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FirstEnergy’s (FE) CEO Tony Alexander on Q4 2014 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

FirstEnergy Corp. (NYSE: FE ) Q4 2014 Results Earnings Conference Call February 18, 2015, 09:00 AM ET Executives Meghan Beringer – Director, Investor Relations Chuck Jones – President and Chief Executive Officer Leila Vespoli – Executive Vice President, Markets and CLO Jim Pearson – Senior Vice President and CFO Donny Schneider – President, FirstEnergy Solutions Jon Taylor – Vice President, Controller and CAO Steve Staub – Vice President and Treasurer Irene Prezelj – Vice President, Investor Relations Analysts Neel Mitra – Tudor, Pickering, Holt Dan Eggers – Credit Suisse Paul Patterson – Glenrock Associates Angie Storozynski – Macquarie Stephen Byrd – Morgan Stanley Julien Dumoulin-Smith – UBS Anthony Crowdell – Jefferies Ashar Khan – Visium Paul Ridzon – Keybanc Brian Chin – Bank of America Michael Lapides – Goldman Sachs Operator Greetings. And welcome to the FirstEnergy Corp.’s Fourth Quarter Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now turn the conference over to Ms. Meghan Beringer, Director of Investor Relations. Thank you, Ms. Beringer. You may now begin. Meghan Beringer Thank you, Manny, and good morning. Welcome to FirstEnergy’s fourth quarter earnings call. First, please be reminded that during this conference call, we will make various forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Safe Harbor provisions of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Investors are cautioned that such forward-looking statements with respect to revenues, earnings, performance, strategies, prospects and other aspects of the business of FirstEnergy Corp. are based on current expectations that are subject to risks and uncertainties. A number of factors could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those indicated by such forward-looking statements. Please read the Safe Harbor statement contained in the consolidated report to the financial community, which was released yesterday and is also available on our website under the Earnings Information link. Today, we will be referring to operating earnings, operating earnings per share, operating earnings per share by segments and adjusted EBITDA, which are all non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures are contained in the consolidated report. The updated fact book, and as well on the Investor Information section on our website at www.firstenergycorp.com/ir. Participating in today’s call are; Chuck Jones, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jim Pearson, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Leila Vespoli, Executive Vice President, Markets and Chief Legal Officer; Donny Schneider, President of FirstEnergy Solutions; Jon Taylor, Vice President, Controller and Chief Accounting Officer; Steve Staub, Vice President and Treasurer; and Irene Prezelj, Vice President, Investor Relations. Now I will turn the call over to Chuck Jones. Chuck Jones Thanks, Meghan, and good morning, everyone. It’s my pleasure to talk with you today. For today’s call we are deliberately keeping our prepared remarks rather brief, so there will be plenty of time to take your questions at the end. Clearly the topic many of you will be most interested in is our 2015 earnings guidance, which we made public late last evening. But before moving to that discussion, I’d like to take a moment to thank Tony Alexander for his leadership of FirstEnergy over the past decade. Tony guided our Company through a dramatic expansion and navigated through one of the most challenging periods in the history of the utility industry. As you know, we also announced last night that Tony’s last day will be April 30th and we certainly wish him well as he begins his new chapter in his life and enjoys more time with his family. Since moving into the CEO position on January 1, I’ve had the opportunity to either meet personally or talk with many of you over the telephone. We’ve had some good two way conversation over the past couple of months. And I want you to know that the entire FirstEnergy team is committed to providing frank and open discussion about the challenges and opportunities we are facing as a company, that’s why in light of the recent Pennsylvania rate case settlements we decided to provide you with our earnings guidance range earlier than originally planned, so you would have a clear sense of what we are expecting this year. The 2015 operating earnings guidance range of $2.40 to $2.70 per share is in line with the updated drivers for our utilities business and corporate segment that we provided in November, although some street expectations have not been adjusted to reflect that information. Looking at consensus estimates, we saw a fairly widespread of about $0.50 ranging from $2.60 to over $3.10 and we understand the challenges of modelling FirstEnergy giving all the moving pieces we have right now. Given the disparity between the street consensus and our 2015 base earnings, we believe it’s very critical to ground the investment community on earnings sooner rather than later as we reset our utilities around the new growth strategy. After today, our focus shifts to customer service driven growth across the utility segment. In that light now that we have made our 2015 earnings guidance public, following this call Irene and her investor relations team will be happy to answer your detailed questions about all the disclosures we made yesterday and today including here in our consolidated report and in our updated fact book. In the future once all of the pending rate case proceedings are finalized modelling are going forward earnings power should be far more transparent. And we hope to better articulate that for you later this year during the analyst meeting where we expect to provide a growth target for our utilities as well as in overall strategic update on all three of our business segments. We continue to believe the initiatives that were put in place during 2014 laid the path for our future growth and success. So let’s several minutes to review the key events of the past year. We successfully launched our Energizing the Future of transmission expansion program. Under this program, we will invest billions of dollars with an eye towards serving our customers better. These investments will improve reliability, add resiliency to the bulk electric system and install enhanced physical and cyber security to ensure our assets perform as designed. With our multiple rate proceedings, we have also set the stage for similar investment in our regulated businesses and more timely recovery of those investments. The recent major storm events that have impacted FirstEnergy service territory have highlighted the need for hardening of our distribution systems. And of course in the wake of the polar vortex and other severe weather events last winter we began taking a far more conservative approach in our competitive business to limit risk and — focus on greater stability. We have made good progress on these efforts. Our West Virginia rate case settlement was approved by the state public service commission earlier this month and we have filed settlements in our Pennsylvania and Ohio rate proceedings that require regulatory approval. We also look forward to closure on the base rate case at JCP&L and remain hopeful that the board of public utilities final decision in that proceeding will appropriately include the $580 million incurred by JCP&L for the 2012 storms. Once that case is finalized we look forward to working with the BPU to make Jersey Central Power & Light a stronger company going forward. In our ATSI proceeding, we believe FERC’s approval of our request to move to forward looking rates as of January 1 signals support for transmission investments for grid reliability. As we anticipated FERC accepted it subject to refund and also set hearing and settlement procedures and initiated an inquiry into ATSI’s return on equity. We believe that more timely recovery associated with forward looking rates is a major benefit to us which outweighs the impact of a potentially modest ROE adjustment. This rate structure for ATSI will provide a much better co-relation to our cost as we continue to implement our Energizing the Future of transmission investment plan. That plan is comprised primarily of thousands of small, customer focus transmission projects and equipment upgrades that can be implemented relatively quickly across our existing 24,000 miles of transmission assets. These projects are designed to enhance system reliability and resiliency for our customers while providing long term and sustainable growth for FirstEnergy. I strongly believe that the right investments are those that customers value and are willing to pay for and that provide attractive returns for our investors. It’s gratifying to report on the successful first year of that program. We overcame some weather related setbacks early in the year but by December we successfully completed our plan of $1.4 billion in new investments spanning more than 1100 projects. You can see the impact that that investment when you look at our financial disclosures for the transmission segment. The plan for 2015 calls for an additional $970 million investment across 430 projects including 1000 pieces of substation equipment and 300 miles of transmission lines. By the end of this year we expect to be well on track to meet our four year goal of $4.2 billion in investments through 2017. Key projects for 2015 include construction of a new substation and transmission line near Clarksburg, West Virginia to support an existing gas processing plant and reinforce the regional grid. We are also planning construction of a new transmission substation near Burgettstown town, Pennsylvania that will support low growth and improve service reliability for more than 40,000 customers of West Penn Power. At the EEI conference last November, we told you that we have identified about $15 billion in incremental transmission projects in 2018 and beyond providing a path to both improved customer service and a long term and sustainable growth platform for our company. Lets shift gears now and look at our competitive business. The actions we continue to take with regard to our more conservative strategy have been very effective at reducing the overall risk in this business. While our open position is subject to market movement we are structuring the business to be more predictable and self sustaining. Our conservative approach will better protect us in the event of extreme weather or unplanned outages at a major generating facility. We are projecting this business to be cash flow positive each year over the 2015 to 2018 period using conservative assumptions. I’ve been asked numerous times about the possibility of divesting this business, frankly at this point in time it doesn’t make sense while we are at or hopefully near the bottom of the market to sell these assets at the lowest value they will likely ever have. In addition, capacity market reforms and pending changes to the treatment of demand or response are likely to provide near term value for this business. Once these moving pieces play out we should have a much better picture of what we can expect from our competitive business going forward, at this point it remains a core business for FirstEnergy. However, we continue to monitor closely the financial performance of some of our individual generating units, particularly those located in western PJM. While the low market revenues are build into our financial models several of our units continue to struggle to run economically. The strategies we have in place in all three of our business segments are sound. They are the right priorities for our company at this time and in this