William J. Fehrman
fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. I am happy to be here with all of you. We are operating in a period of incredible transformation across our industry, marked by accelerating electrification, rapidly expanding AI-driven and industrial demand, and rising expectations for reliable and affordable energy solutions. These trends only accelerated in 2025 and continued in 2026. As we look to the future, AEP stands out among its peers as one of the fastest-growing high-quality, pure play electric utilities strategically positioned in multiple high-growth regions. Let's begin on slides four and five of today's presentation. AEP is rooted deep in innovation, and we are ready to meet unprecedented customer demand across our impressive 11-state regulated service territory and beyond, resulting in significant infrastructure investment which continues to drive our strong financial performance now and into the future. We are operating in an environment and time when scale matters more than ever, and we continue to leverage our size to mitigate supply chain risk and focus on having the resources necessary to meet this massive system demand and investment opportunity. Notably, we are deepening our engagement with customers, regulators, policymakers, and suppliers to align our long-term goals and achieve favorable outcomes. For example, we have key relationships with major gas turbine manufacturers securing over 10 gigawatts of capacity and have entered into a long-term strategic partnership with Quanta Services to strengthen and accelerate capabilities for 765 kV transmission infrastructure buildout. Simply put, the AEP team has made significant progress in 2025. And as we look ahead, we have built a robust plan with a clear focus on operational excellence and accountability supported by the strength and experience of our winning team. I am very excited to share our progress with you today. Turning to slide seven and eight, I would like to first walk through our 2025 financial performance and share our outlook, then speak to our recent key accomplishments and continued focus on customer satisfaction and affordability. I will then hand things over to Trevor for a more detailed summary of our financial results and the growth trajectory of our business. Now on to our financial results. I am proud of the dedication and accomplishments of the entire team over the past year. AEP has a long history of consistently delivering or exceeding our earnings guidance and 2025 was no exception. We achieved fourth quarter 2025 operating earnings of $1.19 per share, bringing our full-year 2025 operating earnings to $5.97 per share, which is above the top end of our guidance range. In October, we also increased our quarterly dividend to $0.95 per share, demonstrating our ability to deliver competitive and sustainable shareholder returns. In fact, total shareholder return for 2025 was 29%, one of the highest in the industry. AEP’s execution-driven performance in 2025 has established a solid foundation from which we are reaffirming our 2026 full-year operating earnings guidance range of $6.15 to $6.45 per share. With the remarkable load expansion we are experiencing today, we are also reaffirming our premium long-term earnings growth rate of 7% to 9% for 2026 to 2030 with an expected 9% CAGR. We have a large but conservative $72 billion five-year capital plan yielding a 10% rate base CAGR that continues to present incremental upside and is supported by a strong balance sheet. In short, we finished the year with positive momentum, and we are only just getting started. Later in the call, Trevor will walk through our fourth quarter performance and provide additional details about our financial growth outlook. As we have discussed, we are in the midst of a generational load growth phenomenon throughout our diversified service territory, especially in Texas, Ohio, Indiana, and Oklahoma. We now have 56 gigawatts of firm incremental contracted load additions, doubling the 28 gigawatts we reported just last fall. These gigawatts are not speculative as they are all backed by signed customer agreements. However, meeting this demand must be done responsibly. It is critically important that costs associated with these large loads are allocated fairly and the right investments are made for the long-term success of our grid. AEP continues to work with federal and state leaders to quickly adopt reforms to streamline the connection of new energy resources to serve large loads and drive smart solutions to protect residential customers from extra costs. This builds on our progress over the last several years. We laid the groundwork two years ago when we secured commission approvals for data center tariffs in Ohio and large load tariff modifications in Indiana, Kentucky, and West Virginia. We now have pending tariff filings in Michigan, Oklahoma, Texas, and Virginia. A summary of these tariff filings can be found on slide nine of our presentation. This methodology is designed to help protect our existing customers from bearing the costs of grid improvements required to meet data centers’ energy demands. While this is good progress, additional measures must be taken to ensure that the infrastructure required to serve large loads is paid for by the customers who drive those needs. Beyond these efforts, we are also building on AEP’s history of innovation. We continue to explore generation solutions for the benefit of customers during this period of massive demand. We have previously talked about AEP’s ongoing efforts to develop small modular reactors, or SMRs, in our service territory. We announced that we are participating in the early site permit process for two potential SMR locations, in Indiana and Virginia, and we will, of course, only move forward with