These terms and conditions govern your use of the website alphaminr.com and its related services.
These Terms and Conditions (“Terms”) are a binding contract between you and Alphaminr, (“Alphaminr”, “we”, “us” and “service”). You must agree to and accept the Terms. These Terms include the provisions in this document as well as those in the Privacy Policy. These terms may be modified at any time.
Your subscription will be on a month to month basis and automatically renew every month. You may terminate your subscription at any time through your account.
We will provide you with advance notice of any change in fees.
You represent that you are of legal age to form a binding contract. You are responsible for any
activity associated with your account. The account can be logged in at only one computer at a
time.
The Services are intended for your own individual use. You shall only use the Services in a
manner that complies with all laws. You may not use any automated software, spider or system to
scrape data from Alphaminr.
Alphaminr is not a financial advisor and does not provide financial advice of any kind. The service is provided “As is”. The materials and information accessible through the Service are solely for informational purposes. While we strive to provide good information and data, we make no guarantee or warranty as to its accuracy.
TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES SHALL ALPHAMINR BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES OF ANY KIND, INCLUDING DAMAGES FOR INVESTMENT LOSSES, LOSS OF DATA, OR ACCURACY OF DATA, OR FOR ANY AMOUNT, IN THE AGGREGATE, IN EXCESS OF THE GREATER OF (1) FIFTY DOLLARS OR (2) THE AMOUNTS PAID BY YOU TO ALPHAMINR IN THE SIX MONTH PERIOD PRECEDING THIS APPLICABLE CLAIM. SOME STATES DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL OR CERTAIN OTHER DAMAGES, SO THE ABOVE LIMITATION AND EXCLUSIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU.
If any provision of these Terms is found to be invalid under any applicable law, such provision shall not affect the validity or enforceability of the remaining provisions herein.
This privacy policy describes how we (“Alphaminr”) collect, use, share and protect your personal information when we provide our service (“Service”). This Privacy Policy explains how information is collected about you either directly or indirectly. By using our service, you acknowledge the terms of this Privacy Notice. If you do not agree to the terms of this Privacy Policy, please do not use our Service. You should contact us if you have questions about it. We may modify this Privacy Policy periodically.
When you register for our Service, we collect information from you such as your name, email address and credit card information.
Like many other websites we use “cookies”, which are small text files that are stored on your computer or other device that record your preferences and actions, including how you use the website. You can set your browser or device to refuse all cookies or to alert you when a cookie is being sent. If you delete your cookies, if you opt-out from cookies, some Services may not function properly. We collect information when you use our Service. This includes which pages you visit.
We use Google Analytics and we use Stripe for payment processing. We will not share the information we collect with third parties for promotional purposes. We may share personal information with law enforcement as required or permitted by law.
Commission | Registrant, State of Incorporation, | I.R.S. Employer | ||
File Number | Address and Telephone Number | Identification No. | ||
1-3526
|
The Southern Company | 58-0690070 | ||
|
(A Delaware Corporation) | |||
|
30 Ivan Allen Jr. Boulevard, N.W. | |||
|
Atlanta, Georgia 30308 | |||
|
(404) 506-5000 | |||
|
||||
1-3164
|
Alabama Power Company | 63-0004250 | ||
|
(An Alabama Corporation) | |||
|
600 North 18 th Street | |||
|
Birmingham, Alabama 35203 | |||
|
(205) 257-1000 | |||
|
||||
1-6468
|
Georgia Power Company | 58-0257110 | ||
|
(A Georgia Corporation) | |||
|
241 Ralph McGill Boulevard, N.E. | |||
|
Atlanta, Georgia 30308 | |||
|
(404) 506-6526 | |||
|
||||
001-31737
|
Gulf Power Company | 59-0276810 | ||
|
(A Florida Corporation) | |||
|
One Energy Place | |||
|
Pensacola, Florida 32520 | |||
|
(850) 444-6111 | |||
|
||||
001-11229
|
Mississippi Power Company | 64-0205820 | ||
|
(A Mississippi Corporation) | |||
|
2992 West Beach | |||
|
Gulfport, Mississippi 39501 | |||
|
(228) 864-1211 | |||
|
||||
333-98553
|
Southern Power Company | 58-2598670 | ||
|
(A Delaware Corporation) | |||
|
30 Ivan Allen Jr. Boulevard, N.W. | |||
|
Atlanta, Georgia 30308 | |||
|
(404) 506-5000 |
Large | Smaller | |||||||||||||||
Accelerated | Accelerated | Non-accelerated | Reporting | |||||||||||||
Registrant | Filer | Filer | Filer | Company | ||||||||||||
The Southern Company
|
X | |||||||||||||||
Alabama Power Company
|
X | |||||||||||||||
Georgia Power Company
|
X | |||||||||||||||
Gulf Power Company
|
X | |||||||||||||||
Mississippi Power Company
|
X | |||||||||||||||
Southern Power Company
|
X |
Description of | Shares Outstanding | |||||
Registrant | Common Stock | at March 31, 2011 | ||||
The Southern Company
|
Par Value $5 Per Share | 849,122,723 | ||||
Alabama Power Company
|
Par Value $40 Per Share | 30,537,500 | ||||
Georgia Power Company
|
Without Par Value | 9,261,500 | ||||
Gulf Power Company
|
Without Par Value | 4,142,717 | ||||
Mississippi Power Company
|
Without Par Value | 1,121,000 | ||||
Southern Power Company
|
Par Value $0.01 Per Share | 1,000 |
2
Page | ||||||
Number | ||||||
DEFINITIONS | 5 | |||||
CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION | 7 | |||||
|
||||||
PART I — FINANCIAL INFORMATION
|
||||||
|
||||||
Item 1. |
Financial Statements (Unaudited)
|
|||||
Item 2. |
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
|
|||||
9 | ||||||
10 | ||||||
11 | ||||||
13 | ||||||
14 | ||||||
32 | ||||||
32 | ||||||
33 | ||||||
34 | ||||||
36 | ||||||
49 | ||||||
49 | ||||||
50 | ||||||
51 | ||||||
53 | ||||||
68 | ||||||
68 | ||||||
69 | ||||||
70 | ||||||
72 | ||||||
85 | ||||||
85 | ||||||
86 | ||||||
87 | ||||||
89 | ||||||
106 | ||||||
106 | ||||||
107 | ||||||
108 | ||||||
110 | ||||||
119 | ||||||
Item 3. | 30 | |||||
Item 4. | 30 |
3
Page | ||||||
Number | ||||||
PART II — OTHER INFORMATION
|
||||||
|
||||||
Item 1. | 145 | |||||
Item 1A. | 145 | |||||
Item 2. |
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
|
Inapplicable | ||||
Item 3. |
Defaults Upon Senior Securities.
|
Inapplicable | ||||
Item 5. |
Other Information
|
Inapplicable | ||||
Item 6. | 146 | |||||
150 |
4
Term | Meaning | |
2007 Retail Rate Plan
|
Georgia Power’s retail rate plan for the years 2008 through 2010 | |
2010 ARP
|
Alternate Rate Plan approved by the Georgia PSC for Georgia Power which became effective January 1, 2011 and will continue through December 31, 2013 | |
AFUDC
|
Allowance for funds used during construction | |
Alabama Power
|
Alabama Power Company | |
Clean Air Act
|
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 | |
DOE
|
U.S. Department of Energy | |
Duke Energy
|
Duke Energy Corporation | |
ECO Plan
|
Mississippi Power’s Environmental Compliance Overview Plan | |
EPA
|
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency | |
FERC
|
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission | |
Fitch
|
Fitch Ratings, Inc. | |
Form 10-K
|
Combined Annual Report on Form 10-K of Southern Company, Alabama Power, Georgia Power, Gulf Power, Mississippi Power, and Southern Power for the year ended December 31, 2010 | |
GAAP
|
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles | |
Georgia Power
|
Georgia Power Company | |
Gulf Power
|
Gulf Power Company | |
IGCC
|
Integrated coal gasification combined cycle | |
IIC
|
Intercompany Interchange Contract | |
Internal Revenue Code
|
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended | |
IRS
|
Internal Revenue Service | |
KWH
|
Kilowatt-hour | |
LIBOR
|
London Interbank Offered Rate | |
Mirant
|
Mirant Corporation | |
Mississippi Power
|
Mississippi Power Company | |
mmBtu
|
Million British thermal unit | |
Moody’s
|
Moody’s Investors Service | |
MW
|
Megawatt | |
MWH
|
Megawatt-hour | |
NCCR
|
Georgia Power’s Nuclear Construction Cost Recovery | |
NDR
|
Alabama Power’s natural disaster reserve | |
NRC
|
Nuclear Regulatory Commission | |
NSR
|
New Source Review | |
OCI
|
Other Comprehensive Income | |
PEP
|
Mississippi Power’s Performance Evaluation Plan | |
Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4
|
Two new nuclear generating units under construction at Plant Vogtle | |
Power Pool
|
The operating arrangement whereby the integrated generating resources of the traditional operating companies and Southern Power are subject to joint commitment and dispatch in order to serve their combined load obligations | |
PPA
|
Power Purchase Agreement | |
PSC
|
Public Service Commission | |
Rate CNP Environmental
|
Alabama Power’s rate certificated new plant environmental | |
Rate ECR
|
Alabama Power’s energy cost recovery rate mechanism | |
registrants
|
Southern Company, Alabama Power, Georgia Power, Gulf Power, Mississippi Power, and Southern Power |
5
Term | Meaning | |
SCR
|
Selective catalytic reduction | |
SCS
|
Southern Company Services, Inc. | |
SEC
|
Securities and Exchange Commission | |
Southern Company
|
The Southern Company | |
Southern Company system
|
Southern Company, the traditional operating companies, Southern Power, and other subsidiaries | |
SouthernLINC Wireless
|
Southern Communications Services, Inc. | |
Southern Nuclear
|
Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. | |
Southern Power
|
Southern Power Company | |
S&P
|
Standard and Poor’s Ratings Services, a division of The McGraw Hill Companies, Inc. | |
traditional operating companies
|
Alabama Power, Georgia Power, Gulf Power, and Mississippi Power | |
Westinghouse
|
Westinghouse Electric Company LLC | |
wholesale revenues
|
revenues generated from sales for resale |
6
• | the impact of recent and future federal and state regulatory changes, including legislative and regulatory initiatives regarding deregulation and restructuring of the electric utility industry, implementation of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, environmental laws including regulation of water quality, coal combustion byproducts, and emissions of sulfur, nitrogen, carbon, soot, particulate matter, hazardous air pollutants, including mercury, and other substances, financial reform legislation, and also changes in tax and other laws and regulations to which Southern Company and its subsidiaries are subject, as well as changes in application of existing laws and regulations; | |
• | current and future litigation, regulatory investigations, proceedings, or inquiries, including the pending EPA civil actions against certain Southern Company subsidiaries, FERC matters, and IRS audits; | |
• | the effects, extent, and timing of the entry of additional competition in the markets in which Southern Company’s subsidiaries operate; | |
• | variations in demand for electricity, including those relating to weather, the general economy and recovery from the recent recession, population and business growth (and declines), and the effects of energy conservation measures; | |
• | available sources and costs of fuels; | |
• | effects of inflation; | |
• | ability to control costs and avoid cost overruns during the development and construction of facilities; | |
• | investment performance of Southern Company’s employee benefit plans and nuclear decommissioning trust funds; | |
• | advances in technology; | |
• | state and federal rate regulations and the impact of pending and future rate cases and negotiations, including rate actions relating to fuel and other cost recovery mechanisms; | |
• | regulatory approvals and actions related to the Plant Vogtle expansion, including Georgia PSC and NRC approvals and potential DOE loan guarantees; | |
• | regulatory approvals and actions related to the Kemper IGCC, including Mississippi PSC approvals and potential DOE loan guarantees; | |
• | the performance of projects undertaken by the non-utility businesses and the success of efforts to invest in and develop new opportunities; | |
• | internal restructuring or other restructuring options that may be pursued; | |
• | potential business strategies, including acquisitions or dispositions of assets or businesses, which cannot be assured to be completed or beneficial to Southern Company or its subsidiaries; | |
• | the ability of counterparties of Southern Company and its subsidiaries to make payments as and when due and to perform as required; | |
• | the ability to obtain new short- and long-term contracts with wholesale customers; | |
• | the direct or indirect effect on Southern Company’s business resulting from terrorist incidents and the threat of terrorist incidents; | |
• | interest rate fluctuations and financial market conditions and the results of financing efforts, including Southern Company’s and its subsidiaries’ credit ratings; | |
• | the ability of Southern Company and its subsidiaries to obtain additional generating capacity at competitive prices; | |
• | catastrophic events such as fires, earthquakes, explosions, floods, hurricanes, droughts, pandemic health events such as influenzas, or other similar occurrences; | |
• | the direct or indirect effects on Southern Company’s business resulting from incidents affecting the U.S. electric grid or operation of generating resources; | |
• | the effect of accounting pronouncements issued periodically by standard setting bodies; and | |
• | other factors discussed elsewhere herein and in other reports filed by the registrants from time to time with the SEC. |
7
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Operating Revenues:
|
||||||||
Retail revenues
|
$ | 3,396 | $ | 3,459 | ||||
Wholesale revenues
|
449 | 542 | ||||||
Other electric revenues
|
150 | 135 | ||||||
Other revenues
|
17 | 21 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating revenues
|
4,012 | 4,157 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Expenses:
|
||||||||
Fuel
|
1,476 | 1,645 | ||||||
Purchased power
|
100 | 127 | ||||||
Other operations and maintenance
|
944 | 908 | ||||||
Depreciation and amortization
|
418 | 343 | ||||||
Taxes other than income taxes
|
220 | 212 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating expenses
|
3,158 | 3,235 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Income
|
854 | 922 | ||||||
Other Income and (Expense):
|
||||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
35 | 49 | ||||||
Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized
|
(222 | ) | (222 | ) | ||||
Other income (expense), net
|
2 | (2 | ) | |||||
|
||||||||
Total other income and (expense)
|
(185 | ) | (175 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Earnings Before Income Taxes
|
669 | 747 | ||||||
Income taxes
|
231 | 236 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Consolidated Net Income
|
438 | 511 | ||||||
Dividends on Preferred and Preference Stock of Subsidiaries
|
16 | 16 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Consolidated Net Income After Dividends on
Preferred and Preference Stock of Subsidiaries
|
$ | 422 | $ | 495 | ||||
|
||||||||
Common Stock Data:
|
||||||||
Earnings per share (EPS) -
|
||||||||
Basic EPS
|
$ | 0.50 | $ | 0.60 | ||||
Diluted EPS
|
$ | 0.49 | $ | 0.60 | ||||
Average number of shares of common stock outstanding (in millions)
|
||||||||
Basic
|
848 | 823 | ||||||
Diluted
|
854 | 825 | ||||||
Cash dividends paid per share of common stock
|
$ | 0.4550 | $ | 0.4375 |
9
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Operating Activities:
|
||||||||
Consolidated net income
|
$ | 438 | $ | 511 | ||||
Adjustments to reconcile consolidated net income
to net cash provided from operating activities —
|
||||||||
Depreciation and amortization, total
|
501 | 422 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes
|
174 | 107 | ||||||
Deferred revenues
|
(2 | ) | (20 | ) | ||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
(35 | ) | (49 | ) | ||||
Pension, postretirement, and other employee benefits
|
(11 | ) | 5 | |||||
Stock based compensation expense
|
21 | 19 | ||||||
Generation construction screening costs
|
— | (19 | ) | |||||
Other, net
|
(14 | ) | (37 | ) | ||||
Changes in certain current assets and liabilities —
|
||||||||
-Receivables
|
276 | 43 | ||||||
-Fossil fuel stock
|
(42 | ) | 133 | |||||
-Other current assets
|
(77 | ) | (94 | ) | ||||
-Accounts payable
|
(108 | ) | (100 | ) | ||||
-Accrued taxes
|
131 | (73 | ) | |||||
-Accrued compensation
|
(277 | ) | (112 | ) | ||||
-Other current liabilities
|
23 | 2 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from operating activities
|
998 | 738 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Investing Activities:
|
||||||||
Property additions
|
(1,086 | ) | (1,054 | ) | ||||
Investment in restricted cash
|
(3 | ) | — | |||||
Distribution of restricted cash
|
61 | 8 | ||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trust fund purchases
|
(928 | ) | (238 | ) | ||||
Nuclear decommissioning trust fund sales
|
924 | 189 | ||||||
Proceeds from property sales
|
14 | — | ||||||
Cost of removal, net of salvage
|
(15 | ) | (28 | ) | ||||
Change in construction payables
|
136 | 28 | ||||||
Other investing activities
|
13 | 7 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for investing activities
|
(884 | ) | (1,088 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Financing Activities:
|
||||||||
Increase (decrease) in notes payable, net
|
(54 | ) | 132 | |||||
Proceeds —
|
||||||||
Long-term debt issuances
|
937 | 350 | ||||||
Common stock issuances
|
193 | 147 | ||||||
Redemptions —
|
||||||||
Long-term debt
|
(824 | ) | (256 | ) | ||||
Payment of common stock dividends
|
(385 | ) | (359 | ) | ||||
Payment of dividends on preferred and preference stock of subsidiaries
|
(16 | ) | (16 | ) | ||||
Other financing activities
|
(2 | ) | 1 | |||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for financing activities
|
(151 | ) | (1 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net Change in Cash and Cash Equivalents
|
(37 | ) | (351 | ) | ||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Period
|
447 | 690 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Period
|
$ | 410 | $ | 339 | ||||
|
||||||||
Supplemental Cash Flow Information:
|
||||||||
Cash paid during the period for —
|
||||||||
Interest (net of $17 and $21 capitalized for 2011 and 2010, respectively)
|
$ | 197 | $ | 182 | ||||
Income taxes (net of refunds)
|
(357 | ) | 6 | |||||
Noncash transactions — accrued property additions at end of period
|
531 | 373 |
10
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Assets | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Current Assets:
|
||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents
|
$ | 410 | $ | 447 | ||||
Restricted cash and cash equivalents
|
7 | 68 | ||||||
Receivables —
|
||||||||
Customer accounts receivable
|
1,024 | 1,140 | ||||||
Unbilled revenues
|
341 | 420 | ||||||
Under recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
220 | 209 | ||||||
Other accounts and notes receivable
|
249 | 285 | ||||||
Accumulated provision for uncollectible accounts
|
(26 | ) | (25 | ) | ||||
Fossil fuel stock, at average cost
|
1,350 | 1,308 | ||||||
Materials and supplies, at average cost
|
828 | 827 | ||||||
Vacation pay
|
150 | 151 | ||||||
Prepaid expenses
|
435 | 784 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, current
|
199 | 210 | ||||||
Other current assets
|
53 | 59 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current assets
|
5,240 | 5,883 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Property, Plant, and Equipment:
|
||||||||
In service
|
57,408 | 56,731 | ||||||
Less accumulated depreciation
|
20,384 | 20,174 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Plant in service, net of depreciation
|
37,024 | 36,557 | ||||||
Other utility plant, net
|
67 | — | ||||||
Nuclear fuel, at amortized cost
|
738 | 670 | ||||||
Construction work in progress
|
4,872 | 4,775 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total property, plant, and equipment
|
42,701 | 42,002 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Other Property and Investments:
|
||||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts, at fair value
|
1,369 | 1,370 | ||||||
Leveraged leases
|
630 | 624 | ||||||
Miscellaneous property and investments
|
267 | 277 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total other property and investments
|
2,266 | 2,271 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Charges and Other Assets:
|
||||||||
Deferred charges related to income taxes
|
1,263 | 1,280 | ||||||
Prepaid pension costs
|
104 | 88 | ||||||
Unamortized debt issuance expense
|
178 | 178 | ||||||
Unamortized loss on reacquired debt
|
269 | 274 | ||||||
Deferred under recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
133 | 218 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, deferred
|
2,432 | 2,402 | ||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
433 | 436 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred charges and other assets
|
4,812 | 4,876 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Assets
|
$ | 55,019 | $ | 55,032 | ||||
|
11
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Current Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Securities due within one year
|
$ | 1,435 | $ | 1,301 | ||||
Notes payable
|
1,243 | 1,297 | ||||||
Accounts payable
|
1,315 | 1,275 | ||||||
Customer deposits
|
333 | 332 | ||||||