environment and we will continue to refine them as conditions require or opportunities emerge. Along the way we intend to provide clear communication about our challenges, opportunities, strategies and goals. I’m sure you will have many questions at the end of this call and we have full investor meeting schedule coming up. I will make myself available as often as necessary to ensure we address all of your questions. I also hope to get to know many of you more in the next several months. For those of you who are not yet familiar with my style, I was trained in as an engineer to solve problems. My career FirstEnergy has been focused on customers and looking for sound long term solutions. Our distribution and transmission businesses have been my main focus, although I did have the opportunity to oversee our competitive business for the couple of years as well. As I mentioned earlier, in my mind the best investments like the ones we’re making in our transmission business are those that provide both customers and shareholders with real value. Its our responsibility to provide customer with a safe, reliable, affordable and clean electricity and my philosophy is that a commitment to these principals reflected in both our decision making and our management style is good business. Lastly, I believe very strongly in transparent communications whether to employees, customers, regulators or the financial community that mean saying what we know, when we know it. That’s why we decide to write earnings guidance sooner than originally expected. Looking forward, we will remain focused on long term shareholder value, executing our regulated growth plans and taking a conservative approach to our competitive business. At the same time, we will continue to evolving [ph] to meet the needs of our customers who rely on electricity to power their businesses in everyday lives. It’s my priority to move FirstEnergy to its next period of growth and success benefiting our customers, employees and investors. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Jim for a short review of 2014 financial results and additional details on our earnings guidance. Following Jim’s remarks we’ll open the call to your questions and we should have ample time to address whatever you’d like to talk about. Jim Pearson Thanks, Chuck and good morning everyone. This morning we’ve reported 2014 fourth quarter operating earnings of $0.80 per share and full year operating earnings of $2.56 per share, which was at the upper end of our guidance range. It was a strong quarter and solid year overall with numerous achievements. In somewhat of a change to past practice I won’t cover the results for the quarter in detail by segment since that information is available in the consolidated report or from our IR team. Instead, I will speak to the major drivers and events while leaving more time for Q&A. For the fourth quarter of 2014 GAAP results were in loss of $0.73 per share. This includes special items of $1.53 per share of which $1.23 is related to our annual pension and OPEB mark-to-market adjustment and as a non-cash item. This adjustment primarily reflects a 75 basis points decline in the discount rate and revise mortality assumptions used to measure our obligation. Moving now to our fourth quarter operating earnings drivers, consistent with the guidance we provided at EEI November, the FirstEnergy consolidated effective tax rate was 21.6% in the fourth quarter of 2014 predominantly reflecting a tax benefit associated with the resolution of state tax position. This drew a quarter-over-quarter benefit of $0.12 per share of which $0.10 was included in the corporate segment. And our regulated utilities overall distribution deliveries decreased fourth quarter earnings $0.01 per share. Total deliveries were down slightly primarily driven by milder weather which drove a 2.5% reduction in residential sales quarter-over-quarter. Industrial sales were up 1.8%, the sixth consecutive quarter of growth in that sector. On the transmission side we’ve reported fourth quarter operating earnings of $0.14 per share in line with our expectations as we ramped up our Energizing the Future initiative. At our competitive operations results came in slightly better than expected for the quarter. Commodity margin was down $0.08 per share primarily due to lower contract sales that resulted from the change in retail strategy as well as mild weather. These factors were partially offset by higher capacity revenues related to the increase in the auction clearing prices. Let’s move to a short overview of some of the key earnings drivers for 2014 which included a 6% earnings improvement in our transmission segment year-over-year as we launched our Energizing the Future Initiatives. On a competitive side of the business we experienced a year-over-year earnings decline of $0.51 per share due to the extreme weather events early in 2014, partially offset by the actions we put into place to reposition our sales portfolio and effectively hedge our generation by reducing weather sensitive loads. Adjusted EBITDA was $653 million in line with our expectations. At our regulated distribution utilities we’ve reported 2014 operating earnings of $1.93 per share in line with the midpoint of guidance we provided in November. We saw the full benefit of the West Virginia asset transfer but also rising expenses for maintenance, depreciation, general taxes and interest without commensurate recovery in rates. However, as Chuck said, new rates that we expect to be effective in 2015 will reset the base line for a majority of our utilities. Distribution deliveries increased 1% compared to 2013 on both on actual and weather adjusted basis. Industrial sales were up each quarter and ended the year up 2%. At our corporate segment we benefited from multiple tax initiatives and ended the year with an effective income tax rate of 29.3%. As we have previously discussed, we anticipate an effective tax rate of approximately 37% to 38% in 2015. Let’s now move to a discussion of some of the 2015 operating earnings guidance details. On the regulated utility side which is where we believe most estimates did not fully account for the increases in ongoing expenses such as depreciation, interest and taxes, we expect a midpoint of $1.82 per share. This includes new rigs in West Virginia which will effective this month and our expectation for new rates in Pennsylvania which would be effective in May based on the pending settlement. For New Jersey, we assumed revenues neutral to 2014 levels but included $0.08 per share for amortization of deferred storm cost for both 2011 and 2012 storms. We expect moderate low growth in distribution sales of about 1%. Commodity margin at our competitive operations is expected to increase by $0.44 per share in 2015 compared to 2014 primarily due to higher ATSI capacity prices. For 2015, our committed sales currently are 67 million megawatt hours. Our 2015 adjusted EBITDA for the competitive business has been revised to $875 million to $950 million, a slight decrease from our previous range given the drop in power prices since November. At our transmission segment, this year we expect an uplift of $0.11 per share related to the implementation of forward-looking formula rates as requested in our FERC filing and high rate base at both ATSI and TrAIL. An although FERC has initiated an enquiry related to our ATSI, ROE we anticipate the range for that segment should accommodate the outcome of that process. At corporate a combination of a more normal effective tax rate coupled with increase net financing cost is expected to reduce 2015 operating earnings by $0.42 per share in line with the drivers we provided at the EEI. Last evening, we published detailed information regarding our 2015 guidance on our fact book, which is posted on our website. With that, I’d like open the call for you questions. Question-and-Answer Session Operator Thank you. We would now… Jim Pearson Okay. As promised we have 35 minutes left for questions. Operator Thank you. [Operator Instructions] our first question is from Neel Mitra of Tudor, Pickering, Holt. Please go ahead. Neel Mitra Hi. Good morning. Jim Pearson Good morning, Neel. Neel Mitra Jim, I had a question on the O&M expense at the regulated utilities, so it seems to go up $0.08 in 2015 and then in your drivers in 2016, it looks like its flat. Was just wondering what’s causing the increase in 2015 and maybe what’s the normalized run rate on a percentage basis for increases going forward? Jim Pearson Going forward, Neel, I would say our O&M is going to be pretty much consistent with what we’re reflecting in 2015. In 2015, we’re seeing some additional O&M expenses associated with some of our rate filings and vegetation management mostly. That would be the primary driver. Chuck Jones And vegetation management are big piece of it, in light of the major storms that we saw, we been spending a lot of money reclaiming our rights of ways and expanding our rights of ways which has been capital expense and we’re going to be shifting more into more typically four year trim cycle which is going to shift some of that back to O&M. Neel Mitra Right. So in 2016, it looks it shows its kind of neutral, as I mean you expected to be flat or do you expect kind of a consistent percentage increases as 2014 or 2015 between 2015 and 2016? Jim Pearson No. In 2016 Neel we would expect that O&M to be flat to 2015. Neel Mitra Okay, great. And then, is there any kind of update on the timing of the higher PPAs as far as when we get a decision and whether that would be before RPM? Leila Vespoli Hi, Neel, this is Leila. Yes. So the procedural schedule slipped in Ohio little bit. We may have FirstEnergy supplemental testimony being due in March 2 as well as intervener testimony and Staff testimony on March 27 and hearings on April 13. Given that we’ve asked for – originally asked for an April 8 decision date, obviously that is not going to happen. But from our standpoint I still think we’re in a good place. Originally we had asked for April 8 date to commit two things. If you think about it from an FES perspective, FES needs to know to whether they have this generation and how to hedge it. So we need a reasonable period of time to allow FES to be put in to position to sell it. And also with regard to the RMP auction. I think given the schedule the way it is now we’re FES is going to have to bid those units in along with the rest of the competitive generation and it just kind of a missed opportunity for the utility side to do that. But again I don’t think a critical thing. it just would have been a nice to have kind of thing. So that’s – it was respect to the schedule for us. As you may AEP has a case dealing with the PPA coming up, I understand decision will probably come out in the next two to three weeks or so and I’m hopeful that will bode well for decision in our case. Neel Mitra Great. Thank you very much. Operator Thank you. the next question is from Dan Eggers from Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Dan Eggers Hey, good morning guys. Chuck, I think Jim hit it well that you prior lot of us in the industry were surprised by some the expense lines of the utility, if you look at the earned ROEs for the jurisdictions how do you think those ROEs look in 2015 versus what you expect going forward meaning, are you going to see improvement in ROEs beyond this year, or we normalized at this ROE level? Chuck Jones Well, Dan, here’s what I’d say, obviously I think given fiscal policy in our country there is going to continue to be pressure on ROEs as long as interest rates stay low. But absent regulatory action on our part I don’t see any way that those are going to change. So once we get through Pennsylvania, we’ll figure out where we end up with ATSI and we get through New Jersey. I think we’re going to be