Topic: Blue Chip Stocks

Canadian Utilities aims to spark profits with $5.8-billion expansion plan

canadian utilities

Today we look at Canadian Utilities, an electricity provider and natural gas distributor with holdings in Alberta, Australia, and the U.K. Slumping oil prices have dampened electricity demand in Alberta, driving down Canadian Utilities’ earnings and stock price. However, with a planned investment of $5.8-billion in new infrastructure over the next two years, Canadian Utilities will be well positioned for a rise in earnings with a recovery in oil prices. The company has a long record of steady dividend increases. Canadian Utilities’ new investments include a 485-km power line and underground gas storage facilities in Alberta, and a gas pipeline and power plants in Mexico. We view Canadian Utilities as a reliable blue chip stock for conservative investors.

Canadian Utilities is down 10% since the start of 2015. That’s mainly because lower oil prices have prompted companies that produce and explore for crude to put off new projects, hurting electricity demand in Alberta.


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However, the company is in the midst of expansion that will spur its earnings as oil prices recover. That will give it more room to increase its dividend.

CANADIAN UTILITIES LTD. (Toronto symbols CU [class A non-voting] and CU.X [class B voting]; www.canadian utilities.com) distributes electricity and natural gas in Alberta and Australia. It also operates 18 power plants in Canada, Australia and the U.K. ATCO Ltd. owns 53.2% of the company.

Between 2015 and 2017, Canadian Utilities plans to spend $5.8 billion on its utility operations, including building a 485- kilometre power line in eastern Alberta. This $1.8-billion project should start up by the end of 2015.

Other projects include a new gas pipeline and power plant in Mexico and four underground gas-storage facilities in Alberta. Meanwhile, lower gas prices and demand cut Canadian Utilities’ revenue by 8.9% in the three months ended June 30, 2015, to $780 million from $856 million a year earlier.

Overall earnings dropped 62.6%, to $43 million from $115 million, while per-share profits declined 69.2%, to $0.12 from $0.39, on more shares outstanding.

Blue Chip stocks: New investments to lift earnings

The latest earnings included a charge related to an increase in Alberta’s corporate tax rate. Without this and other unusual items, profits rose 18.8%, to $101 million from $85 million.

Lower power demand and rates in Alberta will probably cut the company’s 2015 earnings by 21.4% from 2014, to $1.98 a share. The stock trades at 18.7 times that estimate.

However, Canadian Utilities’ new projects will likely push up its 2016 earnings to $2.30 a share, and the stock trades at an attractive 16.1 times that forecast. The $1.18 dividend yields 3.2%. The class A non-voting shares are more liquid than the class B voting shares.

Canadian Utilities class A stock is a buy.

Recommendation in The Successful Investor: BUY 

For a recent report on another Canadian blue chip stock we recommend, read: Efficient CP Rail set to roll to future gains.

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