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DATE
Tuesday, May 5, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- President and Chief Executive Officer — Stephen D. Westhoven
- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — Roberto Bel
- Vice President, Investor Relations — Adam Prior
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TAKEAWAYS
- Net Financial Earnings -- $221.5 million, or $2.20 per share, up sharply from $17.3 million, or $0.38 per share, in the prior-year quarter.
- Energy Services Performance -- Segment delivered notably higher contribution, prompting a second consecutive NFEPS guidance increase this year.
- NFEPS Guidance -- Fiscal 2026 range raised by $0.20 to $3.48-$3.62 per share, following an earlier $0.25 increase after January's performance.
- Customer Savings -- $93 million in gross savings delivered to customers through the basic gas supply service incentive program over the winter season.
- Hedging Coverage -- over 87% of projected winter gas supply requirements pre-hedged at an average price of approximately $3.27 per dekatherm, avoiding Citygate price spikes above $135 per dekatherm.
- Capital Deployment -- approximately $400 million deployed year-to-date, with about two-thirds allocated to New Jersey Natural Gas for infrastructure, safety, and growth investments.
- Five-Year CapEx Outlook -- Confirmed range of $4.8 billion to $5.2 billion through fiscal 2030, with over 60% targeted for utility investments.
- Storage & Transportation Growth -- Net financial earnings in this segment expected to more than double over two years, supported by recontracting, a FERC filing to increase Leaf River storage capacity by 70% underway, and a new long-term contract secured.
- Clean Energy Ventures Expansion -- Installed capacity grew nearly 25% in fiscal 2025 and by 33 megawatts this year; plans to increase total installed capacity by 50% by end of fiscal 2027, with a pipeline exceeding 1.2 gigawatts.
- Balance Sheet Metrics -- Adjusted debt-to-capital ratio projected to remain around 20% over the next five years, with energy services cash flow reducing the need for new equity.
- Customer Participation in Efficiency Programs -- Over 115,000 participants in SAVEGREEN, where integrated solutions achieved up to 30% bill savings.
- Customer Growth -- Steady increases from new construction, conversions, and targeted service expansions, as highlighted by Chester Township joining the regulated service territory.
- NFEPS Segment Contribution -- New Jersey Natural Gas forecast to deliver approximately 60% of NFEPS, with Energy Services' percentage rising due to recent outperformance.
SUMMARY
New Jersey Resources Corporation (NJR 0.20%) delivered materially higher net financial earnings, driven primarily by standout energy services performance during an unusually severe winter.
Management highlighted execution of capital initiatives aligned with long-term growth targets, including confirmed project pipelines and no changes to five-year capital expenditure forecasts. The call also indicated ongoing regulatory progress at Leaf River, continued expansion of clean energy assets, and strong positioning to meet policy support and market demand for new capacity.
- CEO Westhoven said, "New Jersey Natural Gas experienced the highest send-out days in its history" during the quarter.
- Long-term fee-based contracts and recent recontracting activity at Adelphia Gateway and Leaf River underpin earnings predictability in Storage & Transportation, according to management.
- Clean Energy Ventures surpassed 500 megawatts of in-service capacity, reaching a new milestone.
- CFO Bel stated, "we see no need for block equity in the foreseeable future." given incremental cash flow and balance sheet strength.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- Send-out days: The highest single-day throughput of gas delivered to customers, indicating peak system demand.
- Citygate price: The wholesale price of natural gas delivered to a local distribution company at a citygate, reflecting regional market volatility.
- FERC application: A formal regulatory submission to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, required for expansion or construction of interstate energy infrastructure.
- Safe harbor investment: Projects that qualify under IRS guidance for certain energy tax benefits by meeting regulatory or timing criteria.
- PJM: The regional transmission organization managing wholesale electricity markets and grid reliability in the Mid-Atlantic and parts of the Midwest.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Adam Prior: Thank you. Welcome to New Jersey Resources Fiscal 2026 Second Quarter and First Half Conference Call and Webcast. I'm joined here today by Steve Westhoven, our President and CEO; Roberto Bel, our Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; as well as other members of our senior management team. Certain statements in today's call contain estimates and other forward-looking statements within the meaning of the securities laws. We wish to caution listeners of this call that the current expectations, assumptions and beliefs forming the basis for our forward-looking statements include many factors that are beyond our ability to control or estimate precisely. This could cause results to materially differ from our expectations as found on Slide 2.
These items can also be found in the forward-looking statements section of yesterday's earnings release furnished on Form 8-K and in our most recent Forms 10-K and 10-Q as filed with the SEC. We do not, by including this statement, assume any obligation to review or revise any particular forward-looking statement referenced herein in light of future events. We will also be referring to certain non-GAAP financial measures such as Net Financial Earnings or NFE. We believe that NFE, net financial loss, utility gross margin, financial margin, adjusted funds from operations and adjusted debt provide a more complete understanding of our financial performance. However, these non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for GAAP.
Our non-GAAP financial measures are discussed more fully in Item 7 of our 10-K. The slides for today's presentation are available on our website and were furnished on our Form 8-K filed yesterday. Steve will start with this quarter's highlights and business unit overview beginning on Slide 5. Roberto will then review our financial results. Then we'll open it up for your questions. With that said, I'll turn the call over to our President and CEO, Steve Westhoven. Please go ahead, Steve.
Stephen D. Westhoven: Thanks, Adam. NJR reported excellent second quarter results during one of the most demanding winter periods in recent years. January and February brought sustained freezing temperatures in the Northeast region of the country. New Jersey Natural Gas experienced the highest send-out days in its history in our infrastructure, planning and operations delivered. Our teams provided safe, reliable service to home schools, hospitals and critical services across our communities. Our system operates exactly as designed when customers needed us most. This reflects years of disciplined investment in our infrastructure and a continued focus on safety and reliability. At S&T, Adelphia Gateway had multiple days of operating at maximum capacity and Leaf River had withdrawals that exceeded Winter Storm year of 2021.
Finally, our Energy Services team delivered exceptional results. As a result of Energy Services outperformance, we were able to raise our fiscal 2026 NFEPS guidance for the second time this year. Roberto will provide additional details on our financial projections later in the call. With that, I'll turn to New Jersey Natural Gas and walk through how our efforts directly benefited customers on the next slide. Natural Gas remains by far the most cost-effective option for home heating, particularly during periods of extreme cold, affordability and reliability go hand in hand. The same planning and operational discipline that allows us to meet record demand this winter also helps customers manage costs during periods of higher usage.
That's why we take a proactive approach to managing gas costs. Each year, we secure a significant portion of winter gas supply well advanced, limiting our customers' exposure to sharp commodity price increases. As we noted last quarter, going into this winter, the projected gas supply requirements at New Jersey Natural Gas were over 87% hedged, securing cost-effective supply to serve our customers. The average hedge price used for our customers was approximately $3.27 per dekatherm per storage in LNG compared with Citygate price, which we avoided that traded in excess of $135 per dekatherm. This winter, New Jersey Natural Gas also delivered meaningful savings to our customers under the state-approved basic gas supply service incentive program.
This helps to further manage gas costs during the periods of high usage and elevated commodity prices, which we highlighted on the slide. Under this program, we generated over $93 million in gross customer savings over the winter season. Over the life of the program, we have generated over $1.6 billion in gross customer savings by optimizing our gas supply while also creating value for our shareholders. In parallel, we continue to invest in energy efficiency through our SAVEGREEN program. More than 115,000 customers have taken part in our programs to date with those utilized in our whole home offerings, realizing bill savings of up to 30%.
Finally, we provide payment flexibility and offer targeted assistance that helps customers manage usage and bills over time. Turning to Slide 7. The cost advantage of natural gas continues to support steady customer growth across our service territory. That growth reflects a combination of new construction, conversions and targeted infrastructure expansion all driven by customer demand. A recent example is Chester Township in Morris County, which is now formally included in New Jersey Natural Gas' regulated service territory. This reflects our ability to partner with communities and regulators to thoughtfully expand our footprint while continuing to deliver safe, reliable service. Now turning to our Storage and Transportation business on the next slide.
As we discussed on our year-end earnings call, we expect net financial earnings from this segment to more than double over the next 2 years and we remain on track to achieve or surpass that goal. Over the next 2 years, our growth is driven by strong recontracting activity at both Philadelphia and Leaf River. These are fixed price fee-based agreements with high-quality credit-weighted counterparties, providing a high degree of predictability in our earnings. Moving to longer-term growth at Leaf River, we continue to make steady progress on our expansion plans. During the first quarter, we filed a FERC application in which we proposed increasing working gas capacities by more than 70% over the next few years.
