Executive Summary / Key Takeaways
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Strategic Transformation Complete: Dominion's $14.2 billion gas divestiture program has created a pure-play electric utility positioned at the epicenter of the data center boom, with 48 GW of demand in contracting stages representing 28% of Virginia sales and driving a 30% increase in the five-year capital plan to $65.7 billion.
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CVOW: The Ultimate High-Stakes Bet: The $11.2 billion Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project is 70% complete and represents the largest investment in company history. While execution risks with the Charybdis vessel have created near-term uncertainty, bipartisan political support and a 50% cost-sharing partnership with Stonepeak limit downside exposure while creating an irreplaceable clean energy asset essential for meeting Virginia's 2045 zero-carbon mandate.
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Data Center Demand as Quality Moat: Unlike speculative growth, Dominion's data center backlog is validated by 20+ gigawatts of signed electric service agreements and construction letters of authorization, with demand forecasts through 2045 already covered by existing contracts, creating unprecedented revenue visibility and justifying the 10% CAGR in the investment base.
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Regulatory Execution as Key Differentiator: Dominion's ability to maintain residential rates 9% below the national average while data center load grows 20% annually demonstrates superior regulatory relationships, enabling rider mechanisms that recover nearly two-thirds of capital spending in real-time and de-risk the massive investment program.
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Critical Execution Phase: The investment thesis hinges on three variables: successful CVOW commissioning by March 2026, constructive outcomes in the June 2026 South Carolina rate case to close 150-200 basis points of under-earning, and sustained data center demand conversion from the 48 GW pipeline, with any shortfall creating meaningful earnings and valuation pressure.
Setting the Scene: From Diversified Utility to Data Center Infrastructure Pure-Play
Dominion Energy, originally incorporated as Dominion Resources in 1983 and headquartered in Richmond, Virginia, has spent the past two years executing one of the most consequential strategic pivots in the utility sector. The company concluded a comprehensive business review in March 2024 and promptly divested $14.2 billion of regulated gas distribution assets—East Ohio, Questar Gas, Wexpro, and PSNC—to Enbridge (ENB). This wasn't merely portfolio pruning; it was a deliberate transformation into a focused electric utility positioned to capture the most compelling demand growth story in the industry: the artificial intelligence and data center supercycle.
The significance of this transformation lies in the elimination of regulatory complexity and geographic dispersion, freeing management attention and capital for its core electric franchise in Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. It created a pure-play vehicle for investors seeking exposure to data center growth without the dilutive effect of slower-growing gas distribution assets. The divestiture proceeds were deployed to repay debt, strengthening the balance sheet just as the company embarks on a $65.7 billion capital program through 2030—a 30% increase from prior guidance that directly reflects accelerating electric demand.
Virginia is home to the world's largest data center market, and Dominion's service territory has become the critical infrastructure backbone for hyperscale cloud providers. The company now serves over 450 data centers, representing 28% of Virginia Power's electricity sales in 2025, with load growing at a 20% CAGR since 2016. This concentration creates both opportunity and risk: opportunity because data center customers provide stable, long-term revenue with minimal bad debt risk; risk because any slowdown in AI investment or shift in data center location preferences could leave Dominion with stranded assets. The company's response has been to demand 14-year contracts with collateral requirements for loads over 25 MW, ensuring customers pay their full cost of service and mitigating stranded asset risk—a structural advantage that smaller utilities cannot replicate.
The regulatory environment in Virginia provides another crucial moat. The 2018 Grid Transformation and Security Act and 2020 Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) mandate 100% zero-carbon generation by 2045 and deem 5.2 GW of offshore wind and 2.7 GW of energy storage to be in the public interest. This legislative framework effectively guarantees rate recovery for clean energy investments, de-risking the massive capital deployment required to serve data center growth. Dominion's ability to maintain residential rates 9% below the national average while data center load explodes demonstrates that regulators view the company's investments as customer-beneficial, creating a virtuous cycle of investment and growth.
