're doing? Is it other business development opportunities that you've been working on? Judy SteelePresident and COO at Emera Energy00:26:19I think you're asking me that question. You know, I always start by saying that we manage the business to limit the downside risk always and have some optionality when the market conditions present themselves, and they did in Q1. Without kind of giving away the whole commercial strategy, there were four big rocks that contributed to the results. We do have a transport portfolio, and specifically, the capacity we had between New England and New York became very, very valuable as the New York pricing spiked. We had also picked up some short-term capacity from Western Canada before the cold weather event hit at pretty reasonable prices, and that increased our available gas volumes. We had options that we had invested in for risk management purposes that we exercised at some very healthy margins. Judy SteelePresident and COO at Emera Energy00:27:12In New York, gas generators were being dispatched for reliability, which also had a very bullish impact on the market. You know, fundamentally, the story is the same as always. We have transportation assets, and when the market conditions present themselves, we're able to use those assets to move lower-priced gas into higher-priced markets. Ben PhamAnalyst at BMO Capital Markets00:27:36Okay. Got it. That's a useful color. Thank you. Operator00:27:41Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, a reminder to please press star one should you have any questions. Thank you. Next, we will hear from Michael Logan at Barclays. Please go ahead, Michael. Michael LoganAnalyst at Barclays00:27:54Hi. Thanks for taking my question. You know, in the event that Nova Scotia were to reject the securitization, you know, approval of the regulations, you know, what would you see as your next step? Would you apply for, you know, conventional rate recovery, or is there a way you could make a, you know, different securitization proposal, like renegotiate or repackage the securitization structure? Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:28:22Good morning, Michael. Jared here. The formal first steps, if securitization were not to proceed, the regulator actually set that out in their decision coming from this last settlement. There is a deferral account that is set up in that circumstance. If it didn't proceed with securitization, then those assets would be treated in the normal course of a rate base and ratemaking. As that moved forward, Vivek and the team would be looking at the full rate structures, the company, and what scenarios would be present there. As we sit right now, again, we're confident that we will be able to proceed with the securitization because it makes really good sense for customers. Absent that, we do have the regulatory pathway for the alternative. Michael LoganAnalyst at Barclays00:29:16Thank you. Then, you know, in the event the New Mexico Gas sale, you know, were not to close and, you know, also, you know, if the securitization again of the thermal asset regulations are not approved, what could we expect the path forward for your financing plan to be? You know, obviously, Moody's has you on a negative outlook. You know, would you consider issuing more equity or selling additional non-core assets like Barbados or pipelines? You know, just wondering if you could talk about that. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:29:44The number one plan for that, Michael, is business execution, and that's actually been what has occurred over this last couple-year period as well. We're sitting in a place where we are kind of right up at the down or the threshold levels, even without the securitization of New Mexico Gas close. I would like to have the extra flexibility in our measures that would come from that to get some strengthening into the balance sheet. The business itself has improved a lot, and the execution of the business has been that core piece. In that unlikely scenario you described of those two pieces not going forward, the execution plan of the business is not going to have an abrupt change. We're going to execute, and we'll move forward in a prudent, measured fashion. Michael LoganAnalyst at Barclays00:30:36Great. Thanks for taking my question. Operator00:30:40Thank you. At this time, Mr. Bezanson, we have no further questions registered. Please proceed. Dave BezansonSVP of Capital Markets at Emera00:30:48Thank you very much, Sylvie. Thanks everyone for your interest and support of Emera. We look forward to seeing you in the coming months in our marketing. Have a good day. Operator00:30:57Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, this does indeed conclude the conference call for today. Once again, thank you for attending. At this time, we do ask that you please disconnect your lines. Have yourselves a good weekend.