Accrued taxes —
|
||||||||
Accrued income taxes
|
13 | 8 | ||||||
Unrecognized tax benefits
|
183 | 187 | ||||||
Other accrued taxes
|
192 | 440 | ||||||
Accrued interest
|
259 | 225 | ||||||
Accrued vacation pay
|
190 | 194 | ||||||
Accrued compensation
|
165 | 438 | ||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
133 | 152 | ||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, current
|
83 | 88 | ||||||
Other current liabilities
|
493 | 535 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current liabilities
|
6,037 | 6,472 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Long-term Debt
|
18,133 | 18,154 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Credits and Other Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accumulated deferred income taxes
|
7,673 | 7,554 | ||||||
Deferred credits related to income taxes
|
233 | 235 | ||||||
Accumulated deferred investment tax credits
|
525 | 509 | ||||||
Employee benefit obligations
|
1,575 | 1,580 | ||||||
Asset retirement obligations
|
1,283 | 1,257 | ||||||
Other cost of removal obligations
|
1,170 | 1,158 | ||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, deferred
|
335 | 312 | ||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities
|
508 | 517 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred credits and other liabilities
|
13,302 | 13,122 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities
|
37,472 | 37,748 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Redeemable Preferred Stock of Subsidiaries
|
375 | 375 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Stockholders’ Equity:
|
||||||||
Common Stockholders’ Equity:
|
||||||||
Common stock, par value $5 per share —
|
||||||||
Authorized — 1.5 billion shares
|
||||||||
Issued — March 31, 2011: 850 million shares
|
||||||||
— December 31, 2010: 844 million shares
|
||||||||
Treasury — March 31, 2011: 0.5 million shares
|
||||||||
— December 31, 2010: 0.5 million shares
|
||||||||
Par value
|
4,248 | 4,219 | ||||||
Paid-in capital
|
3,894 | 3,702 | ||||||
Treasury, at cost
|
(15 | ) | (15 | ) | ||||
Retained earnings
|
8,404 | 8,366 | ||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
|
(66 | ) | (70 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Total Common Stockholders’ Equity
|
16,465 | 16,202 | ||||||
Preferred and Preference Stock of Subsidiaries
|
707 | 707 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Stockholders’ Equity
|
17,172 | 16,909 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
|
$ | 55,019 | $ | 55,032 | ||||
|
12
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Consolidated Net Income
|
$ | 438 | $ | 511 | ||||
Other comprehensive income (loss):
|
||||||||
Qualifying hedges:
|
||||||||
Changes in fair value, net of tax of $2 and $1, respectively
|
3 | 1 | ||||||
Reclassification adjustment for amounts included in net income, net of tax of $2 and $3, respectively
|
3 | 6 | ||||||
Marketable securities:
|
||||||||
Change in fair value, net of tax of $- and $1, respectively
|
(1 | ) | 2 | |||||
Pension and other post retirement benefit plans:
|
||||||||
Reclassification adjustment for amounts included in net income, net of tax of $1 and $-, respectively
|
(1 | ) | — | |||||
|
||||||||
Total other comprehensive income (loss)
|
4 | 9 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Dividends on preferred and preference stock of subsidiaries
|
(16 | ) | (16 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Comprehensive Income
|
$ | 426 | $ | 504 | ||||
|
13
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(73) | (14.6) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(63) | (1.8) | |
14
First Quarter | ||||||||
2011 | ||||||||
(in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Retail — prior year
|
$ | 3,459 | ||||||
Estimated change in —
|
||||||||
Rates and pricing
|
166 | 4.8 | ||||||
Sales growth (decline)
|
(5 | ) | (0.1 | ) | ||||
Weather
|
(90 | ) | (2.6 | ) | ||||
Fuel and other cost recovery
|
(134 | ) | (3.9 | ) | ||||
Retail – current year
|
$ | 3,396 | (1.8 | )% | ||||
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(93) | (17.2) | |
15
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$15 | 11.1 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(4) | (20.3) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||||||||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Fuel*
|
$ | (169 | ) | (10.3 | ) | |||
Purchased power
|
(27 | ) | (20.8 | ) | ||||
Total fuel and purchased power expenses
|
$ | (196 | ) | |||||
* | Fuel includes fuel purchased by the Southern Company system for tolling agreements where power is generated by the provider and is included in purchased power when determining the average cost of purchased power. |
16
First Quarter | First Quarter | Percent | ||||||||||
Average Cost | 2011 | 2010 | Change | |||||||||
(cents per net KWH) | ||||||||||||
Fuel
|
3.25 | 3.60 | (9.7 | ) | ||||||||
Purchased power
|
9.25 | 7.37 | 25.5 | |||||||||
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$36 | 3.8 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$75 | 21.9 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$8 | 3.9 | |
17
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(14) | (28.6) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(5) | (1.8) | |
18
19
20
21
|
Scherer 3 | July 1, 2011 | ||
|
Branch 1 | December 31, 2013 | ||
|
Branch 2 | October 1, 2013 | ||
|
Branch 3 | October 1, 2015 | ||
|
Branch 4 | December 31, 2015 |
22
23
24
25
26
First Quarter | ||||
2011 | ||||
Changes | ||||
Fair Value | ||||
(in millions) | ||||
Contracts outstanding at the beginning of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (196 | ) | |
Contracts realized or settled
|
38 | |||
Current period changes
(a)
|
— | |||
Contracts outstanding at the end of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (158 | ) | |
(a) | Current period changes also include the changes in fair value of new contracts entered into during the period, if any. |
Asset (Liability) Derivatives | March 31, 2011 | December 31, 2010 | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Regulatory hedges
|
$ | (156 | ) | $ | (193 | ) | ||
Cash flow hedges
|
— | (1 | ) | |||||
Not designated
|
(2 | ) | (2 | ) | ||||
Total fair value
|
$ | (158 | ) | $ | (196 | ) | ||
27
March 31, 2011 | ||||||||||||||||
Fair Value Measurements | ||||||||||||||||
Total | Maturity | |||||||||||||||
Fair Value | Year 1 | Years 2&3 | Years 4&5 | |||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Level 1
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||
Level 2
|
(158 | ) | (125 | ) | (33 | ) | — | |||||||||
Level 3
|
— | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
Fair value of
contracts
outstanding at end
of period
|
$ | (158 | ) | $ | (125 | ) | $ | (33 | ) | $ | — | |||||
28
29
30
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Operating Revenues:
|
||||||||
Retail revenues
|
$ | 1,126 | $ | 1,176 | ||||
Wholesale revenues, non-affiliates
|
68 | 172 | ||||||
Wholesale revenues, affiliates
|
75 | 98 | ||||||
Other revenues
|
51 | 49 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating revenues
|
1,320 | 1,495 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Expenses:
|
||||||||
Fuel
|
395 | 489 | ||||||
Purchased power, non-affiliates
|
11 | 18 | ||||||
Purchased power, affiliates
|
46 | 52 | ||||||
Other operations and maintenance
|
297 | 310 | ||||||
Depreciation and amortization
|
157 | 145 | ||||||
Taxes other than income taxes
|
85 | 82 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating expenses
|
991 | 1,096 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Income
|
329 | 399 | ||||||
Other Income and (Expense):
|
||||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
5 | 13 | ||||||
Interest income
|
4 | 4 | ||||||
Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized
|
(74 | ) | (75 | ) | ||||
Other income (expense), net
|
(6 | ) | (6 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Total other income and (expense)
|
(71 | ) | (64 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Earnings Before Income Taxes
|
258 | 335 | ||||||
Income taxes
|
96 | 122 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income
|
162 | 213 | ||||||
Dividends on Preferred and Preference Stock
|
10 | 10 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income After Dividends on Preferred and Preference Stock
|
$ | 152 | $ | 203 | ||||
|
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Net Income After Dividends on Preferred and Preference Stock
|
$ | 152 | $ | 203 | ||||
Other comprehensive income (loss):
|
||||||||
Qualifying hedges:
|
||||||||
Changes in fair value, net of tax of
$2 and $-, respectively
|
2 | — | ||||||
Reclassification adjustment for amounts included in net
income, net of tax of $- and $1, respectively
|
— | 1 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total other comprehensive income (loss)
|
2 | 1 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Comprehensive Income
|
$ | 154 | $ | 204 | ||||
|
32
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Operating Activities:
|
||||||||
Net income
|
$ | 162 | $ | 213 | ||||
Adjustments to reconcile net income
to net cash provided from operating activities —
|
||||||||
Depreciation and amortization, total
|
185 | 168 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes
|
59 | 47 | ||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
(5 | ) | (13 | ) | ||||
Pension, postretirement, and other employee benefits
|
(11 | ) | (8 | ) | ||||
Stock based compensation expense
|
3 | 3 | ||||||
Hedge settlements
|
4 | — | ||||||
Storm damage accruals
|
1 | 2 | ||||||
Other, net
|
(4 | ) | 4 | |||||
Changes in certain current assets and liabilities —
|
||||||||
-Receivables
|
51 | 11 | ||||||
-Fossil fuel stock
|
3 | 13 | ||||||
-Materials and supplies
|
10 | (3 | ) | |||||
-Other current assets
|
(69 | ) | (78 | ) | ||||
-Accounts payable
|
(153 | ) | (75 | ) | ||||
-Accrued taxes
|
160 | 69 | ||||||
-Accrued compensation
|
(67 | ) | (41 | ) | ||||
-Other current liabilities
|
(2 | ) | (38 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from operating activities
|
327 | 274 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Investing Activities:
|
||||||||
Property additions
|
(213 | ) | (255 | ) | ||||
Distribution of restricted cash from pollution control revenue bonds
|
11 | 5 | ||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trust fund purchases
|
(97 | ) | (39 | ) | ||||
Nuclear decommissioning trust fund sales
|
97 | 39 | ||||||
Cost of removal, net of salvage
|
(8 | ) | (5 | ) | ||||
Change in construction payables
|
(2 | ) | (26 | ) | ||||
Other investing activities
|
(12 | ) | (17 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for investing activities
|
(224 | ) | (298 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Financing Activities:
|
||||||||
Proceeds —
|
||||||||
Capital contributions from parent company
|
5 | 6 | ||||||
Senior notes issuances
|
250 | — | ||||||
Redemptions —
|
||||||||
Senior notes
|
(200 | ) | — | |||||
Payment of preferred and preference stock dividends
|
(10 | ) | (10 | ) | ||||
Payment of common stock dividends
|
(138 | ) | (136 | ) | ||||
Other financing activities
|
(5 | ) | (1 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for financing activities
|
(98 | ) | (141 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net Change in Cash and Cash Equivalents
|
5 | (165 | ) | |||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Period
|
154 | 368 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Period
|
$ | 159 | $ | 203 | ||||
|
||||||||
Supplemental Cash Flow Information:
|
||||||||
Cash paid during the period for —
|
||||||||
Interest (net of $2 and $5 capitalized for 2011 and 2010, respectively)
|
$ | 72 | $ | 59 | ||||
Income taxes (net of refunds)
|
(110 | ) | 19 | |||||
Noncash transactions — accrued property additions at end of period
|
26 | 48 |
33
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Assets | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Current Assets:
|
||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents
|
$ | 159 | $ | 154 | ||||
Restricted cash and cash equivalents
|
7 | 18 | ||||||
Receivables —
|
||||||||
Customer accounts receivable
|
321 | 362 | ||||||
Unbilled revenues
|
110 | 153 | ||||||
Under recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
10 | 5 | ||||||
Other accounts and notes receivable
|
33 | 35 | ||||||
Affiliated companies
|
89 | 57 | ||||||
Accumulated provision for uncollectible accounts
|
(10 | ) | (10 | ) | ||||
Fossil fuel stock, at average cost
|
388 | 391 | ||||||
Materials and supplies, at average cost
|
336 | 346 | ||||||
Vacation pay
|
56 | 55 | ||||||
Prepaid expenses
|
140 | 208 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, current
|
32 | 38 | ||||||
Other current assets
|
7 | 10 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current assets
|
1,678 | 1,822 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Property, Plant, and Equipment:
|
||||||||
In service
|
20,218 | 19,966 | ||||||
Less accumulated provision for depreciation
|
7,038 | 6,931 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Plant in service, net of depreciation
|
13,180 | 13,035 | ||||||
Nuclear fuel, at amortized cost
|
317 | 283 | ||||||
Construction work in progress
|
428 | 547 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total property, plant, and equipment
|
13,925 | 13,865 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Other Property and Investments:
|
||||||||
Equity investments in unconsolidated subsidiaries
|
63 | 64 | ||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts, at fair value
|
578 | 552 | ||||||
Miscellaneous property and investments
|
71 | 71 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total other property and investments
|
712 | 687 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Charges and Other Assets:
|
||||||||
Deferred charges related to income taxes
|
456 | 488 | ||||||
Prepaid pension costs
|
267 | 257 | ||||||
Deferred under recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
5 | 4 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, deferred
|
673 | 675 | ||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
209 | 196 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred charges and other assets
|
1,610 | 1,620 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Assets
|
$ | 17,925 | $ | 17,994 | ||||
|
34
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Current Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Securities due within one year
|
$ | — | $ | 200 | ||||
Accounts payable —
|
||||||||
Affiliated
|
158 | 210 | ||||||
Other
|
170 | 273 | ||||||
Customer deposits
|
86 | 86 | ||||||
Accrued taxes —
|
||||||||
Accrued income taxes
|
4 | 2 | ||||||
Other accrued taxes
|
51 | 32 | ||||||
Accrued interest
|
62 | 63 | ||||||
Accrued vacation pay
|
45 | 45 | ||||||
Accrued compensation
|
34 | 99 | ||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
24 | 31 | ||||||
Over recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
23 | 22 | ||||||
Other current liabilities
|
39 | 41 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current liabilities
|
696 | 1,104 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Long-term Debt
|
6,235 | 5,987 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Credits and Other Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accumulated deferred income taxes
|
2,774 | 2,747 | ||||||
Deferred credits related to income taxes
|
86 | 85 | ||||||
Accumulated deferred investment tax credits
|
155 | 157 | ||||||
Employee benefit obligations
|
309 | 311 | ||||||
Asset retirement obligations
|
528 | 520 | ||||||
Other cost of removal obligations
|
712 | 701 | ||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, deferred
|
236 | 217 | ||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities
|
90 | 87 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred credits and other liabilities
|
4,890 | 4,825 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities
|
11,821 | 11,916 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Redeemable Preferred Stock
|
342 | 342 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Preference Stock
|
343 | 343 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Common Stockholder’s Equity:
|
||||||||
Common stock, par value $40 per share —
|
||||||||
Authorized - 40,000,000 shares
|
||||||||
Outstanding - 30,537,500 shares
|
1,222 | 1,222 | ||||||
Paid-in capital
|
2,166 | 2,156 | ||||||
Retained earnings
|
2,036 | 2,022 | ||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
|
(5 | ) | (7 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Total common stockholder’s equity
|
5,419 | 5,393 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity
|
$ | 17,925 | $ | 17,994 | ||||
|
35
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(51) | (25.1) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(50) | (4.3) | |
36
First Quarter | ||||||||
2011 | ||||||||
(in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Retail – prior year
|
$ | 1,176 | ||||||
Estimated change in —
|
||||||||
Rates and pricing
|
26 | 2.2 | ||||||
Sales growth (decline)
|
(3 | ) | (0.2 | ) | ||||
Weather
|
(45 | ) | (3.9 | ) | ||||
Fuel and other cost recovery
|
(28 | ) | (2.4 | ) | ||||
Retail – current year
|
$ | 1,126 | (4.3 | )% | ||||
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(104) | (60.5) | |
37
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(23) | (23.5) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||||||||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Fuel*
|
$ | (94 | ) | (19.2 | ) | |||
Purchased power – non-affiliates
|
(7 | ) | (38.9 | ) | ||||
Purchased power – affiliates
|
(6 | ) | (11.5 | ) | ||||
Total fuel and purchased power expenses
|
$ | (107 | ) | |||||
* | Fuel includes fuel purchased by Alabama Power for tolling agreements where power is generated by the provider and is included in purchased power when determining the average cost of purchased power. |
First Quarter | First Quarter | Percent | ||||||||||
Average Cost | 2011 | 2010 | Change | |||||||||
(cents per net KWH) | ||||||||||||
Fuel*
|
2.62 | 2.80 | (6.4 | ) | ||||||||
Purchased power
|
5.26 | 7.08 | (25.7 | ) | ||||||||
* | KWHs generated by hydro are excluded from the average cost of fuel. |
38
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(13) | (4.2) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$12 | 8.3 | |
39
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(8) | (61.5) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(26) | (21.3) | |
40
41
42
43
44
45
First Quarter | ||||
2011 | ||||
Changes | ||||
Fair Value | ||||
(in millions) | ||||
Contracts outstanding at the beginning of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (38 | ) | |
Contracts realized or settled
|
11 | |||
Current period changes
(a)
|
— | |||
Contracts outstanding at the end of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (27 | ) | |
(a) | Current period changes also include the changes in fair value of new contracts entered into during the period, if any. |
46
March 31, 2011 | ||||||||||||||||
Fair Value Measurements | ||||||||||||||||
Total | Maturity | |||||||||||||||
Fair Value | Year 1 | Years 2&3 | Years 4&5 | |||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Level 1
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||
Level 2
|
(27 | ) | (23 | ) | (4 | ) | — | |||||||||
Level 3
|
— | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
Fair value of
contracts
outstanding at end
of period
|
$ | (27 | ) | $ | (23 | ) | $ | (4 | ) | $ | — | |||||
47
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Operating Revenues:
|
||||||||
Retail revenues
|
$ | 1,815 | $ | 1,792 | ||||
Wholesale revenues, non-affiliates
|
83 | 110 | ||||||
Wholesale revenues, affiliates
|
11 | 14 | ||||||
Other revenues
|
80 | 68 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating revenues
|
1,989 | 1,984 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Expenses:
|
||||||||
Fuel
|
677 | 758 | ||||||
Purchased power, non-affiliates
|
74 | 82 | ||||||
Purchased power, affiliates
|
163 | 162 | ||||||
Other operations and maintenance
|
422 | 389 | ||||||
Depreciation and amortization
|
173 | 114 | ||||||
Taxes other than income taxes
|
87 | 80 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating expenses
|
1,596 | 1,585 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Income
|
393 | 399 | ||||||
Other Income and (Expense):
|
||||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
25 | 35 | ||||||
Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized
|
(96 | ) | (93 | ) | ||||
Other income (expense), net
|
(1 | ) | (6 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Total other income and (expense)
|
(72 | ) | (64 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Earnings Before Income Taxes
|
321 | 335 | ||||||
Income taxes
|
111 | 93 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income
|
210 | 242 | ||||||
Dividends on Preferred and Preference Stock
|
4 | 4 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income After Dividends on Preferred and
Preference Stock
|
$ | 206 | $ | 238 | ||||
|
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Net Income After Dividends on Preferred and Preference Stock
|
$ | 206 | $ | 238 | ||||
Other comprehensive income (loss):
|
||||||||
Qualifying hedges:
|
||||||||
Reclassification adjustment for amounts included in net
income, net of tax of $— and $2, respectively
|
1 | 3 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Comprehensive Income
|
$ | 207 | $ | 241 | ||||
|
49
