Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, 28422-28446 [06-4041]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 16, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
18 CFR Parts 2 and 33
[Docket No. RM05–34–001; Order No. 669–
A]
Transactions Subject to FPA Section
203
Issued April 24, 2006.
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; order on rehearing.
AGENCY:
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SUMMARY: In this order on rehearing, the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(Commission) reaffirms its
determinations in part and grants
rehearing in part of Order No. 669,
which revised 18 CFR 2.26 and 18 CFR
part 33 to implement amended section
203 of the Federal Power Act (FPA).
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 15, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Andrew P. Mosier, Jr. (Legal
Information), Office of the General
Counsel, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502–
6274.
Phillip Nicholson (Technical
Information), Office of Energy,
Markets, and Reliability—West,
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502–
8240.
Jan Macpherson (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426. (202) 502–8921.
James Akers (Technical Information),
Office of Energy, Markets, and
Reliability—West, Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426.
(202) 502–8101.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Background
A. Pre-EPAct 2005 Standards
B. EPAct Revisions to Section 203 and
Order No. 669
III. Discussion
A. 18 CFR Part 33
1. Section 33.1(b)(3)—Definition of
‘‘Value’’
2. Section 33.1(b)(4)—Definitions of
‘‘Electric Utility Company’’ and
‘‘Holding Company’’
3. Section 33.1(c)(1)—Blanket
Authorizations: Intrastate Commerce,
Local Distribution, and Internal
Corporate Reorganizations
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4. Blanket Authorizations for Cash
Management Programs, Money Pools,
and Intra-Holding Company Financing
Arrangements
5. Section 33.1(c)(2)–(c)(4)—Blanket
Authorizations: Purchases of Voting and
Non-Voting Securities Under Section 203
6. Other Requested Blanket
Authorizations—Holding Company
Purchasing Its Own Securities, Fiduciary
Investments and Bank Underwriting/
Hedging
7. Section 33.2(j)—General Information
Requirements Regarding CrossSubsidization
8. Section 33.11(b)—Commission
Procedures for Consideration of
Applications Under Section 203 of the
FPA
B. Amendments to 18 CFR 2.26—The
Merger Policy Statement
1. Rehearing Requests
2. Commission Determination
IV. Information Collection Statement
V. Document Availability
VI. Effective Date
Before Commissioners: Joseph T.
Kelliher, Chairman; Nora Mead
Brownell, and Suedeen G. Kelly.
I. Introduction
1. On August 8, 2005, the Energy
Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005) 1 was
signed into law. Section 1289 (Merger
Review Reform) of Title XII, Subtitle G
(Market Transparency, Enforcement,
and Consumer Protection),2 of EPAct
2005 amends section 203 of the Federal
Power Act (FPA).3 Amended section
203: (1) Increases (from $50,000 to $10
million) the value threshold above
which certain transactions are subject to
section 203; (2) extends the scope of
section 203 to include transactions
involving certain transfers of generation
facilities and certain public utility
holding companies’ transactions with a
value in excess of $10 million; (3) limits
the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission’s (Commission) review of a
public utility’s acquisition of securities
of another public utility to transactions
greater than $10 million; (4) requires
that the Commission, when reviewing
proposed section 203 transactions,
examine cross-subsidization and
pledges or encumbrances of utility
assets; and (5) directs the Commission
to adopt, by rule, procedures for the
expeditious consideration of
applications for the approval of
transactions under section 203.
2. On October 3, 2005, the
Commission issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NOPR) requesting comment
on its proposal to amend its regulations
1 Energy Policy Act of 2005, Pub. L. 109–58, 119
Stat. 594 (2005).
2 EPAct 2005 at 1281 et seq.
3 16 U.S.C. 824b (2000).
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to implement amended section 203.4 As
discussed below, on December 23, 2005,
the Commission issued a final rule
(Order No. 669) 5 adopting certain
modifications to 18 CFR 2.26 and 18
CFR part 33 to implement amended
section 203. Generally, Order No. 669:
(1) Implemented the new applicability of
amended section 203;
(2) Granted blanket authorizations, in some
instances with conditions, for certain types of
transactions, including acquisitions of
foreign utilities by holding companies, intraholding company system financing and cash
management arrangements, certain internal
corporate reorganizations, and certain
acquisitions of securities of transmitting
utilities and electric utility companies;
(3) Defined terms, including ‘‘electric
utility company,’’ ‘‘holding company,’’ and
‘‘non-utility associate company;’’
(4) Defined ‘‘existing generation facility;’’
(5) Adopted rules on the determination of
‘‘value’’ as it applies to various section 203
transactions;
(6) Set forth a section 203 applicant’s
obligation to demonstrate that a proposed
transaction will not result in crosssubsidization of a non-utility associate
company or the pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets for the benefit of an associate
company; and
(7) Provided for expeditious consideration
of completed applications for the approval of
transactions that are not contested, do not
involve mergers, and are consistent with
Commission precedent.
3. In Order No. 669, the Commission
also announced that, at a technical
conference on the Public Utility Holding
Company Act of 2005 (PUHCA 2005),6
to be held within the next year,7 we will
4 Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, 70 FR
58636 (Oct. 7, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,589
(2005).
5 Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, Order
No. 669, 71 FR 1348 (Jan. 6, 2006), FERC Stats. &
Regs. ¶ 31,200 (2005). On January 10, 2006, the
Commission issued an errata notice to Order No.
669 revising parts of the regulatory text to conform
to the version of the order that was issued in the
Federal Register. Transactions Subject to FPA
Section 203, 114 FERC ¶ 61,018 (2006). As relevant
here, in instruction 7, at 18 CFR 33.11(b)(2), a
footnote was added after ‘‘(2) transactions that do
not require Appendix A analysis,’’ reading: ‘‘Inquiry
Concerning the Commission’s Merger Policy Under
the FederalPower Act: Policy Statement,’’ Order No.
592, 61 FR 68595 (Dec. 30, 1996), FERC Stats. &
Regs. ¶ 31,044 (1996), reconsideration denied,
Order No. 592–A, 62 FR 33340 (June 19, 1997), 79
FERC ¶ 61,321 (1997) (Merger Policy Statement).
6 EPAct 2005 at 1261 et seq. Repeal of the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 and
Enactment of the Public Utility Holding Company
Act of 2005, Order No. 667, 70 FR 55805, FERC
Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,197 (2005) (PUHCA 2005 Final
Rule).
7 PUHCA 2005 Final Rule at P 17. The
Commission stated that we intend to hold a
technical conference no later than one year after
PUHCA 2005 became effective to evaluate whether
additional exemptions, different reporting
requirements, or other regulatory actions need to be
considered. The PUHCA 2005 Final Rule took effect
on February 8, 2006.
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also address certain issues raised in this
proceeding. These include whether the
blanket authorizations granted in Order
No. 669 should be revised and whether
additional protection against crosssubsidization and pledges or
encumbrance of utility assets is
needed.8
4. In this order, the Commission
grants rehearing in part, grants
clarification in part, and denies
rehearing in part of its Order No. 669.
Our actions here will necessitate further
changes in the regulations. In light of
the number of regulatory text changes,
the Commission is including the revised
regulations in their entirety. In addition,
for the convenience of interested
persons, we will include a version of the
revised regulations in their entirety that
highlights the changes from Order No.
669 as a separate attachment. (See
Appendix B.) This attachment will not
be published in the Federal Register.
II. Background
5. The background to Order No. 669
is set forth in detail in that order. We
will summarize it here.
A. Pre-EPAct 2005 Standards
6. Prior to EPAct 2005, section 203
provided that
no public utility shall sell, lease or otherwise
dispose of the whole of its facilities subject
to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or any
part thereof of a value in excess of $50,000,
or by any means whatsoever, directly or
indirectly, merge or consolidate such
facilities or any part thereof with those of any
other person, or purchase, acquire, or take
any security of any other public utility,
without first having secured an order of the
Commission authorizing it do so.
The Commission applied the ‘‘public
interest’’ standard in approving
proposed transactions. The purpose of
the Merger Policy Statement was to
ensure that mergers are consistent with
the public interest and to provide
greater certainty and expedition in the
Commission’s analysis of merger
applications. The Merger Policy
Statement sets out three factors the
Commission generally considers when
analyzing whether a proposed section
203 transaction is consistent with the
public interest: Effect on competition;
effect on rates; and effect on regulation.
The Commission later issued the Filing
Requirements Rule,9 a final rule
updating the filing requirements under
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8 Order
No. 669 at P 4.
9 Revised Filing Requirements Under Part 33 of
the Commission’s Regulations, Order No. 642, 65
FR 70984 (Nov. 28, 2000), FERC Stats. & Regs., July
1996–Dec. 2000 ¶ 31,111 (2000), order on reh’g,
Order No. 642–A, 66 FR 16121 (Mar. 23, 2001), 94
FERC ¶ 61,289 (2001) (codified at 18 CFR part 33
(2005)) (Filing Requirements Rule).
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18 CFR part 33 of the Commission’s
regulations for section 203 applications.
The Filing Requirements Rule
implements the Merger Policy
Statement and provides detailed
guidance to applicants for preparing
applications. The revised filing
requirements also assist the Commission
in determining whether section 203
transactions are consistent with the
public interest, provide more certainty,
and provide for expedited review of
such applications.
B. EPAct Revisions to Section 203 and
Order No. 669
7. Amended section 203(a)(1) states
that no public utility shall, without first
having secured an order of the
Commission authorizing it to do so: (A)
Sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the
whole of its facilities subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission, or any
part thereof of a value in excess of $10
million; (B) merge or consolidate,
directly or indirectly, such facilities or
any part thereof with those of any other
person, by any means whatsoever; (C)
purchase, acquire, or take any security
with a value in excess of $10 million of
any other public utility; or (D) purchase,
lease, or otherwise acquire an existing
generation facility: (i) That has a value
in excess of $10 million; and (ii) that is
used for interstate wholesale sales and
over which the Commission has
jurisdiction for ratemaking purposes.
8. Section 203(a)(2) adds the entirely
new requirement that no holding
company in a holding company system
that includes a transmitting utility or an
electric utility shall purchase, acquire,
or take any security with a value in
excess of $10 million of, or, by any
means whatsoever, directly or
indirectly, merge or consolidate with, a
transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a
holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility, or an electric utility
company, with a value in excess of $10
million without prior Commission
authorization.
9. Amended section 203(a)(4) states
that, after notice and opportunity for
hearing, the Commission shall approve
the proposed disposition, consolidation,
acquisition, or change in control if it
finds that the transaction will be
consistent with the public interest. This
standard was contained in the preEPAct 2005 section 203 as well.
Amended section 203(a)(4) also
provides a new specific requirement
that the Commission must find that the
transaction will not result in crosssubsidization of a non-utility associate
company or pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets for the benefit of an
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associate company, unless that crosssubsidization, pledge, or encumbrance
will be consistent with the public
interest.
10. Section 203(a)(5) adds the entirely
new requirement that the Commission
shall adopt procedures for the
expeditious consideration of
applications for the approval of section
203 transactions. Such rules shall
identify classes of transactions, or
specify criteria for transactions, that
normally meet the section 203 standards
for approval. The Commission shall
provide expedited review for such
transactions. It further provides that the
Commission must act on a proposed
section 203 transaction within 180 days
of filing but may extend the time for not
more than an additional 180 days for
good cause.
11. Section 203(a)(6), which is also
new, provides that for purposes of this
section, the terms ‘‘associate company,’’
‘‘holding company,’’ and ‘‘holding
company system’’ have the meaning
given those terms in PUHCA 2005.10
12. Order No. 669 became effective on
February 8, 2006. The aspects of Order
No. 669 on which rehearing were filed
are described in more detail below.11
III. Discussion
A. 18 CFR Part 33
1. Section 33.1(b)(3)—Definition of
‘‘Value’’
13. Section 33.1(b)(3)(i) generally uses
market value as the appropriate measure
of value for transfers of physical
facilities (transmission facilities and
generation facilities) for purposes of
determining whether the $10 million
jurisdictional threshold is met.12 The
rule states that when a transaction
occurs between non-affiliates, the
Commission will rebuttably presume
that market value is the transaction
price. For transactions between
affiliated companies, value means
original cost undepreciated, as defined
in the Commission’s Uniform System of
Accounts, or original book cost,13 as
applicable.
14. Section 33.1(b)(3)(ii) provides that
value as applied to transfers of
wholesale contracts between nonaffiliates also means the market value.
The Commission will rebuttably
presume that market value is the
10 EPAct
2005 at 1262.
entities that filed requests for rehearing are
listed in an appendix to this order.
12 Order No. 669 at P 116. Section 33.1(b)(3)(iii)
provides that for securities, value means market
value, which is rebuttably presumed to be
transaction price.
13 Book cost, as used here, refers to original book
cost.
11 The
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transaction price. For transfers of
contracts between affiliates, value
means total expected nominal revenues
over the remaining life of the contract.14
15. The Commission noted that a
complicating factor in relying on
transaction price as a measure of market
value is that transactions will
sometimes include assets whose transfer
is not subject to amended section 203
(non-jurisdictional assets) and the
problem arises as to how to value the
jurisdictional assets included in the
transaction. In this situation, the
Commission instructed applicants to
rely on a valuation analysis of the
individual jurisdictional parts in
deciding whether to file for section 203
authorization.
a. Rehearing Requests
16. APPA/NRECA argue that the
Commission should require that
valuations of asset transactions between
non-affiliates under section 203(a)(1)(A)
be consistent with generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP),
particularly when the transaction also
includes non-jurisdictional assets. They
assert that, without such a requirement,
parties will be able to value
jurisdictional assets or weight the value
of non-jurisdictional assets to evade
Commission review, while maintaining
the same total purchase price for all
assets.15
17. APPA/NRECA are concerned
about a possible unintended ‘‘spillover
effect’’ of using market value.16 They
request that the Commission confirm
that valuation for purposes of
determining whether section 203
approval is required will not affect the
valuation placed on the assets for
purposes of applying cost-based
ratemaking standards, in particular, the
Commission’s policy concerning
acquisition adjustments in cost-based
jurisdictional rates.17
18. APPA/NRECA lastly argue that the
Commission should require that
valuations of wholesale contracts being
transferred between non-affiliates be
based on the expected contract revenues
rather than on market value. They
contend that market value, which is
based on expected profits, cannot be
reliably determined and will be prone to
abuse and manipulation. They suggest
14 Order
No. 669 at P 120–21.
Rehearing Request at 24–25.
16 Id. at 26.
17 Id. The Commission disallows acquisition
adjustments in rates absent a showing of ratepayer
benefit. See PSEG Power Connecticut, LLC., 110
FERC ¶ 61,020 at P 32 (2005), citing Utilicorp
United, Inc., 56 FERC ¶ 61,031 at 61,120 and nn.
26–28, reh’g denied, 56 FERC ¶ 61,427, 62,528–29
(1991).
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15 APPA/NRECA
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that ‘‘expected profit’’ has little meaning
when the transaction is undertaken as
much for risk mitigation purposes as for
power supply. Using the same method
to value contract transfers between nonaffiliates as for affiliates, i.e., expected
contract revenues, has the virtue of
regulatory simplicity.18
19. NARUC argues that the record
does not support using ‘‘original cost
un-depreciated’’ as market value in
transactions between affiliates. NARUC
says that net book value is a better way
to value the assets in affiliate
transactions because it represents the
remaining monetary value of an asset
that is ‘‘used and useful’’ at the time of
the proposed transaction. Net book
value, unlike original cost
undepreciated, reflects changes in value
caused by wear and tear during use of
the asset, obsolescence, the return of
capital through annual depreciation
expense, and any improvements that
have been made since the asset was
originally placed in service. These
factors, particularly deterioration and
improvements, NARUC contends, are
typically reflected in the prices
negotiated by unaffiliated buyers and
sellers.19
b. Commission Determination
20. The Commission clarifies that
GAAP must be used to value
jurisdictional physical assets for
purposes of amended section 203 when
they are included with nonjurisdictional assets in a transaction
between non-affiliates.20
21. Order No. 669 states that to place
a value on wholesale contracts that are
part of a transfer that also includes
assets not subject to section 203, the
parties should rely on valuation
analyses consistent with the value used
in audited financial statements and with
GAAP requirements.21 A similar
approach is required for the transfer of
physical jurisdictional assets included
in a transaction with non-jurisdictional
facilities.22 We note that an entity’s
decision not to seek section 203
approval for a transaction based on its
determination of value of the assets,
whether physical or paper facilities, can
18 APPA/NRECA
Rehearing Request at 25.
Rehearing Request at 8.
20 As we held in Order No. 669 at P 117, if a
valuation analysis is not performed, the standard of
original cost undepreciated is to be used in
determining whether section 203 applies to the
transaction.
21 Order No. 669 at P 120.
22 Consistent with our ruling in Order No. 669 (at
P 116), if a transaction between non-affiliates
involves only jurisdictional assets, the Commission
will rebuttably presume that market value is the
transaction price.
19 NARUC
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be reviewed based on a complaint or at
the Commission’s discretion.
22. The Commission also confirms
that the use of the market value
standard for section 203 purposes does
not change the Commission’s
ratemaking policy, including the
Commission’s policy concerning
acquisition adjustments.23
23. The Commission denies APPA/
NRECA’s request that value as applied
to transfers of wholesale contracts
between non-affiliates be based on
expected contract revenues over the
remaining life of the contract, rather
than market value. We acknowledge that
using expected contract revenues for
both non-affiliate transfers and affiliate
transfers would have a superficial
consistency. However, we continue to
believe that market value is the best way
to value transactions between nonaffiliates generally, and no party has
presented a persuasive basis for treating
wholesale contracts differently from
other kinds of assets.
24. The Commission will also deny
NARUC’s request that, for transactions
between affiliates, value should be net
book value rather than original cost
undepreciated. We note that almost all
generation transactions of any
significant size will be jurisdictional
under amended section 203, regardless
of the measure used. We recognize that
marginal cases may occur where the
issue of jurisdiction might arise,
particularly for older assets. We do not
dispute that the deterioration or use
which net book value attempts to
capture affects the price a buyer is
willing to pay for an asset. However, net
book value does not reflect any
appreciation of value of assets, as
evident in the fact that generation
facilities have often sold in recent years
at prices significantly above net book
value. The Commission has long
employed the use of original cost
undepreciated to measure value for
purposes of determining the need for a
section 203 application and finds its
continued use appropriate in the
context of affiliate transactions. Original
cost undepreciated is a simpler, less
ambiguous measure that will avoid
debate as to the life of the facility,
method of depreciation and other
factors that are reflected in net book
value.
2. Section 33.1(b)(4)—Definitions of
‘‘Electric Utility Company’’ and
‘‘Holding Company’’
25. A number of parties raised
arguments about the Commission’s
23 See
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interpretation of new FPA section
203(a)(2). Section 203(a)(2) provides:
No holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting utility or
an electric utility shall purchase, acquire, or
take any security with a value in excess of
$10,000,000 of, or, by any means whatsoever,
directly or indirectly, merge or consolidate
with, a transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a holding
company system that includes a transmitting
utility, or an electric utility company, with a
value in excess of $10,000,000 without first
having secured an order of the Commission
authorizing it to do so.
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26. In particular, parties focus on the
terms ‘‘electric utility company’’ and
‘‘holding company’’ as used in section
203(a)(2). In Order No. 669, the
Commission concluded that the most
reasonable interpretation of the terms
are the definitions contained in PUHCA
2005. Section 33.1(b)(4) provides that
‘‘associate company,’’ ‘‘electric utility
company,’’ ‘‘foreign utility company,’’
‘‘holding company,’’ and ‘‘holding
company system’’ have the meaning
given those terms in PUHCA 2005. It
also provides that the term ‘‘holding
company’’ does not include: A state, any
political subdivision of a state, or any
agency, authority or instrumentality of a
state or political subdivision of a state;
or an electric power cooperative.
a. ‘‘Electric Utility Company’’
27. Section 33.1(b)(4) provides that
the term ‘‘electric utility company’’ has
the same meaning given that term in
PUHCA 2005, which is ‘‘any company
that owns or operates facilities used for
the generation, transmission, or
distribution of electric energy for
sale.’’ 24 The definition thus is broader
than the definition of ‘‘public utility’’
under the FPA; it is not limited to
entities that engage in wholesale or
interstate transactions.
28. The Commission explained in
Order No. 669 that the precise meaning
of the term ‘‘electric utility company’’ is
not clear because it is not defined in the
FPA. We pointed out that amended
section 203(a)(6) provides that certain
other terms used in amended section
203 (‘‘associate company,’’ ‘‘holding
company,’’ and ‘‘holding company
system’’) are to have the same meanings
given those terms in PUHCA 2005.
However, section 203(a)(6) does not
address ‘‘electric utility company.’’
Thus, there is Congressional silence in
the FPA as to the meaning of the term.
In determining what Congress might
have meant by ‘‘electric utility
company,’’ the Commission stated that
the only reference point we have in
24 EPAct
2005 at 1262(5).
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federal electric utility regulatory
terminology is the meaning of the term
as used in PUHCA 1935 25 and in
PUHCA 2005. Congress, in its revisions
to the FPA, relied on terms defined in
the two PUHCA statutes. Therefore, the
Commission concluded that the most
reasonable interpretation of ‘‘electric
utility company,’’ as used in section
203(a)(2) of the FPA (particularly in
light of the fact that section 203(a)(2)
was enacted as part of coordinated,
comprehensive legislation with the
repeal of PUHCA 1935 and the
enactment of PUHCA 2005) is the
meaning in PUHCA 2005.
29. The Commission rejected requests
that we explicitly exclude qualifying
facilities (QFs) 26 and exempt wholesale
generators (EWGs) from the definition of
‘‘electric utility company.’’ We stated
that:
regardless of their status under PUHCA 2005,
the exemptions set forth under PUHCA 2005
are not dispositive as to the scope of the
Commission’s amended FPA section 203
authority. These PUHCA 2005 exemptions
are set forth in the context of federal access
to books and records and, more importantly,
unlike PUHCA 2005, FPA section 203 does
not give us any express authority to exempt
persons or classes of transactions.27
30. Further, the Commission stated
that were we to interpret ‘‘electric utility
company’’ for purposes of FPA section
203(a)(2) not to include EWGs or QFs,
this could preclude review of certain
acquisitions of securities of EWGs or
QFs by holding companies whose
systems contain traditional public
utilities with transmission facilities
and/or captive customers that could be
affected by the acquisitions. The
Commission stated that such
transactions should not be excluded
from review under section 203 and
concluded that it was reasonable to
interpret the statute not to exclude
them.28 We recognized the arguments of
some commenters that we should not
apply section 203(a)(2) to holding
company acquisitions of securities of
EWGs and QFs, or at a minimum should
not apply it to such acquisitions by
holding companies that are holding
companies solely by virtue of owning or
controlling one or more EWGs, QFs or
25 15
U.S.C. 79a et seq. (2000).
Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978
(PURPA), 16 U.S.C. 824a–3 (2000).
27 Order No. 669 at P 59. The Commission also
noted that while QFs themselves currently are
exempt from section 203’s filing requirements by
our regulations promulgated under the Public
Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978, PURPA
does not give us authority to exempt holding
companies that own QFs.
28 Order No. 669 at P 60.
26 Public
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28425
foreign utility companies (FUCOs).29
These commenters said that applying
section 203(a)(2) in these circumstances
would impede investments in QFs and
EWGs or result in unnecessary
regulation of upstream owners of QFs
and EWGs.30 In response, we stated that
the blanket authorizations granted in
Order No. 669 (for certain holding
company acquisitions of non-voting
securities and up to 9.9 percent of
voting securities in electric utility
companies) will ensure that investment
will not be discouraged. The
Commission also noted that we would
consider on a case-by-case basis
granting additional blanket
authorizations for holding company
acquisitions of securities of EWGs or
QFs.
31. In Order No. 669, the Commission
explained that this interpretation of
‘‘electric utility company’’ includes
FUCOs, but we granted blanket
authorizations for certain foreign
acquisitions, with conditions to protect
U.S. customers.31 As discussed below,
the Commission also provided other
blanket authorizations for transactions
that do not raise concerns about
wholesale markets or protection of
wholesale captive customers served by
Commission-regulated public utilities.
b. ‘‘Holding Company’’
32. As required by amended section
203(a)(6), section 33.1(b)(4) provides
that the term ‘‘holding company’’ has
the meaning given that term in PUHCA
2005.32
33. The Commission rejected requests
that we state that only companies that
own traditional utilities, and not those
that own solely FUCOs, EWGs and/or
QFs, are ‘‘holding companies’’ under
amended section 203.33 The
Commission noted that ‘‘holding
company’’ in PUHCA 2005 means ‘‘any
company that directly or indirectly
owns, controls, or holds, with the power
to vote, 10 percent or more of the
outstanding voting securities of a
public-utility company or of a holding
company of any public-utility company;
29 Id.
30 Id.
31 See Section 33.1(c)(5). The regulation requires
a company official to verify that the proposed
transaction will not have an adverse effect on
competition, rates or regulation and that, now or in
the future, it will not result in the transfer of public
utility facilities to an associate company, issuance
of public utility securities or pledge or
encumbrance of public utility assets for the benefit
of an associate company and will not result in
certain new affiliate contracts.
32 Order No. 669 at P 69 (citing EPAct 2005 at
1262(8)).
