Quanta Services Inc.

PWR
NYSEFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 13, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
12%FY2025
Moat
Wide
Latest Q Revenue
$8.6B+26% YoYQ1 2026
Top Holder
Vanguard Group9.5%
Institutional
93%
Bull Case
If Quanta exceeds its 5-year EPS targets and AI/grid infrastructure demand proves more durable than expected, the stock could meaningfully outperform from current levels.
Bear Case
An AI capex pause or utility rate-case delays could decelerate revenue growth and compress the valuation multiple significantly from current levels.

Business Model


ticker: PWR step: 01 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Quanta Services Inc. (PWR) — Business Overview

Business Description

Quanta Services is the largest specialty electrical and utility infrastructure contractor in North America, deploying and maintaining the electric transmission, distribution, renewable energy, and underground utility infrastructure that powers the U.S. grid. Founded in 1997 and headquartered in Houston, Texas, Quanta has evolved from a traditional utility contractor into the key enabler of the energy transition and AI-driven power demand surge — executing transmission upgrades, solar/wind interconnections, and data center power infrastructure for the largest utilities in the country. With ~$28B in FY2025 revenue and a record $39.2B backlog (Q3 2025), Quanta has more forward revenue visibility than almost any company in the S&P 500.

Revenue Model

Quanta generates revenue through two segments (restructured Q1 2025): (1) Electric Infrastructure Solutions (~80% of revenue): Design, installation, repair, and maintenance of electric transmission and distribution systems; renewable energy infrastructure (10,000+ MW of solar installed in 2024; 1,200+ MW energy storage); substation construction; data center power infrastructure; high-voltage transmission (including 765kV upgrades); and (2) Underground Utility and Infrastructure Solutions (~20%): Natural gas and liquid pipeline infrastructure, telecommunications conduit installation, and industrial services. Revenue is primarily project-based (EPC and construction contracts) with some master service agreements (MSAs) providing recurring maintenance revenue. Contracts range from weeks-long distribution work to multi-year, multi-billion-dollar transmission megaprojects.

Products & Services

  • High-Voltage Transmission: 765kV and 345kV transmission line construction and upgrades — the backbone of grid reliability and renewable interconnection
  • Electric Distribution: Last-mile wiring and distribution system hardening/modernization for utilities
  • Renewable Energy: Solar farm EPC (10,000+ MW installed in 2024), wind interconnection, offshore wind electrical infrastructure, energy storage systems
  • Data Center Power Infrastructure: Electrical design, construction, and interconnection for hyperscale data center campuses (NiSource 3GW data center campus win, October 2025)
  • Substation Construction: High-voltage substation design and construction for utilities and large industrial customers
  • Pipeline Infrastructure: Natural gas and liquid pipeline construction and maintenance
  • Telecom / Fiber: Underground conduit and fiber optic installation

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

Quanta's customers are primarily investor-owned utilities (IOUs), electric cooperatives, renewable developers, independent power producers, and large industrial customers (data centers, oil & gas). Long-term strategic partnerships with major utilities: AEP (765kV transmission tied to AEP's $72B capital plan, Nov 2025), NiSource (3GW data center campus, Oct 2025), NextEra Energy, Xcel Energy, Duke Energy, and many others. No single customer represents more than ~5% of revenue.

Competitive Position

Quanta is the largest electrical contractor in North America, with Mastec, MYR Group, and Primoris as smaller competitors in specific sub-segments. The competitive moat rests on: (1) workforce scale — tens of thousands of skilled linemen and electricians who are extremely difficult to hire and train; (2) equipment (cranes, specialized transmission machinery) that takes years to procure; (3) relationships with all major U.S. utilities built over decades; and (4) the ability to execute complex, large-scale ($1B+) transmission megaprojects that require FMEA-level project management and safety systems. The multi-decade grid upgrade cycle and AI power demand surge have created a structural demand environment where Quanta has far more backlog than it can execute, giving it pricing power.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 1997
  • Headquarters: Houston, Texas
  • Employees: ~65,000
  • Exchange: NYSE
  • Sector / Industry: Industrials / Construction & Engineering
  • Fiscal Year End: December 31
  • Market Cap: ~$45–55B

