## Executive Summary / Key Takeaways<br><br>-
Arizona's Economic Transformation Is Creating a Once-in-a-Generation Utility Growth Story: Pinnacle West's service territory is experiencing explosive demand from semiconductor fabs, data centers, and population in-migration, driving weather-normalized sales growth of 5-7% through 2030—nearly double the industry average—and forcing the largest infrastructure build in company history.<br><br>-
Regulatory Lag Is the Critical Constraint, But a Solution Is in Sight: The company's primary challenge is earning timely returns on massive capital investments; the pending 2025 rate case includes a formula rate mechanism that, if approved, would transform PNW from a lumpy, rate-case-dependent utility into a more predictable earnings compounder with annual cost recovery starting in 2027.<br><br>-
Transmission and Subscription Models Are Emerging as Hidden Earnings Drivers: While generation capacity grabs headlines, transmission revenues grew 14% in Q3 2025 and the innovative "subscription model" for large customers ensures growth pays for itself, protecting base customers from cost shifts while securing long-term contracts that de-risk capital deployment.<br><br>-
Palo Verde Nuclear Plant Provides an Irreplaceable Competitive Moat: APS's 29% ownership of the nation's largest nuclear plant delivers carbon-free baseload power at 100% capacity factors during summer peaks, creating a cost and reliability advantage that renewable-heavy peers cannot replicate as they struggle with intermittency and storage costs.<br><br>-
The Investment Thesis Hinges on Regulatory Execution, Not Demand: With $2.4-2.7 billion in annual capex through 2028 and rate base growth of 7-9%, the company has clear visibility on growth; the key variable is whether Arizona regulators will approve mechanisms to reduce regulatory lag and allow PNW to earn its authorized returns in a timely manner.<br><br>## Setting the Scene: The Arizona Power Imperative<br><br>Pinnacle West Capital Corporation, incorporated in 1985 and built upon Arizona Public Service Company (APS) which has served the region since 1886, operates as a vertically integrated electric monopoly in one of America's fastest-growing economies. This isn't a typical utility story about slow population growth and regulatory stagnation. APS serves 1.4 million customers across 11 of Arizona's 15 counties, but the composition of that demand is fundamentally changing. For decades, the customer base leaned heavily residential; today, it's increasingly dominated by power-hungry semiconductor fabs and data centers that require 24/7 baseload power measured in hundreds of megawatts.<br><br>Why does this shift matter? Traditional utilities manage gradual load growth of 1-2% annually, allowing methodical capacity planning and predictable rate cases. PNW is grappling with nearly 20 gigawatts of uncommitted load interest from large customers—equivalent to more than double its current peak demand of 8,500 MW. This creates both opportunity and crisis. The opportunity is unprecedented rate base growth; the crisis is that infrastructure must be built years before regulators approve cost recovery, creating massive regulatory lag that compresses returns and strains the balance sheet.<br><br>Arizona's economic drivers are structural, not cyclical. Taiwan Semiconductor (TICKER:TSM)'s $165 billion total investment (up from the original $65 billion) will build six fabs and two advanced packaging facilities. Amkor Technology (TICKER:AMKR)'s $7 billion advanced packaging plant breaks ground in 2025. These aren't speculative projects; they're responding to the CHIPS Act and the strategic imperative to onshore semiconductor manufacturing. What this implies for PNW is a multi-decade load growth trajectory that extends far beyond typical utility planning horizons. The company isn't just building for today's demand; it's constructing infrastructure for an economy that will look fundamentally different by 2030.<br><br>The competitive landscape reinforces PNW's unique position. Unlike multi-state peers such as Xcel Energy (TICKER:XEL) or Edison International (TICKER:EIX) that must balance competing regulatory regimes across different states, PNW's Arizona focus allows deep local relationships and concentrated political influence. While peers battle California's wildfire liabilities or the Midwest's stagnant population growth, PNW operates in a pro-growth environment where regulators understand that reliable power is the foundation of economic development. This geographic concentration is a double-edged sword: it magnifies both the upside from Arizona's boom and the downside from any state-specific regulatory missteps.