Filings Under the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, as Amended (“Act”), 23264-23271 [E5-2148]
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23264
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 85 / Wednesday, May 4, 2005 / Notices
burdensome under the circumstances.
Edward Jones states that it will notify all
Eligible Customers in writing of their
opportunity to participate in the Switch.
In the notice to Eligible Customers,
Edward Jones will disclose that the
customer’s purchase of Rebate Switch
Funds may be more expensive to
Edward Jones than their purchase of
NAV Switch Funds, thus creating a
conflict of interest. The notice also will
identify those Switch Funds that are
NAV Switch Funds and those that are
Rebate Switch Funds.
Applicant’s Conditions
Applicant agrees that any order
granting the requested relief will be
subject to the following conditions:
1. Prior to implementing the Switch,
Applicant will obtain an undertaking in
writing from each of the NAV Switch
Funds that the NAV Switch Fund will
comply with Rule 22d–1(d) under the
Act with respect to the Switch.
2. Prior to an NAV Switch Fund’s
participating in the Free Switch, the
board of directors or trustees of the NAV
Switch Fund (‘‘Board’’), including a
majority of the Board members who are
not ‘‘interested persons,’’ as defined in
Section 2(a)(19) of the Act, will review
any sales load waiver proposed to be
made by the NAV Switch Fund or its
principal underwriter in connection
with the Switch to determine whether
the waiver is in the best interest of the
NAV Switch Fund and its shareholders.
To assist the Board in making this
determination, the NAV Switch Fund’s
principal underwriter will provide the
Board with such information as may
reasonably be necessary to enable the
Board to make an informed decision.
The factors considered and the basis for
the Board’s determination will be
reflected in the Board’s minutes, which
will be preserved for a period of not less
than six years from the date of the NAV
Switch Fund’s participation in the
Switch, the first two years in an easily
accessible place.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Investment Management, under delegated
authority.
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E5–2167 Filed 5–3–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meeting
FEDERAL REGISTER CITATION OF PREVIOUS
ANNOUNCEMENT: [70 FR22380, April 29,
2005].
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STATUS:
Closed meeting.
450 Fifth Street, NW.,
Washington, DC.
PLACE:
DATE AND TIME OF PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
MEETING: Tuesday, May 3, 2005 at 2 p.m.
CHANGE IN THE MEETING MEETING:
Cancellation of meeting.
The Closed Meeting scheduled for
Tuesday, May 3, 2005 has been
cancelled.
For further information please contact
the Office of the Secretary at (202) 942–
7070.
Dated: April 29, 2005.
Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–9019 Filed 5–2–05; 3:05 pm]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 35–27962]
Filings Under the Public Utility Holding
Company Act of 1935, as Amended
(‘‘Act’’)
April 27, 2005.
Notice is hereby given that the
following filing(s) has/have been made
with the Commission pursuant to
provisions of the Act and rules
promulgated under the Act. All
interested persons are referred to the
application(s) and/or declaration(s) for
complete statements of the proposed
transaction(s) summarized below. The
application(s) and/or declaration(s) and
any amendment(s) is/are available for
public inspection through the
Commission’s Branch of Public
Reference.
Interested persons wishing to
comment or request a hearing on the
application(s) and/or declaration(s)
should submit their views in writing by
May 23, 2005, to the Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
Washington, DC 20549–0609, and serve
a copy on the relevant applicant(s) and/
or declarant(s) at the address(es)
specified below. Proof of service (by
affidavit or, in the case of an attorney at
law, by certificate) should be filed with
the request. Any request for hearing
should identify specifically the issues of
facts or law that are disputed. A person
who so requests will be notified of any
hearing, if ordered, and will receive a
copy of any notice or order issued in the
matter. After May 23, 2005, the
application(s) and/or declaration(s), as
filed or as amended, may be granted
and/or permitted to become effective.
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E.ON AG, et al. (70–10282)
E.ON AG (‘‘E.ON’’), a registered
holding company under the Act, located
¨
at E.ON-Platz 1, 40479 Dusseldorf,
Germany, and certain of its direct and
indirect utility and nonutility subsidiary
companies listed in the Application,
including E.ON U.S. Holding GmbH
(‘‘E.ON U.S. Holding’’), a registered
holding company and a direct
subsidiary of E.ON, also located at
¨
E.ON-Platz 1, 40479 Dulsseldorf,
Germany, and the parent company of
E.ON U.S. Investments Corp. (‘‘E.ON
U.S. Investments’’), a registered holding
company and parent of LG&E Energy
LLC (‘‘LG&E Energy’’), a registered
holding company and parent of
Louisville Gas and Electric Company
(‘‘LG&E’’) and Kentucky Utilities
Company (‘‘KU’’), all located at 220
West Main Street, Louisville, Kentucky
40202 (collectively, ‘‘Applicants’’), have
filed an application, as amended
(‘‘Application’’) under sections 6(a), 7,
9(a), 10, 12(b), 12(c), 12(d) and 13(b) of
the Act and rules 20, 26, 42, 43, 45, 46,
52, 53, 87 and 90.
Applicants seek authority for certain
financing transactions of E.ON and its
associated companies during the period
from the effective date of the order
granting the Application through May
31, 2008 (‘‘Authorization Period’’). The
Commission previously provided
authorizations for E.ON and certain
other entities in the E.ON group (‘‘E.ON
Group’’ or ‘‘Group’’), on June 14, 2002,
to undertake specific financing
transactions, which authorizations
expire on May 31, 2005 (‘‘2002
Order’’).1
I. Background
¨
E.ON is headquartered in Dusseldorf,
Germany, and most of its operations are
located in Europe.2 Applicants state
that, in 2003, E.ON reorganized its
1 See E.ON AG, et al., Holding Co. Act Release
No. 27539 (June 14, 2002).
2 Applicants state that E.On had approximately
478,000 shareholders worldwide, as of June 30,
2004, and that E.ON’s shares, all of which are
ordinary shares, are listed on all seven German
stock exchanges. The shares are also actively traded
over-the-counter in London and E.ON’s American
Depositary Shares (‘‘ADSs’’), each of which
represents one ordinary share, are listed on the New
York Stock Exchange.
Applicants state that, unless otherwise noted,
amounts expressed in United States dollars
(‘‘USD’’) are unaudited and have been converted
from Euros, for convenience, at an exchange rate of
USD 1.2179 = EUR 1.00, the Noon Buying Rate of
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on June 30,
2004. For the six months ended June 30, 2004. E.ON
reported consolidated revenues of EUR 25.594
billion (USD 31.171 billion) calculated in
accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting
procedures (‘‘US GAAP’’). As of June 30, 2004,
E.ON had total consolidated assets of EUR 113.958
billion (USD 138.789 billion).
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 85 / Wednesday, May 4, 2005 / Notices
structure to reflect its commitment to an
integrated business focusing on power
and gas.3
E.ON states that, as a result of its
decision to focus on power and gas, in
the last few years, its core energy
business has been reorganized into five
new market units, each of which is
focused on a market in which E.ON
believes it has a strong competitive
position: (1) Central Europe, led by
E.ON Energie AG (‘‘E.ON Energie’’); (2)
Pan-European Gas, led by E.ON Ruhrgas
AG (‘‘E.ON Ruhrgas’’); (3) U.K., led by
E.ON UK plc (‘‘E.ON UK’’); (4) Nordic,
led by E.ON Nordic AB (‘‘E.ON
Nordic’’); and (5) U.S. Midwest, led by
LG&E Energy. E.ON’s non-U.S. business
segments (E.ON Energie in Central
Europe; E.ON Ruhrgas leading PanEuropean Gas; E.ON UK in the U.K.; and
E.ON Nordic in Northern Europe) are
comprised in part of foreign utility
companies, as defined in section 33 of
the Act (‘‘FUCOs’’).
A. LG&E Energy and the U.S. Midwest
Market Unit
E.ON U.S. Holding, the direct
subsidiary of E.ON and parent of E.ON
U.S. Investments Corp. (together,
‘‘Intermediate Companies’’), which is
the direct parent of LG&E Energy, the
holding company for LG&E and KU,
E.ON’s United States utility subsidiaries
(together, ‘‘Utility Subsidiaries’’). E.ON
U.S. Holding, E.ON U.S. Investments
and LG&E Energy are registered holding
companies. LG&E Energy owns LG&E
and KU, as noted above.4 LG&E is an
electricity- and natural gas-utility based
3 Applicants state that E.ON’s ‘‘on*top’’ project
was comprehensive strategic review, the principle
elements of which were an analysis of E.ON’s
competitive position, the redefinition of its
corporate strategy and the design of a revised
organizational structure to reflect E.ON’s strategic
goals. The on*top project, among other things,
resulted in the transfer of management of LG&E
Energy and its utility subsidiaries from Powergen
Ltd. (‘‘Powergen’’) to E.ON. By order dated
November 22, 2004, the Commission authorized
Powergen’s deregistration under the Act, as well as
the deregistration of its direct and indirect parent
holding companies, E.ON UK Holding GmbH and
E.ON UK Holding Company Ltd.
4 LG&E Energy is also engaged in nonutility
businesses, through wholly owned subsidiaries
LG&E Capital Corp. (‘‘LCC’’) and LG&E Energy
Marketing Inc. (‘‘LEM’’). LCC operates one oil-fired
and nine coal-fired electricity generation units in
western Kentucky through its wholly owned
subsidiary Western Kentucky Energy Corp. and
affiliates. In addition, through its subsidiaries, LCC
operates several other independent power projects
in the United States. LCC also owns interests in
three Argentine gas distribution companies and
stakes in two power plants in the United States
through another wholly owned subsidiary, LG&E
Power Inc. Applicants state that LG&E Energy is in
the process of disposing of its stakes in the power
plants held by LG&E Power Inc.
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in Louisville, Kentucky 5 and KU is an
electric-utility based in Lexington,
Kentucky.6 Revenues from the U.S.
Midwest market unit were USD 1.173
million (EUR 963 million) for the same
period, 3.8% of E.ON’s consolidated
revenues.
B. Subsidiaries To-Be-Divested
The ‘‘to-be-divested’’ E.ON
subsidiaries (‘‘TBD Subsidiaries’’) are
those subsidiaries that E.ON is required
to divest under the 2002 Order. Viterra
AG (‘‘Viterra’’), E.ON’s wholly owned
real estate group, is engaged in two
businesses: residential real estate and
real estate development. E.ON currently
holds a 42.9% interest in Degussa AG
(‘‘Degussa’’), a specialty chemical
company. In the 2002 Order, E.ON was
required to divest Degussa, Viterra and
five passive real estate investment
vehicles managed by Viterra within five
years and E.ON states that it continues
to expect to meet that requirement.7
II. Summary of the Request
Applicants state that E.ON follows a
centralized financing policy and that, as
a general rule, external financings will
be undertaken at the E.ON level (or
through finance subsidiaries under its
guarantee).8 In certain limited
circumstances, future external
financings may also take place at the
subsidiary level. Generally, over time,
E.ON intends to refinance outstanding
external subsidiary debt that is not
consistent with the group financing
policy as it comes due with
5 LG&E distributes electricity to approximately
384,000 customers and supplies natural gas to
approximately 312,000 customers in Louisville and
17 surrounding counties.
6 KU serves approximately 482,000 customers in
77 Kentucky counties, approximately 30,000
customers in five counties in Virginia, as well as 12
municipalities and fewer than 10 customers in
Tennessee.
7 The 2002 Order also required the divestiture of
several other E.ON subsidiaries within three years.
Since the issuance of the 2002 Order, E.ON has
divested VEBA Oel AG, Viterra Energy Services,
Inc., Stinnes AG, Schmalbach Lubeca AG and the
other companies required to-be-divested within
three years, with the exception of AV Packaging and
Hibernia Gamma Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH.
E.ON states that it intends to complete the
divestiture of AV Packaging and Hibernia Gamma
Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH by July 1, 2005, the
three year anniversary of E.ON’s registration under
the Act. From January 1, 2002 to June 30, 2004, the
aggregate proceeds received by E.ON from the
divestiture of various businesses in connection with
its transformation from a diversified company into
an energy and utility company were approximately
EUR 21.8 billion.
8 Applicants state that most of the financing
transactions of E.ON’s market unit have been
centralized and netted at the parent, or at a direct
wholly owned finance subsidiary of the parent, to
reduce the Group’s overall debt and interest
expense.
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intercompany loans.9 E.ON also states,
however, that the financing of joint
ventures or partly-owned companies is
generally concluded externally.
Applicants request the following
financing authorizations and
authorizations for certain related
actions, as described further in
subsequent sections of this notice,
beginning with the effective date of an
order issued in this matter through May
31, 2008 (the Authorization Period).
