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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Trustpower warns of price risk

By Gavin Evans
BusinessDesk·
5 Nov, 2018 04:00 PM3 mins to read

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Trustpower unveiled a 25-cent-a-share special dividend but noted "well-below average" industry hydro storage.

Trustpower unveiled a 25-cent-a-share special dividend but noted "well-below average" industry hydro storage.

Trustpower says a dry year in 2019 is a "real possibility" and warns that some retailers may not be prepared for it.

It says supply and demand in the electricity market has largely moved into balance and the potential for greater price volatility is not yet reflected in retail prices.

The company, which yesterday announced a 25-cent-a-share special dividend and signalled potential for another next year, says it remains of the view that some retailers' prices are not sustainable long-term for the risk they are carrying.

It noted the country's current "well-below average" hydro storage, and the high wholesale prices that had resulted from that and reduced Pohokura gas field production.

"Retailers who do not manage this risk may face going out of business," the company said in a presentation for its first-half earnings.

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While there is a "credible case" for significant increases in long-term electricity demand, Trustpower says considerable uncertainty remains on how that demand will be met.

"Trustpower is unlikely to invest in a significant new-generation build in the near term but is positioning itself for future development."

Major generators have been holding off new developments amid flat demand and rising domestic solar installations. Rapidly developing wind technology, and falling costs, have also prompted revisions to some existing consented wind developments, which are now less economical.

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Trustpower runs 27 generation schemes, is the country's fifth-largest power retailer and its fourth-largest fixed-line internet services provider. In 2016 its wind interests were split off into Tilt Renewables, which last month said it planned a 100 MW wind development at its Waverley site on the southern Taranaki coast, with output contracted to Genesis Energy.

Trustpower this year sold its remaining Australian hydro generation assets to Meridian Energy for A$168 million ($182m) as part of a strategy to focus on its New Zealand generation and retailing operation.

It said that asset sale, and a broader review of its debt levels, would enable the payment of the unimputed special dividend on December 7. The company will also pay a 17 cent fully-imputed half-year dividend on the same date.

After that payment, Trustpower expects its debt to operating earnings ratio, based on its current earnings guidance, to be between 2.3 and 2.5 times by year-end.

"Trustpower will further review its debt levels, including the tenor of that debt, as at 31 March, 2019, and may consider a further special dividend," chairman Paul Ridley-Smith said.

Trustpower yesterday reported an 18 per cent decline in net profit from continuing operations to $64.9m for the six months through September. Operating earnings - before interest, tax, depreciation, amortisation and changes in financial instruments - fell to $129.6m, 15 per cent less than a year earlier.

The company previously reported that generation volumes in the period fell 12 per cent from the year before to 1166 GWh.

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