HTO April 29, 2026

H2O America Q1 2026 Earnings Call - $700M Equity Raise Funds Quadvest Acquisition and 2027 Capital Budget

Summary

H2O America delivered a solid first quarter with adjusted EPS of $0.50, in line with expectations, but masked underlying 15% organic growth by a higher share count from a massive $700 million equity raise. The company successfully priced the offering at a tight discount, more than five times oversubscribed, and will now stay out of the equity markets through 2027 to fund its $2.7 billion five-year capital plan and the pending Quadvest acquisition. Management emphasized a disciplined path to deleveraging, targeting an upgrade to an A-flat credit rating by the end of the five-year plan. Regulatory momentum is building across California, Connecticut, Maine, and Texas, with key rate case filings and PFAS remediation recoveries on track. The Quadvest transaction, now deemed administratively complete, is expected to close in the second half of 2026, setting the stage for significant accretive growth beginning in 2028.

Key Takeaways

  • Adjusted diluted EPS came in at $0.50, consistent with internal expectations and supportive of the full-year 2026 guidance of $3.08 to $3.18 per share.
  • The company executed a $700 million equity offering, more than five times oversubscribed and priced at a tight 2.6% discount, effectively removing equity risk for the Quadvest acquisition and 2026-2027 capital budget.
  • Management confirmed it will stay out of the equity markets, including the ATM program, through at least year-end 2027, relying on the board agreement portion of the March issuance and cash equivalents to fund operations.
  • Underlying net income grew approximately 15% year-over-year, driven by $0.41 per share in revenue increases from rate relief, pass-through costs, and higher usage, partially offset by $0.20 in higher water production expenses.
  • Full-year 2026 capital expenditures are tracked at $483 million, with $85 million deployed in Q1, supporting a broader $2.7 billion five-year investment plan expected to drive a 13% rate base CAGR.
  • Roughly 80% of the $2.7 billion capital plan qualifies for timely regulatory recovery through mechanisms in California, Connecticut, Maine, and Texas, minimizing regulatory lag.
  • The Quadvest acquisition STM application was deemed administratively complete, kicking off a 120-day procedural schedule; the company updated the expected closing timeline to the second half of 2026.
  • Quadvest reported robust connection growth, adding 2,800 active connections in Q1 2026 and expanding its contracted pipeline by 5,000 connections, positioning Texas to grow from 8% to 26% of the consolidated customer base by 2029.
  • Management reiterated a target to upgrade its S&P credit rating from A-minus to A-flat by the end of the five-year plan, requiring an FFO to debt ratio north of 15% to provide future transactional flexibility.
  • Regulatory filings are advancing across key jurisdictions, including a $176 million PFAS remediation recovery request in California, a $26 million rate case request in Connecticut, and a $9.5 million GRC filing in Maine.
  • The effective income tax rate dropped to 15% in Q1 2026 from 17% in the prior year, primarily due to higher flow-through tax benefits associated with infrastructure investments.
  • CEO Andrew Walters emphasized that average water bills remain below 1% of median household income across all service territories, well under the EPA’s suggested affordability threshold, while preparing for potential low-income tariffs in Texas.

Full Transcript

Siobhan, Conference Call Operator: Welcome to the H2O America 2026 Q1 Financial Results conference call. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker, Jonathan Reeder. Please go ahead.

Jonathan Reeder, Senior Director of Treasury and Investor Relations, H2O America: Thank you, Siobhan. Welcome to the first quarter of 2026 financial results conference call for H2O America. My name is Jonathan Reeder, and I am the Senior Director of Treasury and Investor Relations for H2O America. Presenting today will be Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Ann P. Kelly, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, and Bruce A. Hauk, President and Chief Operating Officer. For those who would like to follow along, slides accompanying our remarks are available on our website at h2o-america.com. Before we begin today, I would like to remind you that this presentation or related materials posted on our website may contain forward-looking statements. These statements are based on estimates and assumptions made by the company in light of its experience, historical trends, current conditions, and expected future results, as well as other factors that the company believes are appropriate under the circumstances.

