Daily Press (Sunday)

Utility stocks are losing power

- By Jeffrey R. Kosnett

When a stock sector crushes the S&P 500 index by 15 percentage points over a full year, it’s normally cause for euphoria. But utilities, which are both regulated and sensitive to interest rates, are not your typical industry. And that massive 15-point outperform­ance translates to just a 1.5% total return over the past 12 months.

Now the category confronts several perils. If you are a longtime utility investor, there’s no urgency to quit, particular­ly if you enjoy a fine dividend yield on the original or average cost. The group’s 10-year annualized total return of 11% is excellent. But the bright lights are flickering.

For starters, on fundamenta­l stock market measuremen­ts such as price to earnings, utility shares have become expensive. Next, their average 3.7% dividend yield, which has not changed much over the years, is a percentage point less than the yield of risk-free Treasury bills.

One possible competitiv­e reaction — hefty dividend boosts — is unlikely because utilities on average are paying out a historical­ly lofty 70% of earnings; 60% to 65% is usual. And the rich mergers and acquisitio­ns that leveraged capital growth and led to higher valuations in the 2010s have slowed dramatical­ly. Precious few takeover targets remain.

In early October, the Dow Jones utility average plunged 21% in two weeks, a rout with only a couple of precedents. Utility shares used to be a refuge from all-hands sell-offs, and they were for much of 2022. But looking ahead, if a recession or investor discomfort produces another sharp stock market downturn in 2023, utilities are likely to suffer in full. The chance that slower economic growth will depress industrial power sales and cap utility earnings is legitimate.

“There’s a reset of expectatio­ns,” says Jay Rhame, CEO of Reaves Asset Management, which runs several utility funds. Over the past five years, the path of Virtus Reaves Utilities, an exchange-traded fund, looked independen­t of the S&P 500. But over the past 12 months, the fund’s correlatio­n with SPDR S&P 500 Trust, the giant broad-market ETF, leapt from 0.6 to 0.9 (a correlatio­n of 1 means the securities move in lockstep).

The same pattern holds for other utility funds. The best ideas now are in individual core utility stocks, such as American Electric Power (symbol AEP) and Xcel Energy (XEL). These two are less tied to the market and are worth keeping or buying on dips.

The outlook from the sages at several big investment firms is bearish (or worse) until the presumed impending recession passes and the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates.

What about the defense that your electric bill is a necessity along with groceries? Well, it is, and the dividends are secure. But the real earnings-growth potential is in wholesale and industrial power, where the prognosis is weak. Someday, we’ll see another run of double-digit utility returns, but 5% is realistic now.

 ?? CHERNETSKA­YA/DREAMSTIME ??
CHERNETSKA­YA/DREAMSTIME

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