Form 8-K

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington D.C. 20549

 

 

FORM 8-K

 

 

CURRENT REPORT

PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF

THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): May 20, 2008

 

 

AVISTA CORPORATION

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

 

 

Washington   1-3701   91-0462470

(State or other jurisdiction

of incorporation)

  (Commission File Number)  

(I.R.S. Employer

Identification No.)

 

1411 East Mission Avenue, Spokane, Washington   99202-2600
(Address of principal executive offices)   (Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: 509-489-0500

Web site: http://www.avistacorp.com

 

(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)

 

 

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:

 

¨ Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)

 

¨ Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)

 

¨ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

 

¨ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

 

 

 


Section 7 – Regulation FD Disclosure

Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure.

The information in this report shall not be deemed “filed” for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, nor shall it be incorporated by reference in any filing under the Securities Act of 1933, except as shall be expressly set forth by specific reference in such filing.

On May 21, 2008, management of Avista Corporation (Avista Corp.) will be participating in meetings with investors and will provide a business update presentation at the 2008 Edison Electric Institute Annual Finance Committee Meeting in New York. A copy of the business update presentation is furnished as Exhibit 99.1.

As part of this update, Avista Corp. will be confirming earnings guidance for 2008. This 2008 earnings guidance was included in Avista Corp.’s first quarter of 2008 earnings release furnished on Form 8-K on April 30, 2008.

Any reference to Avista Corp.’s Internet address shall not, under any circumstances, be deemed to incorporate the information available at such Internet address into this Current Report. The information available at Avista Corp.’s Internet address is not part of this Current Report or any other report furnished or filed by Avista Corp. with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Section 9 – Financial Statements and Exhibits

Item 9.01 Financial Statements and Exhibits.

 

(d) Exhibits

 

99.1 Business update presentation dated May 2008, which is being furnished pursuant to Item 7.01.


SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.

 

  AVISTA CORPORATION
  (Registrant)
Date: May 20, 2008  

/s/ Marian M. Durkin

  Marian M. Durkin
 

Senior Vice President, General Counsel

and Chief Compliance Officer

Business update presentation
Avista Corp. Business Update
EEI Finance Meeting
May 2008
NYSE: AVA
www.avistacorp.com
Exhibit 99.1


2
Company Overview
Headquartered in Spokane, Wash.
Core business is the utility
Generates, transmits and distributes
electricity and distributes natural gas
Has one of the smallest carbon
footprints in the United States
Non-regulated Subsidiary Advantage IQ
Provides utility, telecom and waste bill
processing, payment and information
services to multi-site companies
Utility Service Territory
Electric Customers
352,000
Gas Customers
311,000


3
2008 Highlights
New rates effective on January 1, 2008
Moody’s and S&P upgraded our corporate credit rating to investment grade
Filed General Rate Case in Washington on March 4, 2008
Electric rate increase of $36.6 million
Natural gas rate increase of $6.6 million
46.3% equity ratio and 10.8% ROE
Filed General Rate Case in Idaho on April 3, 2008
Idaho base rates last adjusted in October 2004
Electric rate increase of $32.3 million
Natural gas rate increase of $4.7 million
47.9% equity ratio and 10.8% ROE


4
2008 Highlights continued …
Issued $250 million of 5.95% first mortgage bonds on April 3, 2008
$273 million of 9.75% senior notes mature on June 1, 2008
Settled Oregon General Rate Case
Rate increase of $2.28 million
50.0% equity ratio and 10.0% ROE
Quarterly dividend increase of 10%
Acquired the development rights for a 50 MW wind power site located south of Reardan,
Wash. Expected to be completed in December 2011.
Capital budget continues to grow
Approximately $200 million in 2008


5
The economy in our service territory is well diversified and continues to grow
Healthcare, education, finance and tourism
provide an important balance
Strong commodity prices for wheat and
metals have led to a resurgence in agriculture
and mining
Housing prices have continued to rise
Spokane,
Wash.
ranked
in
the
top
20
of
all
metropolitan
areas
in
the
United
States
for
largest
one-year
percentage
increase
for
all
of
2007
Employment growth in the region continues to
outpace the national average by a wide margin
Employment Growth
12 months ending December 2007
(over previous December 2006)
0.9%
2.0%
2.2%
1.4%
4.0%
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
U.S. Job Growth
State of
Washington
Spokane MSA
State of Idaho
Coeur d'Alene
MSA
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA)


6
Responsible Resources


7
Avista is Long Resources Through 2010*
2008-2017
Annual Available Resource Capability
(in aMW)
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Peakers
Gas Dispatch
Contracts
Base Thermal
Hydro
Load w/ CI
* Excludes new resources from the 2007 Integrated Resource Plan shown on next page.


