Daniel J. Schuller
Thanks, Chris, and good morning, everyone. Let us begin on slide nine with a high-level view of the full-year results, and then we will get into the details on the waterfalls. As Chris described, our 2025 was very strong with revenues up 18.6%. Let us recall that this year-over-year GAAP EPS comparison includes previously disclosed prior-year items related to the gain on sale of the Pittsburgh-area energy project, as well as the unanticipated weather we experienced in 2024. On slide 10, we have the revenue waterfall for the year. Revenue has increased $388.5 million, or 18.6%, from about $2.1 billion a year ago to near $2.5 billion this year. Approximately $177.6 million of that increase is the result of regulatory recoveries. Purchase gas tax repair credits to customers contributed $57.2 million, while the “other” category of $30 million consists of reduced weather normalization credits to our gas customers due to colder-than-normal weather in 2025. Next on slide 11, our O&M slide, we see O&M expenses up about $52.3 million, or 0.9% year over year, with an increase of $8.5 million in water production costs, contributing increases in power, purchased water, and chemicals. Operating expenses related to newly acquired water and wastewater systems added $1.7 million. The “other” category reduced O&M by $2.6 million, including the positive impacts of higher capitalization in the gas business, lower spending on materials and supplies, and some insurance-related benefits, offset by expenses related to the merger with American Water. If we normalize out the merger expenses, insurance proceeds, and growth, we get to a year-over-year increase more in line with historic norms. Moving to slide 12, our earnings per share waterfall. We begin with 2024 GAAP EPS of $2.17. As a reminder, we made a few adjustments to arrive at a non-GAAP income per share of $1.97 for 2024. These adjustments included the removal of the one-time gain from sale of the Pittsburgh-area energy project, and adjustments for unanticipated weather along with the associated tax impact. You will find the reconciliation in the investors section of our website and as an appendix to this deck. In 2025, we picked up $0.46 from regulatory recoveries, an additional $0.15 from higher gas volumes, and an incremental $0.01 from water growth. These are partially offset by $0.02 from lower water volume, $0.09 from higher expenses, and $0.48 from “other.” Now, “other” includes $0.24 from the prior-year gain on sale from the energy project, as well as increased depreciation, amortization, interest, and taxes. As we have discussed in the last couple of earnings calls, in 2025, our expectation was that we would achieve GAAP earnings per share above our guidance range of $2.07 to $2.11 due to nonrecurring benefits, and indeed, we finished the year with full-year GAAP EPS of $2.20. Let me point out a few nonrecurring items from our 10-Qs and the upcoming 2025 10-K that contributed to this favorability. We had the release of an income tax reserve regulatory liability based on the February 2025 Aqua Pennsylvania rate order, and we had a favorable regulatory asset adjustment based on the February 2025 Aqua Pennsylvania rate order. We had the closure of the P&G sales and use tax audit. And then in the second quarter, we had a benefit related to decreased bad debt expense. A second of those was actually tied to a COVID-related reserve. And in the first quarter, we had a benefit from insurance proceeds. These were partially offset by merger-related expenses for banking, legal, and other matters. However, even excluding these one-time items, both good and bad, we still had strong financial performance that would have exceeded our range. We remain committed to our long-term goal of delivering 5% to 7% EPS growth for the three-year period of 2024 through 2027. Given the impact of one-time items in the 2025 results, for a better sense of 2026, I would use that long-term CAGR of 5% to 7% off the non-GAAP income per share of $1.97 in 2024. I will conclude my remarks on slide 13 with a discussion on regulatory activity. In 2025, Essential Utilities, Inc. completed regulatory recoveries that total $101.5 million of incremental annualized revenue, with $92.6 million of this related to our water and wastewater business, and the remainder to our gas business. Thus far in 2026, Essential Utilities, Inc. has completed regulatory recoveries that total $12.4 million across our water, wastewater, and natural gas businesses. Looking ahead now, our water and wastewater segment has filed for regulatory recoveries with a requested annualized revenue increase totaling $101.9 million. We continue to manage our regulatory activity to minimize regulatory lag, maintain safe and reliable service, and earn an appropriate return on the capital we invest, while always considering affordability for our customers. This will, in a similar manner to the past, continue throughout 2026 as we approach our anticipated combination with American Water. And with that, I will turn it back over to Chris.