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Bright Future Secured As PPL Corp. Set To Grow EPS Moving Forward

Summary PPL’s complete focus on regulated operations will augur well for performance and stock price. Company’s U.S. regulated utilities are expected to enjoy healthy EPS growth of 8%-10% in the next five years. EPS growth is backed by attractive capital investment plan. Stock valuation will expand given strong regulated operations. PPL Corporation (NYSE: PPL ) is a suitable investment prospect for income investors seeking modest capital appreciation. The stock has an impressive yield of 4.8% and earnings for the company are expected to grow in a range of 4%-6% in future years, which will augur well for the stock valuation. PPL has been undertaking correct strategic decisions and has correctly directed its focus on regulated utility operations, which will fuel its future EPS growth. Furthermore, I think PPL’s transformation into a complete rate regulated electric utility company is favorable. The company plans to repatriate cash from U.K. operations, which will strengthen its cash flows and support growth investment and dividend growth. Moreover, the company has further de-risked the U.K. segment’s operations by reducing currency exposure through currency hedging. Moreover, the stock’s current valuation stays compelling in comparison to its industry. Correct Strategic Measures and Strong Growth Prospects Utility companies in the U.S. have been aggressively working to reduce their competitive business operations and increase regulated operations, as forward power prices have been volatile and weak. Increasing regulated operations will augur well for U.S. utility companies’ future performance as their revenues and cash flows will become more certain, which will lower business risk and result in stock valuation expansion. PPL has also recently completed the spinoff of its competitive operations, and the remaining business operations at the company make up a quality U.S. regulated growth story. In future, I think the stock valuation will expand because of the company’s improved risk profile. After the spinoff of the competitive operations and transition into a fully regulated utility, S&P upgraded the company’s credit rating to ‘A-‘ from ‘BBB’. Moving ahead, the company will continue to focus on its U.S. regulated operations, which will fuel its earnings growth. I think the company’s U.S. regulated utilities will enjoy EPS growth of almost 10% in the next five years, increasing to $1.34 in 2019 up from $0.90 in 2015, mainly driven by its attractive growth investments; PPL has a plan to make total capital investments of $18 billion in the next five years. The company expects its U.S. utilities to grow its earnings in a range of 8%-10% in the next five years. However, the company’s U.K.’s segment growth is expected to stay flat in the next five years, which will dampen the impressive U.S. growth; total EPS growth for the company is expected to be in a range of 4%-6% in future. Consistent with its initiatives to strengthen its consolidated growth, I think the company has rightly planned to repatriate $290 million of cash from the U.K. in 2015 and $300-$500 million in 2016-2017. The planned cash repatriation will allow the company to support its capital investments in future years and increase dividends. Moreover, in my opinion, the company has further de-risked the U.K. segment by lowering currency exposure through hedges. The company is now 100% hedged against the pound for 2015, 90% and 40% hedged for 2016 and 2017, respectively. Moreover, in order to meet carbon emission requirements, the company might opt to revive its shelved plan to construct a $900 million 700MW CCGT expansion at its Green River site. If the company decides to construct the plant, it could provide incremental EPS of $0.05-$0.07 annually, and will help PPL reduce carbon emissions and help meet 150-300MW of shortfall anticipated for the near future. As the company continues to make progress with its plans to focus on regulated operations, its performance has been improving. Given the company’s strong performance in the first two quarters of 2015, PPL has increased its EPS guidance from $2.05-$2.25 to $2.15-2.25 . In addition, given the increase in revenues and cash flows certainty because of complete focus on regulated operations, I think dividend growth for the company will stay strong, which will bode well for the stock price. PPL offers a yield of 4.7%. Separately, the stock’s current valuation stays compelling, as it is trading at a forward P/E of 13x, versus the industry forward P/E of 16x. Given the increased focus on regulated operations and strong earnings growth prospects, I think the stock valuation multiple will expand. Summation The company’s future growth prospects stay strong and it is on track to delivering a healthy performance in future years. The company’s complete focus on regulated operations will augur well for its performance and the stock price. Also, the company’s U.S. regulated utilities are expected to enjoy healthy EPS growth of 8%-10% in the next five years, backed by its attractive capital investment plan. Moreover, the stock valuations stay attractive, as it is trading at a forward P/E of 13x , in comparison to the industry forward P/E of 16x . Moving ahead, given the strong regulated operations, the stock valuation will expand. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Quarterly Financial Reporting Is Needed, Productive, And Good

