Quarterly Report • Nov 14, 2018
Quarterly Report
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| RWE Group – key figures1 | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 2017 | % | 2017 | ||
| Power generation | billion kWh | 131.6 | 150.8 | – 12.7 | 200.2 |
| External revenue (excluding natural gas tax/electricity tax) | € million | 9,993 | 10,342 | – 3.4 | 13,822 |
| Adjusted EBITDA | € million | 1,139 | 1,557 | – 26.8 | 2,149 |
| Adjusted EBIT | € million | 465 | 862 | – 46.1 | 1,170 |
| Income from continuing operations before taxes | € million | – 42 | 2,327 | – 101.8 | 2,056 |
| Net income | € million | – 65 | 2,219 | – 102.9 | 1,900 |
| Earnings per share | € | – 0.11 | 3.61 | – 103.0 | 3.09 |
| Cash flows from operating activities of | |||||
| continuing operations | € million | 3,713 | – 4,351 | 185.3 | – 3,771 |
| Capital expenditure | € million | 863 | 544 | 58.6 | 902 |
| Property, plant and equipment and intangible assets | € million | 687 | 426 | 61.3 | 706 |
| Financial assets | € million | 176 | 118 | 49.2 | 196 |
| Free cash flow | € million | 2,912 | – 4,662 | 162.5 | – 4,439 |
| 30 Sep 2018 | 31 Dec 2017 | ||||
| Net debt of continuing operations | € million | 4,335 | – | – | |
| Workforce2 | 17,653 | 19,106 | – 7.6 |
1 Change in reporting; see commentary on page 4 et seq.
2 Converted to full-time positions.
| Major events | 1 |
|---|---|
| Commentary on reporting | 4 |
| Business performance | 7 |
| Outlook for 2018 | 15 |
| Interim consolidated financial statements | |
| (condensed) | 16 |
| Income statement | 16 |
| Statement of comprehensive income | 17 |
| Balance sheet | 18 |
| Cash flow statement | 19 |
| Financial calendar 2019 | 20 |
In line with its strategy of carrying out large-scale offshore wind projects with partners, innogy sold stakes of 25% and 16% in the Triton Knoll project to the Japanese energy groups J-Power and Kansai Electric Power. innogy retains the majority of Triton Knoll (59 %). The transaction was contractually agreed in the middle of August and closed in September. Triton Knoll is an offshore wind farm with a total capacity of approximately 860 MW which is due to be built off the east coast of England. innogy and its new partners will invest a total of around £2 billion to this end. A large portion of this sum (£1.75 billion) will be provided by an international consortium of banks. innogy developed Triton Knoll and will also be responsible for the construction and operation of the wind farm. Once project financing had been secured, work began in September on the onshore grid connection and construction of the wind farm is scheduled to begin soon. If the project progresses as planned, the 90 wind turbines could be commissioned successively from 2021 onwards. The state has guaranteed a payment of £74.75 per MWh for the electricity fed into the grid. The subsidy period is 15 years.
The official inauguration celebrations for the Galloper wind farm took place in London at the end of September. innogy owns 25 % of the wind farm, operates it and was mainly responsible for its development and construction. Galloper is 27 kilometres off the coast of Suffolk and consists of 56 turbines with a total capacity of 353 MW. The wind farm has been fully online since March and has the capability to supply about 380,000 households. The total investment in Galloper amounted to £1.5 billion.
In September, innogy decided to invest in the Limondale ground-mounted solar array in the state of New South Wales in Australia. On completion in the middle of 2020, the solar farm should have a total net installed capacity of 349 MW. This would currently make it the largest solar farm in Australia. Belectric, the company acquired by innogy in early 2017, is responsible for construction and will also handle Limondale's operation and maintenance. Belectric has already built ground-mounted solar farms with a total of approximately 2 GW in capacity globally, including projects in Australia.
On 30 September, two 300 MW units (E and F) of the Niederaussem lignite-fired power plant were taken offline as planned. However, they can be brought back onto the grid within ten days to bridge significant electricity shortages. They were switched off under Germany's lignite security standby scheme, which was enshrined in law in 2016 for environmental reasons. Under the regime, a total of eight lignite units with a combined 2.7 GW must be taken off the market from 2016 to 2019 and placed on standby as the last resort to ensure security of supply for four years each until they are shut down for good. Five of the eight stations, which have a total capacity of 1.5 GW, belong to RWE. In 2017, we already placed units P and Q of the Frimmersdorf power plant on security standby. Unit C of the Neurath power station will follow suit as of 1 October 2019.
We presented the major events which took place from January to the beginning of August 2018 on pages 4 to 10 of the interim report on the first half of 2018.
