crimsonghost747
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The thing is, IF the FED does increase their interest rates it will be a very small increase. Of course gradually they can keep increasing them as long as they see fit but we won't see any huge changes in the coming years... and during all that time we will still be in a very low rate environment. If an utility stock is very stable and provides 2-4% dividend, usually increasing dividends often, then it's going to take a lot of rate hikes if you are expecting high quality bonds to compete with that.
However I think that the recent volatility together with the ATH prices was the real reason that utilities jumped so much last year. We have been hitting ATHs for a long time now and lets face it, there are a thousand things to be worried about economically speaking. A lot of people still think it's time for a downward correction (myself included) and so people let go of the more risky stocks and buy utilities.
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I'm currently doing research on an article covering a bunch of the utilities on the CCC list.
Just a quick glance at what I have so far I'd toss out ES, D, DUK, MDU, NJR, NWE, SCG, SO, VVC, WEC and XEL as some ideas worth your due diligence.
crimsonghost747
Unregistered
Can't really help you with the others but WTR was one of my first purchases in North America and I've been very happy with them. Extremely satisfied with what the management is doing, constant small aquisitions that add more customers and thus help to bring up the EPS in a regulated market. Also really optimistic about their infrastructure renawals as they are getting a lot of tax benefits from those in certain states... still not exactly free repairs but not far from it. And new infra always means less maintenance cost and better service for customers. So basically: improving service & reducing maintenance costs and having someone else pay for it.
I do think the current shareprice is a little high and for that reason I haven't added to my position recently. There simply won't be any big increases in EPS but it does keep creeping up slowly. That is fine by me but the current PE of 19 and div. yield of 2.60% are more fitting for a company with more growth potential. Many people seem to think that utilities will be taking a dive when the eventual interest rate increase by the FED happens, that might be a better opportunity to get into WTR.
Also keep in mind that they do have a share repurchase program but still their # of outstanding shares does seem to be increasing rather than decreasing. 2 simple reasons for this: Firstly the company isn't really using much of the already approved buybacks simply because the valuation is too high and secondly because part of the DRIP program's shares are newly issued ones instead of them being bought from the market.
Long story short: great company but in my opinion it's too expensive at the moment.
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R2R, I second much of Eric's list although you have some Canadian utes on yours which would probably be advantageous for you since there's no currency exchange.
I'd also add AVA & LNT.
The one thing I don't understand is everyone's infatuation with ED. They're in NYS where the regulators are a pain in the ass, the population is very NIMBY when it comes to high voltage transmission and they have little open space to add to their generation sources without a long transmission corridor. I agree, they're a well-run organization; just look at how well they recovered from Hurricane Sandy when much of their underground distribution system was underwater. It's the outside constraints that really holds them back.
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“While the dividend itself is merely a rearrangement of equity, over time it's more like owning an apple tree. The tree grows the apples back again and again and again, and the theoretical value of the tree doesn't change just because of when the apples are about to fall.” - earthtodan
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Thanks for the tip, DW.
Havent heard of those two companies - will check them out.
I developed an analysis specific to the Utility Sector. My analysis looks at dividends, financial statements, and valuations specific to the utility sector. I look for dividends, but not at the expense of total return. Lastly, I back-test the criteria, and check for alpha (S&P Capital IQ database and P123 database management system). Below are some companies I think have good prospects for income and total return.
PPL Corp (PPL) Yield 4.94%
Suburban Propane Partners LP (SPH) Yield 8.63%
Brookfield Renewable Energy Partners LP (BEP) Yield 5.64%
SCANA Corp (SCG) Yield 4.33%
SJW Corp. (SJW) Yield 2.55%
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Great article, Eric.
Thanks for the data collection and writeup. Im going thru a similar exercise and was planning on sharing a post on my blog next week.