Business Model & Segment Dynamics: Three Engines Driving Regulated Growth
Dominion Energy Virginia: The Data Center Growth Engine
Dominion Energy Virginia represents the crown jewel, serving 2.8 million customers and generating $11.8 billion in revenue (2025) with net income of $2.3 billion. The segment's capital expenditures reached $10.5 billion in 2025, up from $7.2 billion in 2023, reflecting the accelerating pace of infrastructure investment. The five-year capital plan allocates $55.8 billion to this segment alone, focused on new generation capacity (CVOW and dispatchable facilities), transmission upgrades, and distribution expansion to serve data center clusters.
The unique value of this segment is found in the quality of its demand growth. Weather-normal sales in the Dominion Energy Virginia LSE increased 5.4% in 2025, with all of the top 20 peak demand days occurring within the last fourteen months. This isn't weather-driven volatility; it's structural load growth from data centers that operate 24/7, creating a higher load factor and more efficient asset utilization. The company now has over 48 GW of data center demand in various stages of contracting, up 1.4 GW since September 2025. Critically, this demand is de-risked: Dominion's forecasted data center demand through 2045 is more than covered by existing signed Electric Service Agreements (ESAs) and Construction Letters of Authorization (CLOAs), meaning the company doesn't need speculative future demand to justify its capital plan.
The regulatory mechanism is equally important. Nearly two-thirds of the $65.7 billion capital plan is eligible for recovery under rider mechanisms, which allow real-time cash recovery during construction rather than waiting for base rate cases. This de-risks the financing strategy and supports credit metrics. The biennial review process in Virginia, with a final order expected by November 2025, will determine base rates for 2026-2027, but rider mechanisms ensure the bulk of data center and clean energy investments begin generating returns immediately.
Dominion Energy South Carolina: The Steady Eddie
DESC serves 0.8 million electric and 0.5 million gas customers in South Carolina, generating $3.6 billion in revenue and $535 million in net income (2025). While smaller than the Virginia franchise, DESC provides geographic diversification and a stable regulatory environment. The segment's $1.2 billion in 2025 capital expenditures support a $7.6 billion five-year plan focused on infrastructure upgrades and reliability.
The key development for DESC is the January 2026 rate case filing to recover $1.4 billion invested since 2023. Management expects a decision in June 2026 with rates effective July, closing a 150-200 basis point under-earning gap that will persist in the first half of 2026. This creates a near-term earnings headwind but a clear path to recovery. The South Carolina Rate Stabilization Act (RSA) could provide a more frequent, formulaic rate adjustment mechanism, reducing regulatory lag to 75-100 basis points going forward. For investors, this represents a classic utility rate case cycle: temporary under-earning followed by rate relief that resets returns to the authorized 9-10% ROE range.
DESC's customer rates are 12% below the national average, and management projects residential rate increases of 2.8% CAGR—affordable growth that supports continued investment. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's 20-year license extension for VC Summer through 2062 provides long-term carbon-free baseload capacity, aligning with Dominion's net-zero commitment while avoiding the first-of-a-kind cost overrun risks that plague new nuclear construction.
Contracted Energy: The Merchant Hedge
The Contracted Energy segment includes the Millstone nuclear station and non-regulated renewable generation, generating $1.1 billion in revenue and $438 million in net income (2025). Millstone provides over 90% of Connecticut's carbon-free electricity, with 55% of output under a fixed-price contract through 2029 and the remainder hedged through the company's energy marketing program. The plant achieved a 91% capacity factor in 2025, demonstrating operational excellence.
2026 is a "double outage year" for Millstone, which typically reduces operating EPS by 8-10¢ due to lower sales and higher O&M expenses. This headwind is well-understood and incorporated into guidance, but it highlights the segment's earnings volatility. The Connecticut zero-carbon energy RFP, with bids due March 2026, offers upside potential if Millstone can secure additional long-term contracts, potentially supporting incremental data center activity in New England.
The renewable natural gas (RNG) business faces headwinds from updated 45Z credit scoring under the new GREET model , reducing expected credits to a 5-9¢ range (midpoint 7¢) versus prior 10¢ assumptions. While not material to overall earnings, this reflects the evolving policy landscape for clean fuels and the risk of legislative sunsets. The segment's $1.7 billion five-year capital plan is modest relative to the utility segments, focusing on maintaining Millstone's operations and selective RNG investments.