Many factors could cause the company’s actual results and performance to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. For a description of some of the factors that could cause actual results to be different from statements in this presentation, we refer you to the financial results press release and to our most recent forms 10-K, 10-Q, and 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, copies of which may be obtained on our website. All forward-looking statements are made as of today, and H2O America disclaims any duty to update or revise such statements. You will have an opportunity to ask questions at the end of the presentation. This webcast is being recorded, and an archive of the webcast will be available until July 29th, 2026. You can access the press release on the webcast at H2O America’s website.

In addition, some of the information discussed today includes the non-GAAP financial measures of adjusted net income and adjusted diluted earnings per share, which have not been calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States or GAAP. These non-GAAP financial measures should be considered as a supplement to the financial information prepared on a GAAP basis rather than as an alternative with respect to GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are presented in the table in the appendix of our presentation. I will now turn the call over to Andrew.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Welcome, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. We are pleased to provide you with an update on our strong first quarter 2026 results, during which we earned $0.49 per share on a GAAP diluted basis and $0.50 per share on an adjusted diluted basis. Our first quarter 2026 results were consistent with our internal expectations in support of our standalone 2026 EPS guidance of $3.08 per share to $3.18. Before I ask Ann to discuss the quarterly results in more detail, I want to update everyone on the very successful equity raise that we executed in early March.

Following our year-end 2025 update and taking advantage of what we viewed as a receptive equity market, we decided to take the Quadvest acquisition related equity risk off the table by coming to the market with a $550 million equity offering to fund not only the transaction, but also the $100 million-$125 million of equity needed for our 2026 standalone capital budget. Our equity offering received an overwhelmingly positive response from investors as it was more than 5 times oversubscribed and priced at a tight 2.6% discount. Due to the overwhelming demand and our desire to accommodate some very high quality, long-term oriented investors into our shareholder base, we upsized the issuance to $700 million, including the greenshoe. The upsizing also served to address our forecasted equity needs through 2027.

I believe the successful equity offering is a direct reflection of the hard work of all my partners here at H2O America and their dedication to providing our customers with high quality, reliable service while executing on the financial goals that we have communicated to investors. At the same time, we recognize that our work is far from complete. We remain steadfast in our commitment to deliver on the 2026-2030 plan that we rolled out at the end of February, including our increased long-term EPS CAGR target of 16%. The core element of the plan is our tried and true strategy of growing the business and creating shareholder value by making the much needed water infrastructure investments across the national footprint of our systems while constructively engaging our key local stakeholders in a consensus-building process to provide timely regulatory recovery while maintaining customer affordability.

As a reminder, our plan does not include any M&A opportunities beyond our 2 pending Texas acquisitions. On the regulatory front, our teams have been busy working to secure the necessary approvals to execute on our long-term plan. This includes leveraging infrastructure investment mechanisms, recoveries in Connecticut, Maine, Texas, as well as making a PFAS remediation project recovery filing in Connecticut as well as California. In addition, a great deal of thought and effort has gone into preparing our general rate case filings in Connecticut and Maine. Of course, there was a filing of the Quadvest, L.P. sales transfer merger application earlier in the year, and our focus continues to be on closing the transformative acquisition later this year and delivering on the anticipated accretion beginning in 2028.

Bruce will provide more detailed updates on Quadvest transaction as well as some of our key regulatory developments later in the call. Now I will turn it over to Ann to provide details on our first quarter 2026 results and the key elements of our financial plan. Ann.

Ann P. Kelly, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, H2O America: Thank you, Andrew. Yesterday, after the market closed, we released our 1st quarter 2026 operating results. As Andrew mentioned, we were pleased to report 1st quarter 2026 diluted EPS of $0.49 and adjusted diluted EPS of $0.50. The results were consistent with our internal expectations and supportive of the financial guidance that we provided on our year-end 2025 update. Although we grew the underlying net income by roughly 15%, both our reported and adjusted diluted earnings per share were unchanged when compared to the 1st quarter of 2025 results due to the higher share count as a result of leveraging our ATM program in 2025 and our equity issuance in early March. Moving to slide 8, I’d like to briefly discuss all the key drivers resulting in the comparable year-over-year earnings per share.

