Contact Energy shareholders will have to wait at least until the company's half-year result, due to be published in February, before learning of the board's approach to dealing with the growing cash pile the energy company will stack up into the future, now that it has finished investment in new power stations for the foreseeable future.
Speaking after today's annual meeting in Wellington, Contact chairman Grant King nominated higher dividends, share buybacks and a capital return as among the options that would be on the table, having earlier told the meeting "we don't envisage any new investment in new generation for quite some time."
The company has completed a seven-year $2 billion programme of investment that reoriented Contact away from its high dependence on natural gas-fired power stations to lower-cost renewable geothermal energy, with its $600 million Te Mihi geothermal power station commissioned earlier this year, and a so-called "retail transformation" project that has replaced the company's ageing customer relationship management systems.
King first raised the prospect of higher dividends or capital returns to shareholders at the 2012 annual meeting, and said today the Contact board would be "quite thoughtful about those matters and haven't seen fit today to signal we've made any particular decisions, which we haven't."
Asked when it would be reasonable for shareholders to expect announcements on capital management, King said: "Certainly, in February, when we announce the half year, the dividend decision will signal pretty much what the thinking of the board is.