Technology & Strategic Differentiation: The CVOW Moat
The Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW) Commercial Project is Dominion's signature technological and strategic initiative. At $11.2 billion and 2.6 GW capacity, it's the largest offshore wind project in U.S. history and represents a significant investment that will either cement Dominion's competitive advantage or create a decade of earnings drag. The project is over 70% complete with first power expected by March 2026 and full commercial operation by year-end 2026.
The importance of CVOW extends beyond its size. First, it creates an irreplaceable clean energy asset that satisfies Virginia's VCEA mandates while providing baseload-equivalent capacity for data centers. The project's levelized cost of energy (LCOE) of $84/MWh compares favorably to new gas-fired generation and is well below statutory limits, ensuring customer affordability. Second, the 50% partnership with Stonepeak de-risks the investment: Stonepeak funds half the equity and shares in cost overruns under a mechanism that protects customers and shareholders. Dominion recorded only a $50 million after-tax charge in Q4 2025 for costs not expected to be recovered, demonstrating the mechanism works as intended.
Third, CVOW enjoys bipartisan political support at all levels of government because it serves critical national security infrastructure, including Oceana Naval Air Station. As CEO Robert Blue stated, "If you stop it now, it causes energy inflation." This political moat is invaluable in an era of regulatory uncertainty and provides confidence that the project will receive necessary approvals and rate recovery.
The execution risk is real and visible. The Charybdis vessel, the first Jones Act-compliant wind turbine installation vessel built in the U.S., faced delays due to regulatory inspections that identified 200 punch list items, primarily in electrical systems. While 120 items have been closed and Blue remains "highly confident" of November readiness, the delays have consumed schedule contingency and pushed a few final turbines into early 2027. Each additional quarter of delay adds $150-200 million in costs, though Stonepeak shares half this burden.
The technology itself is proven—Siemens Gamesa (GCTAY) turbines are fabricating on schedule with 55% of nacelles complete—but the installation process is first-of-its-kind in U.S. waters. Dominion's "measure twice, cut once" approach is prudent but slower than initial estimates. The key insight for investors is that CVOW's 176 turbines are effectively 176 individual power plants that can be commissioned in strings throughout 2026, allowing real-time revenue recovery through rider mechanisms. This de-risks the timeline compared to a single large power plant that generates no revenue until fully complete.
Financial Performance: Capital Deployment at Scale
Dominion's 2025 operating earnings of $3.42 per share exceeded the midpoint of $3.40 guidance, demonstrating execution discipline. The 47% increase in net income versus 2024 was driven by higher rider equity returns from Virginia Power's capital investments, increased non-fuel base rates in South Carolina, and strong sales growth. Moody's (MCO) estimated CFO pre-working-capital to debt for 2025 was nearly 100 basis points above the company's downgrade threshold and marked the highest result since 2012, validating the balance sheet repair from gas divestitures.
The capital intensity is staggering. 2025 capital expenditures reached $10.5 billion, up 46% from 2023, and the updated five-year plan calls for $65.7 billion through 2030. This represents a 10% CAGR in the investment base, driving regulated rate base growth that underpins the 5-7% long-term EPS growth guidance. The financing plan is conservative: nearly 60% of investing cash flows and dividends will be covered by internally generated operating cash flows, with only 20% from long-term debt and 10% each from hybrid issuance and programmatic equity (DRIP/ATM).
This financing mix maintains credit metrics while funding massive growth, keeping the company well below credit agency maximums for hybrid securities. The $6-9.5 billion of expected 2026 long-term debt issuance will be partially offset by $1.6-1.8 billion in equity through ATM and forward settlements, demonstrating a balanced approach that avoids dilution while preserving financial flexibility. The absence of share repurchases in 2026 reflects capital discipline—every dollar is directed toward regulated investments with 9-10% ROE potential.
The segment performance validates the strategy. Dominion Energy Virginia's net income grew 38% from 2023 to 2025, while DESC grew 42%. Contracted Energy's net income surged from 2023's $99 million to 2025's $438 million, reflecting Millstone's operational excellence and hedging program success. The Corporate segment's $300 million net income in 2025 versus $734 million in 2024 reflects the absence of one-time gains from gas divestitures, signaling the transition to a pure-play electric earnings stream is complete.
