By Jenny Ruth
Friday 12th March 2010 |
Text too small? |
Despite Contact Energy's first-half results being lower than expected, "we now feel the value proposition is too strong to ignore," says Macquarie Equities analyst Stephen Hudson.
Contact reported an $80 million net profit and $225 million in earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) compared with Hudson's $97 million and $247 forecasts.
About $40 million of additional costs, essentially related to transmission constraints, in the first half of 2009 were matched by higher-than-expected costs in the first half of 2010, including a 9% increase in generation costs, a 5% increase in electricity network costs and a 76% rise in customer retention costs and debt write-offs.
"In addition, wholesale electricity revenue was lower than forecast on a lower hedge ratio (87% versus 93%) in a materially weaker wholesale market," Hudson says.
He says the outlook for Contact's pricing is one of its single largest value drivers and he is forecasting "relatively conservative" 3% increases a year for the next three years before reverting to 1% growth a year.
But the company appears confident its 5% price increase in March and 4% increase in July (an effective 2% increase in retail tariffs) due to the Emissions Trading Scheme will hold.
Every 1% increase in forecast prices moves his valuation by about 25 cents a share, Hudson says.
BROKER CALL: Macquarie Equities rate Contact Energy as outperform (raised from neutral).
No comments yet
UPDATE Contact increases dividend as FY earnings rise; quits wind projects
Contact increases dividend as FY earnings rise in competitive market
Contact shares drop to 2-month low, says 'hard to see' investment under Labour-Greens plan
Contact Energy, parent Origin mull redemption of $2.03 bln of notes after S and P change
Solid first half for Contact, despite retail margins squeeze
Contact sells mothballed New Plymouth power station for $24 mln
Contact Energy's King hints at greater returns as cash mounts
Contact energy beats FY profit forecast as revenue surges
Elliott leaving Contact for Origin role
Contact sees 2014 cash-flow boost as projects put on ice