May 5, 2015
Executives
Nikki Sparley - Investor Relations Gregg Kantor - President and CEO Steve Feltz - Senior Vice President and CFO
Analysts
Winfried Fruehauf - W Fruehauf Consulting Limited
Operator
Good morning, and welcome to the Northwest Natural Gas First Quarter Results Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode.
[Operator Instructions]. Please note this event is being recorded.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Nikki Sparley. Please go ahead.
Nikki Sparley
Thank you, Kate. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our first quarter 2015 earnings call.
This is Nikki Sparley and I’m temporarily filling in Bob Hess who is unable to be with us today. As a reminder, some of the things that will be said this morning contain forward-looking statements.
They are based on management’s assumptions, which may or may not come true, and you should refer to the language at the end of our press release for the appropriate cautionary statements and also our SEC filings for additional information. We expect to file our 10-Q later today.
As mentioned, this teleconference is being recorded and will be available on our website following the call. Please note that these conference calls are designed for the financial community.
If you are an individual investor and have questions, please contact me directly at 503-226-4211 extension 58 or 57. Media may contact, Melissa Moore at 503-220-2436.
Speaking this morning are Gregg Kantor, President and Chief Executive Officer and Steve Feltz, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Gregg and Steve have some opening remarks and then will be available to answer your questions.
Also joining us today are other members of our executive team, who are available to help answer any questions that you may have. We look forward to seeing many of you at the upcoming AGA financial forum this month.
If you have any questions about the event, please contact me. With that, let me turn it over to Gregg for his opening remarks.
Gregg Kantor
Good morning, everyone and welcome to our first quarter earnings call. I’m going to begin today with highlights from the quarter and then turn it over to Steve to cover the financial details for the period, and then I’ll wrap up with brief comments about our priorities for the remainder of the year.
As you know, over the past few years, we’ve been working through several complex regulatory proceedings that came out of our 2012 Oregon rate case. In the first quarter, we received the Oregon Commission’s decision on our environmental cost recovery docket which lays out how an earnings test will be applied to environmental expenditures we incurred and will continue to incur in the future.
In this order, the Commission found that all but $33,000 of the $114 million of environmental expenses incurred through March of 2014 recruitment. The order also found that the insurance settlements resulting in the collection of about a $150 million were entered into prudently.
However, the OPUC disallowed recovery of environmental expenses totaling $15 million incurred through 2012 due to the application of an earnings test and other considerations. As a result, we took a one-time after tax charge in the quarter of $9.1 million.
While the write-down was disappointing, we view our ability to fully recover future environmental cleanup costs as the key issue in a very complicated docket. We were also glad to have the environmental spend and insurance settlements being prudent.
Steve will cover the mechanics of the order in a moment but overall, we view this outcome as a reasonable resolution and we’re pleased to have this docket behind us. Also in the quarter, on another holdover issue from our 2012 rate case, the Oregon Commission directed the parties engaged in our interstate storage sharing proceeding, to select a third party to convict an evaluation and a cost allocation study.
Until that study is complete, Northwest Natural and its customers will continue sharing costs and revenues under the current allocation formula. Setting aside the impact of the disallowance, performance in the quarter was on par with the year ago despite our record warm quarter.
In fact utility margin was up slightly over last year due to returns on certain investments, gains from gas cost savings and customer growth. At 1.3%, our customer growth rate in the quarter was consistent with the first quarter of 2014 and the latest economic indicators for the region continue to improve.
For example, Oregon’s seasonally adjusted March unfunded rate was down to 5.4% from 7.1% a year ago. Oregon’s seasonally adjusted employment has increased by more than 10,000 jobs in each of the last six quarters, which hasn’t been equal since 1996.
In Clark County, Washington where we serve with our 10% of customer base, the unemployment rate also declined from 8.3% in March 2014 to 6.7% this March. We also saw healthy activity in the housing market.
Compared to the first quarter of 2014, home sales were up nearly 17% in the Portland Metro area and up almost 24% in Clark County. In the new construction segment, we’ve seen an improvement as well with Oregon housing starts up slightly.
All of these positive signs that I would tell you indicate that our local economy continues to move in the right direction. With that let me turn it over to Steve to cover the financial details for the quarter.
Steve Feltz
Thank you, Gregg and good morning everyone. Earnings for the first quarter of 2015 were $1.04 per share, a net income of $28.5 million as compared to $1.40 per share and $37.9 million for the same period of last year.
As Gregg pointed out, results for the current quarter include a onetime $15 million charge to O&M expense for the right after deferred environmental costs ordered by the OPUC. Net charge decreased earnings by $9.1 million or $0.33 per share; excluding the charge quarterly earnings were $1.37 per share, a net income of $37.6 million or roughly on par with last year as utility earnings were up $0.04 per share while gas storage was down $0.06 per share.
