NFG: Earnings Surge in Q1 FY2026—Don't Miss Out!
Overview of National Fuel Gas (NFG)
National Fuel Gas Company (NYSE: NFG) is a diversified energy firm with integrated operations in natural gas exploration & production (E&P), pipeline & storage, gathering, and utility distribution (www.globenewswire.com). This unique structure gives NFG exposure to commodity-driven upstream profits as well as stable regulated cash flows from its midstream and gas utility businesses. The company’s latest results underscore this synergy: Q1 FY2026 GAAP earnings jumped to $181.6 million (EPS $1.98) from just $45.0 million (EPS $0.49) in the prior-year quarter (www.globenewswire.com). On an adjusted basis (excluding unusual items), earnings were up 24% year-on-year to $187.7 million ($2.06 per share) (www.globenewswire.com). Management credited higher natural gas price realizations (+14%) and production growth (+12%) for the surge in upstream and gathering segment profits (www.globenewswire.com). Meanwhile, the regulated utility segment saw a modest income uptick (~5% YoY) as ongoing infrastructure investments expanded rate base and customer margins (www.globenewswire.com). Overall, CEO David Bauer highlighted that these strong results “were a great start to the fiscal year” and affirm the company’s outlook for continued earnings and free cash flow growth (www.globenewswire.com) (www.globenewswire.com).
Dividend Policy and Track Record
NFG stands out as a steady dividend payer with 123 consecutive years of payouts and 55 straight years of annual dividend increases (www.globenewswire.com). In June 2025, the Board approved a 3.9% hike in the quarterly dividend, raising it from $0.515 to $0.535 per share (annualized $2.14) (www.globenewswire.com). This places NFG among a select group of “Dividend Kings” with over five decades of growth. The forward dividend yield is approximately 2.6%–2.7% at recent share prices (uk.finance.yahoo.com), a competitive yield given the company’s growth profile. Importantly, NFG’s dividend is well-covered by cash flow. In Q1 FY2026, the company paid out about $48.3 million in dividends (www.globenewswire.com), while generating an estimated $275 million in cash from operations (versus ~$220 million in the prior-year quarter). Even after funding a robust capital expenditure program, NFG’s operating cash flows comfortably support its dividend, with a conservative payout ratio typically in the 25–30% range of adjusted earnings. This low payout ratio gives NFG room to continue its dividend growth streak and indicates management’s confidence in future cash generation. The dividend policy has been shareholder-friendly yet prudent – NFG targets sustainable raises in line with long-term earnings growth.
Leverage, Debt Maturities, and Balance Sheet Health
NFG maintains a moderate leverage profile as it balances growth investments with an investment-grade balance sheet. As of fiscal year-end 2025, the company’s debt-to-capitalization ratio stood at 45% (www.marketscreener.com), well within its internal and covenant limits. (By contract, NFG could have borrowed an additional $3.6 billion and still remained under the 65% debt-to-cap threshold allowed by its credit agreements (www.marketscreener.com).) Total debt was approximately $3.3–3.5 billion, and the embedded cost of long-term debt averaged a reasonable ~4.9% (www.marketscreener.com). NFG carries investment-grade credit ratings (Moody’s Baa3, S&P BBB-), and management is committed to preserving these ratings (www.globenewswire.com). In late 2025, the company issued 4.4 million new shares in a $350 million private placement (at $79.50/share) (www.globenewswire.com). This equity raise was explicitly to fund part of its planned acquisition (see below) and “satisfies [NFG’s] common equity needs” for that deal while “maintaining its current investment grade credit rating” (www.globenewswire.com). The infusion boosted cash on hand to $271 million as of Dec 31, 2025 (www.globenewswire.com), positioning the company to meet near-term obligations.
Debt Maturities: NFG’s debt maturity profile is manageable, with no daunting near-term walls. In FY2026, about $421 million of long-term debt comes due (www.marketscreener.com), including a $300 million term loan maturing in Feb 2026 (www.marketscreener.com). Given its cash balance and ongoing cash flow, NFG can address the term loan through repayment or refinancing without strain. The next significant maturities are $698 million in 2027 and roughly $557 million in 2030, followed by about $1.14 billion thereafter (www.marketscreener.com). Notably, the 2027 figure will include NFG’s $1.2 billion seller’s note related to the pending acquisition (due in 2027) – that note is structured such that CenterPoint (the seller) receives $1.42 billion at closing in 2026 and the remaining $1.20 billion one year later (www.businesswire.com). NFG has already planned for this: its credit facilities were amended to allow temporary exclusion of the seller note from debt calculations, provided NFG escrows funds to defease that obligation (www.marketscreener.com). In practice, this means NFG expects to refinance or accumulate funds for the $1.2 billion payment by 2027 without impairing its credit metrics. Overall, interest coverage has improved with the earnings rebound – Q1 operating income covered interest expense more than 5×, compared to barely 1.5× a year earlier when profits were depressed by write-downs. With upstream cash flows rising and rate-regulated earnings stable, NFG’s fixed-charge coverage and liquidity appear solid. The company also retains access to short-term borrowing (it had ~$150 million of commercial paper outstanding at FY25 year-end (www.marketscreener.com)) and untapped credit lines, providing financial flexibility.
