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Earnings call: ONE Gas raises 2024 EPS guidance amid challenging market

EditorNatashya Angelica
Published 2024-11-06, 09:14 a/m
© Reuters.
OGS
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During the recent third-quarter earnings call, ONE Gas Inc. (ticker: OGS) reported meeting its expected financial targets, leading to an increase in earnings per share (EPS) guidance for 2024. Despite a decline in net income compared to the previous year, the company remains optimistic about its operational execution and customer growth.

CEO Sid McAnnally and CFO Chris Sighinolfi discussed the company's financial performance, regulatory environment, and outlook, including the impact of Federal Reserve rate cuts on their financial strategy.

Key Takeaways

  • ONE Gas met quarterly expectations and raised its 2024 EPS guidance to $3.85-$3.95.
  • Capital expenditures are maintained at $750 million.
  • Third quarter net income was $19.3 million, down from $25.2 million year-over-year.
  • The Kansas rate case resulted in a $35 million revenue increase starting November 1.
  • A Texas settlement is pending, expected to take effect in December.
  • The quarterly dividend is unchanged at $0.66 per share.
  • The company anticipates a 100 basis points reduction in interest rates by 2025.

Company Outlook

  • The company is optimistic about continued operational execution and customer growth.
  • Future rate filings in Oklahoma are planned by mid-2027.

Bearish Highlights

  • Net income decreased due to higher interest expenses and labor costs.
  • Housing market challenges persist with decreased new meter sets and high mortgage rates causing homeowner reluctance to move.

Bullish Highlights

  • A $35 million revenue increase from the Kansas rate case effective November 1.
  • A potential recovery in the housing market is suggested by a rise in housing permits.
  • The company has returned to normal operations post-moratorium.

Misses

  • The company experienced a year-over-year decrease in net income for the third quarter.

Q&A Highlights

  • Guidance did not account for Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2024, but anticipated a 100 basis points reduction in 2025.
  • The company's financial strategy is influenced by the Federal Reserve's balance sheet normalization.

ONE Gas Inc. has navigated through a period of economic uncertainty, reflected in their cautious yet optimistic financial strategy.

The company's ability to adjust its EPS guidance amidst market challenges demonstrates a responsive and adaptive approach to changing economic conditions. With regulatory developments and a keen eye on the housing market, ONE Gas continues to focus on long-term growth and shareholder value.

InvestingPro Insights

ONE Gas Inc. (OGS) has demonstrated resilience in the face of economic challenges, as evidenced by its recent financial performance and strategic outlook. According to InvestingPro data, the company boasts a market capitalization of $3.93 billion, reflecting its substantial presence in the utility sector.

One of the most noteworthy InvestingPro Tips is that ONE Gas has raised its dividend for 11 consecutive years. This consistent dividend growth aligns with the company's commitment to shareholder value, as mentioned in the earnings call. The current dividend yield stands at 3.74%, which may be attractive to income-focused investors in the current market environment.

Another relevant InvestingPro Tip highlights that OGS operates with a significant debt burden. This information provides context to the company's focus on interest expenses and its sensitivity to potential Federal Reserve rate cuts, as discussed in the earnings call. The company's anticipation of a 100 basis points reduction in interest rates by 2025 could significantly impact its financial strategy and bottom line.

The P/E ratio of 18.3 suggests that investors are willing to pay a premium for OGS shares, possibly due to its stable utility business model and consistent dividend growth. This valuation metric, combined with the company's raised EPS guidance for 2024, indicates market confidence in ONE Gas's future earnings potential.

It's worth noting that InvestingPro offers additional tips and insights for OGS, which could provide further valuable information for investors considering this utility stock. The platform lists several more tips that could offer a more comprehensive view of the company's financial health and market position.

Full transcript - One Gas Inc (NYSE:OGS) Q3 2024:

Operator: Good day, and welcome to the ONE Gas Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Erin Dailey. Please go ahead, Ms. Dailey.

Erin Dailey: Thank you, Elliot. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us on our third quarter 2024 earnings conference call. This call is being webcast live, and a replay will be available later today. After our prepared remarks, we're happy to take your questions. Statements made during this call that might include ONE Gas expectations or predictions should be considered forward-looking statements and are covered by the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, each as amended. Actual results could differ materially from those projected in any forward-looking statements. For a discussion of factors that could cause actual results to differ, please refer to our SEC filings. Joining us on the call this morning are Sid McAnnally, President and Chief Executive Officer; Chris Sighinolfi, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Curtis Dinan, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer. And now I'll turn the call over to Sid.

