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Eversource Energy (ES) James J. Judge on Q1 2016 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Eversource Energy (NYSE: ES ) Q1 2016 Earnings Call May 05, 2016 9:00 am ET Executives Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Philip J. Lembo – Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Leon J. Olivier – EVP-Enterprise Energy Strategy and Business Development Analysts Michael Weinstein – UBS Securities LLC Travis Miller – Morningstar, Inc. (Research) Caroline V. Bone – Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. Operator Good morning, and welcome to the Eversource Energy First Quarter Earnings Conference Call. My name is Brandon, and I’ll be your operator for today. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. Please note this conference is being recorded. And at this time, I will turn it over Jeff Kotkin. You may begin, sir. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations Thank you, Brandon. Good morning, and thank you for joining us. I’m Jeff Kotkin, Eversource Energy’s Vice President for Investor Relations. As you can see on slide one, if you’ve gone into our slides, which are on our website, some of the statements made during this investor call may be forward-looking as defined within the meaning of the Safe Harbor provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are based on management’s current expectations and are subject to risk and uncertainty, which may cause the actual results to differ materially from forecasts and projections. Some of these factors are set forth in the news release issued yesterday. Additional information about the various factors that may cause actual results to differ can be found in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015. Additionally, our explanation of how and why we use certain non-GAAP measures is contained within our news release and the slides we posted last night on the website under Presentations & Webcasts and in our most recent 10-K. Turning to slide two, speaking today will be Jim Judge, who yesterday became Eversource Energy’s President and CEO; and Lee Olivier, our Executive Vice President for Enterprise Energy Strategy and Business Development. Also joining us today are Werner Schweiger, our Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer; Phil Lembo, our new Senior Vice President and CFO; Jay Buth, our Vice President and Controller; and John Moreira, our Vice President of Financial Planning and Analysis. Now, I will turn to slide three and turn over the call to Jim. James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you, Jeff, and thank you all for joining us this morning. I also wanted to thank many of you on our call today for the notes you’ve sent me since our announcement last month of Tom’s retirement. Tom’s record of providing value and service to customers and investors as CEO first of Boston Edison, then NSTAR, Northeast Utilities and Eversource Energy, was unsurpassed in our industry. I was both honored and tremendously excited by being our Board’s choice to succeed him. This company has a tremendous future ahead. We continue to identify investment opportunities to enable our region to successfully implement the state and federal energy policies that continue to shape our region. We also have what I consider to be the best group of 8,000 employees in the industry and a very talented and very experienced management team. I look forward to continuing to work closely with our investors as our company continues to deliver to you attractive returns by providing the highest level of service to customers. As Jeff mentioned, pleased to share with you that yesterday the Eversource Board of Trustees elected Phil Lembo as the company’s Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. Most of you know Phil well. He’s been a key contributor for us for years. So congratulations, Phil, and I’d like you to say a few words. Philip J. Lembo – Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Yeah. Thank you, Jim. I would echo Jim, thank you for those notes and congratulations and calls I received. So thank you very much. I know I’ve known a lot of you for many years going back to the investor relations days several years ago. But I’m looking forward to meeting those of you who I haven’t had a chance to meet yet and working with you closely over the weeks and months ahead. I know I have some big shoes to fill and I’m excited about the opportunity. Just also want to close it and say I’ll be part of the Eversource team that’s at the AGA Conference down in Naples and I hope that I’ll get to meet you in person at that event. So thank you, Jim, and I’ll turn it back to you. James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Thanks, Phil. Today, I will cover our first quarter financial results, strong operating performance results for the quarter, an update on certain transmission projects and regulatory dockets. Starting with our financial result in slide four, we earned $244 million or $0.77 per share in the first quarter of 2016, compared with earnings of $253 million or $0.80 per share in the first quarter of 2015. Both of those are GAAP numbers since we are no longer separating our merger integration costs in reporting our results. These results represent a solid start to 2016 despite the very mild weather in the first quarter. These results also support our full year EPS estimate of $2.90 to $3.05 per share as well as our long-term earnings growth rate of 5% to 7%. Our transmission segment earned $0.27 per share in the first quarter of 2016 compared with $0.21 per share in the first quarter last year. The first of two principle drivers of that increase was the absence of a $0.04 charge we recorded in the first quarter of 2015 after FERC issued its final decision in the first New England Transmission ROE complaint. The second factor was the earnings growth we are experiencing as a result of our continued investment in the reliability of the New England power grid. That rate case growth added $0.02 per share in the first quarter of 2016. On the electric distribution side, we earned $0.34 per share in the first quarter this year compared with earnings of $0.41 per share in the first quarter of 2015. Three principle factors contributed to this $0.07 per share reduction in earnings. The primary driver was the absence in 2016 of about $0.09 of benefits we realized in the first quarter last year from settling several longstanding dockets at NSTAR Electric. Milder weather in the first quarter of 2016 reduced earnings at NSTAR Electric and PSNH where distribution revenues are not fully decoupled, and that cost us about $0.02 per share. Partially offsetting those impacts were lower O&M and other items, including our second quarter 2015 accumulated deferred income tax settlement at Connecticut Light and Power. Altogether, those factors added about $0.04 per share in the first quarter. On the natural gas distribution side, we earned $0.16 per share in the first quarter this year compared with earnings of $0.18 per share in the first quarter of 2015. Warmer weather was a principle factor with lower gas revenues costing us $0.05 per share despite a nearly $16 million annualized rate increase at NSTAR Gas. We had a very cold first quarter in 2015 and a very mild first quarter in 2016. Heating degree days in the Boston area were 21% above normal in the first quarter of 2015 when NSTAR Gas did not yet have decoupling. In Connecticut, where Yankee Gas is not yet decoupled, heating degree days were about 10% below normal in the first quarter this year compared with 18% above normal in the first quarter of 2015. The weather impact was partially offset by lower O&M, a rate increase at NSTAR Gas and other factors that together added $0.03 per share to earnings. Turning from our financial results to operations, our transmission investments totaled $140 million in the first quarter of 2016, and we continue to target transmission capital investments of $911 million for the full year. As you can see on slide five, we continue to move ahead on our major reliability transmission projects across the system. We are making solid progress on our two large families of reliability projects, the Greater Boston Reliability Solutions and the Greater Hartford/Central Connecticut Solutions. We have now invested more than $130 million in those projects with many elements now completed, under construction, or before regulators for approval. By 2019, we expect to invest $900 million in these comprehensive solutions to our region’s energy – long-term reliability challenges. The New Hampshire Site Evaluation Committee has a number of projects before it, including Northern Pass. Last month, we filed our application with the Site Evaluation Committee to build the $77 million Seacoast Reliability Project in Southeastern New Hampshire. We expect a decision on our application by mid-2017, and to complete the Seacoast project by the end of 2018. We also continue to expand our natural gas delivery system in the first quarter. We’ve added about 2,500 natural gas heating customers in the first quarter, up about 20% from the 2,050 we added in the first quarter of 2015, and very consistent with our full year 2016 goal of 12,500 new heating customers. We added a 72nd town to the Yankee Gas service territory, the town of Bozrah in Eastern Connecticut. And despite the mild winter, we did have one frigid weekend around President’s Day, when both Yankee Gas and NSTAR Gas set all-time records for the amount of natural gas delivered in a single day. On February 14, NSTAR Gas delivered over 8.5% more natural gas to our customers than the previous record set back in January, 2014. Now, I will turn to our regulatory calendar in slide six. We are awaiting a decision from the New Hampshire PUC on our comprehensive settlement with numerous state officials and other parties to divest PSNH’s generating assets. To remind you, PSNH generating rate base, including under-appreciated plants, fuel and inventory, totals approximately $700 million. Any investment we have in our generation business that is not recovered through the plant sale process will be recovered through securitization. We continue to expect the entire sale and securitization process to be completed by this time next year. Moving from New Hampshire to Washington, on March 22, the administrative law judge at FERC handling complaints number two and complaint number three involving the ROEs earned by all New England transmission owners issued his initial recommendation. For the 15-month refund period ended in March 2014, the 400-page recommendation called for a base ROE of 9.59% and a cap of 10.42%. For the 15-month period ending October 2015, the decision called for a base ROE of 10.9% and a cap of 12.19%. Our currently allowed ROE is 10.57% and our current cap is 11.74%. So if the FERC were to adopt the ALJ recommendation, we would find ourselves under-reserved for the earlier refund period by $34 million after tax and over reserved for the later refund period by $8 million after tax. Because we cannot be certain how FERC commissioners will ultimately decide the case, we didn’t book any charges this quarter due to the ALJ recommendation. We will reexamine the issue as this process moves forward. If FERC were to adopt the ALJ recommendation, we would have a one-time net charge of approximately $0.08 per share. Going forward, however, we would earn a higher ROE of 10.9% compared with the current base of 10.57%. Parties to the case filed comments on the ALJ recommendation on April 21. We continue to expect the final FERC decision around the end of this year or early 2017. I should note that after six months of no additional complaints, a fourth complaint was filed this past Friday by Eastern Massachusetts Municipal Electric Companies. We await FERC action on this fourth complaint. Turning to financing, Eversource parent issued $500 million of senior notes in March, $250 million of five-year notes with a coupon of 2.5%, and $250 million of 10-year notes with a coupon of 3.35%. Proceeds were used to pay down short-term debt. The issuances were several times oversubscribed, and we’re very pleased with the rates we received. Now, I’ll turn the call over to Lee. Leon J. Olivier – EVP-Enterprise Energy Strategy and Business Development Okay. Thank you, Jim. I’ll provide you with a brief update on our major investment initiatives and then turn the call back to Jeff for Q&A. Let’s start with Northern Pass on slide eight. The review process for Northern Pass continues to move along according to schedule. March was an important month from the standpoint of receiving public input on our project. A total of seven public meetings were held around this date in the month, three by the New Hampshire Site Evaluation Committee, two by the U.S. Department of Energy, and two jointly between these two primary permitting agencies. The Site Evaluation Committee will hold two additional public meetings on some follow-up items, one later this month and another in June. April 4 was the deadline for the written comments on the draft environmental impact statement, and we expect a final environmental impact statement from the DOE in the fourth quarter of this year. On the state side, the New Hampshire SEC recently established a near-term schedule through the end of June, providing for commencement of the discovery process in mid-May. The dates are similar to what we had proposed. Under the state statute, we would expect the New Hampshire SEC to hold evidentiary hearings and issue a decision before the end of the year. We are aware that some interveners have requested a more prolonged review period, and we expect a ruling soon on those requests and establishment of a firm schedule. Assuming the final schedule is consistent with the statutory deadline, as you can see on slide nine, it would support the issuance of a presidential permit from the Department of Energy early next year and the commencement of construction shortly thereafter. We continue to see support for the project building in New Hampshire, and we were gratified by the number of favorable comments in the public meetings, particularly from the labor and business communities of New Hampshire. We believe this is a sign of growing public support for the project and the billions of dollars of benefits it will bring to New Hampshire. As stated in our February Earnings Call, we bid both Northern Pass and the Clean Energy Connect into the three-state electric RFP. Clean Energy Connect would allow 600 megawatts of carbon-free energy to flow