Financial Snapshot


ticker: PWR step: 04 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Quanta Services Inc. (PWR) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary

Metric FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 YoY
Revenue ~$17.1B ~$20.9B $23.67B +13.3%
EBITDA Margin ~8.5% ~8.7% ~8.6% flat
Operating Margin ~4.8% ~5.0% ~5.0% flat
Net Margin ~3.5% ~3.7% ~3.6% flat
Adj. Diluted EPS ~$5.50 $7.16 $8.97 +25%

FY2025 revenue raised guidance: $27.8–28.2B (+18% YoY at midpoint); Q3 2025 EBITDA margin 10.2% (improving). FY2026 adj. EPS target $12.00 (management guidance, and management now expects to exceed it). Revenue growth driven by electric infrastructure demand surge from grid modernization, renewable integration, and data center power buildout.

Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2024)

Metric Value
Free Cash Flow $1.6B (FY2024); $1.2–1.7B guided FY2025
FCF Margin ~7% of revenue
Total Backlog $39.2B (Q3 2025 record); $34.5B at YE 2024
Remaining Performance Obligations $21.0B (Q3 2025)
Total Debt ~$6.0–7.0B
Net Debt / EBITDA ~2.0–2.5x

Key Ratios (approximate, FY2025–2026)

  • P/E (adj., FY2026 $12 EPS): ~38–42x | EV/EBITDA: ~22–24x | FCF Yield: ~3%
  • Revenue Growth (FY2025E): +18% | Adj. EPS Growth (FY2024): +25%
  • Backlog / Revenue: ~1.4x (exceptional forward visibility for a cyclical industrial)
  • Dividend: Small (~0.3% yield); capital returned primarily via buybacks

Growth Profile

Quanta is growing revenue at double-digits and adj. EPS at 20–25% annually — extraordinary for a $28B revenue industrial services company. The growth is structural, not cyclical: U.S. transmission infrastructure requires ~$1 trillion in investment over the next decade (grid modernization, renewable interconnection, resilience hardening), and Quanta is the premier contractor for this work. The data center demand wave (AI infrastructure requiring massive new power supply and transmission capacity) is layering incremental backlog on top of the already-unprecedented utility capex cycle. EBITDA margins are gradually expanding from ~8.6% toward 10%+ as more complex, higher-margin projects (765kV transmission, large substation EPC) dominate the mix.

Forward Estimates

  • FY2026: Revenue ~$30–32B; adj. EPS ~$12.00+ (management expects to exceed); FCF ~$1.8–2.0B
  • 5-Year Plan: Quanta's management unveiled an ambitious 5-year plan targeting mid-teens revenue CAGR and 20%+ EPS CAGR through 2029; backlog expected to reach $50B+
  • Strategic AEP Partnership: 765kV transmission tied to AEP's $72B capital plan provides multi-year contract visibility
  • NiSource 3GW Data Center Campus: Single contract illustrates the scale of new data center power infrastructure wins

Recent Catalysts


ticker: PWR step: 12 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Quanta Services Inc. (PWR) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Grid Modernization + Data Center Power Demand: Multi-Decade Supercycle — The U.S. electric grid requires an estimated $1 trillion+ in investment over the next decade to modernize aging transmission infrastructure, integrate renewable energy, and supply the explosive power demand from AI data centers, EV charging, and industrial electrification. Quanta is the irreplaceable contractor for this work: every major U.S. utility's capital plan has increased by 20–50% in the past two years, and Quanta executes the largest, most complex projects. The $39.2B backlog (Q3 2025) — representing 1.4x annual revenue — provides extraordinary forward visibility. In October 2025, Quanta won a contract from NiSource to build 3 GW of power generation and grid infrastructure for a large data center campus — a single contract that illustrates the scale of incremental demand.

