The New Zealand Herald

Low inflows tipped to hit Contact

- Patrick Smellie

Low inflows of water into the South Island’s hydro-electricit­y storage lakes are expected to knock Contact Energy’s earnings in the second half of the current financial year but should boost prices for electricit­y to residentia­l, commercial and industrial users next year, says analysis from investment firm First New Zealand Capital.

“South Island hydrology has shifted gear from flood to trickle,” wrote analyst Nevill Gluyas in a research note this week.

“Storage in southern lakes has fallen to now reach the 1 per cent risk level, ie, one previously observed extreme hydro sequence could result in future shortfall.”

New Zealand has experience­d periodic winter electricit­y savings campaigns in the 1990s and 2000s, caused by so-called “dry winters” in the eastern South Island catchments, which account for around 80 per cent of the country’s relatively limited hydro storage capacity in an electricit­y system where 70 to 80 per cent of all electricit­y comes from renewable sources, primarily hydro.

In recent years inflows have been normal or above average while the combinatio­n of falling electricit­y demand and major investment­s in new wind and geothermal power stations have seen wholesale electricit­y prices sag and kept pressure off prices to consumers.

While Gluyas notes that inflows “could bounce back at any time”, the current low inflow sequence “has restored tension in 2018 financial year forward prices, lifting our FY18 earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on, amortisati­on and movements in the value of financial instrument­s (ebitdaf) by 1.5 per cent to $533 million”.

“Price tension and reversion to mean inflows mean our FY18 outlook improves . . . benefiting not only Contact’s merchant outlook, but also bringing favourable pressure on retail and commercial/industrial sales and pricing.”

FNZC’s detailed forecasts show Contact earning an average $49.40 per Megwatt hour for wholesale electricit­y in the current financial year, down on last year’s actual average of $59.60 per MWh. In the next financial year, it forecasts a jump to an average of $75.30 per MWh, before rising to above $80 per MWh in FY2021.

In the current financial year, however, higher wholesale electricit­y input costs along with a $4m cost to switch from the FlyBuys to the AA Smartfuel scheme and an expected increase in the price Contact pays for LPG is estimated to knock 2 per cent off ebitdaf, which FNZC now estimates at $518m.

It continues to rate Contact stock at “outperform”, raising its target price per share by 2c to $5.90. The company’s share price closed up 11c yesterday at $5.16.

Gluyas noted that the electricit­y system operator, managed by national grid owner Transpower, is currently doing daily monitoring of the generation mix, with more use of gas and coal-fired power stations in the North Island and increased water conservati­on in the southern catchments controlled by Contact and fellow generator-retailers Meridian Energy and Genesis Energy.

 ?? Picture / File ?? Contact Energy is increasing the use of North Island gas-fired power stations in its energy mix.
Picture / File Contact Energy is increasing the use of North Island gas-fired power stations in its energy mix.

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