Centrica PLC Launches £500m Share Buy-Back Programme

Published in Company Comment on 4 February 2013

Centrica PLC (LON:CNA) also announces decision not to participate in UK nuclear new build.

Centrica (LSE: CNA) this morning reported that it has taken the decision not to participate in the UK construction of up to four new European pressurised nuclear reactors.

In order to return surplus capital to shareholders, Centrica has announced that it will launch a £500m share buy-back scheme, conducted over the next 12 months.

The decision not to proceed follows a detailed appraisal of the project, with pre-development expenditure on the project approaching the agreed £1bn cap, and uncertainty about overall project costs and the construction schedule.

 In 2009, Centrica acquired a 20% interest in EDF Energy's eight operational nuclear power stations in the UK and also took an option for a 20% interest in the construction of new nuclear power stations at Hinkley Point and Sizewell. The acquisition was funded through a £2.2bn rights issue, completed in 2008, part of which provided financing for the investment in new nuclear.

Chief executive Sam Laidlaw commented: 

"We believe that nuclear generation has a valuable role to play in a balanced UK energy mix. Centrica and EDF continue to enjoy a successful partnership in existing nuclear. However, since our initial investment, the anticipated project costs in new nuclear have increased and the construction timetable has extended by a number of years.

"These factors, in particular the lengthening time frame for a return on the capital invested in a project of this scale, have led us to conclude that participation is not right for Centrica and our shareholders. In 2012 we invested over £2 billion in securing supplies of energy for the UK and where we see attractive returns we will continue to invest in Britain’s energy future."

Management stated that Centrica's 20% interest in the eight existing nuclear power stations in the UK is unaffected by this decision.

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> Sam does not own shares in Centrica.

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Comments

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vinchainsaw 04 Feb 2013 , 12:24pm

Announce a share buy-back scheme when the stock price is at 5 year highs. *sigh*.

Where do these companies find this management?

Elswick 04 Feb 2013 , 1:19pm

I could not agree more Vince.

In the real world these idiots (parasites) would not survive.

vinchainsaw 04 Feb 2013 , 5:21pm

I just dont understand how otherwise sane businessman make such stupid mistakes.

Centrica is not a hedge fund, a mutual fund or anything of the sort. Yet their management think they know better than the market and, by extension, they know how to invest better than their shareholders (otherwise they would declare a dividend and get on with it).

Stick with utilities and leave the financial engineering to people who do it night and day. The company has saved up all this cash and now they want to waste it buying their own shares at the top of the market.

Where were all these bright ideas in 2009 when the share price was 220 as opposed to 350 it is now?
Idiots.

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