NRG: Go Back to the Basics to Deliver Returns

 | Jul 03, 2023 12:33PM ET

NRG Energy (NYSE:NRG) is a mid-cap utility company specializing in retail electricity and natural gas sales. They power homes, businesses, and industrial sites across the U.S. and Canada. Besides energy sales, NRG is also involved in wholesale power generation (i.e., fossil fuel, nuclear, renewable) and other adjacent services. In this article, I explore the investment opportunity at NRG, in light of recent developments from activist investors.

My outlook for NRG is moderately bullish. I believe that their cheap valuation limits downside risk for investors. In terms of strategy, I think that there is substantial upside if NRG can successfully spin off Vivint. Management’s claims about synergies from the deal appear quite flimsy to me. Regardless, company leadership has minimal experience in the home services market and previous failures should’ve been paid more attention to. Elliott’s active involvement could also serve as a catalyst for share price appreciation.h2 Background/h2

As an integrated energy and utility provider, NRG’s core business is remarkably solid. From energy generation to distribution and sales, the company has previously demonstrated the ability to deliver strong returns to shareholders. However, NRG has lagged behind its peers in recent years due to operational and strategic mistakes.

By segment, the vast majority of NRG’s revenue comes from retail energy sales, accounting for $29.7 billion out of $31.5 billion total. By geography, the East market accounts for the largest portion of total revenue, but the Texas market is actually the most profitable one for NRG by gross margins. This is likely due to the fact that NRG has generation facilities within Texas, enabling it to drastically reduce costs for energy purchases.

Some of NRG’s peers include OGE Energy (NYSE:OGE), Pinnacle West Capital Corp (NYSE:PNW), and Portland General Electric (NYSE:GE). All these firms are mid-cap electric utilities, each focused on different geographic markets. Bigger players in the space include NextEra Energy Inc (NYSE:NEE) and Duke Energy (NYSE:DUK), but those firms aren’t quite comparable due to the greater scale and complexity of their operations.

NRG’s customer base skews more towards businesses than consumers, perhaps making it more vulnerable to cyclical changes in the economy: