Document
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, DC 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): May 1, 2018
____________________________________________________________
TerraForm Power, Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
______________________________________________________________
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Delaware | 001-36542 | 46-4780940 |
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) | (Commission File Number) | (I. R. S. Employer Identification No.) |
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7550 Wisconsin Avenue, 9th Floor, Bethesda, Maryland 20814
(Address of principal executive offices, including zip code)
(240) 762-7700
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
N/A
(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions (see General Instruction A.2 below):
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o | Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425) |
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o | Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12) |
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o | Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b)) |
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o | Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c)) |
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).
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Emerging growth company o |
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If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. o |
Item 2.02 Results of Operations and Financial Condition.
On May 1, 2018, TerraForm Power, Inc. (“TerraForm Power”) issued a press release announcing the reporting of its financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2018. The press release also reported certain financial and operating metrics of TerraForm Power as of or for the quarters ended March 31, 2018 and 2017. A copy of the press release is furnished with this Current Report on Form 8-K as Exhibit 99.1.
On May 1, 2018, TerraForm Power also posted presentation materials to the Investors section of its website at http://www.terraformpower.com, which were made available in connection with a previously announced May 2, 2018 investor conference call. A copy of the presentation is furnished herewith as Exhibit 99.2.
On May 1, 2018, TerraForm Power also posted a letter to shareholders to the Investors section of its website at http://www.terraformpower.com. A copy of the letter is furnished herewith as Exhibit 99.3.
In the attached press release, presentation, and letter, TerraForm Power discloses items not prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States (“GAAP”), or non-GAAP financial measures (as defined in Regulation G promulgated by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission). A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures is contained in the attached press release and presentation.
The information in this Current Report on Form 8-K (including the exhibits attached hereto) shall not be deemed “filed” for the purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), or otherwise subject to the liabilities of that Section. The information in this Current Report on Form 8-K (including the exhibits attached hereto) shall not be incorporated by reference into any filing or other document under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act, except as shall be expressly set forth by specific reference in such filing or document.
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements. Except for historical information contained in this Form 8-K and the press release, presentation, and letter attached as exhibits hereto, this Form 8-K and the press release, presentation, and letter contain forward-looking statements which involve certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by these statements. Please refer to the cautionary note in the press release and presentation regarding these forward-looking statements.
Item 9.01 Financial Statement and Exhibits.
(d) Exhibits
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Exhibit No. | Description |
99.1 | |
99.2 | |
99.3 | |
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
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| TERRAFORM POWER, INC. |
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Date: May 1, 2018 | By: | /s/ Matthew Berger |
| Name: | Matthew Berger |
| Title: | Chief Financial Officer |
Exhibit
Exhibit 99.1
TerraForm Power Reports First Quarter 2018 Results
BETHESDA, Md., May. 1, 2018 (GLOBENEWSWIRE) -- TerraForm Power, Inc. (Nasdaq: TERP) (“TerraForm Power”) today reported financial results for the three months ended March 31, 2018. For the first quarter of 2018, TerraForm Power’s results were significantly improved with CAFD of $23 million, compared with $19 million in the first quarter of 2017. Excluding the one-time impact of outages related to the Raleigh wind facility, CAFD was $29 million.
Recent Highlights
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• | In advanced negotiations with an original equipment manufacturer to provide a full-wrap, long-term service contract covering all of our wind fleet that features a fixed price that is consistent with our business plan and attractive availability guarantees; contract execution expected in the coming weeks |
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• | Received regulatory approval to launch an accretive tender offer to acquire 100% of Saeta Yield (“Saeta”), a European renewable power company with 1,000 Megawatts (“MW”) of recently constructed wind and solar assets |
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• | Declared a Q2 2018 dividend of $0.19 per share, implying $0.76 per share on an annual basis |
Results
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| | |
$ in millions, except per share amounts | 3 Months Ended 3/31/2018 | 3 Months Ended 3/31/2017 |
Generation (GWh) 1 | 1,834 | 1,982 |
Net Loss | $(76) | $(56) |
Earnings (Loss) per Share 2 | 0.56 | (0.37) |
Adj. EBITDA 3 | 96 | 103 |
CAFD 3 | 23 | 19 |
per Share 3,4 | 0.16 | 0.14 |
Results (excluding impact of outages related to Raleigh)
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$ in millions, except per share amounts | 3 Months Ended 3/31/2018 | 3 Months Ended 3/31/2017 |
Adj. EBITDA 3,5 | $102 | $103 |
CAFD 3,5 | 29 | 19 |
per Share 3,4,5 | 0.20 | 0.14 |
1 Amount in 2017 is adjusted for sale of our UK and Residential portfolios.
2 Earnings per share for the three months ended March 31, 2018 includes the impact of a $145.0 million net loss allocated to non-controlling interests resulting from changes in tax rates effective January 1, 2018.
3 Non-GAAP measures. See “Calculation and Use of Non-GAAP Measures” and “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures” sections. Amounts in 2017 adjusted for sale of our UK and Residential portfolios.
4 Diluted earnings (loss) per share is calculated based on the net income (loss) attributable to Class A common stockholders divided by the weighted average number of shares outstanding. CAFD per share calculated on shares outstanding of Class A common stock and Class B common stock on March 31. For the three months ended March 31, 2018, Class A common stock shares outstanding totaled 148.1 million (three months ended March 31, 2017: 92.2 million). For three months ended March 31, 2018, there were no Class B common stock shares outstanding (three months ended March 31, 2017: 48.2 million).
5 Excluding the impact of outages related to Raleigh.
“We have made significant progress in executing our business plan, which is resilient to macroeconomic factors and capital market volatility,” said John Stinebaugh, CEO of TerraForm Power. “After closing the Saeta acquisition this summer, our growth over the next five years will be driven primarily by executing our cost savings plan, accretion from the acquisition and organic growth initiatives, with limited need to issue equity.”
Growth Initiatives
Over the past few months, we have made significant progress executing an outsourcing agreement for all of our wind fleet. We are currently in advanced negotiations with an original equipment manufacturer to provide a full-wrap, long-term service agreement (“LTSA”). The scope of the LTSA would include comprehensive wind turbine operations and maintenance (O&M) as well as other balance of plant services for a term of 10 years, with flexibility to terminate early. The agreement would also lock in pricing and provide availability guarantees that are consistent with our business plan. We anticipate finalizing the agreement within the next few weeks. While we expect a modest amount of transition costs in order to implement the agreement, we should begin realizing cost savings in the second half of 2018. Combined with the $10 million in cost savings we expect to achieve on a run rate basis by the end of the second quarter, we are confident we will realize approximately $25 million in annual cost savings over the next two to three years.
In April, we received approval from Spain’s National Securities Market Commission (CNMV) of the prospectus for our tender offer to acquire Saeta, including approval of our €12.20 per share offer price as a fair price for a delisting tender offer. Saeta is a European renewable power company with 1,000 MW of wind and solar capacity that has an average remaining life in excess of 23 years. It has historically produced very stable cashflow, with an average contract and/or regulatory life of approximately 14 years. Commencing this week, we will launch a voluntary tender offer to acquire 100% of Saeta, which is supported by irrevocable commitments to purchase over 50% of Saeta’s shares. To the extent we acquire over 90% of Saeta’s shares in the voluntary offer, we will immediately proceed with a merger to acquire the remainder of Saeta. If we acquire less than 90% of Saeta’s shares, we will be able to delist Saeta’s shares by means of a purchase order at the approved price of €12.20 per share, which we anticipate launching shortly after the close of the voluntary offer. In either case, we are very confident we will acquire the vast majority of Saeta’s shares through tender offers by mid-summer.
Since February, it has become apparent to us that the volatility in the capital markets will likely continue for some period of time. As a result, we believe that it is prudent to consider increasing the equity to fund the Saeta transaction from $400 million up to $650 million, which is consistent with our initial underwriting and target returns. If we do so, we believe this would further strengthen our balance sheet and ensure that we have ample access to liquidity. The remainder of the ~$1.2 billion purchase price would be funded with ~$350 million in non-recourse debt raised from TerraForm Power’s unencumbered assets and ~$200 million of cash released from Saeta’s balance sheet. With the incremental equity, the Saeta acquisition would still be very accretive to TerraForm Power’s CAFD per share, and we expect our proforma corporate debt-to-cash flow ratio will decline to within our 4.0x to 5.0x goal, furthering our long-term plan to establish an investment grade rating. With a strong balance sheet and nearly $1 billion of available liquidity under committed facilities after the acquisition closes, we would be well-positioned to make opportunistic acquisitions in this period of market turbulence should they arise.
In addition to opportunistic acquisitions such as Saeta, we are looking for ways to take advantage of investment opportunities within our existing portfolio and to build our pipeline of organic growth opportunities. We are in late stage negotiations to acquire a 6 MW portfolio of operating distributed solar generation assets located in California and New Jersey pursuant to a right of first offer (“ROFO”) associated with a prior acquisition. Expected returns are at the high end of our target range with potential upside from executing our business plan. We have a ROFO on an additional 15 MW of operating distributed solar assets with the same seller, which we may be able to exercise in phases over the next 9-18 months.
We are also progressing a number of opportunities to establish relationships with developers in North America and Europe whereby we may provide capital to fund their pipeline of shovel-ready development projects and add-on acquisitions. We are in discussions with a renewable power developer in Europe in which we would commit capital to fund a strategy to consolidate small, regulated solar facilities in Spain. We are targeting returns on this program that would be accretive to our target return for Saeta.
Operations
In mid-January, the failure of a single faulty blade caused the collapse of a tower at our Raleigh wind facility in Dillon, Ontario. While the incident did not cause any injuries or impact the broader community, it reduced our CAFD for the quarter by approximately $6 million. In order to determine the root cause of the blade failure, we removed from service all 70 turbines at Raleigh and Bishop Hill that utilize the same blades. After a thorough investigation and rigorous inspections of the blades, all turbines were returned to service between mid-March and the end of April.
Excluding outages related to Raleigh, our fleetwide performance was in-line with the same period in the prior year. In addition to the wind outsourcing agreement, we are making progress on our plan to enhance availability at our solar sites. We are in the process of evaluating each of our solar assets that have below average availability to determine the root cause of the underperformance. This will result in a performance improvement plant that should increase availability to our target of 97% and enhance the cash flow of
our solar fleet. Finally, the replacement of the battery energy storage system (BESS) at one of our wind farms in Maui is progressing on scope, schedule and budget.