On 5 October, the Münster Higher Administrative Court ruled in summary proceedings that RWE Power may not clear Hambach Forest, which is near Cologne, for the time being. This will most likely lead to a massive curtailment of lignite production from the Hambach opencast mine. We anticipate annual volume shortfalls of 10 million to 15 million metric tons over the medium term (2019 to 2021). This will probably reduce EBITDA by €100 million to €200 million per year. The clearance of Hambach Forest is part of the mine's main operating plan for 2018 to 2020, which was approved in March 2018 by the relevant district government under an immediate implementation order. Thereupon, the BUND environmental activist group filed a motion to set aside the immediate implementation, which was denied by the Cologne Administrative Court. However, the Münster Higher Administrative Court granted the motion for an appeal by BUND against the Cologne ruling by preliminarily stopping the clearance of Hambach Forest, although the other opencast mining activities can be continued. The court's rationale for its decision was that the legal situation cannot be resolved in summary proceedings due to its complexity.
If and when Hambach Forest can be cleared must now be decided in the principal proceedings, which are pending before the Cologne Administrative Court. The main question is whether the remainder of Hambach Forest, which covers about 200 hectares, is subject to the protective provisions applicable to flora and fauna habitats (FFH areas) under European law. According to an expert opinion published by the Kiel Institute for Landscape Ecology at the beginning of 2018, this is not the case. The same conclusion was reached by the Cologne Administrative Court in an earlier lawsuit filed by BUND concerning the general operating plan for 2020 to 2030. The case was dismissed on 24 November 2017. On 5 October 2018, the Münster Higher Administrative Court granted the motion for an appeal by BUND against this decision. As a result, both the Cologne Administrative Court and the Münster Higher Administrative Court are addressing the FFH issue in principal proceedings. It remains to be seen when a final ruling will be handed down. It is possible that this will not happen until the end of 2020. We are doing all we can to ensure that the proceedings are concluded as soon as possible.
The temporary halt to the clearance has far-reaching ramifications for RWE. Having already renounced our rights during the last clearance period, which ran from October 2017 to February 2018, we now expect there to be substantial effects on the scheduled development of the Hambach opencast mine. First, the equipment at the top-most level, which is already right in front of the forest, will have to stop operating. Then, the excavators will hit the lower layers, preventing them from uncovering coal. We must carry out extensive investigations in order to determine the consequences for the operation of the opencast mine in detail. Only then can the ramifications for the workers be quantified.
Electricity generated from Hambach lignite covers about 15% of demand in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia. It is not only the power plants at the Neurath and Niederaussem sites that rely on the coal produced by the opencast mine, but also refining factories, which supply a large number of small and medium-sized enterprises with lignite products for their electricity and heat generation. This affects about 4,600 RWE employees and numerous supplier personnel who work in the Hambach mining area as well as in the connected power stations and businesses.
Claus C, our mothballed Dutch gas-fired power plant in Maasbracht, will return to operation. This was decided by the Executive Board of RWE Generation in October. The station has a net installed capacity of 1,304 MW and, at 58%, meets the highest efficiency standards. It was commissioned in 2012 but taken offline two years later due to its lack of profitability. The reasons for it coming back online are improved market conditions and rising demand for flexible generation capacity. Commercial opportunities could also arise as Belgium intends to phase out nuclear energy and would therefore need additional generation capacity. Claus C could be connected to the Belgian grid thanks to its proximity to the border. However, it will probably take two years for the power station to be fully operational again, partly because extensive maintenance work has to be carried out.
At the beginning of October, the rating agency Fitch announced that it continues to rate RWE's long-term creditworthiness as 'BBB' with a stable outlook. This was preceded by a rating review triggered by our planned asset swap with E.ON; in March 2018, we agreed to transfer our majority stake in innogy to them in exchange for their and innogy's renewable activities as well as other assets. More detailed commentary on this transaction, which we intend to complete in 2019, can be found on the following page. Fitch is of the opinion that the asset swap will improve our financial profile because the renewables business has a high share of stable, regulated income. The agency Moody's confirmed its rating of RWE as early as May, having subjected it to a review. Moody's rating of our long-term creditworthiness is 'Baa3' with a stable outlook.
On 12 March 2018, RWE and E.ON agreed to redistribute their business operations. E.ON will acquire RWE's 76.8 % stake in innogy SE. In return, RWE will receive the following shareholdings and assets: (1) a 16.67 % stake in E.ON which will be created by way of a capital increase from authorised capital in exchange for contributions in kind; (2) nearly the entire renewable energy business of E.ON; (3) innogy's renewable energy business; (4) the non-controlling interests held by the E.ON subsidiary PreussenElektra in the RWE-operated nuclear power stations Gundremmingen and Emsland of 25% and 12.5%, respectively; (5) innogy's gas storage business and (6) the 37.9% stake in the Austrian energy utility KELAG held by innogy. In addition, RWE will pay €1.5 billion to E.ON. The transfer of the business activities and equity holdings is scheduled to take retroactive commercial effect from 1 January 2018. We expect to be able to complete the transaction by the end of 2019.