The following may be controversial. It also may be dull to the point that you might not care. Here’s why you should care: quarterly reporting is a useful and productive use of corporate resources, and it would be a shame to lose it because some people with a patina of intelligence think it is harmful. Who knows? Losing it might even make you poorer. The cause for this article is a piece from the Wall Street Journal, Time to End Quarterly Reports, Law Firm Says . Here’s the first two sentences: Influential law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz has an idea that may be music to the ears of its big corporate clients and a nightmare for some investors and analysts: end quarterly earnings reports. Wachtell on Tuesday called on the Securities and Exchange Commission to consider allowing U.S. companies to do away with the obligatory updates, one of the most important rituals on Wall Street and in corporate America, suggesting that they distract executives from long-term goals. The basic case is that quarterly earnings lead companies to behave in a short-term manner, and underinvest for longer-term growth, thus hurting the US economy. I disagree. There are at least four things that are false in the arguments made in the article, and in books like Saving Capitalism from Short-Termism : Quarterly earnings don’t produce value in and of themselves Quarterly earnings cause most corporations to ignore the long-term. Ending quarterly earnings will end activism, buybacks, and dividends. Buybacks and dividends are bad uses of capital, and more capital investment, especially for long-dated projects, is necessarily a good thing. Why Quarterly Earnings are Valuable I’ve written a number of articles about quarterly earnings and estimates of those earnings: Earnings Estimates as a Control Mechanism, Flawed as they are , and Earnings Estimates as a Control Mechanism, Flawed as they are, Redux . The basic idea is this: quarterly earnings results give investors an idea as to whether the companies remain on their long-term growth path or not. As I wrote: Most of the value of a Corporation on a going concern basis stems from the future earnings of the company. Investors want to have an estimate of forward earnings so that they can gauge whether the company is growing at an appropriate rate. Now, it wouldn’t matter if the system were set up by third-party sell side analysts, by buyside analysts, by companies themselves, or by a combination thereof. The thing is investors are forward-looking, and they want a forward-looking estimate to allow them to estimate whether the companies are doing well with their current earnings or not. Don’t think of the quarterly earnings in isolation. A good or bad quarterly earnings number conveys information not about the current period only, but about all future periods. A bad earnings number lowers the estimates of all future earnings, telling market players that the long-term efforts of the company are not going to be so great. Vice-versa for a good number. Now, in some cases, that might not be true, and the management team will say, “But we still expect our future earnings to reach the levels that we expected before this quarter.” That still leaves the problem of getting to the high future earnings, which if missed will lead the market to reprice the stock down. They might also use a non-GAAP measure of earnings to explain that earnings are not as bad as they might seem. In the short-run the market may accept that, but if you do that often enough, eventually the markets factor in the many “one-time” adjustments, and lower the earnings multiple on the stock to reflect the reduced quality of earnings. In addition, having shorter-term targets causes corporations to not get lazy in managing expenses and capital. When the measurement periods get too long, discipline can be lost. Quarterly Earnings Don’t Cause Most Firms to Neglect the Long-Term Firms aren’t interested in only the current period’s earnings, but about the entire future path of earnings. Even if the current period’s earnings meet the estimates, the job is not done. If there aren’t plans to grow earnings for the next 3-5 years, eventually earnings won’t meet the expectations of investors, and the price of the stock will fall. The short-term is just the beginning of the long-term. It is not either/or but both/and. A company has to try to explain to investors how it is growing the value of the firm – if present targets aren’t being met, why should there be any confidence that the future will be good? Think of corporate earnings like a long-term project which has a variety of things that have to be done en route to a significant goal. The quarterly earnings measure whether the progress toward completing the goal is adequate or not. Now, the measure is not perfect, but who can think of a better one? Ending Quarterly Earnings Would Not End Activism, Buybacks, and