8-K

EDISON INTERNATIONAL (EIX)

8-K 2026-02-18 For: 2026-02-18
View Original
Added on April 08, 2026

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM 8-K

CURRENT REPORT

Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): February 18, 2026

Commission<br><br>File Number Exact Name of Registrant<br><br>as specified in its charter State or Other Jurisdiction of<br><br>Incorporation or Organization IRS Employer<br><br>Identification Number
1-9936 EDISON INTERNATIONAL California 95-4137452
1-2313 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON COMPANY California 95-1240335 2244 Walnut Grove Avenue 2244 Walnut Grove Avenue
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(P.O. Box 976) (P.O. Box 800)
Rosemead, CA 91770 Rosemead, CA 91770
(Address of principal executive offices) (Address of principal executive offices)
(626) 302-2222 (626) 302-1212
(Registrant's telephone number, including area code) (Registrant's telephone number, including area code) Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
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[ ☐ ] Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
[ ☐ ] Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
[ ☐ ] Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
[ ☐ ] Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c)) Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
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Edison International:
Title of each class Trading Symbol(s) Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Stock, no par value EIX NYSE LLC Southern California Edison Company: None
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Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).
Emerging growth company Edison International
Emerging growth company Southern California Edison Company If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.
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Edison International
Southern California Edison Company

This current report and its exhibits include forward-looking statements. Edison International and Southern California Edison Company ("SCE") based these forward-looking statements on their current expectations and projections about future events in light of their knowledge of facts as of the date of this current report and their assumptions about future circumstances. These forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties that may be outside the control of Edison International and SCE. Edison International and SCE have no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether due to new information, future events, or otherwise. This current report should be read with Edison International's and SCE's combined Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2025. Additionally, Edison International and SCE provide direct links to Edison International and SCE presentations, documents and other information at edisoninvestor.com (Presentations and Updates) in order to publicly disseminate such information.

Item 2.02    Results of Operations and Financial Condition

On February 18, 2026, Edison International issued a press release reporting its financial results and the financial results for its subsidiary, Southern California Edison Company, for the quarter and year ended December 31, 2025. A copy of the press release is attached as Exhibit 99.1. On the same day, members of Edison International's management will speak to investors via a financial teleconference. Senior management's prepared remarks and accompanying presentation are attached as Exhibit 99.2 and Exhibit 99.3 to this report.

The information furnished in this Item 2.02 and Exhibits 99.1, 99.2, and 99.3 shall not be deemed to be “filed” for purposes of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, nor shall it be deemed to be incorporated by reference in any filing under the Securities Act of 1933.

Item 7.01    Regulation FD Disclosure

Members of Edison International management will use the information in the presentation furnished as Exhibit 99.3 to this report in meetings with institutional investors and analysts and at investor conferences. The attached presentation will also be posted on edisoninvestor.com.

Item 9.01    Financial Statements and Exhibits

(d) Exhibits

EXHIBIT INDEX

Exhibit No. Description
99.1 Edison International Press Release dated February 18, 2026
99.2 Edison International Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2025 Financial Results Conference Call Prepared Remarks dated February 18, 2026
99.3 Edison International Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2025 Financial Results Conference Call Presentation dated February 18, 2026
104 Cover Page Interactive Data File (embedded within the Inline XBRL document)

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrants have duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

EDISON INTERNATIONAL
(Registrant)
/s/ Kara G. Ryan
Kara G. Ryan
Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Controller

Date: February 18, 2026

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON COMPANY
(Registrant)
/s/ Kara G. Ryan
Kara G. Ryan
Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Controller

Date: February 18, 2026

Document

Exhibit 99.1

NEWS

Investor Relations: Sam Ramraj, (626) 302-2540

Media Relations: (626) 302-2255

News@sce.com

Edison International Reports Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2025 Results

•Fourth-quarter 2025 GAAP EPS of $4.80; core EPS of $1.87

•Full-year 2025 GAAP EPS of $11.58; core EPS of $6.55

•Introduced 2026 core EPS guidance of $5.90-6.20 and 2027 core EPS guidance of $6.25-6.65

•Recent regulatory decisions provide strong visibility into achieving multi-year targets

•Continued confidence in delivering 5-7% core EPS growth from 2028-2028 and extending to 2030

ROSEMEAD, Calif., Feb. 18, 2026 — Edison International (NYSE: EIX) today reported fourth-quarter net income of $1,848 million, or $4.80 per share, compared to net income of $340 million, or $0.88 per share, in the fourth quarter of last year. As adjusted, fourth-quarter core earnings were $717 million, or $1.87 per share, compared to core earnings of $405 million, or $1.05 per share, in the fourth quarter of last year.

Southern California Edison’s fourth-quarter 2025 core earnings per share (EPS) increased year over year, primarily due to a benefit to interest expense related to cost recoveries authorized under the Woolsey Settlement Agreement and revenue recognition from the 2025 GRC final decision.

Edison International Parent and Other’s fourth-quarter 2025 core loss per share increased year over year, primarily due to a loss on preferred stock redemption driven by the recognition of the original issuance costs.

“This year’s results reflect the progress we’re making to deliver a safer, more resilient, and more affordable energy system for customers,” said Pedro J. Pizarro, president and CEO of Edison International. “SCE’s extensive wildfire mitigation approach has resulted in the installation of more than 7,000 miles of covered conductor in high fire risk areas—over 90% of the utility’s planned grid hardening effort. This work continues to play a critical role in reducing ignition risk and strengthening reliability for the communities we serve. We’re also continuing to support communities recovering from recent wildfires through SCE’s Wildfire Recovery Compensation Program, where we are actively processing claims and making payments to help customers rebuild."

Pizarro added, “Safety and affordability remain at the core of our commitment to customers. Earlier this year, SCE announced a 2.3% rate decrease for residential customers and a 5.3% decrease for small and medium-sized businesses. This is starting from a place of having the lowest system average rate among California’s major investor-owned utilities.”

Full-Year Earnings

For 2025, Edison International reported net income of $4,459 million, or $11.58 per share, compared to $1,284 million, or $3.33 per share, for 2024. As adjusted, Edison International’s core earnings were $2,520 million, or $6.55 per share, compared to $1,900 million, or $4.93 per share, in 2024.

SCE’s full-year core EPS was higher, primarily due to revenue recognition from the 2025 GRC final decision and a benefit to interest expense related to cost recoveries authorized under the TKM and Woolsey Settlement Agreements.

Edison International Parent and Other’s full-year core loss per share increased primarily due to higher interest expense and a loss on preferred stock redemption driven by the recognition of the original issuance costs.

Edison International uses core earnings internally for financial planning and analysis of performance. Core earnings are also used when communicating with investors and analysts regarding Edison International’s earnings results to facilitate comparisons of the company’s performance from period to period. Please see the attached tables to reconcile core earnings to basic GAAP earnings.

2026 and 2027 Earnings Guidance

The company introduced its earnings guidance ranges for 2026 and 2027, as summarized in the following table. See the presentation accompanying the company’s conference call for further information and assumptions.

2026 Earnings Guidance<br><br>as of Feb. 18, 2026 2027 Earnings Guidance<br><br>as of Feb. 18, 2026
Low High Low High
EIX Basic EPS $ 5.90 $ 6.20 $ 6.25 $ 6.65
Less: Non-Core Items*
EIX Core EPS $ 5.90 $ 6.20 $ 6.25 $ 6.65

*Non-core items are presented as they are recorded.

Edison International and Southern California Edison Declare Dividends

Today, the board of directors of Edison International declared a quarterly common stock dividend of $0.8775 per share, payable on April 30, 2026, to shareholders of record on April 7, 2026. It also declared dividends on preferred stock.

Additionally, the board of directors of Southern California Edison Company today declared dividends on preference stock. For more information, please see the related news release at edisoninvestor.com.

Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2025 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast Details

When: Wednesday, Feb. 18, 1:30-2:30 p.m. (PST)
Telephone Numbers: 1-888-673-9780 (U.S.) and 1-312-470-0178 (Int'l) — Passcode: Edison
Telephone Replay: 1-800-685-6667 (U.S.) and 1-203-369-3864 (Int’l) — Passcode: 1834
Telephone replay available through Mar. 4 at 6 p.m. (PST)
Webcast edisoninvestor.com

Edison International has posted its earnings conference call prepared remarks by the CEO and CFO, the teleconference presentation, and Form 10-K to the company’s investor relations website. These materials are available at edisoninvestor.com.

About Edison International

Edison International (NYSE: EIX) is one of the nation’s largest electric utility holding companies, focused on providing clean and reliable energy and energy services through its independent companies. Headquartered in Rosemead, California, Edison International is the parent company of Southern California Edison Company, a utility delivering electricity to 15 million people across Southern, Central and Coastal California. Edison International is also the parent company of Trio (formerly Edison Energy), a global energy advisory firm providing integrated sustainability and energy solutions to commercial, industrial and institutional customers.

