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CNX Resources Corporation (CNX) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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CNX Resources Corporation (NYSE: CNX) Q4 2025 Earnings Call dated Jan. 29, 2026

Corporate Participants:

Tyler LewisSenior Vice President of Finance and Treasurer

Alan ShepardPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Everett GoodChief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Jacob RobertsAnalyst

Leo MarianiAnalyst

Michael SciallaAnalyst

Kalei AkamineAnalyst

Jeff BowmanAnalyst

Betty ChangAnalyst

Presentation:

operator

Good day and welcome to The CNX Resources 2025 Fourth Quarter Q& A conference call. All participants will be in listen only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the STAR key followed by zero. After today’s presentation there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question you may press Star then one on a touch tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press Star then two. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Tyler Lewis, Senior Vice President of Finance and Treasurer.

Please go ahead.

Tyler LewisSenior Vice President of Finance and Treasurer

Thank you and good morning Everybody. Welcome to CNX’s fourth quarter Q& A conference call. Today we will be answering questions related to our fourth quarter results. This morning we posted to our investor relations website an updated slide presentation and detailed fourth quarter earnings release data such as quarterly E and P data, financial statements and non GAAP reconciliations which can be found in a document titled 4Q 2025 Earnings Results and Supplemental Information of CNX Resources. Also, we posted to our investor relations website our prepared remarks for the quarter which we hope everyone had a chance to read before the call as the call today will be used for Q and A.

With me today for Q and A are Alan Shepard, our President and Chief Executive Officer, Everett Goode, our Chief Financial Officer and Navneet Bell, our Chief Operating Officer. Please note that the company’s remarks made during this call, including answers to questions, include forward looking statements which are subject to various risks and uncertainties. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and our actual results may differ materially as a result of many factors. A discussion of risks and uncertainties related to Those factors in CNX’s business is contained in its filings with the securities and Exchange Commission and in the release issued today.

Before we get into Q and A, I’m going to turn it over to Alan for a couple of comments related to the recent cold weather events.

Alan ShepardPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Alan thanks Tyler and good morning everyone. We normally don’t provide opening remarks on these calls, but I’d be remiss today if I didn’t take a moment to acknowledge the hard work and incredible efforts of not just our CNX team, but of all the men and women of the natural gas industry who are working to keep the heat and lights on across America during this extraordinary cold weather event we are experiencing. Speaking on behalf of myself, everyone in the room with me, and all of our fellow citizens who are staying warm today, thank you for everything you’ve done, everything you will continue to do in the days, weeks and years ahead with that being said, operator, can you please now open the line for questions?

Questions and Answers:

operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you’re using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question today comes from Jacob Roberts with tph. Please go ahead.

Jacob Roberts

Good morning.

Alan Shepard

Good morning, Jake.

Jacob Roberts

We wanted to ask about the commentary on the front half weighted capital until program and how we should be thinking about that translating to a flat production profile across the year. Just wondering if you can provide any more granularity on how you’re thinking about the till schedule. Quarter to quarter.

Alan Shepard

Yeah, thanks, Jacob. This is Everett. You can generally think about the first half capex being about 60% of the year’s total and then from a production basis it’s pretty flat throughout the year. But the weighting of that capital to the first half gives us some flexibility in the second half of the year to potentially accelerate frac activity if conditions warrant.

Jacob Roberts

Okay, great, that’s helpful. And turning to the RMG business line, we’re curious to how you view the outlook on the AEC pricing and is there a pathway or to getting that back to the 65 or $75 million annual run rate? And in terms of the 45Z outlook, is it fair to assume that the 20 million are going to gross up 30 million? Is that also firmly tied to the methane stream in terms of the volume being relatively steady going forward?

Alan Shepard

Yeah, so thanks for the questions there. Let’s start with the PA tier 1 rec market. So that market’s been pretty stable since called spring of last year. With the Trump administration coming in, it softened a little bit, I think. Longer term outlook for that market. The prices you’re seeing now are basically what you need to underwrite sort of new solar and wind activity in the PGM markets. So for, you know, for value per megawatt hour to increase there, you’re going to need to see some of the step ups in the required percent of contribution to the grid from renewables.

So that’s sort of the long term bull case. As those standards tighten, you see pricing move up, but in the near term it’s sort of settled into the marginal cost of bringing on new renewable supply on 45Z. Yeah, I think the way to think about that is, you know, at current production levels, we’re able to generate on a run rate basis about 30 million a year with the initial proposed guidance. And we’ll see what the final guidance looks like. So when it comes out, if there’s any adjustments to that.

Jacob Roberts

Great. I appreciate your time.

operator

The next question comes from Leo Mariani with Ross. Please go ahead.

Leo Mariani

Hi. I was hoping you could talk about the Utica program here in 2026. I’m only seeing kind of three turning lines, probably a little bit lower than I expected. It seems like the company’s been very excited about the Utica and made some good progress. So it just seemed like maybe it was a little smaller program this year. So just trying to reconcile that. But maybe some of this is just timing where maybe some of the 26 wells are coming on next year.