  2. Strategic Utility Partnerships Lock in Multi-Year Revenue — Quanta's November 2025 strategic partnership with AEP (tied to AEP's $72B capital plan, 765kV transmission work) represents a transformational shift from project-by-project bidding to a preferred partner model — similar to how Boeing and Airbus maintain long-term relationships with key suppliers. These partnerships give Quanta advance visibility into utility capex plans, allow for workforce pre-positioning, and command premium pricing due to sole-source or limited-competition awards. With management guiding 5-year adj. EPS CAGR of 20%+ and FY2026 $12 EPS now expected to be exceeded, the partnership model is proving out.

  3. Labor and Equipment Scarcity Creates Structural Pricing Power — Skilled linemen and electrical workers are among the most difficult labor categories to recruit, train, and retain in the U.S. Quanta's workforce of ~65,000 specialized technicians represents a physical competitive barrier — it takes years to develop a qualified lineman. The specialized heavy equipment required for large transmission projects (large cranes, conductor stringing equipment, helicopter crews) has 18–36 month procurement lead times. As grid investment accelerates, Quanta's ability to staff and equip projects while competitors cannot creates sustained pricing power and allows Quanta to capture margin expansion in a supply-constrained labor market.

Bear Case Risks

  1. Premium Valuation Leaves No Room for Error — At ~38–42x adjusted 2026 EPS and ~22–24x EV/EBITDA, Quanta is priced for perfection in a capital-intensive, thin-margin contractor business (3.6% net margin). Construction companies are inherently lumpy: weather delays, permitting setbacks, labor shortages, materials cost overruns, and project scope changes can all impair EPS in a given quarter. The market is paying a software-like multiple for an engineering contractor — a premium that reflects the growth outlook but leaves significant downside if management misses FY2026 guidance, project execution stumbles, or the utility capex cycle moderates. A single large project write-down could cause a 15–25% stock decline.

  2. Concentration in a Few Megaprojects Creates Binary Risk — Quanta's backlog is increasingly concentrated in large, complex megaprojects ($1B+) for data center campuses and 765kV transmission programs. While these projects drive revenue and backlog growth, they also create binary execution risk: a single project delay, permitting denial, or customer capex pause could remove $1–2B of revenue from the near-term pipeline. The AEP partnership and NiSource data center campus are individually material to Quanta's 2026–2027 revenue outlook — if either customer significantly scaled back capital plans (due to policy changes, rate case decisions, or demand forecasting errors), Quanta would face a growth headwind.

  3. Policy and Regulatory Risk on Transmission Permitting — Many of the largest transmission upgrade projects require FERC and state-level permitting that can take 5–10 years from planning to construction. If federal permitting reform stalls, if states impose additional environmental review requirements, or if transmission line siting opposition (NIMBY) delays projects, Quanta's execution timeline stretches out — converting near-term revenue into out-year revenue. The AI/data center demand wave is driving urgency for faster permitting, but regulatory timelines are notoriously difficult to compress. Additionally, policy shifts (changes to the Inflation Reduction Act's clean energy incentives, tariff changes affecting solar component costs) could slow renewable energy project awards.

Upcoming Events

  • Q1 2026 Earnings (May 2026): Revenue pace toward $30B+ FY2026 target; backlog update (targeting $40B+); adj. EPS trajectory toward $12.00 target; margin expansion progress
  • AEP 765kV Transmission Milestones: Project commencement and progress reports
  • NiSource Data Center Campus: Construction start and milestone payments
  • Utility Capital Plan Updates: Utility earnings season (all major utilities provide capex guidance) directly drives Quanta's backlog estimates
  • New Strategic Partnerships: Additional utility MSA/strategic partnership announcements expected given market demand

Analyst Sentiment

Strong consensus Buy (18 analysts); consensus price target ~$574 (implying substantial upside from current levels). Bulls cite the $39.2B backlog, grid supercycle, and 20%+ EPS growth trajectory; bears point to the 38–42x forward multiple, thin net margins, and megaproject concentration risk. Management's decision to exceed the $12 FY2026 EPS target (rather than just meet it) has increased analyst confidence in the business.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-12

Full Research Available

This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.

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