1. For E.ON, authority to issue and
sell equity and certain debt securities,
directly or indirectly, in new financing
transactions, in an aggregate amount of
up to USD 75 billion at any one time
outstanding (and which transactions are
also subject to the E.ON External Limit,
the E.ON Short-term Limit and the E.ON
Guarantee Limit (all further described
below)):
(a) Equity and unsecured long-term
debt securities in an aggregate amount
of up to USD 50 billion at any one time
outstanding (exclusive of short-term
debt and guarantees) (‘‘E.ON External
Limit’’), including, but not limited to,
(i) Common stock and ADSs,
preferred stock, preferred securities,
equity-linked securities, options,
warrants, purchase contracts, units,
securities with call and put options and
securities convertible into any of these
securities;
(ii) Unsecured long-term debt,
including, among other things,
subordinated debt and bank borrowings;
(b) Unsecured short-term debt in an
aggregate amount of up to USD 30
billion at any one time outstanding
(‘‘E.ON Short-term Limit’’); and
(c) Guarantees, and other credit
support, in an aggregate amount of up
to USD 40 billion at any one time
outstanding (exclusive of guarantees
exempt under rules 45(b) and 58(a)(1))
(‘‘E.ON Guarantee Limit’’).
2. For E.ON (for itself and on behalf
of its subsidiaries) and for its
subsidiaries, authority to engage in
currency and interest rate transactions
for the purpose of hedging (‘‘Hedging
Interests’’) and certain debt and equity
transactions for the purpose of engaging
in anticipatory hedging (‘‘Anticipatory
Hedging Transactions’’), subject to
certain limitations.
3. For E.ON and its subsidiaries,
authority to continue utilizing certain
profit and loss transfer agreements and
the consolidated tax filing of E.ON and
its German subsidiaries in the manner
authorized by the 2002 Order.
9 Applicants state that E.ON’s aim is to maximize
its financing efficiency and minimize structural
subordination issues that would arise if significant
external debt was held at the operating subsidiary
level.
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4. For E.ON and the E.ON Group
(other than the LG&E Group (described
below)), authority to:
(a) Finance the TBD Subsidiaries and
E.ON’s nonutility subsidiaries not held
within a FUCO group or the LG&E
Energy Group (‘‘Retained Nonutility
Subsidiaries’’) through capital
contributions, loans, guarantees,
purchases of equity or debt securities or
other methods, subject to,
(i) An aggregate amount of up to USD
1 billion (through July 1, 2007) (the end
of the divestiture period) for TBD
Subsidiary investments (‘‘TBD
Investment Limit’’);
(ii) An aggregate amount of up to USD
15 billion for Retained Nonutility
Subsidiary investments (‘‘Retained
Nonutility Subsidiary Investment
Limit’’); and
(b) For the Retained Nonutility
Subsidiaries, to finance their businesses
and acquire new businesses (as
permitted under the Act, the rules or by
Commission order) through the issuance
of equity, preferred stock and debt
securities to third parties, subject to the
Retained Nonutility Subsidiary
Investment Limit.
5. For E.ON through the Intermediate
Companies (E.ON U.S. Holding and
E.ON U.S. Investments) and through the
related financing subsidiaries, authority
to finance the Intermediate Companies
and LG&E Energy and its subsidiaries
(including LG&E and KU) (together,
‘‘LG&E Energy Group’’) by:
(a) Issuance and sale of securities to
E.ON and associate companies (but not
companies in the LG&E Energy Group
(described below));
(b) For E.ON North America Inc.
(‘‘E.ON NA’’) and Fidelia Corp.
(‘‘Fidelia’’) (and any of their
subsidiaries), issuance and sale of
securities to third parties, such as banks,
to finance the capital needs of the E.ON
Group, including the LG&E Energy
Group;
(c) For the Intermediate Companies
and their subsidiaries, acquisition of
securities of other Intermediate
Companies and their subsidiaries and
the LG&E Energy Group;
(d) For the Intermediate Companies
and their subsidiaries, issuance of
guarantees and other forms of credit
support to or for the benefit of another
Intermediate Company, its subsidiaries
and the LG&E Energy Group, subject to
an aggregate amount of up to USD 2
billion at any one time outstanding
(exclusive of guarantees exempt under
rules 45(b) and 58(a)(1)); and
(e) For the LG&E Energy Group,
including LG&E and KU, authority,
(i) For LG&E Energy, to issue and sell
short-term debt securities in an
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aggregate amount of up to USD 400
million;
(ii) For the Utility Subsidiaries, each
of LG&E and KU,
(a) To issue and sell long-term debt
securities having a maturity of two years
or less in an aggregate amount of up to
USD 400 million and USD 400 million,
respectively;
(b) To issue and sell short-term debt
securities in an aggregate amount of up
to USD 200 million and USD 200
million, respectively;
(c) To continue to obtain secured
intercompany loans from Fidelia in an
aggregate amount of up to USD 275
million and USD 215 million,
respectively;
(d) To guarantee, or provide other
credit support, for the obligations of
their subsidiaries and other companies
in which they have invested (but not
exempt wholesale generators, as defined
in section 32 of the Act (‘‘EWGs’’),
exempt telecommunications companies,
as defined in section 34 of the Act
(‘‘ETCs’’), or FUCOs), in an amount of
up to USD 200 million and USD 200
million, respectively;
(iii) For LG&E Energy and its
nonutility subsidiaries, to enter into
intercompany loans in an aggregate
amount of up to USD 1.5 billion
(excluding amounts exempt under rules
45(b) and 52) at any one time
outstanding (and LG&E Energy will not
borrow from its subsidiaries);
(iv) For LG&E Energy, to issue
guarantees and other credit support in
an aggregate amount of up to USD 1.5
billion at any one time outstanding
(excluding amounts exempt under rule
45(b) and separate from E.ON’s External
Limit and E.ON’s Guarantee Limit); and
(v) For the LG&E Energy Group
nonutility subsidiaries, to issue
guarantees and other credit support in
an additional aggregate amount of up to
USD 1.5 billion, at any one time
outstanding (exclusive of guarantees
that may be exempt under rule 45(b)
and separate from E.ON’s External Limit
and E.ON’s Guarantee Limit).
6. For Applicants, to continue the
existing money pools and intercompany
financing arrangements.
7. For Applicants, authority to form
financing entities (‘‘Financing Entities,’’
as defined below) and engage in related
transactions.
8. For Applicants, authority for each
company in the E.ON Group (other than
EWGs, FUCOs and ETCs), to acquire,
redeem or retire its securities (or those
of its direct and indirect subsidiaries),
either outstanding presently or issued
and sold in the future, from time to
time.
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9. For Applicants, to continue
authority to change the terms of any
E.ON Group company’s authorized
capital stock, issue additional shares, or
alter of the terms of any existing
authorized security.
10. For Applicants, authority to
continue to pay dividends out of capital
or unearned surplus.
11. For Applicants, authority to
restructure, consolidate or otherwise
reorganize, E.ON’s nonutility holdings,
which may include the acquisition,
directly or indirectly, of securities of
one or more intermediate subsidiaries
(‘‘Development Subsidiaries,’’ as
defined below) organized exclusively
for the purpose of acquiring, financing,
divesting and/or holding the securities
of one or more existing or future
nonutility subsidiaries.10
12. For Applicants, authority to
continue to invest in EWGs and FUCOs
up to an aggregate amount of USD 65
billion (‘‘Aggregate EWG/FUCO
Financing Limitation’’).
13. For Applicants, authority to invest
in energy-related companies doing
business outside the U.S. (‘‘EnergyRelated Subsidiaries’’) in an aggregate
amount of up to USD 10 billion
(‘‘Energy-Related Subsidiary Investment
Limit’’).
III. Financing Parameters
Applicants represent that the
following general terms will be
applicable, where appropriate, to the
external financing transactions
requested to be authorized in the
Application.
A. Effective Cost of Money
Applicants state that the effective cost
of money on external debt securities and
preferred stock or other types of
preferred securities will not exceed the
competitive market rates available at the
time of issuance for securities having
the same or reasonably similar terms
and conditions issued by similar
companies of reasonably comparable
credit quality.
B. Maturity
Applicants state that the maturity of
long-term debt will be between one and
50 years after their issuance. Preferred
securities and equity-linked securities
will be redeemed no later than 50 years
after their issuance, unless converted
into common stock. Preferred stock
issued directly by E.ON may be
perpetual in duration. Short-term debt
10 Development Subsidiaries may also engage in
development activities (‘‘Development Activities’’)
and administrative activities (‘‘Administrative
Activities’’) relating to the permitted businesses of
the nonutility subsidiaries.
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will have an original maturity of less
than one year.
C. Issuance Expenses
Applicants state that the underwriting
fees, commissions or other similar
remuneration paid in connection with
the non-competitive issue, sale or
distribution of securities will not exceed
the greater of: (i) 5% of the principal or
total amount of the securities being
issued; or (ii) issuance expenses that are
generally paid at the time of the pricing
for sales of the particular issuance,
having the same or reasonably similar
terms and conditions issued by similar
companies of reasonably comparable
credit quality.
D. Common Equity Ratio and
Investment Grade Ratings
E.ON and LG&E Energy, each on a
consolidated basis, and LG&E and KU
will maintain common stock equity as a
percentage of total capitalization of at
least 30%, as reflected in their most
recent annual or semiannual report, in
the case of E.ON, and, with respect to
LG&E Energy and the Utility
Subsidiaries, quarterly financial
statements prepared in accordance with
U.S. GAAP; provided that E.ON in any
event will be authorized to issue
common stock to the extent permitted as
a consequence of this Application.
Applicants further represent that,
except for securities issued for the
purpose of funding money pool
operations, no guarantees or other
securities, other than common stock,
may be issued in reliance upon the
authorization granted by the
Commission pursuant to the
Application unless: (i) The security to
be issued, if rated, is rated investment
grade; (ii) all outstanding securities of
the issuer that are rated, are rated
investment grade; and (iii) all
outstanding securities of E.ON that are
rated, are rated investment grade. For
purposes of this provision (‘‘Investment
Grade Condition’’), a security will be
deemed to be rated ‘‘investment grade’’
if it is rated investment grade by at least
one nationally recognized statistical
rating organization (‘‘NRSRO’’), as that
term is used in paragraphs (c)(2)(vi)(E),
(F) and (H) of rule 15c3–1 under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended. In addition, Applicants
request authorization as follows: (i)
Notwithstanding that at any time the
preferred stock of a Utility Subsidiary,
if rated, may not be rated investment
grade by an NRSRO, such Utility
Subsidiary may nonetheless participate
in the Utility Money Pool, borrow funds
as secured intercompany loans from
Fidelia and borrow funds as
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intercompany loans; and (ii)
notwithstanding that at any time the
securities of a nonutility subsidiary that
are rated are not rated investment grade,
such nonutility subsidiary may
nonetheless participate in the U.S.
Nonutility Money Pool and may borrow
funds as intercompany loans.
Applicants request that the Commission
reserve jurisdiction over the issuance of
any guarantee or other securities in
reliance upon the authorization granted
by the Commission pursuant to the
Application at any time that the
conditions set forth in clauses (i)
through (iii) above are not satisfied.
E. Use of Proceeds
Applicants state that the proceeds
from the proposed financings will be
used for general corporate purposes,
including: (i) Financing investments by
and capital expenditures of the E.ON
Group; (ii) the funding of future
investments in companies that are
exempt under the Act or the rules or
permitted by Commission order,
including EWGs, FUCOs, TBD
Subsidiaries, ETCs and Rule 58
Subsidiaries (as defined below); (iii) the
repayment, redemption, refunding or
purchase by any E.ON Group company
of any of its own securities; (iv)
financing or refinancing capital
requirements of the E.ON Group; and (v)
other lawful purposes. Applicants
represent that no financing proceeds
will be used to acquire the equity
securities of any company unless the
acquisition has been approved by the
Commission or is in accordance with an
available exemption under the Act or
rules, including sections 32, 33, 34 and
rule 58.
IV. The Request
Applicants request the following
authorizations during the Authorization
Period as described below.