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDave BezansonSVP of Capital MarketsJared GreenCFOJudy SteelePresident and COOKaren HuttEVP of Corporate DevelopmentScott BalfourPresident and CEOAnalystsArchie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa ElectricBen PhamAnalyst at BMO Capital MarketsJohn MouldAnalyst at TD CowenMaurice ChoyAnalyst at RBC Capital MarketsMichael LoganAnalyst at BarclaysRob HopeAnalyst at ScotiabankPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release Emera Earnings HeadlinesEmera Inc (EMA) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Highlights: Strong Growth and Strategic Investments ...May 9 at 6:30 PM | finance.yahoo.comEmera Incorporated (EMA:CA) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 8 at 11:42 PM | seekingalpha.comYou’re Being LIED To About The Iran WarThe mainstream explanation for the Iran airstrikes may not be the full story. Addison Wiggin, Founder of Grey Swan Investment Fraternity, says there's a deeper motive behind the bombing campaign that most coverage is ignoring. If you're making investment decisions based on what you're hearing in the news, Wiggin argues you could be working with an incomplete picture.May 11 at 1:00 AM | Banyan Hill Publishing (Ad)Emera Reports 2026 First Quarter Financial ResultsMay 8 at 6:31 AM | financialpost.comFAnalysts Have Conflicting Sentiments on These Utilities Companies: Emera (EMA), Origin Energy Limited (OtherOGFGF) and Clearway Energy (CWEN)April 30, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comEmera Inc. Announces Leadership Transition at Emera EnergyApril 30, 2026 | financialpost.comFSee More Emera Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Emera? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Emera Q1 2026 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, note that all participant lines are in a listen-only mode. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. And if at any time during this call you require immediate assistance, please press star zero for the operator. Also note that this call is being recorded on Friday, May 8, 2026. Now I would like to turn the conference over to Dave Bezanson. Please go ahead. Dave BezansonSVP of Capital Markets at Emera00:00:30Thank you, Sylvie. Thank you all for joining us this morning for Emera's first quarter 2026 conference call and live webcast. Emera's first quarter earnings release was distributed this morning via Newswire, and the financial statements, management's discussion and analysis, and the presentation being referenced on this call are available on our website at emera.com. Joining me for this morning's call are Scott Balfour, Emera's President and Chief Executive Officer, Greg Blunden, Emera's Chief Financial Officer, and other members of Emera's management team. Before we begin, I'd like to advise you that this morning's discussion will include forward-looking information, which is subject to the cautionary statement contained in the supporting slide. Dave BezansonSVP of Capital Markets at Emera00:01:10Today's discussion and presentation will also include references to non-GAAP financial measures. You should refer to the appendix for reconciliations of historical non-GAAP measures to the closest GAAP financial measure. Unless otherwise specified, all financial information referenced is in Canadian dollars. Now I will turn things over to Scott. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:01:32Thank you, Dave, and good morning, everyone. This morning, we reported record first quarter adjusted earnings per share of CAD 1.37, up 7% year-over-year. This marks the strongest first quarter result in Emera's history. This performance positions us well to once again deliver above our 5%-7% adjusted earnings per share compound annual growth target in 2026, using 2024 as the base year. Our first quarter results reflect strong execution, meaningful regulatory progress, and solid performance across our regulated utilities. Results were also supported by record performance at Emera Energy. I want to thank our teams across the organization for their focus and discipline in serving our customers and delivering these results for our shareholders. At Tampa Electric, first quarter results benefited from the subsequent year's revenue adjustment, which came into effect on January 1, 2026. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:02:32Results were also supported by colder-than-normal weather early in the year, including Winter Storm Finn, which drove higher demand across the region. The team responded with reliable generation, disciplined operations, and a secure fuel supply, enabling strong contributions in off-system sales in support of our neighboring utilities. Consistent with our approved sharing mechanism, customers benefit from the majority of the revenues generated from these sales. At Peoples Gas, first quarter earnings reflect new rates effective January 1st of 2026 that support ongoing rate base investment supporting growth, system expansion, and reliability across Florida. Favorable market dynamics also supported strong off-system sales execution, with half of those revenues shared directly with customers. Emera Energy had a standout first quarter, supported by favorable market conditions early in the year and the business's ability to capitalize. