Atmos Energy Heads to May 6 Q2 Fiscal 2026 Report

Atmos Energy Heads to May 6 Q2 Fiscal 2026 Report

Atmos energy is scheduled to release second-quarter fiscal 2026 results on May 6 after market close, with the consensus calling for $3.36 per share and $2.22 billion in revenue. Those estimates point to year-over-year gains of 10.9% and 13.7%, respectively, for a utility that serves 3.4 million customers.

May 6 and Atmos Energy

$3.36 per share is the earnings figure Wall Street is using for the quarter, and the market is also looking for $2.22 billion in revenue. Atmos Energy’s earnings estimate carries a +0.20% Earnings ESP and a Zacks Rank #2, a combination that sets a clear benchmark for the report after the close on May 6.

1.24% was the company’s earnings surprise in the last reported quarter, which gives this print a concrete comparison point. If the new results land near the estimates, the quarter would show whether the prior outperformance carried into a period shaped by infrastructure spending, rate actions, and regulatory mechanisms across the company’s service regions.

3.4 million customers

3.4 million customers is the scale sitting behind the numbers, and the quarter may reflect higher distribution revenues tied to that base. The company also has a diversified and expanding jurisdictional footprint, which matters because the reported period can pick up the effects of different rate implementations across multiple service areas rather than one uniform result.

Higher operation and maintenance expenses may have taken some of the edge off those gains. That leaves a tighter read on whether modernization work on transmission and distribution infrastructure translated into better reliability and service quality fast enough to offset the cost side of the ledger.

ONE Gas and Duke Energy

May 4, May 5, and May 6 place Atmos Energy in a busy stretch for utility earnings, with ONE Gas, Inc. set for May 4 after market close, Duke Energy Corporation due on May 5 before market open, and NiSource Inc. scheduled for May 6 before market open. For investors tracking the group, Atmos Energy’s report becomes one of the week’s cleaner checks on whether rate support and infrastructure spending are showing up in earnings as expected.

+0.20% in Earnings ESP leaves the report close to consensus rather than far outside it, so the most useful read will come from the gap between revenue growth and expense pressure. A result that holds the expected 13.7% revenue improvement while keeping costs contained would leave little doubt about how well the company is converting customer demand into bottom-line performance.

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