We recently received the environmental accession from FERC which represents another important step in the review process, and the filing is progressing as expected. We've also secured a long-term contract supporting the initial expansion at our existing caverns with the remaining phases to be underpinned by long-term fee-based contracts as well. Overall, this project remains on track with regulatory review proceeding in line with our expectations, and we'll continue to provide updates as we move through the process. Moving to Clean Energy Ventures on Slide 9. During fiscal 2025, CEV increased installed capacity by almost 25%, and this momentum has continued with 33 megawatts of new capacity brought into service this year.
We expect to increase installed capacity by an additional 50% through the end of fiscal 2027. And supported by a pipeline of safe harbor investment options in markets with supported policy and strong demand growth. This is diverse project pipeline that grant us the right, but not the obligation to invest is over 1.2 gigawatts, well in excess of our capital deployment targets. Deal flow has been strong in this segment, a result of broad industry relationships and steps taken last year to preserve investment tax credits. CEV is positioned to be increasingly selected with our investment decisions with strong investment returns in the high single to low double-digit unlevered after-tax range.
In addition, New Jersey and PJM require incremental electric capacity to meet rising demand. And solar offers the most expedient path to add a new supply to the grid in the near term. CEV stands ready to be part of the solution. The team at CEV is in the early stages of exploring was to leverage our portfolio of operational assets and existing PJM interconnections to add more supply to the grid in the near term. Technologies like linear generators, fuel cells and batteries offer CEV a potential opportunity to optimize existing solar sites to benefit from investment tax credits into the 2030s. Moving to financing.
We've historically utilized sale leasebacks as the main mechanism to efficiently monetize the tax attributes of our solar investments. In the future, this may include the use of tax credit transferability as an additional tool. We will continue to evaluate the most economically advantaged structures available to support long-term shareholder value. Finally, last month, we reached an important milestone in CEV, surpassing 500 megawatts of in-service capacity. I want to thank the entire CEV team for their strong execution. With that, I'll turn the call over to Roberto for a financial review, and then I'll return for a few closing remarks. Roberto?
Roberto Bel: Thanks, Steve. Turning to Slide 11. The second quarter reflects strong execution across the portfolio and continued momentum into the second half of the year. We delivered solid net financial earnings across both our regulated and nonregulated businesses with continuous outperformance at energy services. As a result, our raising fiscal 2026 guidance for the second time this year, while continuing to fund our capital plan and maintain a strong balance sheet. Moving to a brief walk for the quarter 2. Fiscal 2026 second quarter consolidated net financial earnings was $221.5 million or $2.20 per share, a significant increase over the $17.3 million or $0.38 per share reported in the second quarter of fiscal 2025.
Net financial earnings reflect solid performance across the portfolio with a notably higher contribution from energy services. For the year-to-date period, the higher net loss at CEV simply reflects last year's onetime gain resulting from the sale of our residential solar business. Overall, the mix of results restore the value of our diversified model. With that, let's turn to our capital plan on the next slide. We deployed approximately $400 million of capital across our businesses year-to-date. New Jersey Natural Gas represented roughly 2/3 of total catalog spending with investments focused on strengthening core infrastructure, enhancing safety and reliability and supporting continued customer growth.
We do not have any change to our estimate for fiscal 2026 and fiscal 2027 and have reassuring our 5-year CapEx outlook of $4.8 billion to $5.2 billion through fiscal 2030. More than 60% of this capital is expected to be invested as a utility with clean energy ventures and Storage and Transportation comprising the balance. Collectively, these investments support our 7% to 9% long-term net growth target while remaining well within our long-term credit parameters, which I'll cover on the next slide. On Slide 14, we highlight the strength of our balance sheet, which continues to improve during periods of strong performance like this winter.
We raised our adjusted debt-to-capital to adjust the debt ratio expectations for fiscal 2026 and are projected to remain around 20% for the next 5 years. Energy Services incremental cash flow this quarter enhances our ability to find capital investment, support credit metrics and reinforces that we see no need for block equity in the foreseeable future. In addition, ample liquidity and a well-laddered debt maturity profile led near-term refinancing risk and preserve financial flexibility. And finally, as shown we're generating our indicative guidance range for fiscal 2026. During our prior conference call, we raised our guidance by $0.25 per share, driven by Energy Service outperformance in January 2026.
With favorable results as energy services continued into February and March, while increasing our NFEPS guidance by an additional $0.20 to a higher range of $3.48 to $3.62 per share. We are also revising our expected NFEPS contribution by segment. with Energy Services percentage rising as a result of its outperformance and all the other businesses digesting accordingly. New Jersey Natural Gas will represent approximately 60% of the company's NFEPS for fiscal 2026. With that, I'll turn to Steve for concluding remarks on Slide 16.
