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Duke Energy – FY 2014 Results And Future Guidance Takeaways

Summary Expected EPS growth in 2015 ($4.55-$4.75) from $4.55 in 2014. Expected EPS growth of 4-6% through 2017. Commitment to dividend and maintaining a strong balance sheet. Potential risks include exposure to Brazil, decreased residential energy usage, and volatile oil prices. Duke Energy’s Q4 Earnings Call On February 18, 2015, Duke Energy Corporation (NYSE: DUK ) reported their fourth quarter and full year 2014 earnings. Within the earnings call, the company identified four financial objectives for 2015 and beyond within their presentation: (1) Current Year earnings guidance, (2) Long-term earnings growth, (3) Dividend growth, (4) Balance sheet strength. In this article, I will review these four financial objectives and provide an outline and analysis on the company’s projections. Refer to the company’s earnings call transcript and power point for additional details. Expected EPS Growth in 2015 In 2014, the company achieved an adjusted diluted EPS of $4.55, which fell in the range of the original guidance ($4.45-$4.60) and the revised guidance ($4.50-$4.65). The guidance range for 2015 earnings guidance is $4.55-$4.75. Key assumptions for 2015 in obtaining this estimate are: Capital expenditures falling within the range of $7.4-$7.8 billion in 2015. This represents a moderate increase of 35% to 42% from the $5.5 billion in 2014. This increase is a positive sign for the company in the future as they make commitments to pursue alternative energy generation sources to decrease their financial dependency on crude oil prices. Retail load growth of 0.5-1.0% in 2015. This range has been reached each year since 2012 (0.6% in 2012, 2013, and 2014). This will be a key metric to monitor throughout the year as the company experienced a difficult year for residential sales in 2014. The company experienced a 0.1% decline in weather-normalized residential sales, but the decline was much worse in Q4 2014 specifically where they experienced a 2.2% decline. 700M average shares outstanding as of 12/31/2015. This shouldn’t be a difficult metric for the company to achieve as they had 707M outstanding as of 12/31/2014 with no planned equity issuances through 2017. $65 per barrel average Brent crude price for 2015. This is a hard assumption to question as oil has become a major battleground and everyone has a different opinion on the future price of oil. I expect that oil inventories will continue to rise and prices will continue to decrease in 2015. Based on the February 2015, EIA report, Brent crude oil prices are expected to be $57.56 in 2015. Exchange rate of approximately 2.85 BRL/US$ (2.35 in 2014). Again, like oil, this is a hard assumption to question, but the BRL/US$ exchange rate has seen a relatively steady increase since September 2014 and I expect this to continue as the Brazilian economy struggles and the US economy strengthens in 2015. Expected EPS Growth Past 2015 In addition to achieving 2015 adjusted diluted EPS guidance, the company is striving for per share growth of 4-6% through 2017. The key growth drivers in this per share growth are: Retail load growth of 1% going forward. Based on the analysis above, the company has been stagnant with a 0.6% retail load growth from 2012 to 2014. I think it is going to be very difficult for the company to achieve a 1% growth going forward. I think it is going to be difficult to achieve because of the lower energy usages in homes. I don’t see this trend reversing and allowing this 1% growth rate to be achieved. The company expects total wholesale net margin to increase due to the new 20-year contract with NCEMC at Duke Energy Progress (began in 2013) and 18-year contract with Central EMC at Duke Energy Carolinas growing to a load of 900MW in 2019 from 115MW in 2013. FY2015’s total wholesale net margin is expected to be approximately $1.1 billion with an anticipated 5% compound annual growth rate. Regulated earnings base growth is expected to follow the $2 billion growth trend in 2015 that was seen in 2014. Commitment to Dividend and Maintaining a Strong Balance Sheet In 2014, the company paid out a dividend of $3.18 per share with that amount expected to rise to $3.24 per share in 2015 (almost 2% increase year-over-year). With the company achieving a payout ratio close to 70% and management’s commitment to paying out a quarterly dividend to investors, I do not see the company’s current 4% dividend yield to be at risk. Management has paid 89 consecutive years of dividends with increases coming the past 7 years. This is largely possible due to the company’s strong balance sheet and no planned equity issuances through 2017. In addition, the company announced a strategically tax-efficient way to repatriate $2.7 billion back to the U.S., which will help fuel the dividend increases going forward. 3 Potential Risks The exposure to Brazil is a significant risk for the company’s future, which was seen in the 2014 financial results. In 2014, there was a decrease in sales volume as well as higher purchased power costs due to the interruptions in the hydrology production. Per the earnings call, they are assuming normal hydrology despite the rainy season starting slowly. Brazil is a major story to follow for Duke Energy in 2015 and beyond as the company is predicting EPS growth from this business segment despite recent downward trends in profits there as well as the Brazilian economy. I think the company will have difficulty increasing the retail load growth to 1% given the increased technologies and social initiatives to decrease electric use. Oil prices will continue to be a wild card going forward. Forecasting a price on such a volatile asset is a difficult task. If oil prices continue to fluctuate widely, it will significantly impact the company’s bottom line. Conclusion: Duke Energy Corporation faces some difficult obstacles including a slowing Brazilian economy, lower residential energy usage, and volatile oil prices; however, I believe that the company gave conservative and very obtainable estimates in each of the key assumptions used to allow them to meet their financial objectives for FY 2015 and beyond. While I don’t see Duke Energy being a rapid growth story going forward, I do believe they have the ability to present slow stock appreciation with the safety of a consistent dividend. Disclosure: The author is long DUK. (More…) The author wrote this article themselves, and it expresses their own opinions. The author is not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). The author has no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Are you Bullish or Bearish on ? Bullish Bearish Neutral Results for ( ) Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Submit & View Results Skip to results » Share this article with a colleague

