America’s utilities are on a borrowing spree. Renewable energy is benefiting - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

America’s utilities are on a borrowing spree. Renewable energy is benefiting

Wind turbine
A golden eagle flies over a wind turbine on Duke Energy’s wind farm in Converse County, Wyo. Duke is spending $37 billion through 2023 on projects including adding 700 megawatts of solar capacity in Florida.
(Dina Cappiello / Associated Press)
Share via

U.S. utilities are on a record borrowing spree this year, selling more than $90 billion in bonds for the first time ever.

The surge in debt from NextEra Energy Inc., Duke Energy Inc. and other power giants comes as interest rates are at historic lows, leaving investors hungry for the safe and relatively strong returns offered by utility bonds.

The flood of cheap cash from bonds is making possible a sweeping transformation by utilities to modernize grids and slash emissions by replacing coal plants with wind, solar and cleaner-burning natural-gas generators.

Advertisement

“Financing costs are lower than we ever thought they would be,†Morgan Stanley analyst Stephen Byrd said in an interview. “The low-interest rate environment helps the deployment of renewables.â€

Clean energy advocates are talking about what comes next — and warning that climate change demands faster action.

There is, however, reason for concern. Capital spending by utilities is set to reach an all-time high of $136 billion in 2019, according to industry group Edison Electric Institute. And net debt for utilities in the S&P 500 index rose to an average of 5.4 times earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, up 34% from five years ago.

While utility credit ratings remain strong, they could take a hit if current levels of spending and borrowing continue.

Advertisement

“It’s a concern of ours,†said Maergrethe Amoussou, an analyst at Segall Bryant & Hamill, which manages about $11 billion in fixed-income assets. “I forecast declining credit fundamentals for many of the utilities in my coverage.â€

But capital spending is forecast to decline in the next two years, according to Edison Electric. In the meantime, many utilities have stepped up equity offerings and sold assets to improve fundamentals, including Southern Co. and Dominion Energy Inc.

The borrowing binge by utilities comes as yields on the benchmark 10-year note are at 1.93%, down from 2.68% at the end of 2018 and almost half the average in the past two decades. Utility bonds, meanwhile, have an average yield of about 3%. And since many electric companies are regulated monopolies, investors see them as a safe bet.

Advertisement

Power bonds have returned investors an average of 15% this year, the most in nearly a decade, as a broader market frenzy sent yields around the world to multiyear lows.

If L.A. succeeds, a hydrogen-burning Intermountain Power Plant could become a model for governments and electric utilities around the world.

Utilities are likely to use at least two-thirds of the proceeds for capital spending, said Cliff Andrus, who helps manage $150 billion in fixed income assets at Voya Financial Inc.

One of the biggest issuers has been Duke, a Charlotte, N.C.-based company that owns utilities serving more than 7 million customers in the Midwest, South and Mid-Atlantic. It sold about $7 billion in notes with maturities ranging from two years to 30 years. Duke is spending $37 billion through 2023 on projects including adding 700 megawatts of solar capacity in Florida.

“Our debt issuances were largely as a result of the funds needed to cover investments we are making to strengthen the energy grid, generate cleaner energy and expand natural gas infrastructure,†Duke spokeswoman Catherine Butler said in an email.

Low borrowing costs have also allowed utilities to float bonds to refinance existing debt at lower rates. Vistra Energy Corp., for example, refinanced much of its debt after selling $5.7 billion in notes.

The Irving, Texas-based power generator used proceeds from the new bonds to help pay down about $6.2 billion in previous debt. Its $800 million in notes due 2027, issued last month, pay a coupon of 3.7%, which is half the amount paid by some of the bonds it retired. That helped the company, which isn’t regulated, slash its annual interest expense by approximately $120 million a year, Vistra said by email.

Advertisement