Tag Archives: cash

Portland General: Utility With Some Promise

Summary Short-term, headwinds exist related to heavy capital expenditures and poor weather forecasts. Long-term, spending should be down and income up, freeing up cash flow for shareholder returns. Two natural gas-fired plant openings, one in 2016 and one in 2020, will be key to company success. Portland General Electric Company (NYSE: POR ) is an electric utility that operates wholly within the state of Oregon, providing power to nearly 50% of Oregonians with over 3,400MW of available energy generation. Primarily serving residential customers, the company’s bottom line has been bolstered by domestic migration to the Northwest. From 2010-2014, the Portland metropolitan area added over one hundred thousand new residents – an annual growth rate of 5.2%. This strong local population growth has helped bolster earnings results and shareholder returns, with investors reaping 100% in total return over the past five years, roughly double the return of utilities indexes. Does Portland General have more room to run or has the utility run its course? Future Is Natural Gas, Profit Is With Hydro * Portland General September 2015 Investor Presentation Portland General has a diverse portfolio of power generation. Including purchased power, 36% of power was created from renewable sources and an additional 25% generated from cleaner-burning natural gas. This is going to change drastically over the next few years, however. Given Oregon’s progressive nature, it wasn’t a surprise to see Oregon residents campaign for clean power. Management quickly bowed to customer and political pressure, leading to plans for the elimination of all coal-fired generation in Oregon. Under the Boardman 2020 plan, Portland General will close its 518MW Boardman coal asset by 2020, instead building a natural gas facility on the site. This will be a costly project, but doing so will save the company $470M in required upgrades to meet emissions guidelines had the plant remained open until 2040 as previously guided. The risk here is that the new plant is delayed and is not completed by the time Boardman is scheduled to be mothballed. Portland General relies heavily on the Boardman plant to produce electricity as coal-fired generation is in many cases the cheapest and most reliable asset the company has. Coal represents 16.5% of available resource capacity but generated 28% of the load in 2015 and is run at capacity nearly constantly. The company’s peak power load in 2014 was 3866MW which was already above currently available company-owned power generation and the shortfall from the Boardman plant closure could force Portland General to increase purchased power during peak times. While these costs will inevitably be passed along to the consumer because of Portland General’s clauses with the Public Utility Commission of Oregon, higher prices could still cause a slack in energy demand and bad press is never good for the bottom line. The company’s Carty Generating Station, slated to be completed in 2017, will help cover future shortfalls built is imperative for investors to track how the new Boardman facility’s construction is proceeding over the coming years. This risk is noted in the company’s 10-K: “Beyond 2018, PGE may need additional resources in order to meet the 2020 and 2025 RPS requirements and to replace energy from Boardman, which is scheduled to cease coal-fired operations in 2020. Additional post-2018 actions may also be needed to offset expiring power purchase agreements and to back-up variable energy resources, such as wind generation facilities. These actions are expected to be identified in a future IRP. PGE expects to file its next IRP with the OPUC in 2016.” – Portland General, 2014 Form 10-K From a profitability standpoint, the key to the company’s energy costs however is hydroelectricity. Hydroelectric generation can be the lowest cost source of generation for Portland General if conditions are right. The state of the Deschutes and Clackamas Rivers (tributaries of the Columbia River) is key. Both of these rivers’ headwaters are fed by the Cascades, a mountain range spanning from Canada to Northern California. In general, the greater the snowfall, the better the power generation is for hydroelectric when the spring thaw comes. Unfortunately for Portland General shareholders and highlighted in a recent prior SeekingAlpha article by Tristan Brown , weather models show lower than average snowfall likely for Oregon, along with a more mild winter in regards to temperature. This presents a double whammy for Portland General in the form of higher energy costs and lower revenue in the winter months during which customers typically draw around 10-15% more electricity than in the summer months. Past Operating Results (click to enlarge) Operating results have been steady and rather uneventful over the past five years (my own estimates used for the back half of 2015). Of note however is depreciation/amortization costs have been increasing