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:03:33As a result, Emera Energy delivered another record first quarter for the second year in a row, with earnings expectations for this business now in the range of $60 million-$80 million for 2026, well above its traditional range of $15 million-$30 million. Building on Emera Energy's strong start and with the solid performance across the rest of the business, we are well-positioned to earn above our guidance range in 2026 and remain confident in our long-term average EPS growth guidance of 5%-7% through 2030. We continue to see customer growth across our portfolio that will support our ability to affordably invest in our utilities. We're also seeing meaningful interest from multiple data center developers in Tampa Electric's service territory. A number of developer-funded system impact studies are advancing, and in some cases, developer-funded construction work is underway. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:04:30Overall, we're pleased with how 2026 is shaping up. First quarter results reflect strong execution across the business and continued momentum in our regulated utilities. From a regulatory perspective, we saw good progress early in 2026 with the approval of new rates by the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board. The decision was largely aligned with the consensus settlement agreement by all customer groups. New rates took effect May 1. A key element of the board's decision was the approval of a securitization deferral mechanism for approximately CAD 700 million of retiring thermal assets. This allows related costs, including depreciation, to be deferred during the rate period, pending proposed securitization, helping to manage the timing of cost recovery. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:05:20The regulator agreed with Nova Scotia Power and customer representatives that securitization would deliver meaningful long-term savings for customers while supporting the Nova Scotia Independent System Operator work to meet the federal mandate to retire coal plants by 2030 and the province's target of achieving 80% renewables by 2030. While work remains to fully implement securitization, the Nova Scotia Power team will continue to work with the province to advance the process and ensure the substantial customer and policy benefits are realized. Turning to New Mexico, we continue to await the hearing examiner's recommendation following the hearing that concluded in November. While the duration of this part of the regulatory process is not in our control, our view of the outcome remains unchanged. The key elements remain in place to support a successful transaction, and we now expect the sale to close in mid-2026. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:06:15In the first quarter, our teams safely executed more than CAD 870 million of customer-focused capital investment, keeping us firmly on track to deliver our CAD 4 billion capital plan for 2026, supporting our targeted 7% to 8% rate base growth. Across the portfolio, major projects continue to advance as planned. At Tampa Electric, we're progressing solar investments, grid modernization, and reliability upgrades. In Nova Scotia, we're moving forward on energy storage, transmission, and system reliability investments. At Peoples Gas, the team continues to execute on critical infrastructure expansion supported by strong customer growth. At its core, our capital program is focused on delivering customer value by enhancing reliability, strengthening system resilience, and supporting growth in the communities we serve. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:07:08We remain disciplined in how we pace these investments, carefully balancing timing and execution to help manage customer rate impacts while positioning our systems for long-term value enhancement for customers. With new rates now in place at Nova Scotia Power and multi-year rate frameworks already established at Tampa Electric and Peoples Gas, we have rate clarity across our three largest utilities through 2027. This regulatory clarity gives us greater confidence to continue investing in essential infrastructure while providing a more predictable path for earnings and cash flow growth over time. Before I hand it over to Jared, I want to highlight that earlier this week, we reached an agreement to sell Grand Bahama Power Company to the government of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas. The transaction is expected to close by the end of May. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:07:59While not a material financial impact, it is a further example of our focus on optimizing Emera's portfolio and focusing our efforts on our core utility operations in Florida and Atlantic Canada. While it is never easy to part ways with a company and team that have been part of the Emera family for 15 years, this sale provides support for the government's national energy policy while, at the same time, further simplifying and de-risking Emera's portfolio. We want to thank the Grand Bahama team for their unwavering commitment to delivering safe and reliable energy to customers. We thank each of you for your commitment, your excellence, and your hard work. With that, I'll turn the call over to Jared to discuss our financial results. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:08:47Thank you, Scott, and thank you all for joining us this morning. I am very glad to be with you. Turning to our financial highlights, this morning we reported first quarter adjusted earnings of CAD 415 million or CAD 1.37 per share, representing a 7% or CAD 0.09 increase year-over-year. As Scott noted, this marks a record first quarter for the company. Strong earnings growth drove a 6% increase in operating cash flow, excluding working capital. From a credit metrics perspective, we remain on track to achieve Moody's 12% operating cash flow pre-working capital to debt target for 2026, which would be further enhanced by an expected sustained 50 basis point contribution from the close of New Mexico Gas. I'll now walk through the key drivers of our financial results. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:09:42Starting with Emera Energy, the business delivered a record first quarter with earnings up 57% year-over-year. Results were supported by favorable market conditions early in the year and strong execution by the team. At Tampa Electric, earnings benefited from new rates following the 2024 rate filing, including an $88 million subsequent-year adjustment for 2026, as well as colder than normal weather earlier in the year. These factors, combined with strong operational execution, also supported higher off-system sales. Turning to our gas utilities, Peoples Gas delivered a solid quarter, supported by new rates effective January 1 this year. Similar to Tampa Electric, results also benefited from favorable market conditions that supported higher off-system sales in the first quarter. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:10:34For our other electric segment, results at our Caribbean utilities benefited from lower fuel costs as well as lower income tax expense related to a deferred tax liability recognized in the first quarter of last year. Corporate costs were largely in line with the prior year. We saw a modestly higher O&M expense and a lower gain on the long-term incentive hedge, partially offset by higher income tax recovery and an increase in the deferred income tax asset valuation allowance adjustment. During the quarter, a higher average share count reduced adjusted earnings per share by CAD 0.03, and a stronger Canadian dollar reduced EPS by CAD 0.06. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:11:15Finally, in our Canadian electric segment, earnings were lower, primarily because of a lower income tax recovery compared to the first quarter of 2025 and higher regulatory lag as new rates were not in place for the first quarter as we would have expected, though this was partially offset by higher sales volumes. Before I hand it back over to Scott, I'll briefly touch on our recent financing activities. In the first quarter, we issued $750 million US dollars of hybrid securities. Together with the $750 million US dollars hybrid issued late last year, these proceeds will refinance Emera's $1.2 billion US dollar hybrid, which we do plan to redeem in June. Following the planned redemption, we will have added approximately $300 million US dollars of incremental hybrid capital to our structure. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:12:07This provides about 10 basis points of credit metric benefit. Hybrid capital will continue to be part of our long-term growth funding strategy. Also in the first quarter, we issued $750 million of senior notes to refinance a $750 million maturity coming due in June. With that, I'll turn it back to Scott for his closing remarks. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:12:31Thank you, Jared. Before I close, I want to recognize that this is Judy Steele's final earnings call as CEO of Emera Energy, marking 14 years leading the business and 26 years with Emera. Judy, thank you for your leadership, strategic insight, and deep commitment to the organization. We are grateful for the lasting impact you've had on Emera Energy and, of course, on Emera more broadly. To close, we're encouraged by the way the year started and by the consistent execution we're seeing across the business. Our first quarter results reflect continued progress in executing our strategy and the underlying strength of our regulated utilities and position us well to deliver above our adjusted earnings per share growth target of 5%-7% this year. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:13:20We remain focused on investing to deliver safe, reliable energy for customers while maintaining disciplined capital execution, constructive stakeholder engagement, and a strengthening balance sheet to support predictable long-term growth. We appreciate your continued interest in Emera and your time today and will now open the line for questions. Operator00:13:41Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, if you do have any questions at this time, please press the star followed by one on your touch-tone phone. You will then hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press the star followed by two. If using a speakerphone, you will need to lift the handset first before pressing any keys. One moment, please, for your first question. You will hear first from Rob Hope at Scotiabank. Please go ahead, Rob. Rob HopeAnalyst at Scotiabank00:14:13Morning, everyone. First question is on the funding plan. What are the expected proceeds from the Grand Bahama sale, and was that in the prior funding plan? I'm assuming it was not. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:14:32Good morning, Rob. We haven't stated what the profit levels are at this point in time, so they are still confidential during the closing side. You would be correct. The proceeds on that wouldn't have been in our original funding plan. We will use the funds, though, to just go into the normal corporate funding. It will go to repaying debt, and we will still be executing our capital program and the rest of the funding plan as originally stated. Rob HopeAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:01Sorry. Then maybe just to clarify, do you think that this sale will reduce your equity funding needs and potentially lower the ATM? Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:15:08I don't think this is gonna make a material difference on the overall funding plan. Rob HopeAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:13All right. Appreciate that. Maybe moving over to Nova Scotia, can you provide an update on how the securitization conversations are going for the decarbonization initiatives up there? Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:15:26Rob, Jared here again. Discussions are ongoing with the government. The team is working with them. We do still need to have the regulations put in place. Those are continuing forward. Timing-wise, we're still optimistic and hopeful that we will be able to get through those steps and have the securitization approved and in place in this calendar year. Discussions are ongoing. Rob HopeAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:53All right. Thanks for that. Judy, all the best. It's been enjoyable. Thank you. Judy SteelePresident and COO at Emera Energy00:15:58Thank you. Operator00:16:01Next question will come from Maurice Choy at RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead, Maurice. Maurice ChoyAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:16:07Thank you very much. Good morning, everyone. Just sticking with the Nova Scotia theme, it feels like all the stakeholders have been able to move on following the recent rate case approval. If you agree with that, how do you see the opportunity for incremental growth opportunities for the utility, given all the energy and economic objectives laid out by the government recently? Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:16:36Thanks, Maurice. I mean, yes, there's certainly, you know, not unlike other jurisdictions, the reality is there is a lot of investment opportunity and investment required in electric systems. That's, you know, that's certainly true in Nova Scotia. Of course, with the Independent System Operator in place, it's continuing to proceed with the generation procurement while Nova Scotia Power continues to proceed with investments in poles and wires and the transmission and distribution aspects of the system. There are, you know, as you know, some major project initiatives there, including the New Brunswick, Nova Scotia Intertie, and other system upgrades. There's also synchronous condenser work that the utility is doing, which helps to support the intermittent renewables that are being added onto the system. Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:17:28Continues to be a lot of investment. At this point in time, we're not looking at any adjustments to the rate base growth profile for Nova Scotia Power. Of course, we'll, you know, typically update those rate base growth profiles in the fall. But with the rate profile that's in place now, we have the benefit of agreement with all the stakeholders, including the regulator and customer interveners, as to not only the rate profile but also the capital profile that supports it. There's great clarity for Nova Scotia Power on the execution path ahead. Maurice ChoyAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:18:05Understood. If I could, I'd finish off with NMGC. I know you mentioned that where the process is right now is out of your control. Are you made aware as to what may be causing the slight delay? Maybe just thinking bigger picture, are there any reasons you think it is worthwhile keeping this utility, particularly from a growth perspective? Karen HuttEVP of Corporate Development at Emera00:18:33Good morning, Maurice Choy. It's Karen Hutt. no, we don't have any specific reason to, you know, go in terms of the timing. This is an open docket in front of the commission, so that means that there are specific rules for how you can engage. That means we need to wait to hear from them. you know, as Scott said, we continue to feel confident in our case, and we continue to feel confident in our ability to move forward with the transaction. At this point, we're waiting for word from the hearing examiner, and the rest of the team is ready to go in terms of transition. It's full steam ahead. Maurice ChoyAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:19:21Understood. My thank you, of course, to Judy Steele for the many years of help, and congrats to Karen Hutt on your additional role. Judy SteelePresident and COO at Emera Energy00:19:29Thanks. We're sitting next to each other. Karen says thank you, too. Operator00:19:36Next question will be from John Mould at TD Cowen. Please go ahead, John. John MouldAnalyst at TD Cowen00:19:42Hi. morning, everybody. Maybe, going back to Florida, your comments on data center discussions there. Can you maybe just provide a little more color around the scale of the conversations you're having, you know, what the timing could look like, and any key gating items that you're seeing in those conversations? Scott BalfourPresident and CEO at Emera00:20:07Archie, over to you. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:20:11Good morning, John. Good morning, everyone. John, I guess what I would say is, you know, interest from data centers has certainly been quite elevated for us over the last six to nine months. Lots of interest in our region in West Central Florida, given the fact that we kind of span that I-4 corridor between Tampa and Orlando. Lots of interest in there. You know, one of the gating items is, you know, that certainly was everyone waiting to see whether or not the governor was going to sign Senate Bill 484 into law, and he did that yesterday. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:20:55That certainly makes it clearer to the data center investment community that Florida is in fact open for business as long as certain guidelines are respected in the process. I will say, you know, the guidelines that are embedded within that bill are guidelines that we've agreed with all along. They're rooted in the principles of transparency, fairness of cost allocation, and environmental stewardship. So we certainly, we collectively, whether it's us as the utility or the data center developers, are feeling confident about the support from the community and from the government. Lots of interest. I would say that certainly discussions with multiple parties are much further advanced. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:21:46From a scale perspective, you know, I would say we've got about 1,300MW of interested data center counterparties. That's a collection of them as opposed to any single entity. Those discussions are much further advanced. They've acquired the land. They're pursuing permits. They, as Scott said, have funded very detailed system impact studies, and they're backing a lot of capital work that we're currently undertaking to meet their interconnection timelines and ramp rates. Lots happening. We're feeling confident. We're pleased to see that the governor has signed Senate Bill 484. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:22:30You know, expect that we'll have more to say on, you know, who these counterparties are and what the ramp rates are over the next couple of months. The only other point I would make on this is, like, for a utility our size, you know, the growth potential here is meaningful. 100MW of data center revenue is about 2% load growth on an annual basis. You, you know, you start doing the math, and it's a significant opportunity for a utility like ours. John MouldAnalyst at TD Cowen00:23:07Thanks. Thanks for that. Maybe just continuing because you raised it at the end there. Can you just, you know, talk about your supply picture and ability to, you know, if you are able to land a couple of these over the midterm, you know, what does that look like in terms of incremental generation and potential additions to the capital plan? Appreciate you probably don't want to get too far ahead of yourself, but I'm just trying to get a sense. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:23:34I don't- John MouldAnalyst at TD Cowen00:23:34of the room that you have in the system. Archie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa Electric00:23:37Yeah. I do have to be careful here. Of course, it's a function of the desired ramp rates from the counterparties and a function of our ability to meet those ramp rates while continuing to respect our regulatory obligations vis-a-vis, you know, reserve margin requirements. You know, we're well-positioned in the short term to serve in the neighborhood of 300MW to 500MW of data centers. We're working with the counterparties to firm up, you know, their commitment and their ramp rate and manage our exposure so that we can make other decisions as far as shoring up the generation side of the equation. In the short term, we're well-positioned for 300MW to 500MW over the next couple of years. John MouldAnalyst at TD Cowen00:24:38Okay. That was great detail. Thank you. I'll get back in the queue. Operator00:24:44Thank you. Next question will be from Ben Pham at BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead, Ben. Ben PhamAnalyst at BMO Capital Markets00:24:51Hi. Thanks. Good morning. I just want to start off by congratulating Judy and Karen on the next steps. I just want to go back to the New Mexico Gas Company sale. Given that it's taken about a year and a half or so since the announcement, I assume the outside dates have been extended with parties. If this transaction is delayed beyond mid-year, does this really open up a potential renegotiation of the deal? Karen HuttEVP of Corporate Development at Emera00:25:21Hi, Ben. It's Karen. You're right. We did deal with the outside date as it relates to the contract. We'll deal with that again to the extent that we need to, but we wouldn't anticipate any other discussions beyond that. Ben PhamAnalyst at BMO Capital Markets00:25:37Got it. I just want to go back to the marketing results, just given the strength in the quarter and your new guidance. Can you talk about results from other infrastructure names? Some have done well from the storm results, some have done not as well, and some have actually been negatively impacted depending on your position. Can you remind us how your trading works in that area