Alan Shepard

Yeah, I think it’s the latter, Leo. I appreciate the question. I mean, it’s really nothing to indicate the underlying kind of belief in the Utica or anything like that. It’s just we have a lot of tills from last year coming online. We have some Southwest PA inventory that we want to harvest that’s really economic. And then we’re going to continue in the last half of the year back at IT reps at the wellhead on the Utica. So I don’t know, Nav, if you have anything to add, but nothing to read into on sort of the till timing there.

Yeah, yeah, Leo, I can add. We are really confident of our deep Utica program right now. And as Alan mentioned, this is just a timing issue, nothing else. In fact, we’ll be cheating about 5 Utica laterals this year. So it’s just a function of timing on when we complete it.

Leo Mariani

Okay, that’s very helpful for sure. And then Alan, you kind of went off the call talking about weather here. Just wanted to get a sense. Are you guys expecting some disruption to the operations or the volumes here in the first quarter? Obviously it sounds like your team’s doing a great job. I just wanted to get a sense if you think there’s some impact here.

Alan Shepard

No, we’re not. So, you know, our team’s been preparing for the last weeks heading into this event. They’ve done a tremendous job keeping the field running. The numbers that we put out today include any expected disruptions. So nothing on that front.

Leo Mariani

Okay, that’s helpful for sure. And then just lastly on your new tech business, wanted to get a sense if there’s any update in terms of how some of the other businesses are progressing, like Auto SAP on the service side. And I know you guys have also Discussed kind of some CNG LNG ambitions over time.

Alan Shepard

Yeah. On the autosep, I think as we mentioned before, we fully internalized, adopted that technology, we use it on our flowbacks, provided tremendous cost savings, environmental and safety benefits. We are the sort of non op on that. We’ve outsourced that to an OFS company who’s continuing to roll that out across the Appalachia here. Everything we’re seeing is it’s starting to be adopted and we think 26 might be an uptick year for that, but nothing contributing yet materially to the financial bottom line. When it does, we’ll provide guidance on that. As far as the other businesses, you know, the tech still exists for those businesses, but just nothing, nothing material to update on those right now.

Leo Mariani

Okay, thanks.

operator

The next question comes from Michael Scalia with Stevens. Please go ahead.

Michael Scialla

Good morning. You guys said in your prepared remarks you expect to be responsive to any material changes in gas prices this year. Everett, you mentioned you’d consider adding a frac crew in 2H26. Wanted to see is that built into the CAPEX guidance range that 20 million variants for this year or any more detail you could provide there would suggest what CapEx could do in the, for the full year.

Everett Good

Yeah, Michael. Yeah. Any uptick in activity is not, not included in our base ranges. What we’re seeing right now in terms of pricing, you know, after you get beyond the February contract, where you know, falls off pretty significantly in terms of the strip, so we’re not seeing yet the price activity yet. That would kind of incentivize us to add frac activity in 2H26.

Alan Shepard

Yeah, just add on. We’re not going to chase sort of spot activity when we talk about adding. It would be some sort of long term call associated with new infrastructure, new power plants or something like that that would really get the 27, 28, 29 strip moving. We’re not going to try to jump around to catch a month of pricing.

Michael Scialla

Got it. Okay. And then just want to see if you could add any color on the three deep Utico wells you turn in line for the quarter. I realize it’s early days, but anything you can say there in terms of cost or production.

Alan Shepard

I think everything’s generally aligned. Anything to add? Yeah, on like our team has been like really working on the drilling cost and like we had guided like our average, you know, Utica cost is about $1,700 per foot. So that’s on the cost and second on the performance. These wells are in line with our expected performance, and we’re pretty confident. And now we are into the spacing evaluation. So we have like two spacing tests going on now. One is 1300 foot spacing, and then second is 1500 foot spacing. And as we get more results from these tests, we’ll be getting that information out.

Michael Scialla

Great. Look forward to that. Thank you, guys.

operator

Next question comes from Kalei Akamine with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Kalei Akamine

Hey, good morning, guys. For my first question, I want to ask about coal mine methane volumes. Kind of a modest downtick year over year, maybe half a be off 17.5 from last year. Can you kind of help us understand the activity, sit behind the volumes, how that may compare to last year and how many years of visibility you have looking forward?

Alan Shepard

Yeah, the way to think about it, those volumes are really the primary driver is the underlying mining activity at that particular mine. You know, our expectation is that we’re sort of in that range moving forward, assuming that mine continues to operate. You know, that life of mine is 20 plus years. It’s a metallurgical mine in Virginia, if you’re familiar with it. So really, any sort of wiggle you see in volumes is just a sort of function of the pace of their long wall and what needs to be gassed.

Kalei Akamine

Got it. Thank you, Ellen. For my second question, can you just remind us on the hedging strategy? When do you guys expect to be done with 20? 27.

