Investing
in Regulated Utilities (part I, Water)
And
United Utilities PLC
The visible hand of the regulator, image
courtesy Wikipedia
Investors are attracted to utility companies for their steady income
by way of dividend payouts. Although utility shareholders have made windfall
gains from takeovers, investors expect capital gains to be modest. The FT's
Gas, Water and Multiutility Index (in blue) have performed as one would
expect these past 10 years. The shares that make up the Index (Centrica, Dee
Valley, Igas energy, Modern Water, National Grid, Pennon Group, Renewable
Energy Generation, Severn Trent and United Utilities) have proven to be less
volatile and to produce less of a capital gain than the FTSE 250 (Midcap)
Index (in green):
Once the higher dividend yield of the utility companies is included
(currently from 4 to 5.5%, compared to 2.7% for the FTSE 250), their overall
return over 10 years is very similar to the 250 companies that make up the
Midcap Index.
So far so good. But regulated utility companies are very different
to non-regulated companies. Given that regulated utilities are often providing
unique services to the public, government appointed regulators have
extraordinary powers to ensure that the public are protected from monopoly
pricing. This can be disconcerting for investors.
The water regulator, Ofwat, is in the process of determining
the conditions and price controls for the water utilities from 2015 to 2020. Ofwat
makes clear its main objectives:
"Our main duties
are to:
- protect the interests of consumers, wherever appropriate by promoting effective competition
- enable efficient water and sewerage and water only companies to carry out and finance their functions
One of the ways we deliver our duties is to set the price, investment and service package that customers
receive." (Ofwat website)
Ofwat explains how
the new price regime will take into account past efficiency gains by the water
companies:
"Once price limits have been set, companies can make
higher profits at no expense to the customer by outperforming the assumptions
we make when we set price limits through efficiency and innovation. They earn
these higher profits until the next price review, when the benefits are passed
to customers through lower prices."
In the past review, both
United Utilities (by 13%) and Severn Trent (by 10%) reduced their
dividend because Ofwat set prices that annulled the efficiency gains
from the previous regulatory period. These gains had been passed on to
shareholders.
As each water company
has to present a plan to meet Ofwat's objectives, it is impossible for
the individual investor to assess how Ofwat's new price mechanism will
affect the water companies' profitability. And to complicate matters, Ofwat
will be setting separate prices for wholesale, domestic retail and business
retail customers.
The average dividend
cover for the past three years provides some measure of the leeway the four
quoted water companies have to absorb a more restrictive pricing regime:
Water
company
|
Dividend
yield*
|
Dividend
cover*
|
Price
Earnings Ratio**
|
Dee
Valley
|
4.3%
|
1.45
|
16
|
Pennon
|
3.9%
|
1.29
|
20
|
Severn
Trent
|
4.0%
|
1.33
|
19
|
United
Utilities
|
4.5%
|
1.63
|
14
|
*Average over the past 3 years.
**Current price/average 3-year earnings per share
The latest dividend
cover for each company and the latest dividend
shows a growing payout on a declining cover:
Water
company
|
Dividend
yield*
|
Dividend
cover*
|
Price
Earnings Ratio*
|
Dee
Valley
|
4.4%
|
1.38
|
16
|
Pennon
|
4.5%
|
0.25**
|
98**
|
Severn
Trent
|
4.4%
|
1.25
|
18
|
United
Utilities
|
4.8%
|
1.26
|
17
|
*In the latest year. **Pennon suffered losses on its
non-regulatory business in 2012.
One way that the water
companies have found to improve their 'efficiency' compared to Ofwat's
assumptions is to borrow at low interest rates. This reduces their weighted cost
of capital. Hence, the water companies have relied heavily on loan
financing to meet their capital requirements and to pay generous dividends,
with the result that they are all heavily indebted:
Water
company
|
Net
Debt/Equity
|
3-year
cash flow pounds mn*
|
Years to pay off debt
|
Dee
Valley
|
42%
|
6
|
24
|
Pennon
|
189%
|
(138)
|
n.a.
|
Severn
Trent
|
528%
|
782
|
17
|
United
Utilities
|
319%
|
89
|
201
|
*Operating cash flow less capital expenditure for the last 3
years
It is hard to see how
these water companies will survive without issuing new equity. Some indication of the size of the equity issues that might be
required to restore their balance sheets can be judged by the following table:
Water
company
Pounds
mn
|
Net
Debt
|
Market
Capitalization
|
Possible
capital requirement*
|
Possible
shareholder dilution%
|
Dee
Valley
|
49
|
66
|
5
|
10%
|
Pennon
|
2007
|
2840
|
620
|
22%
|
Severn
Trent
|
4398
|
4150
|
910
|
22%
|
United
Utilities
|
5972
|
4800
|
970
|
20%
|
*New
equity to reduce debt to 200% of equity and/or to cover the present cash dividend
for 5 years, allowing for present cash flows.