8
2007 Integrated Resource Plan
Preferred Resource Strategy by 2017
350 MW of natural gas-fired plants
300 MW of wind
87 MW of conservation
38 MW of hydro plant upgrades
34 MW of other renewables
Timing of Preferred Resource Strategy in MW
34
4
10
20
Other Renewables
38
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
Hydro Upgrades
87
11
10
10
10
10
9
7
7
7
6
Conservation
300
200
100
Wind
350
80
270
CCCT
Total
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008


9
What Has Changed?
Citizens Initiative 937
Renewables Mandate
3% Washington energy by 2012
9% Washington energy by 2016
15% Washington energy by 2020
Western governors sign agreement to reduce greenhouse gases
(Washington, California, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico)
Washington HB 6001 limiting emissions to gas plant (kills coal)
Federal CO
2
legislation in progress
Avista develops global climate change policy (in draft stage)
Higher capital costs for new generation
124.5
2020
73.5
2019
72.5
2018
71.2
2017
69.5
2016
22.6
2015
22.1
2014
21.7
2013
21.3
2012
Avista’s
Requirement to
Meet Mandate
(aMW)
Year


10
2008 Budgeted Utility Capital Expenditures
$200 million
JP Gas
Storage
Expansion
$14.5
Other
$22.7
IS/IT
$12.6
Growth
$43.0
AMR
$5.0
Environmental
$8.5
Gas
$20.9
Generation
$26.4
Electric T&D
$46.4


11
2009-2010 Forecasted Utility Capital Expenditures*
$0
$25
$50
$75
$100
$125
$150
$175
$200
$225
2009
2010
Environmental
Gas
Generation
Growth
IS/IT
Other
Electric T&D
*Excludes capital expenditures for 50 MW wind project


12
Avista Utilities Regulatory Update
Authorized
50.00%
10.00%
8.20%
Oregon Natural Gas
(settlement reached on February 22, 2008)
42.59%
46.00%
Common
Equity Level
Return
on
Equity
Rate of
Return
Jurisdiction and Service
10.40%
9.25%
Idaho Electric and Natural Gas
(implemented in September 2004)
10.20%
8.20%
Washington Electric and Natural Gas
(implemented in January 2008)
$89 million
$73 million
$502 million
$151 million
$890 million
Gas
Gas
Electric
Gas
Electric
Oregon
Idaho
Washington
Rate Base*
* Rate base as of 12/31/07


13
Oregon Gas General Rate Case
Filed October 12, 2007
All-party settlement agreement reached on February 22, 2008
Increase will be implemented in two steps resulting in a total of $2.28 million
$866,000 in April 2008
Approximately
$1.42
million
in
November
2008
based
on
completion
of
certain
capital
projects
51.2%
11.0%
8.98%
2.3%
$3.0 M
Original Request
50.0%
Common equity ratio
10.0%
Return on equity
8.2%
Rate of return
1.82%
% increase
$2.28 M
Amount
Settlement
Agreement


14
Washington Electric and Gas General Rate Case
Primary Electric Revenue Requirement Factors
Hydro
Relicensing &
Compliance
Issues
30%
Distribution &
Other Expense
13%
Increased Net
Plant
Investment
(1)
36%
Production &
Transmission
Expense
21%
Increased Loads
Mid Columbia Purchase Expenses
Colstrip & Kettle Falls Thermal Fuel Expenses
Distribution Operation & Maintenance Costs
Administrative & General Expenses
(1)
Includes return on investment, depreciation
and taxes, offset by the tax benefit of interest
Spokane River Relicensing
Montana Riverbed lease Settlement
46.3%
46.3%
Common Equity Ratio
10.8%
10.8%
Return on Equity
8.4%
8.4%
Rate of Return
3.3%
10.3%
% Increase
$6.6 M
$36.6 M
Amount
Natural
Gas
Electric
Filed March 4, 2008