Alan Shepard

Yeah, yeah, yeah, Clay, I can take that. So for 27, I mean, we’re, as we approach that year, we look to be approximately 80% hedged. You know, 27 is a really good year for us. Right now we have kind of a weighted average 9 max price of about $4. So we target that level around there, you know, based on what we can get in the basis markets as well. So at $4 kind of swaps, you know, business performs really, really well at that level.

Alan Shepard

Yeah. And we’re 60% hedge already on.

Kalei Akamine

Yeah, we’re a little over 60% hedged on that.

Alan Shepard

Yeah. So we’ll break into the rest of that book throughout the year. Given we’re already 60% hedge, we can be a little more opportunistic on putting those on. As Everett mentioned, we’ll we’ll be at our 80% sort of number heading into that year.

Tyler Lewis

Got it. Thank you, guys.

operator

The next question comes from Jeff Bowman with Daniel energy partners. Please go ahead.

Jeff Bowman

Hi, good morning, everybody. I had two questions. First one, I appreciate the comments around not chasing a front month gas price or an Air price. But maybe just to expand on it, can you frame maybe a little bit more of kind of what you want to see? You mentioned the 27th Street 28 strip. Is this something where you want to get through the winter, kind of see where storage levels end in terms of kind of timing on any kind of increase in activity? Just maybe a little bit more and kind of how you’re thinking about level setting, you know, from maintenance to maybe something, you know, something higher.

Thanks.

Alan Shepard

Yeah. So maybe break it into two parts. I think if you think long term. Right. We’ve been in maintenance of production, give or take for the last six years and that’s really a function of just the constraints up here in Appalachia, the unwillingness for regulators to allow additional pipelines to get gas to where it could go. And then some of the projects you are seeing for potential in basin demand, they’re sort of longer lead projects with the new power and AI demand. We’re hopeful on those, but there’s still a few years out. So there’s no reason to build those volumes just yet.

In terms of jumping up or down 5% any given year to make that decision as part of your planning cycle, you’d want to be able to have pretty good visibility that the prices aren’t going to slip away from you by the time you bring the volumes on. So you’d want to hedge off that if you were going increase production. And then you know, you’re just always trying to manage your till count and your duck count to give you a little bit of flexibility. But that’s all just sort of short term tactics as opposed to sort of the longer term strategy which we’d like to see, which is actual increase in on the demand side, right?

Jeff Bowman

Yeah. So a follow up question on that, can you, can you just speak more broadly on incremental takeaway? I get it on the greenfield difficulties, but I’m hearing more and more there’s smaller projects, projects, brownfield expansions, moving gas west out of Pennsylvania into Ohio, kind of some of the bigger data center growth. Just any thoughts on how everybody’s doing in terms of kind of pushing a little bit more gas west and south?

Alan Shepard

Yeah, a lot of the low hanging fruit on those western bound projects was taken up last decade. I mean there are some proposed on the table that gets you back sort of to the, to the Midwest area. Right. The lead kind of area, but those haven’t been greenlit yet. I mean the cost of some of those projects is just a little bit challenging just yet. I think everyone’s sort of waiting to see sort of what the final outlook is here on AI demand. Right. You need kind of those guys to make their decisions, and then, you know, we’ll be right behind them with the fuel supply to support all that.

But, yeah, there’s some cats and dogs out there, but nothing material to kind of move anybody off maintenance production, in my view.

Jeff Bowman

Gotcha. Thank you very much. Again.

operator

If you have a question, please press Star then one. The next question comes from Betty Chang with Barclays. Please go ahead.

Betty Chang

Good morning. Thank you for taking my question. I have a question on the 2026 activity of going to do the three wells in Marcellus in CPA and three wells in Utica. Been surprised just with the Marcellus activity. What’s your expectation for the Marcellus productivity in that region?

Alan Shepard

Yeah, so the way to think about that, that’s kind of our stack pay development. Right. So we go in first with the Utica, and then you think about putting incremental laterals above that. On the Marcellus, I think you’re in the sort of just shy of 2.0 range. Right. With the high ones on those wells.

Betty Chang

Got it. And back to your core Southwest PA Marcellus, where you’re focusing most of your activity. Could you just remind us what is your latest inventory Runway in that area? If you maintain at the 2026 level?

Alan Shepard

Yeah. So I think we’ll put out the updated acreage counts at the end of Q1, but generally we’re in the 40 to 50,000 acres remaining, so get you towards the end of the decade.

Betty Chang

Okay, Got it. That’s it. Thank you.

operator

This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Tyler Lewis for any closing remarks.

Leo Mariani

Great. Thank you for joining us, everyone, this morning. Please feel free to reach out if anyone has any additional questions. Otherwise, we’ll look forward to speaking with everyone again next quarter. Thank you.

Alan Shepard

Thanks, everybody. Thank you.

operator

Thank you. The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.

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