Brief
New Strategies for Utility Growth
New Strategies for Utility Growth
As electricity use levels off, utility executives will need to explore new ways to meet investor growth expectations.
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Brief
As electricity use levels off, utility executives will need to explore new ways to meet investor growth expectations.
Investors expect utilities to grow the size of their businesses by 70% over the next decade in the face of flat electric load growth. That is the stark message from new research by Bain & Company and Rivel Research Group, surveying utilities investors in North America.
Our survey confirms investors’ extraordinary faith in the traditional regulated utility model (see Figure 1). Nearly three quarters of investors have a positive outlook on the sector, and more than 80% believe that the vertically integrated utility model remains sustainable. Most investors have set the bar for earnings per share (EPS) growth at 6% annually or higher.
Utilities have given investors reason for confidence. Of 22 Edison Electric Institute utilities offering long-term EPS guidance, all but two offer targets above 5% (see Figure 2).
In a business where capital deployment drives earnings, there are plenty of opportunities to invest where it benefits customers and contributes to growth, including grid modernization and hardening, power-generation fleet transitions (for example, fuel for steel, and gas for coal), and new energy technologies like storage and solar. Even with all of these opportunities, many utilities will struggle to deploy growth capital and to sustain current growth rates in their regulated businesses over the next decade. They face three major headwinds:
For every utility executive team, finding a formula that can sustain growth in the face of these headwinds will be a critical challenge.
Regulated utility growth remains at the core of the utility investor value proposition. Investors like regulated investments and are clearly telling executives to pursue more of the same (see Figure 3). As noted above, a broad range of capital projects in power generation, transmission and distribution, and new energy technologies could find favor not only with investors, but with customers and regulators as well.
That said, actually approving and deploying the customer-benefitting capital at the scale required is far more challenging than in the past. Each part of the core utility has a role to play:
Executives should ask themselves six questions as they look to sustain growth in the core utility:
As growth becomes more challenging, more utilities are turning to consolidation, particularly when a home jurisdiction seems unlikely to deliver new opportunities. A decade from now, there are likely to be fewer, larger utilities in the US.
M&A has not been easy in this sector, especially since much of the value from mergers (particularly cost reductions) is returned to customers. However, the traditional integration approach, focused on IT integration and process issues, leaves value on the table. M&A can drive multiple benefits in support of growth, including cost synergies that create rate headroom for investments and access to new capital investment opportunities.
The sector’s M&A winners will have a clear strategy blessed by their boards, a list of acquisition targets, and a high-quality diligence process focused on growth drivers and building a sound integration thesis.
Not every utility will pursue consolidation as a growth strategy, but every utility should answer the following four questions:
Utility customers—particularly commercial and industrial customers—are increasingly demanding services beyond simple kilowatts, seeking energy that is more green and reliable. Across the sector, sources of disruption—whether deregulation, decentralization or decarbonization—are growing. In other industries, leading incumbents have shifted their businesses to adapt to customer- or technology-driven change and thrived. Take IBM’s decision to abandon hardware and sell software instead, or Netflix’s transition from renting DVDs to streaming online (see Figure 4). These moves weren’t about tinkering around the edges with products and services; they were about engineering fundamental changes to the mix of the business over time.
The utilities sector offers several good examples of companies that have pushed the bounds and business definition of the plain-vanilla utility. Dominion Energy, Sempra Energy and NextEra Energy have all explored growth opportunities beyond the core in adjacent infrastructure businesses, including midstream natural gas, liquid natural gas terminals and unregulated renewables. NextEra’s well-timed expansion into utility scale renewables became a second engine of growth in an unregulated business, growing at a brisk 17% rate from 2002 to 2018. In 2002, NextEra’s regulated Florida Power & Light business accounted for about 85% of the company’s net income. By 2018, the mix had shifted significantly toward the unregulated business, with NextEra Energy Resources accounting for more than 40% of net income. Our research finds that more than 37% of investors cite NextEra as the most attractive utility to invest in—an affirmation of their interest in businesses beyond the core, so long as those adjacencies are successful.
As change accelerates in the industry, the relative risk level of the core utility and adjacencies is shifting. A growing number of utility executives we speak to worry that fossil generation assets will be forced to strand years ahead of the end of useful life. In a world of heightened competition, many ask what is more risky: deploying capital into a competitive business with a quickly growing end market and clear customer demand, or into a coal unit that might close years ahead of schedule, with millions in book value remaining? Executive teams may find that the answer to that question today differs from the answer five years ago.
For utilities that decide to go beyond the core, success will require getting three things right:
Deciding and executing on an outside-the-core growth strategy are among the most difficult tasks facing utility executives today. Four questions can get you started:
At a time of both opportunity and challenge for the utilities sector, leading executive teams are developing and executing long-term growth plans. The questions to ask are clear, as are the key ingredients: core utility growth, consolidation and growth beyond the core. Delivering against that growth plan will be the defining challenge of the decade to come.
Grant Dougans is a partner in Bain’s Utilities practice, and Joe Scalise leads the practice globally. Joe also leads the firm’s Energy & Natural Resources practice in the Americas.