33 Id. at P 70.
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* * *’’ 34 PUHCA 2005 defines ‘‘publicutility company’’ to include an ‘‘electric
utility company.’’ 35 We explained that
the plain words of this definition simply
do not exclude holding companies that
own or control only EWGs, FUCOs, or
QFs. Additionally, the Commission
stated that:
even under PUHCA 2005, persons that own
or control only EWGs, FUCOs, or QFs are
considered holding companies but are
explicitly exempted from PUHCA 2005 by
section 1266. There is no similar exemption
in amended section 203 and we conclude
that it is reasonable to interpret section
203(a)(2) review to include acquisitions of
generation or transmission facilities or
companies by holding companies owning
only FUCOs, QFs, and/or EWGs.36
34. The Commission also pointed out
that amended section 203(a)(6) requires
that we use the PUHCA 2005 definition
of ‘‘holding company,’’ which, as
explained above, includes the owner of
an ‘‘electric utility company’’ that is not
a public utility under the FPA and that
is not otherwise subject to Commission
ratemaking jurisdiction under Part II of
the FPA. We noted that the definition of
‘‘electric utility company’’ is not limited
to entities that engage in interstate
commerce. Therefore, the Commission
also concluded that holding companies
that own ‘‘electric utility companies’’
whose businesses are solely intrastate
technically fall under section
203(a)(2).37
c. Rehearing Requests
35. NARUC and Occidental assert that
the Commission should not have used
the PUHCA 2005 definition of ‘‘electric
utility company’’ in its regulations
under section 203. They say that this is
contrary to Congressional intent and
fundamental rules of statutory
construction. They point out that
section 203(a)(6) specifically states that
certain terms (‘‘associate company,’’
‘‘holding company,’’ and ‘‘holding
company system’’) have the same
meaning in both section 203 and
PUHCA 2005; however, section
203(a)(6) does not refer to PUHCA
2005’s definition of ‘‘electric utility
company.’’ 38 NARUC and Occidental
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34 EPAct
2005 at 1262(8).
35 Id. at 1262(14).
36 Order No. 669 at P 70.
37 However, as discussed below, we agreed in
Order No. 669 that reviewing transactions involving
Hawaii, Alaska, and Electric Reliability Council of
Texas (ERCOT) would involve matters outside our
expertise and the core focus of Part II of the FPA,
and therefore we granted certain blanket
authorizations.
38 NARUC Rehearing Request at 3–4; Occidental
Rehearing Request at 8–9. NARUC states the maxim
expressio unius est exlusio alterius (the expression
of one thing is the exclusion of another) supports
its argument.
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argue that the Commission’s reliance on
the simultaneous enactment of section
203 and PUHCA 2005 is invalid in the
face of this statutory language.
36. NARUC also asserts that using the
PUHCA 2005 definition of ‘‘electric
utility company’’ improperly extends
the Commission’s authority under
amended section 203 to include
facilities used for transmission or sales
of electric energy in intrastate
commerce, facilities used for local
distribution, and facilities used for
making retail sales. It asserts that such
facilities fall under exclusive state
commission jurisdiction and that the
Commission’s regulations implementing
FPA section 203 should apply to
Commission-jurisdictional facilities
only.39
37. Occidental requests that the
Commission reconsider its
determination to subject parent
companies of QFs to the Commission’s
authority under section 203(a)(2) by
importing the definition of ‘‘electric
utility company’’ from PUHCA 2005. It
argues that the Commission’s reliance
solely on the ‘‘reference point’’ of the
‘‘electric utility company’’ definition
violates the Commission’s continuing
duty to encourage cogeneration and
small power production under section
210(e) of PURPA 40 and without
addressing the statutory QF exemption
in PUHCA 1935 and PUHCA 2005, is
arbitrary and capricious.41 It argues that
nothing in amended section 203
requires that QFs lose the long-standing
exemption from section 203 that the
Commission adopted in accordance
with PURPA section 210(e). Thus,
Occidental argues the Commission
should adopt a blanket authorization
under section 203, instead of using a
case-by-case approach, for companies
that are holding companies solely by
virtue of owning QFs.42
38. Similarly, BofA/JPMorgan and
Industrial Consumers assert that the
Commission erred by requiring preacquisition approval under section
203(a)(2) of utility interests by
companies that qualify as ‘‘holding
39 NARUC Rehearing Request at 5–6 (citing New
York v. FERC, 535 U.S. 1 (2002); Detroit Edison Co.
v. FERC, 334 F.3d 48 (D.C. Cir. 2003); 16 U.S.C. 824
(2000)).
40 16 U.S.C. 824a–3 (2000). Section 210(e) of
PURPA provides that the Commission may grant
certain exemptions for cogeneration and small
power producers.
41 Occidental also points to the PUHCA 2005
Final Rule, where the Commission stated that ‘‘[a]s
for QFs, QFs previously received an exemption
from PUHCA pursuant to the Commission’s
regulations under [PURPA]. Nothing in PUHCA
2005 changes that.’’ Occidental Rehearing Request
at 10–11.
42 Occidental Rehearing Request at 10–11.
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companies’’ solely by virtue of their
ownership interests in QFs and EWGs.
They explain that under PUHCA 1935,
a company that owned or controlled 10
percent or more of the outstanding
voting securities of a QF or EWG did
not, by virtue of such ownership,
become a ‘‘holding company.’’ 43 BofA/
JPMorgan and Industrial Consumers
assert that, while Congress intended to
impose section 203(a)(2) pre-approval
requirements on entities that are
‘‘holding companies’’ in a ‘‘holding
company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric
utility,’’ by a drafting oversight, it
adopted the PUHCA 2005 definition of
‘‘holding company’’ (which includes
companies that own 10 percent or more
of the outstanding voting securities of
EWGs and QFs) in section 203(a)(6).
However, they state that there is no
indication that Congress intended to
apply section 203(a)(2) to QF/EWG-only
holding companies or expand the scope
of the ‘‘holding company’’ definition.
BofA/JPMorgan and Industrial
Consumers argue that the Commission’s
imposition of new burdens on owners of
QFs and EWGs not associated with
transmission-owning utilities
misinterprets Congressional intent in
EPAct 2005. Accordingly, BofA/
JPMorgan and Industrial Consumers
assert that the Commission should
construe section 203(a)(2) as not
applying in these circumstances.
39. If the Commission decides to
continue with that conclusion, then
BofA/JPMorgan propose that the
Commission provide blanket
authorization subject to appropriate
conditions and safeguards, such as a
status report to the Commission within
30 days following the acquisition, where
companies are only holding companies
by virtue of owning QFs or EWGs.44 At
a minimum, existing holdings in EWGs
and QFs should be grandfathered. This
would enable banks and their affiliates
to adjust their future practices
respecting EWGs and QFs to keep such
acquisitions from affecting the core
aspects of their business.
40. Similarly, Morgan Stanley argues
that the definitions in PUHCA 2005,
PUHCA 1935, and the PUHCA 2005
Final Rule demonstrate that EWGs are
not ‘‘electric utility companies’’ and that
43 BofA/JPMorgan Rehearing Request at 26–27;
and Industrial Consumers Rehearing Request at 2.
They explain that all qualifying cogeneration
facilities and certain small power production
facilities were previously exempt from status as
‘‘electric utility companies’’ and that EWGs were
exempted by section 32(e) from being classified as
‘‘electric utility companies’’ or ‘‘public-utility
companies’’ under PUHCA 1935.
44 BofA/JPMorgan Rehearing Request at 30;
Industrial Consumers Rehearing Request at 8.
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EWG owners are not ‘‘holding
companies’’ under PUHCA 2005.
Therefore, it says that the Commission
should not have found that EWGs are
‘‘electric utility companies’’ and that
companies that own only EWGs are
‘‘holding companies’’ for purposes of
section 203(a)(2).45 Morgan Stanley
explains that, in PUHCA 2005, Congress
adopted the meaning of EWG from
PUHCA 1935, which it contends does
not treat EWGs as ‘‘electric utility
companies.’’ 46 Further, Morgan Stanley
states that the PUHCA 2005 Final Rule
reflects Congress’ intent to continue to
define ‘‘holding company’’ to exclude
EWG owners, as well as companies that
own power marketers, FUCOs, and
QFs.47 However, it states, the
Commission adopts a meaning of
‘‘electric utility company’’ for section
203(a)(2) that includes EWGs, and
therefore differs from the meaning given
in PUHCA 2005. In doing so, Morgan
Stanley asserts, the Commission creates
two different definitions and types of
holding companies, thereby nullifying
section 203(a)(6), which states that the
term holding company shall have the
same meaning given in PUHCA 2005.
Thus, Morgan Stanley argues, the
Commission should amend its
regulations to state that companies
owning only EWGs, or some
combinations of EWGs, QFs, FUCOs,
and/or power marketers, are not
‘‘holding companies’’ bound to obtain
prior approval under section 203(a)(2).
d. Commission Determination
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41. We do not agree with those who
argue that, because of the statutory
language and/or policy concerns, the
Commission may not assert jurisdiction
under new section 203(a)(2) over
transactions involving matters that are
not under our traditional, pre-EPAct
2005 jurisdiction. The Commission
affirms its determination in Order No.
669 that, in light of the ambiguity in
section 203(a)(2), the most reasonable
interpretation of the term ‘‘electric
utility company’’ is the definition in
PUHCA 2005. Several factors support
this determination.
42. First, the focus of new section
203(a)(2) is on acquisitions by public
utility holding companies. The
Commission did not previously have
jurisdiction over holding companies,
and this new authority was enacted as
part of coordinated, comprehensive
legislation along with the repeal of
45 Morgan
Stanley Rehearing Request at 3–4.
46 PUHCA 2005 at 1262(6); PUHCA 1935 at 32(e).
47 Morgan Stanley Rehearing Request at 5 (citing
PUHCA 2005 Final Rule at 366.1 (to be codified at
18 CFR 366.1)).
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PUHCA 1935 and the enactment of
PUHCA 2005.48 Section 203(a)(6) states
that the term ‘‘holding company’’ has
the same meaning given the term in
PUHCA 2005. PUHCA 2005 defines a
‘‘holding company’’ in terms of a
‘‘public-utility company,’’ which, under
PUHCA 2005, includes an ‘‘electric
utility company.’’
43. Second, the term ‘‘electric utility
company’’ is defined in both PUHCA
1935 and PUHCA 2005, but is not
defined in the FPA or other statutes
under which the Commission exercises
authority. It is reasonable in the face of
Congressional silence to adopt a
definition that has been well understood
in electric regulatory law for the past 70
years, particularly when we are not
aware of any other federal regulatory
definition of the term.
44. Third, had Congress intended to
restrict section 203(a)(2) to holding
company acquisitions involving only
facilities that are traditionally
jurisdictional under the FPA or to
holding company acquisitions of
companies that are ‘‘public utilities’’
under the FPA, it would have done so,
just as it did in each part of section
203(a)(1). The expressio unius principle
cited by NARUC to support its position
can also be cited to support Order No.
669; the fact that Congress specifically
limited section 203(a)(1) to actions
taken by public utilities, but did not so
restrict section 203(a)(2), supports the
position that Congress intended the
latter provision to have a wider scope.
Moreover, NARUC’s application of
expressio unius in this instance leads to
a conclusion at odds with common
usage. We elaborate further below.
45. NARUC is correct that section
201(b)(1) of the FPA states that Part II
48 There is no legislative history contained in the
conference report accompanying the legislation.
However, the evolution of the various versions of
section 203(a)(2) proposed by members supports
our conclusion that Congress purposely did not
limit section 203(a)(2) to holding companies that
own ‘‘public utilities’’ but, rather, consciously used
terminology that, for the most part, reflected terms
used in PUHCA 2005. See Electricity Competition
and Reliability Act, H.R. 2944, 106th Cong. section
410 (1998); Comprehensive Electricity Competition
Act, H.R. 1828, 106th Cong. section 502 (1998);
Comprehensive Electricity Competition Act, S.
1047, 106th Cong. section 502 (1998); Electric
Power To Choose Act of 1999, H.R. 2050, 106th
Cong. section 110 (1998); Energy Policy Act of 2002,
S. 1766 106th Cong. section 202 (2001); Energy
Policy Act of 2003, S. 14, 108th Cong. (2003);
Senate Amendment No. 1412 to S. 14, 149 Cong.
Rec. S. 10163 (July 29, 2003); Senate Amendment
No. 1413 to S. 14, 149 Cong. Rec. S. 10116–24 (July
29, 2003), 149 Cong. Rec. S. 10204–14 (July 30,
2003); Senate Amendment No. 1537 § 202, 149
Cong. Rec. S. 10739–40 (July 31, 2003); H.R. Rep.
No. 108–375 at 302–03 (Nov. 18, 2003), 149 Cong.
Rec. S. 15,220 (Nov. 20, 2003); Energy Policy Act
of 2005, H.R. 6; Energy Policy Act of 2005, S. 10;
H. Rpt. 109–190 (2005), 149 Cong. Rec. S. 9258 (July
28, 2005), 149 Cong. Rec. S. 9359 (July 29, 2005).
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28427
applies to transmission in interstate
commerce and the sale of electric energy
at wholesale in interstate commerce, but
(except as provided for in paragraph 2,
which involves sections 203(a)(2),
206(e), 210–212, and 215–222) not to
other sales of electric energy. However,
there is a qualifying phrase as well.
Section 201(b)(1) states that the
Commission shall not have jurisdiction,
‘‘except as specifically provided in this
Part and the Part next following’’ over
facilities used for the generation of
electric energy, or over facilities used in
local distribution or only for the
transmission of electric energy in
intrastate commerce or over facilities for
the transmission of electric energy
consumed wholly by the transmitter.
46. NARUC ignores ‘‘except as
specifically provided.’’ Congress, in
amending section 203, specifically
broadened the Commission’s previous
section 203 jurisdiction.49 In the new
section 203(a)(6), Congress directed the
Commission to use the definition of
holding company from PUHCA 2005,
and that definition includes entities that
own ‘‘electric utility companies’’ as
defined in PUHCA 2005. The new
203(a)(2) requires holding companies
that include transmitting utilities (an
FPA definition modified in EPAct 2005
to be limited to transmission in
interstate commerce used for wholesale
sales) or electric utilities (defined in the
FPA as persons that sell electric
energy—not limited to sales for resale or
to sales in interstate commerce) to
obtain Commission approval of certain
securities transactions, including
acquisitions of securities of an ‘‘electric
utility company.’’
47. It is reasonable to conclude that,
in repealing PUHCA 1935 and
importing into the FPA these PUHCA
terms—a statute and terms not limited
to companies engaging in interstate
sales, interstate transmission or
wholesale transactions—Congress
intended to transfer to this Commission
certain corporate review authority that
might involve intrastate/retail
acquisitions that could affect interstate
commerce and customers of
Commission-regulated interstate
utilities. Further, as discussed above, in
other provisions of section 203 Congress
specifically limited the Commission’s
review to transactions involving
‘‘facilities subject to the jurisdiction of
49 For example, in section 203(a)(1)(D) Congress
gave the Commission new jurisdiction over certain
acquisitions of generation facilities. The
Commission under section 201 has no jurisdiction
over generation facilities, except as specifically
provided.
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the Commission.’’ It did not place this
limitation in section 203(a)(2).50
48. NARUC cites the principle of
expressio unius and argues that
Congress’ specific statement in section
203(a)(6) that three other terms have the
same meaning as in PUHCA 2005 shows
that Congress did not intend ‘‘electric
utility company’’ to have the same
meaning as in PUHCA 2005.51 One can
just as convincingly argue that Congress
inadvertently omitted the term from
section 203(a)(6) or that if Congress had
intended to require us to adopt a
particular definition, it would have
done so. The fact is that Congress left us
with no express definition of the term
and that we have exercised reasonable
discretion in interpreting it.
49. Several parties argue that the
policy behind EPAct 2005 requires us to
define ‘‘electric utility company’’ to
exclude companies that own only EWGs
or QFs. We disagree. Congress
specifically required, in section
203(a)(6) of the FPA, that the term
‘‘holding company’’ be given the same
meaning that was given the term in
PUHCA 2005. Under PUHCA 2005, as
explained above, a company is a
holding company if it acquires 10
percent or more of an electric utility
company. EWGs, FUCOs 52 and QFs fall
within the definition of ‘‘electric utility
company’’ under section 1262(5) of
PUHCA 2005 because they own or
operate facilities used for the
generation, transmission or distribution
of electric energy for sale. Moreover,
including EWGs, FUCOs and QFs as
electric utility companies is consistent
with common usage, which supports
defining electric utility companies as
companies owning facilities (generation,
transmission or distribution) for the sale
of electric energy.
50 We note that, in PUHCA 1935, which was not
limited to facilities or companies operating in
interstate commerce, Congress directed the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in
section 3 to exempt predominantly intrastate
holding companies and holding companies whose
operations are confined to one state or contiguous
states (because the states could adequately regulate
these types of holding companies and their
activities) unless the SEC found it detrimental to
the public interest or the interests of investors or
consumers. Although Congress did not give the
Commission authority under section 203(a)(2) to
actually exempt companies from the provision, our
blanket waivers serve a similar purpose of deferring
to the states, as the SEC did under the 1935 Act.
If, however, we find harm to wholesale competition
or customers, the Commission can take an
appropriate action.
51 The three other terms are: associate company,
holding company and holding company system.
52 The Commission explained in Order No. 669
that it interpreted section 203(a)(2) of the FPA as
applying to foreign acquisitions and therefore
interpreted ‘‘electric utility company’’ to include
FUCOs.
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50. Further, as discussed in Order No.
669 and Order No. 667–A (the PUHCA
2005 rehearing order), while Congress
expressly excluded from the definition
of holding company certain banks and
other institutions, it did not similarly
exclude from the definition of holding
company entities that only own QFs,
EWGs or FUCOs. Rather, section 1266(a)
of PUHCA 2005 specifically directs the
Commission to exempt QF/EWG/FUCO
holding companies from the federal
access to books and records provision;
thus, the very language of the provision
recognizes that such entities are holding
companies. It directs the Commission to
issue a final rule to exempt ‘‘any person
that is a holding company, solely with
respect to one or more [QFs, EWGs, or
FUCOs].’’
51. Therefore, consistent with our
determination in the PUHCA 2005
rehearing order, we are giving full effect
to the statutory language when we
conclude that companies that acquire 10
percent or more of an EWG, FUCO or
QF are holding companies as that term
is used in PUHCA 2005 as well as FPA
section 203(a)(2).
52. However, we also have provided
an exemption from the PUHCA section
1264 books and records requirements, as
required by section 1266 of PUHCA
2005. Further, based on consideration of
the rehearing comments filed, we will
grant a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) for holding companies
that own or control only EWGs, QFs or
FUCOs to acquire the securities of
additional EWGs, FUCOs or QFs. Thus,
our definition allows us to ensure that,
for example, cross-subsidization that
affects matters under our traditional
jurisdiction does not occur, while at the
same time ensuring (through blanket
authorizations) that investment in the
electric industry is not hampered and
that encouragement of QFs is not
undermined.
53. We recognize, however, parties’
claims that there were inconsistencies
because of certain statements in Order
No. 667 that EWGs would not be
considered ‘‘electric utility companies.’’
A similar statement was included with
respect to QFs in our recent QF final
rule.53 On rehearing of the Order No.
667, we are eliminating these statements
with respect to EWGs and clarifying that
we intend to eliminate a similar
statement in the QF final rule
rehearing.54 Thus, our interpretation
53 Revised Regulations Governing Cogneration
and Small Power Production, Order No. 671, 71 FR
7852 (Feb. 15, 2006), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,203
(2006).
54 Repeal of the Public Utility Holding Company
Act of 1935 and Enactment of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act of 2005, Order No. 667–A,
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under section 203(a)(2) is consistent
with our interpretation under PUHCA
2005, and Morgan Stanley’s claim that
we are creating two different definitions
is not correct.
54. We also reject Morgan Stanley’s
argument as it relates to power
marketers, but for a different reason. We
decided in the PUHCA 2005 Final Rule
to treat power marketers in a manner
consistent with SEC precedent for
purposes of interpreting PUHCA 2005,
and therefore, decided not to treat
power marketers as ‘‘electric utility
companies.’’ 55 By extension, therefore,
a company owning only a power
marketer is not holding an ‘‘electric
utility company’’ and is not a holding
company. However, power marketers
remain public utilities under the FPA.
3. Section 33.1(c)(1)—Blanket
Authorizations: Intrastate Commerce,
Local Distribution, and Internal
Corporate Reorganizations
55. Section 33.1(c)(1) provides that
any holding company in a holding
company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility
is granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) of the FPA to purchase,
acquire, or take any security of: (i) A
transmitting utility or company that
owns, operates, or controls only
facilities used solely for transmission in
intrastate commerce and/or sales of
electric energy in intrastate commerce;
(ii) a transmitting utility or company
that owns, operates, or controls only
facilities used solely for local
distribution and/or sales of electric
energy at retail regulated by a state
commission; or (iii) a transmitting
utility or company if the transaction
involves an internal corporate
reorganization that does not present
cross-subsidization issues and does not
involve a traditional public utility with
captive customers.
a. Section 33.1(c)(1)(i) and (ii)—Blanket
Authorizations for Intrastate Commerce
and Local Distribution
56. In Order No. 669, the Commission
stated that it was not reasonable to
interpret section 203(a)(2) as being
limited solely to holding company
acquisitions and mergers involving
wholesale sales or transmission in
interstate commerce. However, we
concluded that there would be no
benefit from the Commission’s case-bypublished elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,213 at P 14 & n.
32 (2006).
55 Order No. 667 at P 123.
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case evaluation of certain transactions
under section 203(a)(2).56
57. The Commission explained that
our core jurisdiction under Part II of the
FPA continues to be transmission and
sales for resale of electric energy in
interstate commerce. A major impetus
behind section 203(a)(2) was to clarify
the Commission’s jurisdiction over
mergers of holding companies that own
public utilities as defined in the FPA.57
Accordingly, we concluded that it is
consistent with the public interest to
grant blanket authorizations for the
following: (1) Section 203(a)(2)
purchases or acquisitions by holding
companies of companies that own,
operate, or control facilities used solely
for transmission or sales of electric
energy in intrastate commerce; and (2)
section 203(a)(2) purchases or
acquisitions by holding companies of
facilities used solely for local
distribution and/or sales at retail
regulated by a state commission.58
58. The Commission concluded that
these blanket authorizations are
consistent with the public interest
because: (1) The identified categories do
not raise concerns with respect to
competitive wholesale markets for sales
in interstate commerce or protection of
wholesale captive customers served by
Commission-regulated public utilities—
matters within this Commission’s core
responsibility and expertise; (2) if these
categories raise competitive issues in
intrastate commerce, i.e., in ERCOT,
Hawaii, and Alaska,59 those issues are
within the expertise of, and more
appropriately addressed by, state
commissions; and (3) if competition and
retail ratepayer protection issues are
raised by a holding company’s
acquisition of local distribution or other
retail facilities, these issues also are
within the expertise of, and more
appropriately addressed by, state
commissions.60
56 An acquisition or merger involving ‘‘any
company that owns or operates facilities used for
the generation, transmission, or distribution of
electric energy for sale’’ is not on its face limited
to interstate facilities.
57 Illinois Power Co., 67 FERC ¶ 61,136 (1994)
(noting that the Commission does not have
jurisdiction over public holding company mergers
or consolidations, but concluding that, ordinarily,
when public utility holding companies merge, an
indirect merger involving their public utility
subsidiaries also takes place, and that Commission
approval under section 203 would be required).
58 Order No. 669 at P 56.
59 Similarly, although not raised by the parties,
the blanket authorization would apply to any
organized Territory of the United States.
60 For these blanket authorizations, the
Commission did not impose any type of filing
requirement.
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i. Rehearing Requests
59. APPA/NRECA assert that the
Commission erred in granting blanket
authorization of acquisitions of
‘‘intrastate’’ utilities by holding
companies. They state that in order for
the Commission’s justification to be
true, i.e., that these transactions do not
affect Commission-regulated wholesale
sales in interstate commerce or
Commission-regulated public utilities,
the blanket authorization would have to
be confined to acquisitions of such
intrastate utilities by intrastate holding
companies. However, APPA/NRECA
argue that the regulation allows any
holding company (including a holding
company that owns a Commissionjurisdictional public utility operating in
interstate commerce) to acquire an
intrastate utility.61 They state that the
regulation is overbroad, authorizes
transactions that on their face would
affect interstate commerce in electricity,
and raises the possibility of crosssubsidization and pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets for the
benefit of the holding company at the
expense of captive customers. However,
APPA/NRECA assert that if the blanket
authorization were limited to wholly
intrastate transactions in accordance
with the Commission’s rationale, then
the Commission would lack FPA
jurisdiction over these transactions in
the first place, so no blanket
authorization should be required.
Therefore, they state that the
Commission should delete the section
33.1(c)(1)(i) blanket authorization from
its regulations.