in a pretty stable place there and I expect later this year when we do an Analyst Meeting that we’ll be able to give you little more transparency into what those ROEs are company by company other than we kind of did the rate making and kind of a black box type environment. So hopefully we’ll give you more clarity on that later this summer. Dan Eggers Can I maybe ask that little clumsier than I meant to. From an earned ROE perspective, if you look at the different utilities and particularly with your rate cases having gotten resolved, should the earned realized ROEs kind of level out at where you are expecting in 2015 guidance or do you look at things in 2016 and 2017 that could allow ROEs to improve? Jim Pearson I would think they’re going to certainly level out at where we’re at in 2015 and I expect overtime there will be some modest improvement. Dan Eggers Okay, and I guess here Jim on the operating expenses you know being higher on the utilities something that you expected the Pension/OPEB in depreciation expenses seem to stand out from our math, can you just talk about what was underlying in some of those increases year-on-year and how we should think about those going forward? Jim Pearson Yes let me start with the Pension/OPEB line Dan, that’s primarily driven by the absence of a credit that is expiring over the 2014, 2015 timeframe. And then you have slightly higher pension expense associated with the mortality tables. So that’s what drove the reduction in that line. From a increase in what I would say the depreciation and property taxes when I look at distribution that’s pretty consistent year-over-year and if you look at 2013 to 2014 depreciation property taxes increased about $0.09 were showing about an $0.08 increase 2015 to 2016. And when you think about it, we’re spending about $1.4 billion, $1.3 billion annually at our distribution company and we have about $650 million of depreciation, so we’re spending more in our depreciation there so. I would look for that type of a consistent increase in depreciation and property taxes. From the transmission side, we showed a increase in depreciation property taxes of about $0.03 2013 to 2014 and that was showing the ramp up of our Energizing the future program. We spent $1.4 billion in capital; in 2014 we are expecting to spend just about $1 billion in 2015. So that $0.11 increase in property tax is really associated with that increased capital and essentially the timing of when it goes into service. Dan Eggers Okay. Just one last question just on the transmission side with the CapEx down this year versus last year, I know that was part of the plan you laid out in the fall but because you have a lot of smaller projects what could motivate you guys that allow the opportunity fee you spend more money in 2015 than you’ve budgeted so far? Chuck Jones I don’t think we’re going to spend more money in 2015 than we budgeted, so wouldn’t want to leave you with that impression. You know one of the critical aspects of that plan quite frankly is getting the workforce to be able to construct these projects and there is a constraint on that across our nation, but we have locked in through a partnership with Quanta workforce that will be available to FirstEnergy well into the future and I think that it makes sense to just approach this in a kind of steady predictable fashion. The drop off from 2014 to 2015 is due to the fact that we had a number of reliability projects that PJM ordered as a result of the late plant closings that were finishing up and putting in service early this year. Dan Eggers Great. thank you guys. Operator Thank you. The next question is from Paul Patterson of Glenrock Associates. Please go ahead. Paul Patterson Good morning, sorry about that. Can you hear me? Chuck Jones Yes, we can hear you Paul. Paul Patterson On the $0.30 per transmission that you guys are projecting for 2015, how much of that is in the [Indiscernible] Forward treatment that you guys are expecting? And just on that for a quarter, as I recall my understanding was that they really hadn’t signed off on the Ford test-years treatment. Correct me if I’m wrong, I know the settlement discussions must be encouraged and I think they are still going on, can you give us any flavour for that as well in this context of the Forward test-year stuff? Leila Vespoli This is Leila, I’ll answer the latter part of the question first and then turn it back over to Jim. So you are correct, we are in the settlement of process associate with that, there has been no set procedural schedule although if thing stay inline you might expect that decision in that case maybe late this year or slipping into the first quarter of the following year. With regard to the rate they have not left the forward looking tester, what they did is put the rate into effect subject to refund. So January 1st we started it and I think the refund date was something like the 12th or 13th of January. So that’s where it stands from a procedural schedule standpoint. Jim Pearson And Paul to your first question that $0.30 uptick in revenues there, the majority of that would be associated with actually in the forward-looking test year. Paul Patterson Okay. But you guys feels confident I guess I mean with respect to your settlement discussions and what have you about the forward test year treatment is that Leila that fair enough to say? Leila Vespoli I think if you look at past President at FERC I think the forward-looking test year part of it even though that is an issue that the party is raised is something that you know from my standpoint I feel very comfortable on, I mean some of the other things they are looking at you know – Interveners allege is you know — finding the system. They are also looking at the protocols for true up. So from my standpoint officially given how Chuck described what it is we’re doing and the reliability aspects of this I feel very comfortable where we are. The one thing we have always highlighted is the rate of return and the fact that we thought that that would be an issue and not withstanding that we felt that appropriate to go in with the formula rate. If you want to think about it every 100 basis points is about $16 million and so you know if you then look at past President you can do your own calculation with regard to that. Paul Patterson Okay, great. Jim Pearson Paul, I just want to point out, I’m sure you understand this, but because the 2014 expenditures were you know lagging rate mechanism and now the 2015 expenditures are in a forward-looking mechanism what you are seeing in terms of the shift in earnings from 2014 to 2015 really is two years worth of expenditures. So that’s not the number that you are going to expect to see going forward. Paul Patterson Great. Thanks for the clarity guys. And then Chuck you mentioned in your remarks that you wanted I believe the merchant business to be more self sustaining and also that your thoughts of the market was at a very low price and – power prices and what have you in that it just being the wrong time to divest the business if that were the case. And I guess the question that I have is A, if your market outlook changed would you be willing to perhaps look at breaking off these companies if it were possible? And then just B, what’s your appetite for additional investments perhaps and merchants just and in general how do you see the merchant arm of this business which is clearly very different than the rest of the business, how do you see that strategically going forward, do you see a possibility of a spin off or just in general how should we think about how you are really looking at this business and what you might do strategically to enhance value? Chuck Jones So here’s how I am thinking about it. And I have told several others who – asked this question, I wanted to long time ago never say never and never say always. So, things can change, but for now we’re looking at running that business in a mode where we remain cash flow positive where we used those market changes that are coming to take that cash and begin retiring some of the holding company debt that’s associated with that business and overtime put that business into a position where we can have more flexibility and how we look at it. And then if you can tell me what the market’s going to be like in two years, three years, four years, I think I could answer what I would do depending on what that market’s like. But I don’t think anybody can tell us what that’s going to be. So right now we’re hedged down, we’re committed to running a cash flow positive and we are committed to de-risking it so that it doesn’t continue to be the conversation when 80% of our company is regulated and generating absent [ph] today and getting everybody kind of in line with where we are at, generating consistent predictable regulated earnings, so that’s the plan. Paul Patterson Okay. Thanks so much. Jim Pearson Hey Manny, before we go move forward, I intended [ph] to know when I was giving Dan an explanation on the increase as of depreciation year-over-year I said it increased 2016 versus 2015 I should have said 2015 versus 2014. Operator Thank you. Our next question is from Angie Storozynski of Macquarie. Please go ahead. Angie Storozynski Thank you. I wanted to go back again to the distribution earnings, I mean we are clearly missing a piece here, so you’ve just gone to rate cases in Pennsylvania and New Jersey and West Virginia. You know what if your cost structure going into these rate cases, you showed us what is the pre-tax impact of the rate case settlement or decisions and yet we have all of this $0.25 plus drag from higher cost on the distribution side, shouldn’t that have been already reflected in the rate cases that you have gone through and also is this just an attempt to basically reset the base for future growth of this business and have fetched us just incremental on them [ph] spending that basically is not recurring? Jim Pearson Angie, yes this is Jim. Some of the expenses that we had incurred was to prepare us for these rate filings that we had. As I said earlier we would expect that our O&M is going to held flat going into next year and we will be realizing the full impact of all of those rate filings next year. As Chuck said earlier, I would look at 2015 as our base line that we are going to start growing those distribution earnings from that point and you know we’ll be said that provide more clarity on that at the analyst day meeting that we have. Angie Storozynski Okay, but can you please give us a sense of this growth that other regulated utilities can offer. I mean is this a meaningful step up starting in 2016 for distribution? Jim Pearson For this point we are not giving any type of 2016 guidance but you know this is the base line that we would expect to start showing growth at our distribution utilities. I don’t think we are going to put a percent out there yet until we fully understand what’s reflected in all of the regulatory outcomes and that we’re comfortable and confident that we’ll be able to deliver on that. Chuck Jones We’re got some work to do here, we have a settlement but it hasn’t been approved by the PA regulators, so I don’t think it’s fair for us to assume that we still got work to do in New Jersey and obviously we have a big case pending in Ohio. Once all that settles out then I think we are in a better position to decide what’s our investment strategy going forward, what’s our plan for each of those states going forward and that’s what we plan to tell you later this year once we get all those answers. Angie Storozynski Okay, thank you. Operator Thank you. The next question is from Stephen Byrd of Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Stephen Byrd Good morning. Chuck Jones Good morning. Stephen Byrd Wanted to just follow up I think really on Paul’s question on the sort of