Gas Utilities
•42 stocks
•
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All Stocks (42)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
|
ENB
Enbridge Inc.
Enbridge is a major natural gas utility operator after acquiring three U.S. gas utilities, serving millions of customers.
|
$104.41B |
$47.35
-1.22%
|
|
DUK
Duke Energy Corporation
Natural gas distribution utilities and infrastructure services.
|
$95.49B |
$122.22
-0.47%
|
|
SRE
Sempra
Gas utility operations (SoCalGas) providing natural gas distribution.
|
$60.35B |
$93.62
+1.22%
|
|
NGG
National Grid plc
Gas transmission and distribution assets remain part of National Grid's networks portfolio (about 30%), providing regulated gas services.
|
$59.66B |
$73.59
-2.12%
|
|
D
Dominion Energy, Inc.
Dominion also provides natural gas distribution in its DESC service area.
|
$52.46B |
$61.51
+0.07%
|
|
XEL
Xcel Energy Inc.
Xcel Energy provides natural gas distribution to customers.
|
$47.12B |
$79.80
+0.16%
|
|
PEG
Public Service Enterprise Group Incorporated
PSE&G also provides regulated natural gas distribution, a core utility service.
|
$40.56B |
$82.12
+1.05%
|
|
ED
Consolidated Edison, Inc.
ED provides natural gas distribution services as part of its energy-delivery portfolio.
|
$36.12B |
$99.34
-0.82%
|
|
WEC
WEC Energy Group, Inc.
Core natural gas distribution utility business serving customers in its service territories.
|
$35.77B |
$110.86
-0.26%
|
|
CMS
CMS Energy Corporation
CMS Energy provides natural gas distribution to Michigan customers as part of its integrated utility model.
|
$28.39B |
$74.14
+0.14%
|
|
AEE
Ameren Corporation
Ameren distributes natural gas to end customers, constituting a gas utility busines.
|
$28.27B |
$104.46
-0.07%
|
|
ATO
Atmos Energy Corporation
Atmos Energy operates as a regulated gas utility delivering natural gas to customers and maintaining distribution infrastructure.
|
$28.12B |
$174.21
-0.54%
|
|
PPL
PPL Corporation
PPL also operates regulated natural gas distribution to customers (Gas Utilities).
|
$26.71B |
$36.37
+0.69%
|
|
CNP
CenterPoint Energy, Inc.
Company runs natural gas distribution infrastructure, i.e., a gas utility.
|
$25.83B |
$39.68
+0.30%
|
|
ES
Eversource Energy
Provides natural gas distribution and services to customers in its service territories.
|
$23.96B |
$65.21
+1.02%
|
|
NI
NiSource Inc.
NiSource also operates as a natural gas distribution utility serving customers in multiple states.
|
$20.14B |
$43.72
+2.20%
|
|
LNT
Alliant Energy Corporation
Alliant Energy provides natural gas distribution to customers in its service territories.
|
$17.54B |
$68.33
+0.09%
|
|
EMA
Emera Incorporated
EMA owns and operates gas utilities providing natural gas distribution services to customers.
|
$12.80B |
$47.58
+0.36%
|
|
WTRG
Essential Utilities, Inc.
Core regulated natural gas distribution utility services delivering gas to customers.
|
$11.25B |
$39.85
-0.67%
|
|
UGI
UGI Corporation
UGI provides regulated natural gas distribution services through its Gas Utilities business.
|
$8.08B |
$38.85
+3.31%
|
|
NFG
National Fuel Gas Company
Local natural gas distribution for customers via National Fuel Distribution Corporation (regulated gas utilities).
|
$7.24B |
$79.75
-0.47%
|
|
BIPC
Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation
Gas utilities/infrastructure underpinning gas distribution networks.
|
$6.33B |
$43.70
-1.33%
|
|
CIG
Companhia Energética de Minas Gerais
Gas Utilities reflects Gasmig's gas distribution operations.
|
$5.81B |
$2.04
+0.74%
|
|
SWX
Southwest Gas Holdings, Inc.
Core business as a regulated natural gas distribution utility delivering gas to customers.
|
$5.79B |
$80.48
+0.05%
|
|
BKH
Black Hills Corporation
BKH provides natural gas utility services to customers in its service territory.
|
$5.10B |
$71.26
+1.70%
|
|
SR
Spire Inc.
Spire's core business is natural gas distribution and supply to customers, i.e., a gas utility.
|
$5.08B |
$86.88
+0.91%
|
|
OGS
ONE Gas, Inc.
