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Home / Business / Companies / Energy

Power plan at least five years away - Mighty River

BusinessDesk
22 Apr, 2013 10:35 PM6 mins to read

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Photo / NZ Herald

Photo / NZ Herald

Mighty River Power expects it would take at least four years for the Labour and Green party electricity policies to be enacted and Prime Minister John Key said this morning he didn't think it would ever happen.

With an election not likely till late next year, this would mean five years before any major change in the power market.

The Opposition parties combined to announce plans last week to establish a new agency, New Zealand Power, which would act as a single buyer of wholesale electricity.

The parties claim the plan would cut the nation's power bills by up to $700 million a year, which would lower household power bills by as much as $330 a year and give the economy a $450m annual boost.

Prime Minister John Key told TV3's Firstline this morning that the opposition parties' policy was not a major worry to him.

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"Firstly, I don't think Labour and the Greens are going to win [the 2014 election]. Secondly, I don't think that they'll actually implement the policy - it would be way harder than it looks. Thirdly, if they did they'd have to unwind it at some point. It hasn't worked in countries that have done this."

Key also said power would not be cheaper under a Labour-Greens government because of additional costs as a result of their Emissions Trading Scheme policy.

The Mighty River Power five year estimate is based on the parties' own statements about the complex process such change would involve and suggests the new policy would not be fully implemented by the time of the general election currently scheduled for 2017.

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While MRP says the Opposition party proposal for a single buyer, centrally planned electricity system is "likely to have a material adverse effect on the value and market price of the shares", it sees no reason to change its profit forecasts for the next two financial years which are published in the offer documents for the partial privatisation in May.

The proposals, announced last week, warn "that a future government may enact legislation that materially changes the structure of the New Zealand electricity industry."

The disclosure was deemed necessary under securities regulations requiring additional information in the event of a "significant adverse event" potentially affecting the target company.

The disclosure notes the Green Party policy document says the proposed reforms "will take time to fully implement" and refers to Ministry of Economic Development analysis in 2006 that suggested a two year-pre-launch timetable, followed by single buyer gradually replacing the existing wholesale market over the following two years."

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Energy sector analysts believe the transition could take longer because it would require large numbers of commercial and industrial users' electricity contracts to be renegotiated, which could in turn spark legal challenges.

Assuming the election of a Labour-Green government at the election scheduled for November next year and a four year implementation, the earliest the fully implemented policy could be in place would be in late 2018 - a year after the next general election.

"The company and the Crown cannot quantify (including by reference to the two political parties' estimates of savings and reductions), in a manner that they believe is reliable, the potential effect of the announced proposals on the company's future business and financial results or on the value of the shares."

The disclosure allows the share offer to reopen after being temporarily closed overnight. Investors who had already registered to buy shares now have five days to change their minds. The offer remains open to retail investors until May 3 to apply for shares in minimum lots of $1,000 and will be eligible for a loyalty bonus top-up if they hold the shares for two years.

MRP's update noted "these proposals are in respect of the electricity industry generally, and are not specific to Mighty River Power."

"However, the announcements increase regulatory uncertainty for Mighty River Power by raising the possibility that a future government may enact legislation that materially changes the structure of the New Zealand electricity industry."

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The government has placed an indicative range for the issue price of between $2.35 and $2.80, but the few investment analysts who are not constrained from discussing the float because of their involvement in it suggest the float will go off at the lower end, or possibly below the bottom end of that range.

Infographic: Claudia Ruiz

However, while predicting a 10 per cent reduction in the indicative range, Woodward Partners' Nick Lewis suggests in a note to clients that the Labour-Greens single buyer model may appeal to dedicated infrastructure investment funds, even if power companies are reluctant to invest in new power stations under a centrally planned model.

"Provided they were confident of low political risk in New Zealand post their investment, infrastructure investors are attracted to RRR (regulated rate of return) structures," said Lewis, a long-time energy market participant and analyst in a 30 year career spanning some 15 different jurisdictions.

"But in return for accepting more modest returns, they need to be confident of reliable, repeat cash flows. Therefore, they would look for the enabling legislation that creates New Zealand Power (the proposed single buying agency) to be able to survive economic cycles and changing political environments."

Contact Energy shares fell almost 10 per cent last week immediately after the announcements, but regained ground late on Friday and yesterday, to $5.39, but are still 8.6 per cent lower than it was a week ago, before the Labour-Greens announcement.

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Prime Minister John Key said at a press conference yesterday there were four key factors to consider: the likelihood of a change of government, whether the policy could be practically implemented, how long it might take to implement, and what its likely effect on electricity prices would be.

In a research note last Thursday, investment bank UBS gave the policy a 40 per cent likelihood of being implemented, based on a 50/50 chance of a Labour-Green government being elected and an 80 per cent chance "of them actually following through."

with APNZ

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