60. APPA/NRECA also assert that the
Commission erred in granting blanket
authorization of acquisitions of ‘‘localdistribution-only’’ or ‘‘retail-only’’
utilities. They assert that the blanket
authorization is broader than the
Commission’s rationale (which is that
these transactions do not affect
Commission-regulated wholesale sales
in interstate commerce or Commissionregulated public utilities), authorizes
transactions that would affect
Commission-jurisdictional interstate
commerce in electricity and creates
opportunities for cross-subsidization or
pledge or encumbrance of utility assets
for the benefit of the holding company
and at the expense of captive
customers.62 APPA/NRECA assert that,
if, on the other hand, the holding
company does not own any
Commission-jurisdictional public
utilities before the transaction, and it is
acquiring a retail-only or local61 APPA/NRECA
62 Id.
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Frm 00009
distribution-only utility that also is not
Commission-jurisdictional, then the
Commission would have no jurisdiction
to act on the transaction in the first
place. They argue that, if the
Commission’s rationale for this blanket
authorization holds, the Commission’s
authority to grant the blanket
authorization evaporates. Thus, APPA/
NRECA state that section 33.1(c)(1)(ii)
should be deleted from the regulations.
61. APPA/NRECA further argue that
the Commission’s own reasoning in
Order No. 669 relating to distinctions
between the uses of generating facilities
for wholesale sales and retail sales
undermines the basis for granting
blanket authorizations for acquisition of
securities of ‘‘retail-only’’ utilities. They
note that in connection with defining
‘‘existing generation facility,’’ the
Commission stated that utilities do not
ordinarily separate the dispatch of their
plants for retail sales and wholesale
sales and thus adopted the rebuttable
presumption that existing generation
facilities are used for both wholesale
sales and retail sales.63 APPA/NRECA
assert that this premise also leads to the
rebuttable presumption that a holding
company that acquires a utility that
owns generation is not acquiring a
‘‘retail-only’’ utility, thus eliminating
the basis for granting a blanket
authorization of such a transaction
without evidence of that fact. In
addition, they note that any ‘‘retailonly’’ utility that does not own any
generation but meets its power needs
through a portfolio of power contracts
and ancillary services is likely to be
selling excess wholesale power during
some periods. As a consequence, they
believe that there is no basis to presume
that retail-only utilities exist or to
provide a blanket authorization for such
acquisitions.
ii. Commission Determination
62. We reaffirm our decision to grant
blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2) for acquisitions of companies
that own, operate or control only
facilities used solely for intrastate
transmission or intrastate energy sales
or for local distribution or retail energy
sales regulated by a state commission.
The energy sales or transmission
transactions by electric utility
companies that fall within this blanket
authorization are relatively small
compared to such transactions by other
electric utility companies. These
transactions are unlikely to adversely
affect wholesale competition. With
respect to possible adverse effects on
rates of retail captive customers, this
Rehearing Request at 27.
at 28–29.
63 Order
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can be addressed by the state
commissions with jurisdiction over and
expertise with these types of
transactions. Adverse effects on rates of
wholesale captive customers or
customers receiving transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities are unlikely but, if they occur,
we believe we can adequately address
any concerns using our rate authority
under FPA sections 205 and 206. Thus,
while APPA/NRECA are correct that
there may be some interstate effects as
a result of such transactions, at this time
we believe that such effects would not
be significant and thus that individual
pre-approval by this Commission under
section 203 is not necessary. We
disagree with APPA/NRECA’s argument
that the blanket authorization for
acquisitions of ‘‘retail-only’’ utility
securities is inconsistent with the
Commission’s rebuttable presumption
in Order No. 669 that all generating
facilities are used for at least some
wholesale sales. If a company engages in
other than de minimis wholesale
transactions, the blanket authorization
will not apply. However, in response to
APPA/NRECA’s concern, we will
require that if any public utility within
the holding company system has captive
customers or owns or provides
transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities, the holding
company must report the acquisition to
the Commission, including any state
actions and conditions related to the
transaction, and provide an explanation
of why the transaction does not result in
cross-subsidization.64
63. We clarify that the Commission is
not asserting jurisdiction over intrastate
facilities, local distribution facilities, or
retail-only companies under the blanket
authorizations. Rather, we are asserting
jurisdiction over holding company
acquisitions of such companies or
facilities for the purpose of ensuring
that interstate interests are not adversely
affected and we may consider
eliminating these blanket authorizations
if necessary to protect customers.65
64 In response to APPA’s concerns regarding the
protection of transmission customers, we believe it
is appropriate, as discussed infra, at P 147, to apply
this reporting requirement to holding companies
that include public utilities that own or provide
transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities. Similarly, where relevant for
conditions or requirements applicable to blanket
authorizations granted herein or to implementing
standards for review of section 203 applications not
receiving blanket authorizations, certain conditions
and requirements will apply to holding company
acquisitions where the holding company includes
a public utility that has captive customers or owns
or provides transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities.
65 See our response to NARUC, supra PP 45–47.
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b. Section 33.1(c)(1)(iii)—Blanket
Authorizations for Internal Corporate
Reorganizations
64. Section 33.1(c)(1)(iii) provides
that
Any holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting utility or
an electric utility is granted a blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(2) of the
Federal Power Act to purchase, acquire, or
take any security of * * * (iii) a transmitting
utility or company if the transaction involves
an internal corporate reorganization that does
not present cross-subsidization issues and
does not involve a traditional public utility
with captive customers.
65. In Order No. 669’s preamble, the
Commission explained that internal
corporate reorganizations that do not
present cross-subsidization issues and
do not involve captive customers are
unlikely to cause anticompetitive
effects.66
i. Rehearing Requests
66. EEI, Entergy, and Duke/Cinergy
request that the Commission grant
blanket authorization for internal
corporate reorganizations under section
203(a)(1) (which addresses public
utilities) as well as under 203(a)(2)
(which addresses holding companies).67
They note that, in the preamble of Order
No. 669, the Commission stated that it
‘‘is granting blanket authorization for
internal corporate reorganizations that
do not present cross-subsidization
issues and that do not involve a
traditional public utility with captive
customers,’’ 68 without drawing any
distinction between section 203(a)(1)
and section 203(a)(2). However, the
actual regulatory text grants blanket
authorization for internal corporate
reorganizations only under section
203(a)(2).
67. National Grid requests that the
Commission grant blanket authorization
for internal reorganizations involving
intermediate holding companies and
other non-utility associate companies
(i.e. the consolidation or dissolution of
such companies and the purchase of
securities of one such company by
another such company).69
68. EEI, Entergy, Duke/Cinergy, and
National Grid request that the
Commission explain what it meant by a
reorganization that does not ‘‘involve’’ a
66 Order
No. 669 at P 192.
Rehearing Request at 6–7; Entergy
Rehearing Request at 4; and Duke/Cinergy
Rehearing Request at 4.
68 Order No. 669 at P 192.
69 National Grid Rehearing Request at 7–8 (citing
National Grid Transco, Order Authorizing Various
Financing Transactions, Money Pool; Reservation of
Jurisdiction, Holding Company Act Release No. 35–
27898; 83 S.E.C. Docket 2653 (Sept. 30, 2004)).
67 EEI
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traditional public utility with captive
customers.70 They state that a broad
reading could deny blanket
authorizations for a reorganization of an
intermediate holding company between
the public utility and the ultimate
parent holding company even in cases
where the transaction does not affect the
organization of the public utility itself.
These parties suggest that the
Commission revise the regulation to
grant blanket authorization for internal
reorganizations that do not ‘‘result in
the reorganization of a traditional public
utility with captive customers.’’ 71
69. In addition, EEI, Entergy, and
Duke/Cinergy recommend that the
Commission consider granting blanket
authorization for certain internal
corporate reorganizations that result in
the reorganization of a traditional public
utility company with captive customers,
as long as an authorized corporate
official verifies that the transaction will
have no adverse effect on competition,
rates, or regulation and makes
additional verifications (similar to the
verifications required for the blanket
authorization in section 33.1(c)(5)(ii) for
FUCOs with captive customers in the
U.S.).72 They explain that the
verifications would ensure that this
automatic approval would apply only
when the transaction cannot harm a
traditional utility company with captive
customers.
70. Similarly, Coral Power requests
that the Commission grant a blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(1) for
internal corporate reorganizations that
do not present cross-subsidization
concerns and do not involve a
traditional public utility with captive
customers, provided that the
reorganization is for a lawful objective
within the company’s corporate
purposes, compatible with the public
interest, and reasonably necessary or
appropriate for such purposes.73
70 EEI previously provided an example of such an
internal corporate reorganization: ‘‘* * * if a
holding company that owns one or more traditional
public utilities with captive customers also owns
several EWGs, FUCOs, or other utilities without
captive customers but seeks only to reorganize some
of these non-traditional companies (e.g., by moving
them under other intermediate holding companies),
this transaction would not involve or affect the
traditional utilities * * *’’ November 7, 2005
rulemaking comment of EEI (at fn. 17) in Docket No.
RM05–34–000.
71 EEI Rehearing Request at 7, and Attachment A
at 1; Entergy Rehearing Request at 5; Duke/Cinergy
Rehearing Request at 4; and National Grid
Rehearing Request at 9.
72 EEI Rehearing Request at 7–8; Entergy
Rehearing Request at 5; and Duke/Cinergy
Rehearing Request at 5. See also EEI Comments,
Docket No. RM05–34–000, at 25.
73 Coral Power Rehearing Request at 6. Coral
Power explains that the Commission does not
currently require a competitive analysis under pre-
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71. If the Commission will not grant
this blanket authority, EEI, Entergy, and
Duke/Cinergy alternatively request that
the Commission revise section 33.11(b)
to provide for expeditious consideration
of ‘‘internal corporate reorganizations
that result in the reorganization of a
traditional public utility with captive
customers but do not present crosssubsidization issues.’’
72. APPA/NRECA note that Order No.
669 discussed the adoption of
safeguards to prevent crosssubsidization involving certain cashmanagement programs and intraholding company financing
arrangements. However, the
Commission erred in granting blanket
authorizations of holding company
acquisitions involving internal
corporate reorganizations without
protective conditions similar to those
imposed on blanket authorizations in
section 33.1(c)(2) for certain securities
purchases by holding companies.74
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ii. Commission Determination
73. The Commission finds no basis for
distinguishing between section 203(a)(1)
and section 203(a)(2) in determining
that ‘‘internal corporate reorganizations
that do not present cross-subsidization
issues are unlikely to cause
anticompetitive effects.’’ In contrast to
other types of transactions, we see no
need to require case-by-case filings
under section 203(a)(1) for such
transactions since, by their very nature,
internal corporate reorganizations that
do not affect the organization of the
public utility itself cannot involve
changes of ownership and ultimate
control of the jurisdictional or
generation facilities. Such transactions
would not ordinarily result in a change
in direct ownership or control of
jurisdictional facilities. However, we
emphasize that any internal
reorganization that would result in a
change of direct ownership of or control
over jurisdictional facilities will require
a filing under section 203(a)(1).
Accordingly, we will grant blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(1) for
internal corporate reorganizations that
do not present cross-subsidization
issues and that do not involve (i.e, do
not result in the reorganization of, as
explained below) a traditional public
EPAct 2005 section 203 for such internal corporate
reorganizations because there are no competitive
concerns or changes in the control of jurisdictional
assets where the ultimate parent company remains
the same and all intermediary holding companies
remain under the same parent company.
74 APPA/NRECA Rehearing Request at 30–31.
These blanket authorizations pertain to acquisitions
of non-voting securities, voting securities of less
than 10 percent and securities of a subsidiary
company within the holding company system.
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utility with captive customers or that
owns or provides transmission service
over jurisdictional transmission
facilities.
74. EEI, Entergy, Duke/Cinergy, and
National Grid are correct that the phrase
‘‘does not involve a traditional public
utility with captive customers’’ could be
interpreted to deny blanket authority in
situations where the transaction does
not affect the organization of the
traditional public utility itself. Their
suggestion to substitute the phrase
‘‘result in the reorganization of a
traditional public utility with captive
customers’’ is reasonable and we will
modify the regulation accordingly. We
also will expand the blanket
authorization to cover reorganizations of
intermediate holding companies, nonutility associate companies, and public
utilities that are not traditional public
utilities that have captive customers or
that own or provide transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities, so long as the reorganization
does not present cross-subsidization
issues. As a result, we are revising
section 33.1(c)(1)(iii) to address a
different issue, as noted below and
adding a new section 33.1(c)(6) to
incorporate the blanket authorizations
for internal corporate reorganizations, as
discussed here.75
75. We will not grant herein a blanket
authorization for internal corporate
reorganizations that result in the
reorganization of a traditional public
utility with captive customers. To
ensure that captive customers and
customers receiving transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities are protected, we will continue
to evaluate such internal corporate
reorganizations on a case-by-case basis.
However, we are revising section
33.11(b) to separately provide in new
section 33.11(c)(3) for expeditious
consideration of internal corporate
reorganizations that result in the
reorganization of a traditional public
utility with captive customers or
customers receiving transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities but that do not present crosssubsidization issues.
76. We are not convinced by APPA/
NRECA’s argument that Order No. 669
granted blanket authorizations involving
internal corporate reorganizations
without adequate protective conditions.
The blanket authorization applies only
if no cross-subsidization issues are
present and only if there are no affected
75 Internal corporate reorganizations, as discussed
here, are provided blanket authorization whether
they are accomplished through the acquisition of
securities or through a merger or consolidation.
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28431
captive customers or customers
receiving transmission service over
jurisdictional transmission facilities.
APPA/NRECA does not explain why
additional conditions or requirements
are necessary.
c. Requests for Additional Blanket
Authorizations
i. Rehearing Request
77. GS Group recommends that the
Commission give blanket authorization
under section 203(a)(2) for a holding
company in a holding company system
that includes a transmitting utility or
electric utility to acquire securities of
industrial self-generators. An industrial
self-generator would be ‘‘any company
that owns generating facilities that total
100 MW or less in size and are used
fundamentally for its own load or for
sales to affiliated end-users.’’ 76
78. GS Group explains that its various
non-utility subsidiaries engage in
proprietary trading and merchant
banking activities and, in the ordinary
course of these business activities,
regularly acquire utility securities. They
acquire these securities for the purpose
of distribution or resale, as broker/
dealers in a fiduciary capacity, or for
their own accounts (proprietary
holdings). GS Group states it has
requested blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) for acquisitions of
securities in excess of the $10 million
threshold. Even if such authorizations
were granted, GS Group states that its
non-utility subsidiaries would not be
allowed to acquire in a proprietary
capacity 10 percent or more of the
voting securities of any electric utility
company or holding company that
includes an electric utility company
without obtaining separate approval
from the Commission.77
79. Furthermore, GS Group says that
the blanket authorizations under section
33.1(c)(1)(i) and section 33.1(c)(1)(ii) do
not allow its non-utility subsidiaries to
acquire 10 percent or more of the voting
securities of an electric utility company.
While GS Group acknowledges that this
may be reasonable for acquiring
securities of a traditional utility with
captive customers, it contends that such
a limitation is unnecessary as applied to
the acquisition of securities of an
industrial company or manufacturer
that generates power itself and
consumes most of the generated power.
76 GS
Group Rehearing Request at 4.
Commission granted blanket
authorizations to GS Group that allow its nonutility subsidiaries to hold, in a proprietary
capacity, up to 10 percent of the voting securities
of electric utility companies, subject to certain
reporting requirements. See The Goldman Sachs
Group, Inc., 114 FERC ¶ 61,118 at P 22, 27 (2006).
77 The
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GS Group notes that many industrial
self-generators sell only a small amount
of surplus power at wholesale to the
local interconnected utility. The same
public policy considerations (the lack of
effects on competitive wholesale
markets for sale in interstate commerce
or on wholesale captive customers) that
underlie a blanket authorization
covering acquisitions of such
companies’ securities (in section
33.1(c)(1)(i)) apply to acquisitions of
securities of industrial self-generators.
GS Group argues that the 100 MW size
limit will assure that transactions
involving the acquisition of securities of
industrial self-generators will not have
an effect on competition in wholesale
power markets.
80. Furthermore, GS Group argues
that this modification would be
consistent with the PUHCA 2005 Final
Rule, 18 CFR 366.3(c), which waives the
accounting, record-retention and filing
requirements in Part 366 for holding
companies that own 100 MW of
generation or less that is used
‘‘fundamentally for their own load or for
sales to affiliated end-users.’’ GS Group
notes that the SEC exempted industrial
self-generators and their parent holding
companies from regulation as electric
utility companies or holding companies.
It says that the SEC also exempted
acquisitions of voting securities of such
companies from the pre-approval
requirements of PUHCA 1935.
81. Coral Power requests that the
Commission grant a blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(1)
(which regulates transactions involving
public utilities) for transfers of
wholesale market-based rate contracts
between affiliates that have the same
ultimate upstream ownership and that
are not affiliated with traditional public
utilities with captive ratepayers. It states
that this would be consistent with the
public interest because such transfers
have no adverse effect on competition,
rates, or regulation. Such transfers will
not harm competition because they will
not result in any change in ultimate
control over the wholesale contracts,
over any other electric generation,
transmission, or distribution facilities,
or over inputs to generation. Coral
Power explains that following such
transfers, the Commission will continue
to have jurisdiction over the contracts.
It states that such transfers have no
effect on captive ratepayers (since
customers under market-base rate
contracts are not captive), and therefore
will not raise any cross-subsidization
issues.
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ii. Commission Determination
82. The Commission will grant a
blanket authorization to allow any
company in a holding company system
that includes a transmitting utility or an
electric utility to acquire the securities
of an electric utility company that owns
generating facilities that total 100 MW
or less and are used fundamentally for
the acquired company’s own individual
load or for sales to affiliated end-users
(industrial self-generators). Such
transactions meet the standards of
section 203. They are consistent with
the public interest (because they will
not harm competition, ratepayers, or
regulation) and will not result in the
cross-subsidization of a non-utility
associate company or the pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets for the
benefit of an associate company. This
blanket authorization will be reflected
in section 33.1(c)(1)(iii).
83. The Commission also is persuaded
by the rationale provided by Coral
Power and will grant a blanket
authorization for transfers of wholesale
market-based rate contracts between
affiliates that have the same ultimate
upstream ownership and that are not
affiliated with a traditional public
utility with captive customers. Such
transactions meet the standards of
section 203. They will not harm
competition because even if a contract
confers control over a generating
resource, the transfer of the contract
does not result in a change in ultimate
control. There also will be no effect on
cost-based rates to captive customers or
to customers that receive transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities, or on regulation. Further,
since the affiliates are not affiliated with
a public utility with captive ratepayers,
the transaction will not result in the
cross-subsidization of a non-utility
associate company or the pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets for the
benefit of an associate company. We
note that the assignment or transfer of
wholesale contracts is subject to section
205 filing requirements, which include,
among other things, designation of the
jurisdictional entity that will be the
supplier under the contract.
4. Blanket Authorizations for Cash
Management Programs, Money Pools,
and Intra-Holding Company Financing
Arrangements
84. In Order No. 669, the Commission
stated that cash management programs,
money pools, and other intra-holding
company financing arrangements 78 are
78 While there are several different types of cash
management programs, a cash management program
generally involves pooling the cash resources of
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a routine and important tool used by
many large companies to lower the cost
of capital for their regulated subsidiaries
and to improve the rate of return the
holding company and its subsidiaries
can receive on their money.79 These
transactions often involve issuances and
acquisitions of securities that are subject
to FPA sections 204 and 203.80 The
Commission stated that it did not intend
to make it more difficult for companies
to take advantage of these types of
transactions. Transfers of funds between
such companies do not generally
present competitive problems. Thus, we
found that it was consistent with the
public interest to grant blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(2)for
holding companies and their
subsidiaries to take part in intra-system
cash management-type programs.
a. Rehearing Requests
85. EEI, Entergy, and Duke/Cinergy
request that the Commission modify the
regulatory text to also grant blanket
authorization under FPA section
203(a)(1) for intra-system financial
transactions between public utility
affiliates. They point out that, while
intra-system financings may be
jurisdictional under section 203(a)(1)
(which applies to acquisitions of
securities by public utilities) and/or
section 203(a)(2) (which applies to
acquisitions of securities by holding
companies), section 33.1(c)(2) grants
blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2) only. They explain that intrasystem cash management or financing
programs typically involve both: (i)
‘‘Horizontal’’ transactions between two
public utility subsidiaries (e.g., one
public utility lending money to an
affiliated public utility), which may be
jurisdictional under section 203(a)(1);
and (ii) transactions between a holding
company and its subsidiaries (e.g., a
holding company lending money
several affiliated companies into a ‘‘money pool.’’
Affiliates can then borrow against the funds in the
pool, often at below market rates. Additionally, the
parent company is often able to achieve a higher
rate of return on its money pool investments than
any single affiliate could on its own. For a more
detailed discussion of cash management programs,
see Regulation of Cash Management Practices,
Order No. 634, 68 FR 40500 (July 8, 2003), III FERC
Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,145 (June 26, 2003), Order No.
634–A, 68 FR 61993 (Oct. 31, 2003), FERC Stats. &
Regs. ¶ 31,152 (Oct. 23, 2003) (Cash Management
Rule).
79 Order No. 669 at P 142.
80 The Commission’s authority under section 204
governing the issuance of securities by a public
utility was often superseded by the authority of the
SEC under section 318 of the FPA. Section 318 of
the FPA resolved conflicts of jurisdiction between
the FPA and PUHCA 1935 regarding, among other
things, the issuance of securities in favor of the
SEC. Section 318 was repealed under section 1277
of PUHCA 2005.
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‘‘downward’’ to a subsidiary public
utility), which may be jurisdictional
under section 203(a)(2).
86. EEI, Entergy, and Duke/Cinergy
assert that, based on the preamble
discussion, the Commission apparently
intended to cover both types of
transactions, but the regulatory text did
not incorporate them. In the preamble,
we stated that ‘‘it is consistent with the
public interest to grant a blanket
authorization to allow holding
companies and their subsidiaries to take
part in intra-system cash managementtype programs.’’ 81 EEI, Entergy, and
Duke/Cinergy state that because these
transactions among public utility
affiliates are very frequent, it is
impractical for them to file for section
203 approval for such transactions.
Thus, blanket authorization for intrasystem financings between public utility
affiliates is necessary to allow
companies to effectively manage their
financial needs.82
87. Similarly, National Grid asserts
that, while the Commission explicitly
stated in the preamble of Order No. 669
its intent to grant blanket preauthorization under FPA section 203 for
public utility participation in cash
management programs, the Commission
provided no regulatory text to allow for
utilities and their associate companies
(other than holding companies) to
participate in cash management
programs. It asserts that to ensure that
the blanket authority granted by the
Commission in paragraph 142 of Order
No. 669 enables cash management
programs to continue, the Commission
should expand the regulatory text to
allow all associate companies that
participate as borrowers in cash
management programs to continue to
‘‘acquire securities’’ in all other program
participants. Specifically, it states that
the Commission should revise section
33.1(c)(2) to cover both holding
companies and any transmitting utility,
electric utility company, or public
utility within the holding company
system.83 National Grid states that the
provision should also be revised to
incorporate requisite blanket authority
under FPA section 203(a)(1) for public
utilities to participate in cash
management programs.
81 EEI Rehearing Request at 4 (citing Order No.
669 at P 142 (emphasis added); Entergy Rehearing
Request at 2; and Duke/Cinergy Rehearing Request
at 2.
82 See EEI Rehearing Request at Attachment A at
1–2, section 33.1(c)(3). Attachment A contains a
black-lined version of regulation 33.1(c), revised to
include a blanket authorization for intra-system
financial transactions between public utility
affiliates under section 203(a)(1).
83 National Grid Rehearing Request at 5.
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88. APPA/NRECA assert that the
Commission granted blanket
authorization for intra-holding company
financing transactions without adequate
safeguards against cross-subsidization or
pledges or encumbrances of utility
assets. In discussing the blanket
approval of these arrangements, Order
No. 669 states that applicants ‘‘must
adopt sufficient safeguards, including
any necessary cash management
controls (such as restrictions on
upstream transfers of funds, ring
fencing, etc.) to prevent any crosssubsidization between holding
companies and their new subsidiaries
before receiving section 203
approval.’’ 84 However, APPA/NRECA
point out that these requirements do not
appear in the Commission’s
accompanying regulations.
b. Commission Determination
89. First, we clarify that the blanket
authorization granted for money pool
transactions is intended to authorize
‘‘horizontal’’ transactions between
public utility company subsidiaries as
well as ‘‘downward’’ loans from the
holding company to its public utility
company subsidiaries and we will add
new regulatory text to reflect this.
However, the blanket authorization does
not extend to acquisition of securities
issued by entities outside the money
pool.
90. Rather than modify the regulatory
text in the Final Rule, which addressed
only ‘‘vertical’’ transactions between
public utility holding companies and
their subsidiaries, in section 33.1(c)(7),
we have adopted stand-alone regulatory
text addressing ‘‘horizontal’’ public
utility money pool transactions subject
to FPA section 203(a)(1)(C). We note
that section 203(a)(1)(C) jurisdiction
applies only to public utility
acquisitions of securities of other public
utilities. Such authorization is not
required under section 203(a)(1) for a
public utility to acquire securities of a
non-public utility. Therefore, there is no
need to broaden the regulatory text as
requested by National Grid to cover
public utility acquisitions of securities
of non-public utilities.
91. In response to APPA/NRECA, we
note that the blanket authorizations
under section 203(a)(2) for holding
company acquisitions of non-voting
securities, voting securities of less than
10 percent of a company, and securities
of subsidiaries are all subject to the
requirement that the holding company
provide the Commission with copies of
certain information required to be filed
84 APPA/NRECA Rehearing Request at 30 (citing
Order No. 669 at P 143).
