Mercury Financial Results 6 months ended 31 December 2018

Page 1

Financial Results Six months ended 31 December 2018

FRASER WHINERAY Chief Executive 26 February 2019

WILLIAM MEEK Chief Financial Officer


DISCLAIMER This presentation has been prepared by Mercury NZ Limited and its group of companies (“Company�) for informational purposes. This disclaimer applies to this document and the verbal or written comments of any person presenting it. Information in this presentation has been prepared by the Company with due care and attention. However, neither the Company nor any of its directors, employees, shareholders nor any other person gives any warranties or representations (express or implied) as to the accuracy or completeness of this information. To the maximum extent permitted by law, none of the Company, its directors, employees, shareholders or any other person shall have any liability whatsoever to any person for any loss (including, without limitation, arising from any fault or negligence) arising from this presentation or any information supplied in connection with it. This presentation may contain projections or forward-looking statements regarding a variety of items. Such projections or forward-looking statements are based on current expectations, estimates and assumptions and are subject to a number of risks, and uncertainties, including material adverse events, significant one-off expenses and other unforeseeable circumstances, such as, without limitation, hydrological conditions. There is no assurance that results contemplated in any of these projections and forward-looking statements will be realised, nor is there any assurance that the expectations, estimates and assumptions underpinning those projections or forward looking statements are reasonable. Actual results may differ materially from those projected in this presentation. No person is under any obligation to update this presentation at any time after its release or to provide you with further information about the Company. A number of non-GAAP financial measures are used in this presentation, which are outlined in the appendix of the presentation. You should not consider any of these in isolation from, or as a substitute for, the information provided in the unaudited consolidated financial statements for the six months ended 31 December 2018, which are available at www.mercury.co.nz.

The information in this presentation is of a general nature and does not constitute financial product advice, investment advice or any recommendation. The presentation does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any security and may not be relied upon in connection with the purchase or sale of any security. Nothing in this presentation constitutes legal, financial, tax or other advice.

2 DISCLAIMER


3 OUR MISSION


MERCURY’S COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE 100% renewable generation > Two low-cost complementary fuel sources in base-load geothermal and peaking hydro

High performance teams > Dynamic company culture built on the understanding that our people set us apart

Superior asset location > North Island generation located near major load centres; rain-fed hydro catchment inflows aligned with winter peak demand

Track record of customer engagement > Brand capital built through customer-led innovation and rewarding loyalty

Substantial peaking capacity > The Waikato hydro system is the largest group of peaking stations in the North Island

Long-term commercial partnerships > With Maori landowners and other key stakeholders

4 MERCURY


5 HY2019 HIGHLIGHTS


HALF YEAR FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS 500

400

385

HY2018 HY2019 380 304

302

$m

300

200

158 131 104

114

114

126 83

100

59

84

45

0 Energy Margin

EBITDAF

NPAT

Underlying Earnings

Free Cash Flow

SIB Capital Expenditure

Declared Ordinary Interim Dividend

> Stable year-on-year earnings despite generation down 206GWh > NPAT negatively impacted by the change in fair value of financial instruments (reflecting higher futures prices) > Reduced FCF driven by a $40m increase in receivables (due to higher ASX margin balances) offset by lower CAPEX

6 HY2019 HIGHLIGHTS


HY2019 HIGHLIGHTS One brand, $302m MERCURY STABLE EARNINGS Bringing together our heritage and our Near-record earnings maintained as customer-driven innovation alignment with high spot generation

prices offset lower hydro generation

6.2cps INTERIM DIVIDEND Fully-imputed interim dividend increase of 3.3% versus HY2018

7 HY2019 HIGHLIGHTS

3,901GWh GENERATION

MARKET THESIS COMING TO FRUITION

Hydro down 246GWh from HY2018 as inflows fell below average; geothermal up 40GWh on increased availability

Higher spot price volatility and futures pricing reflecting short term fuel scarcity but also improved market fundamentals

VALUE FOCUS

INVESTMENT IN CORE

Mercury has maintained a disciplined approach in pursuing value over volume in a highly competitive retail market

Whakamaru and Aratiatia hydro refurbishment in progress with Karapiro refurbishment announced; ensuring sustainable long-term operation, while delivering capacity and efficiency benefits


20.4%

STRATEGIC DRIVERS & HY2019 OUTCOMES DELIVERING CUSTOMER ADVOCACY > Maintaining commercial discipline in competitive retail market