Sid McAnnally: Thanks, Erin, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us and for your interest in ONE Gas. We again delivered quarterly results in line with our expectations, thanks to company-wide efforts and constructive regulatory outcomes. Operational execution and an improved interest rate environment have given us the opportunity to both raise and narrow our financial guidance for 2024, all while preserving a strong balance sheet. We now expect EPS to be in the range of $3.85 to $3.95, $0.05 higher at the midpoint than our original guidance. We still anticipate capital expenditures of $750 million this year. We've also completed a year of significant regulatory activity, including the conclusion of our Kansas rate case and the settlement of our Central-Gulf rate case in Texas, which Curtis will speak to in a few moments. Both cases resulted in constructive settlements, which allow us to recoup investments we've made in our system and earn a fair rate of return on the equity embedded in our capital structure. Now I'll turn it over to Chris to discuss our financial performance for the quarter. Chris?

Chris Sighinolfi: Thanks, Sid, and good morning, everyone. As Sid noted, we are narrowing our earnings forecast and raising the earnings per share guidance midpoint by $0.05 with diluted EPS now expected to be in the range of $3.85 to $3.95. There are several key factors at play in our guidance raise. First is the Fed rate cut in September and it's tethered effect on commercial paper rates. As I've noted previously, we did not assume any rate cuts we did not assume any rate cuts this year and the Fed's 50 basis point rate reduction in September quickly reduced our CP rates by an equivalent amount. So, while concerns about the U.S. election, U.S. deficit and treasury market dynamics have caused longer-term rates to rise in the wake of the Fed's action, our utilization of commercial paper has yielded a benefit. Second, we captured some uplift from the constructive regulatory outcomes that Sid noted, in part due to the timing of rate implementations being earlier than we had embedded in our financial plan for this year. A major credit goes to our teams for their ability to efficiently file our cases and interim mechanisms, shepherd each smoothly through the regulatory process and two conclusions acceptable to all parties. Third, we are benefiting from our multiyear focus on O&M expense management. In our guidance last year, we noted an expectation for annual increases in O&M expenses to average 5% over the five-year period. with higher increases in the early years and moderation in the out years. Through some of the initiatives Sid and Curtis have spoken about on prior calls, we have been able to achieve a faster pace of cost moderation with O&M up just 5% year-to-date. Our program to in-source line locating across much of our service territory has saved dollars, helped hold down contractor costs. and produced workforce flexibility, generating efficiencies and enhancing our productivity. Finally, bad debt expense has proven favorable to plan. When COVID-related moratoria fully lifted across our territories last year, we actively resumed traditional disconnection activities and effectively address past due accounts. Those efforts, combined with lower gas prices and favorable winter weather dynamics this year have resulted in lower bad debt expense than we originally planned. Turning to our third quarter results. Net income was $19.3 million or $0.34 per diluted share compared with $25.2 million or $0.45 in the same period last year. Third quarter net income included $17.5 million in revenue from new rates which was partially offset by an $11.5 million increase in interest expense excluding KGSS-I, primarily due to the impact of refinancings we experienced in the first quarter. As expected, operations and maintenance expenses were higher as compared to the third quarter last year, primarily related to an increase in labor-related costs. As I noted previously, our O&M expenses year-to-date have been about 5% higher compared to 2023, consistent with our long-term guidance, but slightly favorable to our 2024 plan. As I mentioned on last quarter's call, we have satisfied our 2024 equity needs through the forward settlement agreements we issued last year. Those agreements cover approximately 3.6 million shares of our common stock at an average price of approximately $77 per share. Had all shares been settled at quarter-end, we would have received net proceeds of approximately $275 million. In August, the company reopened its 5.1% senior notes of $300 million to issue an additional $250 million at an effective rate of 4.87%, aggregating its senior notes due April 2029 to $550 million. The reopener met our need for long-term financing for this year. As Sid noted, our balance sheet remains strong, with our adjusted CFO to debt ratio projected to end the year above 19%, comfortably within the guidelines for our current credit ratings. Yesterday, the ONE Gas Board of Directors declared a dividend of $0.66 per share, unchanged from the prior quarter. As we close out the year, we look forward to continuing to execute our financial plan in line with our updated guidance. Curtis, I’ll turn things to you.