the appropriate returns and risk mitigating structures. Additionally, last month, we announced plans to purchase $2.65 billion of fuel cells that will be part of a generation facility expected to be located near Cheyenne, Wyoming. The facility includes a 20-year offtake arrangement with a high-quality investment-grade third-party customer. Transmission will be equally important for affordability and to ensure new generation is quickly and reliably connected to serve large loads. Our unmatched scale on the transmission side continues to be a defining advantage for AEP. As outlined further on slide 10, we own and operate nearly 90% of the 765 kV infrastructure in the United States. With the largest electric transmission system in the country, AEP is exceptionally well positioned as the utility partner of choice for customers who need consistent large load power. As a matter of fact, AEP was recently recommended for approval or awarded new 765 kV projects in PJM, SPP, and MISO, expanding our footprint even further. New transmission projects and our planned fuel cell facility in Wyoming reinforce AEP’s growth trajectory, representing opportunities that include approximately $5 billion to $8 billion of confirmed or endorsed incremental generation and transmission projects. This is additive to our current $72 billion five-year capital plan just announced last October. Let me now touch on the progress we are making on the legislative and regulatory fronts for the benefit of our customers and communities. We remain focused on reducing the gap between our authorized versus actual ROE. In 2025, we achieved an earned ROE on the regulated business of 9.1%, up 30 basis points from two years ago with detailed plans to continue the improvement. Our successful approach of listening closely to state leaders, and aligning with their needs has resulted in the passage of improved legislation and the achievement of positive balanced regulatory outcomes that benefit both our customers and investors. Our continued execution is evident through several recent milestones all detailed in the appendix of today’s presentation, including broader regulatory accomplishments achieved in 2025. I would like to highlight a few of these key milestones. Legislation that reduces regulatory lag was approved in Ohio, Oklahoma, and Texas. I&M achieved approval on a generation resources filing enabling targeted resource additions through an efficient streamlined process. Base rate cases in Arkansas, Kentucky, and Ohio were approved or settled with additional new base rate cases recently filed in Oklahoma and Texas. Kentucky Power’s investment in our Mitchell plant was approved, extending interest in its energy and capacity beyond 2028. And in West Virginia, we continue to work with leaders at all levels of the state on fair financial returns as the state’s energy strategy aims to attract more capital investment and triple electricity generation to 50 gigawatts by 2050. While there is no statutory timeline for the commission to rule on the reconsideration filing made last September, we expect the decision soon. Affordability is at the heart of our regulatory approach, and as summarized on slide 11, we are taking decisive action to keep customer bills as economic as possible. We are building on efforts to support incremental load growth with innovative rate design while also mitigating residential rate impacts through our focus on O&M efficiency and effective financing mechanisms such as securitization. As we invest in this electric infrastructure growth cycle, and assign the appropriate cost to new large loads, we remain focused on protecting residential customers from increased cost. To finish up, we are seeing rapid change in our industry as well as increased need and demand from our customers and communities. We have a clear strategy, a strong financial foundation, and a team that knows how to deliver, all coming together to help us capitalize on the unprecedented opportunities ahead for the grid. I am dedicated to AEP’s vision of improving customers’ lives with reliable, affordable power. I am also committed to leading AEP for many more years to come. I look forward to working with our incredible team. We will continue to execute at an unmatched pace of play on behalf of our stakeholders to drive growth, serve our customers, and create value for our investors. I will now turn the call over to Trevor, who will walk us through fourth quarter financial performance and provide more details surrounding our growth. Thanks, Bill, and good morning, everyone. As you have heard, AEP delivered an exceptional year of performance in 2025. Our year-to-date results exceeded expectations, supported by industry-leading load growth fundamentals, constructive regulatory and legislative developments, and disciplined execution of our robust plan with affordability front and center. I am pleased to walk through our progress today. I will start with the key earnings drivers behind our 2025 performance, and build on Bill’s comments regarding load growth. From there, I will provide additional context around our $72 billion base capital plan. I will then highlight the incremental projects that have been identified beyond the base plan. And finally, I will close with remarks reinforcing our continued commitment to our operational and financial strength that positions us to deliver long-term value for our customers and investors. Please turn to slide thirteen and fourteen of the presentation. Our 2025 full-year operating earnings was $5.97 per share, exceeding the high end of our guidance range of $5.75 to $5.95. This strong performance in our regulated segments was due to constructive rate case outcomes across many of our jurisdictions, steady progress on our transmission investment program, and the continued