Appendix

Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures

Edison International’s earnings and basic earnings per share (EPS) are prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles used in the United States and represent the company’s earnings as reported to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Our management uses core earnings and core EPS internally for financial planning and for analysis of performance of Edison International and Southern California Edison. We also use core earnings and core EPS when communicating with analysts and investors regarding our earnings results to facilitate comparisons of the Company’s performance from period to period. Financial measures referred to as net income, basic EPS, core earnings, or core EPS also apply to the description of earnings or earnings per share.

Core earnings and core EPS are non-GAAP financial measures and may not be comparable to those of other companies. Core earnings and core EPS are defined as basic earnings and basic EPS excluding income or loss from discontinued operations and income or loss from significant discrete items that management does not consider representative of ongoing earnings. Basic earnings and losses refer to net income or losses attributable to Edison International shareholders. Core earnings are reconciled to basic earnings in the attached tables. The impact of participating securities (vested awards that earn dividend equivalents that may participate in undistributed earnings with common stock) for the principal operating subsidiary is not material to the principal operating subsidiary’s EPS and is therefore reflected in the results of the Edison International holding company, which is included in Edison International Parent and Other.

Safe Harbor Statement

Statements contained in this release about future performance, including, without limitation, operating results, capital expenditures, rate base growth, dividend policy, financial outlook, and other statements that are not purely historical, are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements reflect our current expectations; however, such statements involve risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from current expectations. These forward-looking statements represent our expectations only as of the date of this release, and Edison International assumes no duty to update them to reflect new information, events or circumstances. Important factors that could cause different results include, but are not limited to the:

•ability of SCE to recover its costs through regulated rates, timely or at all, including uninsured wildfire-related costs (including amounts paid for self-insured retention and co-insurance, and amounts not recoverable from the Wildfire Fund), and costs incurred for wildfire restoration efforts and to mitigate the risk of utility equipment causing future wildfires;

•the cybersecurity of Edison International's and SCE's critical information technology systems for grid control and business, employee and customer data, and the physical security of Edison International's and SCE's critical assets and personnel;

•risks associated with the construction, operation, and maintenance of electrical facilities, including worker, contractor, and public safety issues, the risk of utility assets causing or contributing to wildfires, failure, availability, efficiency, and output of equipment and facilities, and availability and cost of spare parts;

•impact of affordability of customer rates on SCE's ability to execute its strategy, including the impact of affordability on SCE’s ability to obtain regulatory approval of, or cost recovery for, operations and maintenance expenses, proposed capital investment projects, forecasted load growth does not occur, and increased costs due to supply chain constraints, tariffs, inflation and rising interest rates and the impact of legislative actions on affordability;

•ability of SCE to update its grid infrastructure to maintain system integrity and reliability, and meet electrification needs;

•ability of SCE to implement its operational and strategic plans, including its Wildfire Mitigation Plan, its target energization times and capital investment program, including challenges related to project site identification, public opposition, environmental mitigation, construction, permitting, contractor performance, changes in the California Independent System Operator's (“CAISO”) transmission plans, and governmental approvals;

•risks of regulatory or legislative restrictions that would limit SCE's ability to implement operational measures to mitigate wildfire risk, including Public Safety Power Shutoff (“PSPS”) and fast curve settings, when conditions warrant or would otherwise limit SCE's operational practices relative to wildfire risk mitigation;

•ability of SCE to obtain safety certifications from the Office of Energy Infrastructure Safety of the California Natural Resources Agency (“OEIS“);

•risk that California Assembly Bill 1054 (“AB 1054“), California Senate Bill 254 (“SB 254”) or other new California legislation does not effectively mitigate the significant exposure faced by California investor-owned utilities related to liability for damages arising from catastrophic wildfires where utility facilities are alleged to be a substantial or contributing cause, including the longevity of the Wildfire Fund and the California Public Utilities Commission (“CPUC”) interpretation of and actions under AB 1054 or SB 254, including its interpretation of the prudency standard clarified by AB 1054;

•ability of Edison International and SCE to effectively attract, manage, develop and retain a skilled workforce, including its contract workers;

•decisions and other actions by the CPUC, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the California legislature and other governmental authorities, including decisions and actions related to nationwide or statewide crisis, approval of regulatory proceeding settlements, determinations of authorized rates of return or return on equity, the recoverability of wildfire-related and debris flow-related costs, issuance of SCE's wildfire safety certification, reforming wildfire-related liability protections available to California investor-owned utilities, wildfire mitigation efforts, approval and implementation of electrification programs, and delays in executive, regulatory and legislative actions;

•governmental, statutory, regulatory, or administrative changes or initiatives affecting the electricity industry, including the market structure rules applicable to each market adopted by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, CAISO, Western Electricity Coordinating Council, and similar regulatory bodies in adjoining regions, and changes in the United States' and California's environmental priorities that lessen the importance placed on greenhouse gas reduction and other climate related priorities;

•potential for penalties or disallowances for non-compliance with applicable laws and regulations, including fines, penalties and disallowances related to customer notifications and to wildfires where SCE's equipment is alleged to be associated with ignition;

•extreme weather-related incidents (including events caused, or exacerbated, by climate change), such as wildfires, debris flows, flooding, droughts, high wind events and extreme heat events and other natural disasters (such as earthquakes), which could cause, among other things, worker and public safety issues, property damage, outages and other operational issues (such as issues due to damaged infrastructure), PSPS activations and unanticipated costs;

•risks associated with the decommissioning of San Onofre, including those related to worker and public safety, public opposition, permitting, governmental approvals, on-site storage of spent nuclear fuel and other radioactive material, delays, contractual disputes, and cost overruns;

•risks associated with cost allocation resulting in higher rates for utility bundled service customers because of possible customer bypass or departure for other electricity providers such as Community Choice Aggregators (“CCA,” which are cities, counties, and certain other public agencies with the authority to generate and/or purchase electricity for their local residents and businesses) and Electric Service Providers (entities that offer electric power and ancillary services to retail customers, other than electrical corporations (like SCE) and CCAs);

•actions by credit rating agencies to downgrade Edison International or SCE’s credit ratings or to place those ratings on negative watch or negative outlook.

Other important factors are discussed under the headings “Forward-Looking Statements”, “Risk Factors” and “Management’s Discussion and Analysis” in Edison International’s Form 10-K and other reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which are available on our website: edisoninvestor.com. These filings also provide additional information on historical and other factual data contained in this release.

Fourth Quarter Reconciliation of Basic Earnings Per Share to Core Earnings Per Share

Three Months Ended<br>December 31, Twelve Months Ended<br>December 31,
2025 2024 Change 2025 2024 Change
Earnings (loss) per share available to Edison International
SCE $ 5.08 $ 1.11 $ 3.97 $ 12.70 $ 4.20 $ 8.50
Edison International Parent and Other (0.28) (0.23) (0.05) (1.12) (0.87) (0.25)
Edison International 4.80 0.88 3.92 11.58 3.33 8.25
Less: Non-core items
SCE 2.93 (0.17) 3.10 5.13 (1.59) 6.72
Edison International Parent and Other (0.10) (0.01) (0.09)
Total non-core items 2.93 (0.17) 3.10 5.03 (1.60) 6.63
Core earnings (loss) per share
SCE 2.15 1.28 0.87 7.57 5.79 1.78
Edison International Parent and Other (0.28) (0.23) (0.05) (1.02) (0.86) (0.16)
Edison International $ 1.87 $ 1.05 $ 0.82 $ 6.55 $ 4.93 $ 1.62

Note: Diluted earnings were $4.79 and $0.87 per share for the three months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively. Diluted earnings were $11.55 and $3.31 per share for the twelve months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively.

Fourth Quarter Reconciliation of Basic Earnings to Core Earnings (in millions)

Three Months Ended<br>December 31, Twelve Months Ended<br>December 31,
(in millions) 2025 2024 Change 2025 2024 Change
Net income (loss) available to Edison International
SCE $ 1,954 $ 429 $ 1,525 $ 4,889 $ 1,619 $ 3,270
Edison International Parent and Other (106) (89) (17) (430) (335) (95)
Edison International 1,848 340 1,508 4,459 1,284 3,175
Less: Non-core items
SCE1,2,3,4,5,6 1,131 (64) 1,195 1,978 (613) 2,591
Edison International Parent and Other7 (1) 1 (39) (3) (36)
Total non-core items 1,131 (65) 1,196 1,939 (616) 2,555
Core earnings (losses)
SCE 823 493 330 2,911 2,232 679
Edison International Parent and Other (106) (88) (18) (391) (332) (59)
Edison International $ 717 $ 405 $ 312 $ 2,520 $ 1,900 $ 620

1Includes charges for 2017/2018 Wildfire/Mudslide Events claims and expenses, net of recoveries:

•Net earnings recorded for the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, related to the TKM Settlement Agreement, including ongoing legal expenses: $1,341 million ($966 million after-tax) of claim costs, and $55 million ($40 million after-tax) of legal expenses authorized for recovery, partially offset by shareholder-funded wildfire mitigation expenses of $50 million ($36 million after-tax) and impairment of incremental restoration-related assets of $8 million ($6 million after-tax); and charges of $3 million ($2 million after-tax) related to claim costs and related legal expenses, net of expected regulatory recoveries for the three months ended December 31, 2025.