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28433
with the SEC. Further, the new blanket
authorization in section 33.1(c)(7),
which applies to public utility
participation in intra-system cash
management programs, is subject to
safeguards to prevent crosssubsidization or encumbrances of utility
assets. We also note that public utilities
have filing requirements under the
Commission’s Cash Management Rule.
With respect to whether the
Commission should codify specific
safeguards that must be adopted for
money pool transactions, we will
consider this issue at the technical
conference to be held later this year
regarding PUHCA and certain FPA
section 203 issues.
5. Section 33.1(c)(2)–(c)(4)—Blanket
Authorizations: Purchases of Voting and
Non-Voting Securities Under Section
203
92. Section 33.1(c)(2) provides that
any holding company in a holding
company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility
is granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) of the FPA to purchase,
acquire, or take: (i) Any non-voting
security (that does not convey sufficient
veto rights over management actions so
as to convey control) in a transmitting
utility, an electric utility company, or a
holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
utility or an electric utility company; or
(ii) any voting security in a transmitting
utility, an electric utility company, or a
holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
utility or an electric utility company if,
after the acquisition, the holding
company will own less than 10 percent
of the outstanding voting securities; or
(iii) any security of a subsidiary
company within the holding company
system.
93. Section 33.1(c)(3) provides that
the blanket authorizations granted
under section (c)(2) are subject to the
conditions that the holding company
shall not: (i) Borrow from any electric
utility company subsidiary in
connection with such acquisition; or (ii)
pledge or encumber the assets of any
electric utility company subsidiary in
connection with such acquisition.
94. Section 33.1(c)(4) provides that a
holding company granted blanket
authorizations in section (c)(2) shall
provide the Commission with the same
information, on the same basis, that the
holding company provides to the SEC in
connection with any securities
purchased, acquired or taken pursuant
to this section.
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a. Section 33.1(c)(2)(i)—Purchases of
Non-Voting Securities by a Holding
Company
95. In Order No. 669, the Commission
found that there is no need for case-bycase examination of a holding
company’s purchase of non-voting
securities. Such securities generally do
not convey control and hence do not
give the holding company additional
market power, harm competitive
markets, or otherwise harm captive
customers.85 We did not impose any
type of filing requirement with respect
to such transactions.86
i. Rehearing Request
96. APPA/NRECA assert that the
Commission should not have granted
this blanket authorization. They state
that the Commission cites no basis in
the record for its finding that such
transactions generally do not harm
competition or otherwise disadvantage
captive customers.87 According to
APPA/NRECA, non-voting securities
may take many different forms, limited
only by the imagination of creative dealmakers and lawyers. APPA/NRECA
assert, for instance, that securities that
are non-voting can be important in the
overall financial structure of many
corporations or may, in the future,
accrue voting rights, such as in the case
of convertible debt. Therefore, they
argue, the Commission should review
such transactions on a case-by-case
basis. If a party is uncertain whether a
particular acquisition is a transfer of
control that warrants a section 203
application, it can seek a declaratory
order.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
ii. Commission Determination
97. APPA/NRECA has not persuaded
us that customers will be harmed by the
blanket authority to acquire non-voting
securities. An acquisition of non-voting
securities generally does not result in a
change of control because such
securities generally lack mechanisms
like voting or veto rights necessary to
influence or control management of the
company. Moreover, section 33.1(c)(3)
specifically prohibits holding
companies that use the blanket
authorization from borrowing from any
electric utility company subsidiary in
connection with the transaction or from
pledging or encumbering assets of an
electric utility company subsidiary. In
those instances where the security is
85 See Cash Management Rule at 29 (discussing
exception for non-voting interests that convey
significant veto rights).
86 Order No. 669 at P 144.
87 APPA/NRECA Rehearing Request at 31 (citing
Order No. 669 at P 144).
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non-voting when issued or acquired but
can be converted to voting at a later
date, we will treat the security as a
voting security when it is converted.
This blanket authorization for
acquisition of non-voting securities by a
holding company only relieves the
holding company of the requirement to
file an application under section
203(a)(2) to obtain prior authorization
from the Commission in a specific
situation and with certain conditions.
b. Section 33.1(c)(2)—Holding Company
Purchases of Less than 10 Percent of
Outstanding Voting Securities
98. The Commission granted blanket
authorization for a holding company in
a holding company system to purchase
less than 10 percent of the outstanding
voting securities of a public utility or a
holding company covered by section
203(a)(2). We conditioned the blanket
authorization ‘‘by requiring the
purchaser of such securities to provide
the Commission, not more than 45 days
after the purchase, with the same
information on the same basis that the
holding company now provides to the
SEC.’’ 88 The Commission stated that it
would issue notices of these filings for
informational purposes only.
i. Rehearing Requests
99. APPA/NRECA assert that the
Commission should not have granted
this blanket authorization. They assert
that the Commission should set the
ownership threshold at less than 5
percent, as with the safe harbor
provisions of the RTO Rule 89 governing
active ownership interests by market
participants in regional transmission
organizations (RTOs). APPA/NRECA
assert that the Commission provides no
justification for using a higher
percentage threshold for blanket
authorization here than it did in its RTO
rule.
100. Coral Power asserts that the
Commission should grant a blanket
authorization under FPA section
203(a)(1) for dispositions of less than 10
percent of the outstanding voting
securities by a public utility to match
the blanket authorization granted to
holding companies to acquire such
securities. It states that the Commission
has long interpreted section 203 to
apply to changes in control over
88 Order No. 669 at P 145. This could include
Schedules 13D or 13G and Forms 8–K or 10–Q.
89 Regional Transmission Organizations, Order
No. 2000, 65 FR 809, 855 (Jan. 6, 2000), FERC Stats.
& Regs. ¶ 31,089, at 31,108 (1999), order on reh’g,
Order No. 2000-A, 65 FR 12088 (Mar. 8, 2000),
FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,092 (2000), aff’d sub nom.
Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County,
Washington v. FERC, 272 F.3d 607 (D.C. Cir. 2001)
(RTO Rule).
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jurisdictional facilities.90 New FPA
section 203(a)(4) codifies this precedent
and gives the Commission express
authority to review changes in control
under section 203. Coral Power asserts
that the disposition of up to 10 percent
of the outstanding voting securities of a
public utility or any of its upstream
owners is not a change in control for
purposes of FPA section 203(a)(1), as
long as the acquiring entity does not
hold a direct or indirect managing
interest in the public utility. It states
that, where there is no change in
control, there can be no harm to
competition or captive ratepayers as a
result of such a transaction.
ii. Commission Determination
101. APPA/NRECA advocate a
reduction, from 10 percent to 5 percent,
in the level of outstanding voting
securities in a public utility or a public
utility holding company that another
holding company may acquire under the
blanket authorization the Commission
granted in Order No. 669. They cite to
the Commission’s conclusion in the
RTO Rule that limited market
participants to no more than a 5 percent
active ownership interest in an RTO. We
will deny APPA/NRECA’s request for
rehearing. In the RTO Rule, we
reviewed various thresholds for
presuming a lack of independence,
including those found in the decisions
of other agencies. We concluded that,
because of particular concerns with the
independence of RTOs, a limitation of 5
percent was appropriate. However, we
noted that, in other contexts, we had
determined that holding 10 percent of a
company’s voting stock was the level at
which a rebuttable presumption of
control applied for purposes of
determining whether a company was an
affiliate.91
102. The fact that the Commission
adopted a 5 percent ownership interest
as a measure of control for purposes of
determining an RTO’s independence
from market participants does not
dictate the maximum threshold for a
blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2). The two situations are quite
different. For Order No. 2000, the
Commission was faced with the task of
building confidence that the RTOs
would not be subject even to influences
or the appearance of influences that
would favor one market participant over
another. As a result, the Commission set
the threshold relatively low, prohibiting
an ownership interest of no more than
5 percent. Our decision here reflects a
90 Coral
91 RTO
Power Rehearing Request at 7.
Rule, FERC Stats. & Regs ¶ 31,089 at
31,070.
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reasonable balance in determining what
is consistent with the public interest
under section 203, taking into account
Congress’ intent in EPAct 2005 to
remove obstacles to much-needed
investment in the electric utility
industry and to protect ratepayers.
Nothing in the request for rehearing has
convinced us that allowing blanket
approval for a holding company to
acquire less than 10 percent of the
securities in a public utility or another
holding company will harm customers.
Setting the level at the higher end of the
rather short spectrum (the low
considered by the Commission of 5
percent and the high of 10 percent)
described by the Commission in the
RTO Rule will encourage increased
investment because it lifts the burden of
obtaining pre-authorization under FPA
section 203(2).
103. Coral Power suggests that the
Commission give essentially the same
blanket authorization to public utilities
under section 203(a)(1) that we gave to
public utility holding companies under
section 203(a)(2). The Commission
declines to do so and will continue to
review dispositions of jurisdictional
facilities by public utilities under FPA
section 203(a)(1) on a case-by-case basis.
Concerns with control, markets and
protection of captive customers or
customers receiving transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities are closely linked with assets
directly controlled by the public
utilities.
c. Section 33.1(c)(4)—SEC Information
Provided to the Commission
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104. As noted above, the Commission
conditioned the blanket authorization
for holding companies under section
33.1(c)(2) ‘‘by requiring the purchaser of
such securities to provide the
Commission, not more than 45 days
after the purchase, with the same
information on the same basis that the
holding company now provides to the
SEC.’’ 92 The Commission stated that it
92 Accordingly, the Commission directed that the
purchaser of such securities file with the
Commission copies of SEC Schedules 13D, 13G,
and Form 13F. The Commission explained that SEC
Schedule 13D is required to be filed by any entity
acquiring beneficial ownership of more than 5
percent of a class of a company’s securities. The
Schedule 13D filing requires, among other things,
a statement of the purpose(s) of the acquisition of
the securities of the issuer and a description of any
plans or proposals the reporting person may have
that relate to or would result in the acquisition of
additional securities of the issuer; any extraordinary
corporate transactions, such as a merger,
reorganization or liquidation of the issuer or its
affiliates; and any changes in the board of directors
or management of the issuer. Schedule 13G is the
same form, but is used when the person or entity
is making the purchase for investment only.
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would issue notices of these filings for
informational purposes only.
i. Rehearing Requests
105. EEI, Entergy, Duke/Cinergy, and
GS Group request that the Commission
revise section 33.1(c)(4) to list the
specific SEC schedules and forms that
the Commission directed companies to
file with the Commission, rather than
just making the more general reference
to the ‘‘same information’’ provided to
the SEC.93 They state that this change
would make the text of the rule
consistent with the Commission’s
discussion in the preamble and in
footnote 107, which refers specifically
to SEC Schedules 13D and 13G and
Form 13F. GS Group is concerned that
the general directive to provide the
‘‘same information’’ is overly broad,
creates uncertainty regarding the type of
information that must be filed with the
Commission, and could be construed to
include oral communications with the
SEC, correspondence, documents
produced in response to a data request,
and other investor disclosure
documents that are only tangentially
related to an acquisition of securities
pursuant to section 33.1(c)(4).
106. Further, GS Group and
MidAmerican explain that, while the
preamble indicates that the SEC filings
must be provided to the Commission
not later than 45 days after the purchase
of securities being reported, the text of
the rule merely indicates that copies of
SEC filings must be provided to the
Commission ‘‘on the same basis’’
provided to the SEC.94 They state that
the 45-day deadline is inconsistent with
the filing deadlines for Schedule 13D,
Schedule 13G and Form 13F.
107. MidAmerican states that should
the SEC eliminate such reporting
requirements, the acquirer of any
securities under the blanket
authorization should continue to
provide the information that had been
required under the rescinded SEC rule
to the Commission no later than the
time that would have been required
under the rescinded SEC rule.
Institutional investment managers who exercise
investment discretion over $100 million or more
must report their holdings on SEC Form 13F. We
noted that requiring this information should impose
only a de minimis burden on the holding company,
since we are merely requiring the same information
that was filed with the SEC. Further, the
Commission stated that, should the SEC change its
reporting requirements, this information must
continue to be filed with the Commission.
93 See, e.g., EEI Rehearing Request at 6, and
Attachment A at 2–3, section 33.1(c)(5); Entergy
Rehearing Request at 3; Duke/Cinergy Rehearing
Request at 3–4; and GS Group Rehearing Request
at 7.
94 Id. at 8; MidAmerican Rehearing Request at 5.
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28435
108. MidAmerican seeks clarification
of the rule as it pertains to Schedule
13G only to the extent a Schedule 13G
is to be filed with respect to the
reporting of beneficial ownership
interests of less than 10 percent of
voting equity securities.
109. MidAmerican and GS Group also
request that the Commission clarify that,
if the submission to the SEC qualifies
for confidential treatment, the
Commission also should give it
confidential treatment. MidAmerican
explains that the investment strategies
of banks, brokers, investment managers,
pension funds, and other investors often
involve proprietary and confidential
information and that release of this
information could harm these entities.
ii. Commission Determination
110. In response to the many industry
requests on rehearing, we will specify
that it is SEC Schedule 13D, Schedule
13G and Form 13F that the companies
are directed to file. To ensure that this
filing requirement imposes only a de
minimis burden, copies of these SEC
Schedules 13D and 13G and Form 13F
must be filed with the Commission
under the same filing deadlines
provided in the SEC rules. We are
revising section 33.1(c)(4) accordingly.
111. We clarify that, if the SEC
eliminates such reporting requirements,
the acquirer of securities under the
blanket authorization must continue to
provide the information required under
the rescinded SEC rule to the
Commission no later than it would have
been required under the rescinded SEC
rule. MidAmerican’s request for
clarification of the reporting
requirement as it pertains to Schedule
13G is unclear, as is the specific change,
if any, that it proposes. As noted above,
however, the Commission is revising the
reporting requirement as it relates to the
SEC schedules and form to make filing
deadlines and content commensurate
with SEC requirements.
112. Further, we clarify that requests
for confidential treatment of copies of
the schedules must follow the
established procedures for requests for
special treatment of documents
submitted to the Commission.95 Under
those procedures, any person submitting
a document may request privileged
treatment by claiming that some or all
of the information is exempt from the
mandatory public disclosure
requirements of the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA),96 and should be
withheld from public disclosure. The
Commission places documents for
95 18
96 5
CFR 388.112 (2005).
U.S.C. 552 (2000).
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which privileged treatment is requested
in a non-public file. When a FOIA
requester seeks a document for which
privileged treatment has been claimed
or when the Commission itself is
considering release of such information,
the Commission official who will decide
whether to release the information will
notify the person who submitted the
document and give that person at least
five calendar days in which to
comment. Notice of a decision to deny
a claim of privilege will be given to any
person claiming that the information is
privileged no less than five calendar
days before disclosure. In addition,
when a FOIA requester brings suit in
Federal court to compel disclosure of
information for which a person has
claimed privileged treatment, the
Commission will notify the person who
submitted the document.
6. Other Requested Blanket
Authorizations—Holding Company
Purchasing Its Own Securities,
Fiduciary Investments and Bank
Underwriting/Hedging
a. Holding Company Purchasing Its
Own Securities
i. Rehearing Requests
113. EEI, Entergy, and Duke/Cinergy
request that the Commission clarify that
a holding company may buy its own
securities under blanket authority and
need not make a filing under section
203. They state that, while it may seem
obvious that a holding company can
acquire its own securities without
section 203 authorization, there is some
confusion created by the differing
statutory language of 203(a)(1)(C) and
203(a)(2). Before EPAct 2005, section
203(a) required prior approval for a
public utility to acquire the security ‘‘of
any other public utility.’’ In contrast,
new section 203(a)(2), requires prior
approval for a holding company to
acquire ‘‘any security with a value in
excess of $10,000,000 of * * * a
holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
utility or an electric utility company.’’
114. National Grid raises similar
arguments and adds that repurchase
transactions are routine and serve a
variety of business needs, including
facilitating stock issuances under
legitimate stock plans and managing
capital structure.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
ii. Commission Determination
115. In an order issued after the final
rule, the Commission ruled that the
most reasonable interpretation of
section 203(a)(2) is that a holding
company is not required to obtain
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Commission authorization to repurchase
its own stock.97
b. Fiduciary Investments and Bank
Underwriting and Hedging Activities
i. Rehearing Requests
116. BofA/JPMorgan ask that the
Commission clarify that section
203(a)(2) does not apply to fiduciary
investments by non-bank financial
institutions in a Regulated Banking
Group.98 They explain that it would not
be feasible for non-bank fiduciaries to
obtain section 203(a)(2) approval before
making such investments because many
Regulated Banking Groups have nonbank subsidiaries that routinely acquire
and dispose of equity and debt positions
in utility securities in fiduciary
capacities. These fiduciary relationships
include the function of trustee, agent,
executor, administrator, guardian, asset
manager, and discretionary investment
adviser.99 BofA/JPMorgan assert that
these passive investments are not made
to permit the Regulated Banking Group
to exercise control over the operations
of the issuer. Further, they state that
such investments are already
comprehensively regulated under
federal and state regimes applicable to
financial institutions. These regulatory
regimes are designed to assure that the
holdings by a Regulated Banking Group
in a fiduciary capacity are not used to
impermissibly support investments in a
public utility as principal, and do not
provide a basis to exercise
impermissible control over a public
utility issuer. For these reasons, BofA/
JPMorgan seek a determination that
fiduciary investments by their non-bank
financial institutions do not require
approval under section 203(a)(2). In the
alternative, they request blanket
authorization for such fiduciary
investments.
117. BofA/JPMorgan request that the
Commission confirm that relief from the
‘‘acquisition of securities’’ clause under
section 203(a)(1) applies under section
97 National Grid plc and National Grid USA, 114
FERC ¶ 61,115 at P 11 (2006).
98 By use of the term ‘‘Regulated Banking
Group,’’BofA/JPMorgan means: (i) banks chartered
and regulated under the laws of the United States
or a U.S. state, and (ii) bank holding companies
registered as such with (and subject to supervision
and regulation by) the Federal Reserve Board under
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (as
amended by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999,
in each case together with their subsidiaries. BofA/
JPMorgan also explain that the Commission’s
blanket authorization of the acquisition of up to 10
percent of voting equity of utilities does not provide
adequate relief, since on an aggregate basis all
holdings in a fiduciary and/or proprietary capacity
under a large banking group may in the ordinary
course of business exceed the 10 percent threshold.
BofA/JPMorgan Rehearing Request at 13–14.
99 Id. at 13.
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203(a)(2). Specifically, they assert that
the Commission has granted banks that
function as power marketers relief from
the ‘‘acquisition of securities’’ clause in
section 203(a)(1).100 Such banks need
not seek prior approval from the
Commission when they acquire utility
securities in debt, fiduciary, trading, or
hedging capacities. However, BofA/
JPMorgan explain that a number of
banks have recently become power
marketers and when that happens, the
bank becomes a public utility for
purposes of FPA section 203. They
assert that, under EPAct 2005, many
banks that are public utilities are now
also ‘‘holding companies.’’ Congress
provided that certain holdings of banks,
bank operating subsidiaries, and brokerdealers do not make them ‘‘holding
companies’’ in section 1262(8) of EPAct
2005. BofA/JP Morgan state that the
statutory exemption also specifically
covers loan collateral, loan liquidation,
and fiduciary holdings.
118. However, BofA/JPMorgan
explain that when banks act as
underwriters, they will not know at the
outset whether they will be successful
in disposing of a sufficient number of
shares to assure that their holdings do
not exceed 5 percent of the issuer after
45 days.101 To comply with section 203,
however, they would have to seek the
Commission’s approval immediately to
retain the shares or risk noncompliance.
Thus, BofA/JPMorgan ask that the
Commission issue blanket authorization
under section 203(a)(2) for failed
underwritings and hedging holdings on
the same terms and conditions imposed
in the Commission’s orders granting
blanket authorization to bank power
marketers under section 203(a)(1).102
Further, they request that Order No. 669
be clarified to authorize: (i)
Underwriting holdings to exceed 45
days and (ii) equity derivative hedging
holdings, to the extent permitted under
the Commission’s orders applicable to
bank power marketers.
119. Similarly, Morgan Stanley
requests that the Commission revise the
100 See UBS AG and Bank of America, N.A., 101
FERC ¶ 61,312 (2002), reh’g granted in part and
denied in part, 103 FERC ¶ 61,284 (2003), reh’g
granted, 105 FERC ¶ 61,078 (2003) (UBS/Bank of
America); JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Docket No.
ER05–283 (unpublished letter order dated March
18, 2005).
101 BofA/JPMorgan Rehearing Request at 19. They
explain that in a successful underwriting, the
underwriter purchases shares from the issuer and
immediately resells those shares in the market. In
a failed underwriting, the underwriter is not able
to resell those shares immediately and will attempt
to sell the unsold shares in an orderly manner over
a period of time following the closing of the initial
purchase.
102 BofA/JPMorgan Rehearing Request at 20
(citing UBS/Bank of America, 103 FERC ¶ 61,284).
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sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
blanket authorizations adopted in Order
No. 669 to permit certain additional
securities acquisitions and to
differentiate between the acquisition of
securities by a public utility and by nonutility affiliates. It requests that the
Commission grant blanket
authorizations to allow holding
companies and their affiliates to hold:
(1) Voting and non-voting securities,
without limitation, on behalf of
customers as fiduciaries; (2) voting and
non-voting securities, without
limitation, in the ordinary course of
their business as underwriters or
dealers; 103 (3) up to the less than 10
percent limit in section 33.1(c)(2)(ii) of
voting securities as principal of each
class of voting securities issued by a
utility or holding company, provided
that such ownership interest does not
include a right to control the
jurisdictional activities of the issuer; (4)
utility securities in connection with
underwriting activities so that
underwriting activities are not subject to
the 10 percent limit in section
33.1(c)(2), provided that the holding
company or its affiliates file an
application for section 203(a) approval
within 45 days of any failed
underwriting to retain the securities and
commits while the applications remains
pending not to vote the utility securities
held as a result of the failed
underwriting; (5) utility securities in
connection with their trading activities
so that the dealer/trader activities are
not subject to the 10 percent limit in
section 203(c)(2); (6) utility securities as
lenders so that the acquisitions of debt
securities are not subject to the 10
percent limit in section 33.1(c)(2),
except that application under section
203 would be required before the
holding company or its affiliate could
take control by foreclosure, bankruptcy,
or otherwise; (7) utility securities of any
entity formed to acquire, finance, and
lease utility assets to any public utility,
electric utility company, or transmitting
utility under a long-term net lease; and
(8) utility securities in the course of
routine dealing and trading as
principals for their own account so that
utility securities acquired as principal
for hedging purposes are excluded from
the 10 percent limit in section
33.1(c)(2), if the holding company or its
affiliate commits not to vote such
securities.104
120. Morgan Stanley explains that
fiduciary holdings by holding
103 Morgan Stanley explains that any utility
securities held as part of underwriting or dealer/
trader activities are transitory, so the underwriter or
dealer/trader does not have the ability or incentive
to exercise control over the issuer. Id. at 13.
104 Morgan Stanley Rehearing Request at 7–9.
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companies or their affiliates will not
result in control over a public utility
because the fiduciary has an obligation
to manage those holdings in the interest
of the persons on whose behalf such
securities are held.105 It also explains
that any utility securities held as part of
underwriting or dealer/trader activities
are transitory, so the underwriter or
dealer/trader does not have the ability
or incentive to exercise control over the
issuer.106 With respect to hedging
activities, Morgan Stanley asserts that, if
the acquiring entity agrees not to vote an
interest held as principal beyond the
authorized 10 percent limit, it will not
exercise control over the public utility.
Finally, if the acquiring entity engages
in passive lease financing for public
utilities, the Commission has held that
it does not need to regulate such
activity.107
121. Morgan Stanley argues that its
requested blanket authorizations do not
give the acquiring entity additional
market power or enable it to undermine
competition or disadvantage captive
customers. Instead, the blanket
authority would promote the public
interest by bringing more capital
investment to the utility industry. If the
Commission finds that blanket
authorizations should not apply to all
holding companies, Morgan Stanley
requests that they apply to the activities
of non-utility affiliates of financial
institutions.
ii. Commission Determination
122. Section 1262(8)(B) of PUHCA
2005 excludes from classification as
‘‘holding companies’’ certain entities
that hold the securities of public
utilities or public utility holding
companies under certain conditions.
Among these entities are banks, savings
associations and trust companies, or the
operating subsidiaries of these
institutions, holding, as fiduciaries,
these securities in the ordinary course of
their respective businesses, and brokerdealers holding these securities under
certain conditions. The Commission
recognizes that Order No. 669 does not
apply in these situations.
123. BofA/JPMorgan request
clarification that entities that are not
banks or operating subsidiaries of banks,
but are subject to regulation as banks,108
105 Id. at 9 (citing UBS/Bank of America, 103
FERC ¶ 61,284, at P 11).
106 Id. (citing UBS/Bank of America, 103 FERC
¶ 61,284, at P 13).
107 Id. (citing Alliant Energy Corp., 111 FERC
¶ 61,458 (2005)).
