Share price drivers
In summary, Origin Energy (ORG) has lots of problems, its utility profits are just flat, its balance sheet is stretched and APLNG needs a higher oil price. All that said the worst is probably behind it and in the share price. The most encouraging news in this result was the cost achievements. In our view investors have always appreciated a disciplined approach to cost management. For the first time in years ORG seems to be showing this.
ORG shareholders have numerous concerns, but the principal share price drivers short term are:
ORG will be split up, either by the company or by someone else
It’s become very clear that the risk preferences and management skills for an upstream business and a utility business are very different. ORG is clearly two companies under one banner. At the moment ORG guarantees its share of APLNG project debt, so a split can’t be done, but that won’t be a problem in another 12 months. The only question is how it will happen.
A quick glance at the results and outlook
We show a quick figure of the main P&L and some guesstimates about how it may look over the next couple of years. The projections should be treated with a large grain of salt. They don’t have the benefit of peer review, or reasonableness checks and represent a high level sketch rather than the output of a detailed model. Furthermore we have totally ignored the mandatorily redeemable cumulative prefernence shares [MRCPS] as we regard them as largely a cosmetic device to get cash into and out of APLNG in a tax effective manner.
Figure 1 ORG P&L including estimates. Source; company, ITKeORG’s peculiar method of accounting for APLNG makes it difficult to appreciate that APLNG is in fact nothing more than an investment for ORG and in our view its easier to understand ORG’s finances by treating APLNG as an investment and simply seeing the cash paid to ORG once the company is running. For FY18 we see as follows:
Figure 2: ORG with APLNG as an investmentORG’s energy markets (utility) results were basically flat on last year. That is actually an improvement on recent years as electricity gross profits have been under pressure for some time. The increase in gas profits was initially due to buying cheap ramp gas (gas produced in advance of LNG production) and then in this half by sales to GLNG at higher oil linked prices.
However, since the oil price is down, the actual sales price to business customers fell and the cost of gas increased. In our opinion, despite increasing volumes sold to GLNG next year the gas gross profit bears watching. The electricity price charged fell mainly due to a fall in network costs in NSW.
Figure 3 Electricity and gas prices and commodity purchase costFigure 4: Flat gross profits recently in electricity & gas, source: company
Renewable energy and ORG’s position
What ORG says and what it does in regard to renewable energy is a function mainly of necessity. ORG is short thermal generation, so it is in its interest to say that is a good thing and carbon will become more of a problem.
ORG has about 1.5 m REC inventory and for the next couple of years has around 3.8 m production and contracts. The message from the slide in today’s result pack is that the upto 500 MW Stockyard Hill site will fill much of the major gap that develops from around 2020. Of course at 500 MW Stockyard Hill is about $1.2 bn of capital expenditure and that won’t be done on a 5 year PPA.
Figure 5: ORG’s LRET outlook: Source company presentationIn 2016 ORG executed 156 MW of solar PPA’s but of course part of that was on the already in production Moree plant so it produces no new renewable energy.
Upstream – at least the $40bn LNG plant works
The upstream results reflect the outcome of a lot of bad news that has driven the shareprice down from $15 to $5. Specifically, ORG ended up contributing more capital to APLNG than originally anticipated, a largish contract to sell gas to QCLNG at an oil linked price has lead to a $63 m ebitda loss in FY16 rather than the profit originally anticipated. The second train will be about 9 months behind when the company said it would. However, if you are an optimist, you might see:
Our quick look at APLNG’s financials suggests that at an oil price of US$65 boe APLNG could be distributing about A$0.5 bn to ORG after paying down A$1 bn of APLNG’s own $11 bn of project debt.
Figure 6: APLNG P&L, source: company, ITKeOil price upside maybe limited by the ability of USA shale production to respond promptly to a price signal.
Figure 7 USA oil production v price, source WTRG economicsDavid Leitch is principal of ITK. He was formerly a Utility Analyst for leading investment banks over the past 30 years. The views expressed are his own. Please note our new section, Energy Markets, which will include analysis from Leitch on the energy markets and broader energy issues. And also note our live generation widget, and the APVI solar contribution.
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