dramatically due to the large capital investments the company has been making over the past five years, developing relatively more expensive wind/solar farms and the costs associated with the Carty Generating Station. Overall, this is steady-as-she-goes results that utility investors like to see. (click to enlarge) Frequent readers of my utilities research know that I look for solid coverage of capital expenditures and dividends from operating cash flow for mature utilities. Starting in 2013, Portland General reversed course and begun stepping up the leverage as capital expenditures rose for the natural gas plants at the Carty Generation Station and the old Boardman location. To fund this, Portland General issued $865M in long-term debt in 2013/2014 and also issued $67M worth of common stock in 2013 to cover the cash flow gaps. While this picture looks currently worrisome, it should moderate over time. Capital expenditures are expected to fall from the $600-650M range in 2015 to $289M in 2019, back to levels we saw in 2011/2012 when cash flow was positive. Unfortunately, Portland General won’t see much recovery in the form of increased rates because of offsetting factors, based on the overall breakdown of the 2016 rate case filing: (click to enlarge) Conclusion Portland General saw a little bit more renewed interest after the 7% dividend increase in 2015, well in excess of 2% annual growth from 2009-2014. In regards to operating income, however, 2016 looks unclear given the poor weather outlook. Earnings per share are likely to be flat to down in 2015/2016, so I would not expect a repeat of that hefty 2014 dividend increase. Before entering a position, I would like to see the valuation come down along with more visibility on completion of the two big natural gas facilities (early 2016 should give excellent insight into schedule on Carty Generation Station). Overall, however, shares are quite fairly valued given the long-term prospects of the region. Being long won’t hurt you.

Understanding Your MLP’s Financially-Engineered Equity Value

Summary Let’s cover some ground, some of it new, some of it old, but all of it worth repeating. In this article, we will synthetically create the equivalent of a master limited partnership (MLP), called iNewCorp with Kinder Morgan’s financial profile, from scratch with effectively no capital at all. We’ll address the rumor mill by showing how the oil and gas pipeline industry is not covering its dividend and distribution payments with traditional free cash flow, a valuation term. We’ll also explain how valuation techniques cannot ignore growth capital in the valuation equation of MLPs (AMLP) or other midstream corporates. The primary goal of this piece is to reveal how warped the financial engineering has become with respect to MLPs, especially in the context of the “valuations” placed on them. (click to enlarge) For background on this topic, please read “5 Reasons Why Kinder Morgan Will Collapse,” and “5 More Reasons Why Kinder Morgan Will Collapse.” In this article, we will synthetically create the equivalent of a master limited partnership (MLP), called iNewCorp with Kinder Morgan’s financial profile, from scratch with effectively no capital at all, with only a strong credit rating. In such an example, we’ll also explain how valuation techniques cannot ignore growth capital in the valuation equation of MLPs (NYSEARCA: AMLP ) or other midstream corporates by pricing them on a multiple of “distributable cash flow” or on the dividend/distribution that follows it. We’ll do so by contemplating the value of a company that has a “distributable cash flow” stream requiring maintenance (and/or growth) capex versus one with the same “distributable cash flow” stream not requiring any maintenance (and/or growth) capex. First, however, we’ll address the rumor mill by showing how the oil and gas pipeline industry is not covering its dividend and distribution payments with traditional free cash flow, a valuation term, which differs from the industry’s definition of ‘distributable cash flow,’ a contractual term–not one to be used in valuing equities, or at least in the context of how some are using it. The primary goal of this piece, however, is to reveal how warped the financial engineering has become with respect to MLPs, especially in the context of the “valuations” placed on them. When one sees how easily other corporates such as Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT ), Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO ), or Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM ) or any other entity with excess cash and a strong credit rating can create a shell conduit that is priced on a contractual pass-through to shareholders, or the substance of the distribution pass-through to unitholders of an MLP, for example, either one of two things may happen: 1) every capable company will or should create cash-flow-backed shell companies to artificially generate value at the parent, consequences unknown or 2) the MLP