Posts for Ticker ‘AEE’

The Twenty Companies Wall St. Can Trust The Most

uncle sam24/7 Wall St. asked Audit Integrity to screen  companies with market caps of more than $3 billion to create a list of the firms that use the most transparent and conservative accounting programs and have ”best of class” corporate governance and management. This data is based on the The Audit Integrity Accounting and Governance Risk rating which is a forensic measure of the clarity and statistical reliability of a corporation’s financial reporting and governance practices. To create this data Audit Integrity applies over 100 accounting and governance metrics to a company’s publicly filed information.

After reviewing this data, 24/7 created a list of The Twenty Companies Wall St. Can Trust The Most. The firms are ranked based on their Accounting and Governance Risk scores.

The list represents companies that have practices which should be emulated by every public company that wishes to serve the needs of its shareholders by presenting accurate financial data and providing conservative management of shareholder’s investments.

The Twenty Companies Wall St. Can Trust The Most:

 

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Going Nuclear Into Elections (EXC, NRG, D, DUK, PGN, AEE)

Nuclear_power_picElectric utility Exelon (NYSE:EXC) this morning revised guidance for 2008 to a range of $4.15 – $4.30 per share from $4.00 – $4.40 per share. That’s measured on non-GAAP operating earnings; on GAAP earnings, the company adjusted its guidance from $3.70-$4.10/share to $3.90-$4.30/share. The press release cited mark-to-market adjustments in hedging, asset impairments, and costs associated with rate and litigation settlements. Analysts had been predicting GAAP earnings of $4.36/share. The company also announced a share buyback program that will total $1.5 billion over the next six months.  This might just be only the tip of the iceberg in nuclear power during an election year.

Exelon is joining nine other companies that have filed applications with the NRC to build 29 new reactors in the US. NRG Energy (NYSE:NRG), Dominion (NYSE:D), Duke Energy (NYSE:DUK), Progress Energy (NYSE:PGN), and Ameren Energy (NYSE:AEE) among others have also filed construction and operating license applications with the NRC.

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Higher Utility Bills Coming; Rate Relief Filed (FE, CHG, AEE, AYE, GAS)

While many utilities are reporting earnings, there is one thing that many investors will care about more than each company’s results.  It seems that utilities across the board are filing with state or regional boards for rate relief to pass on higher costs to customers.

First Energy Corp. (NYSE:FE) today reported first quarter earnings of $276 million, or $0.91 EPS, compared with earnings of $290 million and $0.92 EPS for the same period in 2007. First quarter revenues totaled $3.3 billion, better than analyst estimates of $3.14 billion and $0.85 EPS. First Energy noted that high fuel costs and higher costs for purchased power reduced EPS by $0.19.

Earlier this week, CH Energy Group Inc. (NYSE:CHG) reported that revenues increased by more than 19%, but net income declined by about 4% and EPS decreased by about 4%. The company’s chairman and CEO had this to say: "Higher energy supply costs are resulting in higher total bills, inducing our customers to conserve, and sales volumes are noticeably affected." In other words, people turn down the heat in an effort to save money, and it costs the utilities money.

So what do utilities do? They go to their state public utility regulators and ask for rate hikes. First Energy has sought a rate increase in  Ohio of $340 million. Central Hudson is seeking an unspecified rate increase during the summer. Ameren Corp (NYSE:AEE), which will report earnings tomorrow, is seeking rate annual increases of 12.1% ($251 million annually) in Missouri and $247 million in Illinois.

The blame for the rate hikes resides largely with rising fuel costs. Coal prices have nearly doubled in the past year, and average natural gas prices at the wellhead have increased by about 25%. The utilities have a point. But they are also seeking increases to their regulated return, usually by about 1%-2%. State regulators so far are not impressed. Last year, Ameren requested a rate hike of $361 million in Missouri, which state regulators trimmed to a recommended $43 million. Both the company and government officials in Missouri are appealing the ruling. The company because the recommended increase is insufficient; the government, because it is too high.

Allegheny Energy, Inc.’s (NYSE: AYE) Potomac Edison Co., has also filed a request with the
Virginia State Corporation Commission for recovery of the cost of purchasing power for its Virginia customers.  It is asking for the recovery of a minimum of $73 million for the 12-month period beginning July 1, 2008, which would boost customer electric bills by about 29% if certain costs can’t be mitigated.

Nicor Inc. (NYSE: GAS) has also filed with the state of Illinois to pass on higher gas costs to its 2.2 million northern Illinois customers.  The rate hike request will add about $4.60 per month to the average residential electric bill, which would take effect in spring 2009.  While the company is saying this isn’t due to the cost of gas because Nicor buys on wholesale and passes on to customers without any mark-up, but this is "for the cost of delivery to the homes and businesses."  Delivery, material…. six of one, half a dozen of the other.

Higher gas prices, higher coal prices, and higher raw materials and transportation costs are going to be influencing residence and business utility bills.  If you think this is bad, wait until potable water shortages become more and more prevalent.  Higher utility bills are on the way, probably across the country and beyond.

Paul Ausick
May 1, 2008