market outlook, you all are fairly physically close to a lot of the shale gas activity and we’re seeing a lot of development of shale gas. I was – just have a high level interested in your market take in terms of what the growth in shale gas really means longer term for power prices, what’s your expectations, it sounds like from Chuck’s earlier comments that you are relatively bullish on power prices relative to the four, I was just curious how you think about the dynamics from the shale gas that we are seeing being developed right around in your territory? Jim Pearson Well first of all I’m not sure what I said to make you think I was bullish on forward curve power freight [ph], because that’s quite to the contrary. I think as we look at the shale gas issue we have to look at it in a couple of different ways. The first way is on those forward price curves and we actually had IHS in yesterday to talk to us about their views. And I think you know for the foreseeable future, we’re not expecting any significant uptick in those forward price curves, so we are structuring our competitive business around those forwards as we know. The other side of that coin is it’s the economic development engine that’s driving growth in our territory and over the next few years we expect to connect over a 1000 megawatts of new load directly attributed to the midstream part of that business, you know there are discussions underway about upto three cracker plants in our region, if any or all of those come to fruition I think those are the foundation for an industrial revolution in the part of the country that we serve. So that’s the upside long term, the reality in short term is we expect gas prices to stay fairly low. There is some congestion in the gas markets that’s going on right now, but there is also roughly $20 billion worth of gas transmission projects that are under construction and expected to go in service over the next few years that will release some of that congestion and eliminate some of the basis difference between our zone and the rest of the country. And that might have a modest change but all in all we are planning to run our regulated business around the market forward as we see them today. Stephen Byrd Okay, great. And just wanted to touch base on your hedging strategy given that they are repaying [ph] your seen in the market any changes in terms of your thinking in terms of the volume that you’d like to hedge or given what you said about sort of your market outlook, any changes we should expect in terms of how you all think about hedging your generation fleet going forward? Chuck Jones I would say no. And what I said my prepared remarks was, we’ve structured that business in a way where we are trying to expose risks to volatility as associated to weather and to kind of protect ourselves against an unplanned generator outage, so we have the ability to generate 80 to 85 million megawatts hours a year. We’re going to sell something less than that, so that as the load fluctuates with weather our committed load fluctuates with weather and/or we have issues that any of our plants we have the ability to cover ourselves. That will – I understand were likely giving up some earnings potential from that business by taking risk out of it, but as I said earlier I’d rather make it more predictable, more stable and get it out of the conversation as much as I can so we can talk about the type of company FirstEnergy really is which is a large regulated utility with 6 million customers. Stephen Byrd That’s very clear. And just lastly very briefly the – we’ve seen some relatively extreme weather through the winter time, in general how has the fleet performed through this sort of this winter period that you are seeing, have you been satisfied with the performance of the fleet and anything compared to sort of prior years in terms of performance trends. Chuck Jones I would say our fleet has performed very well, the markets have not. So had two units at the Bruce Mansfield plant that didn’t run for six days in the last two weeks because the LMP at those plants we couldn’t make money, so we didn’t run out. So but the plants are available, they are running well, our generation team has done an amazing job between last year and this year getting ready for this winter. Stephen Byrd Great. Thank you very much. Operator Thank you. The next question is from Julien Dumoulin-Smith of UBS. Please go ahead. Julien Dumoulin-Smith Hi, good morning. Chuck Jones Hi Julien Jim Pearson Good morning, Julien. Julien Dumoulin-Smith Congratulations again. I really wanted to focus on the transmission side of the business, specifically the guidance. What are you guys assuming in terms of an earned ROE, I know that may be awkward in the context of your pending case for ATSI, but can you give us a sense of how much lag is embedded in that number and as you turn towards the forward test year and implementing that in kind of a run rate for 2016 what kind of improvement should we be thinking about there and what’s ultimately reflected in 2015 specifically? Chuck Jones All right. So I’m not sure if I got all of those, I’m going to answer the first quesztin and then you can answer or ask them one at a time, it will be easier for me to follow. So, but the first question on you know, we get that question a lot of what are we assuming about ATSI’s rate of return going forward and here’s how I view this. We just got first approval January 1st to move forward. There are – there’s a case now that going to be had and there’s a settlement process that’s going to be had and my view is we’re going to go into those arguing like 12.38%, it makes sense going forward and it’s stimulating the type of investment and reliability that I believe folks should want. And that’s our going in position, anything from there I give you a number then we are going to be negotiating from that number. So we’re not going to give you a number, we are going to go into those settlement that settlement process and we’re going to make the best case we can to make sure that we get the right return for our investors so that we can continue making these investments in the way that we are. Julien Dumoulin-Smith But from a regulatory lag perspective, what are you assuming if you can talk to that. Chuck Jones Regulatory lay we are assuming forward-looking rights. Julien Dumoulin-Smith Okay. So there’s not necessarily improvement next year as you have a full year or have you? Chuck Jones No. Julien Dumoulin-Smith Got you. And then in terms of the outlook for transmission CapEx how are you feeling about flowing dollars in the transmission versus distribution. Can you kind of elaborate a little bit on where you see capital going in the future and then subsequently I know we’ve discussed this before, on the distribution side, what kinds of future investments do you see now that you’ve gone or about to go through all of the state utility rate case? Chuck Jones So lets take transmission first. We’ve told you about 4.2 billion over a four year period that was in the second year of it was 1.4 billion the first year, it’s 900 and some million in the second year. After two years we’ll be right on track to be halfway through that and for 2016 and 2017 that will be the number. We have $15 billion worth of projects in addition to those that are in the four year plan that we can’t execute. That hopefully albeit in a position that when we talk to you later this year to articulate kind of more of a long term strategy for transmission and what we are planning to do there. But for the foreseeable future the numbers we’ve given you is what my plans are and I think one of the things that I have to start doing is saying what we are going to do and then doing what we say. So I don’t expect any change in that over the next couple of years. On the distribution front, the rate cases in Pennsylvania are a huge step. It rebases those utilities and it was a necessary step if we decide to make reliability improvement investments in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania has a methodology that’s available to us called the disc that we can make investments, but as I told you when you came in, we got to get through these rate cases first and then we’ll make decisions there. And in my prepared remarks I said once we get through the base rate case in New Jersey then I look forward to the certain amount of BTU and working together to figure out how we make JCP&L stronger going forward. In Ohio we have a DCR mechanism that we have been using to invest in those utilities. So later this year I know you want numbers, I’m not prepared to give you numbers today, but later this year, I think we can lay out a strategy of how much and where we plan to invest to start using our distribution utilities to improve service to customers and improve the picture for shareholders at the same time. Julien Dumoulin-Smith Got you. And you are interested in using the disc mechanism to be clear in terms of… Chuck Jones I think we will definitely look at it once we are done and then decide is that the best way and does it allow the right investments because more importantly to me is making the right investments that truly benefit customers. And if that makes more sense to make them and just have traditional rate cases then we’ll go that way. But to me we have to lay out what the plan is for customers first and make the right investments. If that can be done under the disc then the disc would be a smart way to do it. Julien Dumoulin-Smith Great. Thank you. Operator Thank you. Our next question is from Anthony Crowdell of Jefferies. Please go ahead. Anthony Crowdell Hey good morning. More of like I guess a long term view question or I guess earlier in your remarks you had said that you are not interested in selling the generation assets and I maybe paraphrasing just you thought that was kind of a departmental market, but as I think three to five years if you are locking up the assets now in terms of the regulatory agreement, aren’t you locking that in at these depressed prices and don’t – three to five years will not be able to benefit if there is a power price recovery? Chuck Jones Well, so let me opine a little bit on what’s going on in Ohio, and you know I am of the belief that long term those states that remained fully regulated when you have the opted—the ability to optimize between generation transmission and distribution you are going to serve customers best. Some of our states chose to go to competitive markets. This whole discussion in Ohio is around whether or not we trust regulators better to look out for the long term interest of customers or whether we trust markets better to look out for the long term interest of the customers. Those states that are net importers of generation end up with the highest cost and don’t have the ability to optimize between those three segments, so if the PPA is successful we’re basically taking those plants and turning it over to the regulators to regulate them again. They will have a chance to look at how we run them, to look at the prudency of our expenses, but we are saying I think we trust the regulator to look out for a future Ohio more than we do the markets today. Anthony Crowdell Great. thanks for taking my question. Operator Thank you. The next question is from Ashar Khan of Visium. Please go ahead. Ashar Khan Most of my questions have been answered. I just wanted to thank Tony for his leadership during the very very hard period and I wanted to congratulate you on your taking over the responsibility of the new position. Thank you. Chuck Jones Well thank you. And I’m sure Tony does too, and I’m sure he’s listening. We don’t have a microphone in front of him, but I’m sure he is listening this morning. Operator Thank you. The next question is from Paul Ridzon of Keybanc. Please go ahead. Paul Ridzon Just