15
Idaho Electric and Gas General Rate Case
The last General Rate Case filed in Idaho was in February 2004
Hydro
Relicensing &
Compliance
Issues
12%
Distribution &
Other Expense
8%
Increased Net
Plant
Investment
(1)
36%
Production &
Transmission
Expense
48%
Increased Loads
Mid Columbia Purchases
Colstrip & Kettle Falls Thermal Fuel Expenses
(1)
Includes return on investment, depreciation and taxes,
offset by the tax benefit of interest
Spokane River Relicensing
Montana Riverbed Lease Settlement
Primary Electric Revenue Requirement Factors
Distribution Operation & Maintenance Costs
Administrative & General Expenses
General Upgrades –
Hydro & Thermal
Transmission Upgrades
Distribution –
5 years of new customer growth & AMR Project
47.9%
47.9%
Common Equity Ratio
10.8%
10.8%
Return on Equity
8.74%
8.74%
Rate of Return
6.5%
16.7%
% Increase
$4.7 M
$32.3 M
Amount
Natural
Gas
Electric
Filed April 3, 2008


16
Advantage IQ


17
Advantage IQ
Analyzes utility usage and provides cost-management services for national, multi-site customers
Management services include electricity, natural gas, water/sewer, waste and telecom expenses
Manage over $12.5B in expenses for 410+ clients
Currently process and pay 660,000 bills per month, supporting 214,000+ sites nationwide
Entertainment
Fast Food
Government
Grocery
Hospitality
Industrial
Medium Box Retail
Small Box Retail
Airlines
Banking/Finance
Big Box Retail
Casual Dining
Commercial
Communications
Convenience Stores
Education


18
Financial Information
Revenue
$0
$5,000
$10,000
$15,000
$20,000
$25,000
$30,000
$35,000
$40,000
$45,000
$50,000
2005
2006
2007
Q1 2008
Net Income
$0
$1,000
$2,000
$3,000
$4,000
$5,000
$6,000
$7,000
$8,000
2005
2006
2007
Q1 2008


19
Financial


20
Investment Grade Credit Rating
BBB-
Baa3
BBB-
Senior Unsecured Debt
BBB
Baa2
BBB+
Senior Secured Debt
BB+
Baa3
BBB-
Corporate/Issuer Rating
Fitch, Inc.
Moody’s
Standard & Poor’s
Standard & Poor’s upgraded corporate credit rating and senior unsecured
debt from BB+ to BBB-
on February 7, 2008
Upgraded
Senior
Secured
from
BBB-
to
BBB+
in
September
2007
On December 20, 2007, received upgrade from Moody’s Investors Service


21
6%
3%
4%
1%
25%
8%
2%
2%
6%
2%
14%
19%
9%
$0
$50
$100
$150
$200
$250
$300
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
Long-term debt outstanding
April FMB's issuance
Proposed 2008 debt issuances
Debt Maturities by Year
proforma
December
31,
2008


22
AVA Dividend Payment History
$0.12 per share
dividend initially paid
Dec. 15, 1998
$0.12
$0.125
$0.130
$0.135
$0.140
$0.145
$0.150
$0.165
$0.100
$0.110
$0.120
$0.130
$0.140
$0.150
$0.160
$0.170
Dividend Increase Occurred
Dividend Payment Trend


23
$0.72
$0.92
$1.46
$0.72
$0.47
-$0.05
$0.15
$0.35
$0.55
$0.75
$0.95
$1.15
$1.35
$1.55
$1.75
2004
2005
2006
2007
Q1 2008
Consolidated Earnings


2008 Earnings Guidance
$(0.03)-$0.00
$0.10-$0.12
$1.20-$1.40
$1.35-$1.55
Other
Advantage IQ
Avista Utilities
Consolidated