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Operating Activities:
|
||||||||
Net income
|
$ | 210 | $ | 242 | ||||
Adjustments to reconcile net income
to net cash provided from operating activities –
|
||||||||
Depreciation and amortization, total
|
210 | 154 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes
|
56 | 59 | ||||||
Deferred revenues
|
2 | (18 | ) | |||||
Deferred expenses
|
33 | 25 | ||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
(25 | ) | (35 | ) | ||||
Pension, postretirement, and other employee benefits
|
(7 | ) | (4 | ) | ||||
Stock based compensation expense
|
4 | 3 | ||||||
Storm damage accruals
|
5 | 5 | ||||||
Other, net
|
(52 | ) | (26 | ) | ||||
Changes in certain current assets and liabilities —
|
||||||||
-Receivables
|
122 | (9 | ) | |||||
-Fossil fuel stock
|
(30 | ) | 81 | |||||
-Materials and supplies
|
(9 | ) | 1 | |||||
-Prepaid income taxes
|
80 | 23 | ||||||
-Other current assets
|
(4 | ) | (8 | ) | ||||
-Accounts payable
|
(50 | ) | (17 | ) | ||||
-Accrued taxes
|
(194 | ) | (185 | ) | ||||
-Accrued compensation
|
(65 | ) | (7 | ) | ||||
-Other current liabilities
|
64 | 43 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from operating activities
|
350 | 327 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Investing Activities:
|
||||||||
Property additions
|
(513 | ) | (625 | ) | ||||
Nuclear decommissioning trust fund purchases
|
(830 | ) | (199 | ) | ||||
Nuclear decommissioning trust fund sales
|
827 | 150 | ||||||
Cost of removal, net of salvage
|
1 | (14 | ) | |||||
Change in construction payables, net of joint owner portion
|
93 | 41 | ||||||
Other investing activities
|
(6 | ) | 51 | |||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for investing activities
|
(428 | ) | (596 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Financing Activities:
|
||||||||
Decrease in notes payable, net
|
(62 | ) | (81 | ) | ||||
Proceeds —
|
||||||||
Capital contributions from parent company
|
171 | 460 | ||||||
Pollution control revenue bonds issuances
|
137 | — | ||||||
Senior notes issuances
|
300 | 350 | ||||||
Other long-term debt issuances
|
250 | — | ||||||
Redemptions —
|
||||||||
Pollution control revenue bonds
|
(84 | ) | — | |||||
Senior notes
|
(101 | ) | (250 | ) | ||||
Other long-term debt
|
(300 | ) | — | |||||
Payment of preferred and preference stock dividends
|
(4 | ) | (4 | ) | ||||
Payment of common stock dividends
|
(224 | ) | (205 | ) | ||||
Other financing activities
|
(2 | ) | (2 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from financing activities
|
81 | 268 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Change in Cash and Cash Equivalents
|
3 | (1 | ) | |||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Period
|
8 | 14 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Period
|
$ | 11 | $ | 13 | ||||
|
||||||||
Cash paid during the period for —
|
||||||||
Interest (net of $9 and $13 capitalized for 2011 and 2010, respectively)
|
$65 | $ | 62 | |||||
Income taxes (net of refunds)
|
(77 | ) | (6 | ) | ||||
Noncash transactions — accrued property additions at end of period
|
350 | 275 |
50
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Assets | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Current Assets:
|
||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents
|
$ | 11 | $ | 8 | ||||
Receivables —
|
||||||||
Customer accounts receivable
|
540 | 580 | ||||||
Unbilled revenues
|
160 | 172 | ||||||
Under recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
188 | 184 | ||||||
Joint owner accounts receivable
|
54 | 60 | ||||||
Other accounts and notes receivable
|
52 | 67 | ||||||
Affiliated companies
|
21 | 21 | ||||||
Accumulated provision for uncollectible accounts
|
(13 | ) | (11 | ) | ||||
Fossil fuel stock, at average cost
|
654 | 624 | ||||||
Materials and supplies, at average cost
|
380 | 371 | ||||||
Vacation pay
|
77 | 78 | ||||||
Prepaid income taxes
|
6 | 99 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, current
|
107 | 105 | ||||||
Other current assets
|
66 | 80 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current assets
|
2,303 | 2,438 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Property, Plant, and Equipment:
|
||||||||
In service
|
26,681 | 26,397 | ||||||
Less accumulated provision for depreciation
|
10,008 | 9,966 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Plant in service, net of depreciation
|
16,673 | 16,431 | ||||||
Other utility plant, net
|
67 | — | ||||||
Nuclear fuel, at amortized cost
|
421 | 386 | ||||||
Construction work in progress
|
3,304 | 3,287 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total property, plant, and equipment
|
20,465 | 20,104 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Other Property and Investments:
|
||||||||
Equity investments in unconsolidated subsidiaries
|
69 | 70 | ||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts, at fair value
|
791 | 818 | ||||||
Miscellaneous property and investments
|
40 | 42 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total other property and investments
|
900 | 930 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Charges and Other Assets:
|
||||||||
Deferred charges related to income taxes
|
731 | 723 | ||||||
Prepaid pension costs
|
101 | 91 | ||||||
Deferred under recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
128 | 214 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, deferred
|
1,224 | 1,207 | ||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
191 | 207 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred charges and other assets
|
2,375 | 2,442 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Assets
|
$ | 26,043 | $ | 25,914 | ||||
|
51
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Current Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Securities due within one year
|
$ | 379 | $ | 415 | ||||
Notes payable
|
514 | 576 | ||||||
Accounts payable —
|
||||||||
Affiliated
|
200 | 243 | ||||||
Other
|
644 | 574 | ||||||
Customer deposits
|
198 | 198 | ||||||
Accrued taxes —
|
||||||||
Accrued income taxes
|
34 | 1 | ||||||
Unrecognized tax benefits
|
180 | 187 | ||||||
Other accrued taxes
|
95 | 328 | ||||||
Accrued interest
|
142 | 94 | ||||||
Accrued vacation pay
|
56 | 58 | ||||||
Accrued compensation
|
46 | 109 | ||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
70 | 77 | ||||||
Other cost of removal obligations, current
|
31 | 31 | ||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trust securities lending collateral
|
100 | 144 | ||||||
Other current liabilities
|
162 | 134 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current liabilities
|
2,851 | 3,169 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Long-term Debt
|
8,169 | 7,931 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Credits and Other Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accumulated deferred income taxes
|
3,773 | 3,718 | ||||||
Deferred credits related to income taxes
|
127 | 129 | ||||||
Accumulated deferred investment tax credits
|
227 | 229 | ||||||
Employee benefit obligations
|
685 | 684 | ||||||
Asset retirement obligations
|
721 | 705 | ||||||
Other cost of removal obligations
|
128 | 131 | ||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities
|
196 | 211 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred credits and other liabilities
|
5,857 | 5,807 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities
|
16,877 | 16,907 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Preferred Stock
|
45 | 45 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Preference Stock
|
221 | 221 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Common Stockholder’s Equity:
|
||||||||
Common stock, without par value—
|
||||||||
Authorized - 20,000,000 shares
|
||||||||
Outstanding - 9,261,500 shares
|
398 | 398 | ||||||
Paid-in capital
|
5,467 | 5,291 | ||||||
Retained earnings
|
3,045 | 3,063 | ||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
|
(10 | ) | (11 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Total common stockholder’s equity
|
8,900 | 8,741 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity
|
$ | 26,043 | $ | 25,914 | ||||
|
52
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(32)
|
(13.4) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$23 | 1.3 | |
53
First Quarter | ||||||||
2011 | ||||||||
(in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Retail — prior year
|
$ | 1,792 | ||||||
Estimated change in —
|
||||||||
Rates and pricing
|
141 | 7.9 | ||||||
Sales growth (decline)
|
(7 | ) | (0.4 | ) | ||||
Weather
|
(31 | ) | (1.8 | ) | ||||
Fuel cost recovery
|
(80 | ) | (4.4 | ) | ||||
Retail — current year
|
$ | 1,815 | 1.3 | % | ||||
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(27)
|
(24.5) | |
54
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$12 | 17.6 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||||||||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Fuel*
|
$ | (81 | ) | (10.7 | ) | |||
Purchased power — non-affiliates
|
(8 | ) | (9.8 | ) | ||||
Purchased power — affiliates
|
1 | 0.6 | ||||||
Total fuel and purchased power expenses
|
$ | (88 | ) | |||||
* | Fuel includes fuel purchased by Georgia Power for tolling agreements where power is generated by the provider and is included in purchased power when determining the average cost of purchased power. |
First Quarter | First Quarter | Percent | ||||||||||
Average Cost | 2011 | 2010 | Change | |||||||||
(cents per net KWH) | ||||||||||||
Fuel
|
3.73 | 3.78 | (1.3 | ) | ||||||||
Purchased power
|
5.57 | 6.36 | (12.4 | ) | ||||||||
55
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$33
|
8.5 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$59 | 51.8 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$7 | 8.8 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(10) | (28.6) | |
56
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$18 | 19.4 | |
57
58
Scherer 3
|
July 1, 2011 | |
Branch 1
|
December 31, 2013 | |
Branch 2
|
October 1, 2013 | |
Branch 3
|
October 1, 2015 | |
Branch 4
|
December 31, 2015 |
59
60
61
62
63
64
First Quarter | ||||
2011 | ||||
Changes | ||||
Fair Value | ||||
(in millions) | ||||
Contracts outstanding at the beginning of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (100 | ) | |
Contracts realized or settled
|
17 | |||
Current period changes
(a)
|
(1 | ) | ||
Contracts outstanding at the end of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (84 | ) | |
(a) | Current period changes also include the changes in fair value of new contracts entered into during the period, if any. |
65
March 31, 2011 | ||||||||||||||||
Fair Value Measurements | ||||||||||||||||
Total | Maturity | |||||||||||||||
Fair Value | Year 1 | Years 2&3 | Years 4&5 | |||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Level 1
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||
Level 2
|
(84 | ) | (70 | ) | (14 | ) | — | |||||||||
Level 3
|
— | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
Fair value of
contracts outstanding
at end of period
|
$ | (84 | ) | $ | (70 | ) | $ | (14 | ) | $ | — | |||||
66
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Operating Revenues:
|
||||||||
Retail revenues
|
$ | 274,826 | $ | 304,750 | ||||
Wholesale revenues, non-affiliates
|
31,019 | 27,914 | ||||||
Wholesale revenues, affiliates
|
4,135 | 9,518 | ||||||
Other revenues
|
14,628 | 14,530 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating revenues
|
324,608 | 356,712 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Expenses:
|
||||||||
Fuel
|
131,782 | 152,712 | ||||||
Purchased power, non-affiliates
|
7,003 | 7,435 | ||||||
Purchased power, affiliates
|
16,618 | 20,413 | ||||||
Other operations and maintenance
|
80,509 | 70,418 | ||||||
Depreciation and amortization
|
31,756 | 28,071 | ||||||
Taxes other than income taxes
|
24,896 | 25,233 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating expenses
|
292,564 | 304,282 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Income
|
32,044 | 52,430 | ||||||
Other Income and (Expense):
|
||||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
2,135 | 1,385 | ||||||
Interest income
|
14 | 17 | ||||||
Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized
|
(13,629 | ) | (11,385 | ) | ||||
Other income (expense), net
|
(563 | ) | (533 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Total other income and (expense)
|
(12,043 | ) | (10,516 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Earnings Before Income Taxes
|
20,001 | 41,914 | ||||||
Income taxes
|
6,759 | 15,063 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income
|
13,242 | 26,851 | ||||||
Dividends on Preference Stock
|
1,551 | 1,551 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income After Dividends on Preference Stock
|
$ | 11,691 | $ | 25,300 | ||||
|
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Net Income After Dividends on Preference Stock
|
$ | 11,691 | $ | 25,300 | ||||
Other comprehensive income (loss):
|
||||||||
Qualifying hedges:
|
||||||||
Changes in fair value, net of tax of $- and $(953), respectively
|
— | (1,518 | ) | |||||
Reclassification adjustment for amounts included in net
income, net of tax of $90 and $105, respectively
|
143 | 166 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total other comprehensive income (loss)
|
143 | (1,352 | ) | |||||
|
||||||||
Comprehensive Income
|
$ | 11,834 | $ | 23,948 | ||||
|
68
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Operating Activities:
|
||||||||
Net income
|
$ | 13,242 | $ | 26,851 | ||||
Adjustments to reconcile net income
to net cash provided from operating activities —
|
||||||||
Depreciation and amortization, total
|
33,294 | 29,659 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes
|
6,249 | 2,917 | ||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
(2,135 | ) | (1,385 | ) | ||||
Pension, postretirement, and other employee benefits
|
(1,256 | ) | 550 | |||||
Stock based compensation expense
|
518 | 623 | ||||||
Other, net
|
(3,793 | ) | (520 | ) | ||||
Changes in certain current assets and liabilities —
|
||||||||
-Receivables
|
35,336 | 6,150 | ||||||
-Prepayments
|
1,156 | 983 | ||||||
-Fossil fuel stock
|
(14,941 | ) | 17,419 | |||||
-Materials and supplies
|
(726 | ) | (1,170 | ) | ||||
-Prepaid income taxes
|
28,889 | 4,530 | ||||||
-Property damage cost recovery
|
— | 11 | ||||||
-Other current assets
|
7 | 12 | ||||||
-Accounts payable
|
(8,863 | ) | (4,443 | ) | ||||
-Accrued taxes
|
4,053 | 15,539 | ||||||
-Accrued compensation
|
(10,000 | ) | (3,462 | ) | ||||
-Other current liabilities
|
6,127 | 6,304 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from operating activities
|
87,157 | 100,568 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Investing Activities:
|
||||||||
Property additions
|
(94,239 | ) | (81,225 | ) | ||||
Distribution of restricted cash from pollution control revenue bonds
|
— | 2,340 | ||||||
Cost of removal, net of salvage
|
(5,314 | ) | (5,759 | ) | ||||
Change in construction payables
|
3,171 | (11,846 | ) | |||||
Payments pursuant to long-term service agreements
|
(2,198 | ) | (699 | ) | ||||
Other investing activities
|
68 | (190 | ) | |||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for investing activities
|
(98,512 | ) | (97,379 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Financing Activities:
|
||||||||
Decrease in notes payable, net
|
(6,620 | ) | (6,599 | ) | ||||
Proceeds —
|
||||||||
Common stock issued to parent
|
50,000 | 50,000 | ||||||
Capital contributions from parent company
|
809 | 1,128 | ||||||
Redemptions —
|
||||||||
Senior notes
|
(125 | ) | (85 | ) | ||||
Payment of preference stock dividends
|
(1,551 | ) | (1,551 | ) | ||||
Payment of common stock dividends
|
(27,500 | ) | (26,075 | ) | ||||
Other financing activities
|
110 | 605 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from financing activities
|
15,123 | 17,423 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Change in Cash and Cash Equivalents
|
3,768 | 20,612 | ||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Period
|
16,434 | 8,677 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Period
|
$ | 20,202 | $ | 29,289 | ||||
|
||||||||
Supplemental Cash Flow Information:
|
||||||||
Cash paid during the period for —
|
||||||||
Interest (net of $851 and $552 capitalized for 2011 and 2010, respectively)
|
$ | 8,284 | $ | 9,461 | ||||
Income taxes (net of refunds)
|
(29,557 | ) | (4,383 | ) | ||||
Noncash transactions — accrued property additions at end of period
|
17,882 | 32,308 |
69
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Assets | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Current Assets:
|
||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents
|
$ | 20,202 | $ | 16,434 | ||||
Receivables —
|
||||||||
Customer accounts receivable
|
58,954 | 74,377 | ||||||
Unbilled revenues
|
44,970 | 64,697 | ||||||
Under recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
22,077 | 19,690 | ||||||
Other accounts and notes receivable
|
10,253 | 9,867 | ||||||
Affiliated companies
|
4,923 | 7,859 | ||||||
Accumulated provision for uncollectible accounts
|
(1,518 | ) | (2,014 | ) | ||||
Fossil fuel stock, at average cost
|
182,096 | 167,155 | ||||||
Materials and supplies, at average cost
|
45,455 | 44,729 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, current
|
16,849 | 20,278 | ||||||
Prepaid expenses
|
25,937 | 58,412 | ||||||
Other current assets
|
3,259 | 3,585 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current assets
|
433,457 | 485,069 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Property, Plant, and Equipment:
|
||||||||
In service
|
3,738,908 | 3,634,255 | ||||||
Less accumulated provision for depreciation
|
1,087,442 | 1,069,006 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Plant in service, net of depreciation
|
2,651,466 | 2,565,249 | ||||||
Construction work in progress
|
200,079 | 209,808 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total property, plant, and equipment
|
2,851,545 | 2,775,057 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Other Property and Investments
|
16,284 | 16,352 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Charges and Other Assets:
|
||||||||
Deferred charges related to income taxes
|
49,920 | 46,357 | ||||||
Prepaid pension costs
|
7,998 | 7,291 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, deferred
|
237,448 | 219,877 | ||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
29,288 | 34,936 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred charges and other assets
|
324,654 | 308,461 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Assets
|
$ | 3,625,940 | $ | 3,584,939 | ||||
|
70
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Liabilities and Stockholder's Equity | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Current Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Securities due within one year
|
$ | 110,000 | $ | 110,000 | ||||
Notes payable
|
86,563 | 93,183 | ||||||
Accounts payable —
|
||||||||
Affiliated
|
39,567 | 46,342 | ||||||
Other
|
67,856 | 68,840 | ||||||
Customer deposits
|
35,914 | 35,600 | ||||||
Accrued taxes —
|
||||||||
Accrued income taxes
|
4,613 | 3,835 | ||||||
Other accrued taxes
|
11,754 | 7,944 | ||||||
Accrued interest
|
18,530 | 13,393 | ||||||
Accrued compensation
|
6,234 | 14,459 | ||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, current
|
22,860 | 27,060 | ||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
7,167 | 9,415 | ||||||
Other current liabilities
|
18,863 | 19,766 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current liabilities
|
429,921 | 449,837 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Long-term Debt
|
1,114,406 | 1,114,398 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Credits and Other Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accumulated deferred income taxes
|
396,377 | 382,876 | ||||||
Accumulated deferred investment tax credits
|
7,771 | 8,109 | ||||||
Employee benefit obligations
|
75,472 | 76,654 | ||||||
Other cost of removal obligations
|
205,373 | 204,408 | ||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, deferred
|
42,378 | 42,915 | ||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities
|
145,382 | 132,708 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred credits and other liabilities
|
872,753 | 847,670 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities
|
2,417,080 | 2,411,905 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Preference Stock
|
97,998 | 97,998 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Common Stockholder’s Equity:
|
||||||||
Common stock, without par value—
|
||||||||
Authorized - 20,000,000 shares
|
||||||||
Outstanding - March 31, 2011: 4,142,717 shares
|
||||||||
- December 31, 2010: 3,642,717 shares
|
353,060 | 303,060 | ||||||
Paid-in capital
|
539,867 | 538,375 | ||||||
Retained earnings
|
220,519 | 236,328 | ||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
|
(2,584 | ) | (2,727 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Total common stockholder’s equity
|
1,110,862 | 1,075,036 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity
|
$ | 3,625,940 | $ | 3,584,939 | ||||
|
71
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(13.6)
|
(53.8) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(29.9) | (9.8) | |
72
First Quarter | ||||||||
2011 | ||||||||
(in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Retail — prior year
|
$ | 304.7 | ||||||
Estimated change in —
|
||||||||
Rates and pricing
|
(2.0 | ) | (0.7 | ) | ||||
Sales growth (decline)
|
1.2 | 0.4 | ||||||
Weather
|
(9.5 | ) | (3.1 | ) | ||||
Fuel and other cost recovery.