These are rough and ready numbers, but they do suggest that
the new pricing review will be met with a call for new equity and/or a cut in
the dividend payout.
Investors should be very cautious when assessing these water
companies. It would be wise to wait. Consider:
1. Possible rights issues or placings will reduce the
earnings per share and value of these companies' shares.
2. Dividend payouts are likely to fall. United
Utilities and Severn Trent reduced their dividend payouts by 13% and
10% respectively after the last Ofwat review. All four water companies
will have great difficulty in maintaining their payouts.
3. The uncertainty over the 2014 Ofwat review will
depress water company prices.
4. Against this, the recent (rejected) bid for Severn
Trent valued the company at a 15% premium to the present price. This will
help to sustain present prices.
The water companies have until December 2013 to submit their
plans to Ofwat. Ofwat will announce its new price mechanism
during 2014.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
United Utilities PLC
Tap water, image courtesy Wikipedia
United Utilities (UU) shed its electricity business and a series of other businesses
by 2008 and returned 1.5 billion pounds to shareholders. Since then, UU
is a pure water and waste water business that covers the North West of England.
All its business is subject to the price controls, capital commitments and
other requirements of the regulator Ofwat.
UU's large capital
expenditure, amounting to 3.5 billion pounds in
2009-14, is the equivalent to more than 2 years revenues. Hence, UU's
management are as much engaged in managing new plant and infrastructure as they
are in the sales, service and maintenance side of the water business.
UU's share price (in
blue) is back where it was 5 years ago:
Graph courtesy Yahoo, blue line for United Utilities, green
line for the FTSE 250 Midcap, click to enlarge.
Investors often see
utility companies like UU as an alternative to bonds.
The Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, the Kuwait Investment Office
and the Universities Superannuation Scheme of the UK bid for Severn Trent.
Two of the three bidders are in need of long-term income, which is something
that water utilities can deliver. If necessary, these institutional investors
can assume the utility's debt, which would be another source of income for
their members. But the same conditions do not apply to individual investors.
UU shareholders face
an unappetizing future:
1. In the latest
Annual Report, management refers to the decline in both the retail and
commercial demand for water.
2. This year UU
increased its dividend payout, but this just brings it back to where it was in
2009.
3. Earnings per share
have shown no consistent increase in the last 5 years.
4. Net debt stands at
319% of equity and, in the last 5 years, operating cash flow (including
capital expenditure) of 380 million pounds has failed to cover dividend
payments of 1,235 million pounds.
5. For a company that
relies so heavily on debt, UU cannot be happy that S & P rate
their long-term debt as BBB-. This is the lowest investment grade rating.
6. In the current
climate of austerity, it is unlikely that Ofwat will look favourably on
improving the returns to investors. To the contrary, Ofwat has stated
that, "These separate
price controls will create stronger and more targeted incentives on the
customer facing services companies provide. This will drive companies to
deliver better customer service at a lower cost." (Ofwat's website).
7. Rising 10-year gilt yields hit UU in two ways. They increase UU's
cost of debt and they shrink the difference between what investors can earn
from AA government debt and what they receive from UU in the form of
dividends.
Assuming that UU does not reduce its dividend and that trading results remain
about where they are gives, according to my valuation model*, a value of around 600p for UU's shares.
They currently trade at 711p. *Assumptions: no earnings per
share growth, 15% return on equity as now, dividend yield as now (4.8%), equity
per share continues to increase by about 6% p.a., and the stock market values UU
on an average P/E ratio of 16.5. Discount rate used is 11.3% - UU's cost
of debt is 4.3%, 2% for operating risk and 5% for a margin of safety.
Even at 600p, the
prudent investor will consider:
1. The possible
repercussions of a reduced dividend and/or share issue on UU's share
price.
2. A possibly
unsatisfactory price regime imposed by Ofwat for 2015-2020.
3. Defined pension
scheme assets and liabilities, each valued at 2.4 billion pounds, are large
in the context of UU's business. Adverse changes in assumptions would cause a
further draw on UU assets.
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