25
This presentation contains forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our current expectations for future financial performance and cash flows, capital expenditures, our
current plans or objectives for future operations, future hydroelectric generation projections and other factors, which may affect the company in the future. Such statements are subject to a
variety
of
risks,
uncertainties
and
other
factors,
most
of
which
are
beyond
our
control
and
many
of
which
could
have
significant
impact
on
our
operations,
results
of
operations,
financial
condition
or
cash
flows
and
could
cause
actual
results
to
differ
materially
from
those
anticipated
in
such
statements.
The following are among the important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking statements: weather conditions, including the effect of
precipitation
and
temperatures
on
the
availability
of
hydroelectric
resources
and
the
effect
of
temperatures
on
customer
demand;
changes
in
wholesale
energy
prices
that
can
affect,
among
other things, cash needed to purchase electricity, natural gas for our retail customers and natural gas fuel for electric generation, and the value of surplus energy sold, as well as the market
value
of
derivative
assets
and
liabilities;
volatility
and
illiquidity
in
wholesale
energy
markets,
including
the
availability
and
prices
of
purchased
energy
and
demand
for
energy
sales; the
effect of state and federal regulatory decisions affecting our ability to recover costs and/or earn a reasonable return including, but not limited to, the disallowance of costs that we have
deferred; the potential effects of any legislation or administrative rulemaking, including the possible adoption of national or state laws requiring resources to meet certain standards and
placing
restrictions
on
greenhouse
gas
emissions
to
mitigate
concerns
over
global
warming;
the
outcome
of
pending
regulatory
and
legal
proceedings
arising
out
of
the
“western energy
crisis”
of
2000
and
2001,
and
including
possible
retroactive
price
caps
and
resulting
refunds;
the
outcome
of
legal
proceedings
and
other
contingencies;
changes
in,
and
compliance
with,
environmental and endangered species laws, regulations, decisions and policies, including present and potential environmental remediation costs; wholesale and retail competition
including, but not limited to, electric retail wheeling and transmission costs; the ability to relicense and maintain licenses for our hydroelectric generating facilities at cost-effective levels
with reasonable terms and conditions; unplanned outages at any of our generating facilities or the inability of facilities to operate as intended; unanticipated delays or changes in
construction
costs,
as
well
as
our
ability
to
obtain
required
operating
permits
for
present
or
prospective
facilities;
natural
disasters
that
can
disrupt
energy
production
or
delivery,
as
well as
the availability and costs of materials and supplies and support
services; blackouts or disruptions of interconnected transmission systems; the potential for future terrorist attacks or other
malicious acts, particularly with respect to our utility assets;
changes in the long-term climate of the Pacific Northwest, which can affect, among other things, customer demand patterns and
the volume and timing of streamflows to our hydroelectric resources; changes in future economic conditions in our service territory and the United States in general, including inflation or
deflation; changes in industrial, commercial and residential growth and demographic patterns in our service territory; the loss of significant customers and/or suppliers; default or
nonperformance on the part of any parties from which we purchase
and/or sell capacity or energy; deterioration in the creditworthiness of our customers and counterparties; our ability to
obtain financing through the issuance of debt and/or equity securities, which can be affected by various factors including our credit ratings, interest rates and other capital market
conditions; the effect of any change in our credit ratings; changes in actuarial assumptions, the interest rate environment and the actual return on plan assets for our pension plan, which can
affect future funding obligations, costs and pension plan liabilities; increasing health care costs and the resulting effect on health insurance provided to our employees and retirees;
increasing costs of insurance, changes in coverage terms and our
ability to obtain insurance; employee issues, including changes
in collective bargaining unit agreements, strikes, work
stoppages or the loss of key executives, as well as our ability to recruit and retain employees; the potential effects of negative publicity regarding business practices, whether true or not,
which could result in, among other things, costly litigation and
a decline in our common stock price; changes in technologies, possibly making some of the current technology obsolete;
changes in tax rates and/or policies; and changes in our strategic business plans, which may be affected by any or all of the foregoing, including the entry into new businesses and/or the exit
from existing businesses.
For
a
further
discussion
of
these
factors
and
other
important
factors,
please
refer
to
the
company’s
Annual
Report
on
Form
10-K
for
the
year
ended
Dec.
31,
2007
and
the
company’s
10-Q
for the quarter ended March 31, 2008. The forward-looking statements contained in this news release speak only as of the date hereof. The company undertakes no obligation to update any
forward-looking statement or statements to reflect events or circumstances that occur after the date on which such statement is made or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. New
factors emerge from time to time, and it is not possible for management to predict all of such factors, nor can it assess the impact of each such factor on the company’s business or the extent
to
which
any
such
factor,
or
combination
of
factors,
may
cause
actual
results
to
differ
materially
from
those
contained
in
any
forward-looking
statement.
Securities ratings are not recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities.  The ratings are subject to change or withdrawal at any time by the respective credit rating agencies.  Each credit
rating should be evaluated independently of any other ratings.