108 Such regulation applies to: (i) Banks, and their
subsidiaries, chartered and regulated under the
laws of the United States or a U.S. state, and (ii)
bank holding companies registered as such with the
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either qualify for the statutory
exclusions in section 1262(8)(B) or have
a blanket authorization to acquire and
hold covered securities in any amount
as fiduciaries in the normal course of
their business. We cannot find that
these entities qualify for the statutory
exclusion. The statutory exclusion is
specific only to certain entities under
certain conditions.
124. However, we agree that entities
holding covered securities in any
amount as fiduciaries in the normal
course of their business or as collateral
for loans or in connection with loan
liquidation and that are, in the course of
that business, subject to the regulatory
oversight of the Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve Bank, or the Office
of Comptroller of the Currency are likely
to be significantly constrained in their
use of those securities so as to not affect
regulation, rates or competition under
the FPA. Therefore, subject to certain
conditions and reporting requirements,
the Commission will grant to entities
that are subject to the regulatory
oversight of the Federal Reserve Bank or
the Comptroller of the Currency because
they are affiliated with banks or bank
holding companies regulated by the
Federal Reserve Bank under the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act of 1999, a blanket authorization
under section 203(a)(2) to acquire and
hold as fiduciaries in the normal course
of their business or as collateral for
loans or in connection with loan
liquidation an unlimited amount of
covered securities of public utilities or
public utility holding companies. The
conditions and reporting requirements
are: (1) The holding does not confer a
right to control, positively or negatively,
the operations through debt covenants
or any other means, the operation or
management of the public utility or
public utility holding company, except
as to customary creditor’s rights or as
provided under the United States
Bankruptcy Code; and (2) the parent
holding company files with the
Commission on a public basis and
within 45 days of the close of each
calendar quarter, both its total holdings
and its holdings as principal, each by
class, unless the holdings within a class
are less than one percent of outstanding
shares, irrespective of the capacity in
which they were held.
125. Morgan Stanley requests a
blanket authorization under section
Federal Reserve Board, together with the
subsidiaries of those holding companies, and
subject to the supervision and regulation of the
Federal Reserve Board under the Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956 (as amended by the GrammLeach-Bliley Act of 1999). 12 U.S.C 1843 (2000).
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203(a)(2) of the FPA and section
33.1(c)(2) of the Commission’s
regulations to acquire and hold up to
the percentage limit under section
33.1(c)(2)(ii) on holdings of voting
securities. There is no need to grant the
requested authorization. Section
33.1(c)(2)(ii) grants blanket
authorization to acquire voting
securities under the condition stated in
the regulation notwithstanding that the
acquisition may exceed $10 million.
126. Morgan Stanley requests blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(2) of
the FPA and section 33.1(c)(2) of the
Commission’s regulations to acquire and
hold securities in connection with
passive lease financing of public
utilities. Such authority is already
granted under section 33.1(c)(2)(i).
Similarly, Morgan Stanley requests
blanket authorization to acquire and
hold as a lender without regard to the
percentage limitation under section
33.1(c)(2)(ii). Authority to hold debt
instruments, which normally do not
convey a right to control the public
utility and which Morgan Stanley
implies is the case in its request, is
already provided under section
33.1(c)(2)(i).
127. Morgan Stanley requests
reconsideration of Order No. 669 or, in
the alternative, blanket authorization
under section 203(a)(2) of the FPA so
that it may, without the 10 percent or
more limitation on outstanding
securities, acquire and hold as a
fiduciary any amount of covered
securities. Morgan Stanley does not
claim exemption under section
1262(8)(B) of PUHCA 2005, nor does it
claim that its holdings as a fiduciary
would be subject to regulatory oversight,
such as that provided by the Federal
Reserve Bank. Finally, while Morgan
Stanley cites to UBS AG and Bank of
America, N.A,109 it does not explain
how the safeguards of banking
regulation relied upon by the
Commission in those cases regarding
holdings as a fiduciary apply to Morgan
Stanley’s situation. Therefore the
Commission will not grant Morgan
Stanley’s request to provide a blanket
authorization in our regulations.
However, we will not preclude
companies from seeking a blanket
authorization on a case-by-case basis.
128. BofA/JPMorgan request
confirmation that banks that are power
marketers and that have blanket
authorizations under section 203(a)(1) of
the FPA also have blanket
authorizations under section 203(a)(2) of
the FPA as holding companies acquiring
109 Morgan
Stanley Rehearing Request at 9 (citing
UBS/Bank of America, 103 FERC ¶ 61,284 at P11).
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and holding public utility securities for
the acquisition and holding of an
unlimited amount of covered securities
as a result of failed underwritings, if
they are classified as holding companies
because they own EWGs or QFs. The
Commission in individual cases has
granted conditional blanket
authorizations to certain banks and their
subsidiaries to acquire and hold an
unlimited amount of covered securities
in connection with failed underwritings.
These authorizations contained two
conditions. First, the authorization ends
45 days after acquisition unless the
entity has, within that period, filed an
application for approval under section
203 to keep the securities. Second, the
bank or subsidiary must commit, during
the pendency of that application, not to
vote the securities. The Commission’s
regulatory interests under section
203(a)(2) in holdings as a result of failed
underwritings are similar to its interests
in such holdings under section
203(a)(1). Therefore, with the two
conditions above, we will grant blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(2) to
banks and their subsidiaries to acquire
and hold an unlimited amount of
covered securities in connection with
failed underwritings.
129. Morgan Stanley also requests
blanket authorization to acquire and
hold an unlimited amount of covered
securities in connection with
underwriting activities. It is unclear
whether Morgan Stanley is requesting
authority only for failed underwritings.
Of course, if Morgan Stanley or other
entities are excluded entities under
PUHCA section 1262(8)(B), then they
are not holding companies; in that case,
blanket authorizations to hold covered
securities in connection with a failed
underwriting is not necessary.
130. The blanket authorization that
the Commission has granted in
connection with failed underwritings
relies more heavily on the two
conditions described above than it does
on the oversight of an alternative
regulatory body, such as the
Comptroller of Currency or the Federal
Reserve System in the Bank of America/
UBS AG series of decisions, to ensure
that holdings resulting from failed
underwritings are not used to exert
control.110 Therefore, the Commission
will grant a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) for a holding company
to acquire and hold an unlimited
amount of covered securities in
connection with a failed underwriting
subject to the same conditions imposed
110 UBA AG and Bank of Amercia, N.A., 101
FERC ¶ 61,312 (2002); 103 FERC ¶ 61,284 (2003);
105 FERC ¶ 61,078 (2003).
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in the Bank of America/UBS AG cases.
We will add regulatory text to reflect
this.
131. BofA/JPMorgan request
clarification that the same blanket
authorization previously granted for
banks to hold equity securities of public
utilities and public utility holding
companies as principal for derivatives
hedging purposes continues to apply
under section 203(a)(2). The
Commission has, for several years,
granted blanket authority to certain
banks to hold covered securities for
hedging purposes incidental to the
business of banking.111 This has been
based in part on the fact that the banks
are subject to a supervisory standard
that generally limits such holdings so
that they typically do not exceed 5
percent of the outstanding shares. The
Commission, however, has specifically
conditioned the blanket authorizations
on a limitation of the banks’
authorization to vote the equity shares
to 5 percent of the outstanding shares.
Under PUHCA 2005, a company is a
holding company if it owns 10 percent
or more of the securities of a publicutility company or of a holding
company of any public-utility company.
The Commission agrees that the holding
by banks of covered securities for
hedging purposes that are incidental to
the business of banking are an important
part of the transactions necessary to the
financing of the utility business.
Therefore, the Commission will grant
blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2), subject to the condition that
the bank not vote more than 10 percent
of the outstanding shares. We will add
regulatory text to reflect this.
132. Morgan Stanley requests
clarification that holding covered
securities in connection with hedging
transactions is not subject to the
limitation of up to 10 percent of
outstanding securities provided under
Order No. 669. It proposes that the
Commission condition the grant on the
commitment of the entity holding the
securities, as well as its affiliates, not to
vote securities held in connection with
hedging transactions, to the extent that
its holdings are 10 percent or more of
the outstanding securities in that class.
A condition removing the holder’s
power to vote the securities held for
hedging purposes to the extent they are
10 percent or more of the securities in
the class outstanding, even though the
amount held for hedging is not limited,
will address the Commission’s concerns
with control. Therefore, the Commission
will grant the blanket authorization
under section 203(a)(2) for companies to
111 See
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hold an unlimited amount of covered
securities for hedging purposes on the
condition that they do not vote the
securities held to the extent they are 10
percent or more of the outstanding
securities in the class. We will add
regulatory text to reflect this.
133. We have granted above certain
blanket authorizations for holding
public utility securities as a fiduciary,
for hedging purposes or for purposes of
loan collateralization or liquidation. All
these blanket authorizations require that
such holdings occur in the normal
course of business of the company
holding the securities. In response to
BofA/JP Morgan, we clarify that
holdings that are exempt by virtue of
section 1262(8)(B) of PUHCA 2005 will
not be counted for purposes of
determining whether the company
holding such securities is a holding
company under section 1262(8) of
PUHCA 2005; in other words, holdings
exempt by statute will not be aggregated
with securities held in other capacities.
Holdings by companies as principal for
derivatives hedging purposes are not
exempt under section 1262(8)(B) and,
therefore, will be counted for purposes
of determining whether the company is
a holding company.
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7. Section 33.2(j)—General Information
Requirements Regarding CrossSubsidization
134. Section 33.2(j) provides that a
section 203 applicant must provide an
explanation, with appropriate
evidentiary support (Exhibit M to the
application): (1) Of how it is providing
assurance that the proposed transaction
will not result in cross-subsidization of
a non-utility associate company or the
pledge or encumbrance of utility assets
for the benefit of an associate company;
or (2) if no such assurance can be
provided, an explanation of how such
cross-subsidization, pledge, or
encumbrance will be consistent with the
public interest.
135. In Order No. 669, the
Commission also stated that certain
protections may be necessary, on a caseby-case basis, in order to protect against
cross-subsidization, pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets, and
affiliate abuse. The Commission stated
that applicants should proffer ratepayer
protection mechanisms to assure that
captive customers are protected from
the effects of cross-subsidization.112
112 The Commission also stated that the applicant
bears the burden of proof to demonstrate that
customers will be protected. See Central Vermont
Pub. Serv. Corp., 39 FERC ¶ 61,295, at 61,960 (1987)
(finding of a potential for abuse, the Commission
may disapprove the transaction or place conditions
on it).
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Among the types of protection
mechanisms that can be proposed by
are: A general hold harmless provision,
which must be enforceable and
administratively manageable, where the
applicant commits that it will protect
wholesale customers from any adverse
rate effects resulting from the
transaction for a significant period of
time following the transaction; a
moratorium on increases in base rates
(rate freeze), where the applicant
commits to freezing its rates for
wholesale customers under a certain
tariff for a significant period of time.113
The Commission stated that it will
address the adequacy of the proposed
mechanisms on a case-by-case basis.
136. Order No. 669 also stated that
certain verifications provided in an
application could streamline the
approval process by avoiding a detailed
examination of cross-subsidization and
encumbrance concerns.114 We stated
that we may accept, along with any
protection mechanisms (discussed
above), on a case-by-case basis, in lieu
of or in addition to any other
explanation, the following four
verifications that the proposed
transaction does not result in, at the
time of the transaction or in the future:
(1) Transfers of facilities between a
traditional utility associate company
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation and
an associate company; (2) new issuances
of securities by traditional utility
associate companies with wholesale or
retail customers served under cost-based
regulation for the benefit of an associate
company; (3) new pledges or
encumbrances of assets of a traditional
utility associate company with
wholesale or retail customers served
under cost-based regulation for the
benefit of an associate company; and (4)
new affiliate contracts between nonutility associate companies and
traditional utility associate companies
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation,
other than non-power goods and
113 Order No. 669 at P 167. These protection
mechanisms are offered only as examples. Whether
these types of protection mechanisms are sufficient
in a particular case will depend on the
circumstances. See, e.g., Merger Policy Statement at
30,121–24.
114 Order No. 669 at P 169. The Commission
stated that such verifications, considered on a caseby-case basis in light of the given transaction, and
explanations relating to those verifications, as well
as other explanations of how the transaction will
not result in cross-subsidization, pledge, or
encumbrance of utility assets for the benefit of an
associate company—or if it does result in such, an
explanation of how such cross-subsidization,
pledge, or encumbrance will be consistent with the
public interest—is to be included as Exhibit M to
the application.
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28439
services agreements subject to review
under sections 205 and 206 of the FPA.
a. Rehearing Requests
137. APPA/NRECA argue that the
Commission should have required
substantive structural protections to
ensure that section 203 transactions do
not result in cross-subsidization or
pledges or encumbrances of utility
assets. They request that the
Commission describe the specific issues
a section 203 application must address
and the specific assurances and
protective conditions that must be
included to demonstrate that the
proposed transaction meet the standards
of amended FPA section 203(a)(4).115
138. More fundamentally, however,
APPA/NRECA argue that the
Commission improperly narrowed the
scope of statutory concerns to be
addressed under amended section 203.
They say that ratepayer protection
conditions such as temporary hold
harmless commitments are not
sufficient because Congress was
concerned about more than simply
ratepayer protection. APPA/NRECA
assert that the ratepayer protection
conditions discussed in Order No. 669
would be relevant, at most, to how
cross-subsidization might affect rates;
the conditions do not address the more
structural financial problems of asset
pledges or encumbrances.116 APPA/
NRECA contend that the statute focuses
not just on rate issues, but more broadly
on preventing the erosion of the
financial viability of regulated utilities
by draining off their resources into nonutility businesses. They assert that
Order No. 669 elsewhere acknowledges
this broader focus when it permits
applicants seeking to avoid a hearing to
make the four verifications described
above, which concern the financial
viability of the regulated utility and
cross-subsidization, asset pledges and
encumbrance issues.117 APPA/NRECA
also note that the Commission
conditioned its grant of blanket
authorization for intra-holding company
financing arrangements, including cash
management programs, by requiring
applicants to adopt safeguards to
prevent any cross-subsidization between
holding companies and their new
subsidiaries. They urge the Commission
to impose a similar requirement on all
section 203 applicants, not just those
seeking blanket approval of intra115 APPA/NRECA
Rehearing Request at 13.
at 17.
117 Id. at 18 (citing Order No. 669 at P 169).
116 Id.
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holding company financing
arrangements.118
139. Rather than allowing applicants
to avoid a hearing by using the four
verifications, APPA/NRECA assert that
the Commission should require all
section 203 applicants to demonstrate
that cross-subsidization and
encumbrance of utility assets cannot
occur or to adopt safeguards against
such cross-subsidization or asset
encumbrance. All section 203
applicants should be required to make
a detailed showing that the four
conditions discussed in paragraph 169
of Order No. 669 are satisfied or that a
transaction that fails any of these tests
is nonetheless ‘‘consistent with the
public interest.’’ 119 This would add
substance to 18 CFR § 33.2(j).
140. APPA/NRECA also argue that the
Commission erred by not requiring
section 203 applications to demonstrate
compliance with the Westar Energy 120
conditions on public utility debt or to
explain why such requirement is
unnecessary. They explain that, in
Westar Energy, the Commission
announced restrictions on all future
issuances of secured and unsecured
debt by public utilities under section
204 of the FPA. These conditions ‘‘were
designed to prevent investor-owned
utilities’’ shareholders and management,
whose interests may be different than
the interests of utility customers, from
taking actions which might jeopardize
the utility’s ability to perform its utility
function and adversely affect its
customers.’’ 121 APPA/NRECA contend
that the same cross-subsidization
concerns underlie the express finding
that the Commission is now required to
make under amended section 203(a)(4)
before approving any section 203
application.
141. In addition, APPA/NRECA assert
that the Commission should have
required section 203 applicants to
disclose all existing pledges and
encumbrances of utility assets. In the
same vein, TAPSG contends that the
Commission should have imposed an
ongoing requirement that applicants
disclose future pledges, encumbrances,
or cross-subsidization involving the
assets or businesses that are the subject
of a section 203 application.
142. APPA/NRECA further request
that the Commission clarify the meaning
of the term ‘‘traditional utility with
captive customers’’ in paragraphs 169,
192, and 193 of Order No. 669. They
118 Id.
(citing Order No. 669 at P 143).
at 20.
120 Westar Energy, 102 FERC ¶ 61,186, clarified,
104 FERC ¶ 61,018 (2003).
121 APPA/NRECA Rehearing Request at 23.
119 Id.
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believe that, at a minimum, this term
should include any public utility: (1)
Selling electricity at wholesale under
cost-based rates; (2) selling electricity at
retail under cost-based rates; or (3)
owning or providing transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities (which, at least today, also
implies cost-based rates).122 APPA/
NRECA also would include
transmission customers, as well as retail
customers and wholesale customers, as
‘‘captive customers.’’ Furthermore,
APPA/NRECA say that even a utility
with market-based rates can have
captive customers and, therefore, can be
a traditional utility. The Commission
should not assume that a utility with
market-based rates does not have
captive customers, in light of
impediments to wholesale competition
generally in the industry and the
Commission’s own actions in revising
the tests for market power and then
withdrawing market-based rate
authority in some cases.
143. Finally, TAPSG requests that the
Commission clarify that it will consider
adverse competitive effects associated
with cross-subsidization.123 TAPS
argues that cross-subsidization not only
harms the ratepayers who bear its
expense, but also can injure competition
in the market where the crosssubsidized company sells. TAPSG
contends that a commitment by a utility
to hold captive customers harmless from
increased costs associated with a section
203 transaction will not address this
concern.124
b. Commission Determination
144. On further consideration, the
Commission will grant APPA/NRECA’s
request for rehearing and will require all
section 203 applicants (which do not
include those who have blanket
authorization) to include, as part of
Exhibit M of the application, a detailed
showing that either: (1) All four tests of
the four-part framework set forth in
Order No. 669 (at P 169), as modified
herein, are met, thus demonstrating that
the transaction will not result in crosssubsidization of a non-utility associate
company or the pledge or encumbrance
of utility assets for the benefit of an
associate company; or (2) if crosssubsidization or pledges or
122 Id.
at 20–21.
Request for Rehearing at 3.
124 APPA/NRECA, in response to footnote 118 in
Order No. 669, appear to share the same concern.
They argue that a utility charging market-based
rates can subsidize those rates by inflating its retail
and transmission rates, thereby unfairly eliminating
wholesale competitors and, in the long run,
lessening wholesale competition and raising
wholesale rates. APPA/NRECA Rehearing Request
at 21, n. 25.
123 TAPSG
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encumbrances of utility assets were to
occur, how such cross-subsidization,
pledges or encumbrances would
nonetheless be consistent with the
public interest.125 We believe this will
assure better customer protection and
we will amend the regulatory text to
require this demonstration. We do not
believe that requiring a detailed
showing that all four conditions are met
imposes an unreasonable burden on
section 203 applicants.
145. However, not withstanding
APPA/NRECA’s request, we do not find
it necessary to generally require, except
as noted below, section 203 applicants
to demonstrate that the transaction
satisfies the Westar Energy conditions
relating to the future issuance of secured
and unsecured debt or to certify that
they will comply with such conditions
in the future. However, if a public
utility were to issue secured or
unsecured debt pursuant to a
Commission section 204 authorization
to finance a section 203 transaction
undertaken either by itself or its parent
or affiliate, the public utility would
have to comply with the Westar Energy
conditions as a consequence of
receiving section 204 authorization for
the issuance of debt.
146. The Commission also will
require that applicants disclose all
existing pledges or encumbrances of
utility assets as part of the application.
However, contrary to TAPSG’ request,
we will not generally require the
continuing disclosure of future pledges
or encumbrances of utility assets as a
condition of authorization. On a caseby-case basis, the Commission may
determine that such a condition is
necessary to ensure that the transaction
is consistent with the public interest.
Moreover, section 203(b) authority will
allow the Commission to revisit its
authorization to determine if a further
condition requiring continuing
disclosure is necessary.
147. In response to APPA/NRECA’s
request for clarification regarding the
meaning of ‘‘traditional utility with
captive customers,’’ although we will
retain and clarify our original definition
of the term ‘‘captive customer,’’ as
discussed below, we will also separately
include APPA’s language to cover
public utilities that own or provide
125 We will continue to require verifications,
rather than a showing or demonstration, as a
condition of the blanket authorization for holding
company acquisitions of FUCOs, if the holding
company or its affiliates, subsidiaries, or associate
companies within the holding company have
captive customers or own or provide transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission facilities in
the United States, as provided in section 33.1(c)(5).
The Commission’s verification requirements are set
forth in 18 CFR 385.2005(b).
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transmission service over Commissionjurisdictional transmission facilities.
Thus, various conditions or restrictions
will apply where a traditional public
utility has captive customers (defined as
wholesale or retail electric energy
customers served under cost-based
regulation) and also where the public
utility owns or provides transmission
service over Commission-jurisdictional
transmission facilities. However,
contrary to APPA/NRECA’s proposed
interpretation, a public utility selling
power only pursuant to market-based
regulation will not be regarded as a
‘‘traditional public utility with captive
customers’’ and, hence, customers
served at market-based rates will not be
regarded as ‘‘captive customers.’’ The
fact that the Commission is revisiting its
tests for granting market-based rate
authority or that the authority of some
utilities to sell at market-based rates has
been withdrawn does not undermine a
conclusion that customers of utilities
with legitimate market-based rate
authority are not ‘‘captive customers.’’
We do not approve market-based rates
unless we find that the utility does not
have market power.
148. TAPSG requests that the
Commission clarify that we will
consider the effect of crosssubsidization on competition.
Intervenors can always argue that a
particular transaction may result in
cross-subsidization and that this may
affect competition. We will address
such arguments based on the facts in a
particular case.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
8. Section 33.11(b)—Commission
Procedures for Consideration of
Applications under Section 203 of the
FPA
149. Section 33.11(b) states that the
Commission will expeditiously consider
completed section 203 applications that
are not contested, do not involve
mergers, and are consistent with
Commission precedent.126 It provides
that dispositions of only transmission
facilities, ‘‘particularly’’ those that both
before and after the transaction are
under the functional control of a
Commission-approved RTO or ISO, will
generally receive expedited
treatment.127 In Order No. 669, the
Commission explained that ISOs and
RTOs are pro-competitive and are
effective at preventing market power
abuse because they have market
monitoring and mitigation measures.
a. Rehearing Requests
150. APPA/NRECA assert that the
Commission provides no plausible
justification for providing expedited
review for dispositions of only
transmission facilities. They argue that
because owning transmission facilities
is one of the major means of exercising
market power, consolidations of control
over transmission facilities should be
carefully evaluated. They also argue that
the Commission’s regulation of
transmission service does not mean that
transactions involving only
transmission should be accomplished
with minimal Commission scrutiny.
151. Alternatively, APPA/NRECA
state that if the Commission retains
section 33.11(b)(1), it should be clarified
and revised. They state that the word
‘‘particularly’’ in section 33.11(b)(1)
either makes the regulation superfluous
or makes its meaning unclear. If the
Commission intended for this clause to
be restrictive (in other words, a
disposition of only transmission
facilities does not generally warrant
expedited review unless the condition
in the clause is met), then it should omit
the word ‘‘particularly.’’ 128
152. Further, they say that the
regulation should provide for expedited
review only if the transmission facilities
will remain in the same RTO or ISO.
They state that such transactions should
receive special scrutiny, not expedited
review.
b. Commission Determination
153. We will delete the word
‘‘particularly,’’ as it is confusing, from
section 33.11(b)(1), newly restated as
section 33.11(c)(1). However, we will
not require that to warrant expedited
review, the transaction must maintain
the transmission facilities in the same
RTO or ISO. As we stated in Order No.
669:
the standards set forth in Order No. 2000
require extensive information from RTO
applicants that we believe will demonstrate
whether the proposal is in the public interest.
It also has been our experience that
anticompetitive effects are unlikely to arise
with regard to internal corporate
reorganizations or transactions that only
involve the disposition of transmission
facilities 129
154. Participation in any Commissionapproved RTO or ISO is procompetitive. We note that the regulation
does not provide that such transactions
will always qualify for expedited
review. Intervenors may inform us in a
particular case if switching RTOs may
128 APPA/NRECA
Rehearing Request at 34.
No. 669 at 190 (citing Filing
Requirements Rule at 31,902).
126 Order
No. 669 at P 188.
127 Id. at P 190–91.
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28441
cause problems, and the Commission
will perform its review on an
unexpedited basis if justified.
155. The Commission will also take
this opportunity to generally address
requests for expedited review. We often
receive section 203 filings in which an
applicant requests that the Commission
expedite its review process and act on
the filing within a specified time period,
occasionally thirty days or less. In some
of these instances, applicants also ask us
to give a notice period of less than 21
days. Sometimes, applicants offer no
reason for seeking expedited action, or
when they do, the reason is simply that
they wish to close the transaction as
soon as possible. The Commission notes
that applicants themselves are in the
best position to influence the timing of
Commission action. In order to have the
authorization they require at the time
they seek to close the transaction, they
should file an application at the earliest
possible time. The Commission (and its
staff, for transactions that are acted on
under delegated authority) will try to act
as quickly as possible on all
applications, but particularly on those
that warrant expedited review.130
However, the Commission and its staff
take seriously the regulation that
provides for a 21-day notice period for
applications that we deem qualify for
expedited review. We believe that, in
most circumstances, 21 days is the
minimum period necessary for
interested persons to conduct an
adequate review of the application.
