Q: Hi 5i,
For Altagas, assuming that the WGL acquisition is completed successfully, and that no material additional business divestment is required in connection with the pending final regulatory approval, can you estimate what the implied funds from operations would be, on a ‘per share’ basis, of the combined entity (so after the conversion of all of the subscription receipts to common shares) and compare that to the FFO per share from ALA’s most recently reported year or quarter? I’m wondering if the WGL acquisition is expected to be accretive on that metric or whether the growth platform WGL is expected to provide would have to be proven successful before the profitability of the merger might become apparent.
How would you anticipate the shifting of ALA’s business mix to relatively more US-based business and a relatively larger regulated utility component might impact risk perceptions in the debt market (i.e. credit rating and cost of capital) and the equity market (business enterprise risk, current dividend and dividend growth plans). If those impacts would tend to be positive, what might be the most significant potentially offsetting factors (e.g. maybe debt metrics, rising interest rates, or the relevant regulatory authorities)?
Thanks!
For Altagas, assuming that the WGL acquisition is completed successfully, and that no material additional business divestment is required in connection with the pending final regulatory approval, can you estimate what the implied funds from operations would be, on a ‘per share’ basis, of the combined entity (so after the conversion of all of the subscription receipts to common shares) and compare that to the FFO per share from ALA’s most recently reported year or quarter? I’m wondering if the WGL acquisition is expected to be accretive on that metric or whether the growth platform WGL is expected to provide would have to be proven successful before the profitability of the merger might become apparent.
How would you anticipate the shifting of ALA’s business mix to relatively more US-based business and a relatively larger regulated utility component might impact risk perceptions in the debt market (i.e. credit rating and cost of capital) and the equity market (business enterprise risk, current dividend and dividend growth plans). If those impacts would tend to be positive, what might be the most significant potentially offsetting factors (e.g. maybe debt metrics, rising interest rates, or the relevant regulatory authorities)?
Thanks!