Financial Results
Beginning this quarter, we will report CAFD using the definition that we disclosed last year, which we believe will provide a more meaningful measure for investors to evaluate our financial performance and our ability to pay dividends. As compared to preceding periods, CAFD has been revised to (i) exclude adjustments related to deposits into and withdrawals from restricted cash accounts, required by project financing arrangements, (ii) replace sustaining capital expenditures made during the quarter with the average long-term sustaining capital expenditures necessary to maintain the reliability and efficiency of our assets, and (iii) levelize debt service payments paid during the year rather than including the cash principal and interest payments made during a given quarter. For consistency purposes, we will also begin reclassifying into Adjusted EBITDA certain capital expenditures that we expect will be covered under our long-term service agreement and will be reported as O&M expense, prospectively. As a result of these changes, we expect less volatility in our quarterly CAFD than in previous years.
During the first quarter, our portfolio performed broadly in-line with expectations, excluding the impact of the outages related to Raleigh, delivering Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD of $102 million and $29 million, respectively. This represents a decrease in Adjusted EBITDA of $1 million but an increase of CAFD of $10 million compared to the same period last year. The decrease in Adjusted EBITDA was largely attributable to the transmission outage at Bishop Hill, which was partially offset by stronger resource at our utility scale solar facilities compared with the same period in the prior year. The increase in CAFD resulted from reduced interest expense that more than offset the decline in Adjusted EBITDA. Interest savings were driven by the attractive senior note, term loan B and corporate revolver refinancings completed in Q4 2017 as well as lower debt balances. For the first quarter, our total operating expenses on an annualized basis were $181 million, compared to total operating expenses of $191 million in 2017. The $10 million reduction reflects efficiencies from our organization structure and other cost savings initiatives. Deducting the nonrecurring lost revenue of $6 million related to Raleigh, Adjusted EBITDA was $96 million and CAFD was $23 million, representing a decline of $7 million, and an increase of $4 million for the quarter, respectively, compared to the same period in the prior year. We also recorded a non-cash asset impairment charge of $15 million due to the rejection of a Solar Renewable Energy Credit (“SREC”) contract with First Energy Solutions, which recently filed for bankruptcy.
Note that we have also enhanced our supplemental reporting package to better facilitate the assessment of our business by investors. Going forward, we will be providing an estimate of long-term average annual generation (LTA) by segment, which is defined as energy at the point of delivery, net of all recurring losses and constraints. Our LTA represents the level of production we expect to achieve by 2019 as we improve the performance of our fleet. In the short-term, we recognize that wind and irradiance conditions will vary from one period to the next. However, we expect our facilities will produce in-line with their long-term averages over time. We believe that comparing actual generation levels against LTA will enable investors to better assess the impact of an important factor that affects our business results.
Announcement of Quarterly Dividend
TerraForm Power today announced that, on April 30, 2018, its Board declared a quarterly dividend with respect to TerraForm Power’s Class A common stock of $0.19 per share. The dividend is payable on June 15, 2018, to shareholders of record as of June 1, 2018. This dividend represents TerraForm Power’s second dividend payment under Brookfield’s sponsorship.
About TerraForm Power
TerraForm Power owns and operates a best-in-class renewable power portfolio of solar and wind assets located primarily in the U.S., totaling more than 2,600 MW of installed capacity. TerraForm Power’s goal is to acquire operating solar and wind assets in North America and Western Europe. TerraForm Power is listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange (Nasdaq: TERP). It is sponsored by Brookfield Asset Management, a leading global alternative asset manager with more than $285 billion of assets under management.
For more information about TerraForm Power, please visit: www.terraformpower.com.
Contacts for Investors / Media:
Chad Reed
TerraForm Power
investors@terraform.com
Quarterly Earnings Call Details
Investors, analysts and other interested parties can access TerraForm Power’s 2018 First Quarter Results as well as the Letter to Shareholders and Supplemental Information on TerraForm Power’s website at www.terraformpower.com.
The conference call can be accessed via webcast on May 2, 2018 at 9:00 a.m. Eastern Time at https://edge.media-server.com/m6/p/ty7ocvs7, or via teleconference at 1-844-464-3938 toll free in North America. For overseas calls please dial 1-765-507-2638, at approximately 8:50 a.m. Eastern Time. A replay of the webcast will be available for those unable to attend the live webcast.
Safe Harbor Disclosure
This communication contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Forward-looking statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. These statements involve estimates, expectations, projections, goals, assumptions, known and unknown risks, and uncertainties and typically include words or variations of words such as “expect,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “intend,” “plan,” “seek,” “estimate,” “predict,” “project,” “goal,” “guidance,” “outlook,” “objective,” “forecast,” “target,” “potential,” “continue,” “would,” “will,” “should,” “could,” or “may” or other comparable terms and phrases. All statements that address operating performance, events, or developments that TerraForm Power expects or anticipates will occur in the future are forward-looking statements. They may include estimates of cash available for distribution (CAFD), dividend growth, cost savings initiatives, earnings, Adjusted EBITDA, revenues, income, loss, capital expenditures, liquidity, capital structure, future growth, and other financial performance items (including future dividends per share), descriptions of management’s plans or objectives for future operations, products, or services, or descriptions of assumptions underlying any of the above. Forward-looking statements provide TerraForm Power’s current expectations or predictions of future conditions, events, or results and speak only as of the date they are made. Although TerraForm Power believes its expectations and assumptions are reasonable, it can give no assurance that these expectations and assumptions will prove to have been correct and actual results may vary materially.
By their nature, forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those suggested by the forward-looking statements. Factors that might cause such differences include, but are not limited to, risks related to: risks related to the transition to Brookfield Asset Management Inc. sponsorship, including our ability to realize the expected benefits of the sponsorship; risks related to wind conditions at our wind assets or to weather conditions at our solar assets; risks related to the effectiveness of our internal controls over financial reporting; pending and future litigation; the willingness and ability of counterparties to fulfill their obligations under offtake agreements; price fluctuations, termination provisions and buyout provisions in offtake agreements; our ability to enter into contracts to sell power on acceptable prices and terms, including as our offtake agreements expire; our ability to compete against traditional and renewable energy companies; government regulation, including compliance with regulatory and permit requirements and changes in tax laws, market rules, rates, tariffs, environmental laws and policies affecting renewable energy; risks related to the proposed relocation of the Company’s headquarters; the condition of the debt and equity capital markets and our ability to borrow additional funds and access capital markets, as well as our substantial indebtedness and the possibility that we may incur additional indebtedness going forward; operating and financial restrictions placed on us and our subsidiaries related to agreements governing indebtedness; risks related to the expected timing and likelihood of completion of the tender offer for the shares of Saeta Yield, S.A., including the timing or receipt of any governmental approvals; risks related to our financing of the tender offer for the shares of Saeta Yield, S.A., including our ability to issue equity on terms that are accretive to our shareholders and our ability to implement our permanent funding plan; our ability to successfully identify, evaluate and consummate acquisitions; and our ability to integrate the projects we acquire from third parties, including Saeta Yield, S.A., or otherwise and realize the anticipated benefits from such acquisitions.
The Company disclaims any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement to reflect changes in underlying assumptions, factors, or expectations, new information, data, or methods, future events, or other changes, except as required by law. The foregoing list of factors that might cause results to differ materially from those contemplated in the forward-looking statements should be considered in connection with information regarding risks and uncertainties, which are described in our Annual Report on Form 10-K and any subsequent Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, as well as additional factors we may describe from time to time in other filings with the SEC. We operate in a competitive and rapidly changing environment. New risks and uncertainties emerge from time to time, and you should understand that it is not possible to predict or identify all such factors and, consequently, you should not consider any such list to be a complete set of all potential risks or uncertainties.
TERRAFORM POWER, INC AND SUBSIDIARIES
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(In thousands, except per share data)
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| Three Months Ended March 31, |
| 2018 | | 2017 |
Operating revenues, net | $ | 127,547 |
| | $ | 151,135 |
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Operating costs and expenses: | | | |
Cost of operations | 37,323 |
| | 34,338 |
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Cost of operations - affiliate | — |
| | 5,598 |
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General and administrative expenses | 24,284 |
| | 36,725 |
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General and administrative expenses - affiliate | 3,474 |
| | 1,419 |
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Acquisition and related costs | 3,685 |
| | — |
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Impairment of renewable energy facilities | 15,240 |
| | — |
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Depreciation, accretion and amortization expense | 65,590 |
| | 60,987 |
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Total operating costs and expenses | 149,596 |
| | 139,067 |
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Operating (loss) income | (22,049 | ) | | 12,068 |
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Other expenses: | | | |
Interest expense, net | 53,554 |
| | 68,312 |
|
Loss on foreign currency exchange, net | 891 |
| | 587 |
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Other expenses, net | 849 |
| | 360 |
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Total other expenses, net | 55,294 |
| | 69,259 |
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Loss before income tax benefit | (77,343 | ) | | (57,191 | ) |
Income tax benefit | (976 | ) | | (918 | ) |
Net loss | (76,367 | ) | | (56,273 | ) |
Less: Net (loss) income attributable to redeemable non-controlling interests | (2,513 | ) | | 835 |
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Less: Net loss attributable to non-controlling interests | (157,087 | ) | | (25,339 | ) |
Net income (loss) attributable to Class A common stockholders | $ | 83,233 |
| | $ | (31,769 | ) |
| | | |
Weighted average number of shares: |
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Class A common stock - Basic | 148,139 |
| | 92,072 |
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Class A common stock - Diluted | 148,166 |
| | 92,072 |
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| | | |
Earnings (loss) per share: | | | |
Class A common stock - Basic and diluted | $ | 0.56 |
| | $ | (0.37 | ) |
| | | |
Dividends declared per share: | | | |
Class A common stock | $ | 0.19 |
| | $ | — |
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TERRAFORM POWER, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(In thousands, except share and per share data)
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| | | | | | | |
| March 31, 2018 | | December 31, 2017 |
Assets | | | |
Current assets: | | | |
Cash and cash equivalents | $ | 157,833 |
| | $ | 128,087 |
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Restricted cash | 51,987 |