Stephen D. Westhoven: Thanks, Roberto. NJR, once again, delivered exceptional results that are demanding winter period, reinforcing the reliability of our system and the durability of our business model. Our long-term growth continues to be anchored by our regulated utility with clear visibility into capital investment in New Jersey Natural Gas and a continued focus on operating safely and reliably when customers needs us the most. Storage and Transportation remains well positioned with clear earnings visibility in the near term and additional upside over time as capacity expansion opportunities progress. Clean Energy Ventures, our portfolio continues to scale, as expected, supported by a secured development pipeline and disciplined capital deployment.
Taken together, execution across our complementary businesses provides momentum into the remainder of the year and reinforces our confidence in the path ahead. Finally, I want to thank our employees across NJR, your dedication, professionalism and commitment, especially through another challenging winter are the foundation for our success. With that, let's open up the line for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions]. Your first question comes from the line of Gabe Moreen with Mizuho.
Dylan Lipner: Hi, everybody. This is Dylan Lipner on for Gabe. Good quarter. Just want to kind of hit back on CEV. If you guys could provide some more color on what you're seeing in the sense of solar project opportunities and outreach from PJM in the state particularly as New Jersey looks to generation gap?
Stephen D. Westhoven: Yes. Really, it's been playing out just like we said all along, we see [ harbor ] a number of projects. We've got a 1.2 gigawatt number of projects available to us and the state has been certainly encouraging for development with the capacity shortfalls in PJM, the quickest way to bring new capacity to market is through solar. So yes, we're continuing to make investments, and we've got a number of really attractive choices in that space and we're continuing to develop solar. So all things that go and certainly playing out just like we've said over the past few calls.
Dylan Lipner: Got you. And do you guys see this playing out more in the near term or towards the end of the day?
Stephen D. Westhoven: I mean we're not changing our CapEx guidance. So we're still continuing to move forward to hit those numbers. So really, the things that I was talking about the pressure on the market developed and bringing more capacity to electric customers in New Jersey is moving forward and certainly an important part of the Shell Administration's goals of trying to lower electric.
Operator: [Operator Instructions]. Your next question comes from the line of Travis Miller with Morningstar.
Travis Miller: Good morning, everyone. Thank you. I wonder if you can go into a little more on energy services. What's happening fundamentally since February that's changed both your outlook and what you're actually realizing in that business?
Stephen D. Westhoven: Are you just referring to the raising guidance rating?
Travis Miller: Yes, the raising guidance, yes. Relative to what you talked about in February, obviously, last winter in March and April. But wondering what's going on there, what you're seeing differently?
Stephen D. Westhoven: Yes. Really, when we raised guidance back in February, that was previous period. So much of the winter had not transpired to that point. And through February and March, that book continues to increase in value and add value and conclusions of the winter, we're able to close the books and look at those numbers. And certainly the earnings guidance raise that you see here is reflective of that. Energy Services continues to be a business that performs just good things for us long term. Lowers our debt and equity needs by the cash that they are able to bring in and all at a low-risk profile.
So we hope it continues going forward.But really, the whole reason for the raise before and now a raise now was really just timing and having winter conclude.
Travis Miller: Okay. So the initial one incorporated firm right? And then subsequent here now, this has incorporated additional post per. Is that right?
Stephen D. Westhoven: Yes, that's right.
Travis Miller: Okay. And then Leaf River, when does that expansion CapEx start to come into the plan? And related to that, at what point do you need some extra financing above and beyond your plan either equity or debt to support the Leaf River expansion?
Stephen D. Westhoven: So we won't need any additional financing for Leaf River, but capital expenditures are starting now. We started to make commitments on equipment and arrange for contractors and other things that begin that process of construction. You saw that we received the environmental assessment for FERC not too long ago. So everything is moving along as it should according to schedule. And of course, we've got that all backed by a long-term contract. So we're moving over that project and expect to have that service in fiscal year 2027-'28.
Operator: That concludes our question-and-answer session. I will now turn the call back over to Adam Prior for closing remarks.
Adam Prior: Thanks so much, and I'd like to thank everybody for joining us this morning. As always, we appreciate your interest and investment in NJR. We'll see many of you in Scottsdale at AGA in May, and have a good rest of your day. Appreciate it.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.