Cash Flow and Dividend Coverage
A key question for investors is how well NFG’s cash generation supports its investments and shareholder payouts. The Q1 FY2026 results were encouraging on this front: operating cash flow for the quarter was roughly $275 million, up from ~$220 million in the prior year, thanks to higher earnings and modest working-capital benefits. This quarterly cash flow alone covered NFG’s capital expenditures ($278.9 million) and dividends ($48.3 million) nearly entirely (www.globenewswire.com) (www.globenewswire.com), with the remainder funded by the recent equity proceeds. For the full fiscal 2026, NFG guides to $955–$1,065 million in capital expenditures (www.globenewswire.com) across its segments – a sizeable investment program aimed at upstream development (Utica shale drilling), pipeline expansions (e.g. the Tioga County Pathway and Shippingport projects), and ongoing gas utility infrastructure upgrades. This capex will roughly match the year’s expected operating cash flow, implying free cash flow (FCF) breakeven to slightly negative for FY2026. However, given the temporary growth spending and the fact that NFG just bolstered its cash reserves via the stock issuance, the company is well-equipped to bridge any FCF shortfall. Crucially, dividend safety is strong: even when FCF is at breakeven, the dividend is effectively being funded out of internally generated cash. NFG’s payout ratio on an adjusted earnings basis was only ~27% in the latest quarter (and has averaged under 50% historically), indicating ample cushion. Furthermore, management’s confidence in “long-term growth in earnings and free cash flow” (www.globenewswire.com) suggests that as major projects come online and the Ohio acquisition is integrated (in 2027), NFG could enter a period of positive free cash generation. That could create capacity for debt reduction or shareholder returns (dividend hikes, potential buybacks) down the road. In summary, current cash flows comfortably “cover” the dividend and interest obligations, and the outlook for internal funding is positive barring a severe drop in natural gas prices.
Valuation and Peer Comparison
Despite its robust fundamentals, NFG’s stock trades at a relatively modest valuation. Management reaffirmed fiscal 2026 adjusted EPS guidance of $7.60–$8.10 (midpoint ~$7.85) (www.marketscreener.com), which is slightly above consensus estimates and implies strong double-digit growth over the prior year. At the recent share price of ~$83 (www.marketscreener.com), NFG’s forward price-to-earnings ratio is only about 10.5× – a discount both to pure regulated gas utilities and to many E&P peers. For context, large gas distribution utilities (like NiSource or Atmos Energy) often trade at 18–20× earnings and offer higher yields, while standalone Appalachian E&Ps might command 7–9× cash flow multiples but with no dividend. NFG sits in an interesting middle ground: its hybrid model and upstream exposure have historically kept its P/E and dividend yield closer to midstream/E&P levels than to low-risk utility levels. Currently, NFG’s trailing P/E is ~13.7 and the stock yields ~2.7% (uk.finance.yahoo.com), which is in line with the S&P 500 average yield but below many utility peers’ yields (3–4%). The lower yield is partly justified by NFG’s higher earnings growth (fueled by upstream volume gains and expansion projects) and its low payout ratio. On an EV/EBITDA basis, NFG also appears undemanding at roughly ~6.5–7× (based on FY2026 EBITDA projections) – reasonable given that about half of its earnings come from stable regulated segments. Investors essentially get a two-in-one company: a rate-regulated utility business (which alone might merit a premium multiple) and an E&P business (which provides upside when commodity prices rise). This structure could unlock further value if management executes well: for example, NFG’s EPS is on track to grow ~20%+ in FY2026, yet the stock’s multiple hasn’t expanded. Sum-of-the-parts analyses often show NFG undervalued, as the market may be applying a “conglomerate discount.” It is worth noting that NFG’s pending utility acquisition will tilt the business more toward stable regulated revenues (doubling the utility rate base (investor.nationalfuelgas.com)), which in theory should support a higher overall valuation multiple over time. If NFG delivers on its guidance and successfully integrates the new business, there may be a case for multiple expansion closer to pure utility peers. For now, the stock looks reasonably priced – arguably “don’t miss out” on a company trading at ~11× forward earnings with a proven dividend and clear growth drivers.