A. E.ON External Financing and Related
Transactions
E.ON requests authorization to
increase its capitalization through the
issuance and sale of securities,
including, but not necessarily limited
to, common stock, preferred stock,
preferred securities, equity-linked
securities, options, warrants, purchase
contracts, units (consisting of one or
more purchase contracts, warrants, debt
securities, shares of preferred stock,
shares of common stock or any
combination of such securities), longterm debt, subordinated debt, lease
financing, bank borrowings, securities
with call or put options, and securities
convertible into any of these securities,
up to an aggregate amount of new
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23267
financing not to exceed USD 50 billion
outstanding at any one time (exclusive
of short-term debt and guarantees), the
E.ON External Limit, during the
Authorization Period; provided that
securities issued for purposes of
refunding or replacing other outstanding
securities (where E.ON’s capitalization
is not increased as a result) shall not be
counted against this limitation.11 E.ON
further proposes that issuances subject
to the E.ON External Limit (an aggregate
limit of USD 50 billion), the E.ON Shortterm Limit (an aggregate limit of USD 30
billion) and the E.ON Guarantee Limit
(an aggregate limit of USD 40 billion)
would not, in the aggregate, exceed USD
75 billion, during the Authorization
Period, which would be consistent with
its current overall financing limits.12
A.1. Common Stock, Preferred Stock,
Preferred Securities and Equity-linked
Securities
E.ON requests authorization to issue
and sell common stock, options,
warrants or other stock purchase rights
exercisable for common stock.13 E.ON
also proposes to issue common stock
and/or purchase shares of its common
stock (either currently or under forward
contracts) in the open market or through
negotiated purchases for purposes of: (i)
Reissuing such shares at a later date
pursuant to stock-based plans which are
maintained for stockholders, employees
and directors; or (ii) managing its capital
structure. E.ON further requests
authorization to use its common stock
and other equity instruments to fund
employee benefit plans and in
connection with dividend reinvestment
plans currently in existence or that may
be formed during the Authorization
Period.14
E.ON also requests authorization to
issue preferred stock directly and/or
issue, indirectly, through one or more
financing subsidiaries, other forms of
preferred securities (including, without
11 These financing transactions will be valued at
the time of issuance.
12 See note 1, above. The Commission’s 2002
Order placed an overall limit on E.ON’s external
financing of USD 75 billion. That limit applied
E.ON’s aggregate issuances of equity, long- and
short-term debt securities and guarantees.
13 Public distributions may be pursuant to private
negotiation with underwriters, dealers or agents, or
effected through competitive bidding among
underwriters. In addition, sales may be made
through private placements or other non-public
offerings to one or more persons.
14 E.ON states that it currently maintains a stockbased compensation plan that issues stock
appreciation rights (‘‘SARs’’), authorized by the
Commission’s 2002 Order, and it proposes to issue
shares of its common stock to satisfy its obligations
under its stock-based plans, as they may be
amended or extended, and similar plans or plan
funding arrangements adopted in the future without
additional Commission order.
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limitation, trust preferred securities or
monthly income preferred securities),
equity-linked securities in the form of
stock purchase units (which combine a
security with a fixed obligation (e.g.,
preferred stock or debt) with a stock
purchase contract that is exercisable
(either mandatorily or at the option of
the holder or a combination of both)
within a relatively short period (e.g.,
three to six years after issuance)).
Applicants state that these transactions
will be subject to the E.ON External
Limit.
A.2. Long-term Debt
E.ON also requests authorization to
issue unsecured long-term debt that may
be issued directly through a public or
private placement, or indirectly,
through one or more financing
subsidiaries, in the form of notes,
convertible notes, medium-term notes or
debentures under one or more
indentures or long-term indebtedness
under agreements with banks or other
institutional lenders.15 Applicants state
that these transactions will be subject to
the E.ON External Limit.
A.3. Short-term Debt
E.ON requests authority to issue and
sell from time to time, directly or
indirectly through one or more
Financing Entities, unsecured shortterm debt, including commercial paper
and bank borrowings, in an aggregate
principal amount at any time
outstanding not to exceed USD 30
billion, the E.ON Short-term Limit;
provided that securities issued for
purposes of refunding or replacing other
outstanding short-term debt securities
(where E.ON’s capitalization is not
changed as a result) shall not be counted
against this limitation.
E.ON requests further authorization to
issue and sell, from time to time,
directly or indirectly through one or
more Financing Entities, unsecured
short-term debt, an aggregate amount at
any time outstanding of up to the E.ON
Short-term Limit, in the form of
commercial paper, notes issued to banks
and other institutional lenders, and
other forms of unsecured short-term
indebtedness. Applicants state that
short-term borrowings under credit lines
will have original maturities of less than
a year from the date of each borrowing.
Applicants state that these transactions
15 The maturity dates, interest rates, redemption
and sinking fund provisions and conversion
features, if any, with respect to the long-term debt
of a particular series, as well as any associated
placement, underwriting or selling agent fees,
commissions and discounts, if any, will be
established by negotiation or competitive bidding at
the time of issuance.
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will be subject to the E.ON External
Limit.
A.4. Interest Rate, Currency and Certain
Equity Risk Management Devices
E.ON requests authorization to enter
into, perform, purchase and sell
financial instruments intended to
manage the volatility of interest rates
and currency exchange rates, including
but not limited to swaps, caps, floors,
collars and forward agreements or any
other similar agreements (‘‘Hedging
Instruments’’). E.ON would employ
Hedging Instruments as a means of
prudently managing the risk associated
with any of the outstanding debt issued
by it or any of its associate companies
under the authority requested in the
Application or an applicable exemption
by, for example: (i) Converting variable
rate debt to fixed rate debt; (ii)
converting fixed rate debt to variable
rate debt; (iii) limiting the impact of
changes in interest rates resulting from
variable rate debt; and (iv) providing an
option to enter into interest rate swap
transactions in future periods for
planned issuances of debt securities.
E.ON also proposes to enter into
Hedging Instruments with respect to
anticipated debt or equity offerings
(‘‘Anticipatory Hedges’’), subject to
certain limitations and restrictions.
Anticipatory Hedges would only be
entered into on-exchange or offexchange with Approved
Counterparties, and would be used to
fix and/or limit the interest rate or
currency exchange rate risk associated
with any proposed new issuance.16
E.ON’s subsidiaries also propose to
enter into Hedging Instruments or
Anticipatory Hedges to hedge interest
rate or currency exposures, subject to
the limitations described above.
A.5. Guarantees
E.ON requests authorization to
provide guarantees with respect to debt
securities or other contractual
obligations of any subsidiary, as may be
appropriate in the ordinary course of the
subsidiary’s business, up to an aggregate
principal or nominal amount not to
16 Applicants state that Anticipatory Hedges may
include: (i) A forward sale of U.S. or European
Economic Area (‘‘EEA’’) Treasury futures contracts,
U.S. or EEA Treasury obligations and/or a forward
swap (each a ‘‘Forward Sale’’): (ii) the purchase of
put options on U.S. or EEA Treasury obligations
(‘‘Put Options Purchase’’); (iii) a Put Options
Purchase in combination with the sale of call
options on U.S. or EEA Treasury obligations (‘‘Zero
Cost Collar’’); (iv) transactions involving the
purchase or sale of U.S. or EEA Treasury
obligations; or (v) some combination of a Forward
Sale, Pub Options Purchase, Zero Cost Collar and/
or other derivative or cash transactions, including,
but not limited to, structured notes, caps and
collars, appropriate for the Anticipatory Hedges.
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exceed USD 40 billion at any one time
outstanding (the E.ON Guarantee Limit),
exclusive of any guarantees and other
forms of credit support that are exempt
under rules 45(b) and 52(b); provided,
however, that the amount of guarantees
in respect of obligations of any EWGs
and FUCOs or companies engaged or
formed to engage in proposed energyrelated businesses, and proposed
companies exempt under rule 58 under
the Act (‘‘Rule 58 Subsidiaries’’) shall
remain subject to the limitations of rules
53(a)(1) and 58(a)(1), as applicable.
E.ON requests authorization for the
E.ON Group (other than the LG&E
Energy Group) to charge each subsidiary
(other than an LG&E Energy Group
company), a fee for the period of time
that a guaranty is outstanding, the fee to
be based upon market rates, which take
into account credit risk, where it may be
necessary to operate its business
efficiently under applicable
regulations.17 E.ON represents that the
amount of guarantees for obligations of
any Rule 58 Subsidiaries shall remain
subject to the limitations of rule
58(a)(1).
A.6. Profit and Loss Transfer
Agreements
Applicants request that the
Commission continue to authorize the
profit and loss transfer agreements of
E.ON and its German subsidiaries.
B. Subsidiary Financing and Related
Transactions
B.1. TBD Subsidiaries and Retained
Nonutility Subsidiaries
The E.ON Group (other than the LG&E
Energy Group) request authorization to
finance the TBD Subsidiaries and the
Retained Nonutility Subsidiaries
through capital contributions, loans,
guarantees, purchase of equity or debt
securities or other methods throughout
the Authorization Period. The Retained
Nonutility Subsidiaries also propose to
finance their respective businesses and
the acquisition of new businesses (as
permitted under the Act or the rules or
by Commission order), through the
issuance of equity, preferred stock and
debt securities to third parties.
Applicants propose that, in
connection with the financing of the
TBD Subsidiaries, they be authorized to
make investments in an aggregate
amount of up to USD 1 billion (the TBD
17 Where regulations are not applicable, or for any
guarantee of an LG&E Energy Group company, E.ON
may charge the subsidiary a fee for each guarantee
that is not greater than the cost, if any, of obtaining
the liquidity necessary to perform the guarantee (for
example, bank line commitment fees or letter of
credit fees, plus other transactional expenses) for
the period of time that it remains outstanding.
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Investment Limit), through July 1, 2007
(the end of the divestiture period). In
addition, Applicants propose that
financing of, and investments in, the
Retained Nonutility Subsidiaries, be
authorized in an aggregate amount of up
to USD 15 billion.
B.2. LG&E Energy Group Companies and
the Intermediate Companies
E.ON owns LG&E Energy through the
Intermediate Companies, E.ON U.S.
Holding and E.ON U.S. Investments,
which are registered holding companies
under the Act. E.ON U.S. Holding also
owns Fidelia, a Financing Entity, and
E.ON U.S. Investments owns E.ON NA
and its subsidiaries, which also function
as Financing Entities.
To finance the LG&E Energy Group
and/or the Intermediate Companies and
their subsidiaries, Applicants request
authorization for the Intermediate
Companies and their subsidiaries to
issue and sell securities to E.ON and
associate companies, but not companies
in the LG&E Energy Group.
In addition, authorization is requested
for E.ON NA and Fidelia (and any of
their subsidiaries) to issue securities to
third parties, such as banks, to finance
the capital needs of the E.ON Group,
including the LG&E Energy Group.
Applicants also request authorization
for the Intermediate Companies and
their subsidiaries to acquire securities of
other Intermediate Companies and their
subsidiaries and the LG&E Energy
Group companies.
The Intermediate Companies and
their subsidiaries also seek
authorization to issue guarantees, and
other forms of credit support, to or for
the benefit of another Intermediate
Company, its subsidiaries and the LG&E
Energy Group companies. Applicants
state that, in no case would an
Intermediate Company borrow, or
receive any extension of credit or
indemnity from any LG&E Energy Group
company or its subsidiaries, except that
an Intermediate Company may borrow
from its direct or indirect Financing
Entity that is not part of the LG&E
Energy Group.
In addition, authority is requested for
the Intermediate Companies, E.ON NA
and Fidelia, and their respective
subsidiaries, to guarantee the
indebtedness or contractual obligations
of, and to otherwise provide credit
support to, their respective associated
subsidiary companies up to an aggregate
amount of external guarantees not
exceed USD 2 billion outstanding
(exclusive of any guarantees and other
forms of credit support that are exempt
under rules 45(b) and 52(b)); provided,
however, that the amount of guarantees
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for obligations of any Rule 58
Subsidiaries shall remain subject to the
limitations of rule 58(a)(1). Applicants
state that, for reasons of economic
efficiency, the terms and conditions of
any financings between an Intermediate
Company (or E.ON NA and Fidelia) and
its direct or indirect parent, or between
an Intermediate Company and a FUCO
subsidiary or their associate company
subsidiaries, will be on market terms.
Applicants state that market rate
financing assures that intercompany
loans will not be used to transfer profits
from one related entity to another and
will also allow the lending entity to
recover its true costs of liquidity, risks
associated with credit quality and
interest rate and currency variability.
B.2.a. LG&E Energy Short-term Debt
LG&E Energy requests authorization
to obtain funds through the issuance of
external short-term debt securities in an
aggregate amount of up to USD 400
million, to meet its funding
requirements.
B.2.b. Utility Subsidiary Debt,
Intercompany Loans and Guarantees
LG&E and KU request authorization to
issue certain long-term and short-term
debt securities having maturities of two
years or less in an aggregate amount of
up to USD 400 million at any one time
outstanding for each of LG&E and KU
(to the extent their financing is not
exempt under rule 52(a), or otherwise),
as each may deem appropriate in light
of its needs and market conditions at the
time of issuance, subject to the
applicable Financing Parameters.