ONE Gas is a 100% regulated natural gas distribution utility providing gas distribution services to ~2.3 million customers.
|
$4.98B |
$82.97
+0.06%
|
|
NJR
New Jersey Resources Corporation
NJR operates a regulated natural gas distribution utility (Gas Utilities).
|
$4.91B |
$48.22
-1.25%
|
|
MDU
MDU Resources Group, Inc.
MDU has natural gas distribution operations across multiple states, aligning with Gas Utilities.
|
$4.19B |
$20.75
+1.22%
|
|
NWE
Northwestern Energy Group Inc
NWE's acquisition of Energy West's natural gas distribution system underscores its role as a Gas Utilities provider.
|
$4.03B |
$66.72
+1.57%
|
|
ALE
ALLETE, Inc.
Regulated natural gas distribution as part of the utility operations.
|
$3.92B |
$67.52
-0.08%
|
|
DTW
DTE Energy Company JR SUB DB 2017 E
DTE Energy operates natural gas distribution to approximately 1.3 million customers, i.e., a gas utility.
|
$3.81B |
$21.41
+0.85%
|
|
AVA
Avista Corporation
Avista also operates natural gas utilities delivering gas service to customers as part of its regulated utility operations.
|
$3.34B |
$41.07
-0.34%
|
|
CPK
Chesapeake Utilities Corporation
Direct gas utility service delivering natural gas to customers (acquisition of Florida City Gas expands distribution footprint).
|
$3.23B |
$137.41
+0.19%
|
|
MGEE
MGE Energy, Inc.
MGEE provides natural gas distribution to customers in Wisconsin.
|
$3.01B |
$81.50
-1.19%
|
|
CSAN
Cosan S.A.
Compass's natural gas distribution/gas utility operations.
|
$2.17B |
$4.71
+1.51%
|
|
AILLN
Ameren Illinois Company
Natural gas distribution services within Ameren Illinois' service territory.
|
$2.01B |
$79.00
|
|
NWN
Northwest Natural Holding Company
NWN directly operates natural gas distribution and supply as a regulated gas utility in multiple states.
|
$1.97B |
$48.53
+0.91%
|
|
SPH
Suburban Propane Partners, L.P.
Propane and natural gas distribution activities align with the gas utilities/distribution framework for end customers.
|
$1.22B |
$18.91
+0.56%
|
|
UTL
Unitil Corporation
Direct natural gas distribution utility operations.
|
$798.97M |
$49.30
+0.52%
|
|
DTG
DTE Energy Company 2021 Series
Gas Utilities reflects DTE's regulated natural gas distribution and services segment.
|
$481.26M |
$17.34
+0.43%
|
|
RGCO
RGC Resources, Inc.
RGCO operates a regulated natural gas distribution utility delivering gas to customers.
|
$231.50M |
$22.26
-0.85%
|
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# Executive Summary
* The gas utilities industry is being reshaped by an unprecedented surge in electricity demand, primarily from data centers, which is driving record-level, multi-billion dollar capital investment plans.
* Constructive regulatory frameworks are critical for enabling this growth, with recent rate case outcomes and new cost-recovery mechanisms directly determining the profitability of these massive investments.
* The long-term energy transition toward decarbonization continues to underpin the industry's multi-decade investment cycle in grid modernization and cleaner generation assets.
* Strategic mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are accelerating as companies reposition their portfolios to gain scale, focus on high-growth regions, and fund capital needs.
* While revenue growth opportunities are robust, profitability faces headwinds from rising interest rates and inflationary pressures on operating costs.
## Key Trends & Outlook
An unprecedented surge in electricity demand, driven by the proliferation of AI-powered data centers and broader electrification, has become the primary growth catalyst for the gas and electric utility industry. Utilities in key regions like Virginia, Texas, and the Midwest are now facing interconnection queues with tens or even hundreds of gigawatts of potential data center load, in some cases representing a potential doubling of their entire system's demand. This demand directly translates into accelerated and upsized five-year capital expenditure plans, with companies adding billions to their forecasts to build out the required generation, transmission, and distribution infrastructure. This dynamic is creating a clear divergence between utilities located in these high-growth corridors and those in more mature service territories. Dominion Energy (D) is at the epicenter with approximately 47 gigawatts of data center demand in its Virginia territory, necessitating substantial, rider-eligible capital investments, while Sempra's (SRE) Texas utility, Oncor, has approximately 186 gigawatts of data centers in its interconnection queue, compared to its current peak load of 31 gigawatts.