7.4% Mercury brand trader churn2 HY2018: 5.5% Market: 8.0%

Total churn2 HY2018: 18.9% Market: 21.3%

> Focus on the customer rather than customer numbers contributed to lower sales volumes but a 4% uplift in volume-weighted average price received across the Mass Market segment > Mercury brand trader churn1 increased to 7.4%2, but maintained lower than market > Trader churn for all Mercury brands increased to 8.5%2 with the transfer of customers from Tiny Mighty Power to our main Mercury brand

> Delivering rewarding digital experiences > Successful launch of our Mercury Go app with more than 30,000 downloads in Q2 FY2019

> Sustained brand momentum > Our ‘Evie’ campaign continued to drive strong engagement with the Mercury brand > Launch of Mercury Drive reinforced our support of e.mobility adoption in NZ > Fulfilment of our customer promises to Reward, Inspire and Make It Easy > ~154,000 customers 4 now registered to receive Airpoints™ > Over 100,000 customers engaging with our online usage tool every week 5

1

Switching where a customer changes retailer without moving house From EA data; 12-monthly rolling trader churn / total churn as at 31 December 2018 3 Based on Mercury’s monthly survey of residential customers, 6-monthly rolling average to 31 December 2018 / 2017 for Mercury brand only 4 As at 31 December 2018 5 Weekly average over 6 months to 31 December 2018 2

8 HY2019 OUTCOMES

63% Customer satisfaction3 HY2018: 62%


1.06 0.86

LWAP/GWAP2 HY2018: 1.07

HY2019 TRIFR1 HY2018: 0.86

97% Geothermal availability3 HY2018: 95%

STRATEGIC DRIVERS & HY2019 OUTCOMES LEVERAGING CORE STRENGTHS > Goal of zero-harm > No high-severity incidents; TRIFR1 at 0.86 (flat versus 0.86 in HY2018)

> Focus on High Performance Teams > Office consolidation successfully completed in Q3 FY2019 bringing together 550+ employees in an environment that will leverage High Performance Teams > 98% of respondents to a recent employee survey say they have participated in High Performance Team development activities

> Enterprise-wide project execution > Ongoing hydro refurbishment continuing at Whakamaru and Aratiatia hydro stations with contract signed in January 2019 for $75m Karapiro refurbishment > Southdown grid-scale battery storage commissioned with discharge of 285MWh in the first quarter of operation

> Stable earnings despite lower hydro generation > HY2019 EBITDAF at $302m as generation alignment with high spot prices offset lower hydro generation versus HY2018

1

9 HY2019 OUTCOMES

12-monthly Total Recordable Injury Frequency Rate per 200,000 hours; includes onsite employees and contractors 2 Average price of purchases (LWAP) over average price of generation (GWAP) 3 Percentage of time plant able to generate after accounting for outages


6.2cps

STRATEGIC DRIVERS & HY2019 OUTCOMES ENHANCED LONG-TERM VALUE > Operational discipline > Opex flat versus HY2018 at $99m

> Continued review of capital allocation > Sale of Metrix smart metering business for $270m; simplifying Mercury while releasing capital and resources > Investment in Tilt Renewables maintained at 19.99% > Dundonnell Wind Farm in Victoria approved by Tilt Renewables Board; Mercury participated in capital raising in February 2019 ($55m) > Joint takeover offer with Infratil reached 85.3% combined shareholding, but did not succeed in reaching the 90% compulsory acquisition threshold

> Returns to shareholders > FY2019 EBITDAF guidance maintained at $515m on 4,150GWh of hydro generation, subject to any material events, significant one-off expenses or other unforeseeable circumstances including hydrological conditions > HY2019 interim ordinary dividend up 3.3% to 6.2cps > FY2019 ordinary dividend guidance maintained at 15.5cps, which will be the 11th consecutive year of ordinary dividend growth

10 HY2019 OUTCOMES

$270m Metrix Divestment gross proceeds

Interim Dividend HY2018: 6.0cps

Tilt Renewables joint takeover offer achieved combined holding of

>85%


11 MARKET DYNAMICS


REGULATORY OVERVIEW > Electricity Price Review (EPR) options paper released 20 February 2019 > > > > >

Stakeholder engagement through March 2019 with final recommendations to Government by mid-2019 Support phase-out of Low Fixed Charge Tariff which had industry consensus Need for sustainable market making arrangements with appropriate coverage and greater upstream fuel transparency Retail price regulation, vertical separation and distributor consolidation not supported by panel Prompt Payments recommended to shift from incentive to penalty