The agreed asset swap requires reporting to be adjusted. A new methodology was adopted for the first time in the interim report on the first half of 2018. Before then, we had presented innogy as a fully consolidated group in its own segment. Now this segment only comprises those parts of innogy remaining within the RWE Group after the transaction. The other parts, which will permanently be transferred to E.ON, will be classified as 'discontinued operations' until they are sold. This primarily applies to the distribution networks and retail business.
The details of the change in accounting treatment are as follows:
In our financial reporting the RWE Group is still divided into four segments (divisions). Whereas we continue to report on the Lignite&Nuclear, European Power and Supply&Trading divisions, innogy has been replaced by the segment 'innogy – continuing operations'.
The individual segments are as follows:
Individual companies with cross-segment tasks, e.g. the Group holding company RWE AG, are stated under 'other, consolidation'. This item also includes our 25.1% stake in the German electricity transmission system operator Amprion.
In the 2018 fiscal year, we began applying the new accounting standard IFRS 15 'Revenue from Contracts with Customers'. One of the consequences is that changes in the fair value of commodity derivatives, which occur before the contracts are realised, must be recognised in other operating income instead of in revenue or the cost of materials. Therefore, the revenue we state for 2018 is much lower, particularly in the gas business. Prior-year figures have not been adjusted.
We also started to apply the new accounting standard IFRS 9 'Financial Instruments' this year. This results in changes to the classification and valuation of financial instruments, to hedge accounting and to the recognition of impairments due to expected payment defaults. Again, prior-year figures have not been adjusted. Changes in the fair value of some of our securities are no longer recognised without an effect on profit or loss. This results in increased volatility on the income statement. Furthermore, the recognition of expected credit losses reduces our assets. In consequence, net debt is slightly higher.
This interim statement contains forward-looking statements regarding the future development of the RWE Group and its companies as well as economic and political developments. These statements are assessments that we have made based on information available to us at the time this document was prepared. In the event that the underlying assumptions do not materialise or unforeseen risks arise, actual developments can deviate from the developments expected at present. Therefore, we cannot assume responsibility for the correctness of these statements.
| External revenue € million |
Jan – Sep 2018 |
Jan – Sep 2017 |
+/– % |
Jan – Dec 2017 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lignite&Nuclear | 813 | 923 | – 11.9 | 1,259 |
| European Power | 660 | 687 | – 3.9 | 923 |
| Supply&Trading | 7,739 | 7,948 | – 2.6 | 10,517 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 765 | 756 | 1.2 | 1,087 |
| Other, consolidation | 16 | 28 | – 42.9 | 36 |
| RWE Group (excluding natural gas tax/electricity tax) | 9,993 | 10,342 | –3.4 | 13,822 |
| Natural gas tax/electricity tax | 102 | 101 | 1.0 | 131 |
| RWE Group | 10,095 | 10,443 | –3.3 | 13,953 |
| External revenue by product1 | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 2017 | % | 2017 |
| Electricity revenue | 7,366 | 7,695 | –4.3 | 10,430 |
| of which: | ||||
| Lignite&Nuclear | 218 | 327 | – 33.3 | 451 |
| European Power | 374 | 468 | – 20.1 | 594 |
| Supply&Trading | 6,229 | 6,384 | – 2.4 | 8,628 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 545 | 515 | 5.8 | 755 |
| Gas revenue | 1,123 | 1,421 | –21.0 | 1,795 |
| of which: | ||||
| Supply&Trading | 1,075 | 1,375 | – 21.8 | 1,738 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 36 | 39 | – 7.7 | 48 |
| Other revenue | 1,504 | 1,226 | 22.7 | 1,597 |
| RWE Group (excluding natural gas tax/electricity tax) | 9,993 | 10,342 | –3.4 | 13,822 |
1 Gas revenue in the European Power segment and electricity revenue under 'other, consolidation' is not stated separately because it is immaterial.
In the first three quarters of 2018, RWE recorded external revenue of €9,993 million from continuing operations (without taxes on natural gas or electricity). This represents a drop of 3% compared to the same period last year. Electricity revenue decreased by 4% to €7,366 million in part because RWE Supply&Trading, which markets the lion's share of the Group's production externally, sold less electricity due to a decline in generation volume. Further revenue shortfalls were experienced in the Lignite&Nuclear segment as a result of the sale of the Hungarian lignite-based power producer Mátra and in the European Power segment due to a drop in the utilisation of the Denizli gas-fired power station in Turkey. The Group's gas revenue declined by 21% to €1,123 million despite a slight increase in sales volume. One reason was lower income from the realisation of hedges. Moreover, the first-time adoption of IFRS 15 resulted in certain items no longer being recognised in revenue (see commentary on the preceding page).