| | 54,006 |
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Accounts receivable, net | 70,346 |
| | 89,680 |
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Prepaid expenses and other current assets | 43,473 |
| | 65,393 |
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Due from affiliates | 4,856 |
| | 4,370 |
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Total current assets | 328,495 |
| | 341,536 |
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| | | |
Renewable energy facilities, net, including consolidated variable interest entities of $3,238,105 and $3,273,848 in 2018 and 2017, respectively | 4,719,808 |
| | 4,801,925 |
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Intangible assets, net, including consolidated variable interest entities of $810,724 and $823,629 in 2018 and 2017, respectively | 1,057,557 |
| | 1,077,786 |
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Restricted cash | 43,577 |
| | 42,694 |
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Other assets | 109,344 |
| | 123,080 |
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Total assets | $ | 6,258,781 |
| | $ | 6,387,021 |
|
| | | |
Liabilities, Redeemable Non-controlling Interests and Stockholders' Equity | | | |
Current liabilities: | | | |
Current portion of long-term debt and financing lease obligations, including consolidated variable interest entities of $80,564 and $84,691 in 2018 and 2017, respectively | $ | 413,249 |
| | $ | 403,488 |
|
Accounts payable, accrued expenses and other current liabilities, including consolidated variable interest entities of $40,109 and $34,199 in 2018 and 2017, respectively | 107,439 |
| | 88,538 |
|
Deferred revenue | 1,807 |
| | 17,859 |
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Due to affiliates | 3,369 |
| | 3,968 |
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Total current liabilities | 525,864 |
| | 513,853 |
|
| | | |
Long-term debt and financing lease obligations, less current portion, including consolidated variable interest entities of $831,074 and $833,388 in 2018 and 2017, respectively | 3,181,122 |
| | 3,195,312 |
|
Deferred revenue, less current portion | 13,134 |
| | 38,074 |
|
Deferred income taxes | 16,839 |
| | 18,636 |
|
Asset retirement obligations, including consolidated variable interest entities of $98,812 and $97,467 in 2018 and 2017, respectively | 153,557 |
| | 154,515 |
|
Other long-term liabilities | 38,155 |
| | 37,923 |
|
Total liabilities | 3,928,671 |
| | 3,958,313 |
|
| | | |
Redeemable non-controlling interests | 50,760 |
| | 58,340 |
|
Stockholders' equity: | | | |
Class A common stock, $0.01 par value per share, 1,200,000,000 shares authorized, 148,586,447 shares issued and 148,086,027 shares outstanding in 2018 and 2017 | 1,486 |
| | 1,486 |
|
Additional paid-in capital | 1,841,692 |
| | 1,866,206 |
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Accumulated deficit | (290,818 | ) | | (398,629 | ) |
Accumulated other comprehensive income | 30,360 |
| | 48,018 |
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Treasury stock, 500,420 shares in 2018 and 2017 | (6,712 | ) | | (6,712 | ) |
Total TerraForm Power, Inc. stockholders' equity | 1,576,008 |
| | 1,510,369 |
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Non-controlling interests | 703,342 |
| | 859,999 |
|
Total stockholders' equity | 2,279,350 |
| | 2,370,368 |
|
Total liabilities, redeemable non-controlling interests and stockholders' equity | $ | 6,258,781 |
| | $ | 6,387,021 |
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TERRAFORM POWER, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(In thousands)
|
| | | | | | | |
| Three Months Ended March 31, |
2018 | | 2017 |
Cash flows from operating activities: | | | |
Net loss | $ | (76,367 | ) | | $ | (56,273 | ) |
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by operating activities: | | | |
Depreciation, accretion and amortization expense | 65,590 |
| | 60,987 |
|
Amortization of favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts, net | 9,817 |
| | 9,827 |
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Impairment of renewable energy facilities | 15,240 |
| | — |
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Amortization of deferred financing costs and debt discounts | 2,684 |
| | 4,639 |
|
Unrealized loss (gain) on commodity contract derivatives, net | 2,148 |
| | (2,231 | ) |
Recognition of deferred revenue | (464 | ) | | (3,987 | ) |
Stock-based compensation expense | — |
| | 2,509 |
|
Unrealized loss on foreign currency exchange, net | 779 |
| | 748 |
|
Deferred taxes | (882 | ) | | 639 |
|
Other, net | 2,907 |
| | (22 | ) |
Changes in assets and liabilities: | | | |
Accounts receivable | (6,410 | ) | | (10,982 | ) |
Prepaid expenses and other current assets | 15,390 |
| | 7,024 |
|
Accounts payable, accrued expenses and other current liabilities | 18,527 |
| | 19,858 |
|
Due to affiliates | (599 | ) | | — |
|
Deferred revenue | 368 |
| | 186 |
|
Other, net | 3,361 |
| | 2,306 |
|
Net cash provided by operating activities | 52,089 |
| | 35,228 |
|
Cash flows from investing activities: | | | |
Capital expenditures | (2,720 | ) | | (2,076 | ) |
Proceeds from reimbursable interconnection costs | 4,084 |
| | — |
|
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities | 1,364 |
| | (2,076 | ) |
Cash flows from financing activities: | | | |
Revolving credit facility draws | 52,000 |
| | — |
|
Revolving credit facility repayments | (42,000 | ) | | (5,000 | ) |
Borrowings of non-recourse long-term debt | — |
| | 79,835 |
|
Principal payments on Term Loan and non-recourse long-term debt | (9,556 | ) | | (11,870 | ) |
Debt financing fees | (2,134 | ) | | (2,791 | ) |
Contributions from non-controlling interests in renewable energy facilities | 7,685 |
| | 6,935 |
|
Distributions to non-controlling interests in renewable energy facilities | (5,786 | ) | | (9,692 | ) |
Due to/from affiliates, net | 3,214 |
| | (4,841 | ) |
SunEdison investment | — |
| | 7,371 |
|
Payment of dividend | (28,008 | ) | | — |
|
Net cash (used in) provided by financing activities | (24,585 | ) | | 59,947 |
|
Net increase in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash | 28,868 |
| | 93,099 |
|
Net change in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash classified within assets held for sale | — |
| | 19,440 |
|
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash | (258 | ) | | (471 | ) |
Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at beginning of period | 224,787 |
| | 682,837 |
|
Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at end of period | $ | 253,397 |
| | $ | 794,905 |
|
Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures
Adjusted Revenue, Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD are supplemental non-GAAP measures that should not be viewed as alternatives to GAAP measures of performance, including revenue, net income (loss), operating income or net cash provided by operating activities. Our definitions and calculation of these non-GAAP measures may not necessarily be the same as those used by other companies. These non-GAAP measures have certain limitations, which are described below, and they should not be considered in isolation. We encourage you to review, and evaluate the basis for, each of the adjustments made to arrive at Adjusted Revenue, Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD.
Calculation of Non-GAAP Measures
We define Adjusted Revenue as operating revenues, net, adjusted for non-cash items including unrealized gain/loss on derivatives, amortization of favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts, net and other non-cash revenue items.
We define Adjusted EBITDA as net income (loss) plus depreciation, accretion and amortization, non-cash general and administrative costs, interest expense, income tax (benefit) expense, acquisition related expenses, and certain other non-cash charges, unusual or non-recurring items and other items that we believe are not representative of our core business or operating performance, as described further below.
We define “cash available for distribution” or “CAFD” as Adjusted EBITDA (i) minus cash distributions paid to non-controlling interests in our renewable energy facilities, if any, (ii) minus annualized scheduled interest and project level amortization payments in accordance with the related borrowing arrangements, (iii) minus average annual sustaining capital expenditures (based on the long-sustaining capital expenditure plans) which are recurring in nature and used to maintain the reliability and efficiency of our power generating assets over our long-term investment horizon, (iv) plus or minus operating items as necessary to present the cash flows we deem representative of our core business operations.
As compared to the preceding period, we revised our definition of CAFD to (i) exclude adjustments related to deposits into and withdrawals from restricted cash accounts, required by project financing arrangements, (ii) replace sustaining capital expenditures payment made in the year with the average annualized long-term sustaining capital expenditures to maintain reliability and efficiency of our assets, and (iii) annualized debt service payments. We revised our definition as we believe it provides a more meaningful measure for investors to evaluate our financial and operating performance and ability to pay dividends. For items presented on an annualized basis, we will present actual cash payments as a proxy for an annualized number until the period commencing January 1, 2018.
Furthermore, to provide investors with the most appropriate measures to assess the financial and operating performance of our existing fleet and the ability to pay dividends in the future, we have excluded results associated with our UK solar and Residential portfolios, which were sold in 2017, from Adjusted Revenue, Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD reported for all periods presented.
Use of Non-GAAP Measures
We disclose Adjusted Revenue because it presents the component of our operating revenue that relates to the energy production from our plants, and is, therefore, useful to investors and other stakeholders in evaluating the performance of our renewable energy assets and comparing that performance across periods in each case without regard to non-cash revenue items.
We disclose Adjusted EBITDA because we believe it is useful to investors and other stakeholders as a measure of financial and operating performance and debt service capabilities. We believe Adjusted EBITDA provides an additional tool to investors and securities analysts to compare our performance across periods and among us and our peer companies without regard to interest expense, taxes and depreciation and amortization. Adjusted EBITDA has certain limitations, including that it: (i) does not reflect cash expenditures or future requirements for capital expenditures or contractual liabilities or future working capital needs, (ii) does not reflect the significant interest expenses that we expect to incur or any income tax payments that we may incur, and (iii) does not reflect depreciation and amortization and, although these charges are non-cash, the assets to which they relate may need to be replaced in the future, and (iv) does not take into account any cash expenditures required to replace those assets. Adjusted EBITDA also includes adjustments for non-cash impairment charges, gains and losses on derivatives and foreign currency swaps, acquisition related costs and items we believe are infrequent, unusual or non-recurring, including adjustments for general and administrative expenses we have incurred as a result of the SunEdison bankruptcy.
We disclose CAFD because we believe cash available for distribution is useful to investors in evaluating our operating performance and because securities analysts and other stakeholders analyze CAFD as a measure of our financial and operating performance and our ability to pay dividends. CAFD is not a measure of liquidity or profitability, nor is it indicative of the funds needed by us to operate
our business. CAFD has certain limitations, such as the fact that CAFD includes all of the adjustments and exclusions made to Adjusted EBITDA described above.
The adjustments made to Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD for infrequent, unusual or non-recurring items and items that we do not believe are representative of our core business involve the application of management judgment, and the presentation of Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD should not be construed to infer that our future results will be unaffected by infrequent, non-operating, unusual or non-recurring items.
In addition, these measures are used by our management for internal planning purposes, including for certain aspects of our consolidated operating budget, as well as evaluating the attractiveness of investments and acquisitions. We believe these Non-GAAP measures are useful as a planning tool because it allows our management to compare performance across periods on a consistent basis in order to more easily view and evaluate operating and performance trends and as a means of forecasting operating and financial performance and comparing actual performance to forecasted expectations. For these reasons, we also believe these Non-GAAP measures are also useful for communicating with investors and other stakeholders.
