Earnings

Columbia’s Marketing Woes Drag on Earnings

Despite large increases in both operating income and income fromcontinuing operations, Columbia Energy Group’s 1999 bottom lineregressed from 1998, as a hostile takeover bid from NiSourcecombined with severe losses caused by Columbia’s marketingoperations to undermine the company’s overall performance.

January 26, 2000

Industry Briefs

The CEO of LG&E Energy Corp. blasted a Kentucky PublicService Commission order for an LG&E and KU reduction inpre-tax earnings totaling $63 million per year. Roger W. Hale saidthe reduction represents more than 20% of the utilities’ income.

January 10, 2000

CNG’s 3Q Income Nearly Doubles

Higher prices and production, partially offset by merger costs,pushed third quarter earnings of Consolidated Natural Gas up 90% to$10.8 million, or 11 cents per share, from $5.7 million, or 6cents/share, a year earlier. Excluding costs related to the pendingmerger with Dominion Resources, Inc., of $7.7 million, or 6cents/share after taxes, income from continuing operations in thethird quarter of 1999 was $16.4 million, or 17 cents per share.

October 20, 1999

Power Contract Defaults Cost Cinergy $16 Million

Cinergy Corp. said yesterday it expects to take a $57 millionafter-tax charge ($0.36 per share) on July earnings because it hadto pay exorbitant prices in the wholesale market to maintaindeliveries during a period of peak demand in late July. The chargealso includes $16 million to settle damage claims related toCinergy’s defaults on several power marketing agreements.

August 11, 1999

Columbia Plans Share Repurchase; Earnings Rise

Columbia Energy Group beat analysts expectations with a 15% jump($3.3 million or five cents per share) in net income during thesecond quarter to $26.1 million, or 32 cents per share. It alsoupped the ante yesterday in its effort to fend off NiSource’s $5.7billion hostile takeover offer by adding $400 million to its stockrepurchase program, which now totals $420 million.

July 16, 1999

Accounting Scheme Shaves Millions from MCN’s Results

MCN Energy said yesterday it has had to chop millions from its 1997and 1998 earnings reports and raise slightly its 1Q99 results becauseof deliberate financial miscalculations by several former employees atCoEnergy trading, its unregulated gas marketing subsidiary. MCNdiscovered the problem last month and fired three employees, includingtwo subsidiary officers (see Daily GPI, May18), for falsely showing good financial results from marketing.

June 10, 1999

BP Amoco Earnings Drop 41%

BP Amoco first quarter replacement cost profit, beforeexceptional items, was $761 million after adjusting for specialcharges of $84 million for merger integration costs. Results weredown 12% from the previous quarter and down 41% from the firstquarter of 1998. The decrease reflected a substantial deteriorationin the trading environment, the company said.

May 12, 1999

Trading Boosts Barrett’s 1Q99 Results

Barrett Resources was one of the few independent producers ableto emerge from the first quarter with an increase in earningscompared to last year and it achieved the growth through gastrading operations. Revenues from Barrett’s trading division soared136% to $176 million in 1Q99 from 1Q98 and the division reported agross profit of $15.1 million compared to $4.9 million for theprior year first quarter. First quarter trading volumes increased156% to 96 Bcf, or about 1.07 Bcf/d. Barrett reported net income of$7.7 million, or 24 cents per diluted share, compared to $6.2million, or 19 cents per diluted share, for 1Q98.

May 6, 1999

Despite Huge Earnings Drop, Vastar Remains Bullish

Vastar Resources had a far better year in the field than it didin the commodity marketplace, reporting first-quarter 1999 netincome of $19 million, down from $48 million during the firstquarter of 1998. However, Vastar achieved a 24% increase inproduction and continued exploratory success, and is predictingbetter times ahead.

April 19, 1999

Despite Huge Earnings Drop, Vastar Remains Bullish

Vastar Resources had a far better year in the field than it didin the commodity marketplace, reporting first-quarter 1999 netincome of $19 million, down from $48 million during the firstquarter of 1998. However, Vastar achieved a 24% increase inproduction and continued exploratory success, and is predictingbetter times ahead.

April 16, 1999