Exelon Corp
BMV:EXC
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Exelon Corp
Exelon is a utility holding company that delivers electricity and natural gas through regulated local utilities. Its main businesses are the wires, pipes, and customer service networks that move power and gas to homes, businesses, schools, and public facilities in major metropolitan areas in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic. The company does not sell most of the electricity or gas itself. Instead, it earns money by owning and maintaining the delivery infrastructure and charging rates approved by state regulators. That makes Exelon’s business model different from a typical seller of energy: it is paid for keeping essential utility networks running safely and reliably, not for trading power in a competitive market. Exelon’s main customers are captive utility users in the regions its operating companies serve. Because local utilities are natural monopolies, the business is tied closely to long-term infrastructure spending, regulatory oversight, and steady day-to-day demand for electric and gas service. This gives Exelon a role as a core provider in the energy value chain, connecting generators and gas suppliers to end users.
Exelon is a utility holding company that delivers electricity and natural gas through regulated local utilities. Its main businesses are the wires, pipes, and customer service networks that move power and gas to homes, businesses, schools, and public facilities in major metropolitan areas in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic.
The company does not sell most of the electricity or gas itself. Instead, it earns money by owning and maintaining the delivery infrastructure and charging rates approved by state regulators. That makes Exelon’s business model different from a typical seller of energy: it is paid for keeping essential utility networks running safely and reliably, not for trading power in a competitive market.
Exelon’s main customers are captive utility users in the regions its operating companies serve. Because local utilities are natural monopolies, the business is tied closely to long-term infrastructure spending, regulatory oversight, and steady day-to-day demand for electric and gas service. This gives Exelon a role as a core provider in the energy value chain, connecting generators and gas suppliers to end users.
Quarterly beat: Exelon reported adjusted operating earnings of $0.91 per share, above expectations, helped mainly by favorable weather and timing-related items.
Guidance affirmed: Management reaffirmed 2026 operating earnings guidance of $2.81 to $2.91 per share and still expects to land at the midpoint or better.
Capital plan reset: Exelon trimmed and reshaped its capital program, including $1.1 billion of project deferrals and reductions at PECO and BGE distribution, while adding $1.5 billion of transmission investment.
Cost cuts: The company plans $350 million of incremental O&M savings in 2027 tied to work it will no longer pursue, and now targets no more than 2% adjusted O&M growth through 2029.
Pennsylvania pause: PECO withdrew its recently filed electric and gas rate cases, a timing decision management tied to customer affordability and stakeholder feedback.
Supply push: Management spent much of the call arguing that affordability cannot be fixed without more generation, and said it will keep pushing for utility-owned generation and resource adequacy reforms.
Transmission growth: Exelon continues to lean into transmission, including about $1.9 billion of Illinois transmission bids in MISO and two more bids expected later this month.