|
(19.6 | ) | (6.4 | ) | ||||
Retail — current year
|
$ | 274.8 | (9.8 | )% | ||||
73
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$3.1
|
11.1 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(5.4) | (56.6) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||||||||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Fuel*
|
$ | (21.0 | ) | (13.7 | ) | |||
Purchased power — non-affiliates
|
(0.4 | ) | (5.8 | ) | ||||
Purchased power — affiliates
|
(3.8 | ) | (18.6 | ) | ||||
Total fuel and purchased power expenses
|
$ | (25.2 | ) | |||||
* | Fuel includes fuel purchased by Gulf Power for tolling agreements where power is generated by the provider and is included in purchased power when determining the average cost of purchased power. |
74
First Quarter | First Quarter | Percent | ||||||||||
Average Cost | 2011 | 2010 | Change | |||||||||
(cents per net KWH) | ||||||||||||
Fuel
|
4.69 | 5.11 | (8.22 | ) | ||||||||
Purchased power
|
5.37 | 5.56 | (3.42 | ) | ||||||||
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$10.1
|
14.3 | |
75
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$3.7 | 13.1 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$0.7 | 54.2 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$2.2 | 19.7 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(8.3) | (55.1) | |
76
77
78
79
80
81
First Quarter | ||||
2011 | ||||
Changes | ||||
Fair Value | ||||
(in millions) | ||||
Contracts outstanding at the beginning of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (11 | ) | |
Contracts realized or settled
|
2 | |||
Current period changes
(a)
|
1 | |||
Contracts outstanding at the end of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (8 | ) | |
(a) | Current period changes also include the changes in fair value of new contracts entered into during the period, if any. |
82
March 31, 2011 | ||||||||||||||||
Fair Value Measurements | ||||||||||||||||
Total | Maturity | |||||||||||||||
Fair Value | Year 1 | Years 2&3 | Years 4&5 | |||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Level 1
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||
Level 2
|
(8 | ) | (5 | ) | (3 | ) | — | |||||||||
Level 3
|
— | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
Fair value of contracts
outstanding at end
of period
|
$ | (8 | ) | $ | (5 | ) | $ | (3 | ) | $ | — | |||||
83
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Operating Revenues:
|
||||||||
Retail revenues
|
$ | 180,474 | $ | 186,587 | ||||
Wholesale revenues, non-affiliates
|
69,851 | 78,889 | ||||||
Wholesale revenues, affiliates
|
9,300 | 14,675 | ||||||
Other revenues
|
3,651 | 3,487 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating revenues
|
263,276 | 283,638 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Expenses:
|
||||||||
Fuel
|
121,054 | 130,797 | ||||||
Purchased power, non-affiliates
|
1,010 | 3,621 | ||||||
Purchased power, affiliates
|
8,350 | 14,721 | ||||||
Other operations and maintenance
|
70,367 | 67,338 | ||||||
Depreciation and amortization
|
19,863 | 18,675 | ||||||
Taxes other than income taxes
|
17,481 | 18,460 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating expenses
|
238,125 | 253,612 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Income
|
25,151 | 30,026 | ||||||
Other Income and (Expense):
|
||||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
3,131 | 18 | ||||||
Interest income
|
342 | 33 | ||||||
Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized
|
(6,013 | ) | (6,179 | ) | ||||
Other income (expense), net
|
(403 | ) | 1,531 | |||||
|
||||||||
Total other income and (expense)
|
(2,943 | ) | (4,597 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Earnings Before Income Taxes
|
22,208 | 25,429 | ||||||
Income taxes
|
7,158 | 9,743 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income
|
15,050 | 15,686 | ||||||
Dividends on Preferred Stock
|
433 | 433 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income After Dividends on Preferred Stock
|
$ | 14,617 | $ | 15,253 | ||||
|
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Net Income After Dividends on Preferred Stock
|
$ | 14,617 | $ | 15,253 | ||||
Other comprehensive income (loss):
|
||||||||
Qualifying hedges:
|
||||||||
Changes in fair value, net of tax of $(1) and
$12, respectively
|
(2 | ) | 20 | |||||
|
||||||||
Comprehensive Income
|
$ | 14,615 | $ | 15,273 | ||||
|
85
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Operating Activities:
|
||||||||
Net income
|
$ | 15,050 | $ | 15,686 | ||||
Adjustments to reconcile net income
to net cash provided from operating activities —
|
||||||||
Depreciation and amortization, total
|
21,442 | 20,118 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes
|
10,015 | (8,080 | ) | |||||
Investment tax credits received
|
9,750 | — | ||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction
|
(3,131 | ) | (18 | ) | ||||
Pension, postretirement, and other employee benefits
|
1,037 | 1,822 | ||||||
Stock based compensation expense
|
813 | 757 | ||||||
Tax benefit of stock options
|
73 | 24 | ||||||
Generation construction screening costs
|
— | (18,832 | ) | |||||
Other, net
|
(1,436 | ) | 1,138 | |||||
Changes in certain current assets and liabilities —
|
||||||||
-Receivables
|
11,592 | 7,715 | ||||||
-Fossil fuel stock
|
(538 | ) | 17,761 | |||||
-Materials and supplies
|
(317 | ) | (885 | ) | ||||
-Prepaid income taxes
|
15,976 | — | ||||||
-Other current assets
|
1,649 | (8,262 | ) | |||||
-Accounts payable
|
17,538 | 970 | ||||||
-Accrued taxes
|
(31,213 | ) | (12,109 | ) | ||||
-Accrued compensation
|
(9,556 | ) | (7,719 | ) | ||||
-Over recovered regulatory clause revenues
|
7,756 | 7,596 | ||||||
-Other current liabilities
|
(149 | ) | (708 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from operating activities
|
66,351 | 16,974 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Investing Activities:
|
||||||||
Property additions
|
(148,917 | ) | (19,054 | ) | ||||
Cost of removal, net of salvage
|
(2,830 | ) | (3,375 | ) | ||||
Construction payables
|
33,291 | 2,812 | ||||||
Capital grant proceeds
|
16,912 | — | ||||||
Distribution of restricted cash
|
50,000 | — | ||||||
Other investing activities
|
(834 | ) | (5,316 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for investing activities
|
(52,378 | ) | (24,933 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Financing Activities:
|
||||||||
Proceeds —
|
||||||||
Capital contributions from parent company
|
50,610 | 752 | ||||||
Gross excess tax benefit of stock options
|
106 | 75 | ||||||
Redemptions —
|
||||||||
Capital leases
|
(349 | ) | (323 | ) | ||||
Other long-term debt
|
(130,000 | ) | — | |||||
Payment of preferred stock dividends
|
(433 | ) | (433 | ) | ||||
Payment of common stock dividends
|
(18,875 | ) | (17,150 | ) | ||||
Other financing activities
|
(418 | ) | (1 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for financing activities
|
(99,359 | ) | (17,080 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net Change in Cash and Cash Equivalents
|
(85,386 | ) | (25,039 | ) | ||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Period
|
160,779 | 65,025 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Period
|
$ | 75,393 | $ | 39,986 | ||||
|
||||||||
Supplemental Cash Flow Information:
|
||||||||
Cash paid during the period for —
|
||||||||
Interest (net of $994 and $9 capitalized for 2011 and 2010, respectively)
|
$ | 6,135 | $ | 7,028 | ||||
Income taxes (net of refunds)
|
(32,294 | ) | (3,821 | ) | ||||
Noncash transactions – accrued property additions at end of period
|
72,114 | 6,501 |
86
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Assets | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Current Assets:
|
||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents
|
$ | 75,393 | $ | 160,779 | ||||
Restricted cash and cash equivalents
|
— | 50,000 | ||||||
Receivables —
|
||||||||
Customer accounts receivable
|
31,355 | 37,532 | ||||||
Unbilled revenues
|
25,992 | 31,010 | ||||||
Other accounts and notes receivable
|
9,345 | 11,220 | ||||||
Affiliated companies
|
30,905 | 17,837 | ||||||
Accumulated provision for uncollectible accounts
|
(467 | ) | (638 | ) | ||||
Fossil fuel stock, at average cost
|
112,777 | 112,240 | ||||||
Materials and supplies, at average cost
|
28,988 | 28,671 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, current
|
60,440 | 63,896 | ||||||
Prepaid income taxes
|
46,458 | 59,596 | ||||||
Other current assets
|
21,482 | 19,057 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current assets
|
442,668 | 591,200 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Property, Plant, and Equipment:
|
||||||||
In service
|
2,416,242 | 2,392,477 | ||||||
Less accumulated provision for depreciation
|
980,896 | 971,559 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Plant in service, net of depreciation
|
1,435,346 | 1,420,918 | ||||||
Construction work in progress
|
383,619 | 274,585 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total property, plant, and equipment
|
1,818,965 | 1,695,503 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Other Property and Investments
|
6,111 | 5,900 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Charges and Other Assets:
|
||||||||
Deferred charges related to income taxes
|
21,521 | 18,065 | ||||||
Other regulatory assets, deferred
|
128,379 | 132,420 | ||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
20,357 | 33,233 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred charges and other assets
|
170,257 | 183,718 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Assets
|
$ | 2,438,001 | $ | 2,476,321 | ||||
|
87
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Current Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Securities due within one year
|
$ | 126,465 | $ | 256,437 | ||||
Accounts payable —
|
||||||||
Affiliated
|
48,146 | 51,887 | ||||||
Other
|
116,911 | 59,295 | ||||||
Customer deposits
|
13,181 | 12,543 | ||||||
Accrued taxes —
|
||||||||
Accrued income taxes
|
8,753 | 4,356 | ||||||
Other accrued taxes
|
16,147 | 51,709 | ||||||
Accrued interest
|
5,132 | 5,933 | ||||||
Accrued compensation
|
6,521 | 16,076 | ||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, current
|
5,730 | 6,177 | ||||||
Over recovered regulatory clause liabilities
|
84,802 | 77,046 | ||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
24,825 | 27,525 | ||||||
Other current liabilities
|
20,454 | 20,115 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current liabilities
|
477,067 | 589,099 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Long-term Debt
|
461,696 | 462,032 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Credits and Other Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accumulated deferred income taxes
|
298,724 | 281,967 | ||||||
Deferred credits related to income taxes
|
12,096 | 11,792 | ||||||
Accumulated deferred investment tax credits
|
43,098 | 33,678 | ||||||
Employee benefit obligations
|
114,369 | 113,964 | ||||||
Other cost of removal obligations
|
115,192 | 111,614 | ||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, deferred
|
60,452 | 58,814 | ||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities
|
37,865 | 43,213 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred credits and other liabilities
|
681,796 | 655,042 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities
|
1,620,559 | 1,706,173 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Redeemable Preferred Stock
|
32,780 | 32,780 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Common Stockholder’s Equity:
|
||||||||
Common stock, without par value —
|
||||||||
Authorized - 1,130,000 shares
|
||||||||
Outstanding - 1,121,000 shares
|
37,691 | 37,691 | ||||||
Paid-in capital
|
444,344 | 392,790 | ||||||
Retained earnings
|
302,627 | 306,885 | ||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
|
— | 2 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total common stockholder’s equity
|
784,662 | 737,368 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity
|
$ | 2,438,001 | $ | 2,476,321 | ||||
|
88
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(0.7) | (4.2) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(6.1) | (3.3) | |
89
First Quarter | ||||||||
2011 | ||||||||
(in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Retail – prior year
|
$ | 186.6 | ||||||
Estimated change in —
|
||||||||
Rates and pricing
|
1.0 | 0.5 | ||||||
Sales growth (decline)
|
3.5 | 1.9 | ||||||
Weather
|
(4.0 | ) | (2.2 | ) | ||||
Fuel and other cost recovery
|
(6.6 | ) | (3.5 | ) | ||||
Retail – current year
|
$ | 180.5 | (3.3 | )% | ||||
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(9.0) | (11.5) | |
90
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(5.4) | (36.6) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||||||||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Fuel
|
$ | (9.7 | ) | (7.4 | ) | |||
Purchased power – non-affiliates
|
(2.6 | ) | (72.1 | ) | ||||
Purchased power – affiliates
|
(6.4 | ) | (43.3 | ) | ||||
Total fuel and purchased power expenses
|
$ | (18.7 | ) | |||||
First Quarter | First Quarter | Percent | ||||||||||
Average Cost | 2011 | 2010 | Change | |||||||||
(cents per net KWH) | ||||||||||||
Fuel
|
3.92 | 4.23 | (7.3 | ) | ||||||||
Purchased power
|
3.08 | 3.76 | (18.1 | ) | ||||||||
91
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$3.1 | 4.5 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$1.2 | 6.4 | |
92
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(1.0) | (5.3) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$3.1 | N/M | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(0.2) | (2.7) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
($1.9) | N/M | |
93
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010
|
||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(2.5) | (26.5) | |
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
First Quarter | ||||
2011 | ||||
Changes | ||||
Fair Value | ||||
(in millions) | ||||
Contracts outstanding at the beginning of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (44 | ) | |
Contracts realized or settled
|
7 | |||
Current period changes
(a)
|
— | |||
Contracts outstanding at the end of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (37 | ) | |
(a) | Current period changes also include the changes in fair value of new contracts entered into during the period, if any. |
March 31, 2011 | ||||||||||||||||
Fair Value Measurements | ||||||||||||||||
Total | Maturity | |||||||||||||||
Fair Value | Year 1 | Years 2&3 | Years 4&5 | |||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Level 1
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||
Level 2
|
(37 | ) | (24 | ) | (13 | ) | — | |||||||||
Level 3
|
— | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
Fair value of
contracts
outstanding at end
of period
|
$ | (37 | ) | $ | (24 | ) | $ | (13 | ) | $ | — | |||||
103
104
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Operating Revenues:
|
||||||||
Wholesale revenues, non-affiliates
|
$ | 197,166 | $ | 153,337 | ||||
Wholesale revenues, affiliates
|
83,274 | 101,757 | ||||||
Other revenues
|
1,347 | 1,394 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating revenues
|
281,787 | 256,488 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Expenses:
|
||||||||
Fuel
|
102,715 | 97,514 | ||||||
Purchased power, non-affiliates
|
8,942 | 18,542 | ||||||
Purchased power, affiliates
|
15,099 | 23,411 | ||||||
Other operations and maintenance
|
42,754 | 39,010 | ||||||
Depreciation and amortization
|
30,167 | 29,109 | ||||||
Taxes other than income taxes
|
4,763 | 5,106 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total operating expenses
|
204,440 | 212,692 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Operating Income
|
77,347 | 43,796 | ||||||
Other Income and (Expense):
|
||||||||
Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized
|
(18,829 | ) | (20,054 | ) | ||||
Other income (expense), net
|
59 | 418 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total other income and (expense)
|
(18,770 | ) | (19,636 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Earnings Before Income Taxes
|
58,577 | 24,160 | ||||||
Income taxes
|
20,834 | 9,436 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net Income
|
$ | 37,743 | $ | 14,724 | ||||
|
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Net Income
|
$ | 37,743 | $ | 14,724 | ||||
Other comprehensive income (loss):
|
||||||||
Qualifying hedges:
|
||||||||
Changes in fair value, net of tax of $423 and
$1,714, respectively
|
643 | 2,677 | ||||||
Reclassification adjustment for amounts included in
net
income, net of tax of $1,071 and $1,003,
respectively
|
1,630 | 1,567 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total other comprehensive income (loss)
|
2,273 | 4,244 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Comprehensive Income
|
$ | 40,016 | $ | 18,968 | ||||
|
106
For the Three Months | ||||||||
Ended March 31, | ||||||||
2011 | 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Operating Activities:
|
||||||||
Net income
|
$ | 37,743 | $ | 14,724 | ||||
Adjustments to reconcile net income
to net cash provided from operating activities —
|
||||||||
Depreciation and amortization, total
|
33,580 | 32,355 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes
|
8,601 | 13,388 | ||||||
Convertible investment tax credits received
|
38,068 | — | ||||||
Deferred revenues
|
(21,476 | ) | (20,993 | ) | ||||
Mark-to-market adjustments
|
(63 | ) | 762 | |||||
Other, net
|
1,752 | 930 | ||||||
Changes in certain current assets and liabilities —
|
||||||||
-Receivables
|
20,759 | 16,566 | ||||||
-Fossil fuel stock
|
625 | 3,815 | ||||||
-Materials and supplies
|
253 | 4,721 | ||||||
-Prepaid income taxes
|
15,744 | (9,248 | ) | |||||
-Other current assets
|
(137 | ) | 1,020 | |||||
-Accounts payable
|
(21,645 | ) | (15,111 | ) | ||||
-Accrued taxes
|
4,888 | 3,433 | ||||||
-Accrued interest
|
(12,281 | ) | (12,028 | ) | ||||
-Other current liabilities
|
(519 | ) | 297 | |||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from operating activities
|
105,892 | 34,631 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Investing Activities:
|
||||||||
Property additions
|
(113,518 | ) | (68,179 | ) | ||||
Change in construction payables
|
43,259 | 15,489 | ||||||
Payments pursuant to long-term service agreements
|
(11,320 | ) | (8,145 | ) | ||||
Other investing activities
|
(3,165 | ) | (245 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Net cash used for investing activities
|
(84,744 | ) | (61,080 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Financing Activities:
|
||||||||
Increase (decrease) in notes payable, net
|
(20,360 | ) | 48,006 | |||||
Proceeds — Capital contributions
|
17,179 | 1,632 | ||||||
Repayments — Other long-term debt
|
(3,066 | ) | — | |||||
Payment of common stock dividends
|
(22,800 | ) | (26,775 | ) | ||||
Other financing activities
|
38 | 95 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Net cash provided from (used for) financing activities
|
(29,009 | ) | 22,958 | |||||
|
||||||||
Net Change in Cash and Cash Equivalents
|
(7,861 | ) | (3,491 | ) | ||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Period
|
14,204 | 7,152 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Period
|
$ | 6,343 | $ | 3,661 | ||||
|
||||||||
Supplemental Cash Flow Information:
|
||||||||
Cash paid during the period for —
|
||||||||
Interest (net of $4,240 and $1,926 capitalized for 2011
and 2010, respectively)
|
$ | 26,993 | $ | 28,900 | ||||
Income taxes (net of refunds)
|
(44,721 | ) | 1,532 | |||||
Noncash transactions — accrued property additions at end of period
|
78,567 | 30,963 |
107
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Assets | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Current Assets:
|
||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents
|
$ | 6,343 | $ | 14,204 | ||||
Receivables —
|
||||||||
Customer accounts receivable
|
65,359 | 77,033 | ||||||
Other accounts receivable
|
2,388 | 1,979 | ||||||
Affiliated companies
|
10,473 | 19,673 | ||||||
Fossil fuel stock, at average cost
|
13,209 | 13,663 | ||||||
Materials and supplies, at average cost
|
34,356 | 33,934 | ||||||
Prepaid service agreements — current
|
33,272 | 41,627 | ||||||
Prepaid income taxes
|
10,343 | 53,860 | ||||||
Other prepaid expenses
|
4,297 | 4,161 | ||||||
Assets from risk management activities
|
2,811 | 2,160 | ||||||
Other current assets
|
— | 19 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current assets
|
182,851 | 262,313 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Property, Plant, and Equipment:
|
||||||||
In service
|
3,149,499 | 3,143,919 | ||||||
Less accumulated provision for depreciation
|
562,973 | 536,107 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Plant in service, net of depreciation
|
2,586,526 | 2,607,812 | ||||||
Construction work in progress
|
538,067 | 427,788 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total property, plant, and equipment
|
3,124,593 | 3,035,600 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Other Property and Investments:
|
||||||||
Goodwill
|
1,839 | 1,839 | ||||||
Other intangible assets, net of amortization of
$889 and $693
at March 31, 2011 and December 31, 2010,
respectively
|
48,231 | 48,426 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total other property and investments
|
50,070 | 50,265 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Charges and Other Assets:
|
||||||||
Prepaid long-term service agreements
|
80,134 | 69,740 | ||||||
Other deferred charges and assets — affiliated
|
3,213 | 3,275 | ||||||
Other deferred charges and assets — non-affiliated
|
20,214 | 16,541 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred charges and other assets
|
103,561 | 89,556 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Assets
|
$ | 3,461,075 | $ | 3,437,734 | ||||
|
108
At March 31, | At December 31, | |||||||
Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Current Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Securities due within one year
|
$ | 253 | $ | — | ||||
Notes payable — affiliated
|
— | 65,883 | ||||||
Notes payable — non-affiliated
|
249,427 | 203,904 | ||||||
Accounts payable —
|
||||||||
Affiliated
|
46,536 | 69,783 | ||||||
Other
|
89,075 | 45,985 | ||||||
Accrued taxes —
|
||||||||
Accrued income taxes
|
2,390 | 812 | ||||||
Other accrued taxes
|
6,005 | 2,775 | ||||||
Accrued interest
|
17,696 | 29,977 | ||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
5,553 | 5,773 | ||||||
Other current liabilities
|
3,512 | 3,923 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total current liabilities
|
420,447 | 428,815 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Long-term Debt
|
1,299,364 | 1,302,619 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Deferred Credits and Other Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accumulated deferred income taxes
|
317,738 | 307,989 | ||||||
Deferred convertible investment tax credits
|
90,965 | 80,401 | ||||||
Deferred capacity revenues — affiliated
|
9,763 | 30,533 | ||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities — affiliated
|
4,376 | 4,635 | ||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities — non-affiliated
|
17,450 | 16,203 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total deferred credits and other liabilities
|
440,292 | 439,761 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities
|
2,160,103 | 2,171,195 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Redeemable Noncontrolling Interest
|
3,357 | 3,319 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Common Stockholder’s Equity:
|
||||||||
Common stock, par value $.01 per share —
|
||||||||
Authorized - 1,000,000 shares
|
||||||||
Outstanding - 1,000 shares
|
— | — | ||||||
Paid-in capital
|
918,148 | 900,969 | ||||||
Retained earnings
|
391,213 | 376,270 | ||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
|
(11,746 | ) | (14,019 | ) | ||||
|
||||||||
Total common stockholder’s equity
|
1,297,615 | 1,263,220 | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total Liabilities and Stockholder’s Equity
|
$ | 3,461,075 | $ | 3,437,734 | ||||
|
109
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$23.0
|
156.3 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$43.9 | 28.6 | |
110
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(18.5) | (18.2) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||||||||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |||||||
Fuel
|
$ | 5.2 | 5.3 | |||||
Purchased power – non-affiliates
|
(9.6 | ) | (51.8 | ) | ||||
Purchased power – affiliates
|
(8.3 | ) | (35.5 | ) | ||||
Total fuel and purchased power expenses
|
$ | (12.7 | ) | |||||
111
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$3.7
|
9.6 | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$(1.2) | (6.1) | |
First Quarter 2011 vs. First Quarter 2010 | ||
(change in millions) | (% change) | |
$11.4 | 120.8 | |
112
113
114
115
116
First Quarter | ||||
2011 | ||||
Changes | ||||
Fair Value | ||||
(in millions) | ||||
Contracts outstanding at the beginning of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (3.5 | ) | |
Contracts realized or settled
|
0.7 | |||
Current period changes
(a)
|
0.5 | |||
Contracts outstanding at the end of the period, assets (liabilities), net
|
$ | (2.3 | ) | |
(a) | Current period changes also include the changes in fair value of new contracts entered into during the period, if any. |
March 31, 2011 | December 31, 2010 | |||||||
Power (net sold)
|
||||||||
MWHs
(in millions)
|
0.8 | 0.9 | ||||||
Weighted average contract cost per MWH above
(below) market prices
(in dollars)
|
$ | (3.20 | ) | $ | (2.33 | ) | ||