Our utility reported net income of $28.3 million in the first quarter or a decrease of $7.7 million from last year, driven by the write-down of environmental cost. The utility also reported other O&M expense increases but those were more than offset by an increase in other income, a decrease in interest expense and slightly higher margin revenues.
In fact, margins at the utility increased despite this being the warmest first quarter on record in our service territory. From January to March, average temperatures were 22% warmer than a year ago and 20% warmer than normal.
As a result, total gas deliveries by the utility were down 19% and gross revenues were down 10%. In spite of the large decline in volumes and gross revenues, margins increased $300,000, mostly due to customer growth; added returns from rate based investments in gas reserves and pipeline integrity; and gains from incentive-sharing on gas cost savings, all of which more than offset the negative impact of weather from customers in Oregon and Washington that were not covered by weather normalization and the coupling mechanism.
In the quarter, those two mechanisms adjusted margins up by $21.8 million as compared to negative adjustments of $1.4 million last year on slightly colder than normal weather. Turning now to our gas storage segment.
For the quarter, we reported net income of about $100,000 which was slight increase from the fourth quarter of 2014 but a decrease of $1.5 million from a year ago. The decrease from last year reflects a $2.5 million decline in operating revenues due to lower storage prices in California on short-term contracts which ended March 31, 2015.
Most of these contracts were entered into a year ago when prices were at historically low levels. As we discussed previously, market conditions in California have been weak in recent years due to the abundant supply of natural gas and low volatility in gas prices.
Our missed storage facility in Oregon while not immune to these challenges, continues to perform well due to the limited storage capacity and growing demand in the Pacific Northwest. Our Gill Ranch facility in California continues to face headwinds as the oversupply of storage persists and as the state’s economy and its demand for natural gas recovers slowly.
However, we continue to remain optimistic on the value of gas storage in California over the long-term as natural gas will be needed to serve the state’s economy has it improves and as the increased use of renewables and gas generation drives up the demand for flexible storage assets. With regards to consolidated O&M expense, for the quarter we reported an increase of $18.7 million over last year.
That increase was of course largely driven by the $15 million charge discussed earlier, plus another $1 million related to account adjustments resulting from the environmental order. Remaining $2.7 million increase in O&M expense reflects utility cost increases for employee wage rate under the new labor contract signed in June of last year, for increases in pension and other benefit expense due to assumption changes in mortality, rates and interest rates and for increases in system maintenance and safety program costs.
Meanwhile, other income for the quarter increased $3.7 million compared to last year, primarily due to the recognition of regulatory equity income on past deferred environmental asset balances. That was partly offset by interest expense on current deferred environmental liability balances that resulted from insurance proceeds received last year.
Cash flow from operating activity was $118 million in the first quarter of 2015 as compared to $220 million a year ago. Last year’s cash flow was significantly aided by $91 million of insurance recovery.
Now that the OPUC has issued its order on environmental expenditures and insurance recoveries, we can expect to receive annually the following cash flows: The first $5 million of environmental spend each year will be recovered in customer rate; the next $5 million of spend will be reimbursed from insurance proceeds that are set aside to be applied toward future costs; and in addition to the above reimbursement, the SRRM mechanism will allow the company to recover all remaining environmental expenditures not collected previously and will do so over a five-year period. That includes to roughly $30 million of cost incurred prior to 2013 and not yet collected.
We expect that five-year amortization to go in effect on November 1 of this year. The implementation of these collections including amounts to be collected for spend in 2013, 2014 and so far this year is still subject to the OPUC’s approval of our compliance filing.
From a liquidity perspective, we are in a strong position to be able to finance new investments including those infrastructure projects identified in the IRP which Gregg will comment on later on the call. Today, the company reaffirms its guidance for reported earnings in the range of $1.77 per share to $1.97 per share for 2015, which includes the $15 million pretax charge.
As adjusted to exclude the charge, our guidance for the year remains unchanged at $2.10 per share to $2.30 per share. The company’s guidance assumes customer growth from our utility segments, average weather conditions going forward, slow recovery of the gas storage market and no significant changes in prevailing legislative and regulatory policies or outcome.
With that let me turn the call back over to Gregg for his concluding remarks.
Gregg Kantor
Thanks Steve. From a regulatory perspective, the first quarter was clearly a busy one.
As you know, last year we submitted our integrated resource plan to Oregon and Washington regulators and in the period we received acknowledgement of the IRP from both commissions. The plan encompasses a wide range of issues associated with our ability to meet customer needs and it identifies several important areas for future investments.
For example, fast growing Clark County, Washington will require several gas infrastructure investments to serve new homes and businesses; and the company will need to modernize its Newport LNG plant which was originally built in 1977. The expected investment is around $20 million.
Plan also identified several uncertainties around the future demands on our region’s gas infrastructure. Today regulators and investors are considering a variety of energy project proposals, ranging from new pipelines, to LNG export facilities, to large industrial expansions.
