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CenterPoint Energy: Consider This High Yield, Low Growth Utility

Summary I’ve written about several utility companies lately. They varied in growth and dividend yield. In one article, I said Southern Company should be avoided at the moment. In this article, I will write about investing in CenterPoint Energy, which I believe is a superior high yield, low growth utility. Introduction As I’ve written in several of my articles, I usually divide my dividend growth stocks in two ways. The first is by sector, which helps me diversify my portfolio. The second is by the state of the company. I then divide the companies into three types. The first is companies with low yield and high growth, the second is medium yield and medium growth, and the third is high yield and low growth. Sometimes you can find some bargains and get a high growth company for medium or even high yield, but usually the market knows how to price stocks. I’ve written about several utilities lately. These utilities were divided between these three groups. I wrote about ITC holdings (NYSE: ITC ) which has low yield and high growth; Wisconsin Energy (NYSE: WEC ) — my personal favorite — which has medium growth and medium yield; and Southern Company (NYSE: SO ), which has high yield and low growth. I also wrote in March about Avista (NYSE: AVA ), which also shows medium growth and medium yield. Retirees and older people look for the current yield, and therefore agree to accept the extremely low growth shown by some companies. In this article, I will analyze CenterPoint Energy (NYSE: CNP ), a company that has a higher yield than Southern Company and similar low growth. In my opinion, this company is more suitable for investors looking for current income. CenterPoint Energy is a public utility holding company. Through its subsidiaries it is engaged in the following business segments: Electric Transmission & Distribution, Natural Gas Distribution, Competitive Natural Gas Sales and Services and Other Operations. Fundamentals When I look at the past decade, CNP’s fundamentals seem pretty strong. However, as I will show here, they are not going to grow at the same pace in the future. For example, revenue actually declined from $9.7 billion in 2005 to $9.2 billion in 2014. This is an annual decline of 0.5% for the past decade. In the near future, both the company and analysts covering it believe that revenue will grow due to rate relief from the regulators as well as the growing number of customers. CNP Revenue (Annual) data by YCharts On the other hand, EPS has managed to show some significant growth. EPS grew from $0.75 in 2005 to $1.42 in 2014, which is a CAGR of over 6.5%. This is a decent number for a utility. However, the EPS for 2015 and 2016 will be much lower. The estimates for 2015 are between $1.05 and $1.1, and the company has reaffirmed its guidance for 4%-6% annual growth in EPS for 2015-2016. Basically we have a company that will probably show modest growth in both revenue and EPS for the next 3-5 years. CNP EPS Diluted (Annual) data by YCharts The dividend is probably the biggest reason to purchase this stock, as the EPS will grow slowly. The dividend has been raised every year over the past decade, and it grew from $0.38 in 2005 to $0.96 in 2014. This is a CAGR of almost 10%, which is much higher than the EPS growth. Due to that fact, the current payout ratio is 70% for the 2014 earnings, and over 90% for the mid point of the 2015 EPS guidance. Therefore, I believe that the future growth will be limited to less than the EPS growth, and I believe it will be in the range of 2.5%-4%. However, as the company is a utility, which is a regulated monopoly, the dividend is still sustainable. The current yield is really robust at 5.8%. CNP Dividend data by YCharts When I look at the fundamentals, I find that the growth will be slower in the future, but the yield is high enough to compensate income-oriented investors. I find it more attractive than Southern Company as the yield is higher, but the growth estimates are not lower. Valuation Valuation at the current price is pretty compelling, especially when compared to its peers. Due to the low growth, the company trades for a lower P/E than Wisconsin Energy or Avista. Their premium is explained by the higher growth. Currently, CNP trades for a P/E ratio of 15.62 for 2016, and 15.19 for 2017. This valuation is fair for a slowly growing company. CNP P/E Ratio (Forward 1y) data by YCharts In these two graphs, I compared the P/E ratio of CNP to the P/E ratio of SO. I made this comparison because both are diversified utilities that work in the southern part of the U.S. Both have high yield and low dividend growth going into the future. CNP has a much higher yield, and still the P/E is almost the same. I believe it is more attractive than Southern Company. Opportunities Regulation of utility companies can be an opportunity or a risk. At the moment, CNP states that current regulations are favorable to its ability to generate profits. In addition, in the past several months the company has asked for rate relief in a number of states, and regulators granted many of them. In the table below, you can see some of the granted requests. Some are still under examination by regulators, and will be determined shortly. This relief