Applicants that seek a lesser notice
period or that request action within a
specified time period must clearly
identify a significant harm to the public
interest, as opposed to a private
commercial interest, that justifies action
within that time period. We remind
applicants that they must also provide
a fully completed application,
responsive to all of the regulations, to
avoid the need for a deficiency letter,
which creates delay.131
B. Amendments to 18 CFR 2.26—The
Merger Policy Statement
156. In response to the NOPR, APPA/
NRECA and TAPSG recommended that
130 By law, the Commission is required to take
initial action on application no later than 180 days
after filing.
131 On occasion, applicants hae no identified all
of the entities that must have approval for the
transaction, have not adequately identified or
described the facilities, the ownership, control or
operation of which may be affected directly or
indirectly by the transaction, or have not provided
the underlying transaction agreement and offered
little, if any, reason, for failing to do so. As a
consequence, unnecessary additional time is
consumed in obtaining the information from
applicants and in providing an opportunity for
others to comment on the information.
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the Commission rethink our current
merger policy and what ‘‘consistent
with the public interest’’ means in light
of amended section 203 and the repeal
of PUHCA 1935. In particular, they
suggested that the Commission’s
Appendix A analysis, which focuses on
the effect on competition in ‘‘common’’
markets in which applicants operate,
will not be well suited to address the
effects on competition from the ‘‘crosscountry’’ mergers that the repeal of
PUHCA 1935 will likely encourage.
157. In response, in Order No. 669,
the Commission stated that we are not
persuaded to change our current
policies now. We said that our standard
of review is sufficiently flexible to
consider changes in market structure
that might result from EPAct 2005 and
the repeal of PUHCA 1935. However, we
also stated that, as we gain experience
in evaluating mergers under the new
statute, we may reevaluate our merger
policy.132
1. Rehearing Requests
158. APPA/NRECA continue to assert
that the Commission should reevaluate
its criteria for analyzing mergers in
order to address the likely market
response to the changed regulatory
environment. They expect significant
merger activity, consolidation and
restructuring of the industry in the wake
of the repeal of PUHCA 1935. The
Commission should reconsider whether
its existing merger policy, crafted when
PUHCA 1935’s ownership restrictions
were in place, addresses the dangers to
competition and consumers presented
by new section 203 transactions. The
Commission should consider new
approaches to analyzing the effect on
competition beyond those in the current
Appendix A approach. APPA/NRECA
state that they do not expect the
Commission to develop a new policy for
evaluating mergers on rehearing of
Order No. 669. However, they urge the
Commission to set out the procedures
and timetable for a reexamination of its
merger policy.133
159. TAPSG concurs with APPA/
NRECA’s thoughts on the need to revise
merger policy and also asserts that the
Commission should not wait to revise
its merger policy.134 TAPSG notes that
the Commission adopted its current
merger policy almost ten years ago and
that much has changed since then,
including the development of RTOs
with their complicated markets and
locational marginal pricing, repeal of
PUHCA 1935, and new time constraints
on Commission merger review. At a
minimum, TAPSG asserts that the
Commission should commit to review
its current merger policy as part of the
technical conference that the
Commission will hold within a year to
address issues raised in this proceeding
and the PUHCA 2005 Final Rule
proceeding.135
2. Commission Determination
160. We will not reevaluate our
criteria for analyzing the competitive
effects of mergers as part of this
rulemaking. In Order No. 669, we
explained that, after the Commission
has gained more experience in
evaluating section 203 applications
under the new statute, we may
reevaluate our merger policy.136 We
continue to believe that more
experience with the new section 203
will provide us with better guidance as
to whether to reevaluate our merger
policy.
161. We also note that, consistent
with amended section 203(a)(4), we
added new section 2.26(f) to our
regulations. It provides that the
Commission will not approve a
transaction that will result in crosssubsidization of a non-utility associate
company or pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets for the benefit of an
associate company unless that crosssubsidization, pledge, or encumbrance
will be consistent with the public
interest. Thus, in Order No. 669, the
Commission properly updated its
merger policy to address Congress’
specific concerns with respect to new
section 203.
162. However, the Commission
commits to consider whether our
current merger policy should be revised
as part of the technical conference to be
held within one year.137 That technical
conference will address issues raised
both in this proceeding and the PUHCA
2005 Final Rule proceeding
implementing PUHCA 2005.
IV. Information Collection Statement
163. The regulations of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) 138
require that OMB approve certain
information requirements imposed by
an agency. OMB has approved the
information requirements contained in
Order No. 669. Specifically, OMB
approved the following information
collection and assigned the
corresponding OMB control numbers:
135 Order
132 Order
No. 669 at P 202.
133 APPA/NRECA Rehearing Request at 38.
134 TAPSG Rehearing Request at 2–3 and 18–30.
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No. 669 at P 4.
at P 202.
137 PUHCA 2005 Final Rule at P 17.
138 5 CFR 1320.12.
136 Id.
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‘‘Application under Federal Power Act
Section 203’’ (FERC–519).
164. This order on rehearing adopts a
number of changes in response to the
requests for rehearing of Order No. 669.
Four of these are important with respect
to information collection. First, as noted
above, we will require that for holding
company acquisitions of securities of
intrastate utilities or utilities that own
or control facilities used solely for local
distribution or retail sales of electric
energy regulated by a state commission,
if any public utility within the holding
company system has captive customers,
the holding company must report the
acquisition to the Commission,
including any state actions and
conditions related to the acquisition and
provide an explanation why the
transaction does not result in crosssubsidization. Second, we will require
that for certain holding company
acquisitions of securities of electric
utility companies or transmitting
utilities, or of holding companies that
include such entities, the parent
company file with the Commission, on
a public basis and within 45 days of the
close of each calendar quarter, both its
total holdings and its holdings as
principal of the securities, each by class,
unless the holdings within a class are
less than one percent of outstanding
shares. Third, with regard to the
submission of Exhibit M of the
application, all section 203 applicants
(excluding those whose transactions fall
under blanket authorizations) must
demonstrate that they have met all four
tests of a four-part framework, as
elaborated herein and in Order No.669,
showing that the transaction will not
result in cross-subsidization of a nonutility associate company or the pledge
or encumbrances of utility assets for the
benefit of an associate company, or if
cross-subsidization or pledges or
encumbrances of utility assets were to
occur, that such results are nonetheless
consistent with the public interest.
Fourth, also as part of Exhibit M to the
application, applicants are required to
disclose all existing pledges or
encumbrances as part of utility assets.
We do not believe that this information
requirement will impose an
unreasonable burden on section 203
applicants.
165. Any increases in burden will be
offset by the additional blanket
authorizations that the Commission is
granting in this proceeding. Specifically,
the Commission will grant a blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(1) of
the Federal Power Act for certain
internal corporate reorganizations,
provided that the public utility does not
have captive customers and the
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transaction does not present crosssubsidization issues. The Commission
will also grant a blanket authorization
for holding companies that own or
control only EWGs, QFs or FUCOs to
acquire the securities of additional
EWGs, FUCOs or QFs. In addition, the
Commission will grant a blanket
authorization allowing any company in
the holding company system to acquire
the securities of an electric company
that owns generating facilities that total
100 MW or less and are primarily used
for the acquired company’s own load or
for sales to affiliated end-users. The
Commission will also grant a blanket
authorization for transfers of wholesale
market-based rate contracts between
public utility affiliates that have the
same upstream ownership and are not
affiliated with a traditional public
utility with captive ratepayers. For those
entities that are subject to regulatory
oversight of the Federal Reserve Bank or
the Comptroller of the Currency because
of their affiliation with banks or bank
holding companies that are regulated by
the agencies identified above, the
Commission will grant a blanket
authorization to acquire and hold an
unlimited amount of covered securities
for fiduciaries, collateral for loans or for
loan liquidation, subject to certain
reporting requirements. Further, the
Commission will grant a blanket
authorization to the banks and their
subsidiaries to acquire and hold an
unlimited amount of covered securities
in connection with failed underwritings,
subject to certain conditions. The
Commission will also grant a blanket
authorization for certain non-banking
financial institutions to acquire covered
securities in a fiduciary capacity or for
hedging purposes, subject to certain
conditions and reporting requirements.
In sum, taking into account both the
additional requirements and the
additional blanket authorizations, we
believe that one offsets the other and
will allow the original projected burden
estimates expressed in Order No. 669 to
stand. We will, however, adjust these
burden estimates accordingly as we
receive filings and we will notify OMB
of any changes that may be necessary.
The Commission did not receive any
comments on burden estimates in
response to Order No. 669.
166. Interested persons may obtain
information on the information
requirements by contacting the
following: The Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426
[Attention: Michael Miller, Office of the
Executive Director, ED–34, Phone: (202)
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502–8415, Fax: (202) 273–0873, e-mail:
michael.miller@ferc.gov.
167. To submit comments concerning
the collection(s) of information and
provide estimates on the associated
burden of these requirements, please
send your comments to the contact
listed above and to the Office of
Management and Budget, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC 20503 Attention: Desk
Officer for the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, phone: (202)
395–4650. Comments should be emailed to oira_submission@omb.eop.gov
and reference the OMB Control number
listed above.
V. Document Availability
168. In addition to publishing the full
text of this document in the Federal
Register, the Commission provides all
interested persons an opportunity to
view and/or print the contents of this
document via the Internet through
Commission’s Home Page (https://
www.ferc.gov) and in the Commission’s
Public Reference Room during normal
business hours (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Eastern time) at 888 First Street, NE.,
Room 2A, Washington, DC 20426.
169. From the Commission’s Home
Page on the Internet, this information is
available in the Commission’s document
management system, eLibrary. The full
text of this document is available on
eLibrary in PDF and Microsoft Word
format for viewing, printing, and/or
downloading. To access this document
in eLibrary, type ‘‘RM05–34’’ in the
docket number field.
170. User assistance is available for
eLibrary and the Commission’s Web site
during normal business hours. For
assistance, please contact FERC Online
Support at 1–866–208–3676 (toll free) or
202–502–6652 (e-mail at
FERCOnlineSupport@FERC.gov), or the
Public Reference Room at 202–502–
8371, TTY 202–502–8659 (e-mail at
public.referenceroom@ferc.gov).
VI. Effective Date
171. Changes to Order No. 669 made
in this order on rehearing will become
effective on June 15, 2006.
List of Subjects
18 CFR Part 33
Electric utilities, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
Fmt 4701
In consideration of the foregoing,
under the authority of EPAct 2005, the
Commission is amending parts 2 and 33
of Chapter I, Title 18, Code of Federal
Regulations, as set forth below:
I
PART 2—GENERAL POLICY AND
INTERPRETATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 2 is
revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 601; 15 U.S.C. 717–
717w, 3301–3432; 16 U.S.C. 792–825y, 2601–
2645; 42 U.S.C. 4321–4361, 7101–7352; Pub.
L. No. 109–58, 119 Stat. 594.2.
2. Section 2.26 is amended by revising
paragraphs (e) and (f) to read as follows:
I
§ 2.26 Policies concerning review of
applications under section 203.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Effect on regulation. (1) Where the
affected state commissions have
authority to act on the transaction, the
Commission will not set for hearing
whether the transaction would impair
effective regulation by the state
commissions. The application should
state whether the state commissions
have this authority.
(2) Where the affected state
commissions do not have authority to
act on the transaction, the Commission
may set for hearing the issue of whether
the transaction would impair effective
state regulation.
(f) Under section 203(a)(4) of the
Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. 824b), in
reviewing a proposed transaction
subject to section 203, the Commission
will also consider whether the proposed
transaction will result in crosssubsidization of a non-utility associate
company or pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets for the benefit of an
associate company, unless that crosssubsidization, pledge, or encumbrance
will be consistent with the public
interest.
PART 33—APPLICATIONS UNDER
FEDERAL POWER ACT SECTION 203
3. The authority citation for part 33 is
revised to read as follows:
Administrative practice and
procedure, Electric power, Natural gas,
Pipelines, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Frm 00023
By the Commission.
Magalie R. Salas,
Secretary.
I
18 CFR Part 2
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Authority: 16 U.S.C. 791a–825r, 2601–
2645; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 42 7101–7352; Pub. L.
No. 109–58, 119 Stat. 594.
4. The heading of part 33 is revised to
read as set forth above.
I
5. Section 33.1 is revised to read as
follows:
I
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§ 33.1 Applicability, definitions, and
blanket authorizations.
(a) Applicability. (1) The requirements
of this part will apply to any public
utility seeking authorization under
section 203 of the Federal Power Act to:
(i) Sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of
the whole of its facilities subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission, or any
part thereof of a value in excess of $10
million;
(ii) Merge or consolidate, directly or
indirectly, such facilities or any part
thereof with those of any other person,
by any means whatsoever;
(iii) Purchase, acquire, or take any
security with a value in excess of $10
million of any other public utility; or
(iv) Purchase, lease, or otherwise
acquire an existing generation facility:
(A) That has a value in excess of $10
million; and
(B) That is used in whole or in part
for wholesale sales in interstate
commerce by a public utility.
(2) The requirements of this part shall
also apply to any holding company in
a holding company system that includes
a transmitting utility or an electric
utility if such holding company seeks to
purchase, acquire, or take any security
with a value in excess of $10 million of,
or, by any means whatsoever, directly or
indirectly, merge or consolidate with, a
transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a
holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility, or an electric utility
company, with a value in excess of $10
million.
(b) Definitions. For the purposes of
this part, as used in section 203 of the
Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. 824b).
(1) Existing generation facility means
a generation facility that is operational
at or before the time the section 203
transaction is consummated. ‘‘The time
the transaction is consummated’’ means
the point in time when the transaction
actually closes and control of the facility
changes hands. ‘‘Operational’’ means a
generation facility for which
construction is complete (i.e., it is
capable of producing power). The
Commission will rebuttably presume
that section 203(a) applies to the
transfer of any existing generation
facility unless the utility can
demonstrate with substantial evidence
that the generator is used exclusively for
retail sales.
(2) Non-utility associate company
means any associate company in a
holding company system other than a
public utility or electric utility company
that has wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation.
(3) Value when applied to:
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(i) Transmission facilities, generation
facilities, transmitting utilities, electric
utility companies, and holding
companies, means the market value of
the facilities or companies for
transactions between non-affiliated
companies; the Commission will
rebuttably presume that the market
value is the transaction price. For
transactions between affiliated
companies, value means original cost
undepreciated, as defined in the
Commission’s Uniform System of
Accounts prescribed for public utilities
and licensees in part 101 of this chapter,
or original book cost, as applicable;
(ii) Wholesale contracts, means the
market value for transactions between
non-affiliated companies; the
Commission will rebuttably presume
that the market value is the transaction
price. For transactions between
affiliated companies, value means total
expected nominal contract revenues
over the remaining life of the contract;
and
(iii) Securities, means market value
for transactions between non-affiliated
companies; the Commission will
rebuttably presume that the market
value is the agreed-upon transaction
price. For transactions between
affiliated companies, value means
market value if the securities are widely
traded, in which case the Commission
will rebuttably presume that market
value is the market price at which the
securities are being traded at the time
the transaction occurs; if the securities
are not widely traded, market value is
determined by:
(A) Determining the value of the
company that is the issuer of the equity
securities based on the total
undepreciated book value of the
company’s assets;
(B) Determining the fraction of the
securities at issue by dividing the
number of equity securities involved in
the transaction by the total number of
outstanding equity securities for the
company; and
(C) Multiplying the value determined
in paragraph (b)(3)(iii)(A) of this section
by the value determined in paragraph
(b)(3)(iii)(B) of this section (i.e., the
value of the company multiplied by the
fraction of the equity securities at issue).
(4) The terms associate company,
electric utility company, foreign utility
company, holding company, and
holding company system have the
meaning given those terms in the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 2005.
The term holding company does not
include: A State, any political
subdivision of a State, or any agency,
authority or instrumentality of a State or
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
political subdivision of a State; or an
electric power cooperative.
(5) For purposes of this part, the term
captive customers means any wholesale
or retail electric energy customers
served under cost-based regulation.
(c) Blanket Authorizations. (1) Any
holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
utility or an electric utility is granted a
blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2) of the Federal Power Act to
purchase, acquire, or take any security
of:
(i) A transmitting utility or company
that owns, operates, or controls only
facilities used solely for transmission in
intrastate commerce and/or sales of
electric energy in intrastate commerce,
provided that if any public utility
within the holding company system has
captive customers, or owns or provides
transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities, the holding
company must report the acquisition to
the Commission, including any state
actions or conditions related to the
transaction, and shall provide an
explanation of why the transaction does
not result in cross-subsidization;
(ii) A transmitting utility or company
that owns, operates, or controls only
facilities used solely for local
distribution and/or sales of electric
energy at retail regulated by a state
commission, provided that if any public
utility within the holding company
system has captive customers, or owns
or provides transmission service over
jurisdictional transmission facilities, the
holding company must report the
acquisition to the Commission,
including any state actions or
conditions related to the transaction,
and shall provide an explanation of why
the transaction does not result in crosssubsidization; or
(iii) An electric utility company that
owns generating facilities that total 100
MW or less and are fundamentally used
for its own individual load or for sales
to affiliated end-users.
(2) Any holding company in a holding
company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility
is granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) of the Federal Power
Act to purchase, acquire, or take:
(i) Any non-voting security (that does
not convey sufficient veto rights over
management actions so as to convey
control) in a transmitting utility, an
electric utility company, or a holding
company in a holding company system
that includes a transmitting utility or an
electric utility company; or
(ii) Any voting security in a
transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a
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holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility
company if, after the acquisition, the
holding company will own less than 10
percent of the outstanding voting
securities; or
(iii) Any security of a subsidiary
company within the holding company
system.
(3) The blanket authorizations granted
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section are
subject to the conditions that the
holding company shall not:
(i) Borrow from any electric utility
company subsidiary in connection with
such acquisition; or
(ii) Pledge or encumber the assets of
any electric utility company subsidiary
in connection with such acquisition.
(4) A holding company granted
blanket authorizations in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section shall provide the
Commission copies of any Schedule
13D, Schedule 13G and Form 13F, at the
same time and on the same basis, as
filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission in connection with any
securities purchased, acquired or taken
pursuant to this section.
(5) Any holding company in a holding
company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility
is granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) of the Federal Power
Act to acquire a foreign utility company.
However, if such holding company or
any of its affiliates, its subsidiaries, or
associate companies within the holding
company system has captive customers
in the United States, or owns or
provides transmission service over
jurisdictional transmission facilities in
the United States, the authorization is
conditioned on the holding company,
consistent with 18 CFR 385.2005(b),
verifying by a duly authorized corporate
official of the holding company that the
proposed transaction:
(i) Will not have any adverse effect on
competition, rates, or regulation; and
(ii) Will not result in, at the time of
the transaction or in the future:
(A) Any transfer of facilities between
a traditional public utility associate
company that has captive customers or
that owns or provides transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities, and an associate company;
(B) Any new issuance of securities by
a traditional public utility associate
company that has captive customers or
that owns or provides transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities, for the benefit of an associate
company;
(C) Any new pledge or encumbrance
of assets of a traditional public utility
associate company that has captive
customers or that owns or provides
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:43 May 15, 2006
Jkt 208001
transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities, for the benefit of
an associate company; or
(D) Any new affiliate contracts
between a non-utility associate
company and a traditional public utility
associate company that has captive
customers or that owns or provides
transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities, other than nonpower goods and services agreements
subject to review under sections 205
and 206 of the Federal Power Act.
(iii) A transaction by a holding
company subject to the conditions in
paragraphs (c)(5)(i) and (ii) of this
section will be deemed approved only
upon filing the information required in
paragraphs (c)(5)(i) and (ii) of this
section.
(6) Any public utility or any holding
company in a holding company system
that includes a transmitting utility or an
electric utility is granted a blanket
authorization under sections 203(a)(1)
or 203(a)(2) of the Federal Power Act, as
relevant, for internal corporate
reorganizations that do not result in the
reorganization of a traditional public
utility that has captive customers or that
owns or provides transmission service
over jurisdictional transmission
facilities, and that do not present crosssubsidization issues.
(7) Any public utility in a holding
company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility
is granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(1) of the Federal Power
Act to purchase, acquire, or take any
security of a public utility in connection
with an intra-system cash management
program, subject to safeguards to
prevent cross-subsidization or pledges
or encumbrances of utility assets.
(8) A person that is a holding
company solely with respect to one or
more exempt wholesale generators
(EWGs), foreign utility companies
(FUCOs), or qualifying facilities (QFs) is
granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) of the Federal Power
Act to acquire the securities of
additional EWGs, FUCOs, or QFs.
(9) A holding company, or a
subsidiary of that company, that is
regulated by the Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve Bank or by the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, under the Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956 as amended by
the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, is
granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) of the Federal Power
Act to acquire and hold an unlimited
amount of the securities of holding
companies that include a transmitting
utility or an electric utility company if
such acquisitions and holdings are in
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
28445
the normal course of its business and
the securities are held:
(i) As a fiduciary;
(ii) As principal for derivatives
hedging purposes incidental to the
business of banking and it commits not
to vote such securities to the extent they
exceed 10 percent of the outstanding
shares;
(iii) As collateral for a loan; or
(iv) Solely for purposes of liquidation
and in connection with a loan
previously contracted for and owned
beneficially for a period of not more
than two years, with the following
conditions and reporting requirement:
The holding does not confer a right to
control, positively or negatively,
through debt covenants or any other
means, the operation or management of
the public utility or public utility
holding company, except as to
customary creditors’ rights or as
provided under the United States
Bankruptcy Code; and the parent
holding company files with the
Commission on a public basis and
within 45 days of the close of each
calendar quarter, both its total holdings
and its holdings as principal, each by
class, unless the holdings within a class
are less than one percent of outstanding
shares, irrespective of the capacity in
which they were held.
(10) Any holding company, or a
subsidiary of that company, is granted a
blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2) of the Federal Power Act to
acquire any security of a public utility
or a holding company that includes a
public utility:
(i) For purposes of conducting
underwriting activities, subject to the
condition that holdings that the holding
company or its subsidiary are unable to
sell or otherwise dispose of within 45
days are to be treated as holdings as
principal and thus subject to a
limitation of 10 percent of the stock of
any class unless the holding company or
its subsidiary has within that period
filed an application under section 203 of
the Federal Power Act to retain the
securities and has undertaken not to
vote the securities during the pendency
of such application; and the parent
holding company files with the
Commission on a public basis and
within 45 days of the close of each
calendar quarter, both its total holdings
and its holdings as principal, each by
class, unless the holdings within a class
are less than one percent of outstanding
shares, irrespective of the capacity in
which they were held;
(ii) For purposes of engaging in
hedging transactions, subject to the
condition that if such holdings are 10
percent or more of the voting securities
E:\FR\FM\16MYR2.SGM
16MYR2
28446
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 16, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
of a given class, the holding company or
its subsidiary shall not vote such
holdings to the extent that they are 10
percent or more.
(11) Any public utility is granted a
blanket authorization under section
203(a)(1) of the Federal Power Act to
transfer a wholesale market-based rate
contract to any other public utility
affiliate that has the same ultimate
upstream ownership, provided that
neither affiliate is affiliated with a
traditional public utility with captive
customers.
I 6. Section 33.2 is amended by revising
paragraph (j) to read as follows:
§ 33.2 Contents of application—general
information requirements.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(j) An explanation, with appropriate
evidentiary support for such
explanation (to be identified as Exhibit
M to this application):
(1) Of how applicants are providing
assurance that the proposed transaction
will not result in cross-subsidization of
a non-utility associate company or
pledge or encumbrance of utility assets
for the benefit of an associate company,
including:
(i) Disclosure of existing pledges and/
or encumbrances of utility assets; and
(ii) A detailed showing that the
transaction will not result in:
(A) Any transfer of facilities between
a traditional public utility associate
company that has captive customers or
that owns or provides transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities, and an associate company;
(B) Any new issuance of securities by
a traditional public utility associate
company that has captive customers or
that owns or provides transmission
service over jurisdictional transmission
facilities, for the benefit of an associate
company;
(C) Any new pledge or encumbrance
of assets of a traditional public utility
associate company that has captive
customers or that owns or provides
transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities, for the benefit of
an associate company; or
(D) Any new affiliate contract
between a non-utility associate
company and a traditional public utility
associate company that has captive
customers or that owns or provides
transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities, other than nonpower goods and services agreements
subject to review under sections 205
and 206 of the Federal Power Act; or
(2) If no such assurance can be
provided, an explanation of how such
cross-subsidization, pledge, or
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:43 May 15, 2006
Jkt 208001
encumbrance will be consistent with the
public interest.
7. Section 33.11 is revised to read as
follows:
I
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
§ 33.11 Commission procedures for the
consideration of applications under section
203 of the FPA.
18 CFR Parts 365 and 366
(a) The Commission will act on a
completed application for approval of a
transaction (i.e., one that is consistent
with the requirements of this part) not
later than 180 days after the completed
application is filed. If the Commission
does not act within 180 days, such
application shall be deemed granted
unless the Commission finds, based on
good cause, that further consideration is
required to determine whether the
proposed transaction meets the
standards of section 203(a)(4) of the FPA
and issues, by the 180th day, an order
tolling the time for acting on the
application for not more than 180 days,
at the end of which additional period
the Commission shall grant or deny the
application.