from New York into New England. The review process for our projects and the other approximately 20 that were bid into the process continues, and we expect the states involved in the RFP, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island, to announce the winning bids this summer. I will now turn to slide 10 and the Access Northeast project we plan to build with our partners Spectra Energy and National Grid. To remind you, Access Northeast is a $3 billion project to upgrade the existing Algonquin pipeline and add 6.8 billion cubic feet of LNG storage in Acushnet, Massachusetts, to bring firm natural gas supplies to power generators in New England. Our share of Access Northeast is 40%, or $1.2 billion. The project is designed to provide 900 million cubic feet per day of additional natural gas supplies to serve the region’s power generators during cold winter periods. That will allow up to 5,000 additional megawatts of the region’s most efficient low-cost units to remain online when winter temperatures drop, saving New England customers approximately $1.5 billion to $2 billion in a typical winter and approximately $3 billion in an extreme winter such as the 2013 and 2014 period. Access Northeast builds up the existing Algonquin footprint which already touches 60% of the power generation in New England, a percentage that will soon grow as nearly 2,600 megawatts of new proposed plants are built and connected to the project. Access Northeast allows direct last-mile deliveries to the power plants to ensure greater reliability and cost benefits. Business model is that electric utilities sign long-term contracts with Access Northeast and then retain an independent capacity manager to market that capacity to generators out of market price. Without Access Northeast, those generators are frequently without fuel to run their units during cold winter weather when the region’s existing pipeline capacity is used primarily to heat homes and businesses. If a large amount of new pipeline capacity is set aside to meet the fuel supply needs of natural gas generators, we can depend less on more costly and higher emitting coal and oil plants that typically operate when the region’s natural gas suppliers are short. We continue to make significant progress on securing and seeking approval of contracts with New England Electric distribution companies. The current status of the state reviews is on slide 11. You will recall the following in RFP this past fall, NSTAR Electric, Western Mass Electric, and two National Grid electric distribution companies filed with the Massachusetts DPU seeking approval of contracts for pipeline and storage capacity with Access Northeast. Our two utilities asked for a decision by October 1 of this year. The DPU has established a schedule to review that filing that would support a decision in the early fall. Evidentiary hearings on all of the contracts are scheduled for this summer. Once approved by the Department of Public Utilities, these contracts will account for more than 40% of Access Northeast targeted capacity. In Connecticut, we expect the State Department of Energy and Environment Protection to issue request for proposals for natural gas capacity shortly. We expect this process to be complete with approved contracts late this year or early in 2017. In New Hampshire, you may recall that the Public Utilities Commission issued an order on January 19 in which they accepted a staff report that concluded that the Public Utility Commission had sufficient authority to approve electric distribution contracts, financial gas supplies if those contracts were shown to be in customers’ interests. On February 18, Public Service of New Hampshire filed with state regulators a natural gas contract with Access Northeast that was similar to what the four Massachusetts electric utilities filed in their state. If the New Hampshire Public Utility Commissioners agree with the staff that they have sufficient authority to approve such agreements, they would then determine whether the specific contracts submitted were in the customer’s best interest. A technical session on the docket scheduled was held yesterday. We are optimistic that the commissioners will agree with the staff that they have authority to approve a contract with Public Service of New Hampshire and Access Northeast. The PUC’s consideration of whether the contracts provide benefits to customers would follow its legal ruling on the issues. In Maine, where regulators have been engaged in natural gas contracting issue for some time, state regulators are scheduled to reach a decision on recommended solutions by the early fall. In Rhode Island, National Grid issued in RFPs in the fall with bids received November 13, around the same time as the Massachusetts electric distribution companies had their RFP. We expect the National Grid to make a decision and file with Rhode Island regulators by early this summer. In Vermont, the state has expressed support for additional natural gas infrastructure, but its level of participation is yet to be determined. We expect that the state processes will be sufficiently advanced by the end of this year so that we can promptly file a formal application with FERC and bring additional natural gas supplies into New England for the winter 2018 to 2019. We continue to believe that Access Northeast offers an excellent near-term and long-term answer to the region’s intensifying winter energy challenges. And now, I’d like to turn the call back over to Jeff for any Q&As. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations All right. And I’m going to turn it back to Brandon just to remind you how to answer questions. Question-and-Answer Session Operator Thank you, sir. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations All right. Thank you. Our first question this morning is from Mike Weinstein from UBS. Good morning, Mike. Michael Weinstein – UBS Securities LLC Hey. Good morning. I was just wondering if we could talk about the – whether the current status of the RFPs and expected approvals for gas contracts support beginning construction in 2017 for getting major sessions with the pipe online for the winter of 2018 and 2019, generally speaking broadly. Leon J. Olivier – EVP-Enterprise Energy Strategy and Business Development Yeah, Mike. This is Lee Olivier. The construction period would start for the project in 2018, will start in early 2018, approximately the April-May timeframe and then the first sections would go in on the piping for the winter of 2018. So you’re talking about the November timeframe of 2018. I would say right now we’re still on schedule. We will be prepared to file the comprehensive filing at FERC in the November-December timeframe. We believe the timing in and around the other states, including Connecticut, even though Connecticut is built inside of their process, they have 90 days to negotiate precedent agreements with the EDCs, we think that could be done in approximately 30 days or 35 days. Their approval process through their regulatory body PURA is a very short term, it’s about 60 days. So we think all of these schedules line up right now for conclusion by the end of this year and filing with FERC and start with construction in the spring of 2018 for the first phase of the pipeline. Michael Weinstein – UBS Securities LLC Are you seeing more support for the project, just broadly speaking, as a result of the cancellation of Northeast Energy Direct? Leon J. Olivier – EVP-Enterprise Energy Strategy and Business Development I would say, although, the two projects were designed somewhat differently, we were designed to supply gas to generators to firm up 5,000 megawatts and they – ostensibly the (24:55) all around providing LDC power supplies. I think the fact that they’re not going to be there obviously puts more pressure on the overall gas supplies of the region. So I believe that there is more support firming up around Access Northeast, both in the business community and with policymakers as well. Michael Weinstein – UBS Securities LLC And just one last one. Can you give us an update on Massachusetts legislation and work for renewables in the state, how that might impact things like the Clean Energy Connect project, things like that? James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Sure, Mike. This is Jim. We had solar legislation that was approved in Massachusetts that increases that needling cap and actually extends the opportunity for utilities to consider a utility-owned solar. There is also proposed legislation that the governor is endorsing which recommends hydroelectric commitments as well as offshore wind is being discussed as well. Those are only in draft form of proposed, it’s only until the solar legislation is passed today. Michael Weinstein – UBS Securities LLC Okay. Thanks a lot. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations All right. James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations Thanks, Mike. Our next question this morning is from Travis Miller from Morningstar. Good morning, Travis. Travis Miller – Morningstar, Inc. (Research) Good morning. Thanks. I was wondering just on the demand, so electric demand in particular. How much of that was weather do you estimate? I know it’s tough to do. James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Travis, it’s a tough question because you have such an extreme change from one year to the next, a very, very cold winter in the first quarter, a very mild winter this quarter resulting in a sales decline in the electric side of 8.5%. I would say that virtually all of that is weather-driven. I think without the – if we had had normal weather, I think the sales would have been close to flat, is my estimate. Travis Miller – Morningstar, Inc. (Research) Correct. Is that – remind me what your outlook is for this year in terms of electric sales growth. James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Flat is the estimate that we provided. Travis Miller – Morningstar, Inc. (Research) Okay. And is that – if we look out, call it five years or something, what kind of trends are you seeing in terms of what would keep electric demand flat or 0.5%, something well below what we’ve seen historically? Are there particular specific trends and programs perhaps that you would see depressing that type of demand? James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Yeah. We’re estimating the long-term growth rate on the electric side to be flat as well. As you know, we are decoupled in a number of our franchises. And as we have future rate cases, we’ll be decoupled everywhere, I expect. But we are forecasting flat on the electric side, but because of the gas conversions going on, we think there’ll be 2% to 3% growth in gas sales annually. And really I think the primary driver to that flat growth has got nothing to do with the economy, in particular in the Boston area the economy is moving. There’s lots of construction going on. But we as a company spend $500 million a year, $0.5 billion a year on energy efficiency, and I think that has a significant impact – 2% impact on the sales results for the company. Now, fortunately, the rate-making mechanism for energy efficiency spending makes us whole, either decoupling our loss-based revenues reimburse us. If we actually do a good job on the projects, we’re able to earn an incentive. And at the same time, we’re recovering our costs as we incur them each year. So the cash flow is positive as well. So, yeah, were it not for energy efficiency, I think we’d be looking at 2% or higher sales volume growth. Travis Miller – Morningstar, Inc. (Research) Okay, great. I appreciate the thoughts. Thanks. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations Thank you, Travis. Our next question is from Caroline Bone from Deutsche Bank. Good morning, Caroline. Caroline V. Bone – Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. Hey. Good morning, and first of all congratulations, Jim and Phil. That’s wonderful news. James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you very much. Philip J. Lembo – Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Thank you. Caroline V. Bone – Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. You’re welcome. So I just have one question. Last call, I believe you guys discussed the possibility of share buybacks. And I was just wondering if you could kind of review with us the circumstances in which we might see such a program? James J. Judge – President & Chief Executive Officer Sure. We have a lot of positive cash flow items, right? Our fundamental business is strong to begin with. We’ve got bonus depreciation that’s been extended. We have $700 million of cash coming in the door next year from the divestiture and securitization. And what we have said in the past is that to the extent that we can’t find additional projects to pursue, to redeploy that cash, ultimately it’s shareholders’ monies and so obviously we would pay off some debt as well. But we would consider a share buyback if there wasn’t a better use of the proceeds. That being said, I wouldn’t expect any announcement this year. I mean, we are certainly executing to our plan for 2016. As we reaffirm guidance today, we continue to believe that we’re going to be able to achieve those results and those results for 2016 do not assume a buyback is in place. Caroline V. Bone – Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. Okay. Thank you. That’s very clear. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations Thanks, Caroline. We don’t have any other questions this morning. So we want to thank you for joining us. We look forward to seeing you at many conferences over the next couple of weeks, and have a good rest of the day. Operator Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations Thanks, Brandon. Operator You bet. Take care. Jeffrey R. Kotkin – Vice President-Investor Relations All right. 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Duke Energy (DUK) Lynn J. Good on Q1 2016 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Duke Energy Corp. (NYSE: DUK ) Q1 2016 Earnings Call May 03, 2016 10:00 am ET Executives Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Analysts Greg Gordon – Evercore Group LLC Jonathan Philip Arnold – Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Julien Dumoulin-Smith – UBS Securities LLC Christopher J. Turnure – JPMorgan Securities LLC Michael Lapides – Goldman Sachs & Co. James von Riesemann – Mizuho Securities USA, Inc. Praful Mehta – Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. (Broker) Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. Paul Patterson – Glenrock Associates LLC Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners Operator Good day, and welcome to the Duke Energy First Quarter Earnings Call. Today’s conference is being recorded. And at this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Bill Currens. Please go ahead, sir. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Thank you, Yolanda. Good morning everyone, and welcome to Duke Energy’s first quarter 2016 earnings review and business update. Leading our call today is Lynn Good, Chairman, President and CEO along with Steve Young, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Today’s discussion will include forward-looking information and the use of non-GAAP financial measures. Slide two presents the Safe Harbor statement, which accompanies our presentation materials. A reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures can be found on duke-energy.com and in today’s materials. Please note that the appendix to today’s presentation includes supplemental information and additional disclosures. As summarized on slide three, Lynn will cover our first quarter financial and operational highlights and provide an update of our recent strategic and growth initiatives. Then Steve will provide an overview of our first quarter financial results, an, update on economic activities within our service territories and close with our key investor considerations. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Lynn. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Good morning, and thank you for joining us. I’m very pleased with our solid first quarter financial results, our continued focus on operational performance and the progress we’ve made on our strategic portfolio transition and important growth initiatives. I’ll provide an update on our progress on these initiatives in just a moment. First, let me begin with a few financial and operational highlights of the first quarter as summarized on slide four. This morning we announced first quarter 2016 adjusted earnings per share of $1.13. Results for our regulated utilities were modestly below our internal plan as a result of significant storm costs in the Carolinas, milder weather and weaker than expected customer volumes. We continue to see strong customer growth and our 12-month rolling average volumes continue to track consistently with our expectations. Operating results for our international business were in line with our expectations as hydrology began to return to more normal levels in Brazil. We also recognized tax adjustments at international during the quarter, which Steve will review in a movement. As we’ve looked at the balance of the year, we are affirming our full year 2016 guidance range of $4.50 to $4.70 per share. Daily operational excellence continues to underpin our commitment to our customers, communities and investors. That commitment starts with our focus on safety. For 2015, Duke Energy’s employees safety record received the top rank among large utilities as recognize by EEI. Our generation fleet also performed well during the quarter. Our nuclear fleet achieved a 95% capacity factor, building on its record breaking performance in 2015. In Indiana, our Edwardsport IGCC facility continues to improve its operational performance. In February the gasifiers achieved 100% availability, our best month ever. Our growing natural gas fleet is also benefiting customers and the environment, taking advantage of low natural gas prices. In March of this year, our gas-fired plant set a record for monthly natural gas consumption, surpassing the record set last June. This is indicative of the strategic coal-to-gas shift in our generation portfolio, which has enabled us to reduce carbon emissions by 28% since 2005. Our organization responded well to weather challenges in the first quarter. In January, Winter Storm Jonas struck the Carolinas causing approximately 600,000 customer outages. There were also ice and wind storms in February, impacting more than 500,000 customers in the Carolinas. Our teams performed admirably during these events, continuing to provide customers with the level of service they’ve come to expect. Next let me update you on our coal ash basin closure activities in the Carolinas. We continue to make outstanding progress with closure activities underway at six sites. For each of our basins, the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality is required by statue to recommend risk classifications. Preliminary classifications were released at the end of January followed by a public comment period. We expect DEQ to finalize their classifications shortly. The risk classifications will impact basin closure methods, timing and costs. Based on our comprehensive engineering analysis of our basins, we believe the majority of the remaining unclassified basins meet the requirements for a low classification, allowing 15 years and closure methods which include storing the ash in place. W are committed to safe basin closure in a way that protects our communities and the environment, while minimizing cost to customers. We will keep you informed as the regulatory review process continues to advance. Turning to slide five. I’ll highlight several recent milestones in our important growth initiatives. Our five-year capital plan through 2020 includes a deployment of between $25 billion and $30 billion in growth capital in new natural gas-fired generation, grid investment, commercial and regulated renewables and gas pipeline infrastructure. These investments are directed at improving customer service, modernizing our generation fleet and the electric grid, as well as investing in natural gas infrastructure that is complementary to our system. These investments support our transition toward businesses that provide stable, long-term growth in earnings and the dividend. During the quarter, we received approval from the North Carolina Utilities Commission for our $1 billion Western Carolinas modernization project in Ashville. This allows us to move forward with retiring the Asheville Coal Plant by 2020 and replacing it with two highly efficient natural gas combined cycle units. In South Carolina, construction of our $700 million W.S. Lee Natural Gas Combined Cycle Plant is well underway. The project is on budget and on target for a November 2017 in-service date. We also broke ground on our $1.5 billion natural gas-fired Citrus County Combined Cycle Plant in Florida, staying on track for a 2018 in-service date. We’re building on our success and growing our commercial and regulated renewable assets. In our commercial portfolio, our two 200-megawatt wind projects, Los Vientos IV and Frontier are on target to come online later this year. Since the beginning of the year, we’ve announced the acquisition of nine new solar projects including eight in North Carolina. In our regulated utilities, we’ve announced 100 megawatts of planned solar installations for 2016 in the Carolinas, Florida, and Indiana. That’s already about 75% of what we achieved in 2015, which was a very strong year for solar investment. In fact, Duke Energy progress was ranked third among all utilities in 2015 for bringing new solar capacity online. Additionally, as pictured on this slide, we recently completed an iconic solar farm to serve the power needs of Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando. In the first quarter, we also made good progress in our grid modernization efforts. In March, we announced a settlement agreement with nearly all interveners including key consumer groups on our seven-year Indiana T&D infrastructure investment program. The $1.4 billion plan will provide much needed technology and infrastructure upgrades that will benefit customers, providing improved reliability and safety, fewer and shorter power outages, better information, and overall energy savings. In addition, the settlement allows us to continue evaluating the installation of smart meters in our Indiana service territory, which would be eligible for recovery in a future rate case. The grid modernization hearings with the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission began yesterday, and we expect a decision around mid-year. Our two commercial natural gas pipeline infrastructure projects, Atlantic Coast Pipeline and Sabal Trail, continue moving forward. Sabal Trail received FERC approval in February, and the pipeline is on target to begin construction in the second quarter and be in operation in 2017. Atlantic Coast Pipeline is also progressing and has adopted several alternate routes, increasing the lengths of the pipeline from about 550 miles to just under 600 miles. The project partners recently submitted updated information related to these alternative routes as well as responses to all of FERC’s outstanding environmental information requests. We’re confident that FERC will soon be able to issue its draft environmental impact statement, the next important project milestone. And in fact, I believe that statement was issued this morning. The project partners have devoted significant time and resources to ensure that the environmental issues have been fully addressed. And as a result, we’ve adjusted our expectation for receipt of the FERC certificate to mid-2017. We are still planning for a late 2018 in-service date for the project. Turning to slide six, I will address recent activities around the strategic transition of our overall business portfolio toward regulated and contracted electric and gas infrastructure businesses. The two strategic transactions highlighted on this slide will complete the realignment of our portfolio to focus entirely on domestic businesses that drive more stable earnings and cash flows. Let’s start with our pending acquisition of Piedmont Natural Gas. In March, we received approval from the Tennessee Regulatory Authority for a change in control upon acquisition by Duke Energy. The final remaining approval is with the North Carolina Utilities Commission, which has scheduled hearing for July 18. We remain confident of closing the transaction before the end of this year. Additionally, at the end of February, we successfully priced a common stock offering to fund the equity portion of the Piedmont acquisition. The $766 million offering was well received by our investors. As a reminder, the shares were offered in a forward structure. This means we will not issue the shares until the forward is settled at the time the Piedmont transaction closes. We are also progressing on the planned exit of our Latin American generation business. We’ve begun initial steps in marketing the assets including signing nondisclosure agreements and providing information to interested parties. This business includes high quality assets, which we believe will attract significant interest for potential buyers. We will keep you updated on this important strategic transition. In conclusion, I’m pleased with our financial results for the quarter and our progress in advancing our growth investments. We’re also maintaining a sharp focus on operational excellence, which includes our commitment to safety and cost efficiency. Our business portfolio transition positions Duke as an industry-leading domestic infrastructure business with stable, transparent earnings and cash flows. We’re looking forward to continuing our progress on this transition throughout 2016. Now, let me turn it over to Steve. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Thanks, Lynn. Before I begin, I’d like to take a moment to thank Bill Currens for his seven years as a leader with the Investor Relations team. Bill’s tireless commitment to delivering accurate, transparent information to our analysts and investors has been outstanding. I will look forward to continuing to work with him in his new role as our Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer & Controller. As many of you know, Mike Callahan is succeeding Bill as Vice President of Investor Relations. Currently Mike serves as Director of Regulated Utilities Forecasting. He has also had extensive experience in treasury, financial planning and analysis, and investor relations. We’re delighted he’s returning to IR to lead the team, where he will continue our efforts to serve our shareholders and investors. Today, I’ll focus on four primary areas. First, I’ll discuss the major drivers of our first quarter results and provide an update to our full-year adjusted EPS guidance range for 2016. I’ll discuss our retail volume trends and the economic conditions within our service territories. I’ll spend a few moments on the continued cost management efforts underway, and then I will close with a review of our key investor considerations. Let’s start with the quarterly results. I will cover the highlights on slide seven. For more detailed information on segment variances versus last year, please refer to the supporting materials that accompany today’s press release. First quarter adjusted diluted earnings were $1.13 per share compared to $1.24 in the first quarter of 2015. The lower results in the current year reflect milder winter weather in 2016 and the absence of Midwest generation results due to the successful sale of the business in April 2015. Additionally in 2016, we incurred significant winter storm costs and somewhat softer retail volumes, which were offset by a tax adjustment at international. On a reported basis, 2016 first quarter earnings per share were $1.01 compared to $1.22 last year. Let me briefly review key quarterly earnings drivers at each of our business segments. On an adjusted basis, regulated utilities results declined by $0.11 per share, principally driven by the milder weather in the Carolinas and Midwest. Higher revenues from pricing and riders in the Carolinas and Ohio were mostly offset by higher depreciation and amortization expense due to additional plant in service, including the acquisition of the NCEMPA assets in July 2015. Additionally, we incurred higher O&M expense during the quarter as a result of winter storm cost in the Carolinas, which were higher than our planning assumptions by $0.05. Offsetting emergent storm expenses were lower outage costs and increased cost efficiencies throughout the organization. As expected, our commercial portfolio declined by $0.11 per share in the first quarter of 2016, primarily due to the absence of the Midwest generation business, which was sold in April of 2015. Our commercial renewables benefited from improved levels of wind production this quarter and growth from new renewable projects. Other was down $0.06 per share, primarily due to prior year tax adjustments