We realized $0.41 per share increase due to higher revenue. Roughly half of this, or $0.20, was driven by rate relief received from general rate cases and infrastructure surcharges, primarily in California, Connecticut and Texas. There was also $0.11 of higher revenue for pass-through water supply costs that are offset in our water production expenses and do not impact our net income. In addition, higher usage, largely due to a hot, dry March across our California service territory, added $0.05. The revenue increase was partially offset by higher water production expenses of $0.20, attributable to $0.10 of higher water supply costs due to increases in average per unit cost for purchased water and groundwater extraction, $0.09 from increases in water production balancing and memorandum accounts primarily related to the full cost balancing account in California, and $0.08 from higher customer usage.

These increases are partially offset by a $0.07 decrease in water production expense as a result of increased availability of surface water. In addition, other operating expenses increased $0.18. The biggest item here was an $0.11 increase in depreciation and amortization for new utility plants placed in service, as well as an increase in maintenance, employee-related costs, and higher non-labor, administrative and general expenses. The remaining drivers relate to $0.07 of dilution, which I alluded to earlier from the higher share count, partially offset by $0.04 of net other benefits. As for taxes during the quarter, our effective income tax in Q1 2026 was approximately 15% versus 17% in Q1 of 2025. The lower effective tax rate was primarily due to higher flow-through tax benefits.

Shifting from the first quarter results to our full year 2026 and beyond expectations, the figures on the next few slides should look familiar as we are reiterating all aspects of the guidance that we rolled out near the end of February with our year-end 2025 update. During the first quarter of 2026, we invested $85 million into infrastructure improvements. This represents 18% of our full year 2026 CapEx budget of $483 million, which does not include the impacts of Quadvest. While the 18% might seem low, it reflects the seasonality of our CapEx cycle, particularly during the winter months for our Connecticut and Maine operations. We are on track to deliver the full year 2026 CapEx budget as well as our plan to invest $2.7 billion of capital over the 2026-2030 period.

Importantly, roughly 80% of the $2.7 billion capital plan qualifies for timely regulatory recovery, either through California’s 3 or forward-looking general rate case framework or through various infrastructure recovery mechanisms in Connecticut, Maine and Texas. Our 5-year capital investment plan, combined with our pending acquisition of Quadvest, is expected to translate into a 13% rate base CAGR off our year-end 2025 estimated rate base of $2.8 billion. As a reminder, these amounts represent our estimated rate base at year-end and not necessarily what was or will be recognized and rates by our state regulators in those particular years. We are laser-focused on not only delivering the rate base growth but translating it into attractive earnings growth by minimizing regulatory lag and continually seeking ways to operate more efficiently in order to keep rates affordable while providing our customers with best-in-class service.

The details on slide 10 are consistent with what we have provided on our year-end update. I won’t go through them all, but wanted to reiterate our expectations to deliver a nonlinear EPS CAGR over the 2026 to 2030 period at or above the top edge of our 6%-8% long-term organic EPS growth rate target using our 2025 adjusted EPS of $2.99 as a base year. The ability to deliver growth at or above our 6%-8% long-term sustainable rate is enabled by, one, the line of sight that we have on our 5-year capital expenditure plan.

Two, the anticipated accretion from pending Quadvest acquisition beginning in 2028 once the new rates from the consolidated Texas General Rate Case that was planned to follow and file in early 2027 go into effect. Three, our expectation to continue to work constructively with key stakeholders in each of our states to achieve fair and timely revenue regulatory outcomes. We remain excited about our five-year plan and long-term prospects and believe our team is fully capable of delivering on it. Turning to financing and credit on slide 11. As Andrew discussed, we executed on the equity needed to not only fund our pending Texas acquisitions, but also our 2026 and 2027 base capital expenditures.

We expect to stay out of the equity markets, including issuances through our ATM program through at least year-end 2027 as we have the ability to draw down on the $400 million board agreement component of the March issuance over this period to fund our capital needs. We still expect to raise $100 million-$200 million of debt across the parent and Texas Water Company levels to fund the Quadvest transaction. We have more flexibility now regarding the timing given the upsize equity issuance. Our liquidity is strong to fund our daily operations. While we work towards closing Quadvest later this year, we utilize the cash received from the equity issuance to pay down our bank lines of credit, meaning the full $370 million is available, and we have invested the remainder of the proceeds into cash equivalents.