| Internal revenue € million |
Jan – Sep 2018 |
Jan – Sep 2017 |
+/– % |
Jan – Dec 2017 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lignite&Nuclear | 1,782 | 2,185 | – 18.4 | 2,897 |
| European Power | 2,753 | 2,876 | – 4.3 | 3,967 |
| Supply&Trading | 2,686 | 2,715 | – 1.1 | 3,419 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 271 | 270 | 0.4 | 377 |
| Adjusted EBITDA | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 2017 | % | 2017 |
| Lignite&Nuclear | 240 | 551 | – 56.4 | 671 |
| European Power | 234 | 324 | – 27.8 | 463 |
| Supply&Trading | 183 | 201 | – 9.0 | 271 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 488 | 511 | – 4.5 | 785 |
| Other, consolidation | – 6 | – 30 | 80.0 | – 41 |
| RWE Group | 1,139 | 1,557 | –26.8 | 2,149 |
Our adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (adjusted EBITDA) amounted to €1,139 million. This was €418 million, or 27%, less than last year's corresponding figure. Shrinking margins and volumes in conventional electricity generation were the main reasons. Furthermore, earnings achieved in the first three quarters of 2017 included high capital gains on property sales. The following developments were observed in the segments:
| Adjusted EBIT | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 2017 | % | 2017 |
| Lignite&Nuclear | 38 | 349 | – 89.1 | 399 |
| European Power | 14 | 96 | – 85.4 | 155 |
| Supply&Trading | 179 | 197 | – 9.1 | 265 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 226 | 250 | – 9.6 | 398 |
| Other, consolidation | 8 | – 30 | 126.7 | – 47 |
| RWE Group | 465 | 862 | –46.1 | 1,170 |
Adjusted EBIT totalled €465 million, which was 46% less than the comparable figure for 2017. This figure differs from adjusted EBITDA in that it does not include operating depreciation and amortisation, which amounted to €674 million in the period being reviewed (first three quarters of 2017: €695 million).
| Non-operating result | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 2017 | € million | 2017 |
| Capital gains/losses | – 24 | 120 | – 144 | 107 |
| Impact of derivatives on earnings | – 191 | – 188 | – 3 | – 480 |
| Other | – 34 | 1,434 | – 1,468 | 1,322 |
| Non-operating result | –249 | 1,366 | –1,615 | 949 |
The non-operating result, in which we recognise certain effects with no or limited relation to the operations in the period under review, totalled –€249 million (first three quarters of 2017: €1,366 million). The individual items developed as follows:
| Financial result | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 2017 | € million | 2017 |
| Interest income | 115 | 191 | – 76 | 197 |
| Interest expenses | – 135 | – 248 | 113 | – 298 |
| Net interest | –20 | –57 | 37 | –101 |
| Interest accretion to non-current provisions | – 158 | – 90 | – 68 | – 226 |
| Other financial result | – 80 | 246 | – 326 | 264 |
| Financial result | –258 | 99 | –357 | –63 |
Our financial result deteriorated by €357 million to –€258 million. Its components changed as follows:
At –€42 million, income from continuing operations before tax was far below the comparable figure for 2017 (€2,327 million). We recorded €5 million in tax proceeds in the period under review. This resulted in an effective tax rate of 12%, which is below the theoretical normal rate. Tax proceeds were a little too low largely because we did not capitalise any deferred taxes in RWE AG's tax group unless they were offset by deferred tax liabilities. This is because we will probably not be able to use the deferred tax assets. They can only be utilised if in later fiscal years tax gains are achieved against which the tax claims can be offset. However, there is currently no sufficient certainty that this will occur in RWE AG's tax group.
After taxes, we posted income of –€37 million from our continuing operations (first three quarters of 2017: €2,044 million). Income from discontinued operations decreased by €20 million to €391 million. Its development was characterised by significant temporary losses from the fair valuation of derivatives. By contrast, a charge incurred in 2017 resulting from a goodwill impairment in the UK retail business did not recur.
| Reconciliation to net income | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 2017 | % | 2017 | ||
| Adjusted EBITDA | € million | 1,139 | 1,557 | –26.8 | 2,149 |
| Operating depreciation, amortisation and impairment losses | € million | – 674 | – 695 | 3.0 | – 979 |
| Adjusted EBIT | € million | 465 | 862 | –46.1 | 1,170 |
| Non-operating result | € million | – 249 | 1,366 | – 118.2 | 949 |
| Financial result | € million | – 258 | 99 | – 360.6 | – 63 |
| Income from continuing operations before taxes | € million | –42 | 2,327 | –101.8 | 2,056 |
| Taxes on income | € million | 5 | – 283 | 101.8 | – 333 |
| Income from continuing operations | € million | –37 | 2,044 | –101.8 | 1,723 |
| Income from discontinued operations | € million | 391 | 411 | – 4.9 | 592 |
| Income | € million | 354 | 2,455 | –85.6 | 2,315 |
| of which: | |||||
| Non-controlling interests | € million | 374 | 200 | 87.0 | 373 |
| RWE AG hybrid capital investors' interest | € million | 45 | 36 | 25.0 | 42 |
| Net income/income attributable to RWE AG shareholders | € million | –65 | 2,219 | –102.9 | 1,900 |
| Earnings per share | € | – 0.11 | 3.61 | – 103.0 | 3.09 |
| Number of shares outstanding (average) | millions | 614.7 | 614.7 | – | 614.7 |
| Effective tax rate | % | 12 | 12 | – | 16 |
The non-controlling interests in income rose by €174 million to €374 million. In the first nine months of last year, impairments recognised for the Hungarian power producer Mátra resulted in income shortfalls for us and the co-owners, which did not recur.