and higher interest expense in the quarter. Moving to international operational performance, in particular in Brazil, strengthened during the quarter. Hydrology in Brazil has improved significantly during the recent rainy season. Reservoir levels in southeast Brazil are approximately 60%, compared to around 30% this time last year. This improvement has resulted in increased hydro production throughout Brazil and lower purchased power costs to meet our contractual commitments. We also had $0.11 of favorable tax related items associated with the international segment during the quarter, which represents the impact of several events. You will recall in the fourth quarter of 2014, we declared a $2.7 billion dividend at international in order to efficiently bring funds back to the US. In early 2016, we announced our intent to exit the international business. This decision, combined with the extension of bonus depreciation by Congress in late 2015, allows us to more efficiently utilize foreign tax credits and reduce our US income taxes. As a result of our intent to exit the international business, we will recognize additional US income taxes for international up until the point of sale. Overall, and with our first quarter results, we remain on track to achieve our 2016 guidance range of between $4.50 to $4.70 per share. Moving onto slide eight, I’ll now discuss our retail customer volume trends. On a rolling 12-month basis, weather-normalized retail load growth was 0.7% through the first quarter. For the first quarter, our retail load growth trends were soft. Within the residential sector, we continued to experience strong growth in the number of new customers, approximately 1.3% over the recent 12 months. However, after moderating for most of 2015, residential customer usage trends have declined during the quarter due to the slow economic recovery and adoption of energy efficiency initiatives. Employment and wage growth trends continue to be favorable for the residential sector, along with the improving housing sector. The commercial and industrial classes continue to grow, to show growth of 0.2% and 1.1% respectively over the rolling 12 months. The commercial sector continues to be supported by office vacancy rate declines and job creation remains strong. Offsetting this growth is the governmental sector, as many agencies face tighter budgets, elimination of jobs and adoption of energy efficiency measures. As for the industrial sector, construction, automotives and textiles continue to show strength in the Carolinas and Midwest. Other industrial companies continue to reduce production as they work through unusually high inventory levels accumulated in 2015. However, the softer global economies and the stronger dollar is still impacting companies that compete globally, such as steel and metals. Our 12-month trends continue to track to our planning assumptions, despite a weak first quarter. We will continue to closely monitor customer usage patterns as we progress through the year. Moving to slide nine, as we continue to position our company for a low load growth environment, I’d like to spend just a moment discussing the progress that we made in managing costs across the organization. So far this year, absent the emerging storm costs, O&M is tracking favorable to the prior year, which is consistent with our expectations. We are focused on standardization of our operational processes and systems to manage our business much more efficiently. We also continued to take advantage of the flexibility and cost savings associated with the transition of our generation portfolio from coal to natural gas. Also within our nuclear and fossil generation fleets, we’re making changes in how we plan and execute our plant outages and how we utilize resources across our fleet. Although the Nuclear Promise is an industry-wide approach to controlling costs, activities are already underway within our nuclear fleet to drive out cost and place more discipline on capital allocation. In our transmission and distribution businesses, we continue to pursue technology that not only provides greater reliability and information for our customers, but also helps control work volumes, metering costs and contractor needs. I’ll close with slide 10, which summarizes our key investor considerations. Duke Energy has tremendous scale, offering an attractive investor value proposition, which includes balanced growth in earnings and dividends over time. As Lynn mentioned, we are making excellent progress on the acquisition of Piedmont and the exit of the international business. After the completion of this strategic transition, we will operate a portfolio that provides lower risk and higher quality earnings and cash flows to support growth in both earnings and the dividend. Our strong capital plan includes the transition toward a lower carbon future as we retire coal and build new efficient combined cycle natural gas and renewable resources. We’re excited about the growth opportunities for natural gas infrastructure across our service territories, particularly in the Southeast. Our electric grid investments allow us to deliver higher levels of reliability and offer new innovative products and services to our customers. Our dividend is very important to us. We continue to target annual growth in the dividend consistent with our long-term 4% to 6% earnings growth objective. Strong cash flows from our core businesses support our dividend. We are only one quarter into the year, but remain on track to achieve the $4.50 to $4.70 adjusted earnings per share guidance range for 2016. With that, let’s open the line for your questions. Question-and-Answer Session Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Okay. Greg, I think we’ve got you first in the queue. We’ll go to Greg Gordon. Greg? Operator, if you can hear us, we’ll go ahead and take Q&A now. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer We appear that we having some technical difficulty. So, we’ll wait for a few minutes to see if we can establish the line for questions. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations If everyone could just bear with us for one second. They had a fire alarm over at the operator’s location. So just bear with us for a second here. Operator We’ll take our first question from Greg Gordon with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. Greg Gordon – Evercore Group LLC Hey. Thanks. Bill, first of all I wanted to say congratulations. You’ve run a fantastic IR program. You’re leaving it in great hands as well. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Great. Thank you for that comment Greg. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Good morning, Greg. Greg Gordon – Evercore Group LLC Yes. Good morning. How are you? So, couple of questions on tax. So you’re ahead of the game on tax and international. I was a little bit distracted when you were going through that part of your script, so can you rehash what’s going on there? And does that effectively put you ahead of target for the year for that segment, since you’re already more than halfway there in the first quarter on your targeted guidance assumptions? Or is the tax drag year-over-year from other parts of the business offsetting it? And finally, you’re at a 26% effective tax rate year-to-date. Are you still expecting it to be 32%, 33% levelized over the course of the year, or is that also trending better? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer So Greg, let me start with a little explanation on the tax adjustment, then I’ll turn it to Steve on specifics around effective tax rate. So coming into this year, we had the extension of bonus depreciation and then the planned announcement of the exit of international, put us in a position where we could relook at the tax consequences of the sale of the business and we are going to be in a position to utilize more of our foreign tax credits, which is real economic benefit from the combination of the extension of bonus and the decision to exit. And so that economic benefit is being reflecting in the first quarter. It does put us ahead of our first quarter plan on international as a result of that. But also as we indicated in the script, we will begin recognizing tax expense, because we will no longer be making the assertion that the proceeds do not come onshore and that tax expense will be reflected over the balance of the year. So, ahead of plan through the first quarter, good economic benefit from the tax planning that the team has accomplished here, and I’ll turn it to Steve to talk about effective tax rate. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Yes, we had expected and forecasted an effective tax rate for the year of about 32% to 33%. I think it will be lower than that. You might lower it by 1% on that range, as a result of the tax strategies we put forth related to international. Greg Gordon – Evercore Group LLC Okay. So some portion of that $0.11 will flow back, but there will be a net benefit when we look back at the end of the fiscal year. Is that a fair summary? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer That’s correct. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Yes, that’s true. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer That’s correct. A modest amount will turn, Greg. Greg Gordon – Evercore Group LLC Okay. I think I understand. Thank you, guys. I’ll cede to the next question. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Okay. Thanks so much. Operator We’ll take our next question from Jonathan Arnold with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Jonathan Philip Arnold – Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. Thank you, guys. That was actually going to be my first question. So, I’ll ask my second one which was on the international sale. Can you give any insight at this stage whether you feel it’s more likely the assets get sold in one block or in packages or some other structure? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Jonathan, we’re pleased with where we are on the process. There’s been good market interest in the assets. We’re still in preliminary phases. So, I can’t speak to whether or not the transaction will be a single transaction or a combination. Our objective will be to optimize the value of the portfolio. And as the year progresses, we’ll keep you informed on timing and expectations. But I would say we’re off to a solid start on the process. Jonathan Philip Arnold – Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. Are you committed to exiting everything, or is it possible that there would be a partial sale if that was the better value outcome? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer We’ve made a decision to exit, and are certainly in that process today, Jonathan, and as we move through it we’ll have a better sense of timing and approach. So, I think that’s a question that we’ll be prepared to give more specifics on as the year progresses. But again, we’re off to a good start with the degree of market interest we’re seeing in the assets. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Thank you. And thank you to you as well Bill. And good luck. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Thank you, Jonathan. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thanks, Jonathan. Operator We’ll go next to Steve Fleishman with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Yeah. Hi. Good morning. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Good morning. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Thanks for that peaceful moment there earlier. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President We didn’t know what was going on for awhile. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer I know, when we figured out it was a fire alarm, it has to be one of the first ever. Mr. Currens (32:20) on his final call. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Yes. So, we’ll always remember your final call, Bill. So, just one other clarification on the international. There were Bloomberg Radio story headlines this morning that seemed to imply there was a comment from that saying that the dilution from the sale would be less than you had thought going forward. That’s not what you said though here in this call. So, could you just clarify, did you say something about that or is there anything to add there? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Steve, thanks for that question. So it’s kind of all a part of this discussion around economic value from this tax adjustment. So, we still intend, believe the transaction will be dilutive. We’ll give more visibility on valuation as the process continues. But the fact that we’ve had a tax planning strategy here that has provided an economic value reflected in the first quarter is significant. It’s a combination of bonus and the decision to sell. So that was the point I was making. But we’ll know more on the valuation of the entire transaction as the year progresses. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Okay. But there just to, I’m sorry to clarify again. So you were referring to the benefit that you got in this first quarter. There is not some other tax benefits that occur post sale that we weren’t. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer That’s correct. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Okay. Great. And then, just maybe on the clarifying kind of going back to last call. So you had said before, the 4% to 6% growth rate and it’s going to be kind of maybe kind of lower toward the beginning of the period, then rising toward the end of the period. Is that still kind of the way you look at it? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer That’s correct, Steve. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Okay. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer We don’t expect linear, just given the timing of our capital deployment, the approach we take toward rate cases and resetting our prices. But over the five-year period, we believe we have the capital investments, the growth initiatives that will drive growth within our 4% to 6% targeted range. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Okay. And then lastly, I think Piedmont has a stake in the Constitution Pipeline. I mean, I’m sure that’s not a huge part of the company, but just does that affect much at all your kind of expectations there, the delay? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer So, we’ve been following that closely. Steve, and of course are disappointed in the ruling in the State of New York. I think the partners in the projects have been very clear on where they are and the fact that they are reviewing a number of options to go forward. At this point, we’re planning for a delay in the project. But as these options are pursued, some of which could include resubmission or appeal through the courts, we’ll have a better sense of timing and outcome, so more to come on that. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC And their stake is like $250 million, is that the right number? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Around $200 million. Around $200 million, Steve. Steve Fleishman – Wolfe Research LLC Okay. Okay. Thank you. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you. Operator We’ll move next to Julien Dumoulin-Smith with UBS. Please go ahead. Julien Dumoulin-Smith – UBS Securities LLC Hey. Good morning. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Good morning, Julien. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Good morning. Julien Dumoulin-Smith – UBS Securities LLC Get it started. So, a few clarifying questions here. Following up on Steve’s last question, how do you think about hitting the bottom end of the range through at least the near-term period? Just to kind of clarify that. Do you expect to be able to hit that 4% in the subsequent years, especially given the year-to-date start and where the sales process is et cetera? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer You know, Julien, I think our guidance on that is as it was at the end of the year. We have reaffirmed our range of $4.50 to $4.70 for this year. We’re in the midst of portfolio transition with the sale of international and the acquisition of Piedmont, both of which we expect to make substantial progress on in 2016. That will have bearing on 2017 and forward, so we’ll give you a better sense of 2017 as we get close. We’re confident in the range. We believe it will be nonlinear, as we’ve talked about, but don’t have anything further to say on that at this point. But we’re working hard on all elements of both growth initiatives, capital deployment, pursuing rate cases at the right time, and moving aggressively through the transition in the portfolio. Julien Dumoulin-Smith – UBS Securities LLC And then a quick follow-up on pension accounting here. We’ve seen some companies in the sector pursue some new policies on discount rates. I’d be curious, is that something you all are reviewing? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President We keep abreast of the various accounting rules and options available to us and those are things that we look at with a regular basis and we’re keeping an eye on those things. We’re aware of the different methods of selecting discount rates, yield curves, bond methods, spot methods, so we’re keeping an eye on that. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Just no decisions at this point. Julien. Those decisions will be finalized in connection with our year-end planning process. Julien Dumoulin-Smith – UBS Securities LLC So, would that still affect potentially this year? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer No, no decisions have been made at this point. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President No decisions, and typically a decision like that would impact prospective years. Julien Dumoulin-Smith – UBS Securities LLC Okay. Thank you. And then, more strategic question here. As you think about the gas expansion that you are undertaking by the acquisition of Piedmont, how are you thinking about future expansions or exposures on the gas side of the equation? And specifically here, either more gas utilities or more importantly, I suppose the more direct midstream pipeline exposure. I’d be curious. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Julien, we’re excited about what the potential of the Piedmont acquisition represents for Duke and our focus here in 2016 is on closing the transaction and also progressing Atlantic Coast Pipeline and Sabal Trail. We also see growth within the Piedmont franchise, both with customer additions as well as infrastructure that would support gas generation here in the Carolinas. So, we expect to continue to build on that platform in particular. We’ll look at assets that make sense for Duke, whether they’re midstream or local distribution companies, but don’t have anything more specific to share with you at this point. We’re focused on closing the transaction and integrating it in a successful way. Julien Dumoulin-Smith – UBS Securities LLC Got it. Thank you. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you. Operator We’ll take our next question from Chris Turnure with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Good morning, Chris. Christopher J. Turnure – JPMorgan Securities LLC Good morning. I had a more specific question on timing for the international sale. I do respect that it’s still relatively early in the process, but it’s my understanding that you really got the ball rolling back in January, so it’s been a couple months now. At least you do have those I guess confidentiality agreements in place, and you are in discussions. Maybe it would be helpful to hear a best case scenario here knowing what you know, in terms of timing for the ultimate close of the transaction. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Sure. And you know, Chris, the ball was rolling in January and February on planning. The ball began rolling into the market with discussions with counterparties on non-disclosure agreements and interest more in the late March, April timeframe. And so we are two months into that process. The data room, the data book is in the hands of prospective buyers, and over the next couple of months, we’ll be learning more about degree of interest, number of parties that intend to stay in the process, and we’ll have more to update in the second quarter. I just you know, given where we are, I don’t have any more specifics to share with you. Jonathan I believe or someone asked earlier about, is it one transaction or multiple. That of course would impact timing. Our objective is to optimize the value of the portfolio, and we’re going to move through this in a thoughtful way to accomplish exactly that. And we’ll give you more specifics when we are further into the process. Christopher J. Turnure – JPMorgan Securities LLC Great. And then my second question is on Atlantic Coast Pipeline. We did have the delay in the start of construction I guess that you gave some color on in your prepared remarks, but the overall cost and completion date remains unchanged. Is there any more information that you can give us there in terms of the drivers of that delay and start of construction and maybe moving pieces within the lack of change of completion date and lack of change of total costs that might have kind of netted to no effect there, I guess. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Chris, there has been a very active engagement on the part of the partners throughout this process and the delay in receipt of FERC approval has really been the result of pursuing alternate routes and addressing environmental and stakeholder concerns along the way. So the schedule, as originally developed, had contingency timing in it which we’ve continued to work actively with our partners, including you know the way we’re engaging with contractors. And at this point believe that we are on target for a mid-2017 approval from FERC, which should give us an ability to continue to target late 2018 for in-service. So, a lot of good work has been going on to look at a variety of alternatives and to work with the contingency that was within the original project plan. Christopher J. Turnure – JPMorgan Securities LLC Okay, that makes sense. Thank you. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you. Operator Our next question will come from Michael Lapides with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Michael Lapides – Goldman Sachs & Co. Hey, guys. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Hi, Michael. Michael Lapides – Goldman Sachs & Co. Couple of easy ones. Can you all talk about how much utility O&M was down year-over-year in the quarter excluding the impact of storms? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Yes, Michael. The O&M, the non-recoverable types O&M was down $0.04 year-over-year in the quarter. And again, we had about $0.05 of storms delta quarter-over-quarter offsetting that. But we had the $0.04 benefit. Michael Lapides – Goldman Sachs & Co. Okay. And then CapEx in the quarter came in, like if I just annualize that number, that would imply a year-end number several billion below kind of what you highlighted for 2016 levels. Should we just assume CapEx is very back-end loaded in the course of this year or is there a kind of downside potential to that CapEx number? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President I think our original capital plans for the years are still intact. I think it’s just a shaping during the year. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer And Michael, if you look back even at 2015, we spent about 20% of capital last year. We’re kind of in that range this year in the first quarter, and then it picks up over the course of the year. So the pattern looks similar to what we’ve experienced in previous years. Michael Lapides – Goldman Sachs & Co. Got it. And then finally, can you just remind us what are your thoughts or plans around rate case timing across the various utilities or across your system? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Yes, Michael. As we had mentioned in the February call, we’re looking at the majority of these cases to be back loaded in the five-year timeframe. But that’s always subject to scrutiny of costs and events that are going on at the time. And in fact, we are looking at accelerating a rate case. We may file a notice this year for our filing for Duke Energy Progress South Carolina jurisdiction. So we’re always looking at what’s the appropriate time to go in, what’s our cost structure look like and the investment timing related to that. I’d still say that the majority of the cases are in the back end of the five-year timeframe. But the South Carolina is an example of an opportunity we have that we need to move on perhaps earlier. Michael Lapides – Goldman Sachs & Co. Got it. Yeah. I asked that question only because if I look at the quarterly demand rather than the rolling 12 months, while it’s really strong in the Carolinas, Florida has been a little bit weaker and Indiana and Ohio especially in this quarter were significantly weak on a weather normalized basis. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Michael, the rate case timing in Florida, you may recall, we have the GBRAs in place in connection with the building of the plants and that along with that, has a stay-out through 2018, I believe. And then in Indiana, we’ve been pursuing the T-disc, the grid investment, which will give us an ability to track and that will in hearing hopeful to get approval in Indiana, which will give us an opportunity to reset prices for those investments. And we’ll continue to monitor whether load trends and other things would change our timing in Indiana, but we believe the tracker that we’re pursuing is the highest priority rate activity in that jurisdiction. Michael Lapides – Goldman Sachs & Co. Got it. Thank you, guys. Much appreciated. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Thank you. Operator Our next question will come from Jim von Riesemann with Mizuho. Please go ahead. James von Riesemann – Mizuho Securities USA, Inc. I am all set. Thank you. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thanks, Jim. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Thanks, Jim. Operator We’ll move to our next caller then, Praful Mehta with Citi. Praful Mehta – Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. (Broker) Hi, guys. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Hello. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Hello. Praful Mehta – Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. (Broker) So, my quick question was, you mentioned on growth on the gas side that you might look at other gas assets. So just to clarify, are you talking about building on your platform for gas with acquisitions or are you looking for organic growth to build on your gas platform? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer The first objective is to close the sale, or close the purchase of Piedmont Natural Gas. And we believe that we’ll have organic growth opportunities within that platform not only for new customer additions but expansion of the interstate pipeline system in the Carolinas as we continue our strategic move from coal to gas. And then beyond that, for midstream or LDCs, there was a question earlier that address our interest in that. We will consider those types of additions to the portfolio that make sense, complement what we’re trying to do. But our primary objective is closing the transaction, focusing our attention on integration, focusing our attention on growth organically as I outlined, and then other opportunities we’ll evaluate as they arise. Praful Mehta – Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. (Broker) Got you. Thank you, guys. That’s all I have. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you. Operator Our next question will come from Ali Agha with SunTrust. Please go ahead. Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. Thank you. Good morning. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Hello. Good morning. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Hello Ali. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Good morning. Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. Good morning. Can you remind us for this year, the commercial power earnings that you’ve budgeted, how much of that is essentially coming from recognition of tax credits? Is it almost all of it? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer If you look in the slide deck, Ali, on slide 13, it gives you the full year assumption for commercial, and that business is commercial wind and solar, which as you know have tax credits as an important part of their economics. So, that gives you a range or a perspective on the magnitude of that contribution. Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. And Lynn, what is the mix between ITC and PTC recognition there? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer More heavily PTC, just because of the nature of our portfolio, Ali. Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. Okay. And what’s current the average life of contracts on the PTC side? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President On the PTC side, we look at PPAs that are in the range of typically 15 to 25 years, in that type of range. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer And the PTC benefit, Ali, as you know is a 10-year benefit. Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. Yes. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Yeah. Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. And you are relatively early in that recognition, right, for most of the portfolio? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer You know, certainly, we’ve been in the business, started modestly in 2007 and then you can look at our kind of capital contribution in growth 2012, 2013, 2014, so I would say early in that PTC period generally. Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. Yeah. And lastly, Lynn, I know when you provide us full-year guidance, you lay out what you’re expecting adjusted ROEs to be across the portfolio as well. And in general, I mean would you say is there much in terms of, because looking at those numbers, it doesn’t seem to be, but is there much in terms of regulatory lag that you would say exists in your portfolio that perhaps can be captured in future years or are you thinking generally speaking the ROEs will move when you file those rate cases in the back end of the five-year forecast? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Let me make a comment and then Steve can continue. Steve commented a moment ago, Ali, that we see the potential for rate cases in South Carolina in 2016 that’s consistent with capital spending and cost structure and earned returns. And so we do have rate case potential in South Carolina in the very near term. And then later in the five-year period in North Carolina, that will be the result of regulatory lag showing up on capital investment that is occurring now and will occur into the future. I commented on trackers in Indiana and Florida, but at some point, we’ll address updating those rates as well. So, I think regulatory lag for any jurisdiction where we have historic test periods or the need to use base rate increases to achieve prices is going to have some regulatory lag associated with it. And that’s the careful analysis that we closely watch in determining the timing for filing. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President And I would add, as we said in February, we had a slide on our five-year growth and we showed the lag was about 3% negative. And that’s an average number over the five-year period. It will vary year per year. And it is as Lynn said related to the jurisdictions where you’ve got gaps between rate cases and you build up investments during those gap periods. So, we’re working on that and planning around those events. Ali Agha – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. Thank you. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thanks, Ali. Operator We’ll take our next question from Paul Patterson with Glenrock Associates. Please go ahead. Paul Patterson – Glenrock Associates LLC Good morning. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Good morning, Paul. Paul Patterson – Glenrock Associates LLC Congratulations again, Bill. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Thanks, Paul. Paul Patterson – Glenrock Associates LLC I wanted to just sort of touch base on the storms. Is there a normal number for storm costs that we should be thinking about in this quarter? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President It is hard to predict storms obviously. The past three years we’ve seen winter storms that have hit us in the range of $50 million or $60 million a year, but whether that’s normal or not, I would hesitate to say. We try to impute an amount that we think about in our budgeting, but you’ll have during the summer season the potentials for hurricanes in the Southeast and then in the winter storms across our jurisdictions other than Florida, typically there’s the potential. there. Hard to predict, but we’ve seen winter storms the past three years in the neighborhood of $50 million or $60 million. Paul Patterson – Glenrock Associates LLC Okay. On slide 19, it looks like you guys are indicating that for the utilities, only about $0.01 was impacted by unfavorable weather. And I mean, is that solely because of it seems – it’s a little surprisingly, it seems a little low. Does that take into account storm outages that might lower customer usage or, because when we look at slide eight, it looks like non-weather adjusted sales were down 4%, and I think that does not include leap year, correct? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President That’s correct. Yes. Let me give a little color on this. But typically, outages from storms do not affect volumes very significantly, as one point to make there, when you’re looking at the whole breadth of things. I would say that the, I always want to say this, when you’re looking at a quarter in particular, short periods of time, you have to be careful about weather normalized data. I think the first quarter of 2016 was mild, particularly March, and I don’t know whether we pulled all of the weather impacts out appropriately in the first quarter of 2016. Correspondingly, the first quarter of 2015 was very, very cold. And I don’t know whether all of the weather was pulled out of that quarter as well. So you’re comparing these two weather normalized periods, and it shows that the weather impact may not have been that significant. I suspect that it may have been more mild than what we showed in the first quarter here, but I don’t try to guess at what that could be. So we just roll with the data. I like to look at the 12 months rolling more critically there. We did as we acknowledged it, it was a bit of a soft quarter, but I think the 12-month rolling numbers are in line with what we’ve been forecasting. And I would want to emphasize that in response to a relatively weak load, we have aggressively pursued our cost structure to offset that. That’s part of our long-term plans. Paul Patterson – Glenrock Associates LLC Okay. Great. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer You know Paul, the only thing I would add to it is, we have standard methods of identifying what is weather related and non-weather related. And what Steve is commenting on is those standard methods can be impacted in periods where there is extreme temperature. So extreme cold or extreme warm weather that we experienced in March. So that all leads us to look at longer time periods, so that we don’t have those anomalies that could exist in any quarter. And that is really what has led us to this 12-month rolling average discussion on load because we think that is more indicative of trends we’re experiencing. And as you can imagine, we watch this really closely and manage the business for a low load growth environment. Paul Patterson – Glenrock Associates LLC Excellent. Thanks a lot. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thank you. Operator And our final question will come from Andy Levi with Avon Capital. Please go ahead. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners Hi. Good morning. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Hi, Andy. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Hey, Andy. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners How you guys doing? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Good. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Well. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Yes, sir. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners You’re one of the best ever, even though you never won that award, okay. I just want to say that. I would have given you that award. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations You just gave it to us, so thank you. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners Okay. But maybe next year Michael will win it, so. Actually I think most of my questions have been answered, but just back on the sales. So leap year is what, about 30 basis points on an annual basis, is that? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President That’s roughly right, Andy. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners Right, so I guess for the quarter, you times up by four or something like that, or is that not the right math? Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President Yeah I think you could get in the ballpark there, and it’s a little, that’s a rough way to do it. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners Right. Steven K. Young – Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President But again, I think getting weather normalized data is as much art as science and when you get an extreme period like we had in March and comparing it to an extreme period like a prior year, I think you can get fluctuations that make that comparison a little distorted. We think our customer growth and volumes are in line with our broad prediction levels and we’ll keep an eye on it. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners What do you guys think, I mean just in general, because it’s not just you who are seeing like decent customer growth or weak sales trends and it’s not just this quarter. Is it still energy efficiency or what else could it be? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer The other thing that we look at, Andy, is multifamily housing versus single family homes. We’re starting to see some positive trends in the Carolinas where there are more single family home construction opportunities. But coming out of the economic downturn, a lot of the growth was in multifamily units, which by their footprint use less energy than a home. So, I think we’re closely monitoring this and the call to the action for us is to ensure that our cost structure and the way we manage our investments and assets are consistent with the trends we’re seeing at the top line. And we believe we have a demonstrated track record in managing our business that way. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners Yeah. And then, just in general I guess, international is doing better than expected. Part of that is the tax benefit; part of that is hydro and then I would assume for the second half of the year, you’ll have some tailwind from currency if things kind of stay where they are. So that’s a positive for this year. But it also seems that the utility itself, because of the sales trends and I guess lack of rate increases, seems to be towards the low end of your range at this point. Again, it’s early in the year, but is that a fair statement? Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Andy, we’re on target for the range of $450 million to $470 million that we talked to you about. This is the first quarter. I think to give you any more specifics on placement within the guidance range is just premature. As you know, the third quarter is our most significant quarter, and we’re managing the business with identifying rate increase opportunities. Steve talked about South Carolina of course watching costs as part of that. And we’d like to see a longer trend on the sales growth to continue to monitor where that is progressing. So on track to achieve what we set out to achieve at the beginning of the year. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners Okay. Thank you very much, and Bill, again congratulations. I think you’ll be a great Controller and keep everyone in the straight and narrow, because I guess that’s what a Controller does, and I’m sure your kids will be happy to spend more time with you than they have for the last few years. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations All right. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Thanks, Andy. Bill Currens – Vice President-Investor Relations Thank you, Andy. Andrew Levi – Avon Capital/Millennium Partners Yes. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Okay. Operator With that being our last question, I’ll turn the call back to Lynn Good for closing comments. Lynn J. Good – Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Okay, Yolanda, thank you. And thanks everyone for hanging in with our fire alarm and our farewell to Bill Currens and welcome to Mike Callahan today. And most of all, thank you for your interest and investment in Duke. We look forward to meeting with many of you over the next several weeks and months and look forward to continue discussions. So, thanks again. Operator That will conclude today’s conference. Thank you all once again for your participation. 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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ALLETE’s (ALE) CEO Alan Hodnik on Q1 2016 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