Saving Greece? What ETF Investors Should Really Be Focused On

February has been a terrible month for the U.S. economy, but a wonderful month for U.S. stocks. Perhaps ironically, even as an institutional investor, I am not finding myself particularly bearish. On the contrary. I see opportunity to continue riding severely overvalued market-based securities higher. February has been a terrible month for the U.S. economy, but a wonderful month for U.S. stocks. Translation? Investors do not believe that the Federal Reserve will raise overnight lending rates during an economic slowdown. Just how abysmal have the data been so far? Personal spending, construction spending, factory orders, international trade, business inventories, wholesale inventories, consumer sentiment, retail sales and housing starts are just a few of the data points that fell short of expectations. Heck, the Citi Economic Surprise Index recently demonstrated that data points have missed analyst forecasts by the most in more than two years. Most blame the weakening U.S. situation on decelerating activity around the globe. Goldman Sachs has gone so far as to say that the global economy has entered a contraction phase, with six of its seven Global Leading Indicator (GLI) components worsening in February. The lone holdout? U.S. Initial Jobless Claims. Indeed, a low level of unemployment filings coupled with a consistent string of 200,000-plus net new jobs are the positives on the domestic scene. Yet even here, the employment rate as defined by labor force participation is under 63% – percentages that are typically associated with the 1970s. If millions upon millions of working-aged individuals did not give up the search for employment or “retire” since 1/1/2009, back when 66% of working-aged people had jobs, headline unemployment in the U.S. would be above 10.0%. (Naturally, 5.7% unemployment sounds better for those who want to believe that circumstances are much rosier than they really are.) Without question, the U.S. is not an island of self-sustaining expansion. As much as the media portray oil price declines as a windfall for stateside consumers, the slump across the entire commodity space (e.g., metals, agriculture, gas, etc.) communicates anemic demand. Equally troubling, none of the spectacular job gains have translated into significant wage growth in a way that price pressures might rise. (For what it is worth, Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT ) did raise its wages above Federally mandated minimums for all of its low-earning employees.) Worse yet, depreciating currencies against the U.S. dollar have adversely affected the trade balance such that the Fed acknowledged the dollar’s rapid rise as a “persistent source of restraint” on exports. The Fed is not the only group that has expressed concern about dollar strength. Corporations have blamed the dollar for missing earnings targets, as well as used the currency to guide future earnings projections lower. And analysts have dramatically scaled back profit-per-share outlooks for the S&P 500 from nearly 8%-10% in November to 0%-2% here in February. What do lower earnings projections mean? In essence, the Forward 12-month P/E was the last remaining valuation technique that supported the reasonableness of the current price people are paying for the S&P 500. Not anymore. Cyclical, trailing 12-month and forward 12-month price-to earnings (P/E), price-to-sales (P/S), price-to-book (P/B) and price-to-cash flow (P/CF) all suggest S&P 500 overvaluation. In spite of the seemingly obvious concerns investors should have about U.S. equities, bearish sentiment in the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) is