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ENTERGY CORP /DE/ (ETR) Q4 2018 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q4 performance was mixed: ETR adjusted EPS was $0.70 and operational EPS $0.60; Utility operational EPS rose sharply YoY to $1.91 (from $0.74) but EWC swung to a loss (-$0.87), driving consolidated softness. Operating cash flow was $526M, down $385M YoY primarily from returning unprotected excess ADIT to customers.
  • Entergy introduced a simpler ETR adjusted EPS measure and guided FY19 to $5.10–$5.50 (midpoint $5.30), consistent with prior framework except for a ~$0.20 uplift from a lower effective tax rate; long-term growth target reaffirmed at 5–7%.
  • Regulatory and strategic execution remained constructive: Texas rate case approved, Arkansas FRP settlement approved; first AMI meters installed with 1M activations planned in 2019; Vermont Yankee sale closed (Jan 11, 2019) as the company advances to a pure-play utility.
  • Key 2019 drivers: ~1% weather‑adjusted sales growth (industrial ~2.8%), non‑fuel O&M +$2.7B (+3% YoY), ~$0.35 dilution from settling forward equity, and effective tax rate ~22.5–23%.
  • Near-term stock catalysts: sustained execution on rate mechanisms and AMI/grid modernization roll-out, EWC cash positivity 2019–2022, and clarity on SERI/FERC matters and Indian Point sale timeline.

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

  • What Went Well

    • Utility strength: UP&O adjusted EPS rose to $0.51 in 4Q (vs $0.48 YoY), with Utility operational EPS at $1.91 (vs $0.74), supported by lower non‑fuel O&M (nuclear) and favorable base rate actions. “We are reporting strong results for another successful year.”
    • Constructive regulatory progress: Texas base rate case approved; Arkansas FRP partial settlement approved; clarity across jurisdictions improves plan execution.
    • Strategic transition: Vermont Yankee sale completed (Jan 11, 2019); agreements in place to sell Pilgrim and Palisades; EWC de‑risked (e.g., NDT equity exposure reduced) with expected positive net cash to Parent through 2022.
  • What Went Wrong

    • EWC drag: EWC operational EPS fell by $1.22 YoY in Q4 on lower NDT returns and lower nuclear volumes; EWC headwinds offset Utility gains.
    • Cash flow optics: Q4 operating cash flow declined to $526M (down $385M YoY) due primarily to accelerated return of unprotected excess ADIT to customers.
    • Credit metrics below target (temporarily): Operational FFO/debt at 12.0% (15.3% ex‑ADIT giveback) with commitment to ≥15% by 2020; incremental depreciation/interest from capex elevate expense cadence near term.

Financial Results

Quarterly EPS (ETR Adjusted) trend

MetricQ2 2018Q3 2018Q4 2018
ETR Adjusted EPS ($)1.42 2.35 0.70

Q4 YoY EPS (Consolidated)

MetricQ4 2017Q4 2018
As-reported EPS ($)-2.66 -0.36
Operational EPS ($)0.76 0.60
UP&O Adjusted EPS ($)0.48 0.51

Q4 YoY Segment EPS (Operational)

SegmentQ4 2017 ($/sh)Q4 2018 ($/sh)
Utility0.74 1.91
Parent & Other-0.33 -0.44
EWC0.35 -0.87
Total0.76 0.60

Operating Cash Flow

MetricQ2 2018Q3 2018Q4 2018
Operating Cash Flow ($M)523 780 526

Key Balance Sheet/CF Metrics (LTM)

MetricValue
Operational FFO-to-debt12.0%
Operational FFO-to-debt (ex‑ADIT giveback)15.3%
Parent debt-to-total debt22.6%

Note: Results reflect non-GAAP adjustments, including items related to EWC exit; see Regulation G reconciliations in the slides.