ALLETE, Inc. (NYSE: ALE ) Q1 2016 Earnings Conference Call May 3, 2016 10:00 AM ET Executives Alan Hodnik – Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Steven DeVinck – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Analysts Paul Ridzon – KeyBanc Capital Markets Brian Russo – Ladenburg Thalmann & Company Inc. Christopher Ellinghaus – The Williams Capital Group, L.P. Sarah Akers – Wells Fargo Securities, LLC Joe Zhou – Avon Capital Advisors Operator Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the ALLETE Conference Call announcing the First Quarter 2016 Financial Results. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session and instructions will be given at that time. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Al Hodnik, Chief Executive Officer. Sir, you may begin. Alan Hodnik Well, thank you for joining us this morning. With me is ALLETE’s Chief Financial Officer, Steve DeVinck. This morning we reported our first quarter financial results that delivered earnings per share of $0.93 on revenue that was up almost 6% over last year. I am pleased with our financial performance for the quarter and believe ALLETE is well-positioned to deliver sustainable value to our shareholders. These financial results demonstrate the synergies of ALLETE’s businesses in challenging times and the strength of our strategic direction. We started this year facing headwinds similar to those in 2015 the most notable coming from a decline in power demand for Minnesota Power’s taconite customers. Our regulated businesses continue to manage costs as they have always done getting through these down cycles without compromising customer service or reliability. Additionally, our emerging and complementary Energy Infrastructure and Related Services companies posted financial results in line with our expectations and we expect further growth as they execute against their strategies. ALLETE Clean Energy and U.S. Water Services strategies are designed to capitalize on the countries desire for cleaner energy sources and conservation. This to meet changing societal expectation, regulation, and resource scarcity, additions of new wind generation facilities in Southern Minnesota and Pennsylvania last year significantly contributed to strong financial performance at ALLETE Clean Energy. ACE currently owns and operates about 537 megawatts of fully contracted wind generating capability and is well-positioned to meet the nation’s call for more renewable energy. We remain excited about the prospects for U.S. Water Services our newest member to the ALLETE family of businesses. U.S. Water experienced impressive revenue growth in the first quarter. Earnings for the Company reflect results from selling certain products, which are seasonal in nature with higher demand typically realize in warmer months. Attention to the water and energy nexus continues to increase and we believe changing regulation and societal expectations will drive growth and improved profitability for this business. Similar to ALLETE Clean Energy, U.S. Water will further balance and complement our core regulated businesses while providing long-term earnings growth. We are seeing encouraging signs relative to the steel dumping that is negatively impacted taconite production on Minnesota’s iron range. The United States Department of Commerce has made preliminary affirmative determinations in its duty and antidumping investigation; final determinations are expected in 2016. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, February 2016 year-to-date imports for consumption of steel products are down approximately 40% compared to February of 2015. Consequently, we are pleased that the import share of the domestic market has fallen from a peak of 34% in March of last year to roughly 24% of this year. Auto production in the United States remains very strong, all of this reminder that there is no lack of domestic steel demand. In addition, Cliffs Natural Resources recently reported stronger than anticipated Q1 financial results and affirmed that it will be restarting its previously idled Northshore mine in May of this year. Cliffs’ CEO, Lourenco Goncalves announced on a recent earnings call that they fully expect United Taconite to restart later this year. While NorthShore mining is not a large power customer of Minnesota Power, we are nonetheless pleased with these developments. Given nominations as we know them however in the near-term, we believe our full-year earnings will likely be in the lower half of our earnings guidance range of $3.10 to $3.40 per share. Again this expectation reflects our current view of industrial sales at Minnesota Power. The midpoint of our original earnings guidance reflected production levels in Minnesota Power’s taconite customers of approximately 35 million tons in 2016. We now estimate 2016 taconite production to be between 30 million and 32 million tons. We are preparing for our next general rate case at Minnesota Power and will be able to file later this year. Some factors affecting rate case timing decisions includes current depreciation dockets and approval of our integrated resource plan currently be for regulators and the outlook for industrial sales. We expect to have more specific information when we release the second quarter financial results. We remain committed to maintaining reasonable and competitive rates for our customers while providing a fair rate of return to our investors. I am pleased with ALLETE’s financial results for the quarter and I am confident in our ability to deliver sustainable shareholder value. I will make some additional comments after Steve takes you through the quarterly financial results. Steve? Steven DeVinck Thanks, Al and good morning everyone. Before I begin, I encourage you to refer to the 10-Q we filed earlier today for more details on the quarter. For the first quarter of 2016, ALLETE reported earnings of $0.93 per share on net income of $45.9 million and operating revenue of $333.8 million. This compares with $0.85 per share on net income of $39.9 million and operating revenue of $320 million in 2015. Earnings in 2015 included $3 million or $0.06 per share of acquisition costs related to our acquisition of U.S. Water Services in February of last year. Earnings from ALLETE’s regulated operations segment, which includes Minnesota Power, Superior Water Light and Power and our investment in the American Transmission Company were $42.4 million compared with $41 million in 2015. This year’s results reflect higher cost recovery rider revenue and lower operating and maintenance expenses mostly offset by a decrease in kilowatt hour sales and higher depreciation and property tax expenses. Our equity earnings in ATC increased $600,000 after-tax due to period-over-period changes in ATC’s estimate of a refund liability related to MISO return on equity compliance. Operating revenue from the Regulated Operation segment decreased $10.5 million or 4% from 2015, primarily due to lower kilowatt-hour sales, field adjustment cost recoveries and gas sales, partially offset by higher cost recovery rider revenue and FERC formula based rates. Revenue decreased $8.1 million due to a 5% decrease in kilowatt-hour sales. Sales to our residential, commercial, and municipal customers were lower due to warmer average temperatures this year. Heating degree days were approximately 8% lower in 2016. Sales to our industrial customers decreased 18% primarily due to reduced taconite production in 2016. Sales to other power suppliers increased 27% mostly due to more energy available for sale resulting primarily from the reduced demand from our taconite customers. Fuel cost recoveries decreased $5.5 million due to lower fuel and purchase power cost attributable to our retail and municipal customers. Revenue from gas sales at Superior Water Light and Power decreased $1.8 million as a result of warmer temperatures in 2016. Cost recovery rider revenue increased $4.7 million primarily due to the completion of our Boswell Unit 4 environmental upgrade. Revenue from our wholesale FERC regulated customers increased $1.7 million primarily due to additional environmental upgrades and other investments. On the expense side, fuel and purchase power expense decreased $9.1 million or 11% from 2015 primarily due to lower purchase power prices in kilowatt-hour sales this year compared to last year. Transmission services expense increased $1.9 million for the quarter or 13% primarily due to higher MISO related expenses. Cost of sales decreased $1.5 million or 33% from last year due to the previously mentioned lower gas sales at Superior Water, Light and Power. Operating and maintenance expense decreased $8.1 million or 14% primarily due to a sales tax refund received this year and lower salary and benefit expenses. In addition, conservation improvement program expenditures were less than the first quarter of 2015. Conservation improvement program expenses are recovered from certain retail customers resulting in a corresponding reduction in revenue. We remain committed to cost containment at Minnesota Power to reduce rate increases per customers, improve our return on equity over time, and mitigate some of the impacts of cyclicality facing our customers in taconite mining. Our 2016 earnings guidance reflected lower operating and maintenance expense due to cost control initiatives with the expectation that 2016 amounts would be 5% to 10% lower than 2014 actual amounts. We are on track to meet those expectations. Depreciation and amortization expense increased $6.2 million or 19% from 2015 primarily due to additional property, plant and equipment and service. Equity earnings in ATC increased $900,000 or 23% from last year due mostly to period-over-period changes in ATC’s estimate of a refund liability related to MISO return on equity compliance. Net income at ALLETE Clean Energy increased $3.6 million and revenue increased $11.2 million over the last year primarily due to Wind Energy facilities required in April and July of last year. U.S. Water acquired in February of last year is a leader in integrated water management to a growing number of industrial and commercial customers throughout the United States. Revenue at U.S. Water Services increased $16.9 million compared to the period from February 10, 2015 to March 31, 2015. The net loss at U.S. Water was in line with expectations and was $400,000 higher than the first quarter of 2015 which did not reflect the full quarter. The Company sells certain products which are seasonal in nature with higher demand typically realized after the first quarter. The first quarter net loss also included $300,000 of after tax expense related to purchase accounting for inventories and sales backlog. As we have discussed in previous quarters this purchase accounting adjustment has now been fully recognized. The corporate and other segment, which includes result from BNI Energy, ALLETE Properties, and other miscellaneous corporate income and expenses, reported a $2.1 million net loss this quarter compared to a net loss of $3.5 million for the same quarter in 2015. Earnings in 2015 included the $3 million or $0.06 per share of acquisition costs related to the acquisition of U.S. Water Services. ALLETE’s effective tax rate in the first quarter of this year was approximately 17% compared to about 13% in 2015. We anticipate the effective tax rate for 2016 will be approximately 17%; this could vary slightly if earnings expectations change. ALLETE’s financial position continues to be solid. Cash from operating activities increased $21.4 million for the quarter driven primarily by higher net income and non-cash expense. Our debt-to-capital ratio at quarter end was 46%. Al. Alan Hodnik Thank you for the financial update, Steve. I have a few more comments to make before Steve and I take your questions. Regarding Minnesota Power’s Energy forward initiatives we recently shared good news on Minnesota Power’s proposed great Northern transmission line. This proposed 220 mile, 500 kV line will deliver hydro generated electricity from Manitoba to Minnesota Power. In an order dated April 11, 2016 the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission approved the route permit which largely follows Minnesota Power’s preferred route including the international border crossing. The project has garnered considerable support and a final decision on the Presidential permit by the United States Department of Energy is expected in the second quarter of 2016. Minnesota Power expects to begin construction on the transmission line in 2017 and this project will provide investment and growth opportunities to the end of the decade. With respect to a natural gas generation addition Minnesota Power continues to advance the need within its resource plan currently before regulators and with other strategic partners who share a similar interest. I would like to remind everyone that these initiatives are the latest step and how Minnesota Power is advancing its energy forward strategy and the balancing of its energy supply towards one-third renewable, one-third natural gas and one-third coal by the early 2020. Regarding new industrial load in our region, I have constructive news for PolyMet’s proposed copper, nickel, and precious metal mining operation in Northeast Minnesota. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources issued its record of decision on March 3 of this year finding the final EIS adequate. The time to appeal that adequate EIS adequacy determination has expired and on April 19 the Department of Natural Resources initiated their required free application, public information hearing near the mine site. With this required step complete formal submission of permit applications by PolyMet can now occur. Once records of decisions by the federal and state agencies on the necessary permits are received PolyMet could move forward with its plans to construct and operate the mine. Minnesota Power could begin to supply between 45 and 50 megawatts of new load to a 10-year power supply contract that would begin upon start up of the mining operations. Essar is again in the midst of seeking financing to complete their Minnesota project. As you will recall the Essar facility will result in approximately 110 megawatts of new load in Minnesota Power’s fulfill municipal segment once it reaches full production levels and by taking service from the City of Nashwauk. Given the quality of the ore body and the billion plus dollars investment made to date we maintain a view that it is not a matter of if but when the Essar project moves to commercial operations. Further just last week Cliffs Natural Resources publicly shared a view that the Essar site is favorable for a direct reduced iron facility, which is an enhanced product suitable for use in electric arc furnaces. Regarding our complementary Energy Infrastructure and Related Services businesses, ALLETE Clean Energy is positioned for earnings growth in 2016 as a result of the wind energy facilities it acquired during 2015. Opportunities within the renewable space remain very strong and ACE will continue to target acquisitions of existing facilities which have long-term power sales agreements in place. U.S. Water Services will further complement our core regulated operations, balance our exposure to business cycle and changing demand and provide earnings growth over the long-term. The Company will continue to look for strategic tuck-in acquisitions which expand its geographic reach, add new technology or deepen its capabilities to service expanding customer base. All of us at ALLETE are excited about our prospects and the opportunities to create shareholder value. Thank you for your continued confidence and your investment with us. At this time, I’ll ask the operator to open up the line for your questions. Question-and-Answer Session Operator [Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from the line of Paul Ridzon with KeyBanc. Your line is now open. Paul Ridzon Good morning. Alan Hodnik Good morning, Paul. Paul Ridzon What’s the status of – you had talked about special rates for energy intensive customers. Is that still a viable option? Alan Hodnik It still is. The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission took up the docket initially