I think you made a comment about 100 basis point of ROE at actually was it $16 million of net income? Leila Vespoli That was a comment I made and pre-tax, yes. Paul Ridzon Pre-tax, okay. And then I know you are not going to give a growth rate, but given the moving pieces we have with the timing of Pennsylvania rates coming in and New Jersey, do you think 2016 will be a step up from 2015 at the on the regulated side obviously competitive is going to be very well… Chuck Jones Well 2015 only includes seven twelfths of what Pennsylvania is worth, so in 2016 it will be a full years worth of treatment and then beyond that we need to see where we land in New Jersey and Ohio. Paul Ridzon And what was your assumption as far as New Jersey in guidance? Jim Pearson Yes what we assumed in the guidance Paul was that it would be revenue neutral and that there would be $0.08 of storm caused amortization associated with the 2011 and 2012 storms. Paul Ridzon Effective one, is that going to bleed into 2016 as well? Jim Pearson That would be effective March 1st , so you might have just slightly higher amortization year-over-year. Paul Ridzon Any sense of when you are going to hold your Analyst Day? Chuck Jones Not yet. Paul Ridzon Okay, thank you very much… Chuck Jones It will be after we have a decision in Ohio, a decision in New Jersey, a decision hopefully on ATSI and then we’ll go from there. Paul Ridzon Okay thank you very much. Operator Thank you. The next question is from Brian Chin with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Brian Chin Hi good morning. Chuck Jones Good morning, Brian. Brian Chin About a year ago the management team had expressed a possible interest in looking at the REIT structure for transmission growth opportunities and given now that there is an entity out there that’s you can see what the cost of capital is like, just wanted to see if you could give us an updated sense of that and Chuck also any comments you have there on your perspective? Chuck Jones I’m not sure. We are always looking at any option that’s out there, but I’m not sure that we saw at that time or see today any real benefit to a REIT for our company. Our company is a little complex in terms of we’ve got transmission that’s inside utilities, transmission that’s inside the ATSI, transmission that’s inside TrAILCo the transmission that’s inside ATSI, the real estate is owned by the utilities and I just think it’s a distraction that would take a lot of time and effort of the management team to figure out that we don’t need to be looking at right now because it doesn’t provide any significant long term financial advantage for us. Brian Chin That’s very clear. And then just one additional question you had mentioned in your prepared comments PJM West plant, plant box and some plants appear to be a little bit more struggling here. Is the primary criteria that you are thinking about cash flow accretion it seemed to be that you are leaning towards trying to get the merchant generation business to be cash flow positive so is that really the criteria that we should be thinking from a plant perspective here? Chuck Jones So we have the merchant generation business cash flow positive for the next four years at market forwards as we know them and with capacity as we know it. So that’s not our goal, that’s where we are at. As we see the changes that are happening with the capacity market reforms, that’s going to be additive. We’ve put ourselves in a position with our generating fleet that we’re not forced to generate because we have load committements. We’ve got a significant amount of our generation that’s going to be market driven generation. That gives us the ability like I said two weeks ago to say if Mansfield is not in the money we’re not going to run it and loose money. So we’re going to optimize it and that optimization is something that we’re going to do day in day out. We’re going to do day in kind of more as we look at any options on the retail side as new customer opportunities present themselves, but the goal is, is cash flow positive and were there. And then beyond that we want to obviously drive it more cash flow positive so that we can start getting additional flexibility in that part of our business down the road. Brian Chin Thank you very much. Meghan Beringer Manny we have time for one more question. Operator Certainly. The final question comes from the line of Michael Lapides of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Michael Lapides Hey guys, thanks guys for taking my call this late in the hour. Just thinking about the balance sheet and capital structure, you guys did a really good job year and a half or so ago of reducing the debt levels at the competitive business. You narrow in a position where you’ve got a lot of debt at the holding company level and a lot of it is short term or floating rate, many economist would argue that short term debt is probably at its all time lows and that directionally short term debt is likely heading high up. Do you have any thoughts in terms of how you can deal with the significant amount of short term debt that’s on the balance sheet, meaning whether you would turn [ph] it out and therefore kind of lock in a long term interest rate for that and kind of give yourself some multiyear certainty of that or would you potentially pay it off and if so where – how would you where would you receive the proceeds or how would you generate the proceeds to pay down some debt? Jim Pearson Michael, at this point I think we need to see how a number of these initiatives play out. If you think about the PPA in Ohio finalizing the rate cases, the potential for the capacity performance product I think that will give us a much clear sense of what our cash projections will be going forward. At this point we have no plans to term out any of the long term debt that’s sitting at the Holdco. I do agree with you that we are carrying more debt at that level than either Chuck and I are comfortable with, but as we lay out our long term plan going forward, it will be our intention to strengthen the balance sheet and with that reducing some of that debt at the holding company, but at this point I cannot give you a specific plan to do that until we know some of the outcomes of these major initiatives. Michael Lapides Got it. Thanks Jim and Chuck, congratulations. Chuck Jones Thanks Mike. Chuck Jones Okay, well I’d like to thank you all for your continued support of FirstEnergy and I think you know our goal today was to give you a clear and transparent view of our company and to build the foundation for our growth strategy that we will lay out in more detail this year at the analyst meeting. I’m proud to have the opportunity to take over for Tony. I am proud of our employees at FirstEnergy because I truly believe that’s what makes our company strong and I’m thankful for our six million customers and obviously all of our investors. Take care everyone. Operator Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today’s teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation.

How Rebalancing Can Help Improve Earnings Quality And Lower Multiples

By Jeremy Schwartz A key process driving the WisdomTree earnings-weighted Index approach is a rebalancing process that refreshes constituent weights based on changes in Earnings Stream® and relative value. In earnings-weighted indexes, changes at the rebalance are made based on each stock’s relative price appreciation compared to its relative earnings growth: Companies whose stock prices increased compared to their peers’ while their earnings decreased compared to their peers’ would typically see reduced weight in the WisdomTree Earnings Indexes. In a market cap-weighted index, the only driver of weight is the relative change in market capitalization, which is usually driven by the stock price. Companies whose stock prices fell while their earnings were flat or grew would typically see increased weight in the WisdomTree Earnings Indexes. Companies that have not been profitable on a cumulative basis over the previous four quarters are removed to ensure the continued focus on earnings-generating stocks-one element that improves the quality of the basket by removing more speculative, unprofitable ventures. Weight is also shifted to the relatively more profitable companies and those that have seen highest earnings growth. One way to gauge the impact of the rebalance process is to look at the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, essentially the price of the Index divided by its earnings per share before and after the rebalance. Below we show the P/E multiples across market segments. As will be shown, the rebalance can have a large impact on a portfolio’s P/E ratio. U.S. Equity Index Estimated 12-Month P/E Ratios* (as of 11/30/14) (click to enlarge) For definitions of terms and indexes in the chart, visit our glossary . A Lower P/E Ratio Approach: Even prior to the 2014 rebalance, each earnings-weighted Index exhibited a lower P/E ratio than its market capitalization-weighted counterpart. After the rebalance, the P/E ratios dropped even more significantly compared to these benchmarks. This is a key benefit of the annual rebalance process that forces the discipline of reweighting to the fundamental value of the underlying constituents in the Index. Multiples Contracted Anywhere between 7% and 40% across All Indexes: The WisdomTree SmallCap Earnings Index saw multiples contract the greatest at approximately 40%. WisdomTree requires each constituent of its earnings family to demonstrate profitability. This addresses the problem seen in the Russell 2000 Index -namely, a high index-level P/E ratio that is due to index-level earnings being depressed by constituents with negative earnings-by eliminating firms that have had negative earnings over the prior 12 months. Since there are more constituents in small-cap indexes that have delivered negative earnings over the prior 12 months than there are in large-cap indexes, this effect is more pronounced within this size segment. Rebalance Track Record-Consistency in Raising Return on Equity (ROE) Now that we have studied the impact of the rebalance on lowering P/E multiples, we will show the impact of the rebalance in helping to raise the “quality” of the earnings Indexes, measured by the ROE. Post-Rebalance Raising ROE and Improving Quality (click to enlarge) For definitions of terms and indexes in the chart, visit our glossary. This chart illustrates how the rebalance has raised the ROE across four WisdomTree Earnings Indexes. In the 2014 rebalance, for example, the ROE of the WisdomTree SmallCap Earnings Index before and after the rebalance was 7.43% and 11.97%, respectively. As the bull market in equities carries on, it becomes ever more important to pay attention to the underlying valuations and market fundamentals. Above we show how the rebalance both lowered the P/E ratios of each WisdomTree Earnings Index and raised the ROE, a key metric of quality. We believe these are attractive attributes of market exposures, made even more important by the continued gains in the market we have seen in recent years. Important Risks Related to this Article Investments focusing on certain sectors and/or smaller companies increase their vulnerability to any single economic or regulatory development. Jeremy Schwartz, Director of Research As WisdomTree’s Director of Research, Jeremy Schwartz offers timely ideas and timeless wisdom on a bi-monthly basis. Prior to joining WisdomTree, Jeremy was Professor Jeremy Siegel’s head research assistant and helped with the research and writing of Stocks for the Long Run and The Future for Investors. He is also the co-author of the Financial Analysts Journal paper “What Happened to the Original Stocks in the S&P 500?” and the Wall Street Journal article “The Great American Bond Bubble.”