business model will be restrained, or dissolved in time. In the example to follow, we’ll show how an investment-grade company, with essentially no investment or ongoing commitment at all, can generate $120 billion in incremental equity value, to the tune of the equivalent of the entire enterprise value of Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI ), at the time the example was originally developed. Given the recent controversial, contractual pass-through structure of Alibaba (NYSE: BABA ), for example, we wouldn’t be surprised that, if board rooms in other sectors, namely technology, knew how easily value could be generated in the following way, we’d see cash-flow-backed shell companies expand in number just the same as the MLP model has proliferated across the energy complex in the US. But first, let’s clear the air. The Shocking Truth About the Free Cash Flow Shortfall and Debt Bubble Most master limited partnerships and midstream corporates do not generate enough traditional free cash flow to cover their cash distributions and dividends. Anything to the contrary is categorically false. A look at traditional free cash flow generation, as measured by cash flow from operations less all capital spending, after distributions/dividends for a select, but large and representative group of upstream and pipeline MLP plays, shows a massive shortfall. The select group of entities in the table at the top of this article, both upstream and midstream, had an aggregate $16.7 billion free cash flow shortfall relative to cash dividends paid during the first half of 2015 as they collectively held a staggering $210 billion in net debt at the end of the second quarter of 2015; that’s nearly a quarter trillion dollars! The idea that such financial profiles can possibly translate into a view that their dividends/distributions are “safe” is hard to believe. What’s more, how some of the debt from entities in this group can be considered investment-grade by the rating agencies when such entities have been unable to generate operating cash flow in excess of total capital spending and the dividend/distribution, and in light of their “junk-equivalent” net debt to adjusted EBITDA levels, is even harder to believe. It may be the nature of the MLP business model that Is causing this ominous dynamic, but it may not be, but it may not matter either . A corporate, not MLP, Kinder Morgan , for one, has the choice to finance all of its capital expenditures with internally-generated cash flow from operations and forgo the current level of its dividend, as most corporates do, but it doesn’t. Instead, Kinder Morgan accesses the debt and equity markets, not for funds related to capex because we argue it already has them (the firm has already generated them in cash flow from operations), but because it wants to keep paying and growing a dividend. There’s nothing wrong with this, per se, unless of course, investors are led to believe that the dividend is organically-derived like those of other corporates, which pay out their dividends as a percentage of earnings and/or traditional free cash flow. In 2015, Kinder Morgan will pay out twice as much in cash dividends than it will generate in earnings and possibly four times as much in dividends as it will generate in traditional free cash flow. From our perspective, and Kinder Morgan’s activity sheds light on this, executive teams across the MLP space are also, in substance, accessing the equity and debt markets as a way to fund distributions, and in our view, conveniently using the MLP structure as a way to do so, helping to facilitate a debt-infused dividend-based equity pricing paradigm. It doesn’t matter if this is “how MLPs work” or not, this is what’s happening at the core. Internally-generated capital is always the lowest cost of capital – and that it is not being used as the primary source of investment for growth, even for a corporate pipeline operator, which has as much flexibility as any other corporate, is a significant red flag, at the very least. Investors should continue to be concerned about debt-infused dividends/distributions and the equity pricing structure that surrounds them. Understanding the Financial Engineering of MLPs and Why Traditional MLP Valuation Techniques Should Not Omit Growth Capex The following example is purely hypothetical and for educational purposes only, but let’s explain, for example, how Apple–a balance-sheet cash-rich entity–can effectively financially engineer a completely new entity that has “Kinder Morgan’s” current financial profile, or create ~$75 billion in incremental equity value or more, using less than 5% of Apple’s current balance sheet, or arguably with nothing at all. (Note: Kinder Morgan had been trading at a higher price level when this example was first developed, so its market-related information is not current.) First, let’s cover some financials. Kinder Morgan, the largest energy infrastructure company in North America, is on pace to generate ~$4.5 billion in “distributable cash