Title: MANAGING REGULATORY RISK IN A POSTPUHCA WORLD
1MANAGING REGULATORY RISK IN A POST-PUHCA WORLD
- MACQUARIE SECURITIES
- 2007 UTILITIES INFRASTRUTURE CONFERENCE
- VAIL, CO
- FEBRUARY 13, 2007
ROBERT W. GEE PRESIDENT GEE STRATEGIES GROUP LLC
2PUHCA 101(The 1935 Act)
- No significant utility state regulation existed
- PUHCA enacted to address financial abuses
facilitated by complex holding company structures
and interlocking directorates resulting in
numerous utility insolvencies and little
accountability - Required simplified, limited holding company
system - Utility activities limited to a single,
geographically integrated public utility system
and to such other businesses as are reasonably
incidental, or economically necessary or
appropriate to the operations of the integrated
system - Imposed significant recordkeeping and filing
requirements before the Securities and Exchange
Commission
3The Case for PUHCA Repeal
- Over time, PUHCAs restrictions were deemed as
not reflecting either the market structure or
regulatory policy priorities affecting the
modern electric power industry - Geographic integration requirement
counterintuitive to blunt growth of market power - States had assumed greater ratepayer protection
role - Over 2 decades, SEC favored its repeal
- Perception grew that repeal was necessary to
eliminate arcane, duplicative, and unduly
burdensome regulations that disserved the
interest of the consuming public by hindering
needed investment - FERC and states would be better equipped to
protect ratepayers, and not the SEC which is
focused on investor protection
4Just when you thought the war was over, the
battleground shifted . . .
To the states
- PUHCA repealed in Energy Policy Act of 2005
Victory Declared! - Because PUHCA repeal premised on adequacy of
state authority to protect ratepayers from
holding company abuses, states were invited to
address any perceived regulatory gap - Result most states have yet to act, but several
are becoming increasingly assertive Arkansas,
California, New Jersey, and Kansas (pending) - Whether this signals a trend is premature
- Are we witnessing a proliferation of
Mini-PUHCAs a la Wisconsin?
5New State Post-PUHCA Measures
- Structural corporate separation of utility,
affiliates, and holding companies - California mandated by rule
- Kansas Staff recommendation
- New Jersey Staff recommendation
- Maintenance and retention of separate books and
records for utility and holding company
affiliates (Arkansas California) - Ringfencing to protect utility credit quality
- Arkansas under certain conditions, can order
termination of relationship between utility and
its affiliate if shown to impair utilitys credit
quality to below BB (S P) or Ba1 (Moodys) - Kansas Staff proposal to prohibit utility from
issuing long-term debt to fund non-utility
activities, investments, or businesses - New Jersey Staff proposal would empower Board,
among other things, to limit or cease payment of
dividends or holding company if capital of
utility is found impaired
6New State Post-PUHCA Measures (cont.)
- Caps on non-utility diversification by utility or
utility holding company akin to Wisconsin
Mini-PUHCA - Arkansas -- 10 percent of the book value of the
total assets of the public utility and all its
affiliates - New Jersey 25 percent of utility and
utility-related assets, with latitude to seek
increase to 35 percent under certain conditions - Restrictions on transactions or sharing of
services/personnel between utility and holding
company affiliates - California limitations on use of common key
corporate officers, and personnel for regulatory
affairs, legal, lobbying - Arkansas prohibition of affiliate transactions
where utility provides to or shares with
affiliate any financial resource or financial
benefit - Disclosure of total compensation for executive
officers (and those making gt250K/yr. in base
salary), including proportion paid, directly or
indirectly, by ratepayers (California)
7Corporate Governance Oversight An Emerging Issue
- New Jersey Staff proposes to require utility
annually to certify that - 40 percent of its directors are independent
(i.e., not directors of both the electric or gas
public utility and its public utility holding
company system) - It has process in place for selecting new
directors and such process identifies New Jersey
residency, employment and/or other significant
ties with the State of New Jersey (New Jersey
Qualification) - If less than 40 percent, made a good faith effort
in meeting New Jersey Qualification - Californias rule -- Indirect effort at
governance oversight via required disclosure of
share of executive compensation attributable to
utility ratepayers infers utility executive
decisions driven by superseding business
priorities of holding company and/or affiliates
8Common Drivers for State Post-PUHCA Measures
- A strong preference for ex ante versus ex post
sanctions generic rules versus case-by-case
determinations - Skepticism of effectiveness of existing
ratemaking authority to prevent harm to
ratepayers from cross-subsidization or risk of
non-utility diversification - Desire for more rigorous oversight over matters
previously left to management discretion - Not persuaded that new rules would chill
investment
9Lessons for Investors (thus far)
- State commissions inclination to impose controls
influenced by variety of factors - Prior history of utility conduct (e.g., abuses
affecting utility creditworthiness) - General mistrust of utility ownership by large
multi-state holding companies or by out-of-state
interests - Activist regulatory culture
- Commissions relationship to legislature and/or
Governors - No two commissions are identical, but they talk
to one another - Investors should continue to monitor state
actions to see how this evolves
10Robert W. Gee President Gee Strategies Group
LLC 7609 Brittany Parc Court Falls Church, VA
22304 U.S.A. 703.593.0116 703.698.2033
(fax) rwgee_at_geestrategies.com www.geestrategies.co
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