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Operator
Thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Atmos Energy Corporation fiscal 2026 first quarter earnings conference call. (Operator Instructions)
Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Dan Meziere, Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer. You may begin.
Daniel Meziere - Investor Relations
Thank you, Jeannie. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. With me today are Kevin Akers, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Chris Forsythe, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Our earnings release and conference call slide presentation, which we will reference in our prepared remarks, are available at atmosenergy.com under the Investor Relations tab.
As we review our financial results and discuss further expectations, please keep in mind that some of our discussion might contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Securities Act and the Securities Exchange Act.
Our forward-looking statements and projections could differ materially from actual results. The factors that could cause such material differences are outlined on slide 29 and are more fully described in our SEC filings. I will now turn the call over to Kevin.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Thank you, Dan. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I want to begin today's call by thanking every one of our Atmos Energy employees for their preparation, focus, and dedication to safely providing natural gas service to our customers and communities during the very challenging weather conditions of Winter Storm [Fern].
And for their dedication throughout the year to execute upon our system modernization strategy as we continue our journey toward our vision to be the safest provider of natural gas services.
During Winter Storm Fern, all segments of our business, distribution, transmission, Atmos Pipeline, Texas, our underground storage systems, gas supply plans, and our customer support operations, all performed very well and to design expectations. I am very proud of our team and their efforts.
I'd also like to thank the first responders, emergency responders, and emergency management services teams across our service territory for what they do every day for our community.
Yesterday we reported fiscal 2026 first quarter net income of $403 million or $2.44 per diluted share. Our first quarter capital expenditures totaled $1 billion with over 85% of these investments focused on enhancing the safety and reliability of our distribution, transmission, and underground storage systems.
As a reminder, we re-based our fiscal 2026 guidance to reflect the passage of Texas House Bill 4384.
As we stated on our November earnings call and in our investor material, our re-based fiscal 2026 earnings per share guidance is in the range of $8.15 to $8.35 per share. Additionally, we re-based the fiscal 2026 annual dividend to $4 per share, and we plan to grow our dividend in line with our earnings per share growth of 6% to 8% annually.
Moving to our Atmos Pipeline, Texas division, we achieved several project milestones during the first quarter. We completed the installation of approximately 55 miles of 36 inch pipeline from APT's [Bethel] storage facility to our [Grossbeck] compressor station.
This provides additional pipeline capacity to transport gas from our Bethel storage into the growing [DFW] metroplex and the Interstate 35 corridor between [Waco and Austin].
We continue to work on phase two of APT's Line WA Loop project as we have placed 13 miles of this project into service. As a reminder, this project is designed to install approximately 44 miles of 36 inch pipeline to the west of Fort Worth to support growth in this area of the [DFW Metroplex]. The remaining 31 miles is expected to be placed in service this spring.
In addition to the enhanced supply capacity of those projects, we completed a project that more than doubles the takeaway capacity at our [Bethel Salt] dome storage facility, providing additional peak day deliverability into the APT system for our LDC customers.
Finally, we enhanced APT supply optionality, reliability, and system versatility with the completion of two interconnect projects, adding 700,000 MCF per day of additional natural gas supply to the APT system. Across our service territories, we continue to see steady customer growth.
With the 12 month ending December 31, 2025, we added nearly 54,000 new customers, with approximately 42,000 of those new customers located here in Texas. And during the first quarter, we added over 1,100 commercial customers and three new industrial customers. This continued demand from all customer classes demonstrates the value and vital role natural gas plays in economic development across our service territory.
The Texas Workforce Commission reported that at the end of December that the seasonally adjusted number of employees was $14.3 million. Texas once again added jobs at a faster rate than the nation over the last 12 months ending December 2025.
Our customer support associates and service technicians continue to provide exceptional customer service, achieving customer satisfaction ratings of 98% for the quarter.
And our customer advocacy team and customer support agents continued their outreach efforts to energy assistance agencies and customers during the first quarter. Through those efforts, the team helped over 11,000 customers receive nearly $3 million in funding assistance.
Recently, our team's customer service efforts were recognized by [JD Power and Eskom]. In December, the JD Power 2025 gas utility residential Customer satisfaction Study ranked [Atlas Energy] number one in customer satisfaction in the South and Midwest among large utilities.
This is Atmos Energy's fourth consecutive year to receive this honor for the Midwest region. And in January, Atmos Energy was named an escalent 2025 utility customer champion in both the South and Midwest regions.