(b) The Commission will provide for
the expeditious consideration of
completed applications for the approval
of transactions that are not contested, do
not involve mergers, and are consistent
with Commission precedent.
(c) Transactions, provided that they
are not contested, do not involve
mergers and are consistent with
Commission precedent, that will
generally be subject to expedited review
include:
(1) A disposition of only transmission
facilities, including, but not limited to,
those that both before and after the
transaction remain under the functional
control of a Commission-approved
regional transmission organization or
independent system operator; and
(2) Transactions that do not require an
Appendix A analysis; 1 and
(3) Internal corporate reorganizations
that result in the reorganization of a
traditional public utility that has captive
customers or owns or provides
transmission service over jurisdictional
transmission facilities, but do not
present cross-subsidization issues.
Repeal of the Public Utility Holding
Company Act of 1935 and Enactment
of the Public Utility Holding Company
Act of 2005
[FR Doc. 06–4041 Filed 5–15–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
1 Inquiry Concerning the Commission’s Merger
Policy Under the Federal Power Act; Policy
Statement, Order No. 592, 61 FR 68,595 (Dec. 30,
1996), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,044 (1996),
reconsideration denied, Order No. 592–A, 62 FR
33,340 (June 19, 1977), 79 FERC ¶ 61,321 (1997)
(Merger Policy Statement).
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
[Docket No. RM05–32–001, Order No. 667–
A]
Issued April 24, 2006.
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, DOE.
ACTION: Final Rule; Order on rehearing.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In this order on rehearing, the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(Commission) reaffirms its
determinations in part and grants
rehearing in part of Order No. 667,
which amended the Commission’s
regulations to implement the repeal of
the Public Utility Holding Company Act
of 1935 and the enactment of the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 2005.
DATES: Effective Date: The final rule and
order on rehearing are effective June 15,
2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lawrence Greenfield (Legal
Information), Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426.
(202) 502–6415.
Abraham Silverman (Legal Information),
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502–
6444.
James Guest (Technical Information),
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502–
6614.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher,
Chairman; Nora Mead Brownell, and
Suedeen G. Kelly; Order on Rehearing
1. On December 8, 2005, the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission
(Commission) issued Order No. 667,1 in
which the Commission amended its
regulations to implement the repeal of
the Public Utility Holding Company Act
of 1935 and the enactment of the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 2005,
by adding Subchapter U and Part 366 to
its regulations and removing its exempt
wholesale generator rules previously
1 Repeal of the Public Utility Holding Company
Act of 1935 and Enactment of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act of 2005, Order No. 667, 70
FR 75592 (Dec. 20, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs.
¶ 31,197 (2005).
E:\FR\FM\16MYR2.SGM
16MYR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 94 (Tuesday, May 16, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 28422-28446]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-4041]
[[Page 28421]]
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Part II
Department of Energy
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
18 CFR Parts 2, 33, 101, et al.
Federal Power Act--Order on Rehearing and Denial for Rehearing, and
Implementation of Federal Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005
and Repeal of Federal Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935; Final
Rules and Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 16, 2006 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 28422]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
18 CFR Parts 2 and 33
[Docket No. RM05-34-001; Order No. 669-A]
Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203
Issued April 24, 2006.
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; order on rehearing.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this order on rehearing, the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (Commission) reaffirms its determinations in part and grants
rehearing in part of Order No. 669, which revised 18 CFR 2.26 and 18
CFR part 33 to implement amended section 203 of the Federal Power Act
(FPA).
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 15, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Andrew P. Mosier, Jr. (Legal Information), Office of the General
Counsel, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502-6274.
Phillip Nicholson (Technical Information), Office of Energy, Markets,
and Reliability--West, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502-8240.
Jan Macpherson (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502-8921.
James Akers (Technical Information), Office of Energy, Markets, and
Reliability--West, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502-8101.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Background
A. Pre-EPAct 2005 Standards
B. EPAct Revisions to Section 203 and Order No. 669
III. Discussion
A. 18 CFR Part 33
1. Section 33.1(b)(3)--Definition of ``Value''
2. Section 33.1(b)(4)--Definitions of ``Electric Utility
Company'' and ``Holding Company''
3. Section 33.1(c)(1)--Blanket Authorizations: Intrastate
Commerce, Local Distribution, and Internal Corporate Reorganizations
4. Blanket Authorizations for Cash Management Programs, Money
Pools, and Intra-Holding Company Financing Arrangements
5. Section 33.1(c)(2)-(c)(4)--Blanket Authorizations: Purchases
of Voting and Non-Voting Securities Under Section 203
6. Other Requested Blanket Authorizations--Holding Company
Purchasing Its Own Securities, Fiduciary Investments and Bank
Underwriting/Hedging
7. Section 33.2(j)--General Information Requirements Regarding
Cross-Subsidization
8. Section 33.11(b)--Commission Procedures for Consideration of
Applications Under Section 203 of the FPA
B. Amendments to 18 CFR 2.26--The Merger Policy Statement
1. Rehearing Requests
2. Commission Determination
IV. Information Collection Statement
V. Document Availability
VI. Effective Date
Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher, Chairman; Nora Mead
Brownell, and Suedeen G. Kelly.
I. Introduction
1. On August 8, 2005, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005)
\1\ was signed into law. Section 1289 (Merger Review Reform) of Title
XII, Subtitle G (Market Transparency, Enforcement, and Consumer
Protection),\2\ of EPAct 2005 amends section 203 of the Federal Power
Act (FPA).\3\ Amended section 203: (1) Increases (from $50,000 to $10
million) the value threshold above which certain transactions are
subject to section 203; (2) extends the scope of section 203 to include
transactions involving certain transfers of generation facilities and
certain public utility holding companies' transactions with a value in
excess of $10 million; (3) limits the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission's (Commission) review of a public utility's acquisition of
securities of another public utility to transactions greater than $10
million; (4) requires that the Commission, when reviewing proposed
section 203 transactions, examine cross-subsidization and pledges or
encumbrances of utility assets; and (5) directs the Commission to
adopt, by rule, procedures for the expeditious consideration of
applications for the approval of transactions under section 203.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Energy Policy Act of 2005, Pub. L. 109-58, 119 Stat. 594
(2005).
\2\ EPAct 2005 at 1281 et seq.
\3\ 16 U.S.C. 824b (2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. On October 3, 2005, the Commission issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NOPR) requesting comment on its proposal to amend its
regulations to implement amended section 203.\4\ As discussed below, on
December 23, 2005, the Commission issued a final rule (Order No. 669)
\5\ adopting certain modifications to 18 CFR 2.26 and 18 CFR part 33 to
implement amended section 203. Generally, Order No. 669:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, 70 FR 58636 (Oct.
7, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,589 (2005).
\5\ Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, Order No. 669, 71
FR 1348 (Jan. 6, 2006), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,200 (2005). On
January 10, 2006, the Commission issued an errata notice to Order
No. 669 revising parts of the regulatory text to conform to the
version of the order that was issued in the Federal Register.
Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, 114 FERC ] 61,018 (2006).
As relevant here, in instruction 7, at 18 CFR 33.11(b)(2), a
footnote was added after ``(2) transactions that do not require
Appendix A analysis,'' reading: ``Inquiry Concerning the
Commission's Merger Policy Under the FederalPower Act: Policy
Statement,'' Order No. 592, 61 FR 68595 (Dec. 30, 1996), FERC Stats.
& Regs. ] 31,044 (1996), reconsideration denied, Order No. 592-A, 62
FR 33340 (June 19, 1997), 79 FERC ] 61,321 (1997) (Merger Policy
Statement).
(1) Implemented the new applicability of amended section 203;
(2) Granted blanket authorizations, in some instances with
conditions, for certain types of transactions, including
acquisitions of foreign utilities by holding companies, intra-
holding company system financing and cash management arrangements,
certain internal corporate reorganizations, and certain acquisitions
of securities of transmitting utilities and electric utility
companies;
(3) Defined terms, including ``electric utility company,''
``holding company,'' and ``non-utility associate company;''
(4) Defined ``existing generation facility;''
(5) Adopted rules on the determination of ``value'' as it
applies to various section 203 transactions;
(6) Set forth a section 203 applicant's obligation to
demonstrate that a proposed transaction will not result in cross-
subsidization of a non-utility associate company or the pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets for the benefit of an associate
company; and
(7) Provided for expeditious consideration of completed
applications for the approval of transactions that are not
contested, do not involve mergers, and are consistent with
Commission precedent.
3. In Order No. 669, the Commission also announced that, at a
technical conference on the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005
(PUHCA 2005),\6\ to be held within the next year,\7\ we will
[[Page 28423]]
also address certain issues raised in this proceeding. These include
whether the blanket authorizations granted in Order No. 669 should be
revised and whether additional protection against cross-subsidization
and pledges or encumbrance of utility assets is needed.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ EPAct 2005 at 1261 et seq. Repeal of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act of 1935 and Enactment of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act of 2005, Order No. 667, 70 FR 55805, FERC Stats.
& Regs. ] 31,197 (2005) (PUHCA 2005 Final Rule).
\7\ PUHCA 2005 Final Rule at P 17. The Commission stated that we
intend to hold a technical conference no later than one year after
PUHCA 2005 became effective to evaluate whether additional
exemptions, different reporting requirements, or other regulatory
actions need to be considered. The PUHCA 2005 Final Rule took effect
on February 8, 2006.
\8\ Order No. 669 at P 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. In this order, the Commission grants rehearing in part, grants
clarification in part, and denies rehearing in part of its Order No.
669. Our actions here will necessitate further changes in the
regulations. In light of the number of regulatory text changes, the
Commission is including the revised regulations in their entirety. In
addition, for the convenience of interested persons, we will include a
version of the revised regulations in their entirety that highlights
the changes from Order No. 669 as a separate attachment. (See Appendix
B.) This attachment will not be published in the Federal Register.
II. Background
5. The background to Order No. 669 is set forth in detail in that
order. We will summarize it here.
A. Pre-EPAct 2005 Standards
6. Prior to EPAct 2005, section 203 provided that
no public utility shall sell, lease or otherwise dispose of the
whole of its facilities subject to the jurisdiction of the
Commission, or any part thereof of a value in excess of $50,000, or
by any means whatsoever, directly or indirectly, merge or
consolidate such facilities or any part thereof with those of any
other person, or purchase, acquire, or take any security of any
other public utility, without first having secured an order of the
Commission authorizing it do so.
The Commission applied the ``public interest'' standard in
approving proposed transactions. The purpose of the Merger Policy
Statement was to ensure that mergers are consistent with the public
interest and to provide greater certainty and expedition in the
Commission's analysis of merger applications. The Merger Policy
Statement sets out three factors the Commission generally considers
when analyzing whether a proposed section 203 transaction is consistent
with the public interest: Effect on competition; effect on rates; and
effect on regulation. The Commission later issued the Filing
Requirements Rule,\9\ a final rule updating the filing requirements
under 18 CFR part 33 of the Commission's regulations for section 203
applications. The Filing Requirements Rule implements the Merger Policy
Statement and provides detailed guidance to applicants for preparing
applications. The revised filing requirements also assist the
Commission in determining whether section 203 transactions are
consistent with the public interest, provide more certainty, and
provide for expedited review of such applications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Revised Filing Requirements Under Part 33 of the
Commission's Regulations, Order No. 642, 65 FR 70984 (Nov. 28,
2000), FERC Stats. & Regs., July 1996-Dec. 2000 ] 31,111 (2000),
order on reh'g, Order No. 642-A, 66 FR 16121 (Mar. 23, 2001), 94
FERC ] 61,289 (2001) (codified at 18 CFR part 33 (2005)) (Filing
Requirements Rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. EPAct Revisions to Section 203 and Order No. 669
7. Amended section 203(a)(1) states that no public utility shall,
without first having secured an order of the Commission authorizing it
to do so: (A) Sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the whole of its
facilities subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or any part
thereof of a value in excess of $10 million; (B) merge or consolidate,
directly or indirectly, such facilities or any part thereof with those
of any other person, by any means whatsoever; (C) purchase, acquire, or
take any security with a value in excess of $10 million of any other
public utility; or (D) purchase, lease, or otherwise acquire an
existing generation facility: (i) That has a value in excess of $10
million; and (ii) that is used for interstate wholesale sales and over
which the Commission has jurisdiction for ratemaking purposes.
8. Section 203(a)(2) adds the entirely new requirement that no
holding company in a holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility shall purchase, acquire, or
take any security with a value in excess of $10 million of, or, by any
means whatsoever, directly or indirectly, merge or consolidate with, a
transmitting utility, an electric utility company, or a holding company
in a holding company system that includes a transmitting utility, or an
electric utility company, with a value in excess of $10 million without
prior Commission authorization.
9. Amended section 203(a)(4) states that, after notice and
opportunity for hearing, the Commission shall approve the proposed
disposition, consolidation, acquisition, or change in control if it
finds that the transaction will be consistent with the public interest.
This standard was contained in the pre-EPAct 2005 section 203 as well.
Amended section 203(a)(4) also provides a new specific requirement that
the Commission must find that the transaction will not result in cross-
subsidization of a non-utility associate company or pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets for the benefit of an associate company,
unless that cross-subsidization, pledge, or encumbrance will be
consistent with the public interest.
10. Section 203(a)(5) adds the entirely new requirement that the
Commission shall adopt procedures for the expeditious consideration of
applications for the approval of section 203 transactions. Such rules
shall identify classes of transactions, or specify criteria for
transactions, that normally meet the section 203 standards for
approval. The Commission shall provide expedited review for such
transactions. It further provides that the Commission must act on a
proposed section 203 transaction within 180 days of filing but may
extend the time for not more than an additional 180 days for good
cause.
11. Section 203(a)(6), which is also new, provides that for
purposes of this section, the terms ``associate company,'' ``holding
company,'' and ``holding company system'' have the meaning given those
terms in PUHCA 2005.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ EPAct 2005 at 1262.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
12. Order No. 669 became effective on February 8, 2006. The aspects
of Order No. 669 on which rehearing were filed are described in more
detail below.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ The entities that filed requests for rehearing are listed
in an appendix to this order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Discussion
A. 18 CFR Part 33
1. Section 33.1(b)(3)--Definition of ``Value''
13. Section 33.1(b)(3)(i) generally uses market value as the
appropriate measure of value for transfers of physical facilities
(transmission facilities and generation facilities) for purposes of
determining whether the $10 million jurisdictional threshold is
met.\12\ The rule states that when a transaction occurs between non-
affiliates, the Commission will rebuttably presume that market value is
the transaction price. For transactions between affiliated companies,
value means original cost undepreciated, as defined in the Commission's
Uniform System of Accounts, or original book cost,\13\ as applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Order No. 669 at P 116. Section 33.1(b)(3)(iii) provides
that for securities, value means market value, which is rebuttably
presumed to be transaction price.
\13\ Book cost, as used here, refers to original book cost.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
14. Section 33.1(b)(3)(ii) provides that value as applied to
transfers of wholesale contracts between non-affiliates also means the
market value. The Commission will rebuttably presume that market value
is the
[[Page 28424]]
transaction price. For transfers of contracts between affiliates, value
means total expected nominal revenues over the remaining life of the
contract.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Order No. 669 at P 120-21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
15. The Commission noted that a complicating factor in relying on
transaction price as a measure of market value is that transactions
will sometimes include assets whose transfer is not subject to amended
section 203 (non-jurisdictional assets) and the problem arises as to
how to value the jurisdictional assets included in the transaction. In
this situation, the Commission instructed applicants to rely on a
valuation analysis of the individual jurisdictional parts in deciding
whether to file for section 203 authorization.
a. Rehearing Requests
16. APPA/NRECA argue that the Commission should require that
valuations of asset transactions between non-affiliates under section
203(a)(1)(A) be consistent with generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP), particularly when the transaction also includes non-
jurisdictional assets. They assert that, without such a requirement,
parties will be able to value jurisdictional assets or weight the value
of non-jurisdictional assets to evade Commission review, while
maintaining the same total purchase price for all assets.\15\
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\15\ APPA/NRECA Rehearing Request at 24-25.
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17. APPA/NRECA are concerned about a possible unintended
``spillover effect'' of using market value.\16\ They request that the
Commission confirm that valuation for purposes of determining whether
section 203 approval is required will not affect the valuation placed
on the assets for purposes of applying cost-based ratemaking standards,
in particular, the Commission's policy concerning acquisition
adjustments in cost-based jurisdictional rates.\17\
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\16\ Id. at 26.
\17\ Id. The Commission disallows acquisition adjustments in
rates absent a showing of ratepayer benefit. See PSEG Power
Connecticut, LLC., 110 FERC ] 61,020 at P 32 (2005), citing
Utilicorp United, Inc., 56 FERC ] 61,031 at 61,120 and nn. 26-28,
reh'g denied, 56 FERC ] 61,427, 62,528-29 (1991).
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18. APPA/NRECA lastly argue that the Commission should require that
valuations of wholesale contracts being transferred between non-
affiliates be based on the expected contract revenues rather than on
market value. They contend that market value, which is based on
expected profits, cannot be reliably determined and will be prone to
abuse and manipulation. They suggest that ``expected profit'' has
little meaning when the transaction is undertaken as much for risk
mitigation purposes as for power supply. Using the same method to value
contract transfers between non-affiliates as for affiliates, i.e.,
expected contract revenues, has the virtue of regulatory
simplicity.\18\
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\18\ APPA/NRECA Rehearing Request at 25.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
19. NARUC argues that the record does not support using ``original
cost un-depreciated'' as market value in transactions between
affiliates. NARUC says that net book value is a better way to value the
assets in affiliate transactions because it represents the remaining
monetary value of an asset that is ``used and useful'' at the time of
the proposed transaction. Net book value, unlike original cost
undepreciated, reflects changes in value caused by wear and tear during
use of the asset, obsolescence, the return of capital through annual
depreciation expense, and any improvements that have been made since
the asset was originally placed in service. These factors, particularly
deterioration and improvements, NARUC contends, are typically reflected
in the prices negotiated by unaffiliated buyers and sellers.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ NARUC Rehearing Request at 8.
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b. Commission Determination
20. The Commission clarifies that GAAP must be used to value
jurisdictional physical assets for purposes of amended section 203 when
they are included with non-jurisdictional assets in a transaction
between non-affiliates.\20\
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\20\ As we held in Order No. 669 at P 117, if a valuation
analysis is not performed, the standard of original cost
undepreciated is to be used in determining whether section 203
applies to the transaction.
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21. Order No. 669 states that to place a value on wholesale
contracts that are part of a transfer that also includes assets not
subject to section 203, the parties should rely on valuation analyses
consistent with the value used in audited financial statements and with
GAAP requirements.\21\ A similar approach is required for the transfer
of physical jurisdictional assets included in a transaction with non-
jurisdictional facilities.\22\ We note that an entity's decision not to
seek section 203 approval for a transaction based on its determination
of value of the assets, whether physical or paper facilities, can be
reviewed based on a complaint or at the Commission's discretion.
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\21\ Order No. 669 at P 120.
\22\ Consistent with our ruling in Order No. 669 (at P 116), if
a transaction between non-affiliates involves only jurisdictional
assets, the Commission will rebuttably presume that market value is
the transaction price.
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22. The Commission also confirms that the use of the market value
standard for section 203 purposes does not change the Commission's
ratemaking policy, including the Commission's policy concerning
acquisition adjustments.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See supra note 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
23. The Commission denies APPA/NRECA's request that value as
applied to transfers of wholesale contracts between non-affiliates be
based on expected contract revenues over the remaining life of the
contract, rather than market value. We acknowledge that using expected
contract revenues for both non-affiliate transfers and affiliate
transfers would have a superficial consistency. However, we continue to
believe that market value is the best way to value transactions between
non-affiliates generally, and no party has presented a persuasive basis
for treating wholesale contracts differently from other kinds of
assets.
24. The Commission will also deny NARUC's request that, for
transactions between affiliates, value should be net book value rather
than original cost undepreciated. We note that almost all generation
transactions of any significant size will be jurisdictional under
amended section 203, regardless of the measure used. We recognize that
marginal cases may occur where the issue of jurisdiction might arise,
particularly for older assets. We do not dispute that the deterioration
or use which net book value attempts to capture affects the price a
buyer is willing to pay for an asset. However, net book value does not
reflect any appreciation of value of assets, as evident in the fact
that generation facilities have often sold in recent years at prices
significantly above net book value. The Commission has long employed
the use of original cost undepreciated to measure value for purposes of
determining the need for a section 203 application and finds its
continued use appropriate in the context of affiliate transactions.
Original cost undepreciated is a simpler, less ambiguous measure that
will avoid debate as to the life of the facility, method of
depreciation and other factors that are reflected in net book value.
2. Section 33.1(b)(4)--Definitions of ``Electric Utility Company'' and
``Holding Company''
25. A number of parties raised arguments about the Commission's
[[Page 28425]]
interpretation of new FPA section 203(a)(2). Section 203(a)(2)
provides:
No holding company in a holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility shall purchase, acquire,
or take any security with a value in excess of $10,000,000 of, or,
by any means whatsoever, directly or indirectly, merge or
consolidate with, a transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a holding company system that
includes a transmitting utility, or an electric utility company,
with a value in excess of $10,000,000 without first having secured
an order of the Commission authorizing it to do so.
26. In particular, parties focus on the terms ``electric utility
company'' and ``holding company'' as used in section 203(a)(2). In
Order No. 669, the Commission concluded that the most reasonable
interpretation of the terms are the definitions contained in PUHCA
2005. Section 33.1(b)(4) provides that ``associate company,''
``electric utility company,'' ``foreign utility company,'' ``holding
company,'' and ``holding company system'' have the meaning given those
terms in PUHCA 2005. It also provides that the term ``holding company''
does not include: A state, any political subdivision of a state, or any
agency, authority or instrumentality of a state or political
subdivision of a state; or an electric power cooperative.
a. ``Electric Utility Company''
27. Section 33.1(b)(4) provides that the term ``electric utility
company'' has the same meaning given that term in PUHCA 2005, which is
``any company that owns or operates facilities used for the generation,
transmission, or distribution of electric energy for sale.'' \24\ The
definition thus is broader than the definition of ``public utility''
under the FPA; it is not limited to entities that engage in wholesale
or interstate transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ EPAct 2005 at 1262(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
28. The Commission explained in Order No. 669 that the precise
meaning of the term ``electric utility company'' is not clear because
it is not defined in the FPA. We pointed out that amended section
203(a)(6) provides that certain other terms used in amended section 203
(``associate company,'' ``holding company,'' and ``holding company
system'') are to have the same meanings given those terms in PUHCA
2005. However, section 203(a)(6) does not address ``electric utility
company.'' Thus, there is Congressional silence in the FPA as to the
meaning of the term. In determining what Congress might have meant by
``electric utility company,'' the Commission stated that the only
reference point we have in federal electric utility regulatory
terminology is the meaning of the term as used in PUHCA 1935 \25\ and
in PUHCA 2005. Congress, in its revisions to the FPA, relied on terms
defined in the two PUHCA statutes. Therefore, the Commission concluded
that the most reasonable interpretation of ``electric utility
company,'' as used in section 203(a)(2) of the FPA (particularly in
light of the fact that section 203(a)(2) was enacted as part of
coordinated, comprehensive legislation with the repeal of PUHCA 1935
and the enactment of PUHCA 2005) is the meaning in PUHCA 2005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ 15 U.S.C. 79a et seq. (2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
29. The Commission rejected requests that we explicitly exclude
qualifying facilities (QFs) \26\ and exempt wholesale generators (EWGs)
from the definition of ``electric utility company.'' We stated that:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA), 16
U.S.C. 824a-3 (2000).
regardless of their status under PUHCA 2005, the exemptions set
forth under PUHCA 2005 are not dispositive as to the scope of the
Commission's amended FPA section 203 authority. These PUHCA 2005
exemptions are set forth in the context of federal access to books
and records and, more importantly, unlike PUHCA 2005, FPA section
203 does not give us any express authority to exempt persons or
classes of transactions.\27\
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\27\ Order No. 669 at P 59. The Commission also noted that while
QFs themselves currently are exempt from section 203's filing
requirements by our regulations promulgated under the Public Utility
Regulatory Policies Act of 1978, PURPA does not give us authority to
exempt holding companies that own QFs.
30. Further, the Commission stated that were we to interpret
``electric utility company'' for purposes of FPA section 203(a)(2) not
to include EWGs or QFs, this could preclude review of certain
acquisitions of securities of EWGs or QFs by holding companies whose
systems contain traditional public utilities with transmission
facilities and/or captive customers that could be affected by the
acquisitions. The Commission stated that such transactions should not
be excluded from review under section 203 and concluded that it was
reasonable to interpret the statute not to exclude them.\28\ We
recognized the arguments of some commenters that we should not apply
section 203(a)(2) to holding company acquisitions of securities of EWGs
and QFs, or at a minimum should not apply it to such acquisitions by
holding companies that are holding companies solely by virtue of owning
or controlling one or more EWGs, QFs or foreign utility companies
(FUCOs).\29\ These commenters said that applying section 203(a)(2) in
these circumstances would impede investments in QFs and EWGs or result
in unnecessary regulation of upstream owners of QFs and EWGs.\30\ In
response, we stated that the blanket authorizations granted in Order
No. 669 (for certain holding company acquisitions of non-voting
securities and up to 9.9 percent of voting securities in electric
utility companies) will ensure that investment will not be discouraged.