Curtis Dinan: Thank you, Chris, and good morning, everyone. I’ll start with an update on our regulatory activities. As Sid noted, the Kansas Corporation Commission formally approved the settlement of our rate case with a net increase of $35 million. It is a black box settlement, meaning that the agreement does not contain a stated ROE, capital structure or rate base. New rates went into effect on November 1. We also reached a settlement of the Central Gulf rate case for Texas Gas Service pending final commission approval. That settlement includes a $19.3 million rate increase, a 9.7% rate of return on equity and a 59.6% equity layer. Last month, the administrative law judge recommended approval of the settlement. Upon final commission approval, we expect new rates to go into effect the first billing cycle of December. Turning to commercial and operating activities. We expect to finish 2024 within our planned capital budget of $750 million. Over the past several years, we have steadily increased our annual planned capital deployment and operational capabilities to meet the needs of our growing service territory and increase the reliability of our system. And now, I’ll turn it over to Sid for closing remarks.

Sid McAnnally: Thank you, Chris and Curtis. We look forward to a strong finish to the year as we continue to serve our customers and prepare for the opportunities that await us in 2025. In closing, I thank each of our coworkers for their dedication as we safely deliver reliable and affordable natural gas to our 2.3 million customers. Thank you all for joining us this morning. Operator, we're now ready for questions.

Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] First question comes from Julien Dumoulin-Smith with Jefferies. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Julien, your line is open. We move on to Paul Fremont with Ladenburg. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Paul Fremont: Thank you very much and congratulations on a good quarter. I guess, my first question has to do with the timing of your 2025 guidance. Should we expect that to happen in December?

Sid McAnnally: Yes. Good morning, Paul. We changed our guidance cadence a few years ago to allow us to issue guidance before the December Utility Week meetings, so we could speak freely about our guidance and our plan forward. And we think that's worked well. It serves us well, and we feel like it serves the investment community well. So we plan to follow that same cadence as we go into the year ahead.

Paul Fremont: Great. And then you've talked about sort of progress that you've made so far on O&M, and you also, I think, talked about an expectation that O&M would be higher earlier and then the – as you go out in time declining, should we still sort of expect a declining trajectory in O&M on a go-forward basis or not?

Chris Sighinolfi: Hey Paul, this is Chris. Yes, I think that’s a safe expectation. Again, we’ve – what I was trying to convey this morning is that we’ve been successful in – on the front end, not experiencing as robust and inflationary pressure as we anticipated, but we still see the opportunity for a moderation in the cadence as we move forward.

Paul Fremont: Great. And then maybe the last question that I would have is having to do with sort of rate base cadence. Is there any planned filing in Oklahoma? And should we expect sort of Kansas to be like every two years?

Curtis Dinan: Paul, this is Curtis. And under our Oklahoma tariff, we’re required to file a rate – a full rate case there by June 30 of 2027. So, we remain on course to do that with the interim PBR filings each year until we get to that point. In Kansas, we just completed that rate case and haven’t declared any other plans into the future, except for we’ll continue with our annual GSRS filing which captures a large portion of the capital we spend each year in that state.

Paul Fremont: Got it. Thank you very much.

Sid McAnnally: Thank you, Paul.

Operator: We now turn to Christopher Jeffrey with Mizuho (NYSE:MFG) Securities. Your line is open, please go ahead.

Christopher Jeffrey: Hi everyone. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe just looking at the customer growth for the quarter kind of has followed this accelerating pattern and is in line with the longer growth – longer-term target that you guys have put out, could you just kind of talk about what you're seeing in your jurisdictions and where you kind of expect that to trend over the next few quarters and years?

Curtis Dinan: Chris, this is Curtis. And you're right that we saw a little bit of a firming in that activity here the latter part of 2024. I think we're still seeing the effects of higher mortgage rates and the impact that has not only on home buyers, but also on those that are already in homes that have lower mortgages. And so you see a bit of a reluctance of folks to want to move unless they necessarily have to move. And so that slowed activity a little bit. And then on the builder side, the same thing. They're very cognizant of carrying costs. And so there hasn't been quite the level of inventory and thus the need for new meter sets as quickly. What we've seen in the positive front is a pickup in housing permits. And so we think that's a positive sign that we're starting to see some thawing in that market. And depending upon what happens with interest rates, we should expect to see that continuing to recover. But I don't know that it's a rapid acceleration, just a strengthening of what we've seen the past couple of years.