Applicants also request that LG&E
and KU be authorized, up to amounts of
USD 275 million and USD 215 million,
respectively, to obtain secured
intercompany loans from Fidelia, as
currently authorized, through the
Authorization Period.18 In addition,
authorization is requested for Fidelia to
provide intercompany loans to LG&E
and KU on a secured basis.
Utility Subsidiaries also seek
authorization, up to an amount of USD
200 million in the case of LG&E and
USD 200 million in the case of KU, to
guarantee, or otherwise provide credit
support for, the obligations of their
subsidiaries and other companies in
which they have invested (but not
EWGs, ETCs or FUCOs), to the extent
18 18 LG&E and KU request authorization under
section 12(d) of the Act and rule 43 to secure these
intercompany loans with a subordinated lien on
certain personal property of the respective
company, including ‘‘utility assets’’ within the
meaning of the Act, as the Commission previously
authorized, through May 31, 2005. See E.ON, et al.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27711 (Aug. 15, 2003);
see also SEC File No. 70–9985.
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23269
not exempt under rule 45. Applicants
represent that any guarantee of an
obligation of an EWG, FUCO or ETC
will be undertaken only if the
investment is authorized under sections
32, 33 or 34 of the Act, applicable rules,
and/or Commission order.
Applicants request that the Utility
Subsidiaries be permitted to charge each
subsidiary a fee for each guarantee
provided on the subsidiary’s behalf that
is not greater than the cost, if any, of the
liquidity necessary to perform the
guarantee. Applicants further state that
guarantees issued by Utility
Subsidiaries will not be secured by any
utility assets.
B.2.c. Certain Other LG&E Energy Group
Subsidiary Transactions
E.ON, E.ON NA and Fidelia (or a
special purpose financing subsidiary)
request authorization to finance all or a
portion of the capital needs of the LG&E
Energy Group companies directly, or
indirectly through other E.ON Group
companies, including the Intermediate
Companies, at the lowest practical cost.
Companies in the LG&E Energy Group
propose to borrow funds from other
E.ON Group companies that may have
available surplus funds.
Applicants state that, except for the
secured intercompany loans, described
above, the borrowings will be unsecured
and, in all cases, the borrowings will
only occur if the interest rate on the
loan would result in an equal or lower
cost of borrowing than the LG&E Energy
Group company could obtain in a loan
from E.ON or in the capital markets on
its own.19 Applicants state that
borrowings by LG&E Energy Group
companies would comply, at a
minimum, with the Financing
Parameters.
Applicants request authorization for
intercompany loans among LG&E
Energy and its nonutility subsidiaries in
an amount of up to USD 1.5 billion at
any one time outstanding during the
Authorization Period. Applicants state
that this intrasystem financing amount
would exclude financing exempt under
rules 45(b) and 52. They further state
that LG&E Energy will not borrow funds
from its subsidiary companies and that
the terms and conditions of
intercompany loans available to any
19 Applicants state that, consequently, all
borrowings by an LG&E Energy Group company
from an associate company would be at the lowest
of: (i) E.ON’s effective cost of capital; (ii) the
lending associate’s effective cost of capital (if lower
than E.ON’s effective cost of capital); and (iii) the
borrowing LG&E Energy Group’s effective cost of
capital determined by reference to the effective cost
of a direct borrowing by such company from a
nonassociate for a comparable term loan that could
be entered into at such time (Best Rate Method).
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borrowing company will be materially
no less favorable than the terms and
conditions of loans available to the
borrowing company from third-party
lenders. In addition, all intercompany
loans will be payable on demand or
have a maturity of less than 50 years
from the date of issuance.
Applicants also request authorization
for LG&E Energy and the LG&E Energy
Group nonutility subsidiaries to enter
into guarantees, extend credit, obtain
letters of credit, enter into guaranty-type
expense agreements and otherwise to
provide credit support for the
obligations, from time to time, of the
LG&E Energy Group companies during
the Authorization Period, specifically:
(a) For LG&E Energy, in an aggregate
amount of up to USD 1.5 billion
outstanding at any one time (exclusive
of guarantees that may be exempt under
rule 45(b)); and
(b) For the LG&E Energy Group
nonutility subsidiaries, in an additional
aggregate amount of up to USD 1.5
billion outstanding at any one time
(exclusive of guarantees that may be
exempt under rule 45(b)).
Applicants state that these requests
are separate from E.ON’s External Limit
and E.ON’s Guarantee Limit.
C. Continuation of Money Pools
Applicants request authorization to
continue to operate three money
pools.20 The three money pools are the
Utility Money Pool,21 the U.S.
Nonutility Money Pool22 and the E.ON
Nonutility Money Pool.23
Applicants state that Utility
Subsidiaries’ borrowings from the
Utility Money Pool would be counted
against their overall short-term
borrowing limits stated above. The U.S.
Nonutility Money Pool will be operated
on substantially the same terms and
conditions as the Utility Money Pool.
The E.ON Nonutility Money Pool is
20 See 2002 Order (as modified for the E.ON
Nonutility Money Pool in E.ON, et al., Holding Co.
Act Release No. 27788 (Dec. 29, 2003)).
21 The Utility Money Pool includes only Utility
Subsidiaries, as borrowers from and lenders to the
pool. E.ON, E.ON NA, Fidelia and LG&E Energy
may lend to, but not borrow from, the Utility Money
Pool. LG&E Energy Services Inc. (‘‘LG&E Services’’)
will continue to act as the administrator of the
Utility Money Pool.
22 The U.S. Nonutility Money Pool includes the
nonutility subsidiaries as borrowers from and
lenders to the pool. E.ON, E.ON NA, Fidelia and
LG&E Energy may lend to, but not borrow from, the
U.S. Nonutility Money Pool. LG&E Services will
continue to act as the administrator of the U.S.
Nonutility Money Pool.
23 The E.ON Nonutility Money Pool may include
all E.ON Group companies as borrowers from and
lenders to the pool, except E.ON, the Intermediate
Companies, and the LG&E Energy Group. E.ON and
the Intermediate Companies may lend to, but not
borrow from, the E.ON Nonutility Money Pool.
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administered by E.ON Finance GmbH
(formerly Hibernia Industriewerte
GmbH).24
D. Acquisition, Redemption or
Retirement of Securities
Applicants request authorization for
each company in the E.ON Group, other
than EWGs, FUCOs and ETCs, to
acquire, redeem or retire its securities or
those of its direct and indirect
subsidiaries, which securities may be
either outstanding presently or issued
and sold in the future from time to time
during the Authorization Period.
Applicants state that these transactions
will be undertaken at either the
competitive market prices for the
securities or at the stated price for those
securities, as applicable, and that Utility
Subsidiaries will acquire, retire or
redeem securities only in accordance
with rule 42.
E. Financing Entities
Applicants also request authorization
for the E.ON Group companies, except
the EWGs, FUCOs and ETCs, to organize
new or use existing corporations, trusts,
partnerships or other entities
(‘‘Financing Entities’’), to finance the
business of the respective parent
company or its subsidiaries. Applicants
state that a Financing Entity would be
used to finance the authorized or
permitted businesses of its direct or
indirect parent company (‘‘Founding
Parent’’), including the businesses of the
LG&E Energy Group, but in no event
would a Financing Entity engage in
prohibited upstream loans involving
companies in the LG&E Energy Group.25
In addition, Applicants request
authorization to issue securities to a
Financing Entity to evidence the
transfer of financing proceeds by a
Financing Entity to a company receiving
financing. Applicants also request
authorization to enter into support or
expense agreements on market price
terms with Financing Entities to pay the
expenses of any of these entities.
F. Changes in Capital Stock of
Subsidiaries
Applicants request authority to
change the terms of any subsidiary’s
authorized capital stock capitalization
or other equity interests by an amount
deemed appropriate by E.ON or any
intermediate parent company; provided
that the consents of all other
24 E.ON, et al., Holding Co. Act Release No. 27788
(Dec. 29, 2003); see also note 20 above.
25 Applicants state that Financing Entities would
be intended to issue any securities that the
Founding Parent would be authorized to issue, as
authorized by the Commission by order, rule or
under the Act.
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shareholders, if required by applicable
corporate law or the subsidiary’s
governing documents, have been
obtained for the proposed change.
G. Payment of Dividends Out of Capital
or Unearned Surplus
Applicants request authorization that
each of the TBD Subsidiaries, the
Retained Nonutility Subsidiaries, the
Intermediate Companies, and the LG&E
Energy Group companies (excluding
Utility Subsidiaries), be permitted to
continue to pay dividends with respect
to its capital stock, from time to time,
out of capital and unearned surplus (to
the extent permitted under the corporate
law and state or national law applicable
in the jurisdiction where each company
is organized and the terms of any credit
agreements and indentures that restrict
the amount and timing of distributions
to shareholders), through the
Authorization Period. Applicants state
that, in addition, none of the companies
will declare or pay any dividend out of
capital or unearned surplus unless it: (i)
Has received excess cash as a result of
the sale of some or all of its assets; (ii)
has engaged in a restructuring or
reorganization; and/or (iii) is returning
capital to an associate company.
H. Nonutility Reorganizations
Applicants also request continued
authority to restructure, consolidate or
otherwise reorganize E.ON’s nonutility
holdings, including those in the LG&E
Energy Group, from time to time, as may
be necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the E.ON Group’s
authorized nonutility activities, and to
maintain and support investment in the
E.ON TBD Subsidiaries pending
divestiture.
E.ON requests authorization to
acquire, directly or indirectly, the
securities of one or more intermediate
subsidiaries (‘‘Development
Subsidiaries’’) organized exclusively for
the purpose of acquiring, financing,
divesting and/or holding the securities
of one or more existing or future
nonutility subsidiaries. Applicants
request authorization for the
Development Subsidiaries to provide
management, administrative, project
development and operating services to
direct or indirect subsidiaries at cost, in
accordance with section 13 of the Act
and the rules, including rules 90 and 91,
to the extent transactions are not
exempt, or authorized or permitted by
Commission rule or order.
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I. EWG and FUCO Subsidiaries and
Reinvestment of Proceeds From the
Divestiture of Nonutility Businesses
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
E.ON requests the Commission
authorize continued investment in an
aggregate amount of up to USD 65
billion in EWGs and FUCOs, the
Aggregate EWG/FUCO Financing
Limitation.26 Applicants state that they
also seek authority to issue and sell up
to USD 35 billion of securities to finance
EWG and FUCO investments pending
the receipt of divestiture proceeds
(‘‘Bridge Loans’’), for the flexibility of
E.ON, so that attractive investment
opportunities may be pursued, because
the timing of the receipt of divestiture
proceeds will not always coincide with
the opportunity to invest in additional
EWG or FUCO assets.27 Applicants state
that any issuance of Bridge Loans would
count against the E.ON External Limit or
the E.ON Short-term Limit, depending
on the maturity of the Bridge Loans.
J. Energy-Related Subsidiaries
E.ON also seeks authorization to
acquire and to invest up to USD 10
billion, the Energy-Related Subsidiary
Investment Limit, of the divestiture
proceeds during the Authorization
Period in certain permitted nonutility
businesses located primarily outside of
the U.S.
For the Commission by the Division of
Investment Management, pursuant to
delegated authority.
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E5–2148 Filed 5–3–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
[Release Nos. 33–8572; 34–51631/April 28,
2005]
Order Making Fiscal Year 2006 Annual
Adjustments to the Fee Rates
Applicable Under Section 6(b) of the
Securities Act of 1933 and Sections
13(e), 14(g), 31(b) and 31(c) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
I. Background
The Commission collects fees under
various provisions of the securities
laws. section 6(b) of the Securities Act
of 1933 (‘‘Securities Act’’) requires the
Commission to collect fees from issuers
on the registration of securities.1 Section
13(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’) requires the
Commission to collect fees on specified
repurchases of securities.2 Section 14(g)
of the Exchange Act requires the
Commission to collect fees on proxy
solicitations and statements in corporate
control transactions.3 Finally, sections
31(b) and (c) of the Exchange Act
require national securities exchanges
and national securities associations,
respectively, to pay fees on transactions
in specified securities to the
Commission.4
The Investor and Capital Markets Fee
Relief Act (‘‘Fee Relief Act’’) 5 amended
section 6(b) of the Securities Act and
sections 13(e), 14(g), and 31 of the
Exchange Act to require the
Commission to make annual
adjustments to the fee rates applicable
under these sections for each of the
fiscal years 2003 through 2011, and one
final adjustment to fix the fee rates
under these sections for fiscal year 2012
and beyond.6
II. Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Adjustment
to the Fee Rates Applicable under
Section 6(b) of the Securities Act and
Sections 13(e) and 14(g) of the Exchange
Act
Section 6(b)(5) of the Securities Act
requires the Commission to make an
1 15
26 See
the 2002 Order, note 1 above. Applicants
propose that the investments consist of: (i) an initial
combined E.ON, Powergen and LG&E Energy
aggregate investment in EWGs and FUCOs of USD
4.886 billion, as of December 31, 2001; (ii) the
proposed reinvestment of the sale proceeds of the
TBD Subsidiary divestitures in an amount up to
USD 35 billion; and (iii) an additional amount of
EWG/FUCO proposed investment of up to USD 25
billion.