The Commission also noted that we would consider on a case-by-case
basis granting additional blanket authorizations for holding company
acquisitions of securities of EWGs or QFs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Order No. 669 at P 60.
\29\ Id.
\30\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
31. In Order No. 669, the Commission explained that this
interpretation of ``electric utility company'' includes FUCOs, but we
granted blanket authorizations for certain foreign acquisitions, with
conditions to protect U.S. customers.\31\ As discussed below, the
Commission also provided other blanket authorizations for transactions
that do not raise concerns about wholesale markets or protection of
wholesale captive customers served by Commission-regulated public
utilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See Section 33.1(c)(5). The regulation requires a company
official to verify that the proposed transaction will not have an
adverse effect on competition, rates or regulation and that, now or
in the future, it will not result in the transfer of public utility
facilities to an associate company, issuance of public utility
securities or pledge or encumbrance of public utility assets for the
benefit of an associate company and will not result in certain new
affiliate contracts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. ``Holding Company''
32. As required by amended section 203(a)(6), section 33.1(b)(4)
provides that the term ``holding company'' has the meaning given that
term in PUHCA 2005.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Order No. 669 at P 69 (citing EPAct 2005 at 1262(8)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
33. The Commission rejected requests that we state that only
companies that own traditional utilities, and not those that own solely
FUCOs, EWGs and/or QFs, are ``holding companies'' under amended section
203.\33\ The Commission noted that ``holding company'' in PUHCA 2005
means ``any company that directly or indirectly owns, controls, or
holds, with the power to vote, 10 percent or more of the outstanding
voting securities of a public-utility company or of a holding company
of any public-utility company;
[[Page 28426]]
* * *'' \34\ PUHCA 2005 defines ``public-utility company'' to include
an ``electric utility company.'' \35\ We explained that the plain words
of this definition simply do not exclude holding companies that own or
control only EWGs, FUCOs, or QFs. Additionally, the Commission stated
that:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Id. at P 70.
\34\ EPAct 2005 at 1262(8).
\35\ Id. at 1262(14).
even under PUHCA 2005, persons that own or control only EWGs, FUCOs,
or QFs are considered holding companies but are explicitly exempted
from PUHCA 2005 by section 1266. There is no similar exemption in
amended section 203 and we conclude that it is reasonable to
interpret section 203(a)(2) review to include acquisitions of
generation or transmission facilities or companies by holding
companies owning only FUCOs, QFs, and/or EWGs.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Order No. 669 at P 70.
34. The Commission also pointed out that amended section 203(a)(6)
requires that we use the PUHCA 2005 definition of ``holding company,''
which, as explained above, includes the owner of an ``electric utility
company'' that is not a public utility under the FPA and that is not
otherwise subject to Commission ratemaking jurisdiction under Part II
of the FPA. We noted that the definition of ``electric utility
company'' is not limited to entities that engage in interstate
commerce. Therefore, the Commission also concluded that holding
companies that own ``electric utility companies'' whose businesses are
solely intrastate technically fall under section 203(a)(2).\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ However, as discussed below, we agreed in Order No. 669
that reviewing transactions involving Hawaii, Alaska, and Electric
Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) would involve matters outside
our expertise and the core focus of Part II of the FPA, and
therefore we granted certain blanket authorizations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Rehearing Requests
35. NARUC and Occidental assert that the Commission should not have
used the PUHCA 2005 definition of ``electric utility company'' in its
regulations under section 203. They say that this is contrary to
Congressional intent and fundamental rules of statutory construction.
They point out that section 203(a)(6) specifically states that certain
terms (``associate company,'' ``holding company,'' and ``holding
company system'') have the same meaning in both section 203 and PUHCA
2005; however, section 203(a)(6) does not refer to PUHCA 2005's
definition of ``electric utility company.'' \38\ NARUC and Occidental
argue that the Commission's reliance on the simultaneous enactment of
section 203 and PUHCA 2005 is invalid in the face of this statutory
language.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ NARUC Rehearing Request at 3-4; Occidental Rehearing
Request at 8-9. NARUC states the maxim expressio unius est exlusio
alterius (the expression of one thing is the exclusion of another)
supports its argument.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
36. NARUC also asserts that using the PUHCA 2005 definition of
``electric utility company'' improperly extends the Commission's
authority under amended section 203 to include facilities used for
transmission or sales of electric energy in intrastate commerce,
facilities used for local distribution, and facilities used for making
retail sales. It asserts that such facilities fall under exclusive
state commission jurisdiction and that the Commission's regulations
implementing FPA section 203 should apply to Commission-jurisdictional
facilities only.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ NARUC Rehearing Request at 5-6 (citing New York v. FERC,
535 U.S. 1 (2002); Detroit Edison Co. v. FERC, 334 F.3d 48 (D.C.
Cir. 2003); 16 U.S.C. 824 (2000)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
37. Occidental requests that the Commission reconsider its
determination to subject parent companies of QFs to the Commission's
authority under section 203(a)(2) by importing the definition of
``electric utility company'' from PUHCA 2005. It argues that the
Commission's reliance solely on the ``reference point'' of the
``electric utility company'' definition violates the Commission's
continuing duty to encourage cogeneration and small power production
under section 210(e) of PURPA \40\ and without addressing the statutory
QF exemption in PUHCA 1935 and PUHCA 2005, is arbitrary and
capricious.\41\ It argues that nothing in amended section 203 requires
that QFs lose the long-standing exemption from section 203 that the
Commission adopted in accordance with PURPA section 210(e). Thus,
Occidental argues the Commission should adopt a blanket authorization
under section 203, instead of using a case-by-case approach, for
companies that are holding companies solely by virtue of owning
QFs.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ 16 U.S.C. 824a-3 (2000). Section 210(e) of PURPA provides
that the Commission may grant certain exemptions for cogeneration
and small power producers.
\41\ Occidental also points to the PUHCA 2005 Final Rule, where
the Commission stated that ``[a]s for QFs, QFs previously received
an exemption from PUHCA pursuant to the Commission's regulations
under [PURPA]. Nothing in PUHCA 2005 changes that.'' Occidental
Rehearing Request at 10-11.
\42\ Occidental Rehearing Request at 10-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
38. Similarly, BofA/JPMorgan and Industrial Consumers assert that
the Commission erred by requiring pre-acquisition approval under
section 203(a)(2) of utility interests by companies that qualify as
``holding companies'' solely by virtue of their ownership interests in
QFs and EWGs. They explain that under PUHCA 1935, a company that owned
or controlled 10 percent or more of the outstanding voting securities
of a QF or EWG did not, by virtue of such ownership, become a ``holding
company.'' \43\ BofA/JPMorgan and Industrial Consumers assert that,
while Congress intended to impose section 203(a)(2) pre-approval
requirements on entities that are ``holding companies'' in a ``holding
company system that includes a transmitting utility or an electric
utility,'' by a drafting oversight, it adopted the PUHCA 2005
definition of ``holding company'' (which includes companies that own 10
percent or more of the outstanding voting securities of EWGs and QFs)
in section 203(a)(6). However, they state that there is no indication
that Congress intended to apply section 203(a)(2) to QF/EWG-only
holding companies or expand the scope of the ``holding company''
definition. BofA/JPMorgan and Industrial Consumers argue that the
Commission's imposition of new burdens on owners of QFs and EWGs not
associated with transmission-owning utilities misinterprets
Congressional intent in EPAct 2005. Accordingly, BofA/JPMorgan and
Industrial Consumers assert that the Commission should construe section
203(a)(2) as not applying in these circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ BofA/JPMorgan Rehearing Request at 26-27; and Industrial
Consumers Rehearing Request at 2. They explain that all qualifying
cogeneration facilities and certain small power production
facilities were previously exempt from status as ``electric utility
companies'' and that EWGs were exempted by section 32(e) from being
classified as ``electric utility companies'' or ``public-utility
companies'' under PUHCA 1935.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
39. If the Commission decides to continue with that conclusion,
then BofA/JPMorgan propose that the Commission provide blanket
authorization subject to appropriate conditions and safeguards, such as
a status report to the Commission within 30 days following the
acquisition, where companies are only holding companies by virtue of
owning QFs or EWGs.\44\ At a minimum, existing holdings in EWGs and QFs
should be grandfathered. This would enable banks and their affiliates
to adjust their future practices respecting EWGs and QFs to keep such
acquisitions from affecting the core aspects of their business.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ BofA/JPMorgan Rehearing Request at 30; Industrial Consumers
Rehearing Request at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
40. Similarly, Morgan Stanley argues that the definitions in PUHCA
2005, PUHCA 1935, and the PUHCA 2005 Final Rule demonstrate that EWGs
are not ``electric utility companies'' and that
[[Page 28427]]
EWG owners are not ``holding companies'' under PUHCA 2005. Therefore,
it says that the Commission should not have found that EWGs are
``electric utility companies'' and that companies that own only EWGs
are ``holding companies'' for purposes of section 203(a)(2).\45\ Morgan
Stanley explains that, in PUHCA 2005, Congress adopted the meaning of
EWG from PUHCA 1935, which it contends does not treat EWGs as
``electric utility companies.'' \46\ Further, Morgan Stanley states
that the PUHCA 2005 Final Rule reflects Congress' intent to continue to
define ``holding company'' to exclude EWG owners, as well as companies
that own power marketers, FUCOs, and QFs.\47\ However, it states, the
Commission adopts a meaning of ``electric utility company'' for section
203(a)(2) that includes EWGs, and therefore differs from the meaning
given in PUHCA 2005. In doing so, Morgan Stanley asserts, the
Commission creates two different definitions and types of holding
companies, thereby nullifying section 203(a)(6), which states that the
term holding company shall have the same meaning given in PUHCA 2005.
Thus, Morgan Stanley argues, the Commission should amend its
regulations to state that companies owning only EWGs, or some
combinations of EWGs, QFs, FUCOs, and/or power marketers, are not
``holding companies'' bound to obtain prior approval under section
203(a)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ Morgan Stanley Rehearing Request at 3-4.
\46\ PUHCA 2005 at 1262(6); PUHCA 1935 at 32(e).
\47\ Morgan Stanley Rehearing Request at 5 (citing PUHCA 2005
Final Rule at 366.1 (to be codified at 18 CFR 366.1)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Commission Determination
41. We do not agree with those who argue that, because of the
statutory language and/or policy concerns, the Commission may not
assert jurisdiction under new section 203(a)(2) over transactions
involving matters that are not under our traditional, pre-EPAct 2005
jurisdiction. The Commission affirms its determination in Order No. 669
that, in light of the ambiguity in section 203(a)(2), the most
reasonable interpretation of the term ``electric utility company'' is
the definition in PUHCA 2005. Several factors support this
determination.
42. First, the focus of new section 203(a)(2) is on acquisitions by
public utility holding companies. The Commission did not previously
have jurisdiction over holding companies, and this new authority was
enacted as part of coordinated, comprehensive legislation along with
the repeal of PUHCA 1935 and the enactment of PUHCA 2005.\48\ Section
203(a)(6) states that the term ``holding company'' has the same meaning
given the term in PUHCA 2005. PUHCA 2005 defines a ``holding company''
in terms of a ``public-utility company,'' which, under PUHCA 2005,
includes an ``electric utility company.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ There is no legislative history contained in the conference
report accompanying the legislation. However, the evolution of the
various versions of section 203(a)(2) proposed by members supports
our conclusion that Congress purposely did not limit section
203(a)(2) to holding companies that own ``public utilities'' but,
rather, consciously used terminology that, for the most part,
reflected terms used in PUHCA 2005. See Electricity Competition and
Reliability Act, H.R. 2944, 106th Cong. section 410 (1998);
Comprehensive Electricity Competition Act, H.R. 1828, 106th Cong.
section 502 (1998); Comprehensive Electricity Competition Act, S.
1047, 106th Cong. section 502 (1998); Electric Power To Choose Act
of 1999, H.R. 2050, 106th Cong. section 110 (1998); Energy Policy
Act of 2002, S. 1766 106th Cong. section 202 (2001); Energy Policy
Act of 2003, S. 14, 108th Cong. (2003); Senate Amendment No. 1412 to
S. 14, 149 Cong. Rec. S. 10163 (July 29, 2003); Senate Amendment No.
1413 to S. 14, 149 Cong. Rec. S. 10116-24 (July 29, 2003), 149 Cong.
Rec. S. 10204-14 (July 30, 2003); Senate Amendment No. 1537 Sec.
202, 149 Cong. Rec. S. 10739-40 (July 31, 2003); H.R. Rep. No. 108-
375 at 302-03 (Nov. 18, 2003), 149 Cong. Rec. S. 15,220 (Nov. 20,
2003); Energy Policy Act of 2005, H.R. 6; Energy Policy Act of 2005,
S. 10; H. Rpt. 109-190 (2005), 149 Cong. Rec. S. 9258 (July 28,
2005), 149 Cong. Rec. S. 9359 (July 29, 2005).
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43. Second, the term ``electric utility company'' is defined in
both PUHCA 1935 and PUHCA 2005, but is not defined in the FPA or other
statutes under which the Commission exercises authority. It is
reasonable in the face of Congressional silence to adopt a definition
that has been well understood in electric regulatory law for the past
70 years, particularly when we are not aware of any other federal
regulatory definition of the term.
44. Third, had Congress intended to restrict section 203(a)(2) to
holding company acquisitions involving only facilities that are
traditionally jurisdictional under the FPA or to holding company
acquisitions of companies that are ``public utilities'' under the FPA,
it would have done so, just as it did in each part of section
203(a)(1). The expressio unius principle cited by NARUC to support its
position can also be cited to support Order No. 669; the fact that
Congress specifically limited section 203(a)(1) to actions taken by
public utilities, but did not so restrict section 203(a)(2), supports
the position that Congress intended the latter provision to have a
wider scope. Moreover, NARUC's application of expressio unius in this
instance leads to a conclusion at odds with common usage. We elaborate
further below.
45. NARUC is correct that section 201(b)(1) of the FPA states that
Part II applies to transmission in interstate commerce and the sale of
electric energy at wholesale in interstate commerce, but (except as
provided for in paragraph 2, which involves sections 203(a)(2), 206(e),
210-212, and 215-222) not to other sales of electric energy. However,
there is a qualifying phrase as well. Section 201(b)(1) states that the
Commission shall not have jurisdiction, ``except as specifically
provided in this Part and the Part next following'' over facilities
used for the generation of electric energy, or over facilities used in
local distribution or only for the transmission of electric energy in
intrastate commerce or over facilities for the transmission of electric
energy consumed wholly by the transmitter.
46. NARUC ignores ``except as specifically provided.'' Congress, in
amending section 203, specifically broadened the Commission's previous
section 203 jurisdiction.\49\ In the new section 203(a)(6), Congress
directed the Commission to use the definition of holding company from
PUHCA 2005, and that definition includes entities that own ``electric
utility companies'' as defined in PUHCA 2005. The new 203(a)(2)
requires holding companies that include transmitting utilities (an FPA
definition modified in EPAct 2005 to be limited to transmission in
interstate commerce used for wholesale sales) or electric utilities
(defined in the FPA as persons that sell electric energy--not limited
to sales for resale or to sales in interstate commerce) to obtain
Commission approval of certain securities transactions, including
acquisitions of securities of an ``electric utility company.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ For example, in section 203(a)(1)(D) Congress gave the
Commission new jurisdiction over certain acquisitions of generation
facilities. The Commission under section 201 has no jurisdiction
over generation facilities, except as specifically provided.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
47. It is reasonable to conclude that, in repealing PUHCA 1935 and
importing into the FPA these PUHCA terms--a statute and terms not
limited to companies engaging in interstate sales, interstate
transmission or wholesale transactions--Congress intended to transfer
to this Commission certain corporate review authority that might
involve intrastate/retail acquisitions that could affect interstate
commerce and customers of Commission-regulated interstate utilities.
Further, as discussed above, in other provisions of section 203
Congress specifically limited the Commission's review to transactions
involving ``facilities subject to the jurisdiction of
[[Page 28428]]
the Commission.'' It did not place this limitation in section
203(a)(2).\50\
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\50\ We note that, in PUHCA 1935, which was not limited to
facilities or companies operating in interstate commerce, Congress
directed the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in section 3
to exempt predominantly intrastate holding companies and holding
companies whose operations are confined to one state or contiguous
states (because the states could adequately regulate these types of
holding companies and their activities) unless the SEC found it
detrimental to the public interest or the interests of investors or
consumers. Although Congress did not give the Commission authority
under section 203(a)(2) to actually exempt companies from the
provision, our blanket waivers serve a similar purpose of deferring
to the states, as the SEC did under the 1935 Act. If, however, we
find harm to wholesale competition or customers, the Commission can
take an appropriate action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
48. NARUC cites the principle of expressio unius and argues that
Congress' specific statement in section 203(a)(6) that three other
terms have the same meaning as in PUHCA 2005 shows that Congress did
not intend ``electric utility company'' to have the same meaning as in
PUHCA 2005.\51\ One can just as convincingly argue that Congress
inadvertently omitted the term from section 203(a)(6) or that if
Congress had intended to require us to adopt a particular definition,
it would have done so. The fact is that Congress left us with no
express definition of the term and that we have exercised reasonable
discretion in interpreting it.
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\51\ The three other terms are: associate company, holding
company and holding company system.
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49. Several parties argue that the policy behind EPAct 2005
requires us to define ``electric utility company'' to exclude companies
that own only EWGs or QFs. We disagree. Congress specifically required,
in section 203(a)(6) of the FPA, that the term ``holding company'' be
given the same meaning that was given the term in PUHCA 2005. Under
PUHCA 2005, as explained above, a company is a holding company if it
acquires 10 percent or more of an electric utility company. EWGs, FUCOs
\52\ and QFs fall within the definition of ``electric utility company''
under section 1262(5) of PUHCA 2005 because they own or operate
facilities used for the generation, transmission or distribution of
electric energy for sale. Moreover, including EWGs, FUCOs and QFs as
electric utility companies is consistent with common usage, which
supports defining electric utility companies as companies owning
facilities (generation, transmission or distribution) for the sale of
electric energy.
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\52\ The Commission explained in Order No. 669 that it
interpreted section 203(a)(2) of the FPA as applying to foreign
acquisitions and therefore interpreted ``electric utility company''
to include FUCOs.
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50. Further, as discussed in Order No. 669 and Order No. 667-A (the
PUHCA 2005 rehearing order), while Congress expressly excluded from the
definition of holding company certain banks and other institutions, it
did not similarly exclude from the definition of holding company
entities that only own QFs, EWGs or FUCOs. Rather, section 1266(a) of
PUHCA 2005 specifically directs the Commission to exempt QF/EWG/FUCO
holding companies from the federal access to books and records
provision; thus, the very language of the provision recognizes that
such entities are holding companies. It directs the Commission to issue
a final rule to exempt ``any person that is a holding company, solely
with respect to one or more [QFs, EWGs, or FUCOs].''
51. Therefore, consistent with our determination in the PUHCA 2005
rehearing order, we are giving full effect to the statutory language
when we conclude that companies that acquire 10 percent or more of an
EWG, FUCO or QF are holding companies as that term is used in PUHCA
2005 as well as FPA section 203(a)(2).
52. However, we also have provided an exemption from the PUHCA
section 1264 books and records requirements, as required by section
1266 of PUHCA 2005. Further, based on consideration of the rehearing
comments filed, we will grant a blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2) for holding companies that own or control only EWGs, QFs or
FUCOs to acquire the securities of additional EWGs, FUCOs or QFs. Thus,
our definition allows us to ensure that, for example, cross-
subsidization that affects matters under our traditional jurisdiction
does not occur, while at the same time ensuring (through blanket
authorizations) that investment in the electric industry is not
hampered and that encouragement of QFs is not undermined.
53. We recognize, however, parties' claims that there were
inconsistencies because of certain statements in Order No. 667 that
EWGs would not be considered ``electric utility companies.'' A similar
statement was included with respect to QFs in our recent QF final
rule.\53\ On rehearing of the Order No. 667, we are eliminating these
statements with respect to EWGs and clarifying that we intend to
eliminate a similar statement in the QF final rule rehearing.\54\ Thus,
our interpretation under section 203(a)(2) is consistent with our
interpretation under PUHCA 2005, and Morgan Stanley's claim that we are
creating two different definitions is not correct.
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\53\ Revised Regulations Governing Cogneration and Small Power
Production, Order No. 671, 71 FR 7852 (Feb. 15, 2006), FERC Stats. &
Regs. ] 31,203 (2006).
\54\ Repeal of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935
and Enactment of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005,
Order No. 667-A, published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,213 at P 14 & n. 32 (2006).
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54. We also reject Morgan Stanley's argument as it relates to power
marketers, but for a different reason. We decided in the PUHCA 2005
Final Rule to treat power marketers in a manner consistent with SEC
precedent for purposes of interpreting PUHCA 2005, and therefore,
decided not to treat power marketers as ``electric utility companies.''
\55\ By extension, therefore, a company owning only a power marketer is
not holding an ``electric utility company'' and is not a holding
company. However, power marketers remain public utilities under the
FPA.
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\55\ Order No. 667 at P 123.
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3. Section 33.1(c)(1)--Blanket Authorizations: Intrastate Commerce,
Local Distribution, and Internal Corporate Reorganizations
55. Section 33.1(c)(1) provides that any holding company in a
holding company system that includes a transmitting utility or an
electric utility is granted a blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2) of the FPA to purchase, acquire, or take any security of: (i)
A transmitting utility or company that owns, operates, or controls only
facilities used solely for transmission in intrastate commerce and/or
sales of electric energy in intrastate commerce; (ii) a transmitting
utility or company that owns, operates, or controls only facilities
used solely for local distribution and/or sales of electric energy at
retail regulated by a state commission; or (iii) a transmitting utility
or company if the transaction involves an internal corporate
reorganization that does not present cross-subsidization issues and
does not involve a traditional public utility with captive customers.
a. Section 33.1(c)(1)(i) and (ii)--Blanket Authorizations for
Intrastate Commerce and Local Distribution
56. In Order No. 669, the Commission stated that it was not
reasonable to interpret section 203(a)(2) as being limited solely to
holding company acquisitions and mergers involving wholesale sales or
transmission in interstate commerce. However, we concluded that there
would be no benefit from the Commission's case-by-
[[Page 28429]]
case evaluation of certain transactions under section 203(a)(2).\56\
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\56\ An acquisition or merger involving ``any company that owns
or operates facilities used for the generation, transmission, or
distribution of electric energy for sale'' is not on its face
limited to interstate facilities.
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57. The Commission explained that our core jurisdiction under Part
II of the FPA continues to be transmission and sales for resale of
electric energy in interstate commerce. A major impetus behind section
203(a)(2) was to clarify the Commission's jurisdiction over mergers of
holding companies that own public utilities as defined in the FPA.\57\
Accordingly, we concluded that it is consistent with the public
interest to grant blanket authorizations for the following: (1) Section
203(a)(2) purchases or acquisitions by holding companies of companies
that own, operate, or control facilities used solely for transmission
or sales of electric energy in intrastate commerce; and (2) section
203(a)(2) purchases or acquisitions by holding companies of facilities
used solely for local distribution and/or sales at retail regulated by
a state commission.\58\
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\57\ Illinois Power Co., 67 FERC ] 61,136 (1994) (noting that
the Commission does not have jurisdiction over public holding
company mergers or consolidations, but concluding that, ordinarily,
when public utility holding companies merge, an indirect merger
involving their public utility subsidiaries also takes place, and
that Commission approval under section 203 would be required).
\58\ Order No. 669 at P 56.
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58. The Commission concluded that these blanket authorizations are
consistent with the public interest because: (1) The identified
categories do not raise concerns with respect to competitive wholesale
markets for sales in interstate commerce or protection of wholesale
captive customers served by Commission-regulated public utilities--
matters within this Commission's core responsibility and expertise; (2)
if these categories raise competitive issues in intrastate commerce,
i.e., in ERCOT, Hawaii, and Alaska,\59\ those issues are within the
expertise of, and more appropriately addressed by, state commissions;
and (3) if competition and retail ratepayer protection issues are
raised by a holding company's acquisition of local distribution or
other retail facilities, these issues also are within the expertise of,
and more appropriately addressed by, state commissions.\60\
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\59\ Similarly, although not raised by the parties, the blanket
authorization would apply to any organized Territory of the United
States.
\60\ For these blanket authorizations, the Commission did not
impose any type of filing requirement.
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i. Rehearing Requests
59. APPA/NRECA assert that the Commission erred in granting blanket
authorization of acquisitions of ``intrastate'' utilities by holding
companies. They state that in order for the Commission's justification
to be true, i.e., that these transactions do not affect Commission-
regulated wholesale sales in interstate commerce or Commission-
regulated public utilities, the blanket authorization would have to be
confined to acquisitions of such intrastate utilities by intrastate
holding companies. However, APPA/NRECA argue that the regulation allows
any holding company (including a holding company that owns a
Commission-jurisdictional public utility operating in interstate
commerce) to acquire an intrastate utility.\61\ They state that the
regulation is overbroad, authorizes transactions that on their face
would affect interstate commerce in electricity, and raises the
possibility of cross-subsidization and pledge or encumbrance of utility
assets for the benefit of the holding company at the expense of captive
customers. H