In addition, our A-minus credit rating, which S&P affirmed earlier this month, affords us access to the capital needed to fund our longer-term investments. We expect our FFO to debt ratio to be in the 11%-12% range through 2027, which is above S&P’s 11% downgrade threshold. In 2028, we expect the ratio to be above 12%, and we will continue to delever throughout the rest of the plan through increased cash flows and the anticipated pay down of our 2029 holdco maturity. With that, I will turn the call over to Bruce A. Hauk to provide some regulatory updates, including on our pending acquisition of Quadvest.

Bruce A. Hauk, President and Chief Operating Officer, H2O America: Thank you, Ann. Our regulatory teams have been busy to start the year. While the California team is gearing up for the 2028 to 2030 GRC filing that will be made in January of 2027, earlier this month, we filed a request with the CPUC outside of the GRC process for approval and recovery of our planned Williams Station PFAS remediation project. The estimated capital cost of the ion exchange project is $176 million. If approved, SJWC would adjust rates via annual rate-based filing offsets. This is similar to the recovery approach we took for our current AMI project that is expected to be completed around the end of this year.

In Connecticut, we filed and received approval to implement annual revenue increases totaling a combined roughly $3.3 million under the WICA and WGTA mechanisms that went into effect on April 1st, 2026. On April 1st, we implemented our 2025 water revenue adjustment mechanism surcharge to reconcile revenues as authorized in CWC’s most recent rate case. As a result of CWC achieving the PURA prescribed performance metrics in our last GRC, the WRA surcharge provides recovery of certain amounts of compensation expenses. As most of you are aware, CWC filed a letter of intent on March 13th to file a GRC application within the next 60 days.

The actual rate case will be filed in the weeks ahead. Per the letter, CWC plans to request an approximately $26 million increase in annual revenues for new rates to become effective early 2027. As CWC seeks recovery for the approximately $129 million of infrastructure investments made between its last rate case and the end of 2026, as that investment is not reflected in current rates. Moving on to Maine on slide 14, after getting approval of the stipulation and the rate unification proceeding in January, MWC filed its first consolidated WISC application in late February, requesting a $0.9 million increase.

Earlier this month, MWC filed its first consolidated GRC filing, requesting a $9.5 million increase in annual revenues to recover the approximately $36 million of infrastructure investments that have been or are expected to be made in the state by the end of 2026 and are not currently in rates. We expect the new rates to go into effect by the second quarter of 2027. Lastly, I’d like to shift to Texas regulatory activity. We continue to work through the $5.1 million SIC mechanism application we filed in October and expect a decision from the PUCT in the second half of 2026. We also continue to move the ball forward through the PUCT’s approval process for the two pending acquisitions.

In fact, I am pleased to report that just last week, we filed a sales transfer merger or STM application for the Cibolo Valley Wastewater Plant and related collection system, which keeps us on track for an anticipated close of this transaction during the fourth quarter of 2026. Then in early 2027, after the close of the Quadvest and Cibolo Valley acquisitions, as well as the completion of our significant investments to bring an additional 6,000 acre-feet of water annually into our existing system, Texas Water continues to expect to file a combined company general rate case with new rates affected in early 2028, so that these and other additions to Texas Water’s rate base can be recognized in rates. Beginning in 2024, the magnitude of needed infrastructure investments to improve water supply and reliability at our Texas utility increased considerably.

Over the 2024 through 2026 period, we expect to have invested more than $300 million into the infrastructure. Thus filing a GRC to get those investments recognized in rates is critical. Before I move to an update on Quadvest, I did want to point out that despite us making all of these significant and much-needed capital investments in recent years across our service territories and seeking recognition of these investments from our regulators, our average bills are still below 1% of the median household income in each of our service territories. This is well below the EPA’s recent study that reports water and wastewater bills are affordable if, when combined, they are less than 4.5% of median household income. Assuming a 50/50 split between water and wastewater, it would suggest below 2.25 for each is affordable.

