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						Beyond windmills, Epoch's Van Valen looks for grid 
						improvements
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		 [November 06, 2019]  By 
		April Joyner and Ross Kerber 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - At a time when U.S. 
		utilities face pressure to rely more on renewable energy, a well-known 
		investor in the space said it is equally important to judge companies by 
		their spending on less glamorous areas like power lines and grid 
		reliability.
 
 Kera Van Valen, managing director and portfolio manager at Epoch 
		Investment Partners, said on Tuesday that she finds companies including 
		Ameren Corp and WEC Energy Group Inc appealing because of their 
		infrastructure spending.
 
 Those companies - and their regulators - understand that "you're going 
		to need to connect more and more to the alternative energy sources and 
		you need that distribution network to be able to do so," Van Valen said 
		at the Reuters Global Investment Outlook 2020 Summit in New York.
 
		
		 
		
 She said she had avoided holding California utilities, notably the 
		now-bankrupt PG&E Corp, on concerns that state officials were not 
		focused enough on areas like grid reliability. "We didn't feel the state 
		regulator was as constructive as some of the other states within the 
		U.S.," she said.
 
 Van Valen is a portfolio manager for Epoch's equity shareholder yield 
		strategies focused on areas like companies' dividends and buybacks. 
		Epoch managed $33.1 billion for clients as of Sept. 30.
 
 (For other news from the Reuters Global Investment Outlook 2020 Summit, 
		click on https://www.reuters.com/
 summit/investment20)
 
 Van Valen has been a long-standing holder of leading cigarette maker 
		Altria Group Inc, with a stake accounting for about 1% of her portfolio. 
		She defended the holding despite scrutiny of smokeless tobacco 
		technologies and public health concerns.
 
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			Kera Van Valen, managing director and portfolio manager at Epoch 
			Investment Partners, speaks during a Reuters investment summit in 
			New York City, U.S., November 5, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson 
            
			 
She said Altria and rivals have "tremendous pricing power." Even if sales 
volumes decline, "the pricing does allow for the company to generate growth and 
strong cash flows."
 Recent regulatory attention to vaping could ultimately benefit large tobacco 
companies, she said, given much of the concern stems from products made by 
smaller companies or illicit use.
 
 "Everybody wants to see this regulation come through. It actually could be quite 
beneficial to the large tobacco companies," she said.
 
 Van Valen said about 5% to 10% of her strategies' investors currently ask for a 
few holdings to be stripped out because of environmental, social or governance (ESG) 
issues. Despite her holdings in industries like tobacco, her portfolios still 
rate highly on some ESG metrics because they include many companies that are 
tightly overseen.
 
 "The reason we're more comfortable with them is they're following the 
regulations," she said.
 
 (Reporting by April Joyner and Ross Kerber; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
 
				 
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