More than 96% of our customers are located in these two regions, and we are very proud of our entire team for their ongoing focus and dedication to providing exceptional customer service. Congratulations and thank you all. I'll now turn the call over to Chris for his update.
Christopher Forsythe - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President
Thank you, Kevin, and good morning everyone. We appreciate you joining us this morning. Our fiscal '26 first Corps diluted earnings per share of $2.44 represented a 9.4% increase over the prior year quarter. Our first quarter results includes $35 million or $0.16 in the impact of Texas House Bill 4,384. $20 million was recognized in our distribution segment, and the remaining $15 million are recognized at APT.
Our first court performance was also influenced by several other factors. Rate increases in both of our operating segments hold $68 million. Operating income increased by an additional $24 million due to residential commercial customer growth and increased customer load.
Finally, APT's through system revenues, netative writer revv increased about $7 million during the quarter. APT's through system volumes declined approximately 2 BCF as it performed more maintenance during this quarter compared to the prior quarter.
However, spreads widened significantly to an average of $3.99 compared to $1.06 in the prior quarter due to rising associated gas production, constrained takeaway capacity, and lower demand due to unseasonably warm weather during the first quarter.
Partially offsetting these increases was a $23 million increase in consolidated OEM expense. We experience a $12 million increase in compliance and safety related that spending associated with increased leak survey work in a distribution segment and the timing of maintenance work at APT that I mentioned a moment ago.
Additionally, employee related costs increased approximately $5 million primarily due to increased headcount to support company growth and higher overtime and standby costs driven by increased service work.
From a regulatory perspective, since the beginning of the fiscal year, we have implemented $123 million in annualized operating income increases in our distribution segments.
Currently we have five filings in progress seeking approximately $81 million in annualized operating income increases, and we plan to make an additional filing this fiscal year seeking approximately $400 million in annualized operating income increases.
During the quarter, we completed over $1 billion of long-term debt and equity financing highlighted by the $600 million long-term debt financing we completed in October of 2025.
Additionally, we settled $472 million in equity forward agreements. Our equity capitalization as of December 31 was 60%, and we do not have any short-term debt outstanding. We owe $4.6 billion in available liquidity. This amount includes approximately $1.1 billion in net proceeds available under existing foreign sale agreements, which is expected to satisfy the remainder of our anticipated fiscal '26 equity needs and a portion of our anticipated equity needs for fiscal '27.
Our first quarter performance has is well positioned to achieve our re-based fiscal '26, earn interest share guidance in the range of $8.15 to $8.35 per share, and we remain on track to achieve our capital spending plan of $4.2 billion. Thank you for your time this morning. I will now open the call for questions.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Julien Dumoulin-Smith, Jefferies.
Julien Dumoulin-Smith - Equity Analyst
Hey, good morning, team. Nicely done, I got to say, as always, and thank you for the time. Maybe just to kick things off, you just commented in your remarks and in the queue here about the 35 million benefit, for the quarter. Can you talk a little bit about how we should think about that rateably through the year here and just ultimately what that might imply as you think about like an annualized benefit, relative to the guidance you guys give? Seems like it puts you guys in a good place. I'd love to get your thoughts.
Christopher Forsythe - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President
Yeah, good morning, Julian.
Thank you and thanks for joining us this morning. And yes, we are, we're off to a good start for the fiscal year. As we talked about before, the influence or the impact of the deferrals under House Bill 4,384 will be influenced by the timing of spending, the timing of project closings, and the underlying underlying operational activities of the company. So it's, right now, off to a good start, $35 million a quarter of a quarter. And we are still holding firm right now on our earnings per shared guidance of $815 to $835, and we'll see what the second quarter brings for us.
Julien Dumoulin-Smith - Equity Analyst
Got it. But just putting down a little bit further, would you assume that that's a good run rate, at least for the purpose of this year? I know it's CapEx timing driven, and any reason why you wouldn't for the purpose of our conversation, start to do that, or at least do some kind of ratio relative to CapEx against annualized targets?
Christopher Forsythe - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President
I think it's going to depend upon the flow of spend in the quarter, as we've had here the last couple of weeks, a very busy operationally focused around, supporting Winter Storm Ferns, so construction activities were down a little bit. Obviously, we're now beginning to ramp that back up, and I think it'd be dangerous to say take 35 and multiply it by four as remember, as a reminder, year over year we did have the impact of the House Bill 4,384 in the fourth quarter last year, so. I would probably steer clear of just going too strong at this point, just saying [35x4] and moving forward.