The following tables present a reconciliation of Operating Revenues to Adjusted Revenue and net loss to Adjusted EBITDA to CAFD and has been adjusted to exclude asset sales in the UK and Residential portfolios:
|
| | | | | | |
| | | Three Months Ended March 31 |
(in thousands) | | | 2018 | 2017 |
Adjustments to reconcile operating revenues, net to adjusted revenue | | | |
| |
|
Operating revenues, net | | | $127,547 |
| $151,135 |
|
Unrealized (gain) loss on commodity contract derivatives, net (a) | | | 2,148 |
| (2,231) |
|
Amortization of favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts, net (b) | | | 9,817 |
| 9,827 |
|
Other non-cash items (c) | | | (416) |
| (3,433) |
|
Adjustment for Asset Sales | | | — |
| (6,596) |
|
Adjusted revenue | | | $139,096 |
| $148,702 |
|
Direct operating costs (d) | | | (43,383) |
| (45,738) |
|
Settled FX gain (loss) | | | (112) |
| 161 |
|
Adjusted EBITDA | | | $95,601 |
| $103,125 |
|
Non-operating general and administrative expenses (e) | | | (18,065) |
| (25,374) |
|
Stock-based compensation expense | | | — |
| (2,509 | ) |
Acquisition and related costs | | | (3,685 | ) | — |
|
Depreciation, accretion and amortization expense (f) | | | (75,406 | ) | (70,814 | ) |
Impairment charges | | | (15,240 | ) | — |
|
Interest expense, net | | | (53,554 | ) | (68,312 | ) |
Income tax benefit | | | 976 |
| 918 |
|
Adjustment for asset sales | | | — |
| 3,147 |
|
Other non-cash or non-operating items (g) | | | (6,994) |
| 3,546 |
|
Net loss | | | ($76,367) |
| ($56,273) |
|
| | | | |
(in thousands) | | | Three Months Ended March 31 |
Reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA to CAFD | | | 2018 | 2017 |
Adjusted EBITDA | | | $95,601 |
| $103,125 |
|
Fixed management fee | | | (2,500 | ) | — |
|
Variable management fee | | | (787 | ) | — |
|
Adjusted interest expense (h) | | | (49,508 | ) | (60,011 | ) |
Levelized principal payments (i) | | | (24,350 | ) | (24,810 | ) |
Cash distributions to non-controlling interests (j) | | | (4,737 | ) | (9,602 | ) |
Sustaining capital expenditures (k) | | | (1,850 | ) | (244 | ) |
Adjustment for asset sales | | | — |
| (134 | ) |
Other (l) | | | 10,722 |
| 10,940 |
|
Cash available for distribution (CAFD) (m) | | | $22,591 |
| $19,264 |
|
| |
a) | Represents unrealized loss (gain) on commodity contracts associated with energy derivative contracts that are accounted for at fair value with the changes recorded in operating revenues, net. The amounts added back represent changes in the value of the energy derivative related to future operating periods, and are expected to have little or no net economic impact since the change in value is expected to be largely offset by changes in value of the underlying energy sale in the spot or day-ahead market. |
| |
b) | Represents net amortization of purchase accounting intangibles arising from past business combinations related to favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts. |
| |
c) | Primarily represents recognized deferred revenue related to the upfront sale of investment tax credits. |
| |
d) | In the three months ended March 31, 2017, reclassifies $2.3 million wind sustaining capital expenditure into direct operating costs, which will be covered under a new Full Service Agreement. |
| |
e) | Pursuant to the management services agreement, SunEdison agreed to provide or arrange for other service providers to provide management and administrative services to us. In the three months ended March 31, 2017, we accrued $0.4 million of costs incurred for management and administrative services that were provided by SunEdison under the Management |
Services Agreement that were not reimbursed by TerraForm Power and were treated as an addback in the reconciliation of net income (loss) to Adjusted EBITDA. In addition, non-operating items and other items incurred directly by TerraForm Power that we do not consider indicative of our core business operations are treated as an addback in the reconciliation of net income (loss) to Adjusted EBITDA. These items include extraordinary costs and expenses related primarily to restructuring, legal, advisory and contractor fees associated with the bankruptcy of SunEdison and certain of its affiliates (the “SunEdison bankruptcy”) and investment banking, legal, third party diligence and advisory fees associated with the Brookfield transaction, dispositions and financings. The Company’s normal general and administrative expenses, paid by Terraform Power, are the amounts shown below and were not added back in the reconciliation of net income (loss) to Adjusted EBITDA ($ in millions):
| |
f) | Include reductions (increases) within operating revenues due to net amortization of favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts as detailed in the reconciliation of Adjusted Revenue. |
| |
g) | Represents other non-cash items as detailed in the reconciliation of Adjusted Revenue and associated footnote and certain other items that we believe are not representative of our core business or future operating performance, including but not limited to: loss (gain) on foreign exchange (“FX”), unrealized loss on commodity contracts, loss on investments and receivables with affiliate, loss on disposal of renewable energy facilities, and wind sustaining capital expenditure previously reclassified. |
| |
h) | Represents project-level and other interest expense and interest income attributed to normal operations. The reconciliation from Interest expense, net as shown on the Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statement of Operations to adjusted interest expense applicable to CAFD is as follows: |
|
| | | |
$ in millions | Q1 2018 | Q1 2017 |
Interest expense, net | ($54) |
| ($68) |
Amortization of deferred financing costs and debt discounts | 3 |
| 5 |
Adjustment for asset sales | — |
| 4 |
Other | 1 |
| (1) |
Adjusted interest expense | ($50) |
| ($60) |
| |
i) | Represents levelized project-level and other principal debt payments to the extent paid from operating cash. |
| |
j) | Represents cash distributions paid to non-controlling interests in our renewable energy facilities. The reconciliation from Distributions to non-controlling interests as shown on the Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows to Cash distributions to non-controlling interests, net for the three months ended March 31, 2018 and 2017 is as follows: |
|
| | | |
$ in millions | Q1 2018 | Q1 2017 |
Distributions to non-controlling interests | ($6) | ($10) |
|
Adjustment for non-operating cash distributions | 1 | — |
|
Cash distributions to non-controlling interests, net | ($5) | ($10) |
|
| |
k) | Represents long-term average sustaining capex starting in 2018 to maintain reliability and efficiency of the assets. |
| |
l) | Represents other cash flows as determined by management to be representative of normal operations including, but not limited to, wind plant “pay as you go” contributions received from tax equity partners, interconnection upgrade reimbursements, major maintenance reserve releases or (additions), and releases or (postings) of collateral held by counterparties of energy market hedges for certain wind plants. |
| |
m) | CAFD in 2017 was recast as follows to present the levelized principal payments and adjusted interest expense in order to reduce volatility in reported CAFD. In the twelve months ended December 31, 2017, CAFD remained $88 million as reported previously. |
|
| | | | | |
$ in millions | Q1 2017 | Q2 2017 | Q3 2017 | Q4 2017 | 2017 |
Cash available for distribution (CAFD) before debt service reported | $104 | $120 | $106 | $91 | $421 |
Levelized principal payments | (25) | (25) | (25) | (24) | (99) |
Adjusted interest expense | (60) | (61) | (63) | (50) | (234) |
Cash available for distribution (CAFD), recast | $19 | $34 | $18 | $17 | $88 |
exhibit992terpq120188k
TERRAFORM POWER
Q1 2018 Supplemental
Three Months Ended March 31, 2018
Information
2
CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This communication contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. Forward-looking statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. These statements
involve estimates, expectations, projections, goals, assumptions, known and unknown risks, and uncertainties and typically include words or variations of words
such as “expect,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “intend,” “plan,” “seek,” “estimate,” “predict,” “project,” “goal,” “guidance,” “outlook,” “objective,” “forecast,” “target,”
“potential,” “continue,” “would,” “will,” “should,” “could,” or “may” or other comparable terms and phrases. All statements that address operating performance,
events, or developments that the Company expects or anticipates will occur in the future are forward-looking statements. They may include estimates of expected
cash available for distribution, earnings, revenues, capital expenditures, liquidity, capital structure, future growth, financing arrangements and other financial
performance items (including future dividends per share), descriptions of management’s plans or objectives for future operations, products, or services, or
descriptions of assumptions underlying any of the above. Forward-looking statements provide the Company’s current expectations or predictions of future
conditions, events, or results and speak only as of the date they are made. Although the Company believes its expectations and assumptions are reasonable, it
can give no assurance that these expectations and assumptions will prove to have been correct and actual results may vary materially.
Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations, or cautionary statements, are listed below and further disclosed under
the section entitled Item 1A. Risk Factors: risks related to the transition to Brookfield Asset Management Inc. sponsorship, including our ability to realize the
expected benefits of the sponsorship; risks related to wind conditions at our wind assets or to weather conditions at our solar assets; risks related to the
effectiveness of our internal controls over financial reporting; pending and future litigation; the willingness and ability of counterparties to fulfill their obligations
under offtake agreements; price fluctuations, termination provisions and buyout provisions in offtake agreements; our ability to enter into contracts to sell power on
acceptable prices and terms, including as our offtake agreements expire; our ability to compete against traditional and renewable energy companies; government
regulation, including compliance with regulatory and permit requirements and changes in tax laws, market rules, rates, tariffs, environmental laws and policies
affecting renewable energy; risks related to the expected relocation of the Company’s headquarters; the condition of the debt and equity capital markets and our
ability to borrow additional funds and access capital markets, as well as our substantial indebtedness and the possibility that we may incur additional indebtedness
going forward; operating and financial restrictions placed on us and our subsidiaries related to agreements governing indebtedness; risks related to the expected
timing and likelihood of completion of the tender offer for the shares of Saeta Yield, S.A., including the timing or receipt of any governmental approvals; risks
related to our financing of the tender offer for the shares of Saeta Yield, S.A., including our ability to issue equity on terms that are accretive to our shareholders
and our ability to implement our permanent funding plan; our ability to successfully identify, evaluate and consummate acquisitions; and our ability to integrate the
projects we acquire from third parties, including Saeta Yield, S.A., or otherwise and our ability to realize the anticipated benefits from such acquisitions.
The Company disclaims any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement to reflect changes in underlying assumptions, factors, or
expectations, new information, data, or methods, future events, or other changes, except as required by law. The foregoing list of factors that might cause results
to differ materially from those contemplated in the forward-looking statements should be considered in connection with information regarding risks and
uncertainties, which are described in our Annual Report on Form 10-K and any subsequent Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, as well as additional factors we may
describe from time to time in other filings with the SEC. We operate in a competitive and rapidly changing environment. New risks and uncertainties emerge from
time to time, and you should understand that it is not possible to predict or identify all such factors and, consequently, you should not consider any such list to be a
complete set of all potential risks or uncertainties.
3
Q1 2018 HIGHLIGHTS
Activities Highlights
• Announced offer to acquire 100% of Saeta Yield, a leading, publicly-listed European owner and
operator of wind and solar assets, located primarily in Spain. Received Spanish regulatory approval
for the acquisition and for our offer price of €12.20 per share; launching tender offer in early May;
expecting to close the transaction in June or July
• We are in advanced negotiations with an original equipment manufacturer to provide a full-wrap long-
term service contract covering all our wind fleet, which features a fixed price that is consistent with our
business plan and attractive availability guarantees
• In late stage negotiations to acquire a fully contracted 6 MW DG solar portfolio; includes a ROFO on
an additional 15 MW with the same seller, which we may be able to exercise in phases over the next
9-18 months
• In January one of the towers at our Raleigh, Ontario facility collapsed due to a single faulty blade. In
order to determine the root cause of the blade failure, we removed from service all 70 turbines across
the fleet that utilize the same blades. After a thorough investigation to determine the root cause of the
blade failure and rigorous inspections of the blades, the turbines have been returned to normal service
• In early February 2018, we upsized our corporate revolving credit facility to $600 million, TERP now
has over $1 billion of liquidity under committed facilities
• Paid quarterly dividend of $0.19 per share, or $0.76 per share on an annualized basis – a 6% increase
over previous guidance
4
2018 2017
2,022 2,022
1,834 1,982
$ 139 $ 149
96 103
(76) (56)
23 19
$ 0.56 $ (0.37)
$ 0.16 $ 0.14
1,897 1,982
$ 102 $ 103
$ 29 $ 19
Adjusted for sale of our UK solar and Residential portfolios.