Major Growth Catalyst: Ohio Utility Acquisition
One transformative development for NFG is its agreement to acquire CenterPoint Energy’s Ohio natural gas utility (Vectren Energy Delivery of Ohio) for $2.62 billion (investor.nationalfuelgas.com) (investor.nationalfuelgas.com). Announced in October 2025, this deal will double NFG’s regulated gas utility rate base and expand its service territory into Ohio (investor.nationalfuelgas.com). The acquired business includes ~5,900 miles of distribution and transmission pipeline serving ~335,000 customers, consuming ~60 Bcf of natural gas per year (investor.nationalfuelgas.com). Importantly, Ohio is seen as a constructive regulatory jurisdiction that is “highly supportive of natural gas” with a favorable framework (investor.nationalfuelgas.com). This contrasts somewhat with NFG’s legacy territories in New York (which has aggressive climate policies) – giving NFG more geographic and regulatory diversification of its utility operations. The transaction is expected to close in Q4 2026, pending completion of regulatory reviews in Ohio and Hart-Scott-Rodino clearance (investor.nationalfuelgas.com). NFG is paying ~1.6× the utility’s 2026 rate base (investor.nationalfuelgas.com), a multiple that appears reasonable for a gas LDC (local distribution company) and suggests the deal can be accretive to earnings. Management has emphasized that the additional regulated cash flows will strengthen NFG’s overall business risk profile and support its balance sheet (investor.nationalfuelgas.com). The funding plan is also largely in place: NFG raised $350 million in equity (completed Dec 2025) to cover the equity portion, and will likely finance the remainder with debt and internal cash flows (www.globenewswire.com). Notably, $1.2 billion of the price is via a deferred seller note payable in 2027 (www.businesswire.com), giving NFG time to phase in financing. Bottom line: this acquisition is a major mid-term catalyst that should boost NFG’s EPS and cash flow starting in FY2027, as well as temper the earnings volatility by increasing the regulated mix. Successful execution will be key – NFG will need to navigate regulatory approval in Ohio and then smoothly integrate ~335k new customers – but if all goes to plan, shareholders could benefit from enhanced scale and a more “utility-like” earnings base going forward.
Risks and Potential Red Flags
While NFG’s outlook is upbeat, investors should keep in mind several risk factors and potential red flags:
- Natural Gas Price Volatility: Roughly half of NFG’s earnings originate from upstream production, which makes results sensitive to commodity prices. The dramatic earnings swing from FY2024 to FY2025–2026 illustrates this: in FY2024, NFG recorded over $473 million in after-tax impairment charges under the SEC’s full-cost accounting ceiling test (www.marketscreener.com) when gas prices plunged, which slashed reported earnings and temporarily constrained its ability to issue debt (due to an earnings-based covenant) (www.sec.gov). Conversely, the recent rebound in gas prices has supercharged profits. NFG does hedge part of its production, but a sustained gas price downturn could again pressure its E&P earnings and asset valuations. In extreme cases, additional ceiling-test write-downs could occur (non-cash, but affecting book equity). The company provides sensitivities in its guidance – for example, it assumes ~$3.75 /MMBtu NYMEX gas for the remaining quarters of FY2026 (www.globenewswire.com); any major deviation will impact realized pricing and earnings. Investors should be prepared for quarterly volatility linked to commodity swings in the upstream segment.
- Regulatory and Policy Risk: On the utility side, NFG operates in states with active regulatory oversight. Rate cases and cost recovery can affect its returns. For instance, NFG’s Pennsylvania utility just filed to raise base delivery rates by ~$19.7 million annually (www.marketscreener.com) – regulators may grant less than requested, affecting future earnings. More broadly, climate change policies present a long-term headwind for natural gas distribution. New York State (NFG’s home base) has enacted aggressive climate laws (e.g. targets to cut fossil fuel use; future bans on gas hookups in new buildings). NFG acknowledges that evolving greenhouse gas regulations and electrification initiatives at the state and federal level could slow gas demand growth or impose compliance costs (www.marketscreener.com). While Ohio’s regulatory climate is favorable now, political sentiment can shift. Additionally, pipeline projects face permitting and legal risks – even though NFG’s current expansion projects have secured FERC approval, environmental opposition or regulatory delays remain an ever-present risk in midstream development. In summary, regulatory rulings and energy policy changes (especially in NY) could impact NFG’s utility customer growth and required infrastructure spending in the coming years.
- Integration and Financing of Acquisition: The transformative Ohio acquisition carries its own set of risks. Execution risk is not trivial: NFG will need to integrate a large new utility business, align employees and systems, and achieve anticipated synergies. Any missteps could lead to higher costs or service issues. There is also financing and leverage risk – while NFG has a clear plan (equity completed, debt lined up), taking on ~$2.3 billion in new debt (net of the equity) will increase leverage. If credit markets tighten by 2026 or if NFG’s operating cash flows underperform, there’s a chance the company might have to finance on less favorable terms. The purchase agreement’s forward-looking statements explicitly note possibilities such as “the inability of National Fuel to obtain [permanent] financing on acceptable terms,” the acquired business “not performing as expected,” or failing to “achieve the anticipated benefits of the transaction” (www.nationalfuel.com). Should any of these occur, projected accretion could be delayed or credit metrics might temporarily weaken beyond what rating agencies expect. It’s worth monitoring NFG’s progress on regulatory approval and its financing strategy as the closing date approaches.