27 Applicants state that, upon the receipt of the
divestiture proceeds, the Bridge Loans or debt
securities with an equivalent principal amount
would be retired, redeemed or otherwise paid
down.
VerDate jul<14>2003
21:08 May 03, 2005
Jkt 205001
U.S.C. 77f(b).
U.S.C. 78m(e).
3 15 U.S.C. 78n(g).
4 15 U.S.C. 78ee(b) and (c). In addition, Section
31(d) of the Exchange Act requires the Commission
to collect assessments from national securities
exchanges and national securities associations for
round turn transactions on security futures. 15
U.S.C. 78ee(d).
5 Pub. L. No. 107–123, 115 Stat. 2390 (2002).
6 See 15 U.S.C. 77f(b)(5), 77f(b)(6), 78m(e)(5),
78m(e)(6), 78n(g)(5), 78n(g)(6), 78ee(j)(1), and
78ee(j)(3). Section 31(j)(2) of the Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. 78ee(j)(2), also requires the Commission, in
specified circumstances, to make a mid-year
adjustment to the fee rates under sections 31(b) and
(c) of the Exchange Act in fiscal years 2002 through
2011.
PO 00000
2 15
Frm 00184
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23271
annual adjustment to the fee rate
applicable under section 6(b) of the
Securities Act in each of the fiscal years
2003 through 2011.7 In those same fiscal
years, sections 13(e)(5) and 14(g)(5) of
the Exchange Act require the
Commission to adjust the fee rates
under sections 13(e) and 14(g) to a rate
that is equal to the rate that is applicable
under section 6(b). In other words, the
annual adjustment to the fee rate under
section 6(b) of the Securities Act also
sets the annual adjustment to the fee
rates under sections 13(e) and 14(g) of
the Exchange Act.
Section 6(b)(5) sets forth the method
for determining the annual adjustment
to the fee rate under section 6(b) for
fiscal year 2006. Specifically, the
Commission must adjust the fee rate
under section 6(b) to a ‘‘rate that, when
applied to the baseline estimate of the
aggregate maximum offering prices for
[fiscal year 2006], is reasonably likely to
produce aggregate fee collections under
[Section 6(b)] that are equal to the target
offsetting collection amount for [fiscal
year 2006].’’ That is, the adjusted rate is
determined by dividing the ‘‘target
offsetting collection amount’’ for fiscal
year 2006 by the ‘‘baseline estimate of
the aggregate maximum offering prices’’
for fiscal year 2006.
Section 6(b)(11)(A) specifies that the
‘‘target offsetting collection amount’’ for
fiscal year 2006 is $689,000,000.8
Section 6(b)(11)(B) defines the ‘‘baseline
estimate of the aggregate maximum
offering price’’ for fiscal year 2006 as
‘‘the baseline estimate of the aggregate
maximum offering price at which
securities are proposed to be offered
pursuant to registration statements filed
with the Commission during [fiscal year
2006] as determined by the
Commission, after consultation with the
Congressional Budget Office and the
Office of Management and Budget.
* * *’’
To make the baseline estimate of the
aggregate maximum offering price for
7 The annual adjustments are designed to adjust
the fee rate in a given fiscal year so that, when
applied to the aggregate maximum offering price at
which securities are proposed to be offered for the
fiscal year, it is reasonably likely to produce total
fee collections under section 6(b) equal to the
‘‘target offsetting collection amount’’ specified in
section 6(b)(11)(A) for that fiscal year.
8 Congress determined the target offsetting
collection amounts by applying reduced fee rates to
the CBO’s January 2001 projections of the aggregate
maximum offering prices for fiscal years 2002
through 2011. In any fiscal year through fiscal year
2011, the annual adjustment mechanism will result
in additional fee rate reductions if the CBO’s
January 2001 projection of the aggregate maximum
offering prices for the fiscal year proves to be too
low, and fee rate increases if the CBO’s January
2001 projection of the aggregate maximum offering
prices for the fiscal year proves to be too high.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 85 (Wednesday, May 4, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23264-23271]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E5-2148]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 35-27962]
Filings Under the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, as
Amended (``Act'')
April 27, 2005.
Notice is hereby given that the following filing(s) has/have been
made with the Commission pursuant to provisions of the Act and rules
promulgated under the Act. All interested persons are referred to the
application(s) and/or declaration(s) for complete statements of the
proposed transaction(s) summarized below. The application(s) and/or
declaration(s) and any amendment(s) is/are available for public
inspection through the Commission's Branch of Public Reference.
Interested persons wishing to comment or request a hearing on the
application(s) and/or declaration(s) should submit their views in
writing by May 23, 2005, to the Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, Washington, DC 20549-0609, and serve a copy on the relevant
applicant(s) and/or declarant(s) at the address(es) specified below.
Proof of service (by affidavit or, in the case of an attorney at law,
by certificate) should be filed with the request. Any request for
hearing should identify specifically the issues of facts or law that
are disputed. A person who so requests will be notified of any hearing,
if ordered, and will receive a copy of any notice or order issued in
the matter. After May 23, 2005, the application(s) and/or
declaration(s), as filed or as amended, may be granted and/or permitted
to become effective.
E.ON AG, et al. (70-10282)
E.ON AG (``E.ON''), a registered holding company under the Act,
located at E.ON-Platz 1, 40479 D[uuml]sseldorf, Germany, and certain of
its direct and indirect utility and nonutility subsidiary companies
listed in the Application, including E.ON U.S. Holding GmbH (``E.ON
U.S. Holding''), a registered holding company and a direct subsidiary
of E.ON, also located at E.ON-Platz 1, 40479 D[uuml]lsseldorf, Germany,
and the parent company of E.ON U.S. Investments Corp. (``E.ON U.S.
Investments''), a registered holding company and parent of LG&E Energy
LLC (``LG&E Energy''), a registered holding company and parent of
Louisville Gas and Electric Company (``LG&E'') and Kentucky Utilities
Company (``KU''), all located at 220 West Main Street, Louisville,
Kentucky 40202 (collectively, ``Applicants''), have filed an
application, as amended (``Application'') under sections 6(a), 7, 9(a),
10, 12(b), 12(c), 12(d) and 13(b) of the Act and rules 20, 26, 42, 43,
45, 46, 52, 53, 87 and 90.
Applicants seek authority for certain financing transactions of
E.ON and its associated companies during the period from the effective
date of the order granting the Application through May 31, 2008
(``Authorization Period''). The Commission previously provided
authorizations for E.ON and certain other entities in the E.ON group
(``E.ON Group'' or ``Group''), on June 14, 2002, to undertake specific
financing transactions, which authorizations expire on May 31, 2005
(``2002 Order'').\1\
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\1\ See E.ON AG, et al., Holding Co. Act Release No. 27539 (June
14, 2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Background
E.ON is headquartered in D[uuml]sseldorf, Germany, and most of its
operations are located in Europe.\2\ Applicants state that, in 2003,
E.ON reorganized its
[[Page 23265]]
structure to reflect its commitment to an integrated business focusing
on power and gas.\3\
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\2\ Applicants state that E.On had approximately 478,000
shareholders worldwide, as of June 30, 2004, and that E.ON's shares,
all of which are ordinary shares, are listed on all seven German
stock exchanges. The shares are also actively traded over-the-
counter in London and E.ON's American Depositary Shares (``ADSs''),
each of which represents one ordinary share, are listed on the New
York Stock Exchange.
Applicants state that, unless otherwise noted, amounts expressed
in United States dollars (``USD'') are unaudited and have been
converted from Euros, for convenience, at an exchange rate of USD
1.2179 = EUR 1.00, the Noon Buying Rate of the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York on June 30, 2004. For the six months ended June 30,
2004. E.ON reported consolidated revenues of EUR 25.594 billion (USD
31.171 billion) calculated in accordance with U.S. generally
accepted accounting procedures (``US GAAP''). As of June 30, 2004,
E.ON had total consolidated assets of EUR 113.958 billion (USD
138.789 billion).
\3\ Applicants state that E.ON's ``on*top'' project was
comprehensive strategic review, the principle elements of which were
an analysis of E.ON's competitive position, the redefinition of its
corporate strategy and the design of a revised organizational
structure to reflect E.ON's strategic goals. The on*top project,
among other things, resulted in the transfer of management of LG&E
Energy and its utility subsidiaries from Powergen Ltd.
(``Powergen'') to E.ON. By order dated November 22, 2004, the
Commission authorized Powergen's deregistration under the Act, as
well as the deregistration of its direct and indirect parent holding
companies, E.ON UK Holding GmbH and E.ON UK Holding Company Ltd.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E.ON states that, as a result of its decision to focus on power and
gas, in the last few years, its core energy business has been
reorganized into five new market units, each of which is focused on a
market in which E.ON believes it has a strong competitive position: (1)
Central Europe, led by E.ON Energie AG (``E.ON Energie''); (2) Pan-
European Gas, led by E.ON Ruhrgas AG (``E.ON Ruhrgas''); (3) U.K., led
by E.ON UK plc (``E.ON UK''); (4) Nordic, led by E.ON Nordic AB (``E.ON
Nordic''); and (5) U.S. Midwest, led by LG&E Energy. E.ON's non-U.S.
business segments (E.ON Energie in Central Europe; E.ON Ruhrgas leading
Pan-European Gas; E.ON UK in the U.K.; and E.ON Nordic in Northern
Europe) are comprised in part of foreign utility companies, as defined
in section 33 of the Act (``FUCOs'').
A. LG&E Energy and the U.S. Midwest Market Unit
E.ON U.S. Holding, the direct subsidiary of E.ON and parent of E.ON
U.S. Investments Corp. (together, ``Intermediate Companies''), which is
the direct parent of LG&E Energy, the holding company for LG&E and KU,
E.ON's United States utility subsidiaries (together, ``Utility
Subsidiaries''). E.ON U.S. Holding, E.ON U.S. Investments and LG&E
Energy are registered holding companies. LG&E Energy owns LG&E and KU,
as noted above.\4\ LG&E is an electricity- and natural gas-utility
based in Louisville, Kentucky \5\ and KU is an electric-utility based
in Lexington, Kentucky.\6\ Revenues from the U.S. Midwest market unit
were USD 1.173 million (EUR 963 million) for the same period, 3.8% of
E.ON's consolidated revenues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ LG&E Energy is also engaged in nonutility businesses,
through wholly owned subsidiaries LG&E Capital Corp. (``LCC'') and
LG&E Energy Marketing Inc. (``LEM''). LCC operates one oil-fired and
nine coal-fired electricity generation units in western Kentucky
through its wholly owned subsidiary Western Kentucky Energy Corp.
and affiliates. In addition, through its subsidiaries, LCC operates
several other independent power projects in the United States. LCC
also owns interests in three Argentine gas distribution companies
and stakes in two power plants in the United States through another
wholly owned subsidiary, LG&E Power Inc. Applicants state that LG&E
Energy is in the process of disposing of its stakes in the power
plants held by LG&E Power Inc.
\5\ LG&E distributes electricity to approximately 384,000
customers and supplies natural gas to approximately 312,000
customers in Louisville and 17 surrounding counties.
