The Yieldcos Stumble

The yieldco was created as a renewable energy investment analogue to the master limited partnerships. Internal Revenue Code Section 7704 states that at least 90% of an MLP’s income must come from qualified sources, and Section 613 further requires qualifying energy sources to be depletable resources or their derivatives such as crude oil, petroleum products, natural gas and coal. Renewable energy isn’t considered to be a qualifying energy source (something the proposed Master Limited Partnerships Parity Act seeks to rectify), therefore the yieldco structure was formed as a pseudo-MLP.

Like MLPs, yieldcos are meant to provide a predictable tax-deferred yield in exchange for cheap equity capital. They differ from MLPs in that they are not automatically exempted from the corporate income tax, but accelerated depreciation provisions of the tax code and other tax breaks offered to renewable power producers mean that they are able to report net losses for five years at least, while using cash flow to pay investors.

Yieldco distributions are treated as dividends under U.S. tax law to the extent they are paid out of current or accumulated earnings. If dividends are paid out in excess of current and accumulated earnings for a taxable year, the excess cash payments would be treated as a return of capital for federal income tax purposes. This reduces the adjusted tax basis of the shares, and any balance in excess of the adjusted basis is treated as a capital gain taxable only upon sale.

The yieldco era began to heat up in July 2013 when NRG Energy (NYSE: NRGY) spun off subsidiary holding solar generating assets into NRG Yield (NYSE: NYLD). Then TransAlta Renewables (TSE: RNW) listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange in August 2013, and Pattern Energy Group (NASDAQ: PEGI, TSE: PEG) listed simultaneously on the NASDAQ and Toronto Stock Exchange the next month.

In 2014 several more olar PV yieldcos launched. TerraForm Power (NASDAQ: TERP) was spun off from SunEdison (NYSE: SUNE). Abengoa Yield (NASDAQ: ABY) was formed by Abengoa (NASDAQ: ABGB). This year First Solar (NASDAQ: FSLR) and SunPower (NASDAQ: SPWR) jointly launched 8point3 Energy Partners (NASDAQ: CAFD).

How have these new yieldcos fared to date? Here are some metrics from several of the newer yieldcos sorted in order of descending enterprise value:

151119MLPIIyieldcotable

  • EV = Enterprise value in millions as of Nov. 16
  • EBITDA = Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization for the trailing 12 months (TTM), in millions
  • Debt/EBITDA = Net debt at the end of Q3 divided by TTM EBITDA
  • FCF = Levered free cash flow for TTM in billions
  • Total Return = Total share price return, adjusted for dividends, since IPO
  • Yield = Annualized yield based on the most recent quarterly distribution

As you can see, each of these yieldcos other than TransAlta Renewables has suffered a double-digit loss since its IPO. Debt for each of these offerings is quite high relative to a comparable midstream MLP. Perhaps not coincidentally, TransAlta has the lowest debt ratio among these yieldcos, and was also one of only two to generate positive FCF over the past 12 months. TerraForm Power, with the largest negative FCF in the group, has also performed the worst.

Perhaps due to a combination of the meltdown in the energy sector and a lack of track record for these new investment vehicles, the market hasn’t been kind to these offerings. Another concern may be the looming expiration in 2016 of the production and investment tax credits for renewable projects. Loss of the tax credit could stymie the continued growth required to maintain the tax shield on the distributions.

So, despite the fact that we are big fans here of renewable energy, we continue to advise to steer clear of the yieldcos at least until the dust settles. In any case, it should be clear that these should be considered very aggressive speculations suitable only for those with the highest risk tolerance.  

(Follow Robert Rapier on Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.)


Portfolio Update

Burned by SunEdison       

Since the last week’s issue, in which we covered SunEdison’s (NYSE: SUNE) gloomy earnings news, its share price has continued to nosedive. It’s now down nearly 50% since Nov. 10, which happens to be the day its shares slid 22% in response to growing worries about solvency.

The company is caught in a vicious cycle of illiquidity, in which the more obvious its unmet financing needs become, the harder it becomes to obtain the capital in light of its $12 billion debt pile. Its pledge of equity to various lenders threatens more margin calls beyond the one it;s already received. Management has just about squandered all of its credibility.

There remains the chance that SunEdison will withstand the storm, find a white knight and deliver on the tremendous promise we fell for along with many smart hedge fund managers. But “there’s a chance” is not an investment thesis, and there’s no way to model the likelihood of a rescue the company will obviously require at this point.

So we cannot continue to recommend it. Sell SUNE.             

— Igor Greenwald

 

Stock Talk

FawltyTowers

FawltyTowers

Hello

“Another concern may be the looming expiration in 2016 of the production and investment tax credits for renewable projects. Loss of the tax credit could stymie the continued growth required to maintain the tax shield on the distributions.”

In view of the five year approval of the extension of the renewable tax credit, what is your current view on the YeildCos, particularly TERP, which is now a recommended Buy in your MLP letter – or did I just answer my own question?

Thanks

Phil Hendricks

Igor Greenwald

Igor Greenwald

Yes, the investment tax credit extension is a big deal for yieldcos obviously, and I do think TERP is even more attractive at its current depressed levels as a result. It’s been a Hold as of this week though, simply because we’re choosing to concentrate on our Best Buys and not encourage people to deploy cash elsewhere until the market outlook improves. But I do believe that in a few years TERP’s current price will seem cheap even if its new residential assets perform as the skeptics now expect them to. Much of the asset base is under long-term power purchase agreements with investment-grade customers, it yields twice what the other yieldcos do and you have Tepper on the case to deter SunEdison from reaching for any more cookies.

John Arnold

John Arnold

Discuss what is happening with MLPL

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