with the transmission bids you're doing? Is it other business development opportunities that you've been working on? Judy SteelePresident and COO at Emera Energy00:26:19I think you're asking me that question. You know, I always start by saying that we manage the business to limit the downside risk always and have some optionality when the market conditions present themselves, and they did in Q1. Without kind of giving away the whole commercial strategy, there were four big rocks that contributed to the results. We do have a transport portfolio, and specifically, the capacity we had between New England and New York became very, very valuable as the New York pricing spiked. We had also picked up some short-term capacity from Western Canada before the cold weather event hit at pretty reasonable prices, and that increased our available gas volumes. We had options that we had invested in for risk management purposes that we exercised at some very healthy margins. Judy SteelePresident and COO at Emera Energy00:27:12In New York, gas generators were being dispatched for reliability, which also had a very bullish impact on the market. You know, fundamentally, the story is the same as always. We have transportation assets, and when the market conditions present themselves, we're able to use those assets to move lower-priced gas into higher-priced markets. Ben PhamAnalyst at BMO Capital Markets00:27:36Okay. Got it. That's a useful color. Thank you. Operator00:27:41Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, a reminder to please press star one should you have any questions. Thank you. Next, we will hear from Michael Logan at Barclays. Please go ahead, Michael. Michael LoganAnalyst at Barclays00:27:54Hi. Thanks for taking my question. You know, in the event that Nova Scotia were to reject the securitization, you know, approval of the regulations, you know, what would you see as your next step? Would you apply for, you know, conventional rate recovery, or is there a way you could make a, you know, different securitization proposal, like renegotiate or repackage the securitization structure? Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:28:22Good morning, Michael. Jared here. The formal first steps, if securitization were not to proceed, the regulator actually set that out in their decision coming from this last settlement. There is a deferral account that is set up in that circumstance. If it didn't proceed with securitization, then those assets would be treated in the normal course of a rate base and ratemaking. As that moved forward, Vivek and the team would be looking at the full rate structures, the company, and what scenarios would be present there. As we sit right now, again, we're confident that we will be able to proceed with the securitization because it makes really good sense for customers. Absent that, we do have the regulatory pathway for the alternative. Michael LoganAnalyst at Barclays00:29:16Thank you. Then, you know, in the event the New Mexico Gas sale, you know, were not to close and, you know, also, you know, if the securitization again of the thermal asset regulations are not approved, what could we expect the path forward for your financing plan to be? You know, obviously, Moody's has you on a negative outlook. You know, would you consider issuing more equity or selling additional non-core assets like Barbados or pipelines? You know, just wondering if you could talk about that. Jared GreenCFO at Emera00:29:44The number one plan for that, Michael, is business execution, and that's actually been what has occurred over this last couple-year period as well. We're sitting in a place where we are kind of right up at the down or the threshold levels, even without the securitization of New Mexico Gas close. I would like to have the extra flexibility in our measures that would come from that to get some strengthening into the balance sheet. The business itself has improved a lot, and the execution of the business has been that core piece. In that unlikely scenario you described of those two pieces not going forward, the execution plan of the business is not going to have an abrupt change. We're going to execute, and we'll move forward in a prudent, measured fashion. Michael LoganAnalyst at Barclays00:30:36Great. Thanks for taking my question. Operator00:30:40Thank you. At this time, Mr. Bezanson, we have no further questions registered. Please proceed. Dave BezansonSVP of Capital Markets at Emera00:30:48Thank you very much, Sylvie. Thanks everyone for your interest and support of Emera. We look forward to seeing you in the coming months in our marketing. Have a good day. Operator00:30:57Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, this does indeed conclude the conference call for today. Once again, thank you for attending. At this time, we do ask that you please disconnect your lines. Have yourselves a good weekend.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDave BezansonSVP of Capital MarketsJared GreenCFOJudy SteelePresident and COOKaren HuttEVP of Corporate DevelopmentScott BalfourPresident and CEOAnalystsArchie CollinsPresident and CEO at Tampa ElectricBen PhamAnalyst at BMO Capital MarketsJohn MouldAnalyst at TD CowenMaurice ChoyAnalyst at RBC Capital MarketsMichael LoganAnalyst at BarclaysRob HopeAnalyst at ScotiabankPowered by