here in the first quarter of the year and ultimately determined that they did not have enough information and Utility Kilowatt rejected it without sort of discrimination against it in that sense. And so we’re positioned right now and working with our customers to resubmit the EITE where that’s known here in Minnesota to our regulators and would hope to get that to the regulators again sometime in the early spring or mid spring here as we go off into the summer. Paul Ridzon And Al, I think I heard you say you will be filing a rate cases here, is that correct? Alan Hodnik We will be able to file a rate case later this year, yep. Paul Ridzon And how does that targeting with the energy intensive customers, there just be two separate processes? Alan Hodnik While the EITE was a piece of special legislation that was passed by the Minnesota Legislature of course and signed by Governor Dayton into law to help paper customers and taconite customers with their competitiveness challenges that they’re facing. And so that has its own docket if you will or its own pathway with the regulators. It could ultimately get a part of the conversation inside of a rate case because after all it is a rate design question, but the EITE is on its pathway and it’s collateral to or connected to any rate case that we might file later this year. Paul Ridzon So you’re still not committing to file a rate case, you are still prepared to file one if need to be? Alan Hodnik We are going to be able and ready to file a rate case and as we said timing around that really is stemming from sort of more clarity on filings that we have before our regulators in the moment. We have depreciation filings before our regulators right now that are very important to the Company, of course we have our integrated resource plan before the commission at this point in time. We expect to hear on that shortly. And then as I say, we have this industrial loan growth and demand situation here in the region that we continue to manage, but also we’re going to be able and ready to file a rate case in the fall if we need to. We’ll have more clarity on that after our second quarter earnings call. Paul Ridzon Understood. Thanks for clearing that up. What was your previous expectation for tonnage of taconite? Steven DeVinck Our original guidance – Paul this is Steve, good morning. Our original guidance, the midpoint had approximately 35 million tons. Paul Ridzon Okay. Thank you very much. Alan Hodnik Thanks, Paul. Operator Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Brian Russo with Ladenburg Thalmann. Your line is now open. Brian Russo Hi, good morning. Alan Hodnik Good morning, Brian. Brian Russo How does the 30 million to 35 million tons of taconite production assumption – how does that correlate with the present nominations which I believe are set at 80% for the next few months? Steven DeVinck So our updated information this morning were we expect taconite production to be in the 30 million to 32 million ton range would generally correlate with that 80% of total production number that you’ve seen from us here in the last quarter or two. Brian Russo So then what’s changed because I believe the last time you reaffirm to guidance we were at 80% as well? Is it just fine tuning the sensitivity? Steven DeVinck Well, the last time we talked that 80% was for the first four months of the year. We have a better insight into the remaining eight months of the year or an insight or expectation as to what that maybe, so with that insight into the later – in the left eight months of the year we now think taconite production will be reduced from 35 million tons at original expectations to 30 million to 32 million. Brian Russo Okay, got it. And just is there any update on the Boswell depreciation study when might we expect an outcome? Steven DeVinck Yes, as you know in conjunction with Minnesota Power’s Energy forward plan and the related extensive environmental upgrades completed at our Boswell generating facility, we filed for depreciation use of life extensions earlier this year. The requested useful life extension would decrease annual depreciation expense by approximately $20 million and have a rate increase mitigating effects for our customers both immediate and longer-term. We are proposed to provide immediate customer benefit for approximately one-third of the annual expense reduction through our environmental cost recovery rider. The remainder will help mitigate future rate increase needs. The Minnesota Department of Commerce requested and was granted a postponement of the proceeding until August. Brian Russo And did they give a reason why? Steven DeVinck No, we are not certain, but we think it just might be the status of other workload initiatives in front of them. Brian Russo Okay, great. And has there been any change to the property net book value relative to your 10-K? Steven DeVinck No. Brian Russo Okay. And then lastly could you elaborate a little bit more on the ALLETE Clean Energy project pipeline? Alan Hodnik Well, this is Al. Brian, the pipeline remains strong both on the wind and solar side existing assets are positioned for sale or original developers want to move on. So I’m not going to get specific this morning about projects that we are looking at or locations that we are looking at, but I would say again that the pipeline remains very, very strong both on the solar and on the wind side. The ACE has plenty of opportunities before it and right now the team over there is parsing the opportunities that they have in the past and fully expect to have more opportunities later this year for us to assess at the ALLETE corporate level and potentially make investment in. Brian Russo Okay, great. Thank you. Alan Hodnik Thank you. Operator Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Chris Ellinghaus with Williams Capital. Your line is now open. Christopher Ellinghaus Hey, guys. How are you? Steven DeVinck Hi, Chris. Alan Hodnik Good morning. Christopher Ellinghaus Couple of questions, have you got any updates on activity with the ALLETE properties? Steven DeVinck No, nothing really new to report. We continue to see about the same level of activity that we saw in 2015, so we’ll see how the year progresses. Christopher Ellinghaus Okay. And given the acquisition costs that were incorporated another in the first quarter last year; it looks like there was a material decline in adjusted earnings. Can you give us some color on that? Steven DeVinck So the acquisition costs were about $0.06 per share, our earnings per share this year were $0.93 versus $0.85 last year. So if we adjusted for that $0.06 I guess it would be $0.93 versus $0.91 last year. Christopher Ellinghaus No, I meant just in the corporate and another segment, if you take out the $3 million from last year’s first quarter it would’ve been a loss of more like $0.5 million. So there was some significant decline there versus last year adjusted so maybe 2.1 versus minus 0.5 last year. So what was the delta there? Steven DeVinck Yes, I see. So you’re correct, the acquisitions cost of $3 million were in there last year, this year we have just more general corporate interests and taxes, so we have higher interest expense of rate around $0.5 million. We also I’m going to get into ALLETE’s here a little bit but if you look at some of our disclosures we have a contingent purchase obligation for U.S. Water that is discounted and then accreted over time through 2019 when that buyout happens. So there’s accretion expense of about 600,000 related to that that is more than last year. And we have some period to period income tax allocations of probably another $0.5 million or so. So it’s miscellaneous things like that. Christopher Ellinghaus Okay great. And as far as the guidance on taconite production can we infer that a significant portion of your decline in expectations is just related to the timing of United Tac coming back? Steven DeVinck Yes. Christopher Ellinghaus Okay. Great. Thanks for the color. Alan Hodnik Thanks Chris. Operator Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Sarah Akers with Wells Fargo. Your line is now open. Sarah Akers Hey, good morning. Alan Hodnik Good morning, Sarah. Sarah Akers With the latest news on PolyMet and Essar can you update us on the current expectation for the in-service dates there? Alan Hodnik Well, it’s a little difficult with both these to do that I guess Sarah the PolyMet process we’re very encouraged about at the moment. The fact that the EIS adequacy determination and decision by the agencies was not litigated in any way is very good news for PolyMet and somewhat unprecedented to in terms of mining in Minnesota at least with regards to that. On the permit processes themselves have a bit more of a defined timeline both from the Federal Government side and also the state, so unlike the EIS which had a much more sort of expansive process if you will in an undefined timeline, the permit processes are tighter of course it was financing that the Company needs to obtain as well. And so I don’t know that I can give you anything more than what PolyMet expressed already that you know they would hope to be moving forward of permitting in the later part of 2016 here and into 2017 and then hopefully with construction and the timing of finance and all the rest would be operating sometime in 2018 would be kind of I’d think there are commentary or what I’d see basically on their webpage with respect to their latest observations. Essar, of course is about 1 billion plus ton and Essar continues to try to work on it’s financing if you will to put the rest of the project together. We are certainly not expecting any production from Essar in the kind of early 2017 timeframe as they put their financing togetherness construction is played out up there. So that’s the best I can offer with respect to PolyMet and Essar. Sarah Akers Got it. Thank you. And then on the upcoming rate filing should we expect a multi-year rate plan with step-ups in years two and three or will this just be a one-year filing? Steven DeVinck So we are working through that rate now. I have nothing really to announce on the specifics here today. As Al mentioned, when we announce second quarter results, we will have more specifics on the timing amount and some of the other factors in a rate case. So we’re still working through that. Sarah Akers Got it. And then one more, can you just remind us of ALLETE’s deferred tax position and whether you are a cash taxpayer now and if not how many years you expect to be a non-cash taxpayer with bonus and renewable credits? Steven DeVinck Yes, so we are not a cash taxpayer right now because of all the factors you just indicated. I believe our current projections are that we will run through those net operating loss carry-forwards in 2018 or 2019. Sarah Akers Great. Thank you. Steven DeVinck Thank you. Alan Hodnik Thanks, Sarah. Operator Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And our next question comes from the line of Joe Zhou with Avon Capital. Your line is now open. Joe Zhou Hi, how are you? Good morning. Alan Hodnik Hi, Joe. Steven DeVinck Good morning. Joe Zhou Good morning. So I just want to make sure my model is correct. Is that – so now the taconite production is reduced to 30 million to 32 million tons for the year? So is that still a rule of thumb that reduced $0.03 per million tons for taconite production on your [earnings per] share? Alan Hodnik Yes, that rule of thumb generally still holds. Joe Zhou Okay. So your original guidance was like $3.10 to $3.40 and with – and the original taconite production was 35 million and now reduced to a midpoint of 31, so there is 3 million tons. So that should reduce your regional guidance by roughly $0.12 for the rate should be roughly $2.98 to $3.28 so that’s my calculation. And now you say that the earning will be in the bottom half of the guidance, so there is $3.10 to $3.25 so I assume that the lower end lift by $0.10 is that because of the rate case? Steven DeVinck No I don’t think your math is quite accurate. So our original guidance contemplated, the midpoint contemplated taconite production of approximately 35 million tons, so the midpoint would’ve been $3.25. Joe Zhou Okay. Steven DeVinck So that was the midpoint, so now we are expecting taconite production to be $0.30 to $0.32 so you got to subtract that delta from that midpoint. Joe Zhou Okay, okay. Steven DeVinck That’s how we get in the lower… Joe Zhou It’s not the linier relationship that can now do that back-of-the-envelope calculation I guess. Okay, so and on the timing for the rate case can you remind us that you said you would be able to file later this year. Are you talking about the second half of this year or like towards the end the year? Steven DeVinck We don’t have the specific month yet that we’re ready to disclose at this time, some of the factors affecting rate case timing include decisions on our open depreciation docket, approval of our integrated resource plan which is expected in June and really the outlook for industrial sales, but we do expect to have more specific information when we release second quarter financial results. Joe Zhou Okay, great. Thank you very much. Steven DeVinck Thank you. Alan Hodnik Thank you. Operator Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Brian Russo with Ladenburg Thalmann. Your line is now open. Brian Russo Yes, just curious are you able to file for interim rates in the Minnesota rate cases? Steven DeVinck Hi, Brian, yes. So the way it works in Minnesota is once the filing is being complete 60 days later interim rates would go into effect of course subject to refund. Brian Russo Okay, so they automatically going to effect is not like you have to request interim rates? Steven DeVinck Well, we will certainly request and they will automatically going to effect. Brian Russo Okay, got it. And then just within the guidance range might be at the lower end of the range, is there any assumption made on the outcome of the Boswell extension wise study? Steven DeVinck No, we are assuming nothing for that. Brian Russo Okay, great. Thank you very much. Steven DeVinck Thank you. Alan Hodnik Thanks Brian. End of Q&A Operator Thank you. And I am showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back to Mr. Al Hodnik for closing remarks. Alan Hodnik Well, Steve and I thank you again for being with us this morning and we certainly thank you for your investment and interest in ALLETE. We hope to see some or all of you on our travel throughout the summer. Thank you very much. Steven DeVinck Thank you. 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