> Interim Climate Change Committee > Final report due end of April presented directly to Government due to inter-party delays on Zero Carbon Bill negotiations > Targeting 100% renewable electricity prohibitively expensive relative to electrification of transport and process heat

> Transmission Pricing > Electricity Authority will consult further in June 2019 on next stages > EPR panel support government statement on whether consumers or businesses should benefit from transmission cost reallocations

> Tax Working Group > Hydro generation, a non-consumptive water use, looks likely to be excluded in any potential environmental taxation regime

12 MARKET DYNAMICS


FUEL SCARCITY INCREASES SPOT PRICES WHOLESALE PRICE (Daily average)

Otahuhu

$600

HVDC outage causes price spike

$500

$/MWh

Benmore

$400 Average spot prices remain >$100/MWh

$300 $200

$100

5,000

GWh

4,000

Increased inflows lower price

Range (since 1927)

Average

Feb-19

Thermal fuel constraints and dry conditions elevate spot prices

NATIONAL STORAGE

Jan-19

$0

3,000 2,000 1,000

Dec-18

Nov-18

Oct-18

Sep-18

Aug-18

Jul-18

0

Source: NZX Hydro, Pricing Manager (NZX), Mercury

13 MARKET DYNAMICS

FY2019


FUEL SCARCITY INCREASES SPOT PRICES SI MONTHLY HYDRO STORAGE AND PRICE $350

Jan 1999 to Jun 2016 $350 FY2017

FY2018

$300

OTA Spot Price ($/MWh)

Oct-18

FY2019 $250 Nov-18

$200

Feb-19 to date $150 Jan-19 Dec-18

$100 $50 $0 -1500

NI MONTHLY HYDRO STORAGE AND PRICE

FY2017

$300

OTA Spot Price ($/MWh)

Jan 1999 to Jun 2016

Oct-18

FY2018 FY2019

$250 Nov-18

$200

Feb-19 to date $150 Jan-19 Dec-18

$100 $50

-1000

-500

0

500

Delta to SI Storage Average (GWh)

14 MARKET DYNAMICS

1000

1500

$0 -400

-200

0

200

Delta to NI Storage Average (GWh)

Source: NZX Hydro, Pricing Manager (NZX), Mercury 1 For quarters ended 30 September since 1928 2 For quarters ended 31 December since 1928

400


BALANCED APPROACH TO RISK MANAGEMENT AND OPPORTUNITY > Mercury exercised prudent hydrological management as storage approached historical minimum > Mercury’s generation (relative to average) increased in line with spot prices in Q1 FY2019 > Ability to realise generation opportunities in Q2 FY2019 tempered by imminent dry period risk in Q3 FY2019 > High generation relative to inflows caused storage to decrease in Q2 FY2019 instead of increasing as normal LAKE TAUPO STORAGE

Minimum MCL 1

(since 1 Jul 1999) 600

Average FY2019

Managing risk versus reward

500

300 200

15 MARKET DYNAMICS

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

Hydro Generation Delta to Average2 (GWh)

+73

+81

+101

-10

-14

-6

Waikato Inflows Delta to Average3 (GWh)

+50

+90

-35

-123

-78

+20

Spot Price Otahuhu ($/MWh)

$82

$89

$90

$300

$203

$114

Jun

May

Apr

Mar

Feb

Nov

Oct

Sep

Aug

0

Jan

100

Dec

Period where fuel management is critical with low seasonal inflows and drought risk in the Waikato catchment in Q3

Jul

GWh

400

HY2019

Source: NZX Hydro, Mercury 1 Maximum Controllable Level 2 Monthly average since July 1999 3 Monthly average since July 1927


MARKET THESIS COMING TO FRUITION FUNDAMENTALS: SUPPLY AND DEMAND BETTER BALANCED

ANTICIPATED MARKET OUTCOMES > Demand growth > Increased wholesale price volatility

> Futures price increase > Commercial and Industrial (C&I) upwards price pressure > Retail churn reduction > Upward pressure on retail price

16 MARKET DYNAMICS

✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ? ?

