Hawaiian Electric reported a modest first quarter for 2026, with net income of $30.5 million on revenue of $746.4 million (EPS $0.18). The quarter reflected ongoing transition dynamics as the company resolves the Maui wildfire litigation settlement and advances a nontraditional rate rebasing plan ahead of a 2027 rate reset. Operating income of $53.4 million and EBITDA of $53.4 million produced a solid if pressured margin given weather events and elevated O&M costs, while interest expense benefitted from lower debt balance after last year’s debt retirement. The regulatory backdrop remains the key driver of medium-term earnings potential: a 5.3% consolidated base-rate increase phased in over two years (2027–2028) to moderate customer impacts, plus up to 200 bps of PIMs to reward performance in the second multiyear rate period. The Maui settlement completed its first annual payment of $479 million in April 2026, establishing a pathway for future settlements in 2027–2029 and a framework for recovering associated costs via debt or convertible instruments, with Moody’s upgrading both the utility and holding company once the settlement closed. Management frames 2026 as a year of transition, focusing on affordability, wildfire risk reduction, and resilience through initiatives such as Waal repowering and solar/storage advances. Investors should monitor (1) the PUC’s guidance/timeline on the rate rebasing docket and the wildfire liability cap, (2) the progression and cost-recovery mechanics of the Waal project, and (3) the company’s liquidity management as fuel-price dynamics influence working capital and regulatory recovery.