Empire District Electric’s (EDE) CEO Brad Beecher on Q4 2014 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Empire District Electric Co (NYSE: EDE ) Q4 2014 Earnings Conference Call February 6, 2015 13:00 ET Executives Dale Harrington – Director, IR Brad Beecher – President & CEO Laurie Delano – VP, Finance & CFO Analysts Brian Russo – Ladenburg Thalmann Paul Zimbardo – UBS Michael Goldenberg – Luminus Management Tim Winter – Gabelli & Company Operator Welcome to the Empire District Electric Company Fourth Quarter 2014 Results Conference Call and Webcast. [Operator Instructions]. I would now like to turn the conference over to Dale Harrington. Please go ahead, sir. Dale Harrington Thank you, Dan and good afternoon, everyone. I would like to welcome you to our year-end 2014 earnings conference call but let me begin by introducing Brad Beecher, President and Chief Executive Officer and Laurie Delano, Vice President Finance and Chief Financial Officer who in a few moments will be providing an overview of our 2014 results and our 2015 expectations as well as some highlights on other key matters. Our press release announcing 2014 results was issued yesterday afternoon. The press release and a live webcast of this call including our slide presentation are available on our website at www.empiredistrict.com. A replay of the call will be available on our website through May 6th of this year. Before we begin I must remind you that our discussion today includes forward-looking statements and the use of non-GAAP financial measures. Slide 2 of our accompanying slide deck and the disclosures in our SEC filings present a list of some of the risks and factors that could cause future results to differ materially from our expectation. I will caution that these lists are not exhaustive and the statements made in our discussion today are subject to risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict. Our SEC filings are also available upon request or maybe obtained from our website or from the SEC. I would also direct you to our earnings press release for further information on why we believe the presentation of estimated earnings per share impact of individual items and the presentation of gross margin each of which are non-GAAP presentations is beneficial for investors in understanding our financial results. And with that I will now turn the call over to Brad Beecher. Brad Beecher Thank you, Dale. Good afternoon everyone and thank you for joining us. 2014 was a good year for Empire shareholders. The one year total shareholder return was about 35.6%, record earnings record high stock prices, a strong balance sheet with improved retained earnings and a sustainable growing dividend that increased by 2% in the fourth quarter were highlights for the year. Today we will discuss further our financial results for the fourth quarter and 12 months ended December 31, 2014 period, recent activities impacting the company and our outlook for 2015. As shown on slide 3, yesterday we reported consolidated earnings for the fourth quarter of 2014 of 11.1 million or $0.26 per share compared to the same quarter in 2013 when earnings were 15.2 million or $0.35 per share. Earnings for the 12 months ended December 31, 2014 period were 67.1 million or a $1.55 per share. 12 months ended 2013 earnings were 63.4 million or a $1.48 per share. During their meeting yesterday the Board of Directors declared a quarterly dividend of $0.26 per share payable March 16, 2015 for shareholders of record as of March 2nd. In December we completed in-service testing for the Asbury Air Quality Control System. The Missouri Public Service Commission staff determined that as of December 15, 2014 the Asbury AQCS equipment hadn’t met the in-service criteria. The determination by the staff that the in-service criteria have been met is a vital step for the rate case we filed in Missouri on August 29th of last year. As you may recall in order for the commission staff to allow a December 31 true-up date it was required that that Asbury be in service prior to February 1, 2015. Recovery of costs associated with the Asbury AQCS is the primary component of the Missouri Case. I will remind you that we’re seeking the increased electric rates by about $24.3 million annually or about 5.5%. Missouri Commission staff has indicated in testimony filed January 29th that the true-up period for this case will in [ph] December 31, 2014. Local public hearings for this case have been scheduled for February 19 in Joplin and February 20th in Reeds Spring. The Missouri Commission has scheduled an evidentiary hearing at its offices in Jefferson City, the weeks of April 6 through 10 and April 13 through 17. In the interim the Missouri Commission staff will be conducting a construction audit and prudence review on the Asbury Project. True-up direct testimony is scheduled to be filed on April 30th and a true-up evidentiary hearing occur in May 13th. New customer rates as a result of this case will be effective no later than July 26, 2015. Initially we provided a cost estimate for the Asbury AQCS project without AFUDC of between a $112 million and a $130 million. We later updated investors that we expected to be in the bottom half of the range. Today as a result of solid project management I’m proud to report we expect cost to be around a 112 million without AFUDC and around a 120 million including AFUDC. In December we filed a request with the Kansas Corporation Commission for an environmental cost recovery rider, rates from our Kansas request will be effective no later than August 3, 2015. Additionally we plan to file a request for an environmental cost recovery rider in Arkansas later this month. In Oklahoma we filed a request on January 9th to amend our Southwest Power Pool Transmission Tariff. Our proposed amendment request the removal of a requirement to file a base rate case by July 2015. The SPP tariff was established in January 2012 to allow recovery of our Oklahoma share of transmission charges assessed by the Southwest Power Pool. A requirement of that tariff was that Empire must file a base rate case by July 2015 because of the Asbury Air Quality Control System completion in early ’15 and the Riverton 12 combined cycle [ph] conversion projects scheduled for 2016 and Oklahoma filing in 2015 would necessitate a second rate case filing in 2016. Since rate cases are costly for customers we are asking for this Oklahoma requirement to be removed. If our request is approved we would plan to file a single rate case in 2016 to capture costs from both the Asbury and Riverton projects. We announced yesterday that our 2015 earnings guidance falls within the weather normalized range of a $1.30 to a $1.45 per share down from our 2014 results of a $1.55 per share. The lower range reflects the full year of high expense primarily related to the Asbury AQCS upgrade and a new maintenance contract for the Riverton facility offset with only a partial year of new Missouri rates to recover their Asbury investment and other increased cost. I will now turn the call over to Laurie to provide additional details of our financials. Laurie Delano Thank you, Brad. Good afternoon everyone. I’m very pleased to be reviewing such positive financial results with you today, the information I would discuss today will supplement the press release we issued late yesterday and as always the earnings per share numbers referenced throughout the call are provided on an after-tax estimated basis. I will briefly touch on our 2014 fourth quarter results before I discuss our annual results. Our fourth quarter earnings of $0.26 per share reflect a more normal quarter of winter weather when compared to the previous year’s fourth quarter. They also reflect increases in operating and maintenance expenses when compared to last year. Slide 4, shows the quarter-over-quarter changes that impacted our earnings. Gross margins for revenues less fuel and purchase power expense decreased $1.5 million decreasing earnings by $0.02 per share quarter-over-quarter. We estimate the impact of the warmer weather and other volume metric factors compared to last year decreased revenue by about $3.2 million, decreasing margin by about $0.03 per share. This decrease was driven primarily by an 8.1% decrease in sales for our residential customers. Commercial sales were only down about 1%, the weather impact on commercial sales was mitigated in part of increased sales throughout our territory as well as increased sales at the New Mercy Hospital as it prepares to open in March. Increases in operating and maintenance expenses, decreased earnings about $0.06 per share driven by increased transmission operation and production maintenance expenses. Small changes in depreciation, AFUDC and other income and expense rounded out the remaining $0.01 per share decrease in earnings for the fourth quarter. Turning to our annual rates, as Brad mentioned earlier, our net income increased $3.7 million or $0.07 per share. Slide 5, provides a breakdown of the various components that resulted in this year-over-year per share increase. Consolidated gross margin increased $17.1 million over 2013 adding an estimated $0.25 per share. As shown on in the callout box on slide 5, we estimate that increased customer rates from our Missouri rate case effective in April 1 of 2013 added about $12.5 million to revenue or about $0.16 per share to margin. We estimate weather and other volume metric increases on the electric side of the business added an estimate $4.6 million to revenue year-over-year or about $0.05 per share to margin. The weather effect from the gas segment added about a penny per share. The volume metric change was driven by a combination of weather and higher commercial sales again including positive impacts from the construction of the New Mercy hospital. Increased customer accounts added an estimate $1.5 million year-over-year increasing margin about a penny per share. Changes in other miscellaneous revenues primarily related to SPP transmission revenues and non-volume fuel related items netted together rounded out the remaining increase in electric segment, revenues adding a combined net impact of $0.02 per share to margin. Increases in our consolidated operating and maintenance expense offset the