The portion of earnings attributable to RWE hybrid capital investors amounted to €45 million (first three quarters of 2017: €36 million). This sum corresponds to the finance costs related to our £750 million hybrid bond. The bond has a theoretically perpetual tenor. Therefore, associated funds are classified as equity according to IFRS. RWE's other hybrid capital is classified as debt and we recognise the interest accrued on it in the financial result.
As a consequence of the above developments, net income decreased considerably compared to 2017, falling to –€65 million (first three quarters of 2017: €2,219 million). Based on the 614.7 million RWE shares outstanding, earnings per share amounted to –€0.11 (first three quarters of 2017: €3.61).
| Capital expenditure on property, plant and equipment and on intangible assets € million |
Jan – Sep 2018 |
Jan – Sep 2017 |
+/– € million |
Jan – Dec 2017 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lignite&Nuclear | 140 | 169 | – 29 | 269 |
| European Power | 132 | 86 | 46 | 147 |
| Supply&Trading | 6 | 3 | 3 | 7 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 409 | 172 | 237 | 285 |
| Other, consolidation | – | – 4 | 4 | – 2 |
| RWE Group | 687 | 426 | 261 | 706 |
| Capital expenditure on financial assets | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 2017 | € million | 2017 |
| Lignite&Nuclear | – | 1 | – 1 | 1 |
| European Power | 3 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Supply&Trading | 36 | 15 | 21 | 30 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 136 | 101 | 35 | 153 |
| Other, consolidation | 1 | – | 1 | 11 |
| RWE Group | 176 | 118 | 58 | 196 |
RWE spent €863 million in capital in the first nine months of the year. This was €319 million, or 59%, more than in 2017. Our capital expenditure on property, plant and equipment totalled €687 million, representing an increase of 61%. The substantial rise was primarily attributable to innogy's continuing operations – in particular the Triton Knoll and Limondale large-scale projects on which we report on page 1. At €176 million, capital expenditure on financial assets was 49% up on 2017. A large portion of the funds was used by innogy to acquire a portfolio of onshore wind projects in the USA (see page 10 of the interim report on the first half of 2018).
| Cash flow statement1 | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | +/– | Jan – Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 2017 | € million | 2017 |
| Funds from operations | 336 | – 4,522 | 4,858 | – 3,971 |
| Change in working capital | 3,377 | 171 | 3,206 | 200 |
| Cash flows from operating activities of continuing operations | 3,713 | –4,351 | 8,064 | –3,771 |
| Cash flows from investing activities of continuing operations | –1,320 | 4,248 | –5,568 | 3,750 |
| Cash flows from financing activities of continuing operations | –1,369 | 68 | –1,437 | –997 |
| Effects of changes in foreign exchange rates and other | ||||
| changes in value on cash and cash equivalents | 14 | 6 | 8 | – 19 |
| Total net changes in cash and cash equivalents | 1,038 | –29 | 1,067 | –1,037 |
| Cash flows from operating activities of continuing operations | 3,713 | – 4,351 | 8,064 | – 3,771 |
| Minus capital expenditure2 | – 842 | – 517 | – 325 | – 902 |
| Plus proceeds from divestitures/asset disposals2 | 41 | 206 | – 165 | 234 |
| Free cash flow | 2,912 | –4,662 | 7,574 | –4,439 |
1 All items solely relate to continuing operations.
2 Only related to items with an effect on cash.
In the first three quarters of 2018, we achieved cash flows from operating activities of €3,713 million. This was much more than in the same period last year (–€4,351 million) when we had to make a large contribution to the German nuclear energy fund. However, our operating cash flow improved even disregarding this effect. A major reason was that we obtained high variation margins in connection with forward contracts for CO2 certificates and other commodities in the period under review. Variation margins are payments with which transaction partners offset profit and loss positions resulting from the daily revaluation of active contracts. However, their influence on cash flows is temporary and ends once the transactions are realised.
Investing activities of our continuing operations resulted in cash outflows of €1,320 million. In addition to the capital expenditure presented earlier, short-term investments in securities also made a contribution, whereas proceeds on sales of property, plant and equipment and financial assets had a counteracting effect. In the first three quarters of 2017, we recorded substantial cash inflows of €4,248 million, which largely resulted from winding down cash investments. We used the funds to make our contribution to the nuclear energy fund.