We believe this is a reasonable guideline depicting affordability and provides bill headroom for the recovery of our planned infrastructure investments going forward. Now for an update on Quadvest. The STM application for the regulated portion of the Quadvest transaction was filed in January, and earlier this month it was deemed administratively complete. As outlined on slide 15, the STM application requests approval of TWC’s acquisition of the Quadvest, L.P. assets and certification of the value of the rate making rate base as determined in accordance with the Texas Fair Market Value Statute at TWC’s $483.6 million purchase price. TWC is in the process of issuing the required public notices, and once proof of those notices are filed with the commission, the PUCT’s 120-day approval process will commence.

That said, the 120-day timeframe may be extended if staff or the Office of Public Utility Counsel requests a hearing and/or timeline extension. We are updating our expected closing of the Quadvest acquisition from mid 2026 to sometime during the second half of 2026. We continue to see robust connection growth in the Houston-based Quadvest water and wastewater system, which now has more than 57,200 active connections as of March 31st, 2026. This represents an impressive 5% increase in the first three months of 2026 after the active connection count increased 16% during 2025. As Quadvest under contract and pending development pipeline converts into active connections, the pool of future connections continues to be replenished, extending the longevity of the growth profile.

Specifically, during the first quarter of 2026, despite Quadvest converting 2,800 connections from the pipeline to active, the pipeline was increased by 5,000 connections. Of course, future connection growth will vary based on a number of conditions, so this is no guarantee of the future pace of growth. These results are in line with our range of expectations, and we believe solid growth will continue in the greater Houston area, which is the second fastest-growing metropolitan area in the U.S. The addition of Quadvest’s active customers, plus the continued conversion of its contracted development backlog, is the primary contributor that is expected to drive Texas from 8% of our consolidated customer base today to 26% by 2029. Between Quadvest and Cibolo Valley, we are very excited about our long-term growth potential in Texas.

That concludes my regulatory updates, and I will now turn the call back over to Andrew.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Thank you, Bruce. Before opening the call up to Q&A, I wanted to welcome Commissioner Patrick Rhode, who Governor Abbott appointed a few weeks ago to fill the remaining vacancy on the Public Utility Commission of Texas, and take a minute to expand a bit on Bruce’s remarks with respect to customer affordability. We know the concern remains top of mind with customers, regulators, investors alike, especially as the recent uptick in energy prices due to the conflict in the Middle East has caused inflationary expectations to rise. Affordability is, and frankly, always has been a top priority of ours, and we will continue to work constructively with our state regulatory partners as we look to balance affordability with the extensive investment required to replace aging infrastructure and treat emerging contaminants, all while providing safe, high-quality water and reliable service.

As Bruce mentioned, as of year-end 2025, average H2O bills were less than 1% of median household income across all four of our states, which is well below the EPA’s suggested 2.25% affordability threshold. We offer affordability tariffs in California, Connecticut, and Maine, with hopes to introduce this benefit to our Texas customer base as part of our future rate proceeding. As always, we will continue to strive to run the business as efficiently as possible as we recognize that every $1 of avoided operating expenses enables the recovery of $7 of capital investments with a neutral impact on customer bills.

Anytime we can swap operating expenses for capital deployment, we will look to do it as it is a win-win for customers and the company. In closing, I believe our company is off to a good start operationally and financially. We have a busy regulatory agenda ahead of us. I believe our team is up to the challenge, and our company is poised to deliver great things in 2026 and beyond. Our dedicated team remains focused on driving shareholder and customer value through disciplined infrastructure investment and executing on our financial goals. Advancing the transformational Quadvest acquisition as well as Cibolo Valley, deepening our strong partnerships with local stakeholders and our unrelenting pursuit of operational excellence in identifying creative and sustainable solutions to serve generations to come while maintaining a focus on affordability. With that, I will turn the call back over to the operator for questions.

Siobhan, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question-and-answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press the star 1 1 on your telephone and wait for your name and company name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 1 again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Alex Kania of BTIG. Your line is now open.