- Environmental and Operational Risks: Like all energy companies, NFG faces operational risks – from well productivity and drilling costs in its upstream unit to safety and reliability issues in its pipeline and utility networks. Any major incident (e.g. a well blowout, pipeline leak or explosion, etc.) could result in financial losses or reputational damage. NFG has generally strong safety records, but investors should be aware of these low-probability, high-impact events. Additionally, NFG is subject to weather and seasonal demand variability. Warmer-than-normal winters, for example, reduce natural gas heating demand for its utility customers, which can dent short-term revenues (though mechanisms like weather normalization clauses in some jurisdictions and the offset of higher sales in colder years even this out over time).
- One-Time Accounting and Legacy Issues: The company’s financials in recent years included some one-off items – beyond the commodity impairments, in 2024 NFG also impaired ~$46 million on a halted pipeline project (Northern Access) that faced permitting hurdles (www.marketscreener.com). While these legacy write-offs are largely behind them, it highlights the risk of project cancellations if external approvals fail. Investors should also note that NFG used to have older debt indentures with restrictive covenants (as evidenced by the temporary debt issuance limitation in early 2025 due to low earnings (www.sec.gov)). The company has since refinanced or redeemed those legacy notes (for example, it issued new debt and retired the last $50 million of 7.375% notes under the 1974 indenture in June 2025 (www.marketscreener.com)), which should give it more financing flexibility going forward.
Conclusion and Open Questions
NFG’s strong start to FY2026 – with earnings surging and guidance reaffirmed – reinforces the company’s multi-faceted value proposition: steady dividends, exposure to improving gas markets, and imminent expansion of its regulated footprint. The stock offers an attractive mix of income and growth, trading at a valuation that does not appear to fully price in the earnings momentum. However, there are open questions that investors should consider as they evaluate the “don’t miss out” thesis:
- Earnings Sustainability: Can NFG sustain its elevated earnings if natural gas prices soften? The current guidance assumes a healthy ~$3.75 /MMBtu price (www.globenewswire.com). A significant price reversal could trim upstream profits and test NFG’s ability to hit its ~$7.85 EPS midpoint. How resilient are NFG’s cash flows under lower price scenarios, and how effectively can the company hedge or scale its drilling activity in response?
- Post-Acquisition Strategy: After the Ohio utility acquisition closes in late 2026, what will NFG’s strategy be? Will management focus on deleveraging and digesting this acquisition, or will they pursue further growth (e.g. other bolt-on assets or accelerating upstream drilling)? The acquisition will make NFG more utility-centric; might the company consider separating its upstream and regulated businesses in the future to unlock value, or is the integrated model still central to its identity?
- Regulatory and Policy Evolution: How will regulatory developments, especially in New York, shape NFG’s long-term business? New climate mandates could eventually cap natural gas usage growth or require additional investments in renewable natural gas, hydrogen blending, or other mitigations. NFG’s ability to innovate and work with regulators (for instance, in winning rate cases or securing timely pipeline approvals) will be crucial. Progress on the pending Ohio rate approval and the integration into a new regulatory jurisdiction is another area to watch.
- Capital Allocation: With the equity issuance behind it and major projects ongoing, how will NFG balance its capital allocation going forward? The dividend is well-protected – but once free cash flow inflects positive (potentially after 2026), will the company look to accelerate dividend growth, reinstate share repurchases (NFG had been buying back stock prior to 2025), or invest in new opportunities? Clear signals from management on capital returns vs. growth reinvestment will inform the stock’s appeal to different investor bases.
In conclusion, National Fuel Gas (NFG) presents a compelling case of a long-established company entering a new growth phase. The Q1 FY2026 earnings surge is a testament to favorable tailwinds (higher gas output and prices) and solid execution across segments. With a fifty-plus-year dividend growth streak, upcoming expansion into a larger regulated business, and a commitment to financial discipline, NFG offers both offense and defense for equity investors. While risks – from commodity swings to regulatory shifts – are not insignificant, the company has shown prudent management through cycles. For investors seeking a blend of income and natural gas leverage, NFG’s recent performance and reasonable valuation suggest it’s an opportunity not to overlook. The coming quarters (and the big 2026 acquisition) will be crucial in determining if NFG can fully capitalize on this moment and reward shareholders accordingly.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.