<br><br>## Technology, Products, and Strategic Differentiation: Beyond Wires and Poles<br><br>Pinnacle West's strategic differentiation begins with its generation portfolio, anchored by the Palo Verde Generating Station. APS owns or leases 29.1% of Units 1, 2, and 3, making it the nation's largest nuclear plant operator. In September 2025, APS acquired two of three leased interests in Unit 2 for $199 million, terminating associated lease agreements and moving toward full ownership. The importance of this lies in nuclear plants operating at capacity factors exceeding 90%, providing carbon-free baseload power that doesn't fluctuate with weather or fuel prices. During Q3 2025's record heat, Palo Verde ran at 100% capacity factor all summer, delivering power at a marginal cost near zero while gas plants faced volatile fuel prices.<br><br>This nuclear foundation creates a cost structure advantage that renewable-heavy peers cannot match. While competitors like Edison International (TICKER:EIX) struggle with California's solar duck curve {{EXPLANATION: solar duck curve,The solar duck curve illustrates the imbalance between peak solar power production during the day and peak electricity demand in the evening, creating challenges for grid management and requiring flexible generation or storage solutions.}} and storage costs, PNW's nuclear baseload provides stable, predictable generation costs that can be hedged through long-term contracts. Strategically, this is twofold: first, it reduces exposure to natural gas price volatility, which is critical as APS plans up to 2,000 MW of new gas generation at the Desert Sun Power Plant; second, it positions PNW to meet carbon-neutral goals by 2050 without sacrificing reliability, a key differentiator as data center customers prioritize uptime over renewable percentages.<br><br>The Desert Southwest pipeline expansion represents another strategic moat. APS executed a precedent agreement with Transwestern Pipeline Company in July 2025 to secure capacity on a new Permian Basin-to-Arizona pipeline operational by late 2029. As the anchor shipper, APS ensures long-term gas supply for new generation at predictable prices. This is critical: without this pipeline, Arizona's gas generation would depend on constrained existing infrastructure, creating supply risk and price volatility that could derail the economic development attracting TSMC and others. The pipeline is a $5.3 billion project that de-risks the entire generation expansion strategy, ensuring fuel availability coincident with new plant commissioning.<br><br>Most innovative is the subscription model for large load customers. Rather than socializing infrastructure costs across all ratepayers, APS is contracting directly with data centers and manufacturers to fund incremental capacity through long-term agreements. This "growth pays for growth" approach is significant because it solves the classic utility dilemma: how to build for large customers without burdening residential ratepayers. The model protects affordability for existing customers while providing upfront cash that reduces equity dilution. For investors, this transforms large load growth from a regulatory risk into a financing advantage, creating a direct line of sight between customer commitments and capital recovery.<br><br>Transmission infrastructure is the hidden earnings driver. With 5,814 pole miles and $450-860 million in annual transmission capex through 2028, APS is building regional interconnections that generate FERC-regulated formula rate revenues. Transmission revenues grew 14% in Q3 2025 to $44.3 million, and these investments create opportunities for additional wheeling revenues from third parties. Strategically, transmission provides timely cost recovery through FERC's formula rate mechanism, partially offsetting the regulatory lag at the state level and creating a diversified earnings stream that peers with less robust transmission networks cannot replicate.<br><br>## Financial Performance & Segment Dynamics: Evidence of Execution<br><br>Pinnacle West's Q3 2025 results provide compelling evidence that the strategy is working. Consolidated net income attributable to common shareholders rose to $413.2 million ($3.39 per share) from $395.0 million year-over-year, driven by increased customer usage, customer growth, higher transmission revenues, lower O&M expenses, and higher AFUDC {{EXPLANATION: AFUDC,Allowance for Funds Used During Construction is an accounting entry used by utilities to capitalize the cost of financing construction projects, allowing them to earn a return on these costs once the assets are placed into service.}}. Operating revenues reached $1.82 billion, up from $1.77 billion. This demonstrates that the company is growing earnings while simultaneously investing record amounts in capital infrastructure, a combination that demonstrates operational leverage and effective cost management.<br>