Julien Dumoulin-Smith - Equity Analyst
Yeah, no, fair enough, and then just as it pertains to the Winter Storm, I mean, obviously folks are zeroed in on and certainly cognizant of the impact to customers. How do you think about the The preliminary financial impacts here if you can break that down a little bit. I mean, obviously there's working capital consideration and ultimately there's there, there's a few other moving pieces that you care to elaborate a little bit further just given the history.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Yeah, Jay, I let me rephrase your question because I'm not quite following you that way you're talking about gas costs.
Julien Dumoulin-Smith - Equity Analyst
Yeah, I was thinking about the just the balance sheet, and the earnings impact from the Winter Storm in the last couple of weeks cumulatively.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Yeah, so let's start with the Winter Storm itself. It was very significant as you saw the icing across all of the country. I think 40 states were impacted at one point by the storm, but the storm was not nearly as significant as Uri. I think the upstream supply, as we've reported, and I think you'll hear from some of the other folks that do upstream of us, supply performed very well. We had minimal supply issues, and what we did have, we were able to backfill with storage itself to keep a steady and reliable supply of natural gas flowing.
And with that we had an exceptional gas supply plan laid out from baseload to peaking contracts to some spot purchases to our storage supply. So again, I don't think you're going to see the impact as you did in Uri both on the operational nor a financing from gas supply costs related to Winter Storm Fern.
Julien Dumoulin-Smith - Equity Analyst
All right, that's great. All right, well, look, I, I'll leave it there. Thank you guys very much. I appreciate the time today.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Thank you. Thanks.
Operator
David Arcaro, Morgan Stanley.
David Arcaro - Analyst
Hey, thanks so much. Good morning I was wondering if you could maybe touch on what you're hearing maybe on the ground and in some of your regulatory proceedings going on with regard to affordability pressures.
Is this an issue that you're seeing, migrate into the gas LDC space? Is it coming up politically surrounding the cost of natural gas? What are you seeing on the ground right now?
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
It's always a part of what we talk about with our commissions. It's always top of mind for us, and I'll point you back to our deck in slides 15 through 17, I believe that's in the deck there and how we look at the metrics around portability, but it's always a topic we continue to have with our regulators. They understand the need for our investment just as it helped us get through Winter Storm Fern.
You have to start these things year in advance and. Your system, putting on additional supply, upstream of that, increasing your capacity on your pipelines, bringing on more additional supply points, all those go into that equation for reliability, on a go-forward basis for our customers.
But again, it's more the conversation. We're not getting any sort of, negative feedback or impression from our cust, from our regulators at this point as they understand the need to maintain reliability and safety across the system.
David Arcaro - Analyst
Okay, got it, understood, and wanted to check in to see whether you're seeing any, inflection or meaningful projects on the gas power, side of things, either major power plants moving forward or what we're seeing is on site power using natural gas at data centers, at pretty high volume. So are you seeing, more activity or opportunities there?
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
As we said before, we continue to get inquiries around large loads, whether they're data centers themselves or additional power generation.
We'll share more about those once we have a signed contract. We don't want to get out in front and have to walk any of that sort of load back at this point, but we continue to get inquiries. Our engineering, our operations teams continue to investigate those, respond to those data requests. But we'll, when we have something to report, we'll bring those forward. And as APT already serves some Power gen facilities across its, transmission footprint as well today, so.
David Arcaro - Analyst
Okay great thanks so much.
Operator
Jeremy Tonet, JP Morgan.
Unidentified Participant - Analyst
Hey, good morning. This is [Eli] on for Jeremy. Wanted to start on the, yeah, good morning. The special election that was just recently happened in Texas, there was a Democrat seat, I believe that flipped. Is there any impact overall or I mean, how do you guys kind of see that outcome in relation to the business? Thanks.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Yeah, we're apolitical. We work with R's and D's and I's or anybody to share our stakeholder strategy, why we do the things we do, why it's important for our communities, why natural gas is important for our customers, why it's important for economic development, and we've been around for 43 years now, and we've been through many administration changes both at the federal, state, and city level, county level as well. And again, we see ourselves as an essential energy source for our communities and we'll work with anybody that is in public office today or has an interest in what we do.
Unidentified Participant - Analyst
Awesome and then you know maybe just shifting to the Mississippi rate case outcome and kind of the process going forward you know how do you adjust your plan for for outcomes in that jurisdiction going forward?