positive margin impact decreasing earnings about $0.17 per share. The callout box on slide 5 provides a breakdown of this impact. As we’ve discussed on previous calls the largest individual O&M increase was for transmission operation expenses primarily related to SPP charges. This added expense reduced earnings about $0.08 per share. Increases in distribution and production maintenance along with general LIBOR cost combined to reduced earnings about $0.11 per share, other smaller cost increases reduced earnings to a total of $0.02 per share. These increases were offset by the effect of lower healthcare cost about $0.02 per share as well as the $0.02 per share positive effect of the regulatory reversal of a gain on sale of the assets that we recorded in 2013. And as you all will recall we also recorded a similar entry in 2013 for our planned disallowance. This 2013 write-off also has the impact of increasing earnings year-over-year by $0.03 per share. Continuing on with slide 5, depreciation and amortization expenses decreased earnings per share $0.05 driven by higher levels of plant and service and increased depreciation rates resulting from our April 2013 Missouri case. Increases in property taxes brought earnings down another $0.02 per share. Increased allowance for funds used during construction or AFUDC added about $0.06 per share to earnings reflecting our Asbury and Riverton construction projects. Small changes in other income and deductions in the effects of additional stock issued under our various stock plans round out the remaining $0.03 decrease in earnings per share. On our balance sheet we have $90.3 million in retained earnings as of December 31, 2014. We had $44 million of short term debt outstanding at the end of 2014 and we currently have $68 million outstanding. We received the proceeds from our $60 million private placement of first mortgage bonds on December 1. As Brad said we announced in our press release yesterday that we expect our full year 2015 weather normalized earnings to be within the range of a $1.30 to a $1.45 per share. Before I talk about the drivers for our new guidance I would like to review our actual 2014 results as compared to our original 2014 guidance. Slide 6 provides this information, in developing our 2014 guidance we assumed 30 year average weather, modest growth as Joplin continued the three building projects and the extra quarter of Missouri rates from our 2013 rate case and revenues from our 2013 Arkansas rate case filing. This was offset with a corresponding effect of increased O&M expenses. Our actual 2014 results of a $1.55 were higher than the midpoint of our original guidance range primarily due to one higher than expected electric and gas sales and two lower than expected operating and depreciation expenses. Higher sales added about $0.03 to our earnings per share on the electric side of the business, and about a penny to our gas segment results. Favorable weather and higher commercial sales again inclusive of the New Mercy hospital were the primary drivers. Decreased cost totaling $0.06 per share were driven by lower than expected generating plant operating expenses and lower than expected SPP charges. Also depreciation was lower due to the timing of various in-service dates of our construction projects. On slide 7 we highlight the drivers of our decrease in earnings expectations in 2015. First as in the past our estimates are based on normal weather with a modest positive sales growth as we have previously disclosed we still expect this growth to be at a level of less than 1% per year over the next several years. We’re also assuming our Missouri rate case will be effective as filed. We also assume our Arkansas and Kansas rate case filings will go into effect as filed. Operating and maintenance expenses will be higher primarily due to a new maintenance contract for our Riverton facility. Depreciation expense will increase reflecting the Asbury AQCS project in service for a full year and an estimated 20 year life rate and we will also see increased depreciation for assets placed in service since our last case. The impact on depreciation from the Asbury AQCS project alone is approximately $0.09 on an earnings per share basis. We will also see increases in property tax and interest expense. The higher interest expense reflects our December 2014 debt issuance and expected issuance in 2015. Our AFUDC impact will be lower in 2015 now that as Asbury is complete and in service. Other factors considered in our range are variations in customer growth and usage as well as variations in operating and maintenance expense. Again our range does not take into account any changes to our Missouri rate case filing or reflect any December 31, 2014 true-up numbers. As a reminder we have summarized the components of our Missouri rate case as currently filed on slide 8. On slide 9, we provide the historical and projected capital expenditures and net plant in-service numbers that reflect our current capital expenditure plan. No changes have been made since the update we provided last quarter. The 2015 expenditures reflect our ongoing cost for the Riverton combined cycle project. On this slide w also present our net plant levels less deferred taxes to approximate our estimated rate base. To finance these projects we expect to issue some debt financing in the middle of 2015. Right now we believe the debt offering will be in the range of $60 million but could be subject to change based on expenditure timing and other factors. This financing combined with the addition of internal equity from our dividend reinvestment and stock purchase plans and our combined build of retained earnings will help keep us near our target 50:50 debt equity capital structure. I will now turn the discussion back over to Brad. Brad Beecher Thank you, Laurie. As Laurie referenced and as shown in slide 10, in addition to the work completed in Asbury we’re moving ahead with construction at our Riverton power plant. The foundation work is complete and most of the major equipment is on-site for the Riverton Unit 12 conversion. As of December 31, our total cost of this project is 88.5 million. As a reminder we estimate our total cost of completion to be between a 165 million to a 175 million. We continue to successful execute our growth strategy to build rate base infrastructure to serve our customers and meet environmental regulations. The completion of the Asbury AQCS and on-going Riverton 12 combined cycle projects are the largest additions to these plan. Empire remains a high quality, pure play, regulated electric and natural gas utility. We’re focused on our vision of making lives better every day with reliable energy and service. We’re committed to meeting today’s energy challenges with least cost resources while ensuring reliable energy for our customers and attractive return for our shareholders and a rewarding environment for our employees. I will now turn the call back to the operator for your questions. Question-and-Answer Session Operator [Operator Instructions]. And our first question comes from Brian Russo of Ladenburg Thalmann. Please go ahead. Brian Russo When I look at kind of the midpoint of your 2015 guidance, kind of implies about an 8% earned ROE which is quite a meaningful amount of regulatory lag versus you know kind of 9-8 current allowed ROE. I just want to maybe drill deeper into the lag. I think you quantified the impact for the Asbury depreciation. Could we quantify the O&M impact as well and then kind of differentiate what structural lag versus what’s just timing lag related to your base rate cases. Laurie Delano We don’t really anticipate a huge O&M impact from the Asbury project, we will see an increase in our consumables, limestone, activated carbon and those sorts of things. However we actually recovered those back through our fuel adjustment. Obviously we will see an increase in property taxes from the Asbury project and if you look at the slide where our rate case summarization takes place you will see that we have asked for about $2.9 million in property taxes associated with that case. So that kind of gives you a feel for what that directionally might be. Brian Russo Okay, can you remind us of the lag that you experience on transmission cost and property taxes each year? Brad Beecher Today neither property taxes or transmission expenses are recovered in trackers and so they go through a normal procedure. So in this case what we’re recovering in our rates is reflective of the rates that we received in April of 2013. So, we have asked for in this current case the transmission expenses to be included in our fuel adjustment cost to help reduce that lag in the future. But that’s something that will have to be taken in account in this current case. Your other question, you had asked earlier relating to structural lag versus lag on timing of the cases. I have a hard time differentiating that, in Missouri we have a 11 month process and using this case is a good example for illustration is any – we have filed the case at the end of August of last year. We will expect rates by about July, we’re going to get a true-up through the end of the year and so that’s about as tight as we can cut it as it relates to the biggest CapEx expenditure. So we have 6 or 7 months lag on those big CapEx after they go in service before we get recovery in rates. And so that’s what we experienced on Asbury and we’re seeing today and it’s the kind of representative of the kind of lag we will see on Riverton 12 as well. Brian Russo Okay. In your last Missouri rate case you guys actually settled and rates went into effect in April. Was that several months earlier than the 11 month process or was the filing date different than this go around [ph]? Brad Beecher Brian, my memory is the rates went into effect a little bit early and when you get into settlement sometimes that’s one of the variables that we consider when we’re deciding whether to sell or not, it’s where the rates can go in a little bit early. I don’t recall the exact dates on the last case we will have to – we can dig that out later. Brian Russo Okay, so I guess if you did settled rates went into effect earlier obviously there would be less lag in ’15? Brad Beecher If that were to