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<br><br>The revenue mix reveals strategic progress. Retail electric revenues from non-residential customers grew 6% to $765.2 million in Q3 2025, outpacing residential revenues which declined slightly to $963.2 million due to weather effects. Over nine months, non-residential revenues grew 8.4% to $1.94 billion, reflecting the ramp-up of manufacturing and data center customers. This shift is crucial because large C&I customers have higher load factors and more predictable usage patterns, improving asset utilization and reducing revenue volatility. A 1% variation in large C&I sales impacts annual net income by approximately $6 million, versus $24 million for residential, showing that diversified growth reduces earnings risk.<br><br>Operations and maintenance expenses decreased $8 million in Q3 2025, primarily from a $12 million reduction in employee benefit costs. This O&M discipline is occurring despite 2.4% customer growth and record peak demand, demonstrating that the company is achieving scale efficiencies. For a utility facing massive capex, controlling O&M is critical to maintaining regulatory support and protecting the earnings base. The nine-month O&M trend shows a $46 million increase, but this includes planned outage costs and IT investments that position the company for future automation and efficiency gains.<br><br>Transmission service revenues grew $5.6 million in Q3 2025, a 14% increase, as investments in FERC-regulated infrastructure began generating returns. Transmission revenues are recovered through formula rates with minimal regulatory lag, which is important as it provides a timely earnings offset to the state-level delays in generation cost recovery. As transmission capex ramps to $860 million by 2028, this revenue stream will become increasingly material to overall earnings, creating a more balanced regulatory risk profile.<br><br>The balance sheet is positioned for the capital program. As of September 30, 2025, APS's common equity ratio was 52% with $9 billion in shareholder equity, well above the $6.9 billion dividend prohibition threshold. Debt-to-capitalization ratios of 60% for Pinnacle West and 49% for APS remain below the 65% covenant limit, providing headroom for the $2.4-2.7 billion in annual capex through 2028. The company has $700 million available under its ATM program and has already priced 85% of 2026 equity needs, de-risking the financing plan. This demonstrates management's proactive approach to funding growth without excessive dilution or balance sheet stress.<br><br>Cash flow from operations increased $158 million to $1.33 billion in 2025, driven by $291 million higher electric revenue receipts. However, investing activities consumed $1.83 billion, creating a funding gap that requires external financing. Crucially, the company must maintain regulatory support to ensure that invested capital earns its authorized return. The $29 million pre-tax gain from the BCE divestiture in Q1 2024 provided a one-time boost, but the underlying trend shows a business generating solid operating cash flow that fully funds the dividend while requiring external capital for growth investments.<br>
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<br><br>## Outlook, Management Guidance, and Execution Risk<br><br>Pinnacle West raised its 2025 EPS guidance to $4.90-$5.10 from $4.40-$4.60, citing strong sales growth, above-normal weather, increased transmission revenues, and contributions from El Dorado. This $0.50 per share increase demonstrates management's confidence in both top-line growth and cost control, even as capex accelerates. The company expects to finish in the top half of this range, implying Q4 performance will remain strong despite typical seasonal patterns.<br><br>The 2026 guidance of $4.55-$4.75 represents a year-over-year decrease, but this is entirely due to normalized weather assumptions and higher financing/D&A costs as capital projects enter service. The critical insight is that 2026 guidance excludes any rate case outcome, which is anticipated in Q4 2026. This means the guidance represents a conservative baseline that could see significant upside if the rate case concludes favorably. The expected O&M decrease in 2026 despite continued customer growth shows management's commitment to efficiency, with a long-term goal of reducing O&M per megawatt-hour.<br><br>Long-term sales growth guidance was raised to 5-7% through 2030, up from 4-6%, driven by residential trends and extra high load factor customer ramp-ups. This is a material increase that extends the growth runway by three additional years. For a utility, this is extraordinary visibility. This suggests that rate base growth of 7-9% through 2028 is not a one-time spike but the beginning of a sustained expansion cycle that could continue beyond 2030 as larger projects like Desert Sun Phase 2 (subscription model) and the Desert Southwest pipeline (late 2029) come online.<br><br>The financing strategy through 2028 maintains a balanced mix of debt and equity, with $1.0-1.2 billion in Pinnacle West equity forecasted. Management is exploring opportunities to secure upfront cash from large load customers via the subscription model to reduce equity needs. This directly addresses the primary constraint on utility valuations: dilution from equity issuances. If the subscription model can fund even a portion of the $2.4-2.7 billion annual capex, it would improve per-share metrics and accelerate EPS growth beyond the 5-7% long-term guidance.<br>