Alex Kania, Analyst, BTIG: Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I kind of had just two questions. The first one was, just as you think about the, you know, the upcoming rate case process, I guess, for I’d say for Quadvest, you know, next year. I know obviously it’s early, but just from a high level, how would you know, obviously this rate case is going to be important, but how would you just think about maybe some of the affordability statistics that you provided for your other jurisdictions, and maybe how they may end up looking, you know, relative to what you might expect from Quadvest, you know, kind of on a run rate basis?

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Sure. I’ll ask Bruce to take that question. Thank you very much, Alex, and good morning.

Bruce A. Hauk, President and Chief Operating Officer, H2O America: Thank you, Alex, for the question. As it relates to Quadvest rates, we’ve not disclosed the potential impact on rates, but we have disclosed that it would be significant. With that in mind, there’s been, you know, a lot of investment that needs to be made for liability in the system, as you heard in my prepared remarks, and also the FMV transaction itself. With that being said, you know, we’re in the process of being engaged with all the stakeholders, customers, and also the regulatory commission as well. We have to be creative and thoughtful in our preparations and preparing for that. That will most likely be most public, if you will, sometime in 2027 when we file.

With that being said, as Andrew mentioned in his comments, we are very focused on affordability and our rate design will take that into consideration. We are going to be proposing a low income tariff to address affordability’s issues in Texas as well. Also being mindful of how to most appropriately bring those investments to light and to rates and how we can do that in conjunction and partnership with the commission.

Alex Kania, Analyst, BTIG: Great. That’s helpful. Maybe a question for Ann, just as you talked about the balance sheet and the fact that, you know, you might be in that, you know, 11%-12% range for the next couple of years, given that cushion from the, you know, from the equity offering. Just thinking about, you know, the thoughts around the comments on just the desire to continue to deleverage. Is there a, you know, is there a kind of a target that we should be thinking of over the very long term, from an FFO to debt and maybe, you know, just the thinking behind wanting to be, you know, you know, pretty sizably above, you know, maybe whatever downgrade threshold might be for your A rating. Thanks.

Ann P. Kelly, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, H2O America: Thanks, Alex. As we mentioned, we do plan to delever over the five-year plan with the target being to get into the, you know, the A flat rating, which is comparable to our competitors. You know, right now we have a, I think it’s a 15% FFO to debt upgrade threshold. We would need to be north of that. We expect to be there by the end of the five-year review. Going to the A flat credit rating gives us flexibility. We said overall that we’re very committed to our A category rating currently at the A minus.

Building back up to an A flat gives us flexibility if we were to pursue an acquisition or any other transactions in the future, to be able to do so while still maintaining the A category rating.

Alex Kania, Analyst, BTIG: Great. Thanks so much.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Thank you, Alex.

Siobhan, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Davis Hebert of Baird. Your line is now open.

Davis Hebert, Analyst, Baird: Hey, good morning, guys.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Morning, Davis.

Davis Hebert, Analyst, Baird: Andrew, Bruce, Anne, thank you so much. Yeah, excited to be joining you guys, the analyst community, and thank you for taking our questions. Maybe two from me, just starting first on Quadvest. Wondering maybe Andrew or Bruce, if you guys could talk just a bit about the final steps needed to close this, any risks you guys see to the timeline, and then whether or not any small deviations, thinking months difference here, would pose any risk to your guys’ timing for potentially filing the Texas rate case application next year.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Yeah. I’ll have Bruce take that question, but thank you, Davis.

Bruce A. Hauk, President and Chief Operating Officer, H2O America: Thank you, Davis Hebert, for the question. You know, we’re super excited about the major hurdle that we most recently covered, which was being deemed administratively sufficient. That specific step allows us to engage in the notice to customers of the acquisition and kicks off a process that allows us to actually get the 120-day procedural schedule set by the Commission. With that being said, if you think back when we actually announced this acquisition, filed notice for the FMV, then proceeded with filing over 7,000 pages of the STM filing, the sales transfer merger process. To only have had a 60-day examination of that process to get deemed administratively sufficient, that’s significant in terms of an achievement.