flow” in 2015. Traditional free cash flow, however, will be substantially less than “distributable cash flow” during the year given growth capital investments that are necessary to drive future increases in net income, a component of future “distributable cash flow.” This is a very important point that will be critical later in this example. Let’s assume that Kinder Morgan’s “distributable cash flow” will advance at a ~10% clip over the next few years, in line with management’s expectation for the pace of dividend growth over the same time frame. Kinder Morgan’s enterprise value is currently ~$120 billion, consisting of about $75 billion in equity and $45 billion in debt (at the time the example had been written). Apple holds over $200 billion in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities on its balance sheet, as of June 27, 2015. For illustration purposes, let’s have Apple create a corporation called iNewCorp, in which it sets up a partnership agreement by which Apple contributes ~$4.5 billion, more or less, in cash to iNewCorp per annum in exchange for 100% ownership of iNewCorp. The agreement stipulates no minimum distributable-cash-flow to dividends-paid ratio, meaning that dividends can exceed Apple’s cash contributions at any time, which equivalently happens periodically across the master-limited-partnership arena when distributions exceed distributable cash flow in certain periods. From a baseline of ~$4.5 billion, let’s also assume that iNewCorp plans to increase dividends to its future shareholders by 10% each year through 2020 and by a more-reasonable growth rate after that. The initial ~$4.5 billion “start-up” obligation could easily be covered by Apple, an entity with $200 billion on the books and one that has generated ~$68 billion in cash flow from operations during the nine months ending June 27. Apple can cover the initial ~$4.5 billion obligation 40+ times over with cash on the balance sheet and 15+ times over with nine-months-worth of cash from operations. Let’s now assume that Apple guarantees iNewCorp’s growing dividend stream and any and all of iNewCorp’s debts, thereby giving iNewCorp an investment-grade credit rating. With such an investment-grade rating, iNewCorp then borrows ~$45 billion against the future cash flow stream that is implicitly backed by Apple, coincidentally approximating Kinder Morgan’s debt outstanding. If you think this is good thus far, it gets better. iNewCorp then uses this $45 billion in newly-raised debt to backstop its very own future dividend payments to its very own future shareholders. With the newly-raised debt alone, iNewCorp would then be able to cover growing dividends to its future shareholders for ~5-10 years depending on the growth rate, without any future Apple cash contributions. Apple now IPO’s iNewCorp. iNewCorp can now raise equity on the open market such that, with its newly-raised debt, the corporate is now able to fund its entire growing dividend stream via external capital-raising efforts, maybe on a 50%/50% equity/debt split if it wants to. Said differently, iNewCorp can fund its entire future and growing dividend stream purely from financing activities. Under this scenario, to sustain iNewCorp’s dividend, Apple itself would not have to pay any more ongoing cash to iNewCorp after the initial ~$4.5 billion outlay. Since there is no minimum distributable-cash-flow to dividends-paid mandate within this particular partnership agreement, Apple would only have to stand as a backdrop and guarantee the newly-created entity’s future dividends and debt load. The external financing markets are sustaining the dividend. What Apple has done in this example is financially engineer the future dividend stream and capital structure of a new “Kinder Morgan,” which we have called iNewCorp, and it has done so with effectively no capital at all. Apple is just standing behind iNewCorp reinforcing its investment-grade borrowing capacity, which supports the dividend that supports the equity price, which provides incremental equity capital that can also be used to support iNewCorp’s dividend, and so on. On the basis of the current enterprise value of the actual Kinder Morgan, iNewCorp should theoretically fetch an enterprise value of at least $120 billion (or it was at the time), which would be all equity in iNewCorp’s case, until borrowings are distributed to iNewCorp’s shareholders as dividends. If dividends should happen to be paid directly from newly-issued equity, then there’s no reason to believe iNewCorp’s equity wouldn’t hold a ~$120 billion equity price, all else equal (at least in this market). There’s more that meets the eye, however, and this is where it becomes clear that growth capital cannot be ignored in the valuation of oil and gas pipeline entities. (Please note that given recent changes in the market price, Kinder Morgan’s price-to-distributable cash flow ratio has fallen significantly from noted levels below). Kinder Morgan has been trading at a price to distributable cash flow ratio