Christopher Jeffrey: Got it. And then just as far as interest expense, could you kind of remind us after you did the $250 million add-on, could you remind us kind of where you stand on balance between commercial paper and how much you want to kind of term that out into long-term debt and kind of trajectory thereabouts?

Chris Sighinolfi: Yes. Sure, Chris. This is Chris. Nice to hear from you. On that [ph] I did mention the equity forwards. That would be the next financing settlement that we – that you could expect. If you look at our historical cadence, we do that in and around the end of the year at least that's been the last several years’ experience. So you can look for the forwards to settle at year end that would reduce the commercial paper balance and between the reopener we did in August and the settlements at year end that would satisfy the – and the retained earnings of the company over the course of this year that would satisfy the long-term financing needs. As you recall, we use commercial paper to finance investments in rate base that are not yet in authorized rate base of gas and storage and other similar types of investments. So we're always going to have some level of commercial paper balance. And then we will match long-term financing needs, both debt and equity, similar to how we have done this year and in years prior.

Christopher Jeffrey: Great. Thanks, Chris. And maybe just one quick follow-up. You had mentioned kind of the lifting of the moratorium on the COVID restrictions and seeing some progress on the bad debt expense. Just kind of how much more of that do you see to go? Or is that kind of those opportunities have been fully played out?

Curtis Dinan: Chris, this is Curtis again. And at this point, it's really normalized for us in our normal activity, if you will. We're caught up from the effects of the moratorium. It just really creates a little bit of a year-over-year comparison when you look at some of the numbers. But again, in terms of where we are, it's back to normal functioning and not really any big changes expected from here.

Christopher Jeffrey: Okay, great. Thanks, everyone.

Sid McAnnally: Thank you, Chris.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] We now turn to Jamieson Ward with Jefferies. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Jamieson Ward: Good morning. How are you guys.

Sid McAnnally: Hey good morning, Jamieson.

Jamieson Ward: Somewhat following on the last question there, but looking a little bit longer term and higher level specific to your guidance. As we're looking at another potentially 25 basis point rate cut on Thursday, I don't think that's too controversial at this point after the 50 basis point cut in September. Could you remind us of what you have baked in to your guidance at the moment, whether you had included cuts this year, which I don't think you've had, but please correct me if that's not the case? And then I think, 3% by 2027 was sort of the pass that you were looking towards and we're potentially looking at maybe 4 cuts into 2025. So a lot of hypotheticals there, but it seems like you might be getting a bit more headroom in your guidance relative to prior expectations. Would just like to hear your thoughts there as you're preparing that new guidance package? And just remind us what's baked in today? Thank you.

Chris Sighinolfi: Sure, Jamieson. Good to hear from you. This is Chris. So when we had established the guidance last year, we had assumed no cuts in 2024. We had assumed 100 basis points of reduction in 2025. So we already, as you pointed out, got 50 basis points of reduction from the Fed last month or in September, I should say. We have not changed our expectation through year-end 2025. So that would leave 50 to go. You're right, market consensus calls for 25 basis points later this week. We have not assumed that. And then in terms of the normalization down to three, if you look at what the Federal Reserve speaks about in terms of its neutral policy rate, what they call R-star to 2.9%. And if you look at the delta between Fed funds rate and our commercial paper rates, that's what would put us in that 3% territory. What shaped the time line for our plan to get down to 3% was really an examination of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet and the normalization process and getting back to sort of a sub 20% of GDP level, which is where it was prior to COVID.

Jamieson Ward: Terrific. Thank you very much, Chris. Look forward to seeing all of your in December.

Sid McAnnally: Yes. Thank you.

Chris Sighinolfi: Same here, Jamieson. Thanks.

Operator: That concludes the question-and-answer session. I would now like to hand back to the ONE Gas team for closing remarks.

Erin Dailey: Thank you all again for your interest in ONE Gas. We look forward to seeing many of you at conferences in New York the second week of December. Our quiet period for the fourth quarter starts when we close our books in early January and extends until we release earnings in late February. We'll provide details on the conference call at a later date. Have a great day.

Operator: This concludes the ONE Gas Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. You may now disconnect.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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