at a meager 17.88%. According to Bespoke Research, there have been only five weeks of the last 300 where bearish sentiment was lower. Perhaps ironically, even as an institutional investor, I am not finding myself particularly bearish. On the contrary. I see opportunity to continue riding severely overvalued market-based securities higher; that is, there’s no reason to exit the central bank stimulus bubble when the world’s investors have so much faith in their policies. Overvaluation can beget irrational exuberance, and irrational exuberance can beget insane euphoria. It can go on for weeks, months or years. The only caveat? You have to realize the reality that asset prices have gone rogue, and that you will need an insurance plan for reducing risk when the inevitable blow-up transpires. My approach is threefold. First, hold the stock assets that continue to trend higher. Each needs to remain above a a significant trendline like a 200-day moving average; a downside breach should not last more than a couple of days. Some of my favorites? The Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSEARCA: VIG ), the Vanguard Mega Cap Growth ETF (NYSEARCA: MGK ), the Health Care Select Sect SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLV ) and the Vanguard Information Technology ETF (NYSEARCA: VGT ). Additionally, add exposure to assets where you see value, as I have with the iShares Currency Hedged MSCI Germany ETF (NYSEARCA: HEWG ), or add exposure to where you’ve witnessed momentum, as I have with the PureFunds ISE Cyber Security ETF (NYSEARCA: HACK ). Second, recognize that the appeal of long-term U.S. bonds will not dissipate in a weakening global economy. Fits and starts? Sure. Yet long-term U.S treasury proxies yield more than comparable sovereign debt abroad. Buying the bond dips can be as lucrative as buying stocks when they pull back. What’s more, funds like the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TLT ) and the Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: BLV ) have made more money over the last 15 months than ETFs like the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) or the Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (NYSEARCA: VTI ). (Note: Readers know that I have been advocating exposure to longer-term maturities since December of 2013.) Third, there are a wide variety of things that could derail the respective rallies in stocks and bonds. Policy mistakes by one or more of the major central banks around the globe could cause an exodus. A monumental shift toward global acceleration in the worldwide economy would likely catch investors off guard. A decline in oil prices below the current line in the sand at $45 per barrel could cause hardship and/or civil unrest in export-dependent countries. A less-than-graceful exit from the eurozone by Greece (at some point in 2014) could affect the investing landscape. Even an unforeseen event(s) could take market-based securities for a ride where the price declines lead to bearish panic rather than bullish dip-buying opportunity. Disclosure: Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.

Pinnacle West Capital (PNW) Q4 2014 Results – Earnings Call Webcast

The following audio is from a conference call that will begin on February 20, 2015 at 11:00 AM ET. The audio will stream live while the call is active, and can be replayed upon its completion. If you would like to view a transcript of this call, please click here. Are you Bullish or Bearish on ? Bullish Bearish Neutral Results for ( ) Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Submit & View Results Skip to results » Share this article with a colleague