With that being said, you know, as things proceed, that puts us from where we said in my prepared remarks from a mid-2026 close to a, you know, sometime in the latter half of 2026. That being said, all commissions across this country are inundated with a lot of dockets. You know, Texas is no exception with the amount of investment and growth that’s taking place in Texas. We have to work with the commission in partnership to proceed and prosecute the STM. So far, you know, we’re on track, like I mentioned, for that late 2026, barring no significant exceptions in terms of delays with things that may come up in the due diligence process.

So far so good, we are planning to close, as I mentioned, at the latter part of 2026, barring no unforeseen things that may come up by intervening parties or just basically with the, you know, with the commission staff being unable to get to things as timely as, you know, we would like, based on their docket, and all the actual cases that they’re reviewing. We’re very happy with the process thus far and the total engagement by the commission and the staff. We are happy with, I mentioned, you know, crossing that hurdle at this point.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Yeah. I think that’s an important point, Davis, too. It’s just to kinda highlight that if anybody gets that amount of volume of documents to go through, they’re not going to kinda scrimp on their review process. It just means they have to work very hard in order to get through it. You know, at least from our standpoint, we have nothing but gratitude for the hard work that the staff is putting into this.

Davis Hebert, Analyst, Baird: That is super helpful. Thank you both for all the detail. Maybe just one other, if I could sneak it in. I know this is a bit of a moving target, if you will, to an extent. The EPA has been talking a bit more about regulating microplastics and other potentially harmful substances in drinking water. I think in fairness, it took maybe two and a half years to officially move forward on PFAS. It’s still early on. I guess my question is: Have you guys thought about whether or not treating for PFAS would also cover treating some of these other potentially harmful substances, or is this maybe a tailwind to increase capital deployments longer term, or just how to think of this in context of your guys’ planned capital deployments? Thank you very much.

Bruce A. Hauk, President and Chief Operating Officer, H2O America: Thank you, Davis, for that question. Super engaged in the process with the EPA, working with the rulemaking process. Just to kinda level set, you know, the six constituents that are actually PFAS regulated with MCLs and what have you, we’re very much on track to make the improvements that are needed in Connecticut and California to achieve, you know, that compliance and, you know, things are on track there. This new list of compounds that were part of that process that you just described, you know, just like you had mentioned, the rulemaking process is lengthy and long, and the due process is pretty extensive.

The partnership that we have with the Water Research Foundation, also our other partners with EPA and other organizations, NAWC, allows us to be a significant and meaningful part of that process and a voice. To your point of does ion exchange or GAC or any of these treatment processes that we use to mitigate PFAS, are there ancillary benefits? Absolutely. One of the things on microplastics I’m super proud of is our director of water quality based out of our San Jose Water operation is actually doing a pilot through the Water Research Foundation and actually using our Montevina plant to do a pilot on microplastics to inform the science behind what can be done to eliminate, treat, remediate microplastics.

We’re very much in on the research and participating in the process that will help our company as well as others, as we work through the process and the rulemaking. Super excited about that.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Yeah. I think it’s, you know, it’s good that Bruce highlights that because I think as we look at the team that is supporting all of us, when we get the honor of telling the story, the work that actually gets done on the field is nothing short of amazing for what those folks do every day. Suzanne DeLorenzo, who Bruce just talked about, is one of those amazing partners that is continuing to drive progress in our company and actually put us at the forefront of things that impact the entire industry, not just us.

Davis Hebert, Analyst, Baird: Super helpful. Thanks for the time, guys. I’ll pass it on.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Thank you.

Siobhan, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. I’m showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn it back over to Andrew Walters for any closing remarks.

Andrew Walters, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, H2O America: Thank you. Thank you again for joining us today. H2O America proudly leverages our national platform to support our distinct local operations, all united by a shared mission, delivering reliable service and high-quality water to 1.6 million people across 4 states. Together, we protect what’s precious. At the same time, we continue executing our growth strategy and delivering our shareholder value, including our unwavering commitment to the dividend, which we paid for more than 80 consecutive years and increased it in each of the past 58. Our success is built on a culture of service and partnership. We value our customers, communities, the environment, and capital partners, and I couldn’t be prouder of our team, whose dedication makes it all possible. I’m always available for follow-up, along with my partners, Ann and Bruce. We appreciate your interest in H2O America.

Siobhan, Conference Call Operator: Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.