\6\ KU serves approximately 482,000 customers in 77 Kentucky
counties, approximately 30,000 customers in five counties in
Virginia, as well as 12 municipalities and fewer than 10 customers
in Tennessee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Subsidiaries To-Be-Divested
The ``to-be-divested'' E.ON subsidiaries (``TBD Subsidiaries'') are
those subsidiaries that E.ON is required to divest under the 2002
Order. Viterra AG (``Viterra''), E.ON's wholly owned real estate group,
is engaged in two businesses: residential real estate and real estate
development. E.ON currently holds a 42.9% interest in Degussa AG
(``Degussa''), a specialty chemical company. In the 2002 Order, E.ON
was required to divest Degussa, Viterra and five passive real estate
investment vehicles managed by Viterra within five years and E.ON
states that it continues to expect to meet that requirement.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The 2002 Order also required the divestiture of several
other E.ON subsidiaries within three years. Since the issuance of
the 2002 Order, E.ON has divested VEBA Oel AG, Viterra Energy
Services, Inc., Stinnes AG, Schmalbach Lubeca AG and the other
companies required to-be-divested within three years, with the
exception of AV Packaging and Hibernia Gamma
Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH. E.ON states that it intends to
complete the divestiture of AV Packaging and Hibernia Gamma
Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH by July 1, 2005, the three year
anniversary of E.ON's registration under the Act. From January 1,
2002 to June 30, 2004, the aggregate proceeds received by E.ON from
the divestiture of various businesses in connection with its
transformation from a diversified company into an energy and utility
company were approximately EUR 21.8 billion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Summary of the Request
Applicants state that E.ON follows a centralized financing policy
and that, as a general rule, external financings will be undertaken at
the E.ON level (or through finance subsidiaries under its
guarantee).\8\ In certain limited circumstances, future external
financings may also take place at the subsidiary level. Generally, over
time, E.ON intends to refinance outstanding external subsidiary debt
that is not consistent with the group financing policy as it comes due
with intercompany loans.\9\ E.ON also states, however, that the
financing of joint ventures or partly-owned companies is generally
concluded externally.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Applicants state that most of the financing transactions of
E.ON's market unit have been centralized and netted at the parent,
or at a direct wholly owned finance subsidiary of the parent, to
reduce the Group's overall debt and interest expense.
\9\ Applicants state that E.ON's aim is to maximize its
financing efficiency and minimize structural subordination issues
that would arise if significant external debt was held at the
operating subsidiary level.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicants request the following financing authorizations and
authorizations for certain related actions, as described further in
subsequent sections of this notice, beginning with the effective date
of an order issued in this matter through May 31, 2008 (the
Authorization Period).
1. For E.ON, authority to issue and sell equity and certain debt
securities, directly or indirectly, in new financing transactions, in
an aggregate amount of up to USD 75 billion at any one time outstanding
(and which transactions are also subject to the E.ON External Limit,
the E.ON Short-term Limit and the E.ON Guarantee Limit (all further
described below)):
(a) Equity and unsecured long-term debt securities in an aggregate
amount of up to USD 50 billion at any one time outstanding (exclusive
of short-term debt and guarantees) (``E.ON External Limit''),
including, but not limited to,
(i) Common stock and ADSs, preferred stock, preferred securities,
equity-linked securities, options, warrants, purchase contracts, units,
securities with call and put options and securities convertible into
any of these securities;
(ii) Unsecured long-term debt, including, among other things,
subordinated debt and bank borrowings;
(b) Unsecured short-term debt in an aggregate amount of up to USD
30 billion at any one time outstanding (``E.ON Short-term Limit''); and
(c) Guarantees, and other credit support, in an aggregate amount of
up to USD 40 billion at any one time outstanding (exclusive of
guarantees exempt under rules 45(b) and 58(a)(1)) (``E.ON Guarantee
Limit'').
2. For E.ON (for itself and on behalf of its subsidiaries) and for
its subsidiaries, authority to engage in currency and interest rate
transactions for the purpose of hedging (``Hedging Interests'') and
certain debt and equity transactions for the purpose of engaging in
anticipatory hedging (``Anticipatory Hedging Transactions''), subject
to certain limitations.
3. For E.ON and its subsidiaries, authority to continue utilizing
certain profit and loss transfer agreements and the consolidated tax
filing of E.ON and its German subsidiaries in the manner authorized by
the 2002 Order.
[[Page 23266]]
4. For E.ON and the E.ON Group (other than the LG&E Group
(described below)), authority to:
(a) Finance the TBD Subsidiaries and E.ON's nonutility subsidiaries
not held within a FUCO group or the LG&E Energy Group (``Retained
Nonutility Subsidiaries'') through capital contributions, loans,
guarantees, purchases of equity or debt securities or other methods,
subject to,
(i) An aggregate amount of up to USD 1 billion (through July 1,
2007) (the end of the divestiture period) for TBD Subsidiary
investments (``TBD Investment Limit'');
(ii) An aggregate amount of up to USD 15 billion for Retained
Nonutility Subsidiary investments (``Retained Nonutility Subsidiary
Investment Limit''); and
(b) For the Retained Nonutility Subsidiaries, to finance their
businesses and acquire new businesses (as permitted under the Act, the
rules or by Commission order) through the issuance of equity, preferred
stock and debt securities to third parties, subject to the Retained
Nonutility Subsidiary Investment Limit.
5. For E.ON through the Intermediate Companies (E.ON U.S. Holding
and E.ON U.S. Investments) and through the related financing
subsidiaries, authority to finance the Intermediate Companies and LG&E
Energy and its subsidiaries (including LG&E and KU) (together, ``LG&E
Energy Group'') by:
(a) Issuance and sale of securities to E.ON and associate companies
(but not companies in the LG&E Energy Group (described below));
(b) For E.ON North America Inc. (``E.ON NA'') and Fidelia Corp.
(``Fidelia'') (and any of their subsidiaries), issuance and sale of
securities to third parties, such as banks, to finance the capital
needs of the E.ON Group, including the LG&E Energy Group;
(c) For the Intermediate Companies and their subsidiaries,
acquisition of securities of other Intermediate Companies and their
subsidiaries and the LG&E Energy Group;
(d) For the Intermediate Companies and their subsidiaries, issuance
of guarantees and other forms of credit support to or for the benefit
of another Intermediate Company, its subsidiaries and the LG&E Energy
Group, subject to an aggregate amount of up to USD 2 billion at any one
time outstanding (exclusive of guarantees exempt under rules 45(b) and
58(a)(1)); and
(e) For the LG&E Energy Group, including LG&E and KU, authority,
(i) For LG&E Energy, to issue and sell short-term debt securities
in an aggregate amount of up to USD 400 million;
(ii) For the Utility Subsidiaries, each of LG&E and KU,
(a) To issue and sell long-term debt securities having a maturity
of two years or less in an aggregate amount of up to USD 400 million
and USD 400 million, respectively;
(b) To issue and sell short-term debt securities in an aggregate
amount of up to USD 200 million and USD 200 million, respectively;
(c) To continue to obtain secured intercompany loans from Fidelia
in an aggregate amount of up to USD 275 million and USD 215 million,
respectively;
(d) To guarantee, or provide other credit support, for the
obligations of their subsidiaries and other companies in which they
have invested (but not exempt wholesale generators, as defined in
section 32 of the Act (``EWGs''), exempt telecommunications companies,
as defined in section 34 of the Act (``ETCs''), or FUCOs), in an amount
of up to USD 200 million and USD 200 million, respectively;
(iii) For LG&E Energy and its nonutility subsidiaries, to enter
into intercompany loans in an aggregate amount of up to USD 1.5 billion
(excluding amounts exempt under rules 45(b) and 52) at any one time
outstanding (and LG&E Energy will not borrow from its subsidiaries);
(iv) For LG&E Energy, to issue guarantees and other credit support
in an aggregate amount of up to USD 1.5 billion at any one time
outstanding (excluding amounts exempt under rule 45(b) and separate
from E.ON's External Limit and E.ON's Guarantee Limit); and
(v) For the LG&E Energy Group nonutility subsidiaries, to issue
guarantees and other credit support in an additional aggregate amount
of up to USD 1.5 billion, at any one time outstanding (exclusive of
guarantees that may be exempt under rule 45(b) and separate from E.ON's
External Limit and E.ON's Guarantee Limit).
6. For Applicants, to continue the existing money pools and
intercompany financing arrangements.
7. For Applicants, authority to form financing entities
(``Financing Entities,'' as defined below) and engage in related
transactions.
8. For Applicants, authority for each company in the E.ON Group
(other than EWGs, FUCOs and ETCs), to acquire, redeem or retire its
securities (or those of its direct and indirect subsidiaries), either
outstanding presently or issued and sold in the future, from time to
time.
9. For Applicants, to continue authority to change the terms of any
E.ON Group company's authorized capital stock, issue additional shares,
or alter of the terms of any existing authorized security.
10. For Applicants, authority to continue to pay dividends out of
capital or unearned surplus.
11. For Applicants, authority to restructure, consolidate or
otherwise reorganize, E.ON's nonutility holdings, which may include the
acquisition, directly or indirectly, of securities of one or more
intermediate subsidiaries (``Development Subsidiaries,'' as defined
below) organized exclusively for the purpose of acquiring, financing,
divesting and/or holding the securities of one or more existing or
future nonutility subsidiaries.\10\
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\10\ Development Subsidiaries may also engage in development
activities (``Development Activities'') and administrative
activities (``Administrative Activities'') relating to the permitted
businesses of the nonutility subsidiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
12. For Applicants, authority to continue to invest in EWGs and
FUCOs up to an aggregate amount of USD 65 billion (``Aggregate EWG/FUCO
Financing Limitation'').
13. For Applicants, authority to invest in energy-related companies
doing business outside the U.S. (``Energy-Related Subsidiaries'') in an
aggregate amount of up to USD 10 billion (``Energy-Related Subsidiary
Investment Limit'').
III. Financing Parameters
Applicants represent that the following general terms will be
applicable, where appropriate, to the external financing transactions
requested to be authorized in the Application.
A. Effective Cost of Money
Applicants state that the effective cost of money on external debt
securities and preferred stock or other types of preferred securities
will not exceed the competitive market rates available at the time of
issuance for securities having the same or reasonably similar terms and
conditions issued by similar companies of reasonably comparable credit
quality.
B. Maturity
Applicants state that the maturity of long-term debt will be
between one and 50 years after their issuance. Preferred securities and
equity-linked securities will be redeemed no later than 50 years after
their issuance, unless converted into common stock. Preferred stock
issued directly by E.ON may be perpetual in duration. Short-term debt
[[Page 23267]]
will have an original maturity of less than one year.
C. Issuance Expenses
Applicants state that the underwriting fees, commissions or other
similar remuneration paid in connection with the non-competitive issue,
sale or distribution of securities will not exceed the greater of: (i)
5% of the principal or total amount of the securities being issued; or
(ii) issuance expenses that are generally paid at the time of the
pricing for sales of the particular issuance, having the same or
reasonably similar terms and conditions issued by similar companies of
reasonably comparable credit quality.
D. Common Equity Ratio and Investment Grade Ratings
E.ON and LG&E Energy, each on a consolidated basis, and LG&E and KU
will maintain common stock equity as a percentage of total
capitalization of at least 30%, as reflected in their most recent
annual or semiannual report, in the case of E.ON, and, with respect to
LG&E Energy and the Utility Subsidiaries, quarterly financial
statements prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP; provided that E.ON in
any event will be authorized to issue common stock to the extent
permitted as a consequence of this Application.
Applicants further represent that, except for securities issued for
the purpose of funding money pool operations, no guarantees or other
securities, other than common stock, may be issued in reliance upon the
authorization granted by the Commission pursuant to the Application
unless: (i) The security to be issued, if rated, is rated investment
grade; (ii) all outstanding securities of the issuer that are rated,
are rated investment grade; and (iii) all outstanding securities of
E.ON that are rated, are rated investment grade. For purposes of this
provision (``Investment Grade Condition''), a security will be deemed
to be rated ``investment grade'' if it is rated investment grade by at
least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization
(``NRSRO''), as that term is used in paragraphs (c)(2)(vi)(E), (F) and
(H) of rule 15c3-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended. In addition, Applicants request authorization as follows: (i)
Notwithstanding that at any time the preferred stock of a Utility
Subsidiary, if rated, may not be rated investment grade by an NRSRO,
such Utility Subsidiary may nonetheless participate in the Utility
Money Pool, borrow funds as secured intercompany loans from Fidelia and
borrow funds as intercompany loans; and (ii) notwithstanding that at
any time the securities of a nonutility subsidiary that are rated are
not rated investment grade, such nonutility subsidiary may nonetheless
participate in the U.S. Nonutility Money Pool and may borrow funds as
intercompany loans. Applicants request that the Commission reserve
jurisdiction over the issuance of any guarantee or other securities in
reliance upon the authorization granted by the Commission pursuant to
the Application at any time that the conditions set forth in clauses
(i) through (iii) above are not satisfied.