Dividends I can think of an area in business where earnings estimates don’t play a role – private equity. Are the owners long-term oriented? Yes. Are they short-term oriented? Yes. Is capital managed tightly? Very tightly. All excess capital is dividended back – it as if activists run the firms permanently. If there were no quarterly earnings in the public equity markets, firms would still be under pressure to return excess capital to shareholders. Activists would still analyze companies to see if they are badly managed, and in need of change. If anything, when companies would release their earnings less frequently, the adjustments to the market price of the stock would be more severe. Companies that disappoint would find the activists arriving regardless of the periodicity of the release of earnings. On the Use of Excess Capital Investing, particularly for the long-term, is not risk-free. In an environment where there is rapid technological change, like there is today, it is difficult to tell what investments will not be made obsolete. In such an environment, it can make a lot of sense to focus on shorter-term investments that are more certain as to the success of the project. It is also a reason why dividends and buybacks are done, as capital returned to shareholders is associated with higher stock prices, because the capital is used more efficiently. Companies that shrink their balance sheets tend to outperform those that grow them. As an example, large acquisitions tend not to benefit shareholders, while small acquisitions that lead to greater organic growth do tend to benefit investors. The same is true of large versus small investments for organic growth away from M&A. Most management teams can adequately estimate and plan for the growth that stems from incremental action. Large revolutionary investments are another thing. There is usually no way to estimate how those will work out, and whether the prospects are reasonable or not. In one sense, it’s best to leave those kinds of investment projects to highly focused firms that do only that. That’s how biotech firms work, and it is why so many of them fail. The few winners are astounding. Or, think about how progressive Japanese firms were viewed to be in the 1980s, as they pursued long-term projects that had very low returns on equity. All of that failed, to a first approximation, while the derided American model of shareholder capitalism prospered, as capital was used efficiently on projects with high risk-adjusted returns, and not wasted on speculative projects with uncertain returns. The same will prove true of China over the next 20 years as they choke on all of their bad investments that yield low returns, if indeed the returns are positive. Remember, bad investments are just expenses in fancy garb – it just takes the accounting longer to recognize the losses. Think of Enron if you need an example, which brings up one more point: good investing focuses on accounting quality. Accrual items on the asset side of the balance sheets of corporations get higher valuations the shorter the accrual is, and the more likely it is to produce cash. Most long term projects tend to be speculative, and as such, drag down the valuation of the stock, because in most cases, it lowers the long-term earnings of the company. Conclusion If quarterly earnings are abolished, intelligent corporations won’t change much. Investment won’t go up much, and the time horizon of most management teams will not rise much. If you need any proof of that, look at how private equity and large mutual insurers manage their firms – they still analyze quarterly results, and are conservative in how they deploy capital. The only great change of eliminating quarterly earnings will be a loss of quality information for equity investors. Bond investors and banks will still require more frequent financial updates, and equity investors may try to find ways to get that data, perhaps through the rating agencies. Disclosure: None

5 Huge Advantages You Have Over Professional Investors

Summary 5 ways you are better than the Wall Street pros. Why you should ignore what the pros are doing. How to take advantage of your advantages. “Don’t bother. The professionals are better than you and they know something you don’t.” Really? There’s some truth to that, but there’s plenty of lies mixed in that short statement too. And it’s easy to dismiss yourself or come up with excuses for why you can’t do it. Here are five to get things started. 