Natural gas (net purchase)
|
||||||||
Commodity — million mmBtu
|
13.5 | 13.0 | ||||||
Commodity — Weighted average contract cost
per mmBtu above (below) market prices
(in dollars)
|
$ | 0.01 | $ | 0.11 | ||||
117
Asset (Liability) Derivatives | March 31, 2011 | December 31, 2010 | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Cash flow hedges
|
$ | 0.1 | $ | (1.0 | ) | |||
Not designated
|
(2.4 | ) | (2.5 | ) | ||||
Total fair value
|
$ | (2.3 | ) | $ | (3.5 | ) | ||
March 31, 2011 | ||||||||||||||||
Fair Value Measurements | ||||||||||||||||
Total | Maturity | |||||||||||||||
Fair Value | Year 1 | Years 2&3 | Years 4&5 | |||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Level 1
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||
Level 2
|
(2.3 | ) | (2.7 | ) | — | 0.4 | ||||||||||
Level 3
|
— | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
Fair value of contracts outstanding at end of period
|
$ | (2.3 | ) | $ | (2.7 | ) | $ | — | $ | 0.4 | ||||||
118
Registrant | Applicable Notes | |
|
||
Southern Company
|
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I | |
|
||
Alabama Power
|
A, B, C, E, F, G, H | |
|
||
Georgia Power
|
A, B, C, E, F, G, H | |
|
||
Gulf Power
|
A, B, C, E, F, G, H | |
|
||
Mississippi Power
|
A, B, C, E, F, G, H | |
|
||
Southern Power
|
A, B, C, E, G, H |
119
(A) | INTRODUCTION |
The condensed quarterly financial statements of each registrant included herein have been prepared by such registrant, without audit, pursuant to the rules and regulations of the SEC. The Condensed Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2010 have been derived from the audited financial statements of each registrant. In the opinion of each registrant’s management, the information regarding such registrant furnished herein reflects all adjustments, which, except as otherwise disclosed, are of a normal recurring nature, necessary to present fairly the results of operations for the periods ended March 31, 2011 and 2010. Certain information and footnote disclosures normally included in annual financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP have been condensed or omitted pursuant to such rules and regulations, although each registrant believes that the disclosures regarding such registrant are adequate to make the information presented not misleading. Disclosures which would substantially duplicate the disclosures in the Form 10-K and details which have not changed significantly in amount or composition since the filing of the Form 10-K are generally omitted from this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q. Therefore, these Condensed Financial Statements should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and the notes thereto included in the Form 10-K. Due to the seasonal variations in the demand for energy, operating results for the periods presented are not necessarily indicative of the operating results to be expected for the full year. | |||
Effective March 15, 2011, Southern Company transferred its ownership in its wholly-owned subsidiary, Southern Renewable Energy, Inc. (SRE), to Southern Power. SRE was formed to construct, acquire, own, and manage renewable generation assets and sell electricity at market-based prices in the wholesale market. As a transfer of net assets among entities under common control, the assets and liabilities of SRE were transferred at historical cost. The consolidated financial statements of Southern Power have been revised to include the financial condition and the results of operations of SRE since its inception in January 2010. | |||
Southern Company has made separate guarantees to two counterparties regarding performance of contractual commitments by SRE. The total original notional amount of the guarantees was $120 million, approximately $12 million of which was outstanding at March 31, 2011. Of this amount, approximately $3 million is expected to expire in August 2011, and approximately $9 million is expected to expire in 2037. | |||
Certain prior years’ data presented in the financial statements have been reclassified to conform to the current year presentation. |
(B) | CONTINGENCIES AND REGULATORY MATTERS |
See Note 3 to the financial statements of the registrants in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for information relating to various lawsuits, other contingencies, and regulatory matters. | |||
General Litigation Matters | |||
Each registrant is subject to certain claims and legal actions arising in the ordinary course of business. In addition, each registrant’s business activities are subject to extensive governmental regulation related to public health and the environment, such as regulation of air emissions and water discharges. Litigation over environmental issues and claims of various types, including property damage, personal injury, common law nuisance, and citizen enforcement of environmental requirements such as opacity and air and water quality standards, has increased generally throughout the U.S. In particular, personal injury and other claims for damages caused by alleged exposure to hazardous materials, and common law nuisance claims for injunctive relief and property damage allegedly caused by greenhouse gas and other emissions, have become more frequent. The ultimate outcome of such pending or potential litigation against each registrant and any of its subsidiaries cannot be predicted at this time; however, for current proceedings not specifically |
120
reported herein or in Note 3 to the financial statements of each registrant in Item 8 of the Form 10-K, management does not anticipate that the liabilities, if any, arising from such current proceedings would have a material adverse effect on such registrant’s financial statements. |
Environmental Matters | |||
New Source Review Actions | |||
In November 1999, the EPA brought a civil action in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia against certain Southern Company subsidiaries, including Alabama Power and Georgia Power, alleging that these subsidiaries had violated NSR provisions of the Clean Air Act and related state laws at certain coal-fired generating facilities. After Alabama Power was dismissed from the original action, the EPA filed a separate action in January 2001 against Alabama Power in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. In these lawsuits, the EPA alleges that NSR violations occurred at eight coal-fired generating facilities operated by Alabama Power and Georgia Power, including facilities co-owned by Mississippi Power and Gulf Power. The civil actions request penalties and injunctive relief, including an order requiring installation of the best available control technology at the affected units. The EPA concurrently issued notices of violation to Gulf Power and Mississippi Power relating to Gulf Power’s Plant Crist and Mississippi Power’s Plant Watson. In early 2000, the EPA filed a motion to amend its complaint to add Gulf Power and Mississippi Power as defendants based on the allegations in the notices of violation. However, in March 2001, the court denied the motion based on lack of jurisdiction, and the EPA has not re-filed. The action against Georgia Power has been administratively closed since the spring of 2001, and the case has not been reopened. The separate action against Alabama Power is ongoing. | |||
In June 2006, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama entered a consent decree between Alabama Power and the EPA, resolving a portion of the Alabama Power lawsuit relating to the alleged NSR violations at Plant Miller. In July 2008, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama granted partial summary judgment in favor of Alabama Power with respect to its other affected units regarding the proper legal test for determining whether projects are routine maintenance, repair, and replacement and therefore are excluded from NSR permitting. | |||
In September 2010, the EPA dismissed five of its eight remaining claims against Alabama Power, leaving only three claims for summary disposition or trial, including the claim relating to a facility co-owned by Mississippi Power. The parties each filed motions for summary judgment in September 2010. | |||
On March 14, 2011, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama granted Alabama Power’s motion for summary judgment on all remaining claims and dismissed the case with prejudice. The EPA has the right to appeal within 60 days of the order. | |||
Southern Company believes that the traditional operating companies complied with applicable laws and the EPA regulations and interpretations in effect at the time the work in question took place. The Clean Air Act authorizes maximum civil penalties of $25,000 to $37,500 per day, per violation at each generating unit, depending on the date of the alleged violation. An adverse outcome could require substantial capital expenditures or affect the timing of currently budgeted capital expenditures that cannot be determined at this time and could possibly require payment of substantial penalties. Such expenditures could affect future results of operations, cash flows, and financial condition if such costs are not recovered through regulated rates. The ultimate outcome of these matters cannot be determined at this time. | |||
Carbon Dioxide Litigation | |||
New York Case | |||
In July 2004, three environmental groups and attorneys general from several states, each outside of Southern Company’s service territory, and the corporation counsel for New York City filed complaints in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York against Southern Company and four other electric power companies. The complaints allege that the companies’ emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, contribute to global warming, which the plaintiffs assert is a public nuisance. Under common law public and private nuisance theories, the plaintiffs seek a |
121
judicial order (1) holding each defendant jointly and severally liable for creating, contributing to, and/or maintaining global warming and (2) requiring each of the defendants to cap its emissions of carbon dioxide and then reduce those emissions by a specified percentage each year for at least a decade. The plaintiffs have not, however, requested that damages be awarded in connection with their claims. Southern Company believes these claims are without merit and notes that the complaint cites no statutory or regulatory basis for the claims. In September 2005, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York granted Southern Company’s and the other defendants’ motions to dismiss these cases. The plaintiffs filed an appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in October 2005 and, in September 2009, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed the district court’s ruling, vacating the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ claim, and remanding the case to the district court. In December 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court granted the defendants’ petition for writ of certiorari. On April 19, 2011, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argument in this case, and a decision is expected before year-end. The ultimate outcome of these matters cannot be determined at this time. | |||
Kivalina Case | |||
In February 2008, the Native Village of Kivalina and the City of Kivalina filed a suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against several electric utilities (including Southern Company), several oil companies, and a coal company. The plaintiffs are the governing bodies of an Inupiat village in Alaska. The plaintiffs contend that the village is being destroyed by erosion allegedly caused by global warming that the plaintiffs attribute to emissions of greenhouse gases by the defendants. The plaintiffs assert claims for public and private nuisance and contend that some of the defendants have acted in concert and are therefore jointly and severally liable for the plaintiffs’ damages. The suit seeks damages for lost property values and for the cost of relocating the village, which is alleged to be $95 million to $400 million. Southern Company believes that these claims are without merit and notes that the complaint cites no statutory or regulatory basis for the claims. In September 2009, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss the case based on lack of jurisdiction and ruled the claims were barred by the political question doctrine and by the plaintiffs’ failure to establish the standard for determining that the defendants’ conduct caused the injury alleged. In November 2009, the plaintiffs filed an appeal with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit challenging the district court’s order dismissing the case. On January 24, 2011, the defendants filed a motion with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to defer scheduling the case pending the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in the New York case discussed above. On February 23, 2011, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit issued an order staying the case until June 15, 2011. The ultimate outcome of this matter cannot be determined at this time. | |||
Environmental Remediation | |||
The registrants must comply with environmental laws and regulations that cover the handling and disposal of waste and releases of hazardous substances. Under these various laws and regulations, the subsidiaries may also incur substantial costs to clean up properties. The traditional operating companies have each received authority from their respective state PSCs to recover approved environmental compliance costs through regulatory mechanisms. Within limits approved by the state PSCs, these rates are adjusted annually or as necessary. | |||
Georgia Power’s environmental remediation liability as of March 31, 2011 was $13.2 million. Georgia Power has been designated or identified as a potentially responsible party (PRP) at sites governed by the Georgia Hazardous Site Response Act and/or by the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), including a large site in Brunswick, Georgia on the CERCLA National Priorities List (NPL). The parties have completed the removal of wastes from the Brunswick site as ordered by the EPA. Additional claims for recovery of natural resource damages at this site or for the assessment and potential cleanup of other sites on the Georgia Hazardous Sites Inventory and CERCLA NPL are anticipated; however, they are not expected to have a material impact on Georgia Power’s or Southern Company’s financial statements. | |||
In September 2008, the EPA advised Georgia Power that it has been designated as a PRP at the Ward Transformer Superfund site located in Raleigh, North Carolina. Numerous other entities have also received notices regarding this site from the EPA. Georgia Power, along with other named PRPs, is negotiating with the EPA to address cleanup of the site and reimbursement for past expenditures related to work performed at the site. In addition, in April 2009, two PRPs filed |
122
separate actions in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina against numerous other PRPs, including Georgia Power, seeking contribution from the defendants for expenses incurred by the plaintiffs related to work performed at a portion of the site. The ultimate outcome of these matters will depend upon further environmental assessment and the ultimate number of PRPs and cannot be determined at this time; however, it is not expected to have a material impact on Southern Company’s and Georgia Power’s financial statements. | |||
Gulf Power’s environmental remediation liability includes estimated costs of environmental remediation projects of approximately $63.5 million as of March 31, 2011. These estimated costs relate to site closure criteria by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) for potential impacts to soil and groundwater from herbicide applications at Gulf Power substations. The schedule for completion of the remediation projects will be subject to FDEP approval. The projects have been approved by the Florida PSC for recovery through Gulf Power’s environmental cost recovery clause; therefore, there was no impact on net income as a result of these estimates. | |||
In 2003, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) designated Mississippi Power as a PRP at a site in Texas. The site was owned by an electric transformer company that handled Mississippi Power’s transformers as well as those of many other entities. The site owner is bankrupt and the State of Texas has entered into an agreement with Mississippi Power and several other utilities to investigate and remediate the site. Amounts expensed during the first quarters of 2010 and 2011 related to this work were not material. Hundreds of entities have received notices from the TCEQ requesting their participation in the anticipated site remediation. The final impact of this matter will depend upon further environmental assessment and the ultimate number of PRPs. The remediation expenses incurred by Mississippi Power are expected to be recovered through the ECO Plan. | |||
The final outcome of these matters cannot now be determined. However, based on the currently known conditions at these sites and the nature and extent of activities relating to these sites, Southern Company, Georgia Power, Gulf Power, and Mississippi Power do not believe that additional liabilities, if any, at these sites would be material to their respective financial statements. | |||
Right of Way Litigation | |||
Southern Company and certain of its subsidiaries, including Mississippi Power, have been named as defendants in numerous lawsuits brought by landowners since 2001. The plaintiffs’ lawsuits claim that defendants may not use, or sublease to third parties, some or all of the fiber optic communications lines on the rights of way that cross the plaintiffs’ properties and that such actions exceed the easements or other property rights held by defendants. The plaintiffs assert claims for, among other things, trespass and unjust enrichment and seek compensatory and punitive damages and injunctive relief. Management of Southern Company and Mississippi Power believe they have complied with applicable laws and that the plaintiffs’ claims are without merit. | |||
Mississippi Power has entered into agreements with plaintiffs in approximately 95% of the actions pending against Mississippi Power to clarify its easement rights in the State of Mississippi. These agreements have been approved by the Circuit Courts of Harrison County and Jasper County, Mississippi (First Judicial Circuit), and the related cases have been dismissed. These agreements have not resulted in any material effects on Southern Company’s or Mississippi Power’s financial statements. | |||
In addition, in late 2001, certain subsidiaries of Southern Company, including Mississippi Power, were named as defendants in a lawsuit brought in Troup County, Georgia, Superior Court by Interstate Fiber Network Inc. a subsidiary of telecommunications company ITC DeltaCom, Inc. that uses certain of the defendants’ rights of way. This lawsuit alleges, among other things, that the defendants are contractually obligated to indemnify, defend, and hold harmless the telecommunications company from any liability that may be assessed against it in pending and future right of way litigation. Southern Company and Mississippi Power believe that the plaintiff’s claims are without merit. In the fall of 2004, the trial court stayed the case until resolution of the underlying landowner litigation discussed above. In January 2005, the Georgia Court of Appeals dismissed the telecommunications company’s appeal of the trial court’s order for lack of jurisdiction. In August 2010, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss the suit for lack of prosecution. The court denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss the claim. On March 25, 2011, the plaintiffs filed an amended complaint asserting claims for breach of contract for failing to make the defendants’ facilities fully available to the plaintiffs and for failing to |
123
indemnify the plaintiffs in defending the underlying landowner litigation. An adverse outcome in this matter, combined with an adverse outcome against the telecommunications company in one or more of the right of way lawsuits, could result in substantial judgments; however, the final outcome of these matters cannot now be determined. | |||
Nuclear Fuel Disposal Cost Litigation | |||
See Note 3 to the financial statements of Southern Company, Alabama Power, and Georgia Power under “Nuclear Fuel Disposal Costs” in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for information regarding the litigation brought by Alabama Power and Georgia Power against the government for breach of contracts related to the disposal of spent nuclear fuel. | |||
In July 2007, the U.S. Court of Federal Claims awarded Georgia Power approximately $30 million, based on its ownership interests, and awarded Alabama Power approximately $17 million, representing substantially all of the direct costs of the expansion of spent nuclear fuel storage facilities at Plants Farley, Hatch, and Vogtle from 1998 through 2004. In November 2007, the government’s motion for reconsideration was denied. In January 2008, the government filed an appeal and, in February 2008, filed a motion to stay the appeal, which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit granted in April 2008. In May 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit lifted the stay. | |||
On March 11, 2011, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit issued an order in which it affirmed the damage award to Alabama Power, but remanded the Georgia Power portion of the proceeding back to the U.S. Court of Federal Claims for reconsideration of the damages amount in light of the spent nuclear fuel acceptance rates adopted in a separate proceeding by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. | |||
In April 2008, a second claim against the government was filed for damages incurred after December 31, 2004 (the court-mandated cut-off in the original claim), due to the government’s alleged continuing breach of contract. The complaint does not contain any specific dollar amount for recovery of damages. Damages will continue to accumulate until the issue is resolved or the storage is provided. No amounts have been recognized in the financial statements as of March 31, 2011 for either claim. The final outcome of these matters cannot be determined at this time, but no material impact on net income is expected as any damage amounts collected from the government are expected to be returned to customers. | |||
Sufficient pool storage capacity for spent fuel is available at Plant Vogtle to maintain full-core discharge capability for both units into 2014. Construction of an on-site dry storage facility at Plant Vogtle is expected to begin in sufficient time to maintain pool full-core discharge capability. At Plants Hatch and Farley, on-site dry spent fuel storage facilities are operational and can be expanded to accommodate spent fuel through the expected life of each plant. | |||
Income Tax Matters | |||
Georgia State Income Tax Credits | |||
Georgia Power’s 2005 through 2009 income tax filings for the State of Georgia include state income tax credits for increased activity through Georgia ports. Georgia Power also filed similar claims for the years 2002 through 2004. The Georgia Department of Revenue (DOR) has not responded to these claims. In July 2007, Georgia Power filed a complaint in the Superior Court of Fulton County to recover the credits claimed for the years 2002 through 2004. In March 2010, the Superior Court of Fulton County ruled in favor of Georgia Power’s motion for summary judgment. The Georgia DOR has appealed to the Georgia Court of Appeals and a decision is expected later this year. Any decision may be subject to further appeal to the Georgia Supreme Court. An unrecognized tax benefit has been recorded related to these credits. If Georgia Power prevails, no material impact on Southern Company’s or Georgia Power’s net income is expected as a significant portion of any tax benefit is expected to be returned to retail customers in accordance with the 2010 ARP. If Georgia Power is not successful, payment of the related state tax for previously utilized credits would have a negative effect on Southern Company’s and Georgia Power’s cash flow. See Note 5 to the financial statements of Southern Company and Georgia Power in Item 8 of the Form 10-K under “Unrecognized Tax Benefits” and Note (G) herein for additional information. The ultimate outcome of this matter cannot now be determined. |
124
State PSC Matters | |||
Alabama Power | |||
Natural Disaster Reserve | |||
See Note 3 to the financial statements of Southern Company under “PSC Matters – Alabama Power – Natural Disaster Reserve” and Note 3 to the financial statements of Alabama Power under “Retail Regulatory Matters – Natural Disaster Reserve” in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for additional information. At March 31, 2011, the NDR had an accumulated balance of $127 million, which is included in the Condensed Balance Sheets herein under other regulatory liabilities, deferred. The accruals are reflected as operations and maintenance expenses in the Condensed Statements of Income herein. | |||