allows the company to increase its revenue and margins. The rate relief accounts for almost $300 million annually, and I believe it alone can push up revenue by 2% before inflation. This way, we can achieve growth of 3%-4% just by increasing the prices annually, and over 50% of it will come from the rate relief. Together with cost cutting efforts, the rate relief will not only increase revenues, but also profit margins and EPS. The goal is to reach double-digit profit margins, and it will take more price increases, as the current profit margin is almost zero. Another opportunity the company’s business segment and geographic diversification. It operates in several states, which means it has no exposure to a single regulator, diminishing its regulatory risk and giving it an advantage over its peers in that regard. Its revenues are divided equally between three segments: electric transmission, gas distribution and energy services. In addition, the company is a major holder of Enable Midstream Partners (NYSE: ENBL ), a joint venture with two of its peers — GE Energy and ArcLight Capital Partners. The entity is considered an MLP. It’s relatively not leveraged and has several growth prospects. It is a great opportunity for CNP to keep growing. When energy prices recover, MLPs’ prices will rise along with their profitability. This offers potential upside for CNP investors as an energy recovery play. When I said that Wisconsin Energy is a better investment than Southern Company, I was told to look at the area where the companies operate. WEC is in the rust belt, while SO is in the growing south. CNP operates mainly in the growing south, just like SO. Its primary customers are in the area around Houston, Texas, and the company dedicated an entire slide in its Q3 presentation to show that it operates in a quickly growing area. This gives CNP the ability to grow organically in the future. Houston is a huge opportunity for many reasons. First, it is one of the fastest-growing cities in the U.S., according to Forbes. Moreover, according to the Texas State Demographer, Houston’s population is set to keep growing in the next 35 years, mainly due to immigration. Houston is a great opportunity, as it is much more than the center of energy companies it used to be. Over 1500 corporations have relocated to Houston over the last 5 years, and it is becoming a base for medical companies and financial companies as well. All of these people and businesses will need both electricity and gas, and CNP will supply it. Risks The company still presents risks for investors. The first is its balance sheet. CNP is using a lot of debt. I believe that the debt load is manageable, and the company is aware of the associated risk. However, imminent interest rate hikes will make this debt more expensive. I must add that although any rise in interest rates is forecast to be slow, at CNP’s current debt to equity ratio, which is higher than 2, its fragile A1 credit rating may still be in jeopardy. CNP’s cash on hand decreased by almost 30% this year, and the credit rating agencies warned that its narrowing liquidity puts its credit rating at risk. When interest rates rise, more expensive debt may put this leveraged company in a very uncomfortable position, which will force it to cut the dividend. The company should maintain more than $100 million in cash, and it currently has around $225 million. The company is forecast to show very modest EPS growth in the medium term. This can easily mean a dividend freeze, and at the current dividend payout ratio, it will be very hard for the company to raise its distribution. In addition, the favorable regulatory environment mentioned above can always change. One regulatory change by a major state or by the federal government can result in damage to CNP’s income. With a payout ratio of 92%, that may cause a dividend cut. However, this risk is not too great, as the southern states where CNP operates tend to have favorable regulation for enterprises. The company should be very cautious in the short term to make sure that its dividend is sustainable. The combination of the growing dividend with rising interest rates and the current payout ratio could become a problem if management isn’t careful. The company does not produce electricity. It allows the producers to use its infrastructure to deliver electricity to its customers. These companies can create their own transmission network or use a competitor’s transmission network if they feel CNP’s prices are too high. However, this risk is mitigated by the fact the infrastructure request a lot of capital invested, which gives CNP a bit of a moat. Conclusion CNP is currently a solid business. It has almost no room for error in the medium term, but can still offer a better income than its peers. Of course, a dividend freeze is a very real concern if the company cannot grow EPS at the pace of the guidance. However, the MLP business can offer interesting upside in the future. At 25 years old, an investment that grows pretty slowly is not for me. I try to look for dividend growth stocks that can show medium to high growth, even if it comes at the expense of current income. Retirees and older investors should consider CNP, however, as its 5.8% yield is quite attractive for current income seekers.

OGE Energy – Should Investors Buy The Dip?