happen, that’s true. Brian Russo And then just back to your comment, the lag experience with Asbury this year and then the lag associated with Riverton upgrade next year. Is it kind of implied that you’re going to be experiencing similar regulatory lag in ’16 and ’15 and 2017 should be the year where we see improved returns? Brad Beecher What I was trying to get across is we’re going to have similar lag on Riverton 12 as we have on Asbury AQCS so that would say we’re going to have lag in 2016 and you can look at our CapEx forecast for ’16, ’17 and ’18 and we do drop off after Riverton 12 and that should give our shareholders a little bit of a better change to recover their allowed rate of return. Operator Our next question comes from Julien Dumoulin-Smith of UBS. Please go ahead. Paul Zimbardo It’s actually Paul Zimbardo. First question, on the estimated rate base slides, it looks like there is a little bit of a change from the last quarter, is that just bonus depreciation or something of alike? Laurie Delano For the rate base slides, yes, that would be correct. Paul Zimbardo And does that impact the rate case filing at all? Brad Beecher So, when we made the rate case filing bonus depreciation had not yet been extended and so our filing did not reflect that and same way when we put this slide together last quarter it had not yet being extended. So that accelerated depreciation will be reflected as one of the many true-ups that will happen at the end of the December 31 true-up. And as you pointed out bonus depreciation is a reduction or offset to rate base. Paul Zimbardo So a follow-up on the last question about quantifying some of those 2015 earnings driver, I apologize if I missed it, did you say what the impact of the new maintenance contract was– Laurie Delano I didn’t say but on the slide that summarizes our rate case filing assumptions, we call that out at $3.9 million. Operator [Operator Instructions]. Our next question comes from Michael Goldenberg of Luminus Management. Please go ahead. Michael Goldenberg So I want to go back to 2016, I understand 2015 is a big down year but I was under the assumption – I think we have discussed on a several occasion, you kind of always seem to point investors to when you think about long term, when you think about 2016, do rate base times equity times ROE and all these little changes in O&M are long haul, they even out and then structural lag probably should be more than let’s say a 100 bps that was kind of the impression that I think over the years have got. Is it fair to say that that may no longer be the best way to think about the company structurally? Brad Beecher If you look at the last several years for EDE we have been closer to 200 basis points regulatory lag and we have been looking at about 8% ROE in something that’s in that 10% kind of ROE range as people think about our allowed ROEs and so we have had closer to 200 basis points of lag historically. For 2014 we were at about 8.75% I think actually ROE, so we got down to about a 150 basis point to lag [inaudible]. In the big CapEx years we’re going to struggle a little bit more but as growth has come down in our industry and I’m really talking about our sales growth, it really tends to exacerbate regulatory lag when you don’t have any new kilowatt hour sales to help pay for increased expenses. Michael Goldenberg So help me understand this then, generally the way the rate cases work even with in stage with structural lag in your first year of rate case, let’s say it’s a three year cycle. Your drag is generally the lowest right when you get the rates and then I agree that if you have a lot of CapEx then by the end of year three that structural lag increases and that’s generally the way it works so. I kind of thought or was working on the assumption that if you take the period of July ’15 through June ’16, structure, that should be the time of your least drag. Is that not the right way or is the drag actually going to then get even worse? Brad Beecher I think you’re thinking about it correctly. Once our rates go into effect in ’15 until such time as we start big depreciation expense on Riverton 12 going into service, that will be the time of least regulatory lag in that kind of window, that year after you get rates and before you start depreciation and O&M on the new assets coming into service. Michael Goldenberg Okay and just to be precise, Riverton depreciation starts when? Laurie Delano Well we’re assuming that Riverton will come online in mid-2016 and so you would assume that deprecation would start immediately after it comes online Michael Goldenberg So then we would see drags of even more than 200 bps? Laurie Delano Well we haven’t really quantified that but – I mean it’s – you’re going to see the same, a little bit the same scenario again depending on what the depreciation amount is for Riverton and the other thing you see is AFUDC benefit dropping off when that plant comes into service, you know that’s happening on the Asbury project also. Brad Beecher And then as we’ve talked about earlier when the new plants come online we have got property taxes that get assessed [ph] and we have lag on property taxes as well. Michael Goldenberg But yes you get the revenue step up to make up for all of that and give you as much to the bottom-line as AFUDC used to, isn’t that the general concept, that when a plant goes into service. If everything is done ideally then revenue just increases for the amount that the expenses are and the net income stays roughly the same for a $1 off CapEx whether it’s AFUDC or cash. Laurie Delano Yes, when your rates go into effect that’s true but in those intervening months until they go into effect the time that plant comes online that’s where you’re going to drag. Michael Goldenberg And then just finally, conceptually thinking, yes it’s very good ’14 right? You made $1.55 and that’s before rate case, now you actually are going to get new rates and you do know how to CapEx and yet your earnings are going down and just judging by the structure of going into ’16 and then more depreciation. It’s hard to see how structurally putting in all this CapEx is actually – instead given the situation Missouri, does it actually incentivize investment where the company actually financially hurts from putting in more and more CapEx? Brad Beecher Well in the end our business model in Missouri is we earn a return on assets that we build to serve our customers. We’re going through structural pain and this is a perfect example, Asbury went into service. It’s been used to service customers, we’re depreciating it today and expensing it in early ’15. We’re paying property taxes, we’re paying O&M and we’re getting no recovery from customers until rates go into effect no later than July 26th and that is Missouri structural lag and it is a disincentive but it is the world that we live in. We’ve worked very, very hard in the Missouri legislature last couple of years trying to get some relief on plan in-service, trying to get relief on property taxes and we have so far being unsuccessful. Operator [Operator Instructions]. And another question just came in from Tim Winter of Gabelli & Company. Please go ahead. Tim Winter I just had one follow-up, Brad. Where is the legislation stand right now in Missouri to give property taxes and transmission expenses [ph] and whatever else included. Brad Beecher At the current time Tim to my knowledge there is not any legislation filed related to plant in-service and/or property taxes. We have got a lot of uncertainty in the state right now as the governor is got a statewide energy plan underway, I don’t know if you participated but there has been input meetings across the state and we would expect a statewide energy plan to come out sometime May kind of timeframe. We have got 111(d) and how that’s going to get finalized. So right now we’re still – I’m expecting a pretty quiet year in Jeff City, not saying that something can’t get done but I’m expecting a pretty quiet year in Jeff City, not saying that something can’t get done but I’m expecting a pretty quiet year in Jeff City as it relates to this topic. Tim Winter The statewide energy plan include something about – would address this issue? Because you’re not the only utility in the state that has this issue. Brad Beecher We’re absolutely not the only utility in the state with this issue. The statewide energy plan is comprehensive, it’s everything that you can think about from solar to distributed generation to responses and emergencies to what we need to build assets just about everything has been talked about in one work group or another. So, it’s a work in progress, it’s being led by a member of the governor staff and so we will have to see where it goes. But we certainly brought up this concern. Operator And this concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Brad Beecher for any closing remarks. Brad Beecher Thank you. Before we close I remind you that Laurie and I will be at the UBS Analyst Day in Boston on March 3rd and 4th and Laurie and Dale will be the AJA Mini-Forum in Dallas on March 17th and 18th. Also we will be saying goodbye to Jen Watson at the end of April as she has decided to retire. Jen has served Empire in the Secretary and Treasurer positions since 1995. We thank Jen for her service and wish her the best. The Board has named Dale Harrington to replace Jen as Secretary beginning May 1, 2015. Dale will also continue in this role of Director of Investor Relations. Thank you for joining us today and have a great weekend. Operator The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect. Copyright policy: All transcripts on this site are the copyright of Seeking Alpha. However, we view them as an important resource for bloggers and journalists, and are excited to contribute to the democratization of financial information on the Internet. (Until now investors have had to pay thousands of dollars in subscription fees for transcripts.) So our reproduction policy is as follows: You may quote up to 400 words of any transcript on the condition that you attribute the transcript to Seeking Alpha and either link to the original transcript or to www.SeekingAlpha.com. All other use is prohibited. 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