Financing activities of our continuing operations also resulted in cash outflows, which amounted to €1,369 million (first three quarters of 2017: €68 million). €1.0 billion thereof was used to make dividend payments to RWE shareholders, co-owners of fully consolidated RWE companies and hybrid investors. In the period under review, we redeemed €0.9 billion and issued €0.5 billion in financial debt.
On balance, the aforementioned cash flows from operating, investing and financing activities increased our cash and cash equivalents by €1,038 million.
The variation margins mentioned above were also reflected in free cash flow, which amounted to €2,912 million. By contrast, the figure recorded in last year's corresponding period (–€4,662 million) was characterised by the contribution to the nuclear energy fund.
| Net debt1 | 30 Sep 2018 | 31 Dec 2017 | +/– |
|---|---|---|---|
| € million | € million | ||
| Cash and cash equivalents | 4,618 | 3,933 | 685 |
| Marketable securities | 3,076 | 5,131 | – 2,055 |
| Other financial assets | 2,054 | 1,863 | 191 |
| Financial assets | 9,748 | 10,927 | –1,179 |
| Bonds, other notes payable, bank debt, commercial paper | 1,571 | 15,099 | – 13,528 |
| Hedge transactions related to bonds | 15 | 27 | – 12 |
| Other financial liabilities | 1,308 | 2,102 | – 794 |
| Financial liabilities | 2,894 | 17,228 | –14,334 |
| Net financial debt | –6,854 | 6,301 | –13,155 |
| Provisions for pensions and similar obligations | 2,635 | 5,420 | – 2,785 |
| Surplus of plan assets over benefit obligations | – 144 | – 103 | – 41 |
| Provisions for nuclear waste management | 5,905 | 6,005 | – 100 |
| Mining provisions | 2,531 | 2,322 | 209 |
| Provisions for dismantling wind farms | 357 | 359 | – 2 |
| Adjustment for hybrid capital (portion of relevance to the rating) | – 95 | – 77 | – 18 |
| Plus 50 % of the hybrid capital stated as equity | 463 | 470 | – 7 |
| Minus 50 % of the hybrid capital stated as debt | – 558 | – 547 | – 11 |
| Net debt of continuing operations | 4,335 | – | – |
| Net debt of discontinued operations | 14,132 | – | – |
| Net debt | 18,467 | 20,227 | –1,760 |
1 As of the balance-sheet date, discontinued operations are only recognised in the collective item 'net debt of discontinued operations', whereas they were still included in the individual items of the table at the end of 2017.
As of 30 September 2018, net debt amounted to €18.5 billion, of which €4.3 billion was allocable to our continuing operations and the remainder to our discontinued operations; this was €1.8 billion less than in 2017. The prior-year figures relate to the Group as a whole. With respect to our continuing operations, the significant cash flows from variation margins had a debt-reducing effect, whereas the dividend payments (€1.0 billion) and capital expenditure (€0.8 billion) had a counteracting impact. As regards our discontinued operations, operating cash flow (€1.2 billion) could not fully finance the cash outflows for the dividend payments (€0.5 billion) and capital expenditure (€0.9 billion). Furthermore, we recorded €0.4 billion more in provisions for pensions for these activities. One reason is that the plan assets which cover a large portion of the pension obligations declined due to negative market developments.
| Adjusted EBITDA forecast € million |
2017 actual1 | Outlook for 2018 |
|---|---|---|
| RWE Group | 2,149 | 1,500 – 1,800 |
| of which: | ||
| Lignite&Nuclear | 671 | 350 – 450 |
| European Power | 463 | 300 – 400 |
| Supply&Trading | 271 | 100 – 300 |
| innogy – continuing operations | 785 | 700 – 800 |
1 Figures adjusted; see commentary on page 4.
Due to the planned asset swap with E.ON and the subsequent required change in our reporting, we published a structurally adjusted earnings forecast for the full year in August 2018 (see page 26 of the interim report on the first half of 2018). This outlook is maintained. Excluding innogy's business that is due to be transferred to E.ON, the RWE Group's adjusted EBITDA is expected to range between €1.5 billion and €1.8 billion. Last year's comparable figure was €2.1 billion. The earnings forecasts at the segment level also remain unchanged.
We also confirm the August outlook concerning our investing activities. This year, spending on property, plant and equipment will probably total between €1.2 billion and €1.4 billion. Of this sum, €0.8 billion to €1.0 billion has been set aside for innogy's continuing operations, focusing on the expansion of renewable energy. We anticipate that capital expenditure on property, plant and equipment in conventional electricity generation will amount to some €400 million. These funds are mainly earmarked for the maintenance and modernisation of power stations and opencast mines. Some of the funds will be channelled to minor growth projects, e. g. the conversion of our Dutch hard coal-fired power plants to biomass co-firing. The development of the net debt of our continuing operations largely depends on variation margins, which are highly volatile and therefore almost impossible to predict. We currently still expect that year-end net debt will be moderately lower than as of 30 June 2018 (€5.4 billion).