Total generation (GWh) (1)(5)
(5)
Adjusted EBITDA(3)(5)
CAFD(3)(5)
(4)
(1)
(2)
(3)
Earnings per share for the three months ended March 31, 2018 includes the impact of a $145.0 million net loss
allocated to non-controlling interests resulting from changes in tax rates effective January 1, 2018.
Loss per share calculated on weighted average basic and diluted Class A shares outstanding. CAFD per share
calculated on shares outstanding of Class A common stock and Class B common stock on March 31. For three
months ended March 31, 2018, Class A common stock shares outstanding totaled 148.1 million (three months
ended March 31, 2017: 92.2 million). For three months ended March 31, 2018, there is no Class B common stock
shares outstanding (three months ended March 31, 2017: 48.2 million).
Excluding impact of Raleigh outages in 2018.
Non-GAAP measures. See “Calculation and Use of Non-GAAP Measures” and “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP
Measures” sections. Amounts in 2017 adjusted for sale of our UK and Residential portfolios.
Three months ended
(MILLIONS, EXCEPT AS NOTED)
Total generation (GWh)(1)
Mar 31
LTA generation (GWh)
Adjusted EBITDA(3)
Adjusted Revenue(3)
CAFD(3)
Excluding impact of Raleigh outages
Earnings (loss) per share(2)
CAFD per share(3)(4)
Net loss
• Our portfolio performed broadly in-line with expectations,
excluding the impact of the Raleigh outages, delivering
Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD of $102 million and $29
million
• Adjusted EBITDA $1 million down mainly due to
congestion in Texas Wind, partially offset by stronger
resource in Utility Solar
• CAFD $10 million higher due to lower debt service
driven by refinancing executed in Q4 2017, and lower
distributions to non-controlling interests, partially
offset by lower Adjusted EBITDA
• Including the nonrecurring lost revenue related to the
Raleigh outages, Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD were $96
million and $23 million
• Excluding the impact of the Raleigh outages, total
generation in Q1 2018 of 1,897 GWh, ~4% lower than Q1
2017, primarily due to curtailment in our Wind segment.
We experienced fleet availability of 95%
• Net loss of ($76) million was $20 million greater than Q1
2017 primarily due to lower Adjusted EBITDA and asset
impairment in DG Solar of $15 million due to FirstEnergy
Solutions bankruptcy
• Robust liquidity with over $1 billion of corporate liquidity
available to fund growth
Q1 2018 HIGHLIGHTS (continued)
Key Performance Metrics
Key Balance Sheet Metrics
Performance Highlights
1,834 GWh
Generation
~$1,037 million
Corporate Liquidity
$23 million
CAFD
Mar 31 Dec 31
2018 2017
1,037 855
3,637 3,643
5,966 6,071
(1)
(IN $ MILLIONS)
Corporate liquidity
Total long-term debt
Total capitalization(1)
Total capitalization is comprised of total stockholders ’ equity, redeemable non-controlling interests ,
and Total long-term debt.
5
Our Business
TerraForm Power’s goal is to own and operate high-quality solar and wind
generation assets in North America and Western Europe
Performance Targets and Key Measures
• Our objective is to deliver an attractive total return in the low teens per annum to
our shareholders
• Expect to generate return from a dividend backed by stable cashflow from our
assets and 5-8% annual dividend per share increase that we believe is
sustainable over the long term
• We target a dividend payout of 80-85% of CAFD
• Over the next five years, expect growth to be driven primarily by cost
savings, accretion from Saeta acquisition, and organic investments
• Opportunistic, value-oriented acquisitions expected to provide upside to our
business plan
• Growth in CAFD per share is a key performance metric as it is a proxy for our
ability to increase distributions
6
20+ years
15%
15-20 years
28%
10-15 years
39%
<10 years
18%
Our Operations
Owner and operator of a 2,606 MW diversified portfolio of high-quality solar and
wind assets, primarily in the US, underpinned by long-term contracts
Solar Wind Total
US 894 MW 1,453 MW 2,347 MW
International 181 MW 78 MW 259 MW
Total 1,075 MW 1,531 MW 2,606 MW
Solar
67%
Wind
33%
2.6 GW
Fleet
Large Scale Portfolio with Cash
Flow Diversified by Technology1
Long-Term Offtake Contract1
1. Weighted on 2017 project CAFD.
Average
~14 Years
Remaining
7
Generation and Revenue
• Long term average annual generation (LTA) is energy at the point of delivery net of all recurring losses and
constraints. Our LTA represents the level of production that we expect to achieve starting in 2019 as we improve the
performance of our fleet
• We compare actual generation levels against the long-term average to highlight the impact of an important factor that
affects the variability of our business results. In the short-term, we recognize that wind and irradiance conditions will
vary from one period to the next; however, we expect our facilities will produce electricity in-line with their long-term
averages over time
(GWh) (MILLIONS)
Actual Generation LTA Generation Operating Revenue, Net Adjusted Revenue(1)
Q1 2018 Q1 2017 Q1 Q1 2018 Q1 2017 Q1 2018 Q1 2017
Wind
Central Wind 669 778 779 32$ 40$ 40$ 49$
Texas Wind 430 479 454 6$ 13$ 6$ 10$
Hawaii Wind 41 39 66 8$ 7$ 8$ 7$
Northeast Wind 325 330 324 22$ 25$ 24$ 25$
1,465 1,626 1,623 68$ 85$ 78$ 91$
Solar
NA Utility Solar 204 189 219 23$ 21$ 24$ 22$
International Utility Solar 62 64 66 8$ 8$ 7$ 9$
DG 103 103 114 29$ 30$ 30$ 27$
369 356 399 60 59 61 58
Total adjusted for Asset Sales 1,834 1,982 2,022 128$ 144$ 139$ 149$
Asset Sold 50 - 7 - 7
Total 1,834 2,032 2,022 128$ 151$ 139$ 156$
(1) Non-GAAP measures. See "Calculation and Use of Non-GAAP Measures" and "Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures” sections. Adjusted for unrealized (gain) loss on commodity
contract derivatives, amortization of favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts, other non-cash items, and sale of our UK solar and Residential portfolios.
8
Selected Income Statement and Balance Sheet Information
The following tables present selected income statement and balance sheet information by operating
segment:
Income Statement Balance Sheet
2018 2017
(12) 6
(7) 5
(57) (67)
$ (76) $ (56)
49 47
54 65
(7) (9)
$ 96 $ 103
23 21
35 33
(35) (35)
$ 23 $ 19
Three months ended
Mar 31
(MILLIONS, UNLESS NOTED)
Net loss
Solar
Wind
Corporate
Total
Adjusted EBITDA
Solar
Wind
Corporate
Total
Total
CAFD
Solar
Wind
Corporate
2,814 2,897
3,342 3,401
103 89
$ 6,259 $ 6,387
1,101 1,145
882 884
1,946 1,929
$ 3,929 $ 3,958
1,713 1,752
2,460 2,517-
(1,843) (1,840)
$ 2,330 $ 2,429
Solar
Wind
Corporate
Total
Total
Total Equity and NCI
Solar
Wind
Corporate
Total
Total Liabilities
Solar
Wind
Corporate
As of
(MILLIONS) Mar 31, 2018 Dec 31, 2017
Total Assets
9
Operating Segments
10
Solar
The following table presents selected key performance metrics for our Solar segment:
Overview
• 1,075 MW of net capacity
• 515 Sites in diverse geographies
• Average remaining PPA life of 17 years
• Average offtaker credit rating of Aa3
• Diverse mix of high quality modules
Contracted cash flows
• Utility scale – generation contracted by
investment grade counterparties (such
as state utilities)
• Distributed generation – mostly behind
the meter generation contracted by
investment grade public offtakers
(municipalities, universities, schools,
hospitals), and commercial and
industrial offtakers
2018 2017
1,075 1,075
399 399
93% 93%
369 356
$ 61 $ 58
$ 166 $ 162
(1) Adjusted for sale of our UK solar and Residential portfolios.
(MILLIONS, UNLESS NOTED)
Average Adj. Revenue per MWh(1)
Adjusted Revenue (1)
Generation (GWh) (1)
LTA Generation (GWh)
Availability (%)
Capacity (MW)
Three months ended
Mar 31
11
Solar (continued)
• Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD were $49 million
and $23 million, respectively, versus $47
million and $21 million, respectively, in Q1
2017
• Adjusted EBITDA increased $2 million due
to higher average realized prices in DG
solar driven by greater SREC subscriptions
at strong prices in 2018, and higher
volumes in Utility Solar. These were
partially offset by an increase in costs
related to SunEdison sponsor subsidies,
which benefited 2017
• CAFD increased $2 million due to greater
Adjusted EBITDA, and lower distributions to
non-controlling interests than Q1 2017.
Project defaults in 2016 caused cash traps,
which increased distributions to non-
controlling interests in Q1 2017 as cash
was released
• Net loss of ($12 million) was $18 million lower
than Q1 2017 primarily due to an asset
impairment in DG Solar
• Availability was adversely impact in Q1 2018
primarily due to switch gear outages in Chile
Performance Highlights
2018 2017
61 58
(12) (11)
$ 49 $ 47
(14) (14)
(12) (12)
(3) (4)
3 4
$ 23 $ 21
49 47
(15) (20)
(30) (29)
(16) 8
$ (12) $ 6
(1 ) Adjusted for sale of our UK solar and Residential portfolios in 2017.
Depreciation and amortization
Other
Net (loss) income
(MILLIONS, UNLESS NOTED)
Adjusted revenue (1)
Direct operating costs (1)
Adjusted EBITDA (1)
Adjusted interest expense (1)
Levelized principal repayments
Distributions to NCI
Other
CAFD (1)
Adjusted EBITDA
Interest expense
Mar 31
Three months ended
Actual Generation (GWh) Average Adj. Revenue per MWh
(MILLIONS, EXCEPT AS NOTED) Q1 2018 Q1 2017 Q1 2018 Q1 2017
NA Utility Solar 204 189 118$ 116$
International Utility Solar 62 64 120 132
DG 103 103 289 266
Total 369 356 166$ 162$
12
Wind
Overview
• 1,531 MW of net capacity
• 18 Sites in diverse geographies
• Average remaining PPA life of 12 years
• Average offtaker credit rating of A1
• Recently constructed assets (average 5
years old) with primarily top tier turbines
Contracted cash flows
• Substantially all generation is contracted
with investment grade counterparties,
such as state utilities or financial
institutions
The following table presents selected key performance metrics for our Wind segment:
2018 2017
1,531 1,531
1,623 1,623
95% 95%
1,528 1,626
$ 84 $ 91
$ 53 $ 56
Capacity (MW)
(1) Excluding impact related to Raleigh outages in 2018.