Summary OGE Energy has suffered lately due to its ownership interest in Enable Midstream Partners. This weakness is likely to remain in place in the short term, but the regulated utility business will bolster earnings. Compared to partner CenterPoint Energy, OGE Energy looks to be the more attractive deal currently. OGE Energy (NYSE: OGE ) is another pseudo-utility option for investors, with both a regulated electric business and an equity ownership interest in master limited partnership Enable Midstream Partners (NYSE: ENBL ). The regulated business does substantially most of its business in Oklahoma, serving nearly one million customers throughout the state (including Oklahoma City). Power is provided through the company’s ownership of 6.8GW of mixed electric generation. By peak capacity, OGE Energy has more production available at its natural gas facilities, however in general the company has relied on its coal-fired units for baseload generation due to cost advantages. The equity ownership in Enable and how it came to be is an interesting one. Enable was founded by OGE Energy, ArcLight Capital Partners, and CenterPoint Energy (NYSE: CNP ) ( prior research by myself on CenterPoint is available here on SeekingAlpha ) in 2013. CenterPoint has a majority interest through the limited partner units, but both parties have equal management ownership rights. CenterPoint and OGE Energy elected to spin-off Enable from Centerpoint in April of 2014 to raise capital, while also swapping their common stock ownership to subordinated to appease prospective investors. As I cautioned investors in October when I wrote on CenterPoint, while exposure to midstream operations has been a trend in many utilities lately and can boost the earnings growth, such operations can also bring volatility to the stock price. In the time since that research was published under two months ago, Enable has fallen over 30%, now down 45% over the past six months. This has dragged both CenterPoint and OGE Energy down along with it, compared to a relatively boring performance for the utility sector as a whole over the same timeframe. Is it time to go bottom fishing for a deal in either of these two names? Historical Results For The Utility Business (click to enlarge) I’ve stripped out the results for OGE Energy’s utility assets above, so this is purely the results from the regulated utility segment. Revenue growth has been solid for the company, primarily due to Oklahoma’s relatively favorable economic profile compared to the rest of the country. Oklahoma City and other large cities have seen sizeable inflows of interstate migration, and charge-offs have been low due to below average unemployment and better than average median household incomes. Operating margins, however, have contracted. This is primarily due to increased depreciation and amortization expenses, stemming from additional assets being placed into service throughout the period. Capital expenditures have been quite high, even excluding the midstream pipeline infrastructure, from 2011-2013. This has moderated somewhat in 2014/2015, but further ramp-up is likely in the coming years. The reason for that is the company’s coal power plant exposure. From 2015-2019, the company estimates it has over $1B in capex costs directly related to bringing these coal power plants into emissions and regulatory compliance, while also converting two to natural gas where it deemed upgrades unfeasible. (click to enlarge) * OGE Energy Investor Presentation, EEI 2015 Like many Midwestern utilities that have traditionally used coal as a primary source of power generation, OGE Energy has been engaged in a lengthy dance with federal and state regulators. It recently won a one year extension for compliance for Mercury Air Toxic Rules (through April 2016) and lost many filings and appeals over the EPA’ Federal Implementation Plan, which it tried to push all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. While these costs will be eventually passed along to utility customers and likely recovered, this recovery will take time and the burden of the costs over the next several years will likely dent short-term cash flow. The likely cash flow shortfalls in the coming years will be a continuation of recent trends. OGE Energy has raised $1B in net debt since 2011, but managed to minimize the impact of this by using proceeds from the spin-off of Enable as an offset. Given the current market appetite for Enable common units being weak at best, it is unlikely management will elect to sell any of its currently held units to the public to raise cash. To pay for 2016-2019 capex, investors should expect the company to turn back to the credit markets again, making good use of its solid credit ratings. While OGE Energy is already paying $150M in annual interest expense, its leverage ratios remain low (roughly 2.7x net debt/EBITDA on 2015 full year expectations). Conclusion Enable’s results are the wildcard here. In my opinion, if you’re willing to shop for or own OGE Energy, you should also be willing to buy CenterPoint Energy, and vice versa. While CenterPoint trades cheaper at 7.9x ttm EV/EBITDA compared to OGE Energy’s 9.7x, I think the risk/reward favors OGE Energy still. You’re getting a lower levered player with a higher quality regulated business. However, in the end, you might end up with both company’s assets anyway as I think OGE Energy and CenterPoint are ripe for a merger. Both management teams already work closely together due to their interests in the Enable entity, and tying the companies’ fates together makes economic sense. The joined company would enjoy further diversification and the companies operate right next door to one another geographically. Utility consolidation has been an ongoing trend, and a merger here is one of the more obvious remaining moves among smaller utility names in my opinion.