At this point, we don’t know the outcome of those projects but how they play out will determine which regional pipeline investment makes the most sense. In the mean time, we are continuing to work with TransCanada to make sure that Trail west pipeline project which was formerly the Palomar project remains an option for the region in the years ahead.
Over the last several months, we’ve been working with key stakeholders on several project proposals under our new carbon solutions program. As I mentioned in the past, our carbon solutions program is an opportunity made possible by Oregon legislation.
It allows the OPUC to incent natural gas utilities to undertake projects that will reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The firs proposal we hope to file with the commission is designed to further the use of combined heat power in Oregon, a goal the state has had for many years.
Under our CHP proposal, large industrial and commercial customers in the market could submit CHP projects for consideration. Depending on their carbon reduction potential, our program would provide incentive funding based on the verified carbon zinc, making the project more financially feasible from a customer’s perspective.
We’ve been collaborating with the variety of regional and state organizations interested in helping CHP gain more traction and working also to leverage other existing funding streams. In our view, this is an important effort that could provide a significant carbon reduction benefit for our customers and for Oregon.
The next step is to file testimony and work through the OPUC approval process which we hope to begin in the next month. In parallel, we’ve been working on in oil to gas project replacement proposal to serve the residential market.
Discussions with stakeholders are just getting started on this project, so it’s too early to tell where it will go but we believe it could also be an important carbon reduction opportunity. Company is also working on developing several other proposals and overall I would tell you, we’ve been pleased with the level of interest and engagement we’ve been receiving from the OPUC staff; customer groups; state agencies; and environmental groups across the state.
This kind of effort has never been done before, so there were likely be issues to work through but we are optimistic about the potential. Finally, this morning, let me give you a quick update on the expansion project at our underground storage facility in Mist, Oregon.
Last January, we received approval from Portland General Electric to move forward with the permitting and land acquisition work required for an expansion project in the northern section of our Mist field. As we’ve discussed before, the project would be designed to provide no notice storage services to PGE’s natural gas-fired generating plants at Port Westward in Oregon.
The project would include a new reservoir providing up to 2.5 billion cubic feet of available storage and additional compressor station and a new pipeline to connect to PGE’s gas plants. Last week, we submitted an application with the Oregon Energy Facility Siting Council for an amendment to our existing Mist site certificate, a step that’s required to support the expansion.
The Oregon Department of Energy, ODOE will be the lead agency reviewing our application. And the next step, a major step in the process will occur when ODOE and Siting Council publish the proposed order later this year.
Between now and issuance of that proposed order, we’re going to be working with both organizations to provide clarifications on our filing and address any questions that they might have. The current estimated cost of the expansion is approximately $125 million with the potential in-service state in 2018-2019 winter season depending on as you’d expect the permitting process and construction schedule.
Let me close by making two points. First, this quarter was rally a remarkable testament to the effectiveness of our weather normalization mechanism in terms of stabilizing, margin, revenues and earnings in the face of what was a record warm quarter.
And second, we’re pleased with the progress we’ve made towards getting a good deal at the regulatory uncertainty behind us and we’re looking forward to executing on our utility priorities and advancing our growth strategies in the months ahead. Thanks again for joining us this morning and now I’ll open it up for questions.
Operator
We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions].
The first question comes from Winfried Fruehauf of W Fruehauf Consulting Limited Consulting Limited. Please go ahead.
Winfried Fruehauf
Regarding environmental expenditures going forward, your press statements says that you will be allowed to recover prudently incurred expenses. Does that mean that you have to go back to the Commission and obtain approval in order to know what was prudently incurred?
Gregg Kantor
Yes, that’s correct. On new expenditures that were not covered by the previous ruling, we’ll have to make sure that they go through a process with the Commission that after they’ve been spent that they were in fact prudently incurred.
Winfried Fruehauf
Okay.
Gregg Kantor
And that will be done on an annual basis.
Winfried Fruehauf
And regarding your gas storage income, you have a past contract expired in the ‘13-’14 gas year. Why do you expect lower prices in the next 12 months?
Steve Feltz
We’re not expecting lower prices in next 12 months. There is a gas storage contracting period, usually starts every April 1.
A year ago, there were headwinds in the market, primarily there was a lack of storage because after the cold winter there have been a lot of drawn storage. And so the front end of the curve was higher.
This year we started to see a more normal forward curve with lower prices, the front end of it. So, we’re not expecting to see lower prices than a year ago.
In fact we’ve seen a little bit of an increase, a modest increase in prices this year but nowhere near what we had seen a years ago when prices were lower.
Operator
[Operator Instructions].
Gregg Kantor
It doesn’t look like we’ve got any other questions. I know we’re going to see many of you down Palm Springs here in the couple of weeks, looking forward to that.
And again if you have questions about that event, feel free to call Nikki and looking forward to it. Enjoy the rest of your day.
Operator
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation.
You may now disconnect.