2013 Fact Book 48th EEI Financial Conference
Transcription
2013 Fact Book 48th EEI Financial Conference
2013 Fact Book 48th EEI Financial Conference Orlando, Florida “Safe Harbor” Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 This presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Although AEP and each of its Registrant Subsidiaries believe that their expectations are based on reasonable assumptions, any such statements may be influenced by factors that could cause actual outcomes and results to be materially different from those projected. Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements are: the economic climate and growth or contraction within and changes in market demand and demographic patterns in our service territory, inflationary or deflationary interest rate trends, volatility in the financial markets, particularly developments affecting the availability of capital on reasonable terms and developments impairing our ability to finance new capital projects and refinance existing debt at attractive rates, the availability and cost of funds to finance working capital and capital needs, particularly during periods when the time lag between incurring costs and recovery is long and the costs are material, electric load, customer growth and the impact of retail competition, particularly in Ohio, weather conditions, including storms and drought conditions, and our ability to recover significant storm restoration costs through applicable rate mechanisms, available sources and costs of, and transportation for, fuels and the creditworthiness and performance of fuel suppliers and transporters, availability of necessary generating capacity and the performance of our generating plants, our ability to recover increases in fuel and other energy costs through regulated or competitive electric rates, our ability to build or acquire generating capacity, and transmission line facilities (including our ability to obtain any necessary regulatory approvals and permits) when needed at acceptable prices and terms and to recover those costs (including the costs of projects that are cancelled) through applicable rate cases or competitive rates, new legislation, litigation and government regulation including oversight of nuclear generation, energy commodity trading and new or heightened requirements for reduced emissions of sulfur, nitrogen, mercury, carbon, soot or particulate matter and other substances or additional regulation of fly ash and similar combustion products that could impact the continued operation and cost recovery of our plants and related assets, evolving public perception of the risks associated with fuels used before, during and after the generation of electricity, including nuclear fuel, a reduction in the federal statutory tax rate could result in an accelerated return of deferred federal income taxes to customers, timing and resolution of pending and future rate cases, negotiations and other regulatory decisions including rate or other recovery of new investments in generation, distribution and transmission service and environmental compliance, resolution of litigation, our ability to constrain operation and maintenance costs, our ability to develop and execute a strategy based on a view regarding prices of electricity and other energy-related commodities, prices and demand for power that we generate and sell at wholesale, changes in technology, particularly with respect to new, developing or alternative sources of generation, our ability to recover through rates or market prices any remaining unrecovered investment in generating units that may be retired before the end of their previously projected useful lives, volatility and changes in markets for capacity and electricity, coal, and other energy-related commodities, particularly changes in the price of natural gas, changes in utility regulation and the allocation of costs within regional transmission organizations, including PJM and SPP, the transition to market and the legal separation of generation in Ohio, including the implementation of ESPs and the successful approval, where applicable, and transfer of such Ohio generation assets and liabilities to regulated and nonregulated entities at book value, our ability to successfully manage negotiations with stakeholders and obtain regulatory approval to terminate the Interconnection Agreement, changes in the creditworthiness of the counterparties with whom we have contractual arrangements, including participants in the energy trading market, actions of rating agencies, including changes in the ratings of our debt, the impact of volatility in the capital markets on the value of the investments held by our pension, other postretirement benefit plans, captive insurance entity and nuclear decommissioning trust and the impact on future funding requirements, accounting pronouncements periodically issued by accounting standard-setting bodies and other risks and unforeseen events, including wars, the effects of terrorism (including increased security costs), embargoes, cyber security threats and other catastrophic events. Investor Relations Contacts 2 Bette Jo Rozsa Managing Director Investor Relations 614-716-2840 bjrozsa@aep.com Julie Sherwood Director Investor Relations 614-716-2663 jasherwood@aep.com Sara Macioch Analyst Investor Relations 614-716-2835 semacioch@aep.com AEP Overview (NYSE:AEP) OUR CORE BUSINESS OPERATIONS ARE REGULATED UTILITIES Provide generation, transmission and distribution services to approximately 5.3 million customers in eleven states with headquarters in Columbus, Ohio Our electric assets include: Approximately 37,600 megawatts of generating capacity in 3 RTOs (one of the largest US generation portfolios with a significant cost advantage in many of our market areas) Approximately 39,000 circuit miles of transmission lines, including 2,116 miles of 765kV lines, the backbone of the electric interconnection grid in the Eastern U.S. Approximately 222,000 miles of overhead and underground distribution lines With our coal and transportation assets we: control over 7,600 railcars own and/or operate approximately 3,100 hopper barges, 60 towboats and 25 harbor boats operate one active coal-handling terminal with 18 millions tons of capacity AEP consumes approximately 56 million tons of coal and 220,000,000 cubic feet of natural gas annually. 