•Net earnings recorded in the fourth quarter of 2025, related to the Woolsey Settlement Agreement, including ongoing legal expenses: $1,603 million ($1,154 million after-tax) of claim costs and $35 million ($25 million after-tax) of legal expenses authorized for recovery, partially offset by impairment of incremental restoration-related assets of $10 million ($7 million after-tax).

•Legal expenses authorized for recovery of $2 million ($2 million after-tax) and charges of $5 million ($3 million after tax) related to claim costs and related legal expenses, net of expected regulatory recoveries, for the three and twelve months ended December 31, 2025, respectively.

•Charges of $8 million ($6 million after-tax) and $493 million ($355 million after-tax) related to claim costs and related legal expenses, net of expected regulatory recoveries, for the three and twelve months ended December 31, 2024, respectively.

2Includes charges for Eaton Fire claims and expenses of $15 million ($11 million after tax) recorded in the fourth quarter of 2025, primarily from the shareholder contribution related to SCE's customer-funded self-insurance coverage and legal and other expenses.

3Includes charges for Other Wildfire Events claims and expenses, net of recoveries:

•Charges of $1 million ($1 million after-tax) for the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, consisted of $15 million of legal expenses, net of expected regulatory recoveries, partially offset by $14 million of insurance reimbursements for costs incurred in previous years.

•Charges of $162 million ($117 million after-tax) for wildfire claims and related legal expenses, net of expected insurance and regulatory recoveries for the twelve months ended December 31, 2024.

•Charges of $5 million ($4 million after-tax) and $38 million ($27 million after-tax) for wildfire claims and related legal expenses, net of expected insurance and regulatory recoveries, for the three months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively.

4Includes amortization of SCE's Wildfire Insurance Fund expenses of $36 million ($26 million after tax) and $37 million ($27 million after-tax) for the three months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively, and $144 million ($104 million after-tax) and $146 million ($105 million after-tax) for the twelve months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively.

5Includes net charges of $76 million ($39 million after-tax) recorded in the third quarter of 2025, primarily related to impairment of utility property, plant and equipment associated with historical capital expenditures disallowed in SCE's 2025 GRC final decision.

6Includes severance costs, net of expected FERC recovery, of $6 million ($4 million after-tax) and $50 million ($36 million after-tax), for the three and twelve months ended December 31, 2024.

7Includes charges related to wildfire claims insured by EIS of $50 million ($39 million after-tax) recorded in the first quarter of 2025, and $2 million ($1 million after-tax) and $4 million ($3 million after-tax) for the three and twelve months ended December 31, 2024, respectively.

Consolidated Statements of Income Edison International
Year ended December 31,
(in millions, except per-share amounts) 2025 2024 2023
Operating revenue $ 19,317 $ 17,599 $ 16,338
Purchased power and fuel 4,933 5,209 5,486
Operation and maintenance 5,098 5,172 4,138
Wildfire-related claims, net of (recoveries) (1,959) 652 667
Wildfire Fund expense 144 146 213
Depreciation and amortization 3,237 2,866 2,635
Property and other taxes 665 624 571
Asset impairment 106 1
Total operating expenses 12,224 14,669 13,711
Operating income 7,093 2,930 2,627
Interest expense (1,539) (1,869) (1,612)
Other income, net 438 502 500
Income before income taxes 5,992 1,563 1,515
Income tax expense 1,291 17 108
Net income 4,701 1,546 1,407
Less: Preference stock dividend requirements of SCE 144 175 123
Preferred stock dividend requirements of Edison International 98 87 87
Net income available to Edison International common shareholders $ 4,459 $ 1,284 $ 1,197
Basic earnings per share:
Weighted average shares of common stock outstanding 385 386 383
Basic earnings per common share available to Edison International common shareholders $ 11.58 $ 3.33 $ 3.12
Diluted earnings per share:
Weighted average shares of common stock outstanding, including effect of dilutive securities 386 388 385
Diluted earnings per common share available to Edison International common shareholders $ 11.55 $ 3.31 $ 3.11
Consolidated Balance Sheets Edison International
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December 31,
(in millions) 2025 2024
ASSETS
Cash and cash equivalents $ 158 $ 193
Receivables, net of allowances for uncollectible accounts of $356 and $352 at respective dates 1,463 2,169
Accrued unbilled revenue 1,238 848
Inventory 535 538
Prepaid expenses 119 103
Regulatory assets 3,290 2,748
Wildfire Fund contributions 138 138
Other current assets 745 418
Total current assets 7,686 7,155
Nuclear decommissioning trusts 4,535 4,286
Other investments 51 57
Total investments 4,586 4,343
Utility property, plant and equipment, net of accumulated depreciation and amortization of $15,060 and $14,207 at respective dates 63,131 59,047
Nonutility property, plant and equipment, net of accumulated depreciation of $132 and $124 at respective dates 197 207
Total property, plant and equipment 63,328 59,254
Receivables, net of allowances for uncollectible accounts of $49 and $43 for at respective dates 38 62
Regulatory assets (include $3,092 and $1,512 related to a Variable Interest Entity ("VIE") at respective dates) 12,960 8,886
Wildfire Fund contributions 1,740 1,878
Operating lease right-of-use assets 1,161 1,180
Long-term insurance receivables 359 418
Other long-term assets 2,168 2,403
Total other assets 18,426 14,827
Total assets $ 94,026 $ 85,579
Consolidated Balance Sheets Edison International
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December 31,
(in millions, except share amounts) 2025 2024
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
Short-term debt $ 2,390 $ 998
Current portion of long-term debt 1,928 2,049
Accounts payable 2,344 2,000
Wildfire-related claims 585 60
Accrued interest 473 422
Regulatory liabilities 1,158 1,347
Current portion of operating lease liabilities 120 124
Other current liabilities 1,538 1,439
Total current liabilities 10,536 8,439
Long-term debt (include $3,022 and $1,468 related to a VIE at respective dates) 36,070 33,534
Deferred income taxes and credits 9,114 7,180
Pensions and benefits 370 384
Asset retirement obligations 2,583 2,580
Regulatory liabilities 10,627 10,159
Operating lease liabilities 1,041 1,056
Wildfire-related claims 721 941
Other deferred credits and other long-term liabilities 3,705 3,566
Total deferred credits and other liabilities 28,161 25,866
Total liabilities 74,767 67,839
Preferred stock (50,000,000 shares authorized; 414,342 and 1,159,317 shares of Series A and 87,937 and 503,454 shares of Series B issued and outstanding at respective dates) 497 1,645
Common stock, no par value (800,000,000 shares authorized; 384,787,056 and 384,784,719 shares issued and outstanding at respective dates) 6,362 6,353
Accumulated other comprehensive income 6
Retained earnings 10,714 7,567
Total Edison International's shareholders' equity 17,579 15,565
Noncontrolling interests – preference stock of SCE 1,680 2,175
Total equity 19,259 17,740
Total liabilities and equity $ 94,026 $ 85,579
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows Edison International
--- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Years ended December 31,
(in millions) 2025 2024 2023
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income $ 4,701 $ 1,546 $ 1,407
Adjustments to reconcile to net cash provided by operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization 3,237 2,866 2,635
Equity allowance for funds used during construction (189) (187) (157)
Asset impairment 106 1
Deferred income taxes 1,208 9 108
Wildfire Fund amortization expense 144 146 213
Other 176 154 143
Nuclear decommissioning trusts (123) (174) (180)
Contributions to Wildfire Fund (95) (95) (95)
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
Receivables 662 (278) (349)
Inventory (4) (14) (63)
Accounts payable 78 53 (408)
Other current assets and liabilities (253) (85) 194
Derivative assets and liabilities, net (11) 28 (174)
Regulatory assets and liabilities, net (3,445) 1,219 576
Wildfire-related claims, net of insurance recoveries (610) (314) (446)
Other noncurrent assets and liabilities 218 140 (4)
Net cash provided by operating activities 5,800 5,014 3,401
Cash flows from financing activities:
Long-term debt issued, net of discount and issuance costs of $60, $44, and $54 for the respective years 5,133 5,256 5,121
Long-term debt repaid (2,052) (2,701) (2,498)
Short-term debt issued 1,260 1,076
Short-term debt repaid (230) (401) (2,407)
Common stock repurchased (32) (200)
Preferred and preference stock issued, net of issuance cost 345 542
Preferred and preference stock repurchased and redeemed (1,664) (656) (289)
Commercial paper (repayments) borrowing, net (346) 308 1,102
Dividends and distribution to noncontrolling interests (136) (168) (117)
Common stock dividends paid (1,274) (1,198) (1,112)
Preferred stock dividends paid (104) (88) (108)
Other 16 177 137
Net cash provided by financing activities 571 674 1,447
Cash flows from investing activities:
Capital expenditures (6,515) (5,707) (5,448)
Proceeds from sale of nuclear decommissioning trust investments 6,219 5,019 4,597
Purchases of nuclear decommissioning trust investments (6,098) (4,898) (4,417)
Other 59 50 35
Net cash used in investing activities (6,335) (5,536) (5,233)
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash and cash equivalents 36 152 (385)
Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year 684 532 917
Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash and cash equivalents at end of year $ 720 $ 684 $ 532