Three months ended
Mar 31
(MILLIONS, UNLESS NOTED)
Adjusted Revenue (1)
Average Adj. Revenue per MWh
LTA Generation
Adjusted Availability (%)(1)
Generation (GWh) (1)
13
Wind (continued)
Performance Highlights
• Excluding the impact of the Raleigh outages,
Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD were $60 million and
$41 million, respectively, versus $65 million and
$33 million, respectively, in Q1 2017
• Adjusted EBITDA decreased $5 million versus
Q1 2017, primarily due to scheduled grid
outage at Bishop Hill in January, partially
offset by lower major maintenance versus Q1
2017
• CAFD was $8 million higher than Q1 2017
due to refinancing of the MidCo term loan with
corporate level debt, partially offset by the
impacts to Adjusted EBITDA
• Including the nonrecurring lost revenue related to
the Raleigh outages, Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD
were $54 million and $35 million, respectively,
versus $65 million and $33 million, respectively, in
Q1 2017
• Net loss was ($7) million, $12 million lower than Q1
2017, due to lower Adjusted EBITDA, higher
depreciation, partially offset by repayment of the
MidCo term loan
• Sustaining capital expenditures are reported based
on long term averages starting in 2018. The wind
fleet will record $7 million annually ($2 million per
quarter), substantially higher than the $2 million
recorded in FY 2017
Actual Generation (GWh) Average Adj. Revenue per MWh
(MILLIONS, EXCEPT AS NOTED) Q1 2018 Q1 2017 Q1 2018 Q1 2017
Central Wind 669 778 60$ 62$
Texas Wind 430 479 14 20
Hawaii Wind 41 39 190 190
Northeast Wind 325 330 73 77
Total 1,465 1,626 53$ 56$
2018 2017
78 91
(24) (26)
$ 54 $ 65
(11) (20)
(12) (13)
(2) (6)
Sustaining capital expenditures (2) -
8 7
$ 35 $ 33
54 65
(11) (20)
(46) (41)
(4) 1
$ (7) ` 5
$ 60 $ 65
$ 41 $ 33
Adjusted EBITDA
CAFD
Excluding impact of Raleigh outages
Other
Net (loss) income
CAFD
Adjusted EBITDA
Interest expense
Depreciation and amortization
Adjusted EBITDA
Adjusted interest expense
Levelized principal repayments
Distributions to NCI
Other
(MILLIONS, UNLESS NOTED)
Adjusted revenue
Direct operating costs
Three months ended
Mar 31
14
Corporate
The following table presents our Corporate segment’s
financial results:
Performance Highlights
• Direct operating costs decreased by $2
million compared to Q1 2017 primarily
due to lower compensation
• Interest expense was broadly in line with
Q1 2017, primarily driven by refinancing
of our high yield bonds with interest
saving of ~200 bps, and lower interest
expense on our revolver due to a
significant lower balances, partially offset
by interest expense on the $350 million
Term Loan B issued in Q4 2017
• Non-operating general and administrative
expenses decreased by $7 million
primarily driven by higher legal fees and
consulting fees related to litigation and
transactions in Q1 2017
• Net loss of ($57) million was $10 million
lower than Q1 2017, primarily due to
reduction in non-operating costs
2018 2017
(7) (9)
$ (7) $ (9)
(3) -
(25) (26)-
$ (35) $ (35)
(7) (9)
(28) (28)-
1 1- -
(4) -- -
(18) (25)- -
(1) (6)
$ (57) $ (67)
Three months ended
Mar 31
(MILLIONS, UNLESS NOTED)
Direct operating costs
Adjusted EBITDA
Management fees
Income tax benefit
Acquisition and related costs
Other
Net loss
Adjusted interest expense
CAFD
Adjusted EBITDA
Interest expense
Non-operating general and administrative expens
15
Progress Versus Cost Savings Objectives
• On an annualized basis,
Q1 operating costs plus
base management fee of
$181 million, compared to
operating costs of $191
million on a same store
basis in 2017, illustrating
cost savings of $10 million
• Q1 Corporate operating
costs include $0.9 million
of audit fees, which were
concentrated in Q1 and
not reflective of the normal
quarterly run rate
Three months ended March 31
2018
(MILLIONS, UNLESS NOTED) Solar Wind Corp Total
Operating costs ($12) ($24) ($7) ($43)
Base management fee - - (2) (2)
Total operating costs ($12) ($24) ($9) ($45)
Annualized
2018
Solar Wind Corp Total
Operating costs ($48) ($97) ($25) ($171)
Base management fee - - (10) (10)
Total operating costs ($48) ($97) ($35) ($181)
Tw elve months ended December 31
2017
Solar Wind Corp Total
Operating costs (1) ($52) ($106) ($31) ($189)
Base management fee - - (2) (2)
Total operating costs ($52) ($106) ($33) ($191)
2018 vs 2017 total operating costs ($10)
(1) Operating costs in 2017 include $5.8 million of costs previously reported as
sustaining capex related to our w ind assets. These costs w ill largely be covered by
our recently signed FSA contracts and so are being reported for all periods as
operating costs.
16
We operate with sufficient liquidity to enable us to fund expected growth initiatives, capital expenditures, and distributions,
and to provide protection against any sudden adverse changes in economic circumstances or short-term fluctuations in
generation.
Principal sources of liquidity are cash flows from operations, our credit facilities, up-financings of subsidiary borrowings
and proceeds from the issuance of securities.
Corporate liquidity and available capital were $1,037 million and $1,210 million, respectively, as of March 31, 2018:
Liquidity
$ 73 $ 47
12 21
Cash available to corporate 85 68
Authorized credit facilities 600 450
Draws on credit facilities (70) (60)
Commitments under revolver (78) (103)
Undrawn Sponsor Line 500 500
952 787
$ 1,037 $ 855
73 60
95 97
5 3
$ 1,210 $ 1,015
Other project-level unrestricted cash
Project-level restricted cash
Project-level credit commitments, unissued
Available capital
(MILLIONS)
Unrestricted corporate cash
Project-level distributable cash
Credit facilities
Available portion of credit facilities
Mar 31
2018
Dec 31
2017
Corporate liquidity
17
Maturity Profile
We finance our assets primarily with project level debt that generally has long-term maturities that amortize
over the contract life, few restrictive covenants and no recourse to either TerraForm Power or other projects.
We have long-dated, staggered debt maturities. We have no meaningful maturities over next four years.
The following table summarizes our scheduled principal repayments, overall maturity profile and average
interest rates associated with our borrowings over the next five years:
Notes 7.6 $ - $ - $ - $ - $ - $ 1,500 $ 1,500 5.1%
Term Loan 4.6 3 4 4 4 336 - 350 4.6%
Revolver (1) 3.5 70 - - - - - 70 4.9%
Total corporate 6.9 73 4 4 4 336 1,500 1,920 5.0%
Utility scale 15.1 34 37 41 44 46 677 879 5.7%
Distributed generation 8.5 9 20 10 10 6 43 98 6.8%
Solar 14.4 44 57 51 53 53 720 977 5.9%
Wind 8.9 46 50 50 51 208 334 740 5.5%
Total non-recourse 12.0 90 107 101 104 261 1,054 1,717 5.7%
Total borrrowings 9.4 $ 163 $ 111 $ 105 $ 108 $ 597 $ 2,554 $ 3,637 5.3%
4% 3% 3% 3% 16% 70%
Revolver is classified as current in 2018 because the majority has been paid off in Q2 2018. The remaining balance and future borrowings are eligible to be rolled over for the duration of facilities’ term
Principal Repayments
Corporate borrowings
Non-recourse debt
2021 2022 Thereafter Total
Weighted
Average
Interest
Rate(MILLIONS)
Weighted
Average
Life
Remainder
of 2018 2019 2020
(1)
18
Our portfolio has a weighted-average remaining contract duration of ~14 years. Over the next five years, contracts
accounting for 10% of our expected generation expire. We are focused on securing long-term contracts to the extent
these contracts expire.
The majority of our long-term power purchase agreements are with investment-grade counterparties. The composition of
our counterparties under power purchase agreements is as follows:
• Public utilities: 70%
• Financial institutions: 21%
• Commercial and industrial customers: 5%
• Government institutions: 4%
The following table sets out our contracted generation over the next five years as a percentage of expected generation.
We currently have a contracted profile of approximately 95% of future generation and our goal is to maintain this profile
going forward.
Contract Profile
For the Year ended December 31 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
Contracted
Solar 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
Wind 93% 91% 86% 82% 80%
TERP 95% 93% 90% 86% 85%
Uncontracted
Wind 7% 9% 14% 18% 20%
TERP 5% 7% 10% 14% 15%
19
Appendix 1 - Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures
20
Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures
for the Three Months Ended March 31
(MILLIONS, EXCEPT AS NOTED) Solar Wind Corp Total Solar Wind Corp Total
Revenue $60 $68 $0 $128 $66 $85 $0 $151
Unrealized (gain) loss on commodity contract derivatives, net (a) - 2 - 2 - (2) - (2)
Amortization of favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts, net (b) 1 8 - 9 2 8 - 10
Other non-cash items (c) - - - - (3) - - (3)
Adjustment for asset sales - - - - (7) - - (7)
Adjusted revenues $61 $78 $0 $139 $58 $91 $0 $149
Direct operating costs (d) (12) (24) (7) (43) (11) (26) (9) (46)
Adjusted EBITDA $49 $54 ($7) $96 $47 $65 ($9) $103
Non-operating general and administrative expenses (e) - - (18) (18) - - (25) (25)
Stock-based compensation expense - - - - - - (3) (3)
Acquisition and related costs - - (4) (4) - - - -
Depreciation, accretion and amortization expense (f) (30) (46) - (76) (29) (41) (1) (71)
Impairment charges (15) - - (15) - - - -
Interest expense, net (15) (11) (28) (54) (20) (20) (28) (68)
Income tax benefit - - 1 1 - - 1 1
Adjustment for asset sales - - - - 3 - - 3
Other non-cash or non-operating items (g) (1) (4) (1) (6) 5 1 (2) 4
Net (loss) income ($12) ($7) ($57) ($76) $6 $5 ($67) ($56)
(MILLIONS, EXCEPT AS NOTED) Solar Wind Corp Total Solar Wind Corp Total
Adjusted EBITDA $49 $54 ($7) $96 $47 $65 ($9) $103
Fixed management fee - - (2) (2) - - - -
Variable management fee - - (1) (1) - - - -
Adjusted interest expense (h) (14) (11) (25) (50) (14) (20) (26) (60)
Levelized principal payments (i) (12) (12) - (24) (12) (13) - (25)
Cash distributions to non-controlling interests (j) (3) (2) - (5) (4) (6) - (10)
Sustaining capital expenditures (k) - (2) - (2) - - - -
Other (l) 3 8 - 11 4 7 - 11
Cash available for distribution (CAFD) (m) $23 $35 ($35) $23 $21 $33 ($35) $19
Three Months Ended Three Months Ended
March 31, 2018 March 31, 2017
Three Months Ended Three Months Ended
March 31, 2018 March 31, 2017
21
Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures
for the Three Months Ended March 31
a) Represents unrealized loss (gain) on commodity contracts associated with energy derivative contracts that are accounted for at fair value with the changes recorded in operating
revenues, net. The amounts added back represent changes in the value of the energy derivative related to future operating periods, and are expected to have little or no net economic
impact since the change in value is expected to be largely offset by changes in value of the underlying energy sale in the spot or day-ahead market.
