Contact Energy shareholders will have to wait at least until the company's half-year result, due to be published in February, before learning of the board's approach to dealing with the growing cash pile the energy company will stack up into the future, now that it has finished investment in new
No call from Contact Energy on cash pile
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Contact Energy Chairman Grant King. File picture/New Zealand Herald.
"Clearly one choice is dividends, and that's informed a bit by earnings. I think it's fair to say that the increase in the amount of cashflow that Contact's got to work with will be greater than its movement in profits because we're not reinvesting in the business."
Contact increased its final dividend by 1 cent a share to bring payout to shareholders to 84 per cent of net profit after tax, slightly above its target of 80 per cent.
King is also managing director of Contact's 52.3 per cent majority shareholder, Australia's Origin Energy, which failed in an attempt to merge with Contact in 2006. A share buyback scheme in which Origin did not take part might allow its shareholding to creep higher, although the company has given no indication it desires a larger shareholding in Contact.
Contact chief financial officer Graham Cockcroft said at the company's annual results briefing in August that the board was "considering it (a capital return) at the moment" after announcing a 17.6 per cent increase in profit to $234 million for the year ended June 30, and a sharp decline in intended future capital expenditure.
Flat demand for electricity and over-supply have caused softening wholesale electricity prices.
King noted the impact of the general election result in removing investment uncertainty created by the Labour and Green parties' single buyer electricity market policy, which has pushed all electricity companies' share prices higher in recent weeks.
Speaking as Origin's managing director, King said Origin was "pleased with the repositioning of Contact", which gained urgency in 2008 when the Cook Strait cable linking the North and South Islands suffered failures that limited Contact's ability to send power north from its southern hydro lakes, effectively breaking the flexibility previously available in its generation fleet.
The company was now "in a robust position going forward."
Today's annual meeting was well attended by around 250 shareholders, who were remarkably passive by comparison with Contact annual meetings in the past. One shareholder raised questions about Contact's long-term business model, suggesting the board were "dinosaurs" because of the company's dependence on the national grid to distribute electricity from power stations when there was a global shift towards embedded generation, such as solar panels.
King said the board monitored those developments, noting that solar installations had been "heavily subsidised" in countries were uptake was strong and that in many of those countries, subsidies had been wound back in response to economic weakness.
In an unusually strong show of bi-culturalism, the meeting commenced with blessings and greetings in Maori by director Whaimutu Dewes and chief executive Dennis Barnes, while Contact staff sang a waiata gifted to the company by a central North Island hapu with which it worked on geothermal issues, prompting one elderly shareholder to seek translations into English at next year's event.