Quanta Services (NYSE: PWR) delivered a quarter that justified its elevated valuation. The infrastructure contractor beat on both earnings and revenue this morning, posting adjusted EPS of $3.33 against a $3.26 estimate and revenue of $7.63 billion versus $7.42 billion expected. The stock rose 2.1% in early trading, reaching a new 52-week high as investors absorbed record backlog and accelerating Electric segment demand.
Revenue climbed 17.5% year over year to $7.63 billion, with the Electric segment driving most of the expansion. Electric revenue reached $6.17 billion, up from $5.23 billion in the prior year. Gross profit expanded even faster, rising 34.8% to $1.22 billion. This margin expansion signals improving pricing power and operational leverage as Quanta scales its Electric business.
The company selected for a major NiSource power generation and grid infrastructure project underscores demand tailwinds in the sector. CEO Duke Austin emphasized the strength: “These results demonstrate the power of our portfolio, the strength of our craft-skilled workforce and our ability to provide certainty through world-class execution.” Management raised 2025 revenue guidance, citing accelerating Electric segment momentum.
Record backlog of $39.2 billion represents the most tangible forward indicator. This backlog, driven primarily by Electric segment work, provides revenue visibility well into 2026. For context, this backlog exceeds annual revenue by roughly 5 times, a ratio that signals sustained demand rather than a cyclical spike.
Quanta also completed its acquisition of Dynamic Systems, expanding Underground and Infrastructure capabilities. The addition broadens service offerings and deepens customer relationships across utility and energy markets.
Operating cash flow declined 23.8% to $563 million, a notable softening that warrants attention. Free cash flow came in at $438 million. The decline reflects working capital timing and project phasing rather than operational deterioration, but it’s a metric worth monitoring in coming quarters.
Capital expenditure fell 33% to $142 million, suggesting disciplined capital allocation. Cash on hand decreased to $610 million from $764 million, largely due to acquisition activity and working capital needs tied to the backlog expansion.
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Adjusted EPS: $3.33 vs. $3.25 expected; up 71% year over year
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Revenue: $7.63B vs. $7.42B expected; up 17.5%
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Gross Margin: 16.0%, up from 13.9% year over year
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Operating Income: $517M, up 21.4%
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Net Income: $293.2M, up 15.8%
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Free Cash Flow: $438M
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Record Backlog: $34.0B