Outlook & Guidance: The Upper Half Ambition
Management's 2026 operating EPS guidance of $3.40-$3.60 (midpoint $3.50) represents 6.1% growth despite the 8-10¢ headwind from Millstone's double outage. This acceleration is driven by continued strength in sales (5.4% weather-normal growth) and higher regulated investment. The guidance incorporates normal weather variations and known headwinds while excluding the more volatile RNG 45Z credits, which are now reported separately with a 5-9¢ range.
The long-term guidance is more telling: Dominion reaffirmed 5-7% annual operating EPS growth off the original 2025 $3.30 midpoint but now expects to achieve the upper half of that range starting in 2028. CFO Steven Ridge called this "a bullish message," reflecting improved fundamentals from increased regulated investment. The bias toward the back end of the plan acknowledges that most tailwinds—new generation from CVOW, Chesterfield gas plant, and solar additions—materialize in 2027-2030.
This upper half guidance signals management confidence that the data center demand is not a temporary bubble but a durable, decade-long growth driver that justifies accelerating capital deployment. The 10% CAGR in the investment base translates directly to rate base growth, which drives earnings. However, achieving the upper half requires flawless execution on CVOW, constructive regulatory outcomes in Virginia and South Carolina, and stable financing markets.
The capital plan update is substantial: $65.7 billion through 2030, with $55.8 billion at Virginia Power alone. This includes $1.3 billion in 2026 for 100% of CVOW (before Stonepeak's 50% reimbursement), $7.6 billion at DESC, and $1.7 billion in Contracted Energy. The plan is designed to be conservative, with nearly two-thirds eligible for rider recovery. This de-risks the financing strategy and ensures cash flows begin matching capital outlays quickly, supporting credit metrics.
Risks & Asymmetries: What Can Break the Thesis
CVOW Execution Risk: The most material risk is a catastrophic failure or extended delay in CVOW commissioning. While the project is 70% complete and first power remains on track for March 2026, the Charybdis vessel's regulatory challenges demonstrate the unique risks of first-of-a-kind U.S. offshore wind construction. If turbine installation extends beyond Q1 2027, each additional quarter adds $150-200 million in costs. The cost-sharing mechanism with Stonepeak limits Dominion's exposure to half, but a six-month delay could cost shareholders $300-400 million after-tax.
Data Center Demand Concentration: While the 48 GW pipeline is validated by signed contracts, concentration risk is real. If AI investment slows, hyperscale cloud providers could delay or cancel projects, leaving Dominion with over-built infrastructure. The new large load provisions requiring 14-year contracts and collateral mitigate this risk, but a major tech sector downturn would still impact growth.
Regulatory & Political Risk: Dominion's entire strategy depends on constructive regulatory relationships. The Virginia biennial review process, South Carolina rate case, and PJM transmission approvals are all critical junctures. An adverse Virginia decision could limit rider recovery or impose rate caps that constrain earnings. The withdrawal from RGGI in December 2023, currently under legal challenge, creates carbon pricing uncertainty.
Interest Rate & Financing Risk: With $65.7 billion in capital spending and 20% of funding from debt, Dominion is exposed to rising interest rates. The company's 1.50 debt-to-equity ratio is manageable but will increase as debt is issued. If rates remain elevated, financing costs could pressure earnings and limit the upper half growth trajectory.
Supply Chain & Tariff Risk: CVOW faces potential tariff impacts of $500 million if current policy continues through 2026, with Dominion's share at $130 million. While this is incorporated in the $11.2 billion budget, further trade escalation could increase costs. Supply chain constraints for transformers and other equipment could delay data center connections.
Competitive Context: Regional Moats vs. Scale Disadvantages
Dominion competes with large integrated utilities—Duke Energy (DUK), Southern Company (SO), NextEra Energy (NEE), and American Electric Power (AEP)—but its strategic focus creates distinct advantages and vulnerabilities.
Scale & Geographic Positioning: Duke serves 8.4 million electric customers across six states with $6.31 EPS (2025) and 8% earnings growth, demonstrating superior scale and diversification. Southern serves 9 million customers with $3.94 EPS but faces Vogtle nuclear cost overruns. NextEra's 8% EPS growth and 24.5% operating margin reflect its renewables leadership but lack Dominion's integrated gas-electric model. AEP's $5.97 EPS and 22.8% operating margin show strong transmission execution.