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Well, one, there's, and I'll let Chris follow-up here in a second. There's not an adjustment to plan. Remember, we say in our November call when we lay out our five year plan and we update it every quarter. Chris and I both mentioned it on this call, 85 plus percentage of our investment goes towards safety and reliability. That does not change our plan. It is all driven by the needs of our system, the growth on our system, the demand across our system, the safety across our system. That's what drives our plans out there, and that's what's going to continue to fuel our plans in the state of Mississippi.
Christopher Forsythe - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President
Yeah, I would add to that, Jeremy. I mean, since the outcome, we have been in regular dialogue with the commission, first, working to, implement the tariff, that, to reflect the order that came out, late last year. A tariff was filed in early January.
We're expecting, a decision potentially today on that, including that tariff is also a request. For deferral-like mechanisms, as well as other opportunities to potentially, mitigate to reduce flag going forward, we still have an annual filing mechanism, in the state. It's now on a historical test basis. So, we're evaluating and modeling the impact of shifting that from a forward look back to historical look.
And if you've also, you've probably seen in the public notice in early January, we filed a the public knows that our intent to appeal the decision to the state Supreme Court in Mississippi, and we are working through that process as we speak. So a lot going on, a lot that we're taking in to evaluate, but it's also stepping back at a bigger picture.
Mississippi is roughly 5% of the business, so we believe we've got the ability to absorb whatever outcome comes through in our plans going forward.
Unidentified Participant - Analyst
Great, thanks for the color. I'll leave it there.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Thank you.
Operator
[Feishi], Barclays.
Nicholas Campanella - Analyst
Hey, good morning. It's actually Nicholas Campanella on. I hope you can hear me.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Yeah, we sure can.
Nicholas Campanella - Analyst
Hey, I hope everything's well. So, I just wanted to ask just the $0.21, Texas benefit in the quarter, is that something that we can annualize or just how would you kind of frame that against the $0.40, guide that you originally, pointed to?
Christopher Forsythe - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President
Yeah, so Nick, so the impact on the quarter was approximately $0.16, and as I was chatting with Julian at the top of the call, with, you have to say that you can just simply take a run rate, multiply by three or four to get through that because the underlying operations are impacting the timing of those referrals. So, we said a few minutes ago, we'll just take it quarter by quarter as we work through this first year of implementation, and, we'll see, where the second quarter brings us, and we'll have an update for you at that point.
Nicholas Campanella - Analyst
Okay, and then just I just wanted to make sure I was just directly understanding that the benefit. It's kind of a similar benefit than what was booked in fourth quarter last year. Like, would it be kind of like three times the benefit given, you did about $1 billion of the $4 billion of CapEx this quarter? Just how does, is that the right way to do this?
Christopher Forsythe - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President
Yeah, I mean, again, 25% through the year, a lot needs to occur between now and then operationally, as Kevin talked about, we've been focused the last couple of weeks on, winter operations, which has, put a, cap on the back burner. So as we come through that, right now when we get back up to speed, we'll see what the impact is on referrals. But, again, I would caution against just taking a simple number and multiplying by three or four at this point in time.
Nicholas Campanella - Analyst
Okay, thanks for clarifying, and then just, you kind of brought up, the strength and spreads, is there a way to, explicitly quantify what the margin benefit was from [Waha] spread this quarter?
Christopher Forsythe - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President
Well, quarter over quarter we attributed about $7 million operating income increase as a result of those activities.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Thank you.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Ryan Levine, Citi.
Ryan Levine - Analyst
Good morning. Given the recent storm burn and increasing gas demand in your service areas, do you see incremental opportunities to add gas storage? And please give us some updated color around that opportunity.
Kevin Akers - President and Chief executive officer
Yeah, good morning, Ryan. As you've heard us talk about before, we have 15 storage fields placed across Kentucky. Kansas, Mississippi, here, and here in Texas. Additionally, we have third-party contract storage and then we have storage as part of our, upstream interstate pipeline capacity as well. That's something our gas supply team and our operations team look at post-winter. We'll do a rigorous, review of system performance, gas supply plan performance.
And overlay that with a third-party consulting engineering firm to overlay with customer growth and demand expectations, and then we'll evaluate how that may impact additional needs for gas supply where those may need to come in and any future needs for storage, but it's something we always continue to look at based on past performance, historical weather, and customer growth across the system.
Ryan Levine - Analyst
Okay, thanks for taking my question.
Operator
There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Dan Meziere for closing remarks.
Daniel Meziere - Investor Relations
We appreciate your interest in Atmos Energy and thank you again for joining us this morning. Have a good day.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.