Item 8.01. Other Events
Texas 2019 Electric Rate Case
In August 2019, SPS filed an electric rate case with the PUCT seeking an
increase in retail electric base rates of approximately $141 million. The filing
requests an ROE of 10.35%, a 54.65% equity ratio, rate base of approximately
$2.6 billion and utilizes a historic 12 month period that ended June 30, 2019.
SPS' request was subsequently revised in March 2020 to approximately $130
million, based on a requested ROE of 10.1%, a 54.62% equity ratio, rate base of
approximately $2.6 billion and historic test year ended June 30, 2019.
On May 20, 2020, SPS, the PUCT Staff and various intervenors reached an
uncontested settlement, which includes:
•An electric rate increase of $88 million and a reset of the Transmission Cost
Recovery Factor to zero;
•ROE of 9.45% and equity ratio of 54.62% for allowance for funds used during
construction purposes;
•Depreciation rates:
•Tolk - 2037 end-of-life date;
•Hale - 25-year end-of-life date;
•All other generating units - end-of-life dates as proposed by SPS; and
•Transmission - 35% of the incremental change between existing depreciation
rates and rates proposed by SPS.
•Ring-fencing measures like those in other recent PUCT settlements, including:
•Credit agreements and indentures (e.g., no cross-default provisions);
•Financial covenants;
•Restrictions on pledging of assets and securing debt;
•Maintaining stand-alone credit facility and ratings; and
•Affiliate and non-affiliate limitations.
On Aug. 27, 2020, the PUCT approved the uncontested settlement with limited
non-substantial changes, including a 30-day reporting requirement on the
estimated amount of revenue under-recovery since Sept. 12, 2019 (i.e., the
retroactive effective date). SPS will submit a filing in the fourth quarter of
2020 to surcharge the final under-recovered amount.
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Certain information discussed in this Current Report on Form 8-K is
forward-looking information that involves risks, uncertainties and assumptions.
Such forward-looking statements, as well as assumptions and other statements are
intended to be identified in this document by the words "anticipate," "believe,"
"could," "estimate," "expect," "intend," "may," "objective," "outlook," "plan,"
"project," "possible," "potential," "should," "will," "would," and similar
expressions. Actual results may vary materially. Forward-looking statements
speak only as of the date they are made, and we expressly disclaim any
obligation to update any forward-looking information. Factors, in addition to
those discussed in Xcel Energy's and SPS' Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
year ended Dec. 31, 2019, and subsequent securities filings, that could cause
actual results to differ materially from management expectations as suggested by
such forward-looking information: uncertainty around the impacts and duration of
the COVID-19 pandemic; operational safety, including our nuclear generation
facilities; successful long-term operational planning; commodity risks
associated with energy markets and production; rising energy prices and fuel
costs; qualified employee work force and third-party contractor factors; ability
to recover costs, changes in regulation and subsidiaries' ability to recover
costs from customers; reductions in our credit ratings and the cost of
maintaining certain contractual relationships; general economic conditions,
including inflation rates, monetary fluctuations and their impact on capital
expenditures and the ability of Xcel Energy Inc. and its subsidiaries to obtain
financing on favorable terms; availability or cost of capital; our customers'
and counterparties' ability to pay their debts to us; assumptions and costs
relating to funding our employee benefit plans and health care benefits; our
subsidiaries' ability to make dividend payments; tax laws; effects of
geopolitical events, including war and acts of terrorism; cyber security threats
and data security breaches; seasonal weather patterns; changes in environmental
laws and regulations; climate change and other weather; natural disaster and
resource depletion, including compliance with any accompanying legislative and
regulatory changes; and costs of potential regulatory penalties.
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