Dominion's $3.42 EPS and 22.0% operating margin are respectable. However, Dominion leads in data center exposure—none of its peers have 28% of sales from data centers with 20% CAGR. Duke's North Carolina data center growth is meaningful but smaller scale. NextEra's renewables portfolio serves data centers through PPAs but lacks the direct regulated relationship that provides rate recovery certainty.
Regulatory Moat: Dominion's relationship with Virginia regulators is a structural advantage. The rider mechanism for two-thirds of capital spending is more favorable than traditional rate case cycles that create 12-18 month regulatory lag. Southern's South Carolina operations face similar lag but lack the data center growth driver. Duke's multi-state footprint creates regulatory complexity that slows decision-making.
Technology & Asset Mix: NextEra leads in renewables scale with 62.3% gross margins, but Dominion's CVOW project creates a unique offshore wind moat that none of its peers can replicate in the Mid-Atlantic. Duke's nuclear fleet provides baseload but faces retirement risk. Southern's Vogtle expansion is plagued by cost overruns. Dominion's balanced approach—offshore wind, solar, storage, and dispatchable gas—provides reliability for data centers while meeting clean energy mandates.
Financial Flexibility: Dominion's 1.50 debt-to-equity ratio is lower than Southern's 1.91 and Duke's 1.72, but higher than NextEra's 1.46. Its 4.39% dividend yield is attractive versus Duke's 3.28% and NextEra's 2.73%, but the 76.95% payout ratio limits dividend growth until a peer-aligned payout ratio is achieved.
Valuation Context: Pricing the Data Center Option
At $60.84 per share, Dominion trades at 17.5x trailing earnings, a discount to Duke's 20.6x and NextEra's 27.7x, reflecting execution concerns around CVOW and regulatory concentration. The EV/EBITDA multiple of 12.75x is in line with peers (Duke 11.8x, Southern 12.9x, AEP 13.4x), suggesting the market is pricing Dominion as a traditional utility rather than a data center growth play.
The 4.39% dividend yield is attractive, but the 76.95% payout ratio means dividend growth will lag earnings growth until the payout ratio normalizes. Management has explicitly stated they will revisit dividend growth once a peer-aligned payout ratio is achieved, implying dividend growth will trail the 5-7% EPS growth target in the near term.
Dominion's ability to convert capital investment into regulated rate base growth is critical. The market is effectively pricing Dominion on its ability to execute the $65.7 billion capital plan and earn authorized returns. If Dominion achieves the upper half of its 5-7% EPS growth target, the stock could re-rate toward Duke's 20x multiple, implying 15-20% upside from current levels.
The key valuation driver is the data center growth premium. Dominion's 48 GW pipeline represents nearly 3x its current 30.7 GW generating capacity. If this demand materializes as contracted, the rate base could double by 2035, supporting sustained EPS growth above peer averages. The market is currently assigning only modest probability to this scenario, creating potential upside for investors who believe in the durability of AI-driven electricity demand.
Conclusion: Execution at Scale
Dominion Energy has transformed from a diversified utility into a pure-play electric infrastructure company positioned at the nexus of the data center supercycle. The $14.2 billion gas divestiture has strengthened the balance sheet and focused management on the 48 GW data center opportunity that will define the next decade of growth. The $65.7 billion capital plan is supported by rider recovery mechanisms, signed customer contracts, and bipartisan political support for critical infrastructure.
The investment thesis hinges on three variables: successful CVOW commissioning by March 2026, constructive regulatory outcomes in Virginia and South Carolina, and sustained conversion of the data center pipeline into energized load. The company's track record—delivering 2025 EPS above guidance while navigating CVOW challenges and integrating 450 data centers—suggests management can execute, but the scale of ambition leaves little margin for error.
For investors, Dominion offers a unique combination: a 4.4% dividend yield while investing in a structural growth story that could double the rate base over 15 years. The stock trades at a discount to peers despite superior data center exposure, reflecting execution risk that is gradually diminishing as CVOW approaches completion. If Dominion delivers on its upper half growth ambitions, the stock should re-rate toward peer multiples, creating 15-20% upside plus dividend income. If data center demand slows or CVOW faces major setbacks, the concentrated nature of the strategy creates meaningful downside. The next 12 months will be decisive.