For financial planning purposes, we also use Group figures which include innogy as a purely financial investment and not as a fully consolidated group. In so doing, we deviate from IFRS rules, recognising our 76.8 % stake in our subsidiary under 'other financial assets'. We consider innogy in adjusted EBITDA only on the basis of the dividend payment it makes to RWE. Further details on this can be found on page 60 of the 2017 Annual Report. On page 85, it also contains statements on the probable development of key figures calculated by the described method. We had forecast adjusted EBITDA in the range of €1.4 billion to €1.7 billion (2017: €2.1 billion) and adjusted net income in the range of €0.5 billion to €0.8 billion (2017: €1.0 billion). We confirm this outlook. We updated our forecast in relation to year-end net debt in August (see page 26 of the interim report on the first half of 2018) stating that it was expected to be moderately lower than in 2017 (€4.5 billion). We uphold this assessment.
| Jul – Sep | Jul – Sep | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 20171 | 2018 | 20171 |
| Revenue (including natural gas tax/electricity tax) | 3,268 | 2,970 | 10,095 | 10,443 |
| Natural gas tax/electricity tax | – 33 | – 35 | – 102 | – 101 |
| Revenue 2 | 3,235 | 2,935 | 9,993 | 10,342 |
| Cost of materials | – 2,583 | – 2,181 | – 7,721 | – 7,447 |
| Staff costs | – 483 | – 461 | – 1,457 | – 1,397 |
| Depreciation, amortisation and impairment losses | – 234 | – 225 | – 674 | – 1,021 |
| Other operating result | – 29 | – 98 | – 45 | 1,595 |
| Income from investments accounted for using the equity method | 63 | 32 | 165 | 95 |
| Other income from investments | – 5 | 55 | – 45 | 61 |
| Financial income | 87 | 343 | 319 | 1,195 |
| Finance costs | – 161 | – 427 | – 577 | – 1,096 |
| Income from continuing operations before tax | –110 | –27 | –42 | 2,327 |
| Taxes on income | 91 | 48 | 5 | – 283 |
| Income from continuing operations | –19 | 21 | –37 | 2,044 |
| Income from discontinued operations | – 148 | – 526 | 391 | 411 |
| Income | –167 | –505 | 354 | 2,455 |
| of which: non-controlling interests | 45 | – 67 | 374 | 200 |
| of which: RWE AG hybrid capital investors' interest | 15 | 12 | 45 | 36 |
| of which: net income/income attributable to RWE AG shareholders | –227 | –450 | –65 | 2,219 |
| Basic and diluted earnings per common and preferred share in € | –0.37 | –0.73 | –0.11 | 3.61 |
| of which: from continuing operations in € | – 0.07 | – 0.02 | – 0.22 | 3.39 |
| of which: from discontinued operations in € | – 0.30 | – 0.71 | 0.11 | 0.22 |
1 Prior-year figures adjusted.
2 A presentation of revenue by product and segment can be found on page 7 of the interim statement.
| Jul – Sep | Jul – Sep | Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts after tax – € million | 2018 | 2017 | 2018 | 2017 |
| Income | –167 | –505 | 354 | 2,455 |
| Actuarial gains and losses of defined benefit pension plans and similar obligations |
319 | 213 | – 111 | 1,018 |
| Income and expenses of investments accounted for using the equity method (pro rata) |
– 1 | 22 | – 17 | |
| Fair value of equity instruments | 10 | – 4 | ||
| Income and expenses recognised in equity, not to be reclassified through | ||||
| profit or loss | 328 | 213 | –93 | 1,001 |
| Currency translation adjustment | 33 | – 5 | – 36 | 86 |
| Fair valuation of financial instruments available for sale | 39 | 61 | ||
| Fair valuation of debt instruments | – 5 | – 18 | ||
| Fair valuation of financial instruments used for hedging purposes | 2,190 | 727 | 4,068 | 280 |
| Income and expenses of investments accounted for using the equity method (pro rata) |
– 1 | – 4 | 3 | |
| Income and expenses recognised in equity, to be reclassified through | ||||
| profit or loss in the future | 2,217 | 761 | 4,010 | 430 |
| Other comprehensive income | 2,545 | 974 | 3,917 | 1,431 |
| Total comprehensive income | 2,378 | 469 | 4,271 | 3,886 |
| of which: attributable to RWE AG shareholders | 2,278 | 484 | 3,855 | 3,478 |
| of which: attributable to RWE AG hybrid capital investors | 15 | 12 | 45 | 36 |
| of which: attributable to non-controlling interests | 85 | – 27 | 371 | 372 |
| Assets | 30 Sep 2018 | 31 Dec 2017 |
|---|---|---|
| € million | ||
| Non-current assets | ||
| Intangible assets | 2,191 | 12,383 |