On April 27, 2011, devastating storms swept through the central part of Alabama causing significant damage in parts of Alabama Power’s service territory. Over 400,000 of Alabama Power’s 1.4 million customers were without electrical service immediately after the storms, resulting from significant damage to Alabama Power’s transmission and distribution facilities. The preliminary estimated cost associated with repairing the damage to facilities and restoring electrical service to customers is between $40 million and $55 million for operations and maintenance expenses and between $180 million and $225 million for capital expenditures. Alabama Power maintains a reserve for operations and maintenance expenses to cover the cost of damages from major storms to Alabama Power’s transmission and distribution facilities. | |||
Georgia Power | |||
Fuel Cost Recovery | |||
See Note 3 to the financial statements of Southern Company and Georgia Power under “Retail Regulatory Matters – Georgia Power – Fuel Cost Recovery” and “Retail Regulatory Matters – Fuel Cost Recovery,” respectively, in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for additional information. On March 1, 2011, Georgia Power filed a request with the Georgia PSC to decrease fuel rates by 0.61%. The decrease would reduce Georgia Power’s annual billings by approximately $43 million. The decrease in fuel costs is driven primarily by lower natural gas prices than those included in current rates as a result of increases in natural gas supplies from the production of shale gas and lower industrial demand. If approved, the new rates will go into effect June 1, 2011. The ultimate outcome of this matter cannot be determined at this time. | |||
Nuclear Construction | |||
See Note 3 to the financial statements of Southern Company and Georgia Power under “Retail Regulatory Matters – Georgia Power – Nuclear Construction” and “Construction – Nuclear,” respectively, in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for additional information regarding Georgia Power’s construction of Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4. | |||
In December 2010, Westinghouse submitted an AP1000 Design Certification Amendment (DCA) to the NRC. On February 10, 2011, the NRC announced that it was seeking public comment on a proposed rule to approve the DCA and amend the certified AP1000 reactor design for use in the U.S. The Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards also issued a letter on January 24, 2011 endorsing the issuance of the Construction and Operating License (COL) for Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4. In addition, on March 25, 2011, the NRC submitted to the EPA the final environmental impact statement for Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4. Georgia Power currently expects to receive the COL for Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4 from the NRC in late 2011 based on the NRC’s February 16, 2011 release of its COL schedule framework. | |||
On February 21, 2011, the Georgia PSC voted to approve Georgia Power’s third semi-annual construction monitoring report including total costs of $1.048 billion for Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4 incurred through June 30, 2010. In connection with its certification of Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4, the Georgia PSC ordered Georgia Power and the PSC Staff to work together to develop a risk sharing or incentive mechanism that would provide some level of protection to ratepayers in the event of significant cost overruns, but also not penalize Georgia Power’s earnings if and when overruns are due to mandates from governing agencies. Such discussions have continued through the third semi-annual construction monitoring proceedings; however, the Georgia PSC has deferred a decision with respect to any related risk-sharing or incentive mechanism. A Georgia PSC hearing on this matter is scheduled on July 6, 2011 and a decision is expected on August 2, 2011. Georgia Power will continue to file construction monitoring reports by February 28 and August 31 of each year during the construction period. | |||
In December 2010, the Georgia PSC approved Georgia Power’s NCCR tariff, which became effective January 1, 2011. The NCCR tariff was established to recover financing costs for nuclear construction projects by including the related construction work in progress accounts in rate base during the construction period in accordance with the Georgia Nuclear Energy Financing Act. With respect to Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4, this legislation allows Georgia Power to recover |
125
projected financing costs of approximately $1.7 billion during the construction period beginning in 2011, which reduces the projected in-service cost to approximately $4.4 billion. Georgia Power is collecting and amortizing to earnings approximately $91 million of financing costs capitalized in 2009 and 2010 over the five-year period ending December 31, 2015, in addition to the ongoing financing costs. At March 31, 2011, approximately $87 million of these 2009 and 2010 costs are included in construction work in progress. | |||
Georgia Power, Oglethorpe Power Corporation, the Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia, and the City of Dalton, Georgia, an incorporated municipality in the State of Georgia acting by and through its Board of Water, Light, and Sinking Fund Commissioners (collectively, Owners), and a consortium consisting of Westinghouse and Stone & Webster, Inc. have established both informal and formal dispute resolution procedures in order to resolve issues that commonly arise during the course of constructing a project of this magnitude. Southern Nuclear, on behalf of the Owners, has initiated both formal and informal claims through these procedures, including ongoing claims, and anticipates that further issues are likely to arise in the future. The Owners have successfully used both the informal and formal procedures to resolve disputes and expect to resolve any existing and future disputes through these procedures as well. | |||
There are other pending technical and procedural challenges to the construction and licensing of Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4, including petitions filed at the NRC in response to the events in Japan. Similar additional challenges at the state and federal level are expected as construction proceeds. | |||
The ultimate outcome of these matters cannot be determined at this time. | |||
Other Construction | |||
In May 2010, the Georgia PSC approved Georgia Power’s request to extend the construction schedule for Plant McDonough Units 4, 5, and 6 as a result of the short-term reduction in forecasted demand, as well as the requested increase in the certified amount. As a result, the units are expected to be placed into service in January 2012, May 2012, and January 2013, respectively. The Georgia PSC has approved Georgia Power’s quarterly construction monitoring reports, including actual project expenditures incurred, through June 30, 2010. Georgia Power will continue to file quarterly construction monitoring reports throughout the construction period | |||
Plant Branch Units 1 and 2 De-certification | |||
On March 22, 2011, the board of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources began consideration of modifications to the Georgia Multi-Pollutant Rule. The proposed modifications would change the compliance dates for certain of Georgia Power’s coal-fired generating units as follows: |
|
Scherer 3 | July 1, 2011 | ||
|
Branch 1 | December 31, 2013 | ||
|
Branch 2 | October 1, 2013 | ||
|
Branch 3 | October 1, 2015 | ||
|
Branch 4 | December 31, 2015 |
The Multi-Pollutant Rule is designed to reduce emissions of mercury, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides statewide. The Utility Maximum Achievable Control Technology rule will also regulate emissions of mercury, in addition to other air pollutants. All required controls, including SCR, scrubber, and baghouse, are expected to be operational at Plant Scherer Unit 3 by the required compliance date. As a result of these proposed rules, Georgia Power’s management expects to request that the Georgia PSC approve de-certification of its Plant Branch Units 1 and 2, totaling 569 MWs of capacity, as of the effective dates for controls under the Multi-Pollutant Rule as revised. Georgia Power continues to analyze the potential costs and benefits of installing the required controls on its remaining coal-fired units, including Plant Branch Units 3 and 4, in light of the proposed air quality rules, as well as additional potential federal regulations related to water quality and coal combustion byproducts. Georgia Power may determine that retiring and replacing certain of its existing units with new generating resources or purchased power is more economically efficient than installing the required controls. |
126
See Note 3 under “Retail Regulatory Matters – Rate Plans” to the financial statements of Southern Company and Georgia Power in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for information regarding the 2010 ARP. Under the terms of the 2010 ARP, any costs associated with changes to Georgia Power’s approved environmental operating or capital budgets resulting from new or revised environmental regulations through 2013 that are approved by the Georgia PSC in connection with an updated integrated resource plan will be deferred as a regulatory asset to be recovered over a time period deemed appropriate by the Georgia PSC. Georgia Power currently expects to file an update to its integrated resource plan in late summer 2011, which would include the Plant Branch Units 1 and 2 de-certification request. In connection with this filing, Georgia Power expects to request the Georgia PSC to approve the deferral and related amortization of the retail portion of the related costs associated with the de-certification request. Georgia Power moved the retail portion of the net carrying value of Plant Branch Units 1 and 2 from plant in service, net of depreciation, to other utility plant, net of depreciation. Consistent with current ratemaking treatment, Georgia Power will continue to depreciate these units using the composite straight-line rates approved by the Georgia PSC, and upon actual retirement, expects to include the units’ remaining net carrying value in rate base. However, the recovery periods for these units may change in connection with Georgia Power’s updated integrated resource plan. As a result of this regulatory treatment, the de-certification of Plant Branch Units 1 and 2 is not expected to have a significant impact on Southern Company’s or Georgia Power’s financial statements. | |||
The ultimate outcome of these matters cannot be determined at this time. | |||
Gulf Power | |||
Energy Conservation Cost Recovery | |||
Every five years, the Florida PSC establishes new numeric conservation goals covering a 10-year period for utilities to reduce annual energy and seasonal peak demand using demand-side management (DSM) programs. After the goals are established, utilities develop plans and programs to meet the approved goals. The costs for these programs are recovered through rates established annually in the Energy Conservation Cost Recovery clause. | |||
The most recent goal setting process established new DSM goals for the period 2010-2019. The new goals are significantly larger than the goals established in the previous five-year cycle due to a change in the cost-effectiveness test on which the Florida PSC relies to set the goals. Throughout 2010, Gulf Power engaged in a process at the Florida PSC to develop plans and programs to meet the new DSM goals. The DSM program standards were approved in April 2011, which allow Gulf Power to implement its DSM programs designed to meet the new goals. Higher cost recovery rates and achievement of the new DSM goals may result in reduced sales of electricity which could negatively impact results of operations, cash flows, and financial condition if base rates cannot be adjusted on a timely basis. | |||
Mississippi Power | |||
Certificated New Plant | |||
On April 27, 2011, Mississippi Power submitted to the Mississippi PSC a proposed rate schedule detailing Certificated New Plant-A (CNP-A), a new proposed cost recovery mechanism designed specifically to recover financing costs during the construction phase of the Kemper IGCC. Annual CNP-A rate filings would be made with the first filing occurring in November 2011. If approved by the Mississippi PSC, recovery through CNP-A will remain in place thereafter until the end of the calendar year that the Kemper IGCC is placed into commercial service, which is projected to be 2014. Certificated New Plant-B, which will be filed at a later date, would propose to govern rates effective from the first calendar year after the Kemper IGCC is placed into commercial service through the first seven full calendar years of its operation. The ultimate outcome of this matter cannot be determined at this time. | |||
Integrated Coal Gasification Combined Cycle | |||
See Note 3 to the financial statements of Southern Company under “Retail Regulatory Matters – Mississippi Power Integrated Coal Gasification Combined Cycle” and of Mississippi Power under “Integrated Coal Gasification Combined Cycle” in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for information regarding Mississippi Power’s construction of the Kemper IGCC. | |||
In June 2010, the Mississippi Chapter of the Sierra Club (Sierra Club) filed an appeal of the Mississippi PSC’s June 3, 2010 decision to grant the Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity for the Kemper IGCC with the Chancery Court of Harrison County, Mississippi (Chancery Court). Subsequently, in July 2010, the Sierra Club also filed an appeal directly with the Mississippi Supreme Court. In October 2010, the Mississippi Supreme Court dismissed the Sierra Club’s direct appeal. On February 28, 2011, the Chancery Court issued a judgment affirming the Mississippi PSC’s order authorizing the construction of the Kemper IGCC. On March 1, 2011, the Sierra Club appealed the Chancery Court’s decision to the Mississippi Supreme Court. | |||
In May 2009, Mississippi Power received notification from the IRS formally certifying the IRS allocated Internal Revenue Code Section 48A tax credits (Phase I) of $133 million to Mississippi Power. On April 19, 2011, Mississippi Power received notification from the IRS formally certifying that the IRS allocated $279 million of Internal Revenue Code Section 48A tax credits (Phase II) to Mississippi Power. The utilization of Phase I and Phase II credits is dependent upon meeting the IRS certification requirements, including an in-service date no later than May 11, 2014 for the Phase I credits and April 19, 2016 for the Phase II credits. In order to remain eligible for the Phase II tax credits, Mississippi Power plans to capture and sequester (via enhanced oil recovery) at least 65% of the carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) produced by the plant |
127
during operations in accordance with the recapture rules for Section 48A investment tax credits. Through March 31, 2011, Mississippi Power received and accrued tax benefits totaling $31.9 million for these tax credits, which will be amortized as a reduction to depreciation and amortization over the life of the Kemper IGCC. | |||
In February 2008, Mississippi Power requested that the DOE transfer the remaining funds previously granted under the Clean Coal Power Initiative Round 2 (CCPI2) from a cancelled IGCC project of one of Southern Company’s subsidiaries that would have been located in Orlando, Florida. In December 2008, an agreement was reached to assign the remaining funds ($270 million) to the Kemper IGCC. Mississippi Power will receive grant funds of $245 million during the construction of the plant and $25 million during the initial operation of the plant. Through March 31, 2011, Mississippi Power has received $40 million and requested an additional $20.1 million associated with this grant. | |||
On March 10, 2011, the Sierra Club filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia against the DOE regarding the National Environmental Policy Act review process asking for a stay on the issuance of CCPI2 funds and a stay to any related construction activities. On May 5, 2011, Mississippi Power filed a motion to intervene in this lawsuit. | |||
In March 2010, the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) issued the Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) air permit modification for the plant, which modifies the original PSD air permit issued in October 2008. The Sierra Club requested a formal evidentiary hearing regarding the issuance of the modified permit. On April 4, 2011, the MDEQ Permit Board held an evidentiary hearing wherein the permit board unanimously affirmed the PSD air permit. | |||
On March 4, 2011, Mississippi Power and Denbury Onshore (Denbury), a subsidiary of Denbury Resources Inc., entered into a contract in which Denbury will purchase 70% of the CO 2 captured from the Kemper IGCC. | |||
On April 27, 2011, Mississippi Power submitted to the Mississippi PSC a proposed rate schedule detailing CNP-A, a new proposed cost recovery mechanism designed specifically to recover financing cost during the construction phase of the Kemper IGCC. See “Certificated New Plant” herein for additional information. | |||
As of March 31, 2011, Mississippi Power had spent a total of $352.8 million on the Kemper IGCC, including regulatory filing costs. Of this total, $277 million was included in CWIP (net of $60.1 million of CCPI2 grant funds), $13.2 million was recorded in other regulatory assets, $1.5 million was recorded in other deferred charges and assets, and $1.0 million was previously expensed. | |||
The ultimate outcome of these matters cannot be determined at this time. |
128
(C) | FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS |
As of March 31, 2011, assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis during the period, together with the level of the fair value hierarchy in which they fall, were as follows: |
Fair Value Measurements Using | ||||||||||||||||
Quoted Prices | ||||||||||||||||
in Active | Significant | |||||||||||||||
Markets for | Other | Significant | ||||||||||||||
Identical | Observable | Unobservable | ||||||||||||||
Assets | Inputs | Inputs | ||||||||||||||
As of March 31, 2011: | (Level 1) | (Level 2) | (Level 3) | Total | ||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Southern Company
|
||||||||||||||||
Assets:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 14 | $ | — | $ | 14 | ||||||||
Interest rate derivatives
|
— | 9 | — | 9 | ||||||||||||
Foreign currency derivatives
|
— | 6 | — | 6 | ||||||||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts
(a)
|
631 | 738 | — | 1,369 | ||||||||||||
Cash equivalents and restricted cash
|
262 | — | — | 262 | ||||||||||||
Other investments
|
12 | 49 | 12 | 73 | ||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 905 | $ | 816 | $ | 12 | $ | 1,733 | ||||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 172 | $ | — | $ | 172 | ||||||||
Interest rate derivatives
|
— | 1 | — | 1 | ||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | — | $ | 173 | $ | — | $ | 173 | ||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Alabama Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Assets:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 2 | $ | — | $ | 2 | ||||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts:
(b)
|
||||||||||||||||
Domestic equity
|
328 | 61 | — | 389 | ||||||||||||
Foreign equity
|
7 | 7 | — | 14 | ||||||||||||
U.S. Treasury and government agency securities
|
19 | 8 | — | 27 | ||||||||||||
Corporate bonds
|
— | 83 | — | 83 | ||||||||||||
Mortgage and asset backed securities
|
— | 29 | — | 29 | ||||||||||||
Other
|
28 | 8 | — | 36 | ||||||||||||
Cash equivalents and restricted cash
|
71 | — | — | 71 | ||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 453 | $ | 198 | $ | — | $ | 651 | ||||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 29 | $ | — | $ | 29 | ||||||||
129
Fair Value Measurements Using | ||||||||||||||||
Quoted Prices | ||||||||||||||||
in Active | Significant | |||||||||||||||
Markets for | Other | Significant | ||||||||||||||
Identical | Observable | Unobservable | ||||||||||||||
Assets | Inputs | Inputs | ||||||||||||||
As of March 31, 2011: | (Level 1) | (Level 2) | (Level 3) | Total | ||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Georgia Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Assets:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 2 | $ | — | $ | 2 | ||||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts:
(c)
|
||||||||||||||||
Domestic equity
|
249 | 1 | — | 250 | ||||||||||||
U.S. Treasury and government agency securities
|
— | 87 | — | 87 | ||||||||||||
Municipal bonds
|
— | 60 | — | 60 | ||||||||||||
Corporate bonds
|
— | 211 | — | 211 | ||||||||||||
Mortgage and asset backed securities
|
— | 115 | — | 115 | ||||||||||||
Other
|
— | 68 | — | 68 | ||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 249 | $ | 544 | $ | — | $ | 793 | ||||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 86 | $ | — | $ | 86 | ||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Gulf Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Assets:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 3 | $ | — | $ | 3 | ||||||||
Cash equivalents
|
14 | — | — | 14 | ||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 14 | $ | 3 | $ | — | $ | 17 | ||||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 11 | $ | — | $ | 11 | ||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Mississippi Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Assets:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 3 | $ | — | $ | 3 | ||||||||
Foreign currency derivatives
|
— | 6 | — | 6 | ||||||||||||
Cash equivalents
|
68 | — | — | 68 | ||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 68 | $ | 9 | $ | — | $ | 77 | ||||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 40 | $ | — | $ | 40 | ||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Southern Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Assets:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 4 | $ | — | $ | 4 | ||||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | 6 | $ | — | $ | 6 | ||||||||
(a) | For additional detail, see the nuclear decommissioning trusts sections for Alabama Power and Georgia Power in this table. | |
(b) | Excludes receivables related to investment income, pending investment sales, and payables related to pending investment purchases. | |
(c) | Includes the investment securities pledged to creditors and cash collateral received, and excludes receivables related to investment income, pending investment sales, and payables related to pending investment purchases and the securities lending program. As of March 31, 2011, approximately $99 million of the fair market value of Georgia Power’s nuclear decommissioning trust funds’ securities were on loan and pledged to creditors under the funds’ managers’ securities lending program. |
130
Valuation Methodologies | |||
The energy-related derivatives primarily consist of over-the-counter financial products for natural gas and physical power products including, from time to time, basis swaps. These are standard products used within the energy industry and are valued using the market approach. The inputs used are mainly from observable market sources, such as forward natural gas prices, power prices, implied volatility, and LIBOR interest rates. Interest rate and foreign currency derivatives are also standard over-the-counter financial products valued using the market approach. Inputs for interest rate derivatives include LIBOR interest rates, interest rate futures contracts, and occasionally implied volatility of interest rate options. Inputs for foreign currency derivatives are from observable market sources. See Note (H) herein for additional information on how these derivatives are used. | |||
“Other investments” include investments in funds that are valued using the market approach and income approach. Securities that are traded in the open market are valued at the closing price on their principal exchange as of the measurement date. Discounts are applied in accordance with GAAP when certain trading restrictions exist. For investments that are not traded in the open market, the price paid will have been determined based on market factors including comparable multiples and the expectations regarding cash flows and business plan execution. As the investments mature or if market conditions change materially, further analysis of the fair market value of the investment is performed. This analysis is typically based on a metric, such as multiple of earnings, revenues, earnings before interest and income taxes, or earnings adjusted for certain cash changes. These multiples are based on comparable multiples for publicly traded companies or other relevant prior transactions. | |||
For fair value measurements of investments within the nuclear decommissioning trusts and rabbi trust funds, specifically the fixed income assets using significant other observable inputs and unobservable inputs, the primary valuation technique used is the market approach. External pricing vendors are designated for each of the asset classes in the nuclear decommissioning trusts and rabbi trust funds with each security discriminately assigned a primary pricing source, based on similar characteristics. | |||
A market price secured from the primary source vendor is then used in the valuation of the assets within the trusts. As a general approach, market pricing vendors gather market data (including indices and market research reports) and integrate relative credit information, observed market movements, and sector news into proprietary pricing models, pricing systems, and mathematical tools. Dealer quotes and other market information including live trading levels and pricing analysts’ judgment are also obtained when available. |