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
ETR Adjusted EPSFY2019Prior framework midpoint effectively ~$0.20 lower due to higher tax rate $5.10–$5.50 (mid $5.30) Introduced new measure; midpoint uplift reflects lower effective tax rate
Long-term EPS growth2019–20215–7%5–7% Maintained
Effective tax rate2019; 2021n/a~22.5% (2019); slightly higher in 2021; assumptions ~23% Clarified
Sales growth (weather‑adjusted)2019n/a~1% total; industrial ~2.8% Set
Non‑fuel O&M2019n/a≈$2.7B (~+3% YoY) Set
Share count/dilution2019n/a≈$0.35 dilution from equity forward settlement Set
St. Charles recovery timingMid‑2019n/aBegins when in service mid‑year Set
DividendOngoingn/a4th consecutive raise in 2018; expect trend to continue (Board approval) Positive signal
Utility capex mix2019–2021Preliminary planModest increase vs preliminary, primarily distribution automation and MISO transmission upgrades Raised modestly

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicQ2 2018 (Q-2)Q3 2018 (Q-1)Q4 2018 (Current)Trend
EWC exit/decommissioningAnnounced Pilgrim & Palisades sales; VY decommissioning steps progressing VY license transfer approved; targeting VY transaction close YE18 VY sale closed (Jan 11, 2019); de‑risked NDT; expect EWC positive net cash 2019–2022 Accelerating and de‑risking
Regulatory progressBroad tax reform refunds/constructive filings; minimal rate impact Texas settlement; Arkansas FRP settlement; NO rate case refiling Texas rate case approved; Arkansas FRP resolved; NO ongoing Constructive cadence
AMI/grid modernizationNew customer offerings post‑AMI highlighted First meters installed; 1M planned activations in 2019 Execution ramping
Load/industrial growthStronger resi/commercial; outlook unchanged 2019 guide: ~1% total; industrial ~2.8% Stable to positive
Metrics simplificationEvaluating shift to simpler EPS measure ETR adjusted EPS introduced; 2019 guide $5.10–$5.50 Simplified framework
Grand Gulf NRC statusExpect transition to Column 1 by month-end Expect formal exit with NRC next week; no significant issues Improving oversight
Credit metricsFFO/debt 15.4%; targets reaffirmed FFO/debt 13.1%; parent debt ≤25% targeted Operational FFO/debt 12.0% (15.3% ex‑ADIT); target ≥15% by 2020 Path to targets

Management Commentary

  • “We are reporting strong results for another successful year… consolidated operational earnings came in above our guidance range.” – CEO Leo Denault.
  • “We are moving to a single, simpler measure… initiating our new Entergy adjusted EPS guidance… $5.10 to $5.50.” – CFO Andrew Marsh.
  • “We will install approximately 3 million automated meters… plans to activate 1 million new meters in 2019.” – CEO Leo Denault.
  • “We expect EWC to provide positive net cash to parent from 2019 through 2022.” – CFO Andrew Marsh.
  • “Texas rate case… approved… Arkansas… partial settlement… new rates now effective.” – CEO Leo Denault.

Q&A Highlights

  • Effective tax rate and new metric: The ~$0.10 structural benefit tied to protected excess ADIT/AFUDC is sustainable; weather will no longer be normalized in results, though impacts will be disclosed.
  • Capex cadence: Utility capex is running higher than prior preliminary plan, mainly distribution automation and MISO transmission upgrades.
  • Credit/leverage: Rating agencies comfortable with FFO/debt path back to ≥15% by 2020 given rapid ADIT giveback; levers available if needed.
  • Texas generation rider: Pursuing enabling legislation to reduce regulatory lag on generation investment.
  • Indian Point/Sale timing: Working toward a post‑shutdown transaction; aim to have a transaction signed/announced by year‑end to enter regulatory process.

Estimates Context

  • Wall Street consensus estimates (S&P Global) for Q4 2018 EPS and revenue were not available due to data access limits during this session; as a result, we cannot quantify beats/misses versus consensus. Values would be retrieved from S&P Global when available.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Utility earnings power is inflecting positively: UP&O adjusted EPS improved YoY in Q4, with Utility operational EPS up strongly; regulatory execution remains constructive.
  • ETR adjusted framework simplifies the story and focuses on the core utility, with 2019 midpoint $5.30 and 5–7% growth trajectory intact.
  • Cash metrics are temporarily diluted by ADIT refunds but normalize by 2020; parent debt discipline maintained (22.6% of total).
  • EWC exit is progressing with lower risk (NDT de‑risking, VY close), and expected cash positivity through 2022 provides additional flexibility.
  • 2019 operational levers: ~1% sales growth (industrial ~2.8%), mid‑year St. Charles in‑service, $2.7B non‑fuel O&M to support grid modernization/IT/cyber, and share dilution ($0.35) already framed.
  • Policy/regulatory watch items: Texas generation rider legislation, SERI/FERC ROE and sale‑leaseback proceedings, and New Orleans rate case.
  • Execution on AMI and grid investments, plus clarity on Indian Point transaction timing, are likely near‑term narrative drivers.

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