| Property, plant and equipment | 12,188 | 24,947¹ |
| Investments accounted for using the equity method | 1,464 | 2,846 |
| Other non-current financial assets | 349 | 1,109 |
| Receivables and other assets | 1,477 | 1,782 |
| Deferred taxes | 680 | 2,627 |
| 18,349 | 45,694 | |
| Current assets | ||
| Inventories | 1,857 | 1,924 |
| Trade accounts receivable | 1,544 | 5,405 |
| Receivables and other assets | 14,978 | 7,082 |
| Marketable securities | 2,871 | 4,893 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 4,618 | 3,933 |
| Assets held for sale | 39,276 | 128 |
| 65,144 | 23,365 | |
| 83,493 | 69,059 |
| Equity and liabilities € million |
30 Sep 2018 | 31 Dec 2017 |
|---|---|---|
| Equity | ||
| RWE AG shareholders' interest | 10,141 | 6,759 |
| RWE AG hybrid capital investors' interest | 925 | 940 |
| Non-controlling interests | 4,442 | 4,292 |
| 15,508 | 11,991 | |
| Non-current liabilities | ||
| Provisions | 15,535 | 19,249 |
| Financial liabilities | 1,949 | 14,414 |
| Other liabilities | 494 | 2,393 |
| Deferred taxes | 668 | 718 |
| 18,646 | 36,774 | |
| Current liabilities | ||
| Provisions | 2,339 | 5,137 |
| Financial liabilities | 931 | 2,787 |
| Trade accounts payable | 2,069 | 5,077 |
| Other liabilities | 11,819 | 7,182 |
| Liabilities held for sale | 32,181 | 111 |
| 49,339 | 20,294 | |
| 83,493 | 69,059 |
1 Figure adjusted because investment property has been subsumed under property, plant and equipment.
| Jan – Sep | Jan – Sep | |
|---|---|---|
| € million | 2018 | 20171 |
| Income from continuing operations | – 37 | 2,044 |
| Depreciation, amortisation and impairment losses/write-backs | 725 | 625 |
| Changes in provisions | – 280 | – 7,275 |
| Deferred taxes/non-cash income and expenses/income from disposal of non-current assets and marketable securities |
– 72 | 84 |
| Changes in working capital | 3,377 | 171 |
| Cash flows from operating activities of continuing operations | 3,713 | –4,351 |
| Cash flows from operating activities of discontinued operations | 1,182 | 1,440 |
| Cash flows from operating activities | 4,895 | –2,911 |
| Capital expenditure on non-current assets/acquisitions | – 842 | – 517 |
| Proceeds from disposal of assets/divestitures | 41 | 206 |
| Changes in marketable securities and cash investments | – 519 | 4,559 |
| Cash flows from investing activities of continuing operations 2 | –1,320 | 4,248 |
| Cash flows from investing activities of discontinued operations | – 1,482 | 79 |
| Cash flows from investing activities | –2,802 | 4,327 |
| Cash flows from financing activities of continuing operations | –1,369 | 68 |
| Cash flows from financing activities of discontinued operations | 1,250 | – 595 |
| Cash flows from financing activities | –119 | –527 |
| Net cash change in cash and cash equivalents | 1,974 | 889 |
| Effect of changes in foreign exchange rates and other changes in value on cash and cash | ||
| equivalents | 14 | 6 |
| Net change in cash and cash equivalents | 1,988 | 895 |
| Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of reporting period | 3,958 | 4,576 |
| of which: reported as 'Assets held for sale' | 25 | |
| Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of reporting period as per the consolidated balance sheet |
3,933 | 4,576 |
| Cash and cash equivalents at end of reporting period | 5,946 | 5,471 |
| of which: reported as 'Assets held for sale' | 1,328 | 40 |
| Cash and cash equivalents at end of reporting period as per the consolidated balance sheet | 4,618 | 5,431 |
1 Prior-year figures adjusted.
2 After the initial/subsequent transfer to plan assets in the amount of €41 million (prior-year period: €4 million).
| 14 March 2019 | Annual report for fiscal 2018 |
|---|---|
| 3 May 2019 | Annual General Meeting |
| 8 May 2019 | Dividend payment |
| 15 May 2019 | Interim statement on the first quarter of 2019 |
| 14 August 2019 | Interim report on the first half of 2019 |
| 14 November 2019 | Interim statement on the first three quarters of 2019 |
This document was published on 14 November 2018. It is a translation of the German interim statement on the first three quarters of 2018. In case of divergence from the German version, the German version shall prevail.
RWE Aktiengesellschaft Altenessener Strasse 35 45141 Essen Germany
www.rwe.com
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