131
As of March 31, 2011, the fair value measurements of investments calculated at net asset value per share (or its equivalent), as well as the nature and risks of those investments, were as follows: |
Fair | Unfunded | Redemption | Redemption | |||||||||||||
As of March 31, 2011: | Value | Commitments | Frequency | Notice Period | ||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Southern Company
|
||||||||||||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts:
|
||||||||||||||||
Corporate bonds – commingled funds
|
$ | 100 | None | Daily | 1 to 3 days | |||||||||||
Other – commingled funds
|
68 | None | Daily | Not applicable | ||||||||||||
Trust owned life insurance
|
89 | None | Daily | 15 days | ||||||||||||
Cash equivalents and restricted cash:
|
||||||||||||||||
Money market funds
|
262 | None | Daily | Not applicable | ||||||||||||
Other:
|
||||||||||||||||
Money market funds
|
2 | None | Daily | Not applicable | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Alabama Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts:
|
||||||||||||||||
Trust owned life insurance
|
$ | 89 | None | Daily | 15 days | |||||||||||
Cash equivalents and restricted cash:
|
||||||||||||||||
Money market funds
|
71 | None | Daily | Not applicable | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Georgia Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Nuclear decommissioning trusts:
|
||||||||||||||||
Corporate bonds – commingled funds
|
$ | 100 | None | Daily | 1 to 3 days | |||||||||||
Other – commingled funds
|
68 | None | Daily | Not applicable | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Gulf Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Cash equivalents:
|
||||||||||||||||
Money market funds
|
$ | 14 | None | Daily | Not applicable | |||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Mississippi Power
|
||||||||||||||||
Cash equivalents:
|
||||||||||||||||
Money market funds
|
$ | 68 | None | Daily | Not applicable | |||||||||||
132
The NRC requires licensees of commercial nuclear power reactors to establish a plan for providing reasonable assurance of funds for future decommissioning. Alabama Power and Georgia Power have external trust funds (the Funds) to comply with the NRC’s regulations. The commingled funds in the nuclear decommissioning trusts are invested primarily in a diversified portfolio of high grade money market instruments, including, but not limited to, commercial paper, notes, repurchase agreements, and other evidences of indebtedness with a maturity not exceeding 13 months from the date of purchase. The commingled funds will, however, maintain a dollar-weighted average portfolio maturity of 90 days or less. The assets may be longer term investment grade fixed income obligations having a maximum five-year final maturity with put features or floating rates with a reset rate date of 13 months or less. The primary objective for the commingled funds is a high level of current income consistent with stability of principal and liquidity. The corporate bonds – commingled funds represent the investment of cash collateral received under the Funds’ managers’ securities lending program that can only be sold upon the return of the loaned securities. See Note 1 to the financial statements of Southern Company and Georgia Power under “Nuclear Decommissioning” in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for additional information. | |||
Alabama Power’s nuclear decommissioning trust includes investments in Trust-Owned Life Insurance (TOLI). The taxable nuclear decommissioning trust invests in the TOLI in order to minimize the impact of taxes on the portfolio and can draw on the value of the TOLI through death proceeds, loans against the cash surrender value, and/or the cash surrender value, subject to legal restrictions. The amounts reported in the table above reflect the fair value of investments the insurer has made in relation to the TOLI agreements. The nuclear decommissioning trust does not own the underlying investments, but the fair value of the investments approximates the cash surrender value of the TOLI policies. The investments made by the insurer are in commingled funds. The commingled funds primarily include investments in domestic and international equity securities and predominantly high-quality fixed income securities. These fixed income securities include U.S. Treasury and government agency fixed income securities, non-U.S. government and agency fixed income securities, domestic and foreign corporate fixed income securities, and, to some degree, mortgage and asset backed securities. The passively managed funds seek to replicate the performance of a related index. The actively managed funds seek to exceed the performance of a related index through security analysis and selection. | |||
Southern Company, Alabama Power, and Georgia Power continue to elect the option to fair value investment securities held in the nuclear decommissioning trust funds. For the three months ended March 31, 2011, the increase in fair value of the funds, which includes reinvested interest and dividends, is recorded in the regulatory liability and was $27.3 million for Alabama Power, $14.6 million for Georgia Power, and $41.9 million for Southern Company. | |||
The money market funds are short-term investments of excess funds in various money market mutual funds, which are portfolios of short-term debt securities. The money market funds are regulated by the SEC and typically receive the highest rating from credit rating agencies. Regulatory and rating agency requirements for money market funds include minimum credit ratings and maximum maturities for individual securities and a maximum weighted average portfolio maturity. Redemptions are available on a same day basis up to the full amount of the investment in the money market funds. | |||
Changes in the fair value measurement of the Level 3 items using significant unobservable inputs for Southern Company at March 31, 2011 were as follows: |
Level 3 | ||||
Other | ||||
(in millions) | ||||
Beginning balance at December 31, 2010
|
$ | 19 | ||
Purchases
|
1 | |||
Total gains (losses) — realized/unrealized:
|
||||
Included in earnings
|
(5 | ) | ||
Included in OCI
|
(3 | ) | ||
Ending balance at March 31, 2011
|
$ | 12 | ||
133
Carrying Amount | Fair Value | |||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Long-term debt:
|
||||||||
Southern Company
|
$ | 19,418 | $ | 20,100 | ||||
Alabama Power
|
$ | 6,235 | $ | 6,538 | ||||
Georgia Power
|
$ | 8,437 | $ | 8,641 | ||||
Gulf Power
|
$ | 1,224 | $ | 1,259 | ||||
Mississippi Power
|
$ | 586 | $ | 608 | ||||
Southern Power
|
$ | 1,299 | $ | 1,382 |
The fair values were based on closing market prices (Level 1) or closing prices of comparable instruments (Level 2). |
(D) | STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY |
Earnings per Share | |||
For Southern Company, the only difference in computing basic and diluted earnings per share is attributable to awards outstanding under the stock option and performance share plans. See Note 8 to the financial statements of Southern Company in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for further information on the stock option and performance share plans. The effects of both stock options and performance share award units were determined using the treasury stock method. Shares used to compute diluted earnings per share were as follows: |
Three Months | Three Months | |||||||
Ended | Ended | |||||||
March 31, 2011 | March 31, 2010 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
As reported shares
|
847,510 | 822,526 | ||||||
Effect of options
|
6,429 | 2,261 | ||||||
Diluted shares
|
853,939 | 824,787 | ||||||
Stock options that were not included in the diluted earnings per share calculation because they were anti-dilutive were 7 million and 25 million for the three months ended March 31, 2011 and March 31, 2010, respectively. Assuming an average stock price of $38.01 (the highest exercise price of the anti-dilutive options outstanding), the effect of options would have been immaterial for the three months ended March 31, 2011 and would have increased by 2 million shares for the three months ended March 31, 2010. |
134
Changes in Stockholders’ Equity | |||
The following table presents year-to-date changes in stockholders’ equity of Southern Company: |
Preferred and | ||||||||||||||||||||
Number of | Common | Preference | Total | |||||||||||||||||
Common Shares | Stockholders’ | Stock of | Stockholders’ | |||||||||||||||||
Issued | Treasury | Equity | Subsidiaries | Equity | ||||||||||||||||
(in thousands) | (in millions) | |||||||||||||||||||
Balance at December 31, 2010
|
843,814 | (474 | ) | $ | 16,202 | $ | 707 | $ | 16,909 | |||||||||||
Net income after dividends on
preferred and preference stock
|
— | — | 422 | — | 422 | |||||||||||||||
Other comprehensive income (loss)
|
— | — | 4 | — | 4 | |||||||||||||||
Stock issued
|
5,784 | — | 222 | — | 222 | |||||||||||||||
Cash dividends on common stock
|
— | — | (385 | ) | — | (385 | ) | |||||||||||||
Other
|
— | (1 | ) | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
Balance at March 31, 2011
|
849,598 | (475 | ) | $ | 16,465 | $ | 707 | $ | 17,172 | |||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Balance at December 31, 2009
|
820,152 | (505 | ) | $ | 14,878 | $ | 707 | $ | 15,585 | |||||||||||
Net income after dividends on
preferred and preference stock
|
— | — | 495 | — | 495 | |||||||||||||||
Other comprehensive income (loss)
|
— | — | 9 | — | 9 | |||||||||||||||
Stock issued
|
4,872 | — | 171 | — | 171 | |||||||||||||||
Cash dividends on common stock
|
— | — | (359 | ) | — | (359 | ) | |||||||||||||
Other
|
— | 17 | 1 | — | 1 | |||||||||||||||
Balance at March 31, 2010
|
825,024 | (488 | ) | $ | 15,195 | $ | 707 | $ | 15,902 | |||||||||||
(E) | FINANCING |
Bank Credit Arrangements | |||
Bank credit arrangements provide liquidity support to the registrants’ commercial paper borrowings and the traditional operating companies’ variable rate pollution control revenue bonds. See Note 6 to the financial statements of each registrant under “Bank Credit Arrangements” in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for additional information. | |||
The following table outlines the credit arrangements by company as of March 31, 2011: |
Executable | Expires Within One | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Term-Loans | Expires | Year (a) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
No | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
One | Two | Term | Term | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Company | Total | Unused | Year | Years | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | Out | Out | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Southern Company
|
$ | 950 | $ | 950 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 950 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Alabama Power
|
1,271 | 1,271 | 372 | — | 506 | 765 | — | 372 | 134 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Georgia Power
|
1,715 | 1,703 | 220 | 40 | 595 | 1,120 | — | 260 | 335 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Gulf Power
|
240 | 240 | 210 | — | 240 | — | — | 210 | 30 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mississippi Power
|
186 | 186 | 90 | 41 | 161 | 25 | — | 131 | 55 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Southern Power
|
400 | 400 | — | — | — | 400 | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other
|
60 | 60 | 60 | — | 60 | — | — | 60 | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 4,822 | $ | 4,810 | $ | 952 | $ | 81 | $ | 1,562 | $ | 3,260 | $ | — | $ | 1,033 | $ | 554 | ||||||||||||||||||
(a) | Reflects facilities expiring on or before March 31, 2012. |
135
(F) | RETIREMENT BENEFITS |
Southern Company has a defined benefit, trusteed, pension plan covering substantially all employees. The qualified pension plan is funded in accordance with requirements of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA). No contributions to the qualified pension plan are expected for the year ending December 31, 2011. Southern Company also provides certain defined benefit pension plans for a selected group of management and highly compensated employees. Benefits under these non-qualified pension plans are funded on a cash basis. In addition, Southern Company provides certain medical care and life insurance benefits for retired employees through other postretirement benefit plans. The traditional operating companies fund related other postretirement trusts to the extent required by their respective regulatory commissions. | |||
See Note 2 to the financial statements of Southern Company, Alabama Power, Georgia Power, Gulf Power, and Mississippi Power in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for additional information. | |||
Components of the net periodic benefit costs for the three months ended March 31, 2011 and 2010 were as follows: |
Southern | Alabama | Georgia | Gulf | Mississippi | ||||||||||||||||
PENSION PLANS | Company | Power | Power | Power | Power | |||||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Three Months Ended
March 31, 2011
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Service cost
|
$ | 46 | $ | 11 | $ | 14 | $ | 2 | $ | 2 | ||||||||||
Interest cost
|
98 | 24 | 36 | 4 | 4 | |||||||||||||||
Expected return on plan assets
|
(152 | ) | (43 | ) | (59 | ) | (7 | ) | (6 | ) | ||||||||||
Net amortization
|
13 | 3 | 5 | 1 | 1 | |||||||||||||||
Net cost (income)
|
$ | 5 | $ | (5 | ) | $ | (4 | ) | $ | — | $ | 1 | ||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Three Months Ended
March 31, 2010
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Service cost
|
$ | 43 | $ | 10 | $ | 14 | $ | 2 | $ | 2 | ||||||||||
Interest cost
|
98 | 24 | 36 | 4 | 4 | |||||||||||||||
Expected return on plan assets
|
(138 | ) | (42 | ) | (55 | ) | (6 | ) | (5 | ) | ||||||||||
Net amortization
|
11 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 1 | |||||||||||||||
Net cost (income)
|
$ | 14 | $ | (5 | ) | $ | (1 | ) | $ | 1 | $ | 2 | ||||||||
Southern | Alabama | Georgia | Gulf | Mississippi | ||||||||||||||||
POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS | Company | Power | Power | Power | Power | |||||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Three Months Ended
March 31, 2011
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Service cost
|
$ | 5 | $ | 1 | $ | 2 | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||
Interest cost
|
23 | 6 | 10 | 1 | 1 | |||||||||||||||
Expected return on plan assets
|
(16 | ) | (6 | ) | (8 | ) | — | — | ||||||||||||
Net amortization
|
5 | 2 | 3 | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Net cost (income)
|
$ | 17 | $ | 3 | $ | 7 | $ | 1 | $ | 1 | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Three Months Ended
March 31, 2010
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Service cost
|
$ | 6 | $ | 2 | $ | 2 | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||
Interest cost
|
25 | 6 | 11 | 1 | 1 | |||||||||||||||
Expected return on plan assets
|
(16 | ) | (6 | ) | (8 | ) | — | — | ||||||||||||
Net amortization
|
5 | 2 | 3 | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Net cost (income)
|
$ | 20 | $ | 4 | $ | 8 | $ | 1 | $ | 1 | ||||||||||
136
(G) | EFFECTIVE TAX RATE AND UNRECOGNIZED TAX BENEFITS |
Effective Tax Rate | |||
Southern Company’s effective tax rate was 34.6% for the three months ended March 31, 2011, as compared to 31.6% for the corresponding period in 2010. Southern Company’s effective tax rate is lower than the statutory rate primarily due to its employee stock dividend deduction and AFUDC equity, which is not taxable. See Note 5 to the financial statements of each registrant in Item 8 of the Form 10-K for information on the effective income tax rate. Southern Company’s effective tax rate increased primarily due to no production activities deduction and no Georgia state income tax credits for activity through Georgia ports available to Southern Company for the three months ended March 31, 2011, as compared to the production activities deduction and additional Georgia state income tax credits recognized as of March 31, 2010. Additionally, Georgia Power’s effective tax rate increased for the three months ended March 31, 2011 as compared to March 31, 2010 from 27.8% to 34.6% primarily due to the impact of Georgia state income tax credits discussed above and a decrease in AFUDC equity, which is not taxable, in the first quarter 2011. | |||
Unrecognized Tax Benefits | |||
Changes during 2011 for unrecognized tax benefits were as follows: |
Southern | Alabama | Georgia | Gulf | Mississippi | Southern | |||||||||||||||||||
Company | Power | Power | Power | Power | Power | |||||||||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unrecognized tax benefits as of
December
31, 2010
|
$ | 296 | $ | 43 | $ | 237 | $ | 4 | $ | 4 | $ | 2 | ||||||||||||
Tax positions from current periods
|
8 | 2 | 5 | — | 1 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Tax positions from prior periods
|
— | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Reductions due to expired
|
— | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
statute of limitations
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance as of March 31, 2011
|
$ | 304 | $ | 45 | $ | 242 | $ | 4 | $ | 5 | $ | 2 | ||||||||||||
The tax positions from current periods relate primarily to the tax accounting method change for repairs and other miscellaneous uncertain tax positions. | |||
The impact on the effective tax rate, if recognized, is as follows: |
As of | ||||||||||||||||
December 31, | ||||||||||||||||
As of March 31, 2011 | 2010 | |||||||||||||||
Georgia | Other | Southern | Southern | |||||||||||||
Power | Registrants | Company | Company | |||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||
Tax positions impacting the effective tax rate
|
$ | 205 | $ | 11 | $ | 221 | $ | 217 | ||||||||
Tax positions not impacting the effective tax rate
|
37 | 45 | 83 | 79 | ||||||||||||
Balance of unrecognized tax benefits
|
$ | 242 | $ | 56 | $ | 304 | $ | 296 | ||||||||
The tax positions impacting the effective tax rate primarily relate to Georgia state tax credit litigation at Georgia Power and the production activities deduction tax position. However, if Georgia Power is successful in its claim against the Georgia DOR, a significant portion of the tax benefit is expected to be deferred and returned to retail customers and therefore no material impact to net income is expected. The tax positions not impacting the effective tax rate relate to the timing difference associated with the tax accounting method change for repairs. These amounts are presented on a gross basis without considering the related federal or state income tax impact. See Note (B) under “Income Tax Matters – Georgia State Income Tax Credits” herein for additional information. |
137
Accrued interest for unrecognized tax benefits was as follows: |
Georgia | Other | Southern | ||||||||||
Power | Registrants | Company | ||||||||||
( in millions) | ||||||||||||
Interest accrued as of December 31, 2010
|
$ | 27 | $ | 2 | $ | 29 | ||||||
Interest reclassified due to settlements
|
— | — | — | |||||||||
Interest accrued during the period
|
2 | 1 | 3 | |||||||||
Balance as of March 31, 2011
|
$ | 29 | $ | 3 | $ | 32 | ||||||
All of the registrants classify interest on tax uncertainties as interest expense. The net amount of interest accrued during 2011 was primarily associated with the Georgia state tax credit litigation. | |||
None of the registrants accrued any penalties on uncertain tax positions. | |||
It is reasonably possible that the amount of the unrecognized tax benefits associated with a majority of Southern Company’s and Georgia Power’s unrecognized tax positions will significantly increase or decrease within the next 12 months. The resolution of the Georgia state tax credit litigation would substantially reduce the balances. The conclusion or settlement of state audits could also impact the balances significantly. At this time, an estimate of the range of reasonably possible outcomes cannot be determined. | |||
Tax Method of Accounting for Repairs | |||
Southern Company submitted a change in the tax accounting method for repair costs associated with its subsidiaries’ generation, transmission, and distribution systems with the filing of the 2009 federal income tax return in September 2010. The new tax method resulted in net positive cash flow in 2010 of approximately $141 million for Alabama Power, $133 million for Georgia Power, $8 million for Gulf Power, $5 million for Mississippi Power, $6 million for Southern Power, and $297 million for Southern Company on a consolidated basis. Although IRS approval of this change is considered automatic, the amount claimed is subject to review because the IRS will be issuing final guidance on this matter. Currently, the IRS is working with the utility industry in an effort to resolve this matter in a consistent manner for all utilities. Due to uncertainty concerning the ultimate resolution of this matter, an unrecognized tax benefit has been recorded for the change in the tax accounting method for repair costs. The ultimate outcome of this matter cannot be determined at this time. |
(H) | DERIVATIVES |
Southern Company, the traditional operating companies, and Southern Power are exposed to market risks, primarily commodity price risk, interest rate risk, and occasionally foreign currency risk. To manage the volatility attributable to these exposures, each company nets its exposures, where possible, to take advantage of natural offsets and enters into various derivative transactions for the remaining exposures pursuant to each company’s policies in areas such as counterparty exposure and risk management practices. Each company’s policy is that derivatives are to be used primarily for hedging purposes and mandates strict adherence to all applicable risk management policies. Derivative positions are monitored using techniques including, but not limited to, market valuation, value at risk, stress testing, and sensitivity analysis. Derivative instruments are recognized at fair value in the balance sheets as either assets or liabilities. |
Energy-Related Derivatives | |||
The traditional operating companies and Southern Power enter into energy-related derivatives to hedge exposures to electricity, gas, and other fuel price changes. However, due to cost-based rate regulations and other various cost recovery mechanisms, the traditional operating companies have limited exposure to market volatility in commodity fuel prices and prices of electricity. Each of the traditional operating companies manages fuel-hedging programs, implemented per the guidelines of their respective state PSCs, through the use of financial derivative contracts which is expected to continue to mitigate price volatility. Southern Power has limited exposure to market volatility in commodity fuel prices and prices of electricity because its long-term sales contracts shift |
138
substantially all fuel cost responsibility to the purchaser. However, Southern Power has been and may continue to be exposed to market volatility in energy-related commodity prices as a result of sales of uncontracted generating capacity. | |||
To mitigate residual risks relative to movements in electricity prices, the electric utilities may enter into physical fixed-price or heat rate contracts for the purchase and sale of electricity through the wholesale electricity market. To mitigate residual risks relative to movements in gas prices, the electric utilities may enter into fixed-price contracts for natural gas purchases; however, a significant portion of contracts are priced at market. | |||
Energy-related derivative contracts are accounted for in one of three methods: |
• | Regulatory Hedges – Energy-related derivative contracts which are designated as regulatory hedges relate primarily to the traditional operating companies’ fuel hedging programs, where gains and losses are initially recorded as regulatory liabilities and assets, respectively, and then are included in fuel expense as the underlying fuel is used in operations and ultimately recovered through the respective fuel cost recovery clauses. | ||
• | Cash Flow Hedges – Gains and losses on energy-related derivatives designated as cash flow hedges, which are mainly used to hedge anticipated purchases and sales, and are initially deferred in OCI before being recognized in the statements of income in the same period as the hedged transactions are reflected in earnings. | ||
• | Not Designated – Gains and losses on energy-related derivative contracts that are not designated or fail to qualify as hedges are recognized in the statements of income as incurred. |
Some energy-related derivative contracts require physical delivery as opposed to financial settlement, and this type of derivative is both common and prevalent within the electric industry. When an energy-related derivative contract is settled physically, any cumulative unrealized gain or loss is reversed and the contract price is recognized in the respective line item representing the actual price of the underlying goods being delivered. | |||
At March 31, 2011, the net volume of energy-related derivative contracts for power and natural gas positions for the registrants, together with the longest hedge date over which the respective entity is hedging its exposure to the variability in future cash flows for forecasted transactions and the longest date for derivatives not designated as hedges, were as follows: |