Futures and recent C&I contracted prices up $10/MWh+

}

Increase in Futures / C&I prices represents a cost of retailing and a contraction of retail margins Retail competition remains fierce despite this dynamic with aggressive acquisition offers still prevalent in the market


FUTURES LIFTING IN LINE WITH MARKET THESIS FUTURES PRICE

Otahuhu Benmore

(2 year average price starting 3 quarters ahead)

OTAHUHU FUTURES PRICE 31-Dec-17

30-Jun-18

30-Sep-18

31-Dec-18

22-Feb-19

$100 $180 $160 $90

$140

$/MWh

$80

$100 $80 $60

$70

$40 $20 $0

Jan-19

Oct-18

Jul-18

Apr-18

Jan-18

Jul-17

Oct-17

Apr-17

Oct-16

Jan-17

Jul-16

Apr-16

Jan-16

Oct-15

Jul-15

Apr-15

Jan-15

Jul-14

Oct-14

Apr-14

$60

Jan-14

$/MWh

$120

FY19

FY20

Source: ASX, Mercury

17 MARKET DYNAMICS

FY21


SEASONAL FACTORS CONTRIBUTE TO LOWER DEMAND > Demand down 0.5% in HY2019 (-0.6% normalising for temperature) led by a decrease in the irrigation sector > Industrial demand (excluding Tiwai) continues to decline – possibly lower than usual in Q2 FY2019 due to high spot prices > Tiwai Point 4th potline restart contributed to ~0.3% demand growth in HY2019 (~1.0% annualised) HY2019 NORMALISED DEMAND GROWTH BY SECTOR

DEMAND

HY2015

HY2016

HY2018

HY2019

HY2017

8,000

Sector

GWh

Sector %

Total %

Urban1

+8

0.1%

0.0%

6,000

Rural1

+39

1.2%

0.2%

5,000

+2

0.1%

0.0%

Irrigation

-191

(25.8)%

(0.9)%

2,000

Industrial

+42

0.9%

0.2%

1,000

Other

-31

(8.5)%

(0.1)%

Total

-131

18 MARKET DYNAMICS

(0.6)%

GWh

Dairy processing

7,000

4,000 3,000

0 Urban 1

Rural 1

Dairy

Tiwai

Industrial (excluding Tiwai)

Source: Transpower SCADA data, Mercury 1 Normalised for temperature

Irrigation


DISCIPLINE IN A HIGHLY COMPETITIVE MARKET > Maintained a disciplined approach in pursuing value over volume despite high levels of retail market activity > Mercury customer numbers decreased by 7,000 in HY2019, while the average Mass Market yield increased by 4% > Customer satisfaction1 based on Mercury’s survey remained stable going from 62% in HY2018 to 63% Mercury Group Mercury Brand Prior 12mth Mercury Switches Net Switches

10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 -2,000 -4,000 -6,000 -8,000 -10,000 30% 20% 10% 0%

NATIONAL CHURN RATE

All Retailers

(12mth rolling)

Mercury Mercury Brand

25%

}

Annual Churn

20%

10%

} Jan-19

Oct-18

Jul-18

Apr-18

Jan-18

Oct-17

Jul-17

Apr-17

0%

Jan-17

Jan-19

Oct-18

Jul-18

Apr-18

Jan-18

Oct-17

Jul-17

Apr-17

19 MARKET DYNAMICS

All switches

15%

5%

Jan-17

Switches Withdrawn2

Switches

NATIONAL SWITCHING

Source: Electricity Authority, EMI – Market share trends and switching breakdown 1 Based on Mercury’s monthly survey of residential customers, 6-monthly rolling average to 31 December for Mercury brand only 2 Switches which were initiated but not completed (inclusive of saves) 3 A trader switch is where a customer changes retailer without changing house

Trader switches3


20 FINANCIAL SUMMARY


HIGHER PRICES OFFSETTING REDUCTION IN GENERATION VOLUME EBITDAF BRIDGE (HY2019 vs. HY2018) Mass Market Price: C&I Price: flat

Generation: 206GWh Price: $48/MWh

3.8% Total Net Sales: 112GWh1 LWAP/GWAP: 1%

500 4

450

122 195

350 300

4

2

26 32

29

250

Energy Margin:

4

4

0

$5m

200 150

304

302

100

1 Includes

21 FINANCIAL SUMMARY

2 Includes

FPVV and net CFD sales ancillary services & gas purchases and sales

HY2019

OPEX

Other Income

Other 2

Other Energy Margin

Derivative Settlements

End User CFDs

Derivative Settlements

Price

FPVV Sales

Volume

FPVV Purchases

Price

Price

-

Volume

Generation

Volume

50

HY2018

EBITDAF ($m)