of ~16.5 times (a ~6% distribution yield, or it had at the time), and some may argue the enterprise value and equity market capitalization of iNewCorp should theoretically be higher than Kinder Morgan’s. After all, Kinder Morgan requires maintenance and growth capital to fuel future net income and dividend growth and has exposure to commodity price shifts and other operating risks, while iNewCorp does not. Apple’s newly-created corporation is pure and growing cash. In our view, however, iNewCorp should be the one to fetch a ~16.5 times price-to-distributable multiple (~6% distribution yield), while Kinder Morgan’s price-to-distributable cash flow ratio should be substantially lower given commodity and operating risks as well as the maintenance capex and massive growth capex that is required to drive future net income expansion. They both can’t have the same price-to-distributable cash flow ratios just because their distributable cash flow is the same-one requires significant cash outflows to sustain the payout while the other requires none. In the example of iNewCorp, valuing different equities with varying growth capital outlays and commodity/operating risks on a standardized price-to-distributable cash flow ratio is fraught with inconsistencies and imbalances. Furthermore, in this hypothetical example, with less than 5% of its balance sheet or with perhaps nothing at all, Apple has created in iNewCorp ~$120 billion in incremental equity value, or a ~20% boost to Apple’s entire market capitalization (Apple would have received the proceeds from the IPO of iNewCorp or retained an ownership stake). That’s certainly a needle-mover for one of the largest companies in the world! One may even say that Apple can easily cover an arrangement like this many times over. If you believe in the financial engineering above, then theoretically Apple can create trillions of equity capitalization repeating this over and over again. Apple’s balance sheet and cash flow generation are assets much like the pipelines in the ground are assets. There is a very good reason, in our view, why dividends should be paid out of traditional free cash flow (cash from operations less all capital spending) or earnings, as anything else is textbook financial engineering and arguably misleading to the individual investor that believes all dividends/distributions are created equal, which they are not. We’re sticking with companies that have organically-derived dividends, and we’re not omitting varying growth capital outlays and operating risks from our analysis.

Stocks Are Cheaper Than Bonds, And Other Falsehoods

Summary Currently, the crowd continues to advance the notion that stocks are the only investment to be considered, despite the overvalued condition in risk assets. The notion that bonds are overvalued and underperform stocks, and that cash is earning 0% is also advanced by the crowd. In reality, cash and bonds offer investors tremendous value in a world of declining economic growth. This is especially true given that the economic risks are rising. Stock Market Valuations within the Context of Global Economic Instability: Implications for Portfolio Construction Stocks are cheaper than bonds, or so we are told by the crowd which was out in full force again for the September FOMC meeting, calling for a rise in interest rates, despite the fact that we have not met any of the conditions for such a rise in rates. One of the major reasons investors, and more specifically savers, have for why the Fed should raise interest rates is the notion that cash is currently earning close to 0% on savings, and money market balances. However, when viewed within the context of the global economic environment, and when we take into account the impact of a rising dollar on purchasing power, cash is providing investors with a very nice return. In a previous piece , I explored the reasons behind holding cash. As risk asset prices have risen to lofty levels, investors are far better, in my opinion, holding a majority of their assets in Zero Coupon U.S. Treasury Bonds and cash. The Global Economy and the Rise of Deflationary Forces Why would I pursue a strategy of largely abandoning risk assets for fixed income and cash? For several reasons: 1. CAPE valuation The first reason is valuations. Valuations in the US are trading at levels that are more than 53% above its arithmetic mean and 65% above its geometric mean, as seen in the charts below. As the earnings season begins, the street is expecting a 4.6% decline in S&P earnings. I would contend that this is far more modest than what the actual numbers will turn out to be. The strong dollar continues to be a headwind, as is the decline in overall demand. This, combined with the complete decimation of the commodities complex , declining fundamentals in the global economy, and a FED that keeps the markets uncertain will likely lead to a severe drawdown in risk assets. In such an environment, cash and Zero Coupon U.S. Treasury Bonds are excellent investments. (click to enlarge) (click to enlarge) 2. The Real Yield on Cash The U.S. dollar has been rallying in the face of rising deflationary forces globally. Over the past three years, the U.S. dollar has soared 14.6%. I expect further economic weakness, and growing challenges overseas, combined with extraordinary monetary policy from the BOJ and the ECB will drive the US dollar higher relative to the yen and euro as well as other foreign currencies. As the value of the dollar rises, so does the buying power of Americans cash balances, making the real yield on cash much higher than the current minimal rate of interest. 