Power | Gas | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Longest | Longest | Net | Longest | Longest | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net Sold | Hedge | Non-Hedge | Purchased | Hedge | Non-Hedge | |||||||||||||||||||
MWHs | Date | Date | mmBtu | Date | Date | |||||||||||||||||||
(in millions) | (in millions) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Southern Company
|
0.8 | 2011 | 2011 | 154 | 2015 | 2015 | ||||||||||||||||||
Alabama Power
|
— | 2011 | 2011 | 31 | 2015 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Georgia Power
|
— | 2011 | 2011 | 65 | 2015 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Gulf Power
|
— | 2011 | 2011 | 20 | 2015 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Mississippi Power
|
— | 2011 | 2011 | 24 | 2015 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Southern Power
|
0.8 | 2011 | 2011 | 14 | 2012 | 2015 | ||||||||||||||||||
In addition to the volumes discussed in the above table, the traditional operating companies and Southern Power enter into physical natural gas supply contracts that provide the option to sell back excess gas due to operational constraints. The maximum expected volume of natural gas subject to such a feature is 4 million mmbtu for Southern Company, 4 million mmbtu for Georgia Power, and was immaterial for the other registrants. | |||
For cash flow hedges, the amounts expected to be reclassified from OCI to revenue and fuel expense for the next 12-month period ending March 31, 2012 are immaterial for all registrants. | |||
Interest Rate Derivatives | |||
Southern Company and certain subsidiaries also enter into interest rate derivatives to hedge exposure to changes in interest rates. The derivatives employed as hedging instruments are structured to minimize ineffectiveness. Derivatives related to existing variable rate securities or forecasted transactions are accounted for as cash flow hedges where the |
139
effective portion of the derivatives’ fair value gains or losses is recorded in OCI and is reclassified into earnings at the same time the hedged transactions affect earnings with any ineffectiveness recorded directly to earnings. Derivatives related to existing fixed rate securities are accounted for as fair value hedges, where the derivatives’ fair value gains or losses and hedged items’ fair value gains or losses are both recorded directly to earnings, providing an offset with any difference representing ineffectiveness. | |||
At March 31, 2011, the following interest rate derivatives were outstanding: |
Fair Value | |||||||||||||||||||||
Hedge | Gain (Loss) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Notional | Interest Rate | Interest Rate | Maturity | March 31, | |||||||||||||||||
Amount | Received | Paid | Date | 2011 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
(in millions) | (in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Cash flow hedges
of existing debt
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Southern Company
|
$ | 300 |
3-month LIBOR +
0.40% spread |
1.24 | %* | October 2011 | $ | (1 | ) | ||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Fair value hedges
of existing debt
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Southern Company
|
350 | 4.15% |
3-month LIBOR +
1.96%* spread |
May 2014 | 9 | ||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 650 | $ | 8 | |||||||||||||||||
|
* | Weighted Average |
The following table reflects the estimated pre-tax gains (losses) that will be reclassified from OCI to interest expense for the next 12-month period ending March 31, 2012, together with the longest date that total deferred gains and losses are expected to be amortized into earnings. |
Estimated Gain (Loss) to | ||||||||
be Reclassified for the | Total Deferred | |||||||
12 Months Ending | Gains (Losses) | |||||||
Registrant | March 31, 2012 | Amortized Through | ||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||
Southern Company
|
$ | (16 | ) | 2037 | ||||
Alabama Power
|
1 | 2035 | ||||||
Georgia Power
|
(3 | ) | 2037 | |||||
Gulf Power
|
(1 | ) | 2020 | |||||
Southern Power
|
(12 | ) | 2016 | |||||
Foreign Currency Derivatives | |||
Southern Company and certain subsidiaries may enter into foreign currency derivatives to hedge exposure to changes in foreign currency exchange rates arising from purchases of equipment denominated in a currency other than U.S. dollars. Derivatives related to a firm commitment in a foreign currency transaction are accounted for as a fair value hedge where the derivatives’ fair value gains or losses and the hedged items’ fair value gains or losses are both recorded directly to earnings. Derivatives related to a forecasted transaction are accounted for as a cash flow hedge where the effective portion of the derivatives’ fair value gains or losses is recorded in OCI and is reclassified into earnings at the same time the hedged transactions affect earnings. Any ineffectiveness is recorded directly to earnings. The derivatives employed as hedging instruments are structured to minimize ineffectiveness. |
140
Fair Value | ||||||||||||||||
Gain (Loss) | ||||||||||||||||
Notional | Hedge | March 31, | ||||||||||||||
Amount | Forward Rate | Maturity Date | 2011 | |||||||||||||
(in millions) | (in millions) | |||||||||||||||
Cash flow hedges of
forecasted
transactions
|
||||||||||||||||
Southern Company
|
YEN10 |
85.23 Yen per
Dollar* |
May 2011 | $ | — | |||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Fair value hedges of
firm commitments
|
||||||||||||||||
Mississippi Power
|
EUR38.9 |
1.253 Dollars
per Euro* |
Various through July 2012 | 6 | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 6 | ||||||||||||||
|
*Weighted Average |
Derivative Financial Statement Presentation and Amounts | |||
At March 31, 2011, the fair value of energy-related derivatives, interest rate derivatives, and foreign currency derivatives was reflected in the balance sheets as follows: |
Asset Derivatives at March 31, 2011 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fair Value | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivative Category and Balance Sheet | Southern | Alabama | Georgia | Gulf | Mississippi | Southern | ||||||||||||||||||
Location | Company | Power | Power | Power | Power | Power | ||||||||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments for
regulatory purposes
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other current assets
|
$ | 4 | $ | 1 | $ | — | $ | 2 | $ | 1 | ||||||||||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
6 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | |||||||||||||||||||
Total derivatives designated as hedging instruments
for regulatory purposes
|
$ | 10 | $ | 2 | $ | 2 | $ | 3 | $ | 3 | N/A | |||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments in cash
flow and fair value hedges
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Interest rate derivatives:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other current assets
|
$ | 6 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
3 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Foreign currency derivatives:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other current assets
|
5 | — | — | — | 5 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
1 | — | — | — | 1 | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Total derivatives designated as hedging instruments in
cash flow and fair value hedges
|
$ | 15 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 6 | $ | — | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other current assets*
|
$ | 3 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||||
Assets from risk management activities
|
— | — | — | — | — | 3 | ||||||||||||||||||
Other deferred charges and assets
|
1 | — | — | — | — | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total derivatives not designated as hedging instruments
|
$ | 4 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 4 | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total asset derivatives
|
$ | 29 | $ | 2 | $ | 2 | $ | 3 | $ | 9 | $ | 4 | ||||||||||||
*Southern Company includes “Assets from risk management activities” in “Other current assets” where applicable. |
141
Liability Derivatives at March 31, 2011 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fair Value | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivative Category and Balance Sheet | Southern | Alabama | Georgia | Gulf | Mississippi | Southern | ||||||||||||||||||
Location | Company | Power | Power | Power | Power | Power | ||||||||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments
for regulatory purposes
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
$ | 126 | $ | 24 | $ | 70 | $ | 7 | $ | 25 | ||||||||||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities
|
40 | 5 | 16 | 4 | 15 | |||||||||||||||||||
Total derivatives designated as hedging
instruments for regulatory purposes
|
$ | 166 | $ | 29 | $ | 86 | $ | 11 | $ | 40 | N/A | |||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments in
cash flow and fair value hedges
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Interest rate derivatives:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
$ | 1 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Liabilities from risk management activities
|
$ | 6 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 6 | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total liability derivatives
|
$ | 173 | $ | 29 | $ | 86 | $ | 11 | $ | 40 | $ | 6 | ||||||||||||
All derivative instruments are measured at fair value. See Note (C) herein for additional information. | |||
At March 31, 2011, the pre-tax effect of unrealized derivative gains (losses) arising from energy-related derivative instruments designated as regulatory hedging instruments and deferred on the balance sheet was as follows: |
Regulatory Hedge Unrealized Gain (Loss) Recognized on the Balance Sheet | ||||||||||||||||||||
Derivative Category and Balance Sheet | Southern | Alabama | Georgia | Gulf | Mississippi | |||||||||||||||
Location | Company | Power | Power | Power | Power | |||||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives:
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Other regulatory assets, current
|
$ | (126 | ) | $ | (24 | ) | $ | (70 | ) | $ | (7 | ) | $ | (25 | ) | |||||
Other regulatory assets, deferred
|
(40 | ) | (5 | ) | (16 | ) | (4 | ) | (15 | ) | ||||||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, current
|
4 | — | — | 2 | 1 | |||||||||||||||
Other current liabilities*
|
— | 1 | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Other regulatory liabilities, deferred
|
6 | 1 | — | 1 | 2 | |||||||||||||||
Other deferred credits and liabilities**
|
— | — | 2 | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Total energy-related derivative gains (losses)
|
$ | (156 | ) | $ | (27 | ) | $ | (84 | ) | $ | (8 | ) | $ | (37 | ) | |||||
*Alabama Power includes “Other regulatory liabilities, current” in “Other current liabilities.” | ||
**Georgia Power includes “Other regulatory liabilities, deferred” in “Other deferred credits and liabilities.” |
For the three months ended March 31, 2011 and March 31, 2010, the pre-tax gains from interest rate derivatives designated as fair value hedging instruments on Southern Company’s statements of income were immaterial. | |||
For the three months ended March 31, 2011, the pre-tax gains from foreign currency derivatives designated as fair value hedging instruments on Southern Company’s and Mississippi Power’s statements of income were $3 million. This amount was offset with changes in the fair value of the purchase commitment related to equipment purchases; therefore, there is no impact on Southern Company’s or Mississippi Power’s statements of income. |
142
For the three months ended March 31, 2011 and March 31, 2010, the pre-tax effect of derivatives designated as cash flow hedging instruments on the statements of income were as follows: |
Gain (Loss) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Recognized in OCI | Gain (Loss) Reclassified from Accumulated OCI | |||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives in Cash Flow | on Derivative | into Income (Effective Portion) | ||||||||||||||||||
Hedging Relationships | (Effective Portion) | Statements of Income Location | Amount | |||||||||||||||||
2011 | 2010 | 2011 | 2010 | |||||||||||||||||
(in millions) | (in millions) | |||||||||||||||||||
Southern Company
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | 1 | $ | 5 | Fuel | $ | — | $ | — | |||||||||||
Interest rate derivatives
|
4 | (3 | ) | Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized | (5 | ) | (9 | ) | ||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 5 | $ | 2 | $ | (5 | ) | $ | (9 | ) | ||||||||||
Alabama Power
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Interest rate derivatives
|
$ | 4 | $ | — | Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized | $ | — | $ | (2 | ) | ||||||||||
Georgia Power
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Interest rate derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | — | Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized | $ | (1 | ) | $ | (5 | ) | |||||||||
Gulf Power
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Interest rate derivatives
|
$ | — | $ | (2 | ) | Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||
Southern Power
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Energy-related derivatives
|
$ | 1 | $ | 4 | Fuel | $ | — | $ | — | |||||||||||
Interest rate derivatives
|
— | — | Interest expense, net of amounts capitalized | (3 | ) | (3 | ) | |||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 1 | $ | 4 | $ | (3 | ) | $ | (3 | ) | ||||||||||
There was no material ineffectiveness recorded in earnings for any registrant for any period presented. | |||
For the three months ended March 31, 2011 and March 31, 2010, the pre-tax effect of energy-related derivatives not designated as hedging instruments on the statements of income were immaterial for Southern Company and Southern Power. | |||
Contingent Features | |||
The registrants do not have any credit arrangements that would require material changes in payment schedules or terminations as a result of a credit rating downgrade. There are certain derivatives that could require collateral, but not accelerated payment, in the event of various credit rating changes of certain Southern Company subsidiaries. At March 31, 2011, the fair value of derivative liabilities with contingent features, by registrant, was as follows: |
Southern | Alabama | Georgia | Gulf | Mississippi | Southern | |||||||||||||||||||
Company | Power | Power | Power | Power | Power | |||||||||||||||||||
(in millions) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivative liabilities
|
$ | 32 | $ | 5 | $ | 20 | $ | — | $ | 4 | $ | 3 |
At March 31, 2011, the registrants had no collateral posted with their derivative counterparties; however, because of the joint and several liability features underlying these derivatives, the maximum potential collateral requirements arising from the credit-risk-related contingent features, at a rating below BBB- and/or Baa3, is $32 million for each registrant. | |||
Currently, each of the registrants has investment grade credit ratings from the major rating agencies with respect to debt, preferred securities, preferred stock, and/or preference stock. Generally, collateral may be provided by a Southern Company guaranty, letter of credit, or cash. For the traditional operating companies and Southern Power, included in these amounts are certain agreements that could require collateral in the event that one or more Power Pool participants has a credit rating change to below investment grade. |
143
(I) | SEGMENT AND RELATED INFORMATION |
Southern Company’s reportable business segments are the sale of electricity in the Southeast by the four traditional operating companies and Southern Power. Revenues from sales by Southern Power to the traditional operating companies were $83 million and $102 million for the three months ended March 31, 2011 and March 31, 2010, respectively. The “All Other” column includes parent Southern Company, which does not allocate operating expenses to business segments. Also, this category includes segments below the quantitative threshold for separate disclosure. These segments include investments in telecommunications, and leveraged lease projects. All other intersegment revenues are not material. Financial data for business segments and products and services was as follows: |
Electric Utilities | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Operating | Southern | All | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Companies | Power | Eliminations | Total | Other | Eliminations | Consolidated | ||||||||||||||||||||||
( in millions ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Three Months
Ended
March 31, 2011: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Operating revenues
|
$ | 3,810 | $ | 282 | $ | (98 | ) | $ | 3,994 | $ | 38 | $ | (20 | ) | $ | 4,012 | ||||||||||||
Segment net income *
|
385 | 38 | — | 423 | 1 | (2 | ) | 422 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Total assets at March 31, 2011
|
$ | 51,138 | $ | 3,461 | $ | (74 | ) | $ | 54,525 | $ | 1,059 | $ | (565 | ) | $ | 55,019 | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Three Months
Ended
March 31, 2010: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Operating revenues
|
$ | 4,005 | $ | 256 | $ | (125 | ) | $ | 4,136 | $ | 41 | $ | (20 | ) | $ | 4,157 | ||||||||||||
Segment net income (loss)*
|
481 | 15 | — | 496 | — | (1 | ) | 495 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Total assets at December 31, 2010
|
$ | 51,144 | $ | 3,438 | $ | (128 | ) | $ | 54,454 | $ | 1,178 | $ | (600 | ) | $ | 55,032 | ||||||||||||
*After dividends on preferred and preference stock of subsidiaries |
Products and Services |
Electric Utilities’ Revenues | ||||||||||||||||
Period
|
Retail | Wholesale | Other | Total | ||||||||||||
( in millions ) | ||||||||||||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2011
|
$ | 3,396 | $ | 449 | $ | 149 | $ | 3,994 | ||||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2010
|
$ | 3,459 | $ | 542 | $ | 135 | $ | 4,136 | ||||||||
144
Item 1. | Legal Proceedings. |
Item 1A. | Risk Factors. |
145
Item 6. | Exhibits. |
(b)1 | - | By-laws of Alabama Power as amended effective April 22, 2011 and presently in effect. (Designated in Form 8-K dated April 22, 2011, File No. 1-3164 as Exhibit 3.1.) |
(b)1 | - | Forty-Fifth Supplemental Indenture to Senior Note Indenture dated as of March 10, 2011, providing for the issuance of the Series 2011A 5.50% Senior Notes due March 15, 2041. (Designated in Form 8-K dated March 3, 2011, File No. 1-3164, as Exhibit 4.2.) |
(c)1 | - | Forty-Fifth Supplemental Indenture to Senior Note Indenture dated as of April 19, 2011, providing for the issuance of the Series 2011B 3.00% Senior Notes due April 15, 2016. (Designated in Form 8-K dated April 12, 2011, File No. 1-6468, as Exhibit 4.2.) |
(a)1 | - | Termination of Amended and Restated Change in Control Agreement effective February 22, 2011 between Southern Company, SCS and G. Edison Holland, Jr. |
(a)2 | - | Amended Deferred Compensation Agreement, effective December 31, 2008 between Southern Company, SCS, Georgia Power, Gulf Power and G. Edison Holland, Jr. |
(a)3 | - | Form of Stock Option Award Agreement for Executive Officers of Southern Company, under the Southern Company Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan. |
(a)4 | - | Base Salaries of Named Executive Officers. |
(a)5 | - | Summary of Non-Employee Director Compensation Arrangements. |
(c)1 | - | Retention Agreement between Georgia Power and Michael A. Brown, effective January 1, 2011. |
(a)1 | - | Power of Attorney and resolution. (Designated in the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2010, File No. 1-3526 as Exhibit 24(a) and incorporated herein by reference.) |
(b)1 | - | Power of Attorney and resolution. (Designated in the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2010, File No. 1-3164 as Exhibit 24(b) and incorporated herein by reference.) |
146
(c)1 | - | Power of Attorney and resolution. (Designated in the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2010, File No. 1-6468 as Exhibit 24(c) and incorporated herein by reference.) |
(d)1 | - | Power of Attorney and resolution. (Designated in the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2010, File No. 001-31737 as Exhibit 24(d)1 and incorporated herein by reference.) |
(d)2 | - | Power of Attorney Mark A. Crosswhite. (Designated in the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2010, File No. 001-31737 as Exhibit 24(d)2 and incorporated herein by reference.) |
(e)1 | - | Power of Attorney and resolution. (Designated in the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2010, File No. 001-11229 as Exhibit 24(e) and incorporated herein by reference.) |
(f)1 | - | Power of Attorney and resolution. (Designated in the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2010, File No. 333-98553 as Exhibit 24(f) and incorporated herein by reference.) |
(a)1 | - | Certificate of Southern Company’s Chief Executive Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(a)2 | - | Certificate of Southern Company’s Chief Financial Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(b)1 | - | Certificate of Alabama Power’s Chief Executive Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(b)2 | - | Certificate of Alabama Power’s Chief Financial Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(c)1 | - | Certificate of Georgia Power’s Chief Executive Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(c)2 | - | Certificate of Georgia Power’s Chief Financial Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
147
(d)1 | - | Certificate of Gulf Power’s Chief Executive Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(d)2 | - | Certificate of Gulf Power’s Chief Financial Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(e)1 | - | Certificate of Mississippi Power’s Chief Executive Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(e)2 | - | Certificate of Mississippi Power’s Chief Financial Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(f)1 | - | Certificate of Southern Power’s Chief Executive Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(f)2 | - | Certificate of Southern Power’s Chief Financial Officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(a) | - | Certificate of Southern Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(b) | - | Certificate of Alabama Power’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(c) | - | Certificate of Georgia Power’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(d) | - | Certificate of Gulf Power’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(e) | - | Certificate of Mississippi Power’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
148
(f) | - | Certificate of Southern Power’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. |
(101) | XBRL – Related Documents |
INS
|
XBRL Instance Document | |
SCH
|
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document | |
CAL
|
XBRL Taxonomy Calculation Linkbase Document | |
DEF
|
XBRL Definition Linkbase Document | |
LAB
|
XBRL Taxonomy Label Linkbase Document | |
PRE
|
XBRL Taxonomy Presentation Linkbase Document |
149
By
|
Thomas A. Fanning | ||||
|
Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer | ||||
|
(Principal Executive Officer) | ||||
|
|||||
By
|
Art P. Beattie | ||||
|
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer | ||||
|
(Principal Financial Officer) | ||||
|
|||||
By
|
/s/ Melissa K. Caen
|
150
By
|
Charles D. McCrary | ||||
|
President and Chief Executive Officer | ||||
|
(Principal Executive Officer) | ||||
|
|||||
By
|
Philip C. Raymond | ||||
|
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer | ||||
|
(Principal Financial Officer) | ||||
|
|||||
By
|
/s/ Melissa K. Caen
|
151
|
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY | |||||
By
|
W. Paul Bowers | |||||
|
President and Chief Executive Officer | |||||
|
(Principal Executive Officer) | |||||
|
||||||
By
|
Ronnie R. Labrato | |||||
|
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer | |||||
|
(Principal Financial Officer) | |||||
|
||||||
By
|
/s/ Melissa K. Caen
|
152
|
GULF POWER COMPANY | |||||
By
|
Mark A. Crosswhite | |||||
|
President and Chief Executive Officer | |||||
|
(Principal Executive Officer) | |||||
|
||||||
By
|
Richard S. Teel | |||||
|
Vice President and Chief Financial Officer | |||||
|
(Principal Financial Officer) | |||||
|
||||||
By
|
/s/ Melissa K. Caen
|
153
|
MISSISSIPPI POWER COMPANY | |||||
By
|
Edward Day, VI | |||||
|
President and Chief Executive Officer | |||||
|
(Principal Executive Officer) | |||||
|
||||||
By
|
Moses H. Feagin | |||||
|
Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer | |||||
|
(Principal Financial Officer) | |||||
|
||||||
By
|
/s/ Melissa K. Caen
|
154
|
SOUTHERN POWER COMPANY | |||||
By
|
Oscar C. Harper, IV | |||||
|
President and Chief Executive Officer | |||||
|
(Principal Executive Officer) | |||||
|
||||||
By
|
Michael W. Southern | |||||
|
Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer | |||||
|
(Principal Financial Officer) | |||||
By
|
/s/ Melissa K. Caen
|
155
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
---|
DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
---|
No information found
Customers
Suppliers
Supplier name | Ticker |
---|---|
ABB Ltd | ABB |
Clarivate Plc | CCC |
CMS Energy Corporation | CMS |
CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | CNP |
Dominion Energy, Inc. | D |
General Electric Company | GE |
Price
Yield
Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
---|