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TSE:EMA
This summary was created by AI, based on 10 opinions in the last 12 months.
Emera Inc (EMA-T) is recognized as a solid utility company with strong operational footprints in both Canada and the US, particularly in regions like Nova Scotia and Florida. Analysts appreciate its consistent dividend growth and the favorable regulatory environment in areas of operation. Despite concerns regarding past leverage and payout ratios, current reviews indicate a more stable financial standing, with prospects for growth driven by an increasing customer base and potential solar project expansions in Florida. The stock has seen significant price appreciation but is at all-time highs, making it a bit challenging to enter at current levels. Still, the general sentiment leans towards holding or cautiously accumulating shares due to its reliable income generation capabilities and promising long-term growth.
Utilities are her largest sector weight. Defensive, regulated earnings. Secular trend as we transition off fossil fuels. Long-term growth opportunities. Biggest asset is in Florida, a good jurisdiction. Stock came off due to hurricanes. Yield is 5.5%, grows at a small rate.
(Note short timeframe.) Defensive. Will benefit from interest rates coming down. Asset base should grow ~7% a year, dividend by 4-5% a year. Doing what they say they will. Additional asset sales to bring debt down; with interest rates coming down, may not need to sell as much.
Operates in Florida, which has one of the fastest-growing populations.
Near term, lots of $$ coming into utilities partly because of rate cuts. That's fine. Saw generational low interest rates in 2020, and we're going to see rates ratchet slowly higher for next 15-20 years. So inflation and rates are going to be stickier, making bond proxies harder longer term.
So you need to make sure you have dividend growth. Lean toward dividend growth, rather than high dividend but low growth. He'd prefer CPX, a smaller company with better record of dividend growth, technically a lot better.
Some asset sales. Next asset sale should be a catalyst, as will interest rate cuts. Lower dividend outlook hurt, growth only 1%. Stock rose in July with the rotation and bond yields coming down. He likes power names with price to growth of about 1. This one doesn't, but 5-7% EPS growth plus dividend ~6% gives you that at a lot cheaper than H or FTS.
Bumps along the road, but the price has appreciated. Utilities are always levered, so as rates go up, there's more interest expense on the balance sheet and less profit hits the bottom line. Rates coming down have helped EMA's profit. Over time, expectation is that it will be the better choice. Yield is north of 5%.