momentum in the load growth across our service territory, which I will speak more about shortly. These positive drivers were partially offset by additional spending on system reliability improvements, higher depreciation from our growing capital base, and interest expense. We also continue to see meaningful performance in our Generation & Marketing segment, driven by favorable energy margins and the benefits we realized from contract optimization within the portfolio. Turning to Corporate and Other, the year-over-year variance was largely due to a $0.06 per share tax benefit recognized in 2024 from updated state tax apportionment. As Bill noted earlier, our 2025 performance continues to give us confidence in our financial plan, and we are reaffirming our 2026 guidance and our long-term earnings growth outlook through 2030. As we turn to sales trends on slide 15, you will note that 2025 was a transformative year for AEP. Our total system sales exceeded 200 million megawatt-hours for the first time in AEP history. This milestone highlights the historic load growth we are seeing on our system, with what we anticipate will be even more incredible opportunity ahead of us. Retail sales grew 7.5% in 2025 compared to 2024, driven by significant commercial and industrial sales growth of nearly 10%, primarily from data centers in Indiana, Texas, and Ohio, as well as industrial sales in Texas. Comparatively, residential sales grew approximately 3% in 2025 across our footprint, mostly attributable to I&M and SWEPCO. Keep in mind that our revenues are supported by these rising sales growth trends and further strengthened by minimum demand charges included in our large load customer agreements. So while total retail sales rose 7.5% in 2025, corresponding revenue was up 8.3%. Turning to slide 16 and the future. We have previously discussed our forecast of 28 gigawatts of incremental contracted load growth by 2030. Today, we increased and doubled that outlook by 28 gigawatts to 56 gigawatts of incremental load. This step up reflects our continued success in converting projects from our planning queue into binding financial commitments. The increase to 56 gigawatts over our prior disclosure is driven by growth in ERCOT, PJM, and SPP. In PJM, contracted load increased by 4 gigawatts driven largely by activity in Ohio. This growth continues to be reinforced by data center development and, importantly, about 90% of the incremental PJM load is supported by executed take-or-pay electric service agreements, or ESAs. We are also seeing positive momentum in the region in Oklahoma, where contracted load has grown by 1 gigawatt driven primarily by a commitment with a large aluminum smelting customer. Together, PJM and SPP account for the 5 gigawatts increase in our contracted load outlook. Let me turn to ERCOT because the Texas story remains a central part of our long-term growth outlook. As a transmission and distribution utility, AEP Texas does not directly bill retail customers in ERCOT. We secure contracted load through letters of agreement, or LOAs. Under these agreements, customers must secure land, complete and pay for interconnection studies, provide detailed load forecasts, and importantly, fund all of the construction costs. This structure ensures that only viable and financially backed projects advance into AEP’s forecast, supporting greater confidence in our long-term load additions. Within AEP’s 56 gigawatts of identified incremental load, AEP Texas has signed LOAs for 36 gigawatts with large industrial customers, well-capitalized hyperscalers, and mega-size data center developers. This is a significant increase of 23 gigawatts since October, and all of these new loads meet Senate Bill 6 criteria outlined on slide 17. As implementation of this legislation progresses in Texas, we anticipate improved clarity and certainty around the timing of when additional loads will connect in ERCOT. As such, AEP is well positioned to build the transmission and distribution infrastructure that Texas needs, and investment timing will be influenced by resource availability to support growing system load. We will continue to update our load forecast throughout the year as we support and benefit from the rapid economic growth in Texas. Please turn to slide 18. I want to take a moment to ground us in the foundation of our capital plan and the opportunities ahead. We built our forecast using relatively conservative assumptions which gives us a lot of confidence in our ability to deliver and creates opportunity for upside as conditions evolve. For example, our $72 billion five-year capital plan is based on the 28 gigawatt incremental demand outlook we shared last fall. As we continue to see new opportunities materialize across our service territory, the capital plan will continue to expand. Just since the third quarter call, we have seen upside of approximately $5 billion to $8 billion of confirmed or endorsed generation and transmission projects in the period of 2026 through 2030 that are in addition to the base capital plan. I would like to emphasize that any capital related to the incremental load outlook, which has increased by an additional 28 gigawatts, is additive to our $72 billion plan and is not part of the $5 billion to $8 billion of capital upside. As I have articulated on prior earnings calls, we want to have a cadence of updating the capital plan annually in the third quarter. This timing allows us to run the full plan through our modeling process and provide a view of the associated financing needs. That said, given the size and rapid growth of the incremental opportunity, we felt it was important to highlight some investments that have come into the five-year window. We will provide additional clarity on these opportunities, formally update our capital plan,