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<br><br>The 2025 rate case filing seeks a $579.5 million base rate increase (13.99% net) with a 10.7% ROE and formula rate proposal. The hearing is scheduled for May 2026, with a final vote in October 2026. This timeline means the first formula rate adjustment could occur in 2027, truing up costs annually thereafter. The strategic importance cannot be overstated: successful implementation would transform PNW from a traditional rate-case utility into a more modern, predictable earnings compounder, potentially justifying a re-rating of the stock's valuation multiple.<br><br>## Risks and Asymmetries: What Could Break the Thesis<br><br>Regulatory lag remains the paramount risk. Management candidly states that "regulatory lag will continue to be a factor in 2026," and the current rates are based on 2021 test year expenses. If the Arizona Corporation Commission rejects the formula rate mechanism or grants only a partial rate increase, PNW could face years of compressed returns on its $10+ billion capital program. The mechanism is simple: every year of delay on a $2.5 billion capex program at a 10% authorized return represents $250 million in foregone revenue potential. This directly impacts the ability to fund growth without excessive equity dilution and could pressure the dividend payout ratio, currently at 73.8%.<br><br>Wildfire risk, while lower than California peers, is escalating. APS has increased mitigation investments, installed AI-based fire sensing cameras, and implemented public safety power shutoffs. The May 2025 Arizona law requiring wildfire mitigation plans provides regulatory clarity, but also creates potential liability if plans are deemed inadequate. The $70 million in federal funding from the DOE Grid Deployment Office helps, but a major fire event could result in material claims and damage the company's regulatory relationships. This represents a tail risk that could overshadow the growth narrative and trigger the kind of regulatory backlash that has plagued California utilities.<br><br>Environmental regulations pose material cost uncertainties. The EPA's Coal Combustion Residuals rules could increase costs for managing ash at retired plants, while new greenhouse gas regulations requiring 90% carbon capture on new gas plants by 2032 may be technically infeasible. APS is evaluating compliance options for Four Corners Power Plant under new Effluent Limitation Guidelines. Environmental compliance could add hundreds of millions in unrecoverable costs if regulations are implemented as written, pressing margins and requiring difficult decisions about plant retirements versus expensive retrofits.<br><br>The nuclear wage class action lawsuit filed in July 2025 against 26 nuclear operators, including APS, alleges antitrust violations in compensation practices. While management cannot predict the outcome, a negative ruling could increase labor costs across the nuclear fleet and set a precedent for broader utility wage inflation. Labor typically represents 15-20% of utility O&M, and nuclear plants require specialized, highly compensated talent. Any material increase in labor costs without timely recovery would compress margins.<br><br>Execution risk on the capital program is significant. The Desert Sun Power Plant (up to 2,000 MW) and Desert Southwest pipeline represent multi-billion dollar projects with long lead times and complex counterparties. Delays in permitting, construction, or gas supply could push in-service dates beyond the 2029-2030 target, creating a supply-demand imbalance that risks losing large customers to alternative locations or self-generation. The subscription model for Phase 2 capacity is unproven at this scale, and failure to secure sufficient commitments could strand assets or shift development risk back to ratepayers.<br><br>On the positive side, asymmetries exist if execution exceeds expectations. If the formula rate mechanism is approved and large load customers adopt the subscription model more quickly than anticipated, PNW could accelerate capital recovery, reduce equity needs, and exceed the 5-7% long-term EPS growth guidance. The El Dorado investment in SAI Advanced Power Solutions, which contributed $25.4 million in nine-month equity earnings, demonstrates management's ability to generate ancillary returns from the data center ecosystem. While not core to the thesis, such investments could provide upside optionality.<br><br>## Competitive Context and Positioning<br><br>Comparing PNW to peers reveals its unique value proposition. Xcel Energy (TICKER:XEL) serves 3.8 million customers across eight states but grows at a fraction of PNW's rate, with Q3 2025 ongoing EPS of $1.24 versus PNW's $3.39. XEL's multi-state footprint provides diversification but dilutes focus, while PNW's Arizona concentration allows it to capture the full benefit of the state's growth. PNW's 2.4% customer growth and 5.4% weather-normalized sales growth in Q3 2025 dwarf XEL's metrics, justifying a premium valuation despite XEL's larger scale.