Charged up on American Electric

Company's above-average growth potential comes from its transmission business.

By Jim J. Jubak Dec 11, 2009 1:55PM

Jim JubakWith this post I’m buying American Electric Power (AEP) for my Dividend Income Portfolio. 


I think a modestly better economy in 2010 will increase company sales, profits, and cash flow enough to increase the dividend in 2010. (The yield is now 4.7%.) 


That will give income investors some protection against rising interest rates in 2010. The company certainly has room to raise the dividend since the current payout ratio is only around 60%. That’s low for a utility. (The payout ratio is the percentage of a company’s profits that are paid out to shareholders in dividends.)


In 2010, I’m looking for a big pickup in the company’s sales of electricity to industrial customers in its core Mid-West service area on a pickup in U.S. manufacturing that is, tentatively I’d admit, now under way, and in the company’s sale of out of system power to other utilities.


American Electric Power’s above-average (for a utility) growth potential comes from its transmission business. 


The company’s central location positions as a key link in any attempt to build more transmission lines to connect the country’s three now relatively unconnected regional electric grids.


Interstate transmission lines are regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), which has approved relatively higher returns on investment in an effort to fix decades of underinvestment in the national grid. 


Adding this growth business to American Electric Power’s other utility businesses is projected to result in earnings growth of 6% a year for the next two years, according to Deutsche Bank.


Because of its reliance on coal to generate the bulk of its electricity, American Electric Power is exposed to some risk from whatever form of carbon emissions program the United States finally adopts. (See my Dec. 8 post on where that policy stands this week). 


I think the risk is minimal because the mostly likely outcome, a cap-and-trade program, will give away a high percentage of emission rights to big industries as part of the price for passing any bill. 


In addition, the utility has tried to make lemons into lemonade by becoming a leader in efforts to develop clean-coal technologies. The company launched an effort to build two Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle power plants in 2004. The plants, in West Virginia and Ohio, are designed to turn coal into a gas that can then be cleaned before burning to remove many pollutants.


That doesn’t really tackle the carbon dioxide emissions from burning coal, so the company has become a major proponent of efforts to capture carbon dioxide from coal-fired power plants and then inject it deep underground. The company received $334 million from the U.S. Department of Energy on Dec. 4 to develop a commercial–scale plant using this technology at its Mountaineer coal-fired plant in West Virginia.


The result is, in my opinion, a relatively low-risk stock with a decent yield and good prospects of future growth in that dividend.


Jim Jubak owns one share of American Electric Power that he bought in 1980 (and never sold) so that he could attend the company’s annual shareholder meetings.

0Comments

DATA PROVIDERS

Copyright © 2013 Microsoft. All rights reserved.

Quotes are real-time for NASDAQ, NYSE and AMEX. See delay times for other exchanges.

Fundamental company data and historical chart data provided by Thomson Reuters (click for restrictions). Real-time quotes provided by BATS Exchange. Real-time index quotes and delayed quotes supplied by Interactive Data Real-Time Services. Fund summary, fund performance and dividend data provided by Morningstar Inc. Analyst recommendations provided by Zacks Investment Research. StockScouter data provided by Verus Analytics. IPO data provided by Hoover's Inc. Index membership data provided by SIX Financial Information.

Japanese stock price data provided by Nomura Research Institute Ltd.; quotes delayed 20 minutes. Canadian fund data provided by CANNEX Financial Exchanges Ltd.

STOCK SCOUTER

StockScouter rates stocks from 1 to 10, with 10 being the best, using a system of advanced mathematics to determine a stock's expected risk and return. Ratings are displayed on a bell curve, meaning there will be fewer ratings of 1 and 10 and far more of 4 through 7.

134
134 rated 1
281
281 rated 2
429
429 rated 3
603
603 rated 4
614
614 rated 5
610
610 rated 6
653
653 rated 7
470
470 rated 8
295
295 rated 9
124
124 rated 10
12345678910

Top Picks

SYMBOLNAMERATING
BRCDBrocade Communications Systems Inc9
DNRDenbury Resources Inc9
GTGoodyear Tire & Rubber Ord Shs9
NRGNRG Energy Inc9
STEIStewart Enterprises Inc9
More

LATEST POSTS

Will Monday's rally carry over?

The Dow jumps 109 points after rising as many as 191. Oil-price jitters and rising rates trim gains. Those factors and the Fed may weigh on markets Tuesday.

Fidelity Brokerage Services, Member NYSE, SIPC. (c) 2011 FMR LLC. All rights reserved

VIDEO ON MSN MONEY

ABOUT

Top Stocks provides analysis about the most noteworthy stocks in the market each day, combining some of the best content from around the MSN Money site and the rest of the Web.

Contributors include professional investors and journalists affiliated with MSN Money.

Follow us on Twitter @topstocksmsn.