By Jaime Llinares Taboada

 

SSE PLC said Tuesday that its current strategy represents the optimal pathway, after shareholder Elliott Advisors (UK) Ltd. called for the board to restore investor confidence and continued its push for the energy company to spin off its renewables division.

The Elliott Management Corp. subsidiary, which has been pushing for the separation of SSE's renewables business from the rest of the company, said in a letter to Chairman John Manzoni that it was challenging the energy company to provide a plan to address investor concerns around its corporate governance, its ability to fund growth in the long term, and its "persistent undervaluation."

SSE is one of the U.K.'s largest energy transmission and distribution companies. However, the group is now focused on growing its portfolio of wind farms.

Elliott said the letter "was sent in the wake of the company's disappointing announcement on Nov. 17 and the resulting decline in SSE's stock price". That day, shares in SSE closed 4.3% lower after the group said it would cut its dividend and sell stakes in its network business to fund investment in renewables.

Elliott said the announcement failed to provide any explanation for why SSE wasn't pursuing a listing of the renewables assets, which the investor estimates could have unlocked 5 billion pounds ($6.63 billion) of value. Elliott also said the plan to sell a minority interest in the networks division lacked ambition, and that cutting the dividend disappointed many income-oriented investors.

In the letter, the shareholder called on SSE to explore additional strategic initiatives, including a more ambitious disposal of the networks business and a partial listing or partial disposal of the renewables division. It also proposed the appointment of two new independent directors with renewables experience, and to create a strategic review committee composed of independent board members.

Later Tuesday, SSE replied to Elliott saying that the current strategy "represents the optimal pathway", and said that breaking up the group would have several downsides. Chief Executive Alistair Phillips-Davies said the separation would risk valuable growth options, jeopardize the company's ability to finance and deliver major infrastructure, and lose shared skills.

"Separation does not support the financing of our core growth businesses and would rule out adjacent growth options, as well as reducing the resilience of the business model--it is not the right outcome to maximise value for shareholders or our other stakeholders," Mr. Phillips-Davies said.

Shares in SSE at 1032 GMT were up 0.4% at 1,637 pence.

Some analysts have been critical of SSE's strategy in recent months. RBC Capital Markets said the company is in danger of disappointing both income investors looking for cash-flow generation from networks, and growth investors attracted to the renewables portfolio. Similarly, as quoted by Elliott in its letter, Barclays analysts have said they view SSE trying to please everyone at a risk of pleasing no one.

RBC said in a note Tuesday that any change of direction from SSE management could be some distance away.

 

Write to Jaime Llinares Taboada at jaime.llinares@wsj.com; @JaimeLlinaresT

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

December 07, 2021 05:53 ET (10:53 GMT)

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