E. Use of Proceeds
Applicants state that the proceeds from the proposed financings
will be used for general corporate purposes, including: (i) Financing
investments by and capital expenditures of the E.ON Group; (ii) the
funding of future investments in companies that are exempt under the
Act or the rules or permitted by Commission order, including EWGs,
FUCOs, TBD Subsidiaries, ETCs and Rule 58 Subsidiaries (as defined
below); (iii) the repayment, redemption, refunding or purchase by any
E.ON Group company of any of its own securities; (iv) financing or
refinancing capital requirements of the E.ON Group; and (v) other
lawful purposes. Applicants represent that no financing proceeds will
be used to acquire the equity securities of any company unless the
acquisition has been approved by the Commission or is in accordance
with an available exemption under the Act or rules, including sections
32, 33, 34 and rule 58.
IV. The Request
Applicants request the following authorizations during the
Authorization Period as described below.
A. E.ON External Financing and Related Transactions
E.ON requests authorization to increase its capitalization through
the issuance and sale of securities, including, but not necessarily
limited to, common stock, preferred stock, preferred securities,
equity-linked securities, options, warrants, purchase contracts, units
(consisting of one or more purchase contracts, warrants, debt
securities, shares of preferred stock, shares of common stock or any
combination of such securities), long-term debt, subordinated debt,
lease financing, bank borrowings, securities with call or put options,
and securities convertible into any of these securities, up to an
aggregate amount of new financing not to exceed USD 50 billion
outstanding at any one time (exclusive of short-term debt and
guarantees), the E.ON External Limit, during the Authorization Period;
provided that securities issued for purposes of refunding or replacing
other outstanding securities (where E.ON's capitalization is not
increased as a result) shall not be counted against this
limitation.\11\ E.ON further proposes that issuances subject to the
E.ON External Limit (an aggregate limit of USD 50 billion), the E.ON
Short-term Limit (an aggregate limit of USD 30 billion) and the E.ON
Guarantee Limit (an aggregate limit of USD 40 billion) would not, in
the aggregate, exceed USD 75 billion, during the Authorization Period,
which would be consistent with its current overall financing
limits.\12\
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\11\ These financing transactions will be valued at the time of
issuance.
\12\ See note 1, above. The Commission's 2002 Order placed an
overall limit on E.ON's external financing of USD 75 billion. That
limit applied E.ON's aggregate issuances of equity, long- and short-
term debt securities and guarantees.
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A.1. Common Stock, Preferred Stock, Preferred Securities and Equity-
linked Securities
E.ON requests authorization to issue and sell common stock,
options, warrants or other stock purchase rights exercisable for common
stock.\13\ E.ON also proposes to issue common stock and/or purchase
shares of its common stock (either currently or under forward
contracts) in the open market or through negotiated purchases for
purposes of: (i) Reissuing such shares at a later date pursuant to
stock-based plans which are maintained for stockholders, employees and
directors; or (ii) managing its capital structure. E.ON further
requests authorization to use its common stock and other equity
instruments to fund employee benefit plans and in connection with
dividend reinvestment plans currently in existence or that may be
formed during the Authorization Period.\14\
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\13\ Public distributions may be pursuant to private negotiation
with underwriters, dealers or agents, or effected through
competitive bidding among underwriters. In addition, sales may be
made through private placements or other non-public offerings to one
or more persons.
\14\ E.ON states that it currently maintains a stock-based
compensation plan that issues stock appreciation rights (``SARs''),
authorized by the Commission's 2002 Order, and it proposes to issue
shares of its common stock to satisfy its obligations under its
stock-based plans, as they may be amended or extended, and similar
plans or plan funding arrangements adopted in the future without
additional Commission order.
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E.ON also requests authorization to issue preferred stock directly
and/or issue, indirectly, through one or more financing subsidiaries,
other forms of preferred securities (including, without
[[Page 23268]]
limitation, trust preferred securities or monthly income preferred
securities), equity-linked securities in the form of stock purchase
units (which combine a security with a fixed obligation (e.g.,
preferred stock or debt) with a stock purchase contract that is
exercisable (either mandatorily or at the option of the holder or a
combination of both) within a relatively short period (e.g., three to
six years after issuance)). Applicants state that these transactions
will be subject to the E.ON External Limit.
A.2. Long-term Debt
E.ON also requests authorization to issue unsecured long-term debt
that may be issued directly through a public or private placement, or
indirectly, through one or more financing subsidiaries, in the form of
notes, convertible notes, medium-term notes or debentures under one or
more indentures or long-term indebtedness under agreements with banks
or other institutional lenders.\15\ Applicants state that these
transactions will be subject to the E.ON External Limit.
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\15\ The maturity dates, interest rates, redemption and sinking
fund provisions and conversion features, if any, with respect to the
long-term debt of a particular series, as well as any associated
placement, underwriting or selling agent fees, commissions and
discounts, if any, will be established by negotiation or competitive
bidding at the time of issuance.
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A.3. Short-term Debt
E.ON requests authority to issue and sell from time to time,
directly or indirectly through one or more Financing Entities,
unsecured short-term debt, including commercial paper and bank
borrowings, in an aggregate principal amount at any time outstanding
not to exceed USD 30 billion, the E.ON Short-term Limit; provided that
securities issued for purposes of refunding or replacing other
outstanding short-term debt securities (where E.ON's capitalization is
not changed as a result) shall not be counted against this limitation.
E.ON requests further authorization to issue and sell, from time to
time, directly or indirectly through one or more Financing Entities,
unsecured short-term debt, an aggregate amount at any time outstanding
of up to the E.ON Short-term Limit, in the form of commercial paper,
notes issued to banks and other institutional lenders, and other forms
of unsecured short-term indebtedness. Applicants state that short-term
borrowings under credit lines will have original maturities of less
than a year from the date of each borrowing. Applicants state that
these transactions will be subject to the E.ON External Limit.
A.4. Interest Rate, Currency and Certain Equity Risk Management Devices
E.ON requests authorization to enter into, perform, purchase and
sell financial instruments intended to manage the volatility of
interest rates and currency exchange rates, including but not limited
to swaps, caps, floors, collars and forward agreements or any other
similar agreements (``Hedging Instruments''). E.ON would employ Hedging
Instruments as a means of prudently managing the risk associated with
any of the outstanding debt issued by it or any of its associate
companies under the authority requested in the Application or an
applicable exemption by, for example: (i) Converting variable rate debt
to fixed rate debt; (ii) converting fixed rate debt to variable rate
debt; (iii) limiting the impact of changes in interest rates resulting
from variable rate debt; and (iv) providing an option to enter into
interest rate swap transactions in future periods for planned issuances
of debt securities.
E.ON also proposes to enter into Hedging Instruments with respect
to anticipated debt or equity offerings (``Anticipatory Hedges''),
subject to certain limitations and restrictions. Anticipatory Hedges
would only be entered into on-exchange or off-exchange with Approved
Counterparties, and would be used to fix and/or limit the interest rate
or currency exchange rate risk associated with any proposed new
issuance.\16\
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\16\ Applicants state that Anticipatory Hedges may include: (i)
A forward sale of U.S. or European Economic Area (``EEA'') Treasury
futures contracts, U.S. or EEA Treasury obligations and/or a forward
swap (each a ``Forward Sale''): (ii) the purchase of put options on
U.S. or EEA Treasury obligations (``Put Options Purchase''); (iii) a
Put Options Purchase in combination with the sale of call options on
U.S. or EEA Treasury obligations (``Zero Cost Collar''); (iv)
transactions involving the purchase or sale of U.S. or EEA Treasury
obligations; or (v) some combination of a Forward Sale, Pub Options
Purchase, Zero Cost Collar and/or other derivative or cash
transactions, including, but not limited to, structured notes, caps
and collars, appropriate for the Anticipatory Hedges.
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E.ON's subsidiaries also propose to enter into Hedging Instruments
or Anticipatory Hedges to hedge interest rate or currency exposures,
subject to the limitations described above.
A.5. Guarantees
E.ON requests authorization to provide guarantees with respect to
debt securities or other contractual obligations of any subsidiary, as
may be appropriate in the ordinary course of the subsidiary's business,
up to an aggregate principal or nominal amount not to exceed USD 40
billion at any one time outstanding (the E.ON Guarantee Limit),
exclusive of any guarantees and other forms of credit support that are
exempt under rules 45(b) and 52(b); provided, however, that the amount
of guarantees in respect of obligations of any EWGs and FUCOs or
companies engaged or formed to engage in proposed energy-related
businesses, and proposed companies exempt under rule 58 under the Act
(``Rule 58 Subsidiaries'') shall remain subject to the limitations of
rules 53(a)(1) and 58(a)(1), as applicable.
E.ON requests authorization for the E.ON Group (other than the LG&E
Energy Group) to charge each subsidiary (other than an LG&E Energy
Group company), a fee for the period of time that a guaranty is
outstanding, the fee to be based upon market rates, which take into
account credit risk, where it may be necessary to operate its business
efficiently under applicable regulations.\17\ E.ON represents that the
amount of guarantees for obligations of any Rule 58 Subsidiaries shall
remain subject to the limitations of rule 58(a)(1).
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\17\ Where regulations are not applicable, or for any guarantee
of an LG&E Energy Group company, E.ON may charge the subsidiary a
fee for each guarantee that is not greater than the cost, if any, of
obtaining the liquidity necessary to perform the guarantee (for
example, bank line commitment fees or letter of credit fees, plus
other transactional expenses) for the period of time that it remains
outstanding.
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A.6. Profit and Loss Transfer Agreements
Applicants request that the Commission continue to authorize the
profit and loss transfer agreements of E.ON and its German
subsidiaries.
B. Subsidiary Financing and Related Transactions
B.1. TBD Subsidiaries and Retained Nonutility Subsidiaries
The E.ON Group (other than the LG&E Energy Group) request
authorization to finance the TBD Subsidiaries and the Retained
Nonutility Subsidiaries through capital contributions, loans,
guarantees, purchase of equity or debt securities or other methods
throughout the Authorization Period. The Retained Nonutility
Subsidiaries also propose to finance their respective businesses and
the acquisition of new businesses (as permitted under the Act or the
rules or by Commission order), through the issuance of equity,
preferred stock and debt securities to third parties.
Applicants propose that, in connection with the financing of the
TBD Subsidiaries, they be authorized to make investments in an
aggregate amount of up to USD 1 billion (the TBD
[[Page 23269]]
Investment Limit), through July 1, 2007 (the end of the divestiture
period). In addition, Applicants propose that financing of, and
investments in, the Retained Nonutility Subsidiaries, be authorized in
an aggregate amount of up to USD 15 billion.
B.2. LG&E Energy Group Companies and the Intermediate Companies
E.ON owns LG&E Energy through the Intermediate Companies, E.ON U.S.
Holding and E.ON U.S. Investments, which are registered holding
companies under the Act. E.ON U.S. Holding also owns Fidelia, a
Financing Entity, and E.ON U.S. Investments owns E.ON NA and its
subsidiaries, which also function as Financing Entities.
To finance the LG&E Energy Group and/or the Intermediate Companies
and their subsidiaries, Applicants request authorization for the
Intermediate Companies and their subsidiaries to issue and sell
securities to E.ON and associate companies, but not companies in the
LG&E Energy Group.
In addition, authorization is requested for E.ON NA and Fidelia
(and any of their subsidiaries) to issue securities to third parties,
such as banks, to finance the capital needs of the E.ON Group,
including the LG&E Energy Group. Applicants also request authorization
for the Intermediate Companies and their subsidiaries to acquire
securities of other Intermediate Companies and their subsidiaries and
the LG&E Energy Group companies.
The Intermediate Companies and their subsidiaries also seek
authorization to issue guarantees, and other forms of credit support,
to or for the benefit of another Intermediate Company, its subsidiaries
and the LG&E Energy Group companies. Applicants state that, in no case
would an Intermediate Company borrow, or receive any extension of
credit or indemnity from any LG&E Energy Group company or its
subsidiaries, except that an Intermediate Company may borrow from its
direct or indirect Financing Entity that is not part of the LG&E Energy
Group.
In addition, authority is requested for the Intermediate Companies,
E.ON NA and Fidelia, and their respective subsidiaries, to guarantee
the indebtedness or contractual obligations of, and to otherwise
provide credit support to, their respective associated subsidiary
companies up to an aggregate amount of external guarantees not exceed
USD 2 billion outstanding (exclusive of any guarantees and other forms
of credit support that are exempt under rules 45(b) and 52(b));
provided, however, that the amount of guarantees for obligations of any
Rule 58 Subsidiaries shall remain subject to the limitations of rule
58(a)(1). Applicants state that, for reasons of economic efficiency,
the terms and conditions of any financings between an Intermediate
Company (or E.ON NA and Fidelia) and its direct or indirect parent, or
between an Intermediate Company and a FUCO subsidiary or their
associate company subsidiaries, will be on market terms. Applicants
state that market rate financing assures that intercompany loans will
not be used to transfer profits from one related entity to another and
will also allow the lending entity to recover its true costs of
liquidity, risks associated with credit quality and interest rate and
currency variability.