Document

Exhibit 99.2

Prepared Remarks of Edison International CEO and CFO

Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Teleconference

February 18, 2026, 1:30 p.m. (PT)

Pedro Pizarro, President and Chief Executive Officer, Edison International

Edison International’s 2025 core EPS of $6.55 was above our guidance range, extending our two-decade track record of meeting or exceeding annual EPS guidance. Importantly, this also marks the successful delivery of the long‑term core EPS growth target we established in 2021. Our performance reflects disciplined execution across the enterprise and continued focus on cost management, operational performance, and capital efficiency. Maria will provide more details in her remarks.

Today, I will focus on three themes: our commitments to customers, communities and investors, our strengthened regulatory visibility, and our confidence in our multi‑year plan.

Starting with the first theme, we are committed to the customers and communities who count on safe, reliable, and increasingly clean energy. Safety remains our top value, and SCE continues to carry out extensive work to strengthen the electric system and reduce wildfire risk. We are proud that in the Q4 2025 residential customer engagement survey by Escalent, SCE had the highest absolute brand trust score among large California IOUs. Customers and public trust remain the core of SCE’s mission.

The utility has now installed more than 7,000 miles of covered conductor in high fire risk areas, representing over 90% of its planned grid hardening effort. This work continues to play a critical role in reducing ignition risk and strengthening reliability for the communities we serve. SCE now has fast curve settings on 93% of its distribution circuits in high fire risk areas, a prime example of how it is using technology to reduce risk by detecting and addressing faults even more quickly. All of this work demonstrates SCE’s ongoing wildfire risk reduction leadership. This progress benefits not just the utility’s own customers and communities who fund this critical work, but also many peers across the nation.

Safety and affordability remain at the core of our commitment to customers. Earlier this year, SCE announced a 2.3% rate decrease for residential customers and a 5.3% decrease for small and medium-sized business customers. This is starting from a place of having the lowest system average rate — by a margin of 20% — among California’s major investor-owned utilities.

SCE has invested more than $12 billion for customers’ safety and reliability over the last two years. Currently, a typical non-CARE residential customer pays about $188 per month, which is modestly higher than the $180 paid two years ago. This reflects the utility’s disciplined cost management to support customer affordability. We will continue to work to keep rates affordable for customers.

We are also committed to the investors whose capital makes it possible to build the infrastructure that is essential to deliver safe, reliable, affordable electricity. Our commitment begins with a regulatory framework that enables SCE to consistently earn its authorized returns, which supports a strong investment‑grade balance sheet and lower financing costs for customers. Our capital contributors — including pension funds, mutual funds, and insurers — depend on stable, transparent long‑term performance. Credit rating agencies continue to evaluate California‑specific risk factors, underscoring the importance of maintaining a durable and predictable regulatory environment that provides confidence for long‑term investment and protects customers from higher costs. To that end, we are actively engaging with policymakers and state leaders to reinforce the value of a stable framework, and the SB 254 process will be a central venue in 2026 for strengthening the regulatory durability that supports both capital contributors and customers.

SCE remains committed to resolving wildfire-related claims fairly, prudently, and responsibly. To date, more than 2,300 claims have been submitted under the Wildfire Recovery Compensation Program, with associated payments underway. As always, we are guided by our commitment to transparency, accountability, and customer trust. Building upon this, today SCE announced enhancements to the program, providing stronger support for displaced renters and increasing coverage for legal expenses.

Regarding the Eaton Fire, as you see on page 4, the investigations remain ongoing. To recap our prior statements, while SCE has not conclusively determined that its equipment caused the ignition of the Eaton Fire, a viable explanation is that a de-energized idle SCE transmission facility in the preliminary area of origin was associated with the ignition of the fire, and SCE is not aware of evidence pointing to another possible source of ignition. Absent additional evidence, SCE believes that it is likely that its equipment could have been associated with the ignition of the Eaton Fire. Given the complexities associated with estimating damages, we currently are unable to reasonably estimate a range of potential losses. Nonetheless, based on the information we have reviewed thus far, we remain confident that SCE will be able to make a good faith showing that its conduct with respect to its transmission facilities in the Eaton Canyon area was consistent with actions of a reasonable utility. The company continues to prioritize the recovery of impacted community members. Edison International is donating $2 million to the Pasadena Community Foundation to help meet the needs of community members in the Altadena area recovering from the Eaton Fire.

My second theme today is our strengthened regulatory visibility given 2025 was a significant regulatory year for SCE, which you see on page 5. With the GRC, cost of capital proceeding, TKM and Woolsey settlement agreements, and other wildfire proceedings concluded, SCE enters 2026 with substantially greater clarity into capital plans, revenue requirement, and operational priorities not only through the GRC period, but into the next decade. Our team members across Edison International and SCE continue to demonstrate their ability to execute through complexity, respond to evolving conditions, and stay focused on long-term goals.

Turning to the legislative front, the upcoming session will be pivotal for shaping the next phase of California’s energy and resiliency policy. A central focus this year is the SB 254 Natural Catastrophe Resiliency Study, being authored by the California Earthquake Authority, and subsequent legislation. Our focus remains on a whole-of-society solution to mitigate and respond to catastrophic wildfires that enhances public safety, improves affordability, and supports predictable, long-term investment in a clean, reliable energy system for California. In December, SCE and the other IOUs jointly submitted white papers along with dozens of other stakeholders providing input into the CEA’s process. We continue to be actively engaged with

relevant stakeholders, the Governor’s Office, and legislative leaders about the potential for enhancements to the policy framework.

Moving on to my third theme today, our confidence in our multi-year financial outlook, we are introducing core EPS guidance for 2026 and 2027, reaffirming our 2028 outlook, and extending our expected core EPS growth rate target through 2030. Maintaining the 2028 target while extending the horizon underscores the growing clarity and stability in our multi-year plan, supported by a constructive regulatory foundation and a robust pipeline of necessary investments at the utility.

With an attractive dividend yield of approximately 5% and a long‑term core EPS growth target of 5% to 7%, EIX shares offer a compelling case for total shareholder returns of 10% to 12%. This combination of income and growth reflects the strength of our regulated business model and our commitment to delivering sustainable value for customers and capital providers.

Let me close where I began, with commitment. Our commitment to communities and customers, and to the capital contributors whose support makes our work possible. Our commitment to strengthening the grid, enhancing safety, improving reliability, and supporting affordability. Our commitment to clarity and transparency as we move into a period of greater regulatory stability. And our commitment to deliver on the objectives we have shared with you today.

We have the right strategy, the right plan, and the right team in place. We are confident in our ability to execute that plan through 2030.

Maria Rigatti, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Edison International

In my comments today, I will discuss fourth quarter and full-year financial results, our focus areas for 2026, provide an update on our refreshed capital, rate base, and EPS growth guidance, and discuss other financial topics.

For the fourth quarter, EIX reported core EPS of $1.86. Full year 2025 core EPS of $6.55 exceeded the high end of our EPS guidance range. Pages 6 and 7 provide the year-over-year variance analysis. I would like to note two items embedded in our results. First, fourth quarter core EPS includes 6 cents of costs attributed to the preferred stock tender offers and redemption at EIX and SCE completed in December. Second, we recorded a 46-cent true-up following the final decision in the Woolsey cost recovery proceeding. Excluding the Woolsey true-up, EIX’s full year 2025 core EPS still exceeded the midpoint of our guidance.