Before The Fed Rate Hike, Buy These Stocks And ETFs

When the Fed meets for the final time in 2015, many investors are expecting them to do something that hasn’t been done in nearly a decade, raise rates. The last such rate hike came back in 2006 and brought us up to 5.25%, but it didn’t last long as rates soon cratered before finding bottom near zero in December of 2008 and staying there ever since. But now with an economy on more solid footing and inflation slowly starting to creep back towards a two percent target rate, it may be time to hike rates. After all, the whole idea of zero percent rates was predicated on a crisis situation. It is hard to say that we are still in a ‘crisis’ now, suggesting it is well past the time to consider a rate hike for the economy. Some investors still remain woefully underprepared for this reality, believing that a rate hike simply will not happen. But with a parade of Fed officials coming out lately to say otherwise, not to mention a CME Fed Watch reading approaching 80% chance for a hike , it is looking more and more likely that a hike is all but inevitable at this point. There is still plenty of time to prepare though. A closer look at financial stocks and also bond instruments which will not be hit by rising rates seems like a good plan for now. As such, I have taken a look at a few such good options below, any of which could make for solid choices ahead of a rate hike, no matter when the inevitable does strike: CBOE Holdings (NASDAQ: CBOE ) The Chicago Board Options Exchange may not be the first name you think of in a rising rate scenario, but it could actually be one of the better positioned – and more overlooked – choices in the space. That is because the company’s primary products, options on the S&P 500 and volatility-linked options, stand to see more trading as the Fed adjusts rates (with volatility coming especially into focus). Analysts have also begun to adjust their opinion of CBOE stock as we have seen broad analyst estimate increases in the past quarter. The full-year consensus estimate has increased from $2.21/share to $2.41/share in the past ninety days while we have also seen a positive trend for the next year time frame too. CBOE is also riding an earnings beat streak of three straight quarters and in each of these reports the company has beaten estimates by at least 4%. So not only has CBOE been an impressive pick as of late, but it could be a stealth choice for investors to play a Fed rate hike, and especially considering this is currently a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) security right now. E-Trade Financial (NASDAQ: ETFC ) When the Fed raises rates, it is great news for investment brokers. Companies in this space make money off of the float, or invested capital that hasn’t been allocated to securities yet. And when rates increase, the return companies like E-Trade can generate is even greater. Though there are many names in the investment broker space, ETFC stands out as a great choice right now. The company is expected to see double-digit EPS growth this year while it currently has an earnings ESP of 6.9%. Best of all, analysts have begun to raise their estimates for the stock while all the recent estimates for the current year EPS have gone higher in the past two months. This has been enough to move ETFC to a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy) making it a great pick ahead of a possible rate hike. WisdomTree Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Negative Duration Fund (NASDAQ: AGND ) A lot of investors like the safety of bonds and I can see how this can make up a decent size position of many portfolios. However, rising rates are generally bad news for bonds as bond prices have an inverse relationship with rates. Fortunately, WisdomTree’s ETFs in the bond space look to mitigate these worries with a lineup of negative duration products. These funds move higher when yields do and thus can be great bond choices for investors in this type of environment. Costs aren’t too bad here either at just 28 basis points a year, while yields come in at about 2%. And with an effective duration of roughly -4.5 years, this should benefit from rising rates but still won’t be too volatile either. Ex-Rate Sensitive Low Volatility Portfolio (NYSEARCA: XRLV ) If equities are more of your game but you are still concerned about volatility, than XRLV is definitely worth a closer look. This fund looks at 100 S&P 500 components that exhibit both low volatility, and low interest rate risk. This approach looks to exclude those that tend to perform the worst in rising rate environments, giving a tilt towards financials (28%), industrials (21.8%), and consumer staples (15%). There is definitely a large-cap focus here, but mid caps still make up nearly one-third of the portfolio too. XRLV will definitely be a lower risk choice to play the rising rate trend while it is a pretty cheap selection too at just 25 basis points a year in fees. And while volume isn’t great here, the product does have a pretty tight bid ask spread thanks to its focus on highly liquid securities trading in the U.S. market. Original Post