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SSE Plc’s 2 Greatest Strengths

Two standout factors supporting an investment in SSE plc (LON: SSE).

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When I think of electricity and gas utility company SSE (LSE: SSE) (NASDAQOTH:SSEZY.US), two factors jump out at me as the firm’s greatest strengths and top the list of what makes the company  attractive as an investment proposition.

1) Diversified operations

SSE has electricity distribution operations in the North of Scotland and Southern England; electricity and gas supply contracts; gas production, distribution and storage businesses; and interests in electricity generating assets. That’s a good mix of operations from which the company earns around 97% of revenue in the UK and 3% in Ireland. With such a well-diversified utility business, good financial performance in any one business area could offset poorer performance in another.

Should you buy SSE shares today?

Before you decide, please take a moment to review this report first. Despite ongoing uncertainties from US tariffs to global conflicts, Mark Rogers and his team believe many UK shares still trade at substantial discounts, offering savvy investors plenty of potential opportunities to learn about.

That’s why this could be an ideal time to secure this valuable research – Mark’s analysts have scoured the markets to reveal 5 of his favourite long-term ‘Buys’. Please, don’t make any big decisions before seeing them.

centrica / sseTo illustrate the point, SSE delivered a 17.4% decline in adjusted earnings per share with its most recent half-time report and that performance was due to a mixed operating performance.  The energy distribution and transmission operation saved the day by producing 74% of operating profit with the remaining 26% coming mostly from electricity generation. Those figures carried the firm’s retail energy supply division, which delivered an operating loss over the period. In future periods, the various operations of the company could perform differently but the overall trading result seems set to benefit from the firm’s diversity, which helps mitigate trading risk.

 2) Steady cash flow

Gas and electricity customers have some choice but the reality is that it’s hard to change suppliers, and impossible to do so frequently, without incurring charges thanks to contract lock-in clauses. That adds up to utility customers being relatively ‘sticky’ and, of course, the product has great repeat-purchase credentials. All of which generates the great attraction for utility investors: steady cash flow:

Year to March 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Net cash from operations   (£m) (46) 1,689 2,050 1,708 1,977

SSE seems determined to remunerate investors with annual above-inflation increases in the dividend and that is one thing that depends on good cash flow. The firm reckons it has an unbroken record of better-than-inflation dividend-raising stretching back to 1999, which is impressive, and one reason why dividend-hunting investors flock to the shares. Such a well-engrained tradition is hard for any top executive to break, so it’s on that understanding that we entrust our capital with the firm.

However, despite the advantages outlined here, the trading environment isn’t easy for the utilities, so I’m looking forward to seeing how the company is coping when it updates the market with its full-year results due around 21 May.

What now?

SSE’s forward dividend yield is running at an attractive 6.6% for 2016.

Kevin does not own any SSE shares.

 

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