<br><br>Edison International (TICKER:EIX) faces California's wildfire liabilities and regulatory complexity, with core EPS of $2.34 in Q3 2025. PNW's Arizona regulatory environment, while challenging, is more constructive than California's, and its wildfire risk is materially lower. EIX's 15.77% ROE exceeds PNW's 8.77%, but this reflects California's higher authorized returns that come with commensurately higher risk. PNW's lower ROE is more sustainable and less volatile, providing predictable earnings growth that should command a premium in uncertain markets.<br><br>PNM Resources (TICKER:PNM) and IDACORP (TICKER:IDA) are smaller regional peers with similar growth aspirations but less compelling execution. PNM's Q3 2025 adjusted EPS of $1.33 and IDA's $2.26 both trail PNW's $3.39, reflecting smaller scale and less robust growth. PNM's New Mexico territory lacks Arizona's economic dynamism, while IDA's Idaho market, though growing, cannot match the semiconductor and data center catalysts driving PNW's load growth. PNW's 10,111 MW of generation capacity and 5,814 transmission pole miles provide scale advantages that improve per-unit economics.<br><br>The key differentiator is PNW's nuclear portfolio. Data center customers require 99.999% uptime, making this a crucial differentiator as wind and solar cannot guarantee it without massive battery investments. PNW's balanced portfolio of nuclear, gas, and renewables positions it uniquely to serve the AI economy's power needs while maintaining affordability and reliability.<br><br>## Valuation Context<br><br>Trading at $90.86 per share, PNW carries a market capitalization of $10.88 billion and an enterprise value of $25.09 billion. The stock trades at 18.73 times trailing earnings and 19.41 times forward earnings, a modest premium to the utility sector average that reflects its superior growth profile. The 4.01% dividend yield, with a 73.8% payout ratio, provides income while investors wait for the capital program to generate returns.<br><br>Key valuation metrics tell a nuanced story. The EV/EBITDA multiple of 12.37 is reasonable for a utility with 7-9% rate base growth, while the price-to-operating cash flow ratio of 6.15 suggests the market is not fully valuing the cash generation potential once capital investments begin earning returns. The debt-to-equity ratio of 1.98 is elevated but manageable within the utility sector, particularly given the 52% equity ratio at APS and the 49% debt-to-capitalization ratio that provides covenant headroom.<br><br>Compared to peers, PNW's valuation appears justified by its growth premium. XEL trades at 25.03 times earnings with slower growth, while EIX's 7.72 P/E reflects California's regulatory overhang. PNM's 30.55 P/E and IDA's 22.68 P/E show that smaller regional utilities command similar multiples despite weaker growth trajectories. PNW's combination of 5-7% sales growth, 7-9% rate base growth, and a 4% dividend yield creates a total return profile that should trade at a premium to the sector average.<br><br>The critical valuation variable is the outcome of the 2025 rate case. If the formula rate mechanism is approved, PNW's earnings should become more predictable and less lumpy, potentially justifying a higher multiple as the market rewards reduced regulatory risk. Conversely, a denial or significant reduction in the requested $579.5 million increase would compress returns and likely lead to multiple contraction. The current valuation appears to price in a moderately constructive outcome, leaving upside if management executes successfully.<br><br>## Conclusion<br><br>Pinnacle West stands at the intersection of two powerful forces: Arizona's transformation into America's semiconductor and AI manufacturing hub, and the utility sector's evolution toward more timely regulatory recovery mechanisms. The company's Q3 2025 performance—$3.39 EPS, 5.4% sales growth, and raised guidance—demonstrates that it can execute operationally while simultaneously deploying a record $2.4 billion in annual capital. The 7-9% rate base growth through 2028 is not a temporary spike but the foundation for sustained earnings expansion.<br><br>The investment thesis ultimately hinges on regulatory execution. The 2025 rate case's formula rate proposal represents a potential inflection point that would transform PNW from a traditional, lumpy utility into a more predictable earnings compounder. Success would validate the massive capital program, reduce equity dilution, and accelerate EPS growth beyond the 5-7% long-term guidance. Failure would compress returns and test the dividend payout ratio.<br><br>For investors, the risk/reward is asymmetrically skewed toward upside if management delivers. Arizona's growth is not speculative—TSMC, Amkor, and the data center queue represent committed investments that will consume power regardless of economic cycles. PNW's nuclear baseload, transmission infrastructure, and innovative subscription model create durable competitive advantages that peers cannot easily replicate. The 4% dividend yield provides downside protection while investors wait for the regulatory outcome that will determine whether this utility can truly rewire its earnings power for the AI era.