I will echo Pedro’s comments that this marks the successful delivery of the long-term core EPS target we established for 2021 through 2025. Over that period, we successfully managed a number of unforeseen headwinds: record inflation, the first rising interest rate environment in over 15 years, growing wildfire claims-related debt, several changes to SCE’s authorized cost of capital, and additional cost pressures. Yet, we delivered on our commitment. Today, we are reaffirming our 2028 guidance and extending our 5% to 7% EPS growth target to 2030. You should share this leadership team’s confidence that we will continue to deliver on these commitments and build on your trust. You can see on page 8 that delivering strong financial results was just one accomplishment in another year of strong execution in 2025.

Page 9 summarizes the key management focus areas for 2026. SCE continues to execute its wildfire mitigation plan and its focus on operational excellence to reduce costs for customers. The utility also plans to execute on its $7 billion capital plan for the year to meet customers’ needs. As Pedro mentioned, the legislative process will be a major focus for the year. In the regulatory area, the utility will be driving toward a final decision on its NextGen ERP program and filing an application for its advanced metering infrastructure, or AMI, 2.0 program. Both of these are large programs that provide significant long-term customer benefits. Lastly, we look forward to another year of delivering on our annual core EPS guidance and executing efficient financings across the enterprise.

Let’s turn to SCE’s updated capital and rate base forecasts shown on pages 10 and 11. The extended capital plan of $38 to $41 billion from 2026 through 2030 continues the company’s essential work in load growth-driven programs, infrastructure replacement, and wildfire mitigation. Additionally, our updated forecast now includes nearly $1.5 billion of capital

expenditures through 2030 from SCE’s upcoming AMI 2.0 application. The total request will exceed $3 billion, with spending expected to continue through 2033. We forecast a step-up in our capital deployment opportunities to as high as $9 billion per year in the next GRC cycle. This is driven by the essential investments in the grid to meet customer needs and support California’s clean energy objectives. The resulting projected rate base growth is approximately 7% from 2025 to 2030.

Page 12 shows our 2026 and 2027 core EPS guidance. We have also provided modeling considerations on page 15. Our core EPS guidance for 2026 is $5.90 to $6.20 and for 2027 it is $6.25 to $6.65. As you’re aware, Edison’s core EPS over the years has not been linear. Let me provide some additional insight into our outlook and trajectory toward achieving our longer-term targets.

You will see that 2026 core EPS represents growth of about 3.5% at the midpoint compared to the $5.84 baseline. We have provided a bridge on page 13 to help you understand the puts and takes. This muted growth is driven by three items, which amount to 25 cents. First, SCE has fewer regulatory decisions in 2026 than last year. Therefore, the associated earnings contribution from recognizing prior year earnings is about 11 cents lower. Second, asset mix differences versus the original GRC forecast create depreciation- and property tax-related variances of about 7 cents. Third, financing-related variances, tax law changes, and other items reduce core EPS by approximately 7 cents.

The drivers behind the 25-cent impact are baked into 2026 and thus are not expected to result in negative variances in later periods. Consequently, we expect EPS growth in 2027 to be at the high end of our 5% to 7% range. This is supported by SCE’s 7% rate base growth, and we do not expect any large discrete variances from the rest of SCE’s operations.

Turning to page 16, we are extending our 5% to 7% EPS growth target to 2030. We are also reaffirming our 2028 guidance, and both of these are measured from the $5.84 baseline for 2025.

On the financing front, I want to emphasize that we project no equity needs for the next five years, through 2030. Our balance sheet remains strong, and we continue to finance the business efficiently within our 15% to 17% FFO-to-debt framework. Last month, the utility filed its Woolsey securitization application with the CPUC. Once approved, the utility will securitize about $2 billion in costs associated with the approved Woolsey settlement agreement. SCE’s proposed schedule would allow for this transaction to close in mid-2026. As we have shared before, proceeds from this transaction would be used to offset normal course debt issuances at SCE, rather than paying down specific issuances.

I will conclude by echoing Pedro’s earlier comments about commitment and trust. Deploying capital for the resilience, reliability, and readiness of the grid helps deliver on our commitments to customers and maintain their trust. We are committed to collaborating with stakeholders to advance a clear, durable, and predictable framework. And, to our capital contributors, you have seen us deliver consistently on our annual and long-term commitments to earn your trust. This leadership team remains committed and confident in continuing to do just that going forward.

7

eixq42025earningstelecon

FEBRUARY 18, 2026 FOURTH-QUARTER 2025 FINANCIAL RESULTS Exhibit 99.3


1Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Statements contained in this presentation about future performance, including, without limitation, operating results, capital expenditures, rate base growth, dividend policy, financial outlook, and other statements that are not purely historical, are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements reflect our current expectations; however, such statements involve risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from current expectations. These forward-looking statements represent our expectations only as of the date of this presentation, and Edison International assumes no duty to update them to reflect new information, events or circumstances. Important factors that could cause different results include, but are not limited to the: • ability of SCE to recover its costs through regulated rates, timely or at all, including uninsured wildfire-related costs (including amounts paid for self-insured retention and co-insurance, and amounts not recoverable from the Wildfire Fund), and costs incurred for wildfire restoration efforts and to mitigate the risk of utility equipment causing future wildfires; • the cybersecurity of Edison International's and SCE's critical information technology systems for grid control and business, employee and customer data, and the physical security of Edison International's and SCE's critical assets and personnel; • risks associated with the construction, operation, and maintenance of electrical facilities, including worker, contractor, and public safety issues, the risk of utility assets causing or contributing to wildfires, failure, availability, efficiency, and output of equipment and facilities, and availability and cost of spare parts; • impact of affordability of customer rates on SCE's ability to execute its strategy, including the impact of affordability on SCE’s ability to obtain regulatory approval of, or cost recovery for, operations and maintenance expenses, proposed capital investment projects, forecasted load growth does not occur, and increased costs due to supply chain constraints, tariffs, inflation and rising interest rates and the impact of legislative actions on affordability; • ability of SCE to update its grid infrastructure to maintain system integrity and reliability, and meet electrification needs; • ability of SCE to implement its operational and strategic plans, including its Wildfire Mitigation Plan, its target energization times and capital investment program, including challenges related to project site identification, public opposition, environmental mitigation, construction, permitting, contractor performance, changes in the California Independent System Operator's (“CAISO”) transmission plans, and governmental approvals; • risks of regulatory or legislative restrictions that would limit SCE's ability to implement operational measures to mitigate wildfire risk, including Public Safety Power Shutoff (“PSPS”) and fast curve settings, when conditions warrant or would otherwise limit SCE's operational practices relative to wildfire risk mitigation; • ability of SCE to obtain safety certifications from the Office of Energy Infrastructure Safety of the California Natural Resources Agency (“OEIS“); • risk that California Assembly Bill 1054 (“AB 1054“), California Senate Bill 254 (“SB 254”) or other new California legislation does not effectively mitigate the significant exposure faced by California investor-owned utilities related to liability for damages arising from catastrophic wildfires where utility facilities are alleged to be a substantial or contributing cause, including the longevity of the Wildfire Fund and the California Public Utilities Commission (“CPUC”) interpretation of and actions under AB 1054 or SB 254, including its interpretation of the prudency standard clarified by AB 1054; • ability of Edison International and SCE to effectively attract, manage, develop and retain a skilled workforce, including its contract workers; • decisions and other actions by the CPUC, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the California legislature and other governmental authorities, including decisions and actions related to nationwide or statewide crisis, approval of regulatory proceeding settlements, determinations of authorized rates of return or return on equity, the recoverability of wildfire-related and debris flow-related costs, issuance of SCE's wildfire safety certification, reforming wildfire-related liability protections available to California investor-owned utilities, wildfire mitigation efforts, approval and implementation of electrification programs, and delays in executive, regulatory and legislative actions; • governmental, statutory, regulatory, or administrative changes or initiatives affecting the electricity industry, including the market structure rules applicable to each market adopted by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, CAISO, Western Electricity Coordinating Council, and similar regulatory bodies in adjoining regions, and changes in the United States' and California's environmental priorities that lessen the importance placed on greenhouse gas reduction and other climate related priorities; • potential for penalties or disallowances for non-compliance with applicable laws and regulations, including fines, penalties and disallowances related to customer notifications and to wildfires where SCE's equipment is alleged to be associated with ignition; • extreme weather-related incidents (including events caused, or exacerbated, by climate change), such as wildfires, debris flows, flooding, droughts, high wind events and extreme heat events and other natural disasters (such as earthquakes), which could cause, among other things, worker and public safety issues, property damage, outages and other operational issues (such as issues due to damaged infrastructure), PSPS activations and unanticipated costs; • risks associated with the decommissioning of San Onofre, including those related to worker and public safety, public opposition, permitting, governmental approvals, on-site storage of spent nuclear fuel and other radioactive material, delays, contractual disputes, and cost overruns; • risks associated with cost allocation resulting in higher rates for utility bundled service customers because of possible customer bypass or departure for other electricity providers such as Community Choice Aggregators (“CCA,” which are cities, counties, and certain other public agencies with the authority to generate and/or purchase electricity for their local residents and businesses) and Electric Service Providers (entities that offer electric power and ancillary services to retail customers, other than electrical corporations (like SCE) and CCAs); • actions by credit rating agencies to downgrade Edison International or SCE’s credit ratings or to place those ratings on negative watch or negative outlook. Other important factors are discussed under the headings “Forward-Looking Statements”, “Risk Factors” and “Management’s Discussion and Analysis” in Edison International’s Form 10-K and other reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which are available on our website: edisoninvestor.com. These filings also provide additional information on historical and other factual data contained in this presentation. Forward-Looking Statements


2Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Key Messages $11.58 2025 GAAP EPS $6.55 2025 Core EPS1 Reiterated and Extended 5–7% Core EPS CAGR 2025–20302 Introduced $5.90–6.20 2026 Core EPS Guidance1 Unwavering commitment to customers, communities, and capital contributors—safety, affordability, execution 2025 Core EPS above guidance extends track record of delivering on commitments Introduced 2026 Core EPS1 guidance of $5.90–6.20 and 2027 Core EPS guidance of $6.25–6.65 1. See Earnings Per Share Non-GAAP Reconciliations and Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures in Appendix 2. Compound annual growth rate (CAGR) based on starting point of $5.84, which is the midpoint of the original 2025 EPS guidance range of $5.50–5.90 plus run-rate interest expense benefit resulting from the TKM Settlement Agreement of 14¢ Strengthened execution and wildfire-risk reduction reinforce SCE’s operational and safety leadership 1 3 4 6 Recent regulatory decisions provide strong visibility into achieving multi-year targets 2 Continued confidence in delivering 5–7% Core EPS1 growth from 2025 to 2028 and extending to 203025


3Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call EIX has a solid track record of delivering on Core EPS guidance over the last two decades 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021 Exceeded In-line In-line In-line Exceeded 2020 2019 2017 2016 2015 In-line In-line Exceeded In-line Exceeded 2014 2013 2011 2010 2009 Exceeded Exceeded Exceeded In-line Exceeded 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 In-line Exceeded Exceeded Exceeded Exceeded EIX Actual Core EPS vs. Guidance Range History1   1. 2012 and 2018 not shown because Core EPS guidance was not given in those years due to GRC decision timing  + + ++  + + + + + + +  +


4Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call 1 2 3 Eaton Fire: Currently unable to estimate potential losses; SCE has clear sources for funding claims resolution1 1. Refers to claims for third-party damages related to the Eaton Fire eligible for reimbursement from the Wildfire Fund’s Initial Account, which will be subject to approval of the fund administrator 2. For further details, see "Management Overview—Southern California Wildfires and Mudslides” in the 2025 10-K 3. As of February 13, 2026 4. Refers to funding sources prior to a CPUC determination of prudency. For further details, see "Management Overview—Southern California Wildfires and Mudslides” in the 2025 10-K 5. Customer-funded self-insurance includes a $12.5 million shareholder contribution 6. Subject to CPUC approval. If the CPUC determines that the costs were not prudently incurred, SCE will be required to return any amounts recovered back to customers over a period that matches the remaining duration of the financing instrument through credits to customer rates Clear funding sources mitigate balance sheet exposure from claims resolution4While SCE has not conclusively determined causation, SCE is not aware of evidence pointing to another possible source of ignition. Absent additional evidence, SCE believes that it is likely that its equipment could have been associated with the ignition of the Eaton Fire. Based on the information it has reviewed, SCE believes that it will be able to make a good faith showing that its conduct with respect to its transmission facilities in the preliminary area of origin was consistent with the actions of a reasonable utility. • 2,345 claims submitted for households, consisting of more than 6,778 individuals • 507 offers extended totaling more than $165 million • 71 claims payments already made to individuals, totaling more than $15 million Investigation Status2 Wildfire Recovery Compensation Program Stats3 First $1Bn5 Customer–funded self-insurance Up to remaining capacity of Wildfire Fund Reimbursement from Wildfire Fund1 Above capacity of Wildfire Fund SB 254 provides ability to securitize6


5Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call SCE enters 2026 with substantially greater clarity into outlook following significant regulatory year in 2025 Application 2025 2026 2027 2028 Next Steps General Rate Case (A.23-05-010) n/a TKM Recovery; Financing (A.23-08-013; A.25-04-021) n/a 2023 WMCE; 2024 WMCE (A.24-04-005; A.25-12-002) Awaiting scoping memo to set procedural schedule 2022 WMVM (A.23-10-001) n/a Cost of Capital (A.25-03-012) n/a Woolsey Recovery; Financing (A.24-10-002; A.26-01-007) Prehearing conference on Feb. 19 NextGen ERP (A.25-03-009) Reply briefs due Feb. 20 Advanced Metering Infra. 2.0 (Not yet filed) Plan to file in Q1 2026 = Final Decision Received File 2029 GRC File 2029 CoC File standalone application       


6Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Key SCE EPS Drivers Higher revenue 0.46$ Higher depreciation (0.05) Higher property and other taxes (0.04) Lower interest expense 0.45 Higher other income 0.03 Div on preference stock 0.01 Total core drivers 0.86$ Non-core items1 3.11 Total 3.97$ Total core drivers (0.05)$ Non-core items — Total (0.05)$ EIX EPS Q4 2025 Q4 2024 Variance Basic Earnings Per Share (EPS) SCE 5.08$ 1.11$ 3.97$ EIX Parent & Other (0.28) (0.23) (0.05) Basic EPS 4.80$ 0.88$ 3.92$ Less: Non-core Items1 SCE 2.94$ (0.17)$ 3.11$ EIX Parent & Other — — — Total Non-core Items 2.94$ (0.17)$ 3.11$ Core Earnings Per Share (EPS) SCE 2.14$ 1.28$ 0.86$ EIX Parent & Other (0.28) (0.23) (0.05) Core EPS 1.86$ 1.05$ 0.81$ Fourth Quarter Earnings Summary 1. See EIX Core EPS Non-GAAP Reconciliations and Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures in Appendix Note: Diluted earnings were $4.81 and $0.87 per share for the three months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively Fourth-quarter 2025 Core EPS increased year over year, primarily due to:  SCE: A benefit to interest expense related to cost recoveries authorized under the Woolsey Settlement Agreement and higher revenue from the 2025 GRC final decision  EIX Parent and Other: Preferred stock redemption loss due to recognition of original issuance costs Takeaways


7Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Key SCE EPS Drivers Higher revenue 1.80$ Higher O&M (0.14) Higher depreciation (0.49) Higher property and other taxes (0.06) Lower interest expense 0.77 Lower other income (0.07) Income taxes (0.11) Div on preference stock 0.08 Total core drivers 1.78$ Non-core items1 6.72 Total 8.50$ Total core drivers (0.16)$ Non-core items1 (0.09) Total (0.25)$ EIX EPS 2025 2024 Variance Basic Earnings Per Share (EPS) SCE 12.70$ 4.20$ 8.50$ EIX Parent & Other (1.12) (0.87) (0.25) Basic EPS 11.58$ 3.33$ 8.25$ Less: Non-core Items1 SCE 5.13$ (1.59)$ 6.72$ EIX Parent & Other (0.10) (0.01) (0.09) Total Non-core Items 5.03$ (1.60)$ 6.63$ Core Earnings Per Share (EPS) SCE 7.57$ 5.79$ 1.78$ EIX Parent & Other (1.02) (0.86) (0.16) Core EPS 6.55$ 4.93$ 1.62$ Full Year Earnings Summary 1. See EIX Core EPS Non-GAAP Reconciliations and Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures in Appendix Note: Diluted earnings were $11.58 and $3.31 per share for the twelve months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively 2025 Core EPS increased year over year, primarily due to:  SCE: Higher revenue from the 2025 GRC final decision and benefits to interest expense related to cost recoveries authorized under the TKM and Woolsey Settlement Agreements  EIX Parent and Other: Higher interest expense and preferred stock redemption loss due to recognition of original issuance costs Takeaways


8Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call EIX added another year of strong execution in 2025 Extended track record of delivering on Core EPS guidance and achieved 2021–2025 growth target • 2025 Core EPS of $6.55, above initial guidance range1 • Solid track record of delivering on Core EPS guidance over last two decades • Delivered on multi-year Core EPS growth target set in 2021, successfully managing headwinds Continued progress in wildfire mitigation efforts • Installed 700+ miles of covered conductor, bringing total deployment to more than 7,000 miles • No ignitions due to failure of covered conductor2 Settlements for 2017/2018 Events cost recovery approved by CPUC • Successfully completed TKM and Woolsey cost recovery proceedings (overall approval is 43% of total request = ~$3.6 billion) • Completed securitization of TKM cost recovery (~$1.6 billion) Significant regulatory progress resolving major proceedings • Final decisions on 2025 GRC, 2026 cost of capital, 2023 WMCE, 2022 WMVM, TKM and Woolsey cost recovery settlement agreements • Maintained lowest system-average rate among major California IOUs for 17th consecutive year Grew dividend for 22nd consecutive year • Raised dividend 6%, reflecting confidence in EIX’s financial strength and outlook, and commitment to achieving long-term EPS growth target 1. See Earnings Per Share Non-GAAP Reconciliations and Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures in Appendix 2. Refers to the ignition drivers covered conductor is designed to mitigate     


9Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call 2026 Key Focus Areas Operational • Wildfire mitigation work — continued execution of wildfire mitigation plan • Execute on $7+ billion capital plan — strengthen reliability, resilience, and readiness to meet customer needs • Continue track record of operational excellence — drive toward long-term objectives across safety, reliability, customer satisfaction, and affordability Regulatory & Legislative • SB 254 Natural Catastrophe Resiliency Study & Legislation — drive discussions on a whole- of-society solution that enhances public safety, improves affordability, and supports the predictability for long-term investment in a clean, reliable energy system for California • NextGen ERP application — achieve constructive final decision on program that enables business improvements that provide grid resiliency, customer cost savings, and other benefits • File Advanced Metering Infrastructure 2.0 application — >$3 billion capital program Financial • Another year of solid execution — deliver on Core EPS1 guidance and remain on track to deliver on multiyear EPS targets • Execute efficient financings — OpCo and Parent debt issuances to finance growth and refinance maturities with no equity issuance 1. See Earnings Per Share Non-GAAP Reconciliations and Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures in Appendix


10Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call 2026–2030 Capital Expenditures Plan1 Five-year capex plan of ~$38–$41 billion to strengthen reliability, resilience, and readiness to meet customer needs Capital Expenditures, $ in Billions 1. Forecast includes amounts approved in SCE’s 2025 GRC filing. Additionally, reflects non-GRC spending subject to future regulatory requests beyond GRC proceedings and FERC Formula Rate annual updates. 2. Annual Range Case capital reflects variability associated with future requests based on management judgment, potential for permitting delays and other operational considerations 6.5 6.7 6.7 7.9 8.1 0.8 0.9 0.9 1.1 1.0 $7.3 $7.6 $7.6 $9.0 $9.1 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 CPUC FERC Range Case2 $7.1 $7.3 $7.2 $8.0 $7.9 Forecast through 2030 includes: • 2025 GRC approval • CAISO-awarded FERC transmission projects • Advanced metering infrastructure program (~50% of total >$3bn projected spend is 2026–2030) • Planned 2029 GRC request Beyond 2030, continued long- term capital investment opportunities to serve customers • 2029 GRC investments • CAISO-awarded FERC transmission projects (~$2bn) • Advanced metering infrastructure program (~50% of total >$3bn projected spend is 2031–2033)


11Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call 40.1 43.2 46.4 49.8 53.8 58.4 7.5 7.6 8.0 8.3 8.8 9.5 $47.6 $50.8 $54.4 $58.1 $62.6 $67.9 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 Projected ~7% rate base growth driven by investments to enable customer-driven load growth CPUC FERC ~7% CAGR 2025–2030 Range Case (Recorded) $50.8 $54.3 $57.7 $61.7 $66.1 2025–2030 SCE Rate Base Weighted Average Rate Base, $ in Billions Forecast through 2030 includes: • 2025 GRC approval • CAISO-awarded FERC transmission projects • Advanced metering infrastructure program (~50% of total >$3bn projected spend is 2026–2030) • Planned 2029 GRC request Beyond 2030, continued long- term capital investment opportunities to serve customers • 2029 GRC investments • CAISO-awarded FERC transmission projects (~$2bn) • Advanced metering infrastructure program (~50% of total >$3bn projected spend is 2031–2033)


12Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Note: See Earnings Per Share Non-GAAP Reconciliations and Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures in Appendix. All tax-effected information on this slide is based on our current combined statutory tax rate of approximately 28%. Totals may not add due to rounding EIX 2026 and 2027 Core Earnings Per Share Guidance Ranges 2026 Guidance 2027 Guidance SCE EPS 6.81–7.07 7.20–7.53 EIX Parent and Other (0.91)–(0.87) (0.95)–(0.88) EIX Consolidated Core EPS $5.90–6.20 $6.25–6.65 Share Count (in millions) 385 385 EIX introduces 2026 Core EPS guidance of $5.90–6.20 and 2027 Core EPS guidance of $6.25–6.65 ~7% Growth Now providing 2027 outlook given visibility through GRC cycle • Expected to be at high-end of long-term growth rate range of 5–7% • Core EPS growth driven primarily by ~7% rate base growth • Additional modeling considerations can be found on page 15


13Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call 5.84 0.28 0.18 (0.11) (0.07) (0.07) 6.05 Original 2025 Midpoint Rate Base Growth, Net of Lower CPUC ROE Woolsey Interest Benefit 2025 Regulatory Decision True-ups Depreciation- and Property Tax- related Tax, Financing, and Other 2026 Core EPS Guidance (@ Midpoint) 2026 Core EPS guidance represents ~3.5% growth, muted primarily by variances not expected to affect later periods Drivers of 2026 Core EPS compared to original 2025 midpoint1 $ per Share 1. Original 2025 midpoint represents the midpoint of the original 2025 Core EPS guidance range for $5.50–5.90 plus run-rate interest expense benefit resulting from the TKM Settlement Agreement of 14¢ Note: See Earnings Per Share Non-GAAP Reconciliations and Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures in Appendix. Non-core items are presented as recorded Variances not expected to affect later periods


14Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call 1. Compound annual growth rate (CAGR) based the midpoint of the original 2025 Core EPS guidance range of $5.50–5.90 plus run-rate interest expense benefit resulting from the TKM Settlement Agreement of 14¢ Note: See Earnings Per Share Non-GAAP Reconciliations and Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures in Appendix. All tax-effected information on this slide is based on our current combined statutory tax rate of approximately 28%. Totals may not add due to rounding EIX 2028 Core Earnings Per Share Guidance Range 2028 Guidance SCE EPS 7.74–8.04 EIX Parent and Other (1.00)–(0.90) EIX Consolidated Core EPS $6.74–7.14 Share Count (in millions) 385 EIX reaffirms 2028 Core EPS guidance of $6.74–7.14, representing 5–7% growth from 20251


15Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call 2026–2028 Modeling Considerations Variable 2026 2027 2028 SCE Rate Base ($ billions) $50.8 $54.3–54.4 $57.7–58.1 Rate Base Mix (CPUC/FERC) 85% / 15% 85% / 15% 86% / 14% Authorized ROEs (CPUC/FERC) 10.03% / 10.30% 10.03% / 10.30% 10.03% / 10.30% Authorized Equity Ratios (CPUC/FERC) 52% / 47.5% 52% / 47.5% 52% / 47.5% TKM/Woolsey Interest Benefit1 (Core EPS) ~32¢ ~32¢ ~32¢ SCE Wildfire Debt Rate (Pre-tax) 5.3% weighted average portfolio; incorporates current yield curve, maturities, and financing assumptions EIX Parent Debt Rate (Pre-tax) 5.4% weighted average portfolio; incorporates current yield curve, maturities, and financing assumptions Equity Issuance ($ millions) No equity issuance forecasted from 2026–2030 Share Count (millions) 385 385 385 1. Compared to 2024 baseline


16Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call EIX extends 5–7% Core EPS growth for 2025 to 2030, with no equity needs in financing plan 1. For 2025, represents the midpoint of the original 2025 Core EPS guidance range for $5.50–5.90 plus run-rate interest expense benefit resulting from the TKM Settlement Agreement of 14¢ 2. Financing plan is subject to change. Incorporates expected Woolsey securitization 3. EIX Dividends includes common and preferred dividends, which are subject to approval by the EIX Board of Directors 4. Incremental to refinancing of maturities. Values shown include both SCE and parent debt $5.84 $7.45–8.20 Original 2025 Midpoint 2030 Target Achievable EPS growth for 2030 Core Earnings per Share Guidance1 5–7% CAGR 2026–2030 EIX consolidated financing plan2 $ in Billions Uses Sources Capital Plan $38–41 Dividends3 $7–9 Net cash provided by operating activities $36–38 Incremental Debt2,4 $9–12


17Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Rate base and EPS growth aligned with grid safety, reliability, and customer affordability 1. Compound annual growth rate (CAGR) based the midpoint of the original 2025 Core EPS guidance range of $5.50–5.90 plus run-rate interest expense benefit resulting from the TKM Settlement Agreement of 14¢ 2. Based on EIX stock price on February 17, 2026 3. Relative to 2025 5–7% Core EPS CAGR1 2025–2030 Underpinned by strong rate base growth of ~7% $38–41 billion 2026–2030 capital program ~5% current dividend yield2 22 consecutive years of dividend growth Target dividend payout of 45–55% of SCE core earnings Investments in safety and reliability of the grid Wildfire mitigation execution reduces risk for customers Creates strong foundation for climate adaptation and the clean energy transition One of the strongest electrification profiles in the industry Industry-leading programs for transportation electrification Expected ~30–40% load growth by 2035 and nearly doubling by 20453


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION


19Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call  Resolution of legacy wildfires: TKM and Wooley settlements approved; Woolsey securitization pending approval TKM (A.23-08-013) Woolsey (A.24-10-002) Value ~$1.6 billion (Settlement value)1 ~$2.0 billion (Settlement value)1 Next Steps None — securitization completed in 2025 Targeting issuance of securitized bonds by mid-2026 Avg. Residential Customer Cost2 ~$1.04/month ~$1.18/month (vs. average bill of ~$188) Modeling Considerations2017/2018 Wildfire/Mudslide Events Cost Recovery 1. Approved TKM settlement authorizes recovery of 60% of WEMA costs (claims and associated financing and legal expenses) and 85% of CEMA costs. Approved Woolsey settlement authorizes recovery of 35% of WEMA costs (claims and associated financing and legal expenses) and 85% of CEMA costs 2. For WEMA costs only. Estimated cost assuming securitization. Average bill shown is for non-CARE residential customers Core EPS: One-time benefit recorded upon CPUC approval; going forward, SCE realizes interest expense benefit Cash Flow: Securitization follows CPUC approval of financing order – TKM: ~$1.6 billion completed in 2025 – Woolsey: ~$2.0 billion expected mid-2026 Use of Proceeds: – Offsets normal-course debt issuances as SCE reallocates outstanding debt for rate base growth  One-time True-up in 2025 Ongoing Post-Decision TKM ~30¢ (Q1 2025) ~14¢ (annualized) Woolsey ~46¢ (Q4 2025) ~18¢ (annualized)


20Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call ~$8.0 billion memo account recovery 2021–20251 ~$3.2 billion securitizations of AB 1054 capex and TKM cost recovery completed ~$3.5 billion remaining recoveries through 2027 Cash flow from memo account recovery and securitization strengthens our balance sheet and credit metrics Approved Applications Application / Account Balance @ Dec. 31, ’25 Recovery Through Remaining Rate Recovery by Year 2026 2027 2028  2025 GRC (Jan–Sept. ’25) 789 Sept. ‘27 451 338 –  2023 WMCE 312 Sept. ‘26 312 – –  2022 WM/VM 128 Sept. ‘26 128 – – Woolsey CEMA 50 May ‘27 29 21 –  TKM CEMA 14 Jun. ‘26 14 – – Various others 229 Varies 229 – – Total 1,522 1,163 359 – Pending Applications2 (Subject to CPUC Authorization) Application Request2,3,4 Expected Amort.2 Expected Rate Recovery by Year3 2026 2027 2028 Woolsey Securitization 1,951 n/a 1,951 – – 2024 WMCE 48 12 months – 48 – Total Including Securitization 1,999 1,951 48 – 1. Includes ~$3.2 billion recovered through securitization of AB 1054 capital expenditures and TKM authorized costs 2. Pending Applications reflects applications already submitted to the CPUC. Requested revenue requirement shown. Amounts and amortization subject to CPUC approval 3. Reflects request at the time of the application. SCE continues to record capital-related revenue requirements and interest that would also be authorized upon commission approval. For Woolsey securitization, amount reflects costs recovered upfront. Recovery in customer rates of costs to service the bonds takes place over the tenor of the debt at a fixed recovery charge rate 4. Woolsey Securitization estimate will be further refined as timing and costs of securitization transaction are evaluated Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding Remaining GRC and Wildfire-related Application Recoveries $ in Millions


21Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Q4 2025 Q4 2024 2025 2024 Basic Earnings 1,848$ 340$ 4,459$ 1,284$ Non-Core Items SCE 2017/2018 Wildfire/Mudslide Events (claims and expenses), net of recoveries 1,627 (8) 2,961 (493) Eaton Fire claims and expenses (15) — (15) — Other Wildfire Events (claims and expenses), net of recoveries (5) (38) (1) (162) Wildfire Fund expense (36) (37) (144) (146) Net charges related to disallowed historical capital expenditures in SCE's 2025 GRC decision — — (76) — Severance costs, net of recovery — (6) — (50) Income tax (expense) benefit1 (440) 25 (747) 238 Subtotal SCE 1,131 (64) 1,978 (613) EIX Parent & Other Wildfire claims insured by EIS — (2) (50) (4) Income tax benefit1 — 1 11 1 Subtotal EIX Parent & Other — (1) (39) (3) Less: Total non-core items 1,131$ (65)$ 1,939$ (616)$ SCE 823 493 2,911 2,232 EIX Parent & Other (106) (88) (391) (332) Core Earnings 717$ 405$ 2,520$ 1,900$ Earnings Non-GAAP Reconciliations 1. SCE non-core items are tax-affected at an estimated statutory rate of approximately 28%; wildfire claims insured by EIS are tax-affected at the federal statutory rate of 21% Reconciliation of EIX GAAP Earnings to EIX Core Earnings Net Income (Loss) Available to Edison International, $ in Millions


22Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Q4 2025 Q4 2024 2025 2024 Basic EPS 4.80$ 0.88$ 11.58$ 3.33$ Non-Core Items SCE 2017/2018 Wildfire/Mudslide Events (claims and expenses), net of recoveries 4.22 (0.02) 7.68 (1.28) Eaton Fire claims and expenses (0.04) — (0.04) — Other Wildfire Events (claims and expenses), net of recoveries (0.01) (0.10) — (0.42) Wildfire Insurance Fund expense (0.09) (0.10) (0.37) (0.38) Net charges related to disallowed historical capital expenditures in SCE's 2025 GRC decision — — (0.20) — Severance costs, net of recovery — (0.02) — (0.13) Income tax (expense) benefit2 (1.14) 0.07 (1.94) 0.62 Subtotal SCE 2.94 (0.17) 5.13 (1.59) EIX Parent & Other Wildfire claims insured by EIS — — (0.13) (0.01) Income tax benefit2 — — 0.03 — Subtotal EIX Parent & Other — — (0.10) (0.01) Less: Total non-core items 2.94 (0.17) 5.03 (1.60) Core EPS 1.86$ 1.05$ 6.55$ 4.93$ EIX Core EPS Non-GAAP Reconciliations 1. EPS is based on weighted-average share count of 385 million and 386 million for 2025 and 2024, respectively 2. SCE non-core items are tax-affected at an estimated statutory rate of approximately 28%; wildfire claims insured by EIS are tax-affected at the federal statutory rate of 21% Reconciliation of EIX Basic Earnings Per Share to EIX Core Earnings Per Share EPS Available to Edison International1


23Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Low High Basic EIX EPS $5.90 $6.20 Total Non-Core Items1 – – Core EIX EPS $5.90 $6.20 1. Non-core items are presented as they are recorded Earnings Per Share Non-GAAP Reconciliations Reconciliation of EIX Basic Earnings Per Share Guidance to EIX Core Earnings Per Share Guidance 2026 EPS Available to Edison International


24Edison International | Fourth-Quarter 2025 Earnings Call Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures EIX Investor Relations Contact Sam Ramraj, Vice President Derek Matsushima, Principal Manager (626) 302-2540 (626) 302-3625 Sam.Ramraj@edisonintl.com Derek.Matsushima@edisonintl.com Edison International's earnings and basic earnings per share (EPS) are prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles used in the United States. Management uses core earnings and core EPS internally for financial planning and for analysis of performance. Core earnings and core EPS are also used when communicating with investors and analysts regarding Edison International's earnings results to facilitate comparisons of the company's performance from period to period. Core earnings and core EPS are non-GAAP financial measures and may not be comparable to those of other companies. Core earnings and core EPS are defined as basic earnings and basic EPS attributable to Edison International shareholders less non-core items. Non-core items include income or loss from discontinued operations and income or loss from significant discrete items that management does not consider representative of ongoing earnings, such as write downs, asset impairments, wildfire-related claims, and other income and expense related to changes in law, outcomes in tax, regulatory or legal proceedings, and exit activities, including sale of certain assets and other activities that are no longer continuing. A reconciliation of Non-GAAP information to GAAP information is included either on the slide where the information appears or on another slide referenced in this presentation.