The ability to translate massive capital spending into earnings hinges entirely on constructive regulatory outcomes. Utilities are actively seeking multi-year rate plans, specific cost-recovery riders for large projects, and new legislative mechanisms to reduce regulatory lag and ensure timely returns on investment. Favorable decisions are providing clear growth visibility, while adverse rulings can lead to significant financial impairments. Sempra's (SRE) recent legislative win in Texas for a Unified Tracker Mechanism (House Bill 5247), signed in June 2025, is a prime example of a regulatory enhancement expected to reduce investment lag and improve Oncor's earned ROE by 50 to 100 basis points over time. Conversely, Enbridge (ENB) faced a C$330 million impairment from an unfavorable rate decision in Ohio in June 2025, prompting a rehearing application.
The confluence of data center demand and the energy transition has created a once-in-a-generation opportunity for rate base growth, underpinning a long-term outlook for 6-9% annual EPS growth. The primary risk lies in execution and regulation; specifically, the ability to build massive infrastructure projects on time and on budget while securing timely and sufficient cost recovery from state commissions to maintain financial health amidst rising interest rates.
## Competitive Landscape
The gas utilities market is moderately concentrated and is undergoing a period of strategic consolidation. M&A activity exceeded $60 billion in 2025 as companies seek to gain scale and focus their portfolios to capitalize on new growth drivers.
Some of the largest players in the industry compete by leveraging immense scale and a diversified portfolio of energy infrastructure assets across North America. This approach provides resilient, predictable cash flows but can introduce operational complexity. Enbridge (ENB) exemplifies this strategy, with recent acquisitions doubling the size of its gas distribution franchise, making it North America's largest, and adding to its massive liquids and gas transmission and renewable power businesses, all underpinned by a regulated or long-term contracted model. Other firms are pursuing a more focused strategy, divesting non-core assets to become pure-play regulated utilities concentrated in a few high-growth states. CenterPoint Energy (CNP) is a prime example, actively divesting assets in other states, such as its $2.62 billion sale of its Ohio LDC to National Fuel Gas Company, to double down on its high-growth, Texas-based electric utility business and capitalize on the unprecedented load growth in the Houston area.
The key competitive battleground is the race to secure and build infrastructure for large industrial customers, particularly data centers, which requires both massive capital deployment and favorable regulatory support.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth is bifurcating, with a clear divide between utilities benefiting from rate increases and strong load growth versus those facing headwinds. Year-over-year quarterly growth ranged from over +20% to slightly negative. This divergence is driven by the timing of rate case decisions and exposure to high-growth industrial and data center demand. Leaders are realizing the benefits of new, higher rates and robust electricity sales, while others may be in between rate cases or experiencing milder weather or lower commodity pass-through costs. PSEG's (PEG) +22% year-over-year revenue growth in Q3-25 exemplifies the impact of new base rates, while Pacific Gas and Electric (PCG-PA) reported a -1.5% year-over-year revenue decline in Q2-25.
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Regulated utility business models continue to produce healthy and stable margins, though they face pressure from external macroeconomic factors. Strong margins are a structural feature of the regulated utility model, where rates are set to recover costs and earn a fair return on invested capital. Dominion Energy's (D) 50.57% TTM gross profit margin and 51.38% TTM EBITDA margin are representative of a best-in-class, vertically integrated utility. However, nearly all companies are experiencing margin pressure from higher interest expense on debt used to fund capital projects and inflationary effects on operating costs, a headwind that must be managed through efficiency programs and recovered in future rate cases.
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Capital allocation is overwhelmingly prioritized towards organic growth investments in infrastructure. Faced with the twin drivers of data center demand and the energy transition, companies are funneling nearly all available capital into multi-billion-dollar, multi-year investment programs to grow their regulated rate base. CenterPoint's (CNP) new $65 billion 10-year capital plan (2026-2035) and Dominion's (D) $50 billion 5-year plan (2025-2029) exemplify this intense focus on reinvestment. Share buybacks are largely absent; instead, companies are using asset sales, debt, and modest equity issuances to fund these massive capital plans.
Balance sheets are generally stable and managed to maintain investment-grade credit ratings, but they are carrying significant and growing debt loads to fund capital programs. The capital-intensive nature of the business requires substantial debt financing. Companies actively manage leverage ratios like FFO-to-debt to remain within target ranges (typically 14-16%) to maintain credit ratings and access to capital markets. Strategic divestitures are a key tool for managing leverage, as seen with CenterPoint (CNP) using $2.62 billion in cash proceeds from its Ohio LDC sale to strengthen its balance sheet and reduce debt.
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