3. Deflationary Forces and Tepid Economic Growth The challenges overseas are well documented. Japan remains in an economic malaise, even as Abenomics attempts to bring it out of the doldrums. The eurozone remains entrenched in an extremely slow-growing economic environment on the verge of recession, with deflationary forces rising. Canada is currently in recession, and in the United States, many try to make the case that the economy is doing just fine. But the reality is that the economy is a patient in need of ICU classification, as the charts below will indicate. The labor force participation rate is at its lowest level since 1978. (click to enlarge) To those who believe this is largely caused by the retirement of the Baby Boomer generation, the next chart will be particularly useful in dispelling this idea. (click to enlarge) Falling industrial production and ISM Manufacturing (below) are not indicative of an economy running on all cylinders. (click to enlarge) (click to enlarge) (click to enlarge) (click to enlarge) The data point that I find most concerning is the complete collapse in velocity to the lowest levels in more than 50 years. Despite the Fed’s massive QE program, velocity has continued to decline. (click to enlarge) Implications for Portfolio Construction The world is currently on the verge of a recession . Conventional investment planning has largely failed to protect client assets multiple times in the 21st century, largely due to its reliance on risk assets for the majority of client capital. I believe in a more conservative approach that protects investor capital through a complete investment cycle. On February 18, 2013, Dr. John Hussman wrote an excellent commentary entitled ” The Sirens Song of the Unfinished Half-Cycle ,” in which he explains the overvaluation of the market and the likely drawdown that will result in the completion of this market cycle. (click to enlarge) Since Dr. Hussman wrote this commentary, valuations have only extended further, making the current conditions all the more unstable. These are not conditions in which I would, in good conscience, be overweight risk assets. Especially that which is needed for retirement, regardless of age. I believe capital preservation is the key objective, and I am willing to miss excess gains on the upside when the market gets expensive, rather than be exposed to a severe drawdown due to speculation in an overvalued market. As we seek to preserve capital, cash and cash equivalents (Treasuries) appear to be the best investment vehicles in a world of slow economic growth with rising deflationary and recessionary risks and overvaluations on risk assets that make future returns minimal. While the equity risk premium has already been debunked , the future will likely give us a further case study. One thing I have learned in my decades of investment experience is that the habits of successful investing are often contrary to common human behavior. This is why we seek to ignore the crowd and the noise that accompanies them. I have been writing about our extensive exposure to U.S Treasury bonds for some time. Currently, Treasury bonds are one of the most vilified assets around, and yet, from 2008-2015, long-term Zero Coupon U.S. Treasury bonds have returned 107.91%, while the S&P 500 has returned 64.89%. During this entire period of time, the crowd was vilifying Treasury bonds and telling investors to favor equities. In this case, following the crowd would have cost you a 43.02% gain. Conclusion While many investors and savers may be frustrated by the lack of interest they are earning on their cash balances, the buying power of their cash continues to rise as the value of the US dollar increases. In this environment, cash and cash equivalents are king, and as major headwinds from global growth concerns and U.S. dollar strength, among other factors, begin to reduce the earnings power of U.S. companies, the market will correct in tandem. Additionally, we face continued market uncertainty surrounding monetary policy and the possibility of a government shutdown later this year, which could cause additional stress on the market. I continue to feel comfortable with the majority of our assets in cash and long-term Zero Coupon U.S. Treasury securities as well as select short positions, with an underweight in equities, favoring cheaper-priced foreign equities over those of the expensive U.S. market.