NRG Energy Misses Quarterly Profit Estimates on Mild Texas Weather, Higher Costs

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May 6 (Reuters) – Power producer NRG Energy  on Wednesday missed Wall Street estimates for first-quarter adjusted profit, hurt ​by milder weather in Texas and increased costs.


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The ‌company’s interest expenses in the quarter rose to $285 million from $163 million a year ago, impacted by costs related to ​the completed acquisition of power generation assets from investment ​firm LS Power in a deal valued ⁠at $12 billion.

Houston, Texas-based NRG’s operating costs were up ​33.4% to $9.93 billion.

The company expects commercial operations at the ​415-megawatt T.H. Wharton facility in Texas, its first project, to begin by the end of May.

It plans to return $1 billion ​to shareholders through share repurchases and nearly $407 million ​through common stock dividends in 2026.

Separately, insider Robert Gaudette succeeded Larry Coben ‌as ⁠the company’s CEO on April 30.

NRG posted quarterly revenue of $10.26 billion, up from $8.59 billion a year ago.

Its Texas unit posted first-quarter adjusted core profit of $216 ​million, down from $299 ​million a ⁠year ago, amid mild winter weather that saw a nearly 30% decrease in ​heating degree days leading to lower retail ​load.

The ⁠company reaffirmed its 2026 adjusted earnings forecast of $7.90 to $9.90 per share.

Adjusted profit of $1.49 per share for the ⁠three months ​ended March 31 fell short ​of analysts’ average estimate of $1.78, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Reporting ​by Pooja Menon in Bengaluru; Editing by Shreya Biswas

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