B.2.a. LG&E Energy Short-term Debt
LG&E Energy requests authorization to obtain funds through the
issuance of external short-term debt securities in an aggregate amount
of up to USD 400 million, to meet its funding requirements.
B.2.b. Utility Subsidiary Debt, Intercompany Loans and Guarantees
LG&E and KU request authorization to issue certain long-term and
short-term debt securities having maturities of two years or less in an
aggregate amount of up to USD 400 million at any one time outstanding
for each of LG&E and KU (to the extent their financing is not exempt
under rule 52(a), or otherwise), as each may deem appropriate in light
of its needs and market conditions at the time of issuance, subject to
the applicable Financing Parameters.
Applicants also request that LG&E and KU be authorized, up to
amounts of USD 275 million and USD 215 million, respectively, to obtain
secured intercompany loans from Fidelia, as currently authorized,
through the Authorization Period.\18\ In addition, authorization is
requested for Fidelia to provide intercompany loans to LG&E and KU on a
secured basis.
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\18\ 18 LG&E and KU request authorization under section 12(d) of
the Act and rule 43 to secure these intercompany loans with a
subordinated lien on certain personal property of the respective
company, including ``utility assets'' within the meaning of the Act,
as the Commission previously authorized, through May 31, 2005. See
E.ON, et al., Holding Co. Act Release No. 27711 (Aug. 15, 2003); see
also SEC File No. 70-9985.
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Utility Subsidiaries also seek authorization, up to an amount of
USD 200 million in the case of LG&E and USD 200 million in the case of
KU, to guarantee, or otherwise provide credit support for, the
obligations of their subsidiaries and other companies in which they
have invested (but not EWGs, ETCs or FUCOs), to the extent not exempt
under rule 45. Applicants represent that any guarantee of an obligation
of an EWG, FUCO or ETC will be undertaken only if the investment is
authorized under sections 32, 33 or 34 of the Act, applicable rules,
and/or Commission order.
Applicants request that the Utility Subsidiaries be permitted to
charge each subsidiary a fee for each guarantee provided on the
subsidiary's behalf that is not greater than the cost, if any, of the
liquidity necessary to perform the guarantee. Applicants further state
that guarantees issued by Utility Subsidiaries will not be secured by
any utility assets.
B.2.c. Certain Other LG&E Energy Group Subsidiary Transactions
E.ON, E.ON NA and Fidelia (or a special purpose financing
subsidiary) request authorization to finance all or a portion of the
capital needs of the LG&E Energy Group companies directly, or
indirectly through other E.ON Group companies, including the
Intermediate Companies, at the lowest practical cost. Companies in the
LG&E Energy Group propose to borrow funds from other E.ON Group
companies that may have available surplus funds.
Applicants state that, except for the secured intercompany loans,
described above, the borrowings will be unsecured and, in all cases,
the borrowings will only occur if the interest rate on the loan would
result in an equal or lower cost of borrowing than the LG&E Energy
Group company could obtain in a loan from E.ON or in the capital
markets on its own.\19\ Applicants state that borrowings by LG&E Energy
Group companies would comply, at a minimum, with the Financing
Parameters.
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\19\ Applicants state that, consequently, all borrowings by an
LG&E Energy Group company from an associate company would be at the
lowest of: (i) E.ON's effective cost of capital; (ii) the lending
associate's effective cost of capital (if lower than E.ON's
effective cost of capital); and (iii) the borrowing LG&E Energy
Group's effective cost of capital determined by reference to the
effective cost of a direct borrowing by such company from a
nonassociate for a comparable term loan that could be entered into
at such time (Best Rate Method).
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Applicants request authorization for intercompany loans among LG&E
Energy and its nonutility subsidiaries in an amount of up to USD 1.5
billion at any one time outstanding during the Authorization Period.
Applicants state that this intrasystem financing amount would exclude
financing exempt under rules 45(b) and 52. They further state that LG&E
Energy will not borrow funds from its subsidiary companies and that the
terms and conditions of intercompany loans available to any
[[Page 23270]]
borrowing company will be materially no less favorable than the terms
and conditions of loans available to the borrowing company from third-
party lenders. In addition, all intercompany loans will be payable on
demand or have a maturity of less than 50 years from the date of
issuance.
Applicants also request authorization for LG&E Energy and the LG&E
Energy Group nonutility subsidiaries to enter into guarantees, extend
credit, obtain letters of credit, enter into guaranty-type expense
agreements and otherwise to provide credit support for the obligations,
from time to time, of the LG&E Energy Group companies during the
Authorization Period, specifically:
(a) For LG&E Energy, in an aggregate amount of up to USD 1.5
billion outstanding at any one time (exclusive of guarantees that may
be exempt under rule 45(b)); and
(b) For the LG&E Energy Group nonutility subsidiaries, in an
additional aggregate amount of up to USD 1.5 billion outstanding at any
one time (exclusive of guarantees that may be exempt under rule 45(b)).
Applicants state that these requests are separate from E.ON's
External Limit and E.ON's Guarantee Limit.
C. Continuation of Money Pools
Applicants request authorization to continue to operate three money
pools.\20\ The three money pools are the Utility Money Pool,\21\ the
U.S. Nonutility Money Pool\22\ and the E.ON Nonutility Money Pool.\23\
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\20\ See 2002 Order (as modified for the E.ON Nonutility Money
Pool in E.ON, et al., Holding Co. Act Release No. 27788 (Dec. 29,
2003)).
\21\ The Utility Money Pool includes only Utility Subsidiaries,
as borrowers from and lenders to the pool. E.ON, E.ON NA, Fidelia
and LG&E Energy may lend to, but not borrow from, the Utility Money
Pool. LG&E Energy Services Inc. (``LG&E Services'') will continue to
act as the administrator of the Utility Money Pool.
\22\ The U.S. Nonutility Money Pool includes the nonutility
subsidiaries as borrowers from and lenders to the pool. E.ON, E.ON
NA, Fidelia and LG&E Energy may lend to, but not borrow from, the
U.S. Nonutility Money Pool. LG&E Services will continue to act as
the administrator of the U.S. Nonutility Money Pool.
\23\ The E.ON Nonutility Money Pool may include all E.ON Group
companies as borrowers from and lenders to the pool, except E.ON,
the Intermediate Companies, and the LG&E Energy Group. E.ON and the
Intermediate Companies may lend to, but not borrow from, the E.ON
Nonutility Money Pool.
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Applicants state that Utility Subsidiaries' borrowings from the
Utility Money Pool would be counted against their overall short-term
borrowing limits stated above. The U.S. Nonutility Money Pool will be
operated on substantially the same terms and conditions as the Utility
Money Pool. The E.ON Nonutility Money Pool is administered by E.ON
Finance GmbH (formerly Hibernia Industriewerte GmbH).\24\
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\24\ E.ON, et al., Holding Co. Act Release No. 27788 (Dec. 29,
2003); see also note 20 above.
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D. Acquisition, Redemption or Retirement of Securities
Applicants request authorization for each company in the E.ON
Group, other than EWGs, FUCOs and ETCs, to acquire, redeem or retire
its securities or those of its direct and indirect subsidiaries, which
securities may be either outstanding presently or issued and sold in
the future from time to time during the Authorization Period.
Applicants state that these transactions will be undertaken at either
the competitive market prices for the securities or at the stated price
for those securities, as applicable, and that Utility Subsidiaries will
acquire, retire or redeem securities only in accordance with rule 42.
E. Financing Entities
Applicants also request authorization for the E.ON Group companies,
except the EWGs, FUCOs and ETCs, to organize new or use existing
corporations, trusts, partnerships or other entities (``Financing
Entities''), to finance the business of the respective parent company
or its subsidiaries. Applicants state that a Financing Entity would be
used to finance the authorized or permitted businesses of its direct or
indirect parent company (``Founding Parent''), including the businesses
of the LG&E Energy Group, but in no event would a Financing Entity
engage in prohibited upstream loans involving companies in the LG&E
Energy Group.\25\
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\25\ Applicants state that Financing Entities would be intended
to issue any securities that the Founding Parent would be authorized
to issue, as authorized by the Commission by order, rule or under
the Act.
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In addition, Applicants request authorization to issue securities
to a Financing Entity to evidence the transfer of financing proceeds by
a Financing Entity to a company receiving financing. Applicants also
request authorization to enter into support or expense agreements on
market price terms with Financing Entities to pay the expenses of any
of these entities.
F. Changes in Capital Stock of Subsidiaries
Applicants request authority to change the terms of any
subsidiary's authorized capital stock capitalization or other equity
interests by an amount deemed appropriate by E.ON or any intermediate
parent company; provided that the consents of all other shareholders,
if required by applicable corporate law or the subsidiary's governing
documents, have been obtained for the proposed change.
G. Payment of Dividends Out of Capital or Unearned Surplus
Applicants request authorization that each of the TBD Subsidiaries,
the Retained Nonutility Subsidiaries, the Intermediate Companies, and
the LG&E Energy Group companies (excluding Utility Subsidiaries), be
permitted to continue to pay dividends with respect to its capital
stock, from time to time, out of capital and unearned surplus (to the
extent permitted under the corporate law and state or national law
applicable in the jurisdiction where each company is organized and the
terms of any credit agreements and indentures that restrict the amount
and timing of distributions to shareholders), through the Authorization
Period. Applicants state that, in addition, none of the companies will
declare or pay any dividend out of capital or unearned surplus unless
it: (i) Has received excess cash as a result of the sale of some or all
of its assets; (ii) has engaged in a restructuring or reorganization;
and/or (iii) is returning capital to an associate company.
H. Nonutility Reorganizations
Applicants also request continued authority to restructure,
consolidate or otherwise reorganize E.ON's nonutility holdings,
including those in the LG&E Energy Group, from time to time, as may be
necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the E.ON Group's authorized
nonutility activities, and to maintain and support investment in the
E.ON TBD Subsidiaries pending divestiture.
E.ON requests authorization to acquire, directly or indirectly, the
securities of one or more intermediate subsidiaries (``Development
Subsidiaries'') organized exclusively for the purpose of acquiring,
financing, divesting and/or holding the securities of one or more
existing or future nonutility subsidiaries. Applicants request
authorization for the Development Subsidiaries to provide management,
administrative, project development and operating services to direct or
indirect subsidiaries at cost, in accordance with section 13 of the Act
and the rules, including rules 90 and 91, to the extent transactions
are not exempt, or authorized or permitted by Commission rule or order.
[[Page 23271]]
I. EWG and FUCO Subsidiaries and Reinvestment of Proceeds From the
Divestiture of Nonutility Businesses
E.ON requests the Commission authorize continued investment in an
aggregate amount of up to USD 65 billion in EWGs and FUCOs, the
Aggregate EWG/FUCO Financing Limitation.\26\ Applicants state that they
also seek authority to issue and sell up to USD 35 billion of
securities to finance EWG and FUCO investments pending the receipt of
divestiture proceeds (``Bridge Loans''), for the flexibility of E.ON,
so that attractive investment opportunities may be pursued, because the
timing of the receipt of divestiture proceeds will not always coincide
with the opportunity to invest in additional EWG or FUCO assets.\27\
Applicants state that any issuance of Bridge Loans would count against
the E.ON External Limit or the E.ON Short-term Limit, depending on the
maturity of the Bridge Loans.
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\26\ See the 2002 Order, note 1 above. Applicants propose that
the investments consist of: (i) an initial combined E.ON, Powergen
and LG&E Energy aggregate investment in EWGs and FUCOs of USD 4.886
billion, as of December 31, 2001; (ii) the proposed reinvestment of
the sale proceeds of the TBD Subsidiary divestitures in an amount up
to USD 35 billion; and (iii) an additional amount of EWG/FUCO
proposed investment of up to USD 25 billion.
\27\ Applicants state that, upon the receipt of the divestiture
proceeds, the Bridge Loans or debt securities with an equivalent
principal amount would be retired, redeemed or otherwise paid down.
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J. Energy-Related Subsidiaries
E.ON also seeks authorization to acquire and to invest up to USD 10
billion, the Energy-Related Subsidiary Investment Limit, of the
divestiture proceeds during the Authorization Period in certain
permitted nonutility businesses located primarily outside of the U.S.
For the Commission by the Division of Investment Management,
pursuant to delegated authority.
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E5-2148 Filed 5-3-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010-01-P