5 Common Excuses That Investors Believe The market definitely knows more than me. I’m not smart enough to invest on my own and build wealth. I always miss out on the best opportunities. I can’t beat the computer trading that the market uses. I don’t know where or how to start. Sure there’s some validity to each excuse above. But investing is unique because anyone can be a good investor. The Uniqueness of the Stock Market Outside of the stock market, it’s a good idea to find a professional to solve a problem instead of trying to do it yourself or asking the average Joe next door. Need a kidney transplant? Find a surgeon. Not Ms. Traci, your old biology teacher. But the investment industry is one of the very few where you don’t need any qualification, practice, skill or even knowledge to be involved in the markets. The entry criteria is zero, which is why so many people lose money, throw their hands in the air and forever condemn the stock market as a rigged gambling machine. But choose your direction wisely from the get-go (value investing for you and me), build a good framework based on good guidance, quality investment books and investing resources, and it’s easy to do well. Ignore all the talking heads using jargon or the people who talk about much money they are raking in. All they want to do is make you feel dumb and gloat about how smart they are. But what if you continue to disbelieve, or you know people who continue to doubt that investing successfully on your own is possible? You don’t need to be a rocket scientist. Investing is not a game where the guy with the 160 IQ beats the guy with 130 IQ. – Warren Buffett If you have more than 120 or 130 I.Q. points, you can afford to give the rest away. You don’t need extraordinary intelligence to succeed as an investor. – Warren Buffett Here are 5 advantages small investors hold over professionals that you must take advantage of. 1. As a Small Investor You Are Able to Choose Your Expertise When you are investing as an individual, you are free to choose whatever specialty you like. You can choose whatever stock to invest in. Large. Small. Biotech. Miners. Safety. Whatever. You can even choose to focus and become an expert in a few industries that excite you or take a broader approach. On the other hand, professionals are paid to focus on certain fields or investing strategies. If you get sick of an industry, just move onto your next interest. Professionals don’t have this luxury of choosing their strengths. As a small investor, you are agile and can go to different market caps, sectors, and even buy some odd lots for a quick turnover. 2. You Can Go Against the Grain Professional investors follow the herd. It’s better to be incorrect with the herd and maintain job security instead of sticking your neck out and getting fired if the investment doesn’t work out. You don’t have a boss obsessed with profits breathing down your neck with another younger guy waiting in line to take your job. You’re free to take a contrarian approach like the good ol’ net net strategy or concentrating on Buffett type stocks. The pros will start investing in an “uncertain” stock, sector or country once it starts to rebound – when the best time to invest has already passed. 3. You Are Not Judged Monthly, Quarterly or Yearly Not being obsessed with beating the market is one of the biggest advantages you have. Because the pros have clients and upper management demanding results, the only thing they can do is chase hot stocks, hot trends and buy and sell quickly so as not to “look” left out. Ignoring short term results and focusing on the big picture will put you in a position to succeed. The once bad Golden State Warriors didn’t win the NBA championship by flipping players every time something didn’t work out. They had a long term team building strategy that paid off in the end. Being able to sacrifice short term results to compound long term wealth is a huge advantage. 4. You Can Afford to Be Patient Can’t find a company to invest in? That’s ok because you can hold cash and wait for the right opportunity. Nobody is going to say anything because you hold 30% of your portfolio in cash. You also put yourself in the best position to succeed by buying depressed securities and playing the waiting game. Professionals on the other hand are risk-averse as they can’t afford to lose their client’s money. This leads to following the herd and mediocre returns. 5. It’s Cheaper You don’t need a room full of computers, computerized trading system software or instant access to information. You don’t have to pay people for insider “tips”. With all the high frequency trading going on, the long term value investing approach saves you money on commissions, taxes and other fees. Take Advantage of Your Advantages There’s no reason to play the same game as the professionals. In Malcolm Gladwell’s book David and Goliath , it covers how the “disadvantaged” overcome the expected winners. An important observation was that if David (the small investor) tries to take on Goliath (Wall Street professionals) within the same set of rules, the winner is always Goliath. However, by not playing by the same system and expectations, David is able to defeat Goliath. In other words, as a small investor, do what the big boys can’t to beat them at their own game. In 2008, Buffett bet that a low cost index fund will outperform a fund of hedge funds. Over a ten-year period commencing on January 1, 2008, and ending on December 31, 2017, the S&P 500 will outperform a portfolio of funds of hedge funds, when performance is measured on a basis net of fees, costs and expenses. The result at the start of 2015? The S&P500 up 63.5% and the hedge fund up around 19.6%. The takeaway? It’s only in the stock market where the average Joe can have such a strong advantage over the professionals. Make the most out of your advantages. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.