b) Represents net amortization of purchase accounting related to intangibles arising from past business combinations related to favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts.
c) Primarily represents recognized deferred revenue related to the upfront sale of investment tax credits.
d) In the three months ended March 31, 2017, reclassifies $2.3 million wind sustaining capital expenditure into direct operating costs, which will now be covered under new Full Service
Agreement.
e) Pursuant to the management services agreement, SunEdison agreed to provide or arrange for other service providers to provide management and administrative services to us. In the
three months ended March 31, 2017, we accrued $0.4 million of costs incurred for management and administrative services that were provided by SunEdison under the Management
Services Agreement that were not reimbursed by TerraForm Power and were treated as an addback in the reconciliation of net income (loss) to Adjusted EBITDA. In addition, non-
operating items and other items incurred directly by TerraForm Power that we do not consider indicative of our core business operations are treated as an addback in the reconciliation
of net income (loss) to Adjusted EBITDA. These items include extraordinary costs and expenses related primarily to restructuring, legal, advisory and contractor fees associated with the
bankruptcy of SunEdison and certain of its affiliates (the “SunEdison bankruptcy”) and investment banking, legal, third party diligence and advisory fees associated with the Brookfield
transaction, dispositions and financings. The Company’s normal general and administrative expenses, paid by Terraform Power, are the amounts shown below and were not added back
in the reconciliation of net income (loss) to Adjusted EBITDA ($ in millions):
f) Includes reductions (increases) within operating revenues due to net amortization of favorable and unfavorable rate revenue contracts as detailed in the reconciliation of Adjusted
Revenue.
g) Represents other non-cash items as detailed in the reconciliation of Adjusted Revenue and associated footnote and certain other items that we believe are not representative of our core
business or future operating performance, including but not limited to: loss (gain) on foreign exchange (“FX”), unrealized loss on commodity contracts, loss on investments and
receivables with affiliate, loss on disposal of renewable energy facilities, and wind sustaining capital expenditure previously reclassified.
h) Represents project-level and other interest expense and interest income attributed to normal operations. The reconciliation from Interest expense, net as shown on the Unaudited
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Operations to adjusted interest expense applicable to CAFD is as follows:
Q1 2018 Q1 2017
$7 M $9 M
$ in millions Q1 2018 Q1 2017
Interest expense, net ($54) ($68)
Amortization of deferred financing costs and debt discounts 3 5
Adjustment for asset sales - 4
Other 1 (1)
Adjusted interest expense ($50) ($60)
22
i) Represents levelized project-level and other principal debt payments to the extent paid from operating cash.
j) Represents cash distributions paid to non-controlling interests in our renewable energy facilities. The reconciliation from Distributions to non-controlling interests as shown on the
Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows to Cash distributions to non-controlling interests, net for the three months ended March 31, 2018 and 2017 is as follows:
k) Represents long-term average sustaining capex starting in 2018 to maintain reliability and efficiency of the assets.
l) Represents other cash flows as determined by management to be representative of normal operations including, but not limited to, wind plant “pay as you go” contributions received from
tax equity partners, interconnection upgrade reimbursements, major maintenance reserve releases or (additions), and releases or (postings) of collateral held by counterparties of energy
market hedges for certain wind plants.
m) CAFD in 2017 was recast as follows to present the levelized principal payments and adjusted interest expense in order to provide period to period comparisons that are consistent and
more easily understood. In the twelve months ended December 31, 2017, CAFD remained $88 million as reported previously.
Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures
for the Three Months Ended March 31 (Continued)
$ in millions Q1 2018 Q1 2017
Distributions to non-controlling interests ($6) ($10)
Adjustment for non-operating cash distributions 1 -
Cash distributions to non-controlling interests, net ($5) ($10)
$ in millions Q1 2017 Q2 2017 Q3 2017 Q4 2017 2017
Cash available for distribution (CAFD) before debt service reported $104 $120 $106 $91 $421
Levelized principal payments (25) (25) (25) (24) (99)
Adjusted interest expense (60) (61) (63) (50) (234)
Cash available for distribution (CAFD), recast $19 $34 $18 $17 $88
23
Appendix 2 – Additional Information
24
Annualized Long-term Average Generation
GENERATION (GWh) (1) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total
Wind (2)
Central Wind 779 664 445 762 2,650
Texas Wind 454 472 349 438 1,713
Hawaii Wind 66 80 87 74 307
Northeast Wind 324 227 175 297 1,023
1,623 1,443 1,056 1,571 5,693
Solar (3)
NA Utility Solar 219 343 319 193 1,074
International Utility Solar 66 49 52 73 240
DG 114 182 174 101 571
399 574 545 367 1,885
Total 2,022 2,017 1,601 1,938 7,578
(1)
(2)
(3)
LTA is calculated on an annualized basis from the beginning of the year, regardless of the acquisition or commercial operation date.
Wind Long Term Average Annual Generation is the expected average generation resulting from simulations using historical wind speed data normally
from 1997 to 2016 (20 years), adjusted to the specific location and performance of the different wind farms.
Solar Long Term Average Annual Generation is the expected average generation resulting from simulations using historical solar irradiance level data
normally from 1998 to 2016 (19 years), adjusted to the specific location and performance of the different sites.
25
Calculation and Use of Non-GAAP Measures
Adjusted Revenue, Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD are supplemental non-GAAP measures that should not be viewed as alternatives to GAAP measures of performance, including
revenue, net income (loss), operating income or net cash provided by operating activities. Our definitions and calculation of these non-GAAP measures may not necessarily be the
same as those used by other companies. These non-GAAP measures have certain limitations, which are described below, and they should not be considered in isolation. We
encourage you to review, and evaluate the basis for, each of the adjustments made to arrive at Adjusted Revenue, Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD.
Calculation of Non-GAAP Measures
We define adjusted revenue as operating revenues, net, adjusted for non-cash items including unrealized gain/loss on derivatives, amortization of favorable and unfavorable rate
revenue contracts, net and other non-cash revenue items.
We define adjusted EBITDA as net income (loss) plus depreciation, accretion and amortization, non-cash general and administrative costs, interest expense, income tax (benefit)
expense, acquisition related expenses, and certain other non-cash charges, unusual or non-recurring items and other items that we believe are not representative of our core business
or future operating performance.
We define “cash available for distribution” or “CAFD” as adjusted EBITDA (i) minus cash distributions paid to non-controlling interests in our renewable energy facilities, if any, (ii) minus
annualized scheduled interest and project level amortization payments in accordance with the related borrowing arrangements, (iii) minus average annual sustaining capital
expenditures (based on the long-sustaining capital expenditure plans) which are recurring in nature and used to maintain the reliability and efficiency of our power generating assets
over our long-term investment horizon, (iv) plus or minus operating items as necessary to present the cash flows we deem representative of our core business operations.
As compared to the preceding period, we revised our definition of CAFD to (i) exclude adjustments related to deposits into and withdrawals from restricted cash accounts, required by
project financing arrangements, (ii) replace sustaining capital expenditures payment made in the year with the average annualized long-term sustaining capital expenditures to maintain
reliability and efficiency of our assets, and (iii) annualized debt service payments. We revised our definition as we believe it provides a more meaningful measure for investors to
evaluate our financial and operating performance and ability to pay dividends. For items presented on an annualized basis, we will present actual cash payments as a proxy for an
annualized number until the period commencing January 1, 2018.
Furthermore, to provide investors with the most appropriate measures to assess the financial and operating performance of our existing fleet and the ability to pay dividends in the
future, we have excluded results associated with our UK solar and Residential portfolios, which were sold in 2017, from adjusted revenue, EBITDA and CAFD reported for all periods.
Use of Non-GAAP Measures
We disclose Adjusted Revenue because it presents the component of operating revenue that relates to energy production from our plants, and is, therefore, useful to investors and
other stakeholders in evaluating performance of our renewable energy assets and comparing that performance across periods in each case without regard to non-cash revenue items.
We disclose Adjusted EBITDA because we believe it is useful to investors and other stakeholders as a measure of financial and operating performance and debt service capabilities.
We believe Adjusted EBITDA provides an additional tool to investors and securities analysts to compare our performance across periods and among us and our peer companies
without regard to interest expense, taxes and depreciation and amortization. Adjusted EBITDA has certain limitations, including that it: (i) does not reflect cash expenditures or future
requirements for capital expenditures or contractual liabilities or future working capital needs, (ii) does not reflect the significant interest expenses that we expect to incur or any income
tax payments that we may incur, and (iii) does not reflect depreciation and amortization and, although these charges are non-cash, the assets to which they relate may need to be
replaced in the future, and (iv) does not take into account any cash expenditures required to replace those assets. Adjusted EBITDA also includes adjustments for goodwill impairment
charges, gains and losses on derivatives and foreign currency swaps, acquisition related costs and items we believe are infrequent, unusual or non-recurring, including adjustments for
general and administrative expenses we have incurred as a result of the SunEdison bankruptcy.
We disclose CAFD because we believe cash available for distribution is useful to investors in evaluating our operating performance and because securities analysts and other
stakeholders analyze CAFD as a measure of our financial and operating performance and our ability to pay dividends. CAFD is not a measure of liquidity or profitability, nor is it
indicative of the funds needed by us to operate our business. CAFD has certain limitations, such as the fact that CAFD includes all of the adjustments and exclusions made to Adjusted
EBITDA described above.
The adjustments made to Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD for infrequent, unusual or non-recurring items and items that we do not believe are representative of our core business involve
the application of management judgment, and the presentation of Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD should not be construed to infer that our future results will be unaffected by infrequent,
non-operating, unusual or non-recurring items.