400


FY2019 GUIDANCE CONFIRMED > FY2019 EBITDAF guidance remains $515m on 4,150GWh of hydro generation, subject to hydrological volatility, wholesale market conditions and any material adverse events, significant one-off expenses or other unforeseeable circumstances > FY2019 ordinary dividend guidance is 15.5cps (up 2.6% on FY2018) > FY2019 Free Cash Flow will be positively affected by the maturity of historical interest rate hedges (circa $20m net annual cash flow benefit); partially offset by higher average debt levels > Interest paid $10m lower in HY2019 vs. pcp > Net debt up $183m at 31 December 2018 vs. pcp reflecting Tilt acquisition and share buyback in H2 FY2018

> FY2019 stay-in-business capital expenditure guidance is $95m

22 FINANCIAL SUMMARY


DIVIDENDS > Focus remains on appropriate capital management reflecting Government ownership constraints and growth aspirations > HY2019 fully-imputed interim dividend up 3.3% to 6.2 cents per share > Interim dividend to be paid on 1 April 2019 > Fully year guidance of 15.5cps represents the 11th consecutive year of ordinary dividend growth DECLARED DISTRIBUTIONS

Interim

Final

Specials

Share buyback

Ordinary guidance

2016

2018

$2.14/share

20

Cents per share

$3.21/share

25

15 10 5 0 2008

2009

2010

23 FINANCIAL SUMMARY

2011

2012

2013 2014 Financial Year

2015

2017

2019


DIVERSIFIED FUNDING PROFILE DEBT MATURITIES AS AT 31 DECEMBER 2018 Domestic Wholesale Bonds

US Private Placement

Capital Bond

Drawn Bank Facilities

1

Undrawn Bank Facilities

350 300

$m

250 200 150 100 50 2019

2020

2021

2022

2023

2024

2025

2026

2027

2045

Financial Year

> The average debt maturity profile for committed facilities was 7.0 years at 31 December 2018 > Subject to market conditions, Mercury intends to refinance its Capital Bonds at the next reset date, being the 11th of July 2019 > The maturing Wholesale Bonds in H2 FY2019 will be repaid using existing facilities 1

24 FINANCIAL SUMMARY

Drawn bank facilities includes issued commercial paper


QUESTIONS?

25 Q&A


CONTRACTS FOR DIFFERENCE 6 months ended 31 December 2018

6 months ended 31 December 2017

(1097)

(1,193)

End User

(586)

(642)

Other

(511)

(551)

($64m)

($6m)

Net Contracts for Difference (GWh)

Energy Margin contribution

1

26 APPENDIX

VAS included on both buy and sell side CFDs


JUN-18 JUL-18 AUG-18 SEP-18 OCT-18

th

th

st

th

th

27 APPENDIX JAN-19

Q2-FY2019 Operational Statistics

JUL-19 AUG-19 SEP-19 OCT-19 NOV-19 DEC-19

Q4-FY2019 Operational Statistics Annual Results Announcement Annual Shareholders Meeting Q1-FY2020 Operational Statistics Capital Markets Day (planned) UK & Asia Roadshow (planned) Domestic Governance Roadshow

2019 Financial Year End - 30

JUN-19

MAY-19 America Roadshow (planned) th

APR-19

MAR-19 Q3-FY2019 Operational Statistics

Interim Results Announcement - 26

FEB-19

DEC-18

Domestic Governance Roadshow

th

NOV-18

UK & Asia Roadshow

Q1-FY2019 Operational Statistics - 17

Annual Shareholders Meeting - 28

Annual Results Announcement - 21

Q4-FY2018 Operational Statistics - 18

2018 Financial Year End - 30

KEY INVESTOR RELATIONS DATES

James Flexman (Wholesale Markets Manager) presenting at Mercury’s 2-yearly Capital Markets Day in 2017


REFERENCE MATERIALS MERCURY REFERENCES Mercury Investor Centre

www.mercury.co.nz/Investor-Centre

Quarterly Operational Updates

https://www.mercury.co.nz/investors/results-reports/operating-information

FY2018 Results Presentation – August 2018

https://issuu.com/mercurynz/docs/20180821_mercury_financial_results?e=25554184/63952632

Investor Presentation – November 2018

https://issuu.com/mercurynz/docs/mercury_investor_roadshow_presentat?e=25554184/65954670

Governance Presentation – December 2018

https://issuu.com/mercurynz/docs/mercury_governance_roadshow_present?e=25554184/66170875

PUBLICATIONS Mercury Electricity Price Review Submission

28 APPENDIX

https://www.mercury.co.nz/news/electricity-price-review-executive-summary


FOR FURTHER INFORMATION >> TIM THOMPSON | HEAD OF TREASURY & INVESTOR RELATIONS T. +64 275 173 470 E. INVESTOR@MERCURY.CO.NZ


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