Sempra Energy Delivers on Earnings Growth in the First Quarter

Now that Sempra Energy (NYSE: SRE) has squashed most fears that its Cameron liquefied natural gas export terminal was behind schedule, investors can focus on the more important things. Namely, how the company is performing today and how it can translate today's performance into funding for its ambitious growth plans. On that end, it did a reasonably good job this quarter, with steadily growing revenue and earnings.

Here's a brief look at Sempra's most recent quarter, what management thinks it needs to do to realize those growth plans, and what that means for investors over the long term.

Image source: Getty Images.

By the numbers

Metric Q1 2017 Q4 2016

Q1 2016

Revenue $3,031 million $2,870 million $2,622 million
Adjusted earnings $438 million $383 million $404 million
GAAP earnings $441 million $379 million $353 million
Earnings per share $1.75 $1.51 $1.40

Data source: Sempra Energy earnings release. GAAP = generally accepted accounting principles.

It would seem that Sempra's most recent quarterly results were quite good. Both adjusted and GAAP earnings were up considerably from the prior quarter. One thing to always keep in mind, though, is that Sempra's earnings are better in the winter months because of seasonal natural gas demand for home heating. The difference betweenSempra's year-over-year results mostly has to do with an impairment related to the sale of the Rockies Express pipeline and a tax adjustment for its Mexican business.

In the fourth quarter of 2016, Sempra's management changed the way in which it reports its various business segments. Now, all of its separate utility businesses in the U.S. and South America are consolidated into its utility business, while its IEnova investment in Mexico, its renewable power business, its midstream infrastructure, and its liquefied natural gas business are all reported under infrastructure.

The one thing that is challenging about this new reporting style is how to determine what parts of each segment are performing well. Based on these results, though, we can assume that higher natural gas sales drove improved utility results and infrastructureimproved compared to this time last year from those one-time adjustments mentioned above.

Data source: Sempra Energy earnings release. Chart by author.

The highlights

This most recent earnings release came less than a month after Sempra's analyst day presentation, so there wasn't much news for the company to report. The one thing that management did highlight is that it has an extensive suite of projects slated to come on line soon, one of which is the $900 million tied up in three natural gas pipelines owned by its IEnova subsidiary that will start commercial operations in the second quarter.

What management had to say

CEO Debra Reed's comments on the most recent quarter were quite brief because of the recent analyst day presentation. So instead, here is Reed's statement from its analyst day on how Sempra will measure success over the next five years.

What a Fool believes

One peculiar element of Sempra's earnings release and presentation was that management went out of its way to say that the company had $2.5 billion to $4.5 billion in incremental debt capacity today. On the surface, that seems like a strange bit of news to highlight, but it's an acknowledgment that it is wildly outspending its current operational cash flows on its utility improvement projects and these Mexican natural gas lines. All of this spending is even before the company will have to start dedicating significant spending toward the completion of its Cameron LNG export terminal.

So far, though, management has done a good job of timing capital expenditures such that it promotes fast growth without completely overburdening the balance sheet. Those are the traits that investors in big, stable utilities want. Sempra still has some high hurdles to clear to meet its ambitious 2017-2021 growth plan, but it has stayed on track thus far and is a company worth watching.

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Tyler Crowe has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.