In addition, these measures are used by our management for internal planning purposes, including for certain aspects of our consolidated operating budget, as well as evaluating the
attractiveness of investments and acquisitions. We believe these Non-GAAP measures are useful as a planning tool because it allows our management to compare performance
across periods on a consistent basis in order to more easily view and evaluate operating and performance trends and as a means of forecasting operating and financial performance
and comparing actual performance to forecasted expectations. For these reasons, we also believe these Non-GAAP measures are also useful for communicating with investors and
other stakeholders.
NASDAQ:
TERP
http://www.terraformpower.com
26
Exhibit
Exhibit 99.3
Letter to Shareholders
Over the past quarter, we continued to execute Terraform Power’s business plan, which we believe will be largely resilient to changes in macroeconomic conditions. Since February, there has been a marked increase in the volatility in the equity and debt markets. The VIX stock market volatility index increased by over 40% in the first quarter compared to its average for 2017. With greater uncertainty, companies that rely on open access to the equity market to achieve their growth targets have fallen out of favor. As an example, the master limited partnership sector has declined by 21% from its 52-week high versus a decline of just 6% by the S&P 500. Concurrently, the prolonged growth of the U.S. economy has recently begun to stoke concerns of inflation amongst investors. With the yield on the U.S. ten-year treasury nearing 3 percent, investors have started to rotate out of yield-oriented securities in favor of those that offer total return.
We witnessed the beginning of this change in investor sentiment during the fourth quarter of last year, when Brookfield completed its investment in TerraForm Power. As a result, we developed a business plan that will be primarily driven by executing on cost savings and organic growth initiatives over the next five years, including:
| |
• | Approximately $25 million in annual cost savings achieved over the next two to three years; |
| |
• | CAFD per share accretion from the expected acquisition of Saeta Yield (“Saeta”); and |
| |
• | A modest amount of organic growth and add-on acquisition opportunities. |
Importantly, since our five-year business plan only requires the issuance of up to $100 million of equity following the expected close of Saeta, it is not dependent on favorable equity market conditions. Further, given that approximately 85% of our existing debt is either fixed-rate or swapped, TerraForm Power is largely insulated from interest rate risk. With our current dividend yield of around 7% and a targeted growth rate of 5% to 8% per year, TerraForm Power is well-positioned to deliver a low-to-mid teens total return to our shareholders, irrespective of macroeconomic factors or capital market volatility.
Growth Initiatives
Over the past few months, we have made significant progress executing an outsourcing agreement for all of our wind fleet. We are currently in advanced negotiations with an original equipment manufacturer to provide a full-wrap, long-term service agreement (“LTSA”). The scope of the LTSA would include comprehensive wind turbine operations and maintenance (O&M) as well as other balance of plant services for a term of 10 years, with flexibility to terminate early. The agreement would also lock in pricing and provide availability guarantees that are consistent with our business plan. We anticipate finalizing the agreement within the next few weeks. While we expect a modest amount of transition costs in order to implement the agreement, we should begin realizing cost savings in the second half of 2018. Combined with the $10 million in cost savings we expect to achieve on a run rate basis by the end of the second quarter, we are confident we will realize approximately $25 million in annual cost savings over the next two to three years.
In April, we received approval from Spain’s National Securities Market Commission (CNMV) of the prospectus for our tender offer to acquire Saeta, including approval of our €12.20 per share offer price as a fair price for a delisting tender offer. Saeta is a European renewable power company with 1,000 MW of wind and solar capacity that has an average remaining life in excess of 23 years. It has historically produced very stable cashflow, with an average contract and/or regulatory life of approximately 14 years. Commencing this week, we will launch a voluntary tender offer to acquire 100% of Saeta, which is supported by irrevocable commitments to purchase over 50% of Saeta’s shares. To the extent we acquire over 90% of Saeta’s shares in the voluntary offer, we will immediately proceed with a merger to acquire the remainder of Saeta. If we acquire less than 90% of Saeta’s shares, we will be able to delist Saeta’s shares by means of a purchase order at the approved price of €12.20 per share, which we anticipate launching shortly after the close of the voluntary offer. In either case, we are very confident we will acquire the vast majority of Saeta’s shares through tender offers by mid-summer.
Since February, it has become apparent to us that the volatility in the capital markets will likely continue for some period of time. As a result, we believe that it is prudent to consider increasing the equity to fund the Saeta transaction from $400 million up to $650 million, which is consistent with our initial underwriting and target returns. If we do so, we believe this would further strengthen our balance sheet and ensure that we have ample access to liquidity. The remainder of the ~$1.2 billion purchase price would be funded with ~$350 million in non-recourse debt raised from TerraForm Power’s unencumbered assets and ~$200 million of cash released from Saeta’s balance sheet. With the incremental equity, the Saeta acquisition would still be very accretive to TerraForm Power’s CAFD per share, and we expect our proforma corporate debt-to-cash flow ratio will decline to within our 4.0x to 5.0x goal, furthering our long-term plan to establish an investment grade rating. With a strong balance sheet and nearly $1 billion of available liquidity under committed facilities after the acquisition closes, we would be well-positioned to make opportunistic acquisitions in this period of market turbulence should they arise.
In addition to opportunistic acquisitions such as Saeta, we are looking for ways to take advantage of investment opportunities within our existing portfolio and to build our pipeline of organic growth opportunities. We are in late stage negotiations to acquire a 6 MW portfolio of operating distributed solar generation assets located in California and New Jersey pursuant to a right of first offer (“ROFO”) associated with a prior acquisition. Expected returns are at the high end of our target range with potential upside from executing our business plan. We have a ROFO on an additional 15 MW of operating distributed solar assets with the same seller, which we may be able to exercise in phases over the next 9-18 months.
We are also progressing a number of opportunities to establish relationships with developers in North America and Europe whereby we may provide capital to fund their pipeline of shovel-ready development projects and add-on acquisitions. We are in discussions with a renewable power developer in Europe in which we would commit capital to fund a strategy to consolidate small, regulated solar facilities in Spain. We are targeting returns on this program that would be accretive to our target return for Saeta.
Operations
In mid-January, the failure of a single faulty blade caused the collapse of a tower at our Raleigh wind facility in Dillon, Ontario. While the incident did not cause any injuries or impact the broader community, it reduced our CAFD for the quarter by approximately $6 million. In order to determine the root cause of the blade failure, we removed from service all 70 turbines at Raleigh and Bishop Hill that utilize the same blades. After a thorough investigation and rigorous inspections of the blades, all turbines were returned to service between mid-March and the end of April.
Excluding outages related to Raleigh, our fleetwide performance was in-line with the same period in the prior year. In addition to the wind outsourcing agreement, we are making progress on our plan to enhance availability at our solar sites. We are in the process of evaluating each of our solar assets that have below average availability to determine the root cause of the underperformance. This will result in a performance improvement plant that should increase availability to our target of 97% and enhance the cash flow of our solar fleet. Finally, the replacement of the battery energy storage system (BESS) at one of our wind farms in Maui is progressing on scope, schedule and budget.
Financial Results
Beginning this quarter, we will report CAFD using the definition that we disclosed last year, which we believe will provide a more meaningful measure for investors to evaluate our financial performance and our ability to pay dividends. As compared to preceding periods, CAFD has been revised to (i) exclude adjustments related to deposits into and withdrawals from restricted cash accounts, required by project financing arrangements, (ii) replace sustaining capital expenditures made during the quarter with the average long-term sustaining capital expenditures necessary to maintain the reliability and efficiency of our assets, and (iii) levelize debt service payments paid during the year rather than including the cash principal and interest payments made during a given quarter. For consistency purposes, we will also begin reclassifying into Adjusted EBITDA certain capital expenditures that we expect will be covered under our long-term service agreement and will be reported as O&M expense, prospectively. As a result of these changes, we expect less volatility in our quarterly CAFD than in previous years.
During the first quarter, our portfolio performed broadly in-line with expectations, excluding the impact of the outages related to Raleigh, delivering Adjusted EBITDA and CAFD of $102 million and $29 million, respectively. This represents a decrease in Adjusted EBITDA of $1 million but an increase of CAFD of $10 million compared to the same period last year. The decrease in Adjusted EBITDA was largely attributable to the transmission outage at Bishop Hill, which was partially offset by stronger resource at our utility scale solar facilities compared with the same period in the prior year. The increase in CAFD resulted from reduced interest expense that more than offset the decline in Adjusted EBITDA. Interest savings were driven by the attractive senior note, term loan B and corporate revolver refinancings completed in Q4 2017 as well as lower debt balances. For the first quarter, our total operating expenses on an annualized basis were $181 million, compared to total operating expenses of $191 million in 2017. The $10 million reduction reflects efficiencies from our organization structure and other cost savings initiatives. Deducting the nonrecurring lost revenue of $6 million related to Raleigh, Adjusted EBITDA was $96 million and CAFD was $23 million, representing a decline of $7 million, and an increase of $4 million for the quarter, respectively, compared to the same period in the prior year. We also recorded a non-cash asset impairment charge of $15 million due
to the rejection of a Solar Renewable Energy Credit (“SREC”) contract with First Energy Solutions, which recently filed for bankruptcy.
Note that we have also enhanced our supplemental reporting package to better facilitate the assessment of our business by investors. Going forward, we will be providing an estimate of long-term average annual generation (LTA) by segment, which is defined as energy at the point of delivery, net of all recurring losses and constraints. Our LTA represents the level of production we expect to achieve by 2019 as we improve the performance of our fleet. In the short-term, we recognize that wind and irradiance conditions will vary from one period to the next. However, we expect our facilities will produce in-line with their long-term averages over time. We believe that comparing actual generation levels against LTA will enable investors to better assess the impact of an important factor that affects our business results.
Outlook
Looking forward, all of Terraform Power’s turbines at Raleigh and Bishop Hill have returned to service, which will benefit our financial results for the remaining three quarters of this year. We expect to close Saeta in June/July of this year and realize the accretive benefits of this transaction for most of the second half of 2018. The addition of Saeta’s assets to our existing portfolio will provide TerraForm Power an impressive level of resource and geographic diversity, including one dozen different geographic sub-regions. Since the majority of Saeta’s revenues are driven by the Spanish regulatory framework rather than variable production, this will further reduce the impact of solar or wind resource on Terraform Power’s financial results.
Recent actions at the corporate, state and local levels demonstrate the momentum of the renewable power industry in the United States. Industry analysts estimate that nine corporates signed PPAs for nearly 2 GW of renewables in the first quarter of 2018. These high levels of corporate procurement should bolster our repowering efforts. Given the recently passed renewable portfolio standard (RPS) in New Jersey, which requires procurement of 50% of power from renewable sources by 2030, and many other states considering similar RPS levels, the demand for renewable power is poised to continue growing. With control of high resource sites in attractive markets, TerraForm Power is well-positioned to capture long-term value from its existing asset base.
We are grateful for your continued support and look forward to updating you on our progress in the coming quarters.
Sincerely,
John Stinebaugh
Chief Executive Officer
May 1, 2018