3 AEP Corporate Leadership Nicholas K. Akins - President and Chief Executive Officer Robert P. Powers - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Brian X. Tierney - Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Lisa M. Barton - Executive Vice President Transmission David M. Feinberg - Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary 4 Mark C. McCullough - Executive Vice President Generation Dennis E. Welch- Executive Vice President and Chief External Officer Charles E. Zebula- Executive Vice President, Energy Supply Lana L. Hillebrand- Senior Vice President and Chief Administrative Officer AEP Operational Structure* 5 * Does not represent legal structure AEP Service Territory VERTICALLY INTEGRATED UTILITIES Appalachian Power Company (APCo) Public Service Company of Oklahoma (PSO) Indiana Michigan Power Company (I&M) Southwestern Electric Power Company (SWEPCO) Kingsport Power Company (KGPCo) Kentucky Power Company (KPCo) Wheeling Power Company (WPCo) 6 AEP Service Territory TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION UTILITIES Ohio Power Company* (OPCo) Texas Central Company (TCC) Texas North Company (TNC) 7 * Wires only effective 01/01/2014 2012 Retail Revenue CUSTOMER PROFILE AEP’S SERVICE TERRITORY ENCOMPASSES APPROXIMATELY 5.3 MILLION CUSTOMERS IN 11 STATES Percentage of AEP System Retail Revenues Ohio Texas West Virginia Virginia Oklahoma Indiana Louisiana Kentucky Arkansas Michigan Tennessee 8 29% 13% 12% 12% 10% 9% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% Source: 2012 10-K. *Note: Figures do not include Other Revenues Revenue Composition by Customer Class* Residential Commercial Industrial Wholesale Top 10 Industrial Sectors Across the AEP System By NAICS Code 331 Primary Metal Manufacturing 325 Chemical Manufacturing 324 Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing 212 Mining (except Oil and Gas) 322 Paper Manufacturing 326 Plastics and Rubber Products Manufacturing 311 Food Manufacturing 336 Transportation Equipment Manufacturing 211 Oil and Gas Extraction 486 Pipeline Transportation % of Total Industrial Sales 20.8% 13.1% 11.2% 7.6% 6.3% 5.5% 4.4% 4.4% 4.2% 3.8% Generation Fleet 2013 Generation Capacity by Fuel Type (Including PPAs) Based on 42,535 MW Note: Includes 1,590MW Demand Response/Energy Efficiency 9 2012 Generation Production by Fuel Type (Owned Assets) Based on 159,921,676 MWh Transmission Line Circuit Miles Detail Operating Company Level (Circuit Miles) Operating Company APCo OPCo I&M KGPCo KPCo PSO SWEPCO TCC TNC WPCo Transco - Ohio Transco - OK Total 765kV 734 509 615 0 258 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,116 500kV 97 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 0 0 113 345kV 383 1,798 1,615 0 8 579 672 626 223 9 0 0 5,913 230kV 106 0 0 0 0 34 0 0 0 0 0 0 140 161kV 0 0 0 0 46 8 235 0 0 0 0 0 289 138kV 3,400 3,354 1,673 0 335 2,132 1,386 2,316 1,466 204 7 44 16,317 115kV 0 0 0 0 0 10 57 0 0 0 0 0 67 88kV 23 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 69kV 1,105 2,672 714 3 546 763 1,609 1,400 2,493 90 43 49 11,487 46kV 789 0 0 0 55 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 844 40kV 0 59 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 59 34.5kV 230 365 746 27 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,371 23kV 0 214 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 225 Total 6,867 8,971 5,363 30 1,251 3,526 3,959 4,342 4,182 319 61 93 38,964 State Level (Circuit Miles) State Arkansas Indiana Kentucky Louisiana Michigan Ohio Oklahoma Tennessee Texas W. Virginia Virginia Total 765kV 0 599 258 0 16 509 0 0 0 385 349 2,116 500kV 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 17 96 113 345kV 40 1,381 8 105 234 1,798 625 0 1,330 323 69 5,913 230kV 0 0 0 0 0 0 34 91 0 0 15 140 161kV 235 0 46 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 289 138kV 216 1,431 335 276 242 3,361 2,201 154 4,650 1,679 1,772 16,317 Note: Transmission line circuit miles are current as of 12/31/12 10 115kV 42 0 0 1 0 0 10 0 14 0 0 67 88kV 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 0 23 69kV 461 418 547 337 296 2,715 812 3 4,704 463 731 11,487 46kV 0 0 55 0 0 0 0 0 0 741 48 844 40kV 34.5kV 0 0 0 0 0 59 0 0 0 0 0 59 0 590 3 0 156 365 0 27 0 89 141 1,371 23kV 0 0 0 0 0 225 0 0 0 0 0 225 Total 994 4,419 1,252 719 944 9,032 3,690 275 10,698 3,720 3,221 38,964 Distribution Line Detail By State Tennessee Virginia W. Virginia Kentucky Ohio Michigan Indiana Texas Oklahoma Arkansas Louisiana Total Line Miles* 1,558 30,724 21,679 10,029 45,580 5,315 14,997 52,348 22,080 4,494 13,121 221,925 | | | | | | | | | | | Company Line Miles* KGPCo KPCo APCo OPCo I&M WPCo TCC TNC PSO SWEPCO 1,558 10,029 50,890 45,583 20,312 1,510 29,783 13,868 22,080 26,312 Total * Includes approximately 32,000 miles of underground circuit line Note: Distribution line miles are current as of 12/31/12 11 221,925 Rate Bases & ROEs Vertically Integrated Utilities APCo-Virginia APCo-West Virginia APCo - FERC APCo Total3 $ Proforma 2 Earned Approved Approved Effective Date of last ROE as of ROE Debt/Equity approved rate case 09/30/2013 10.90% 57/43 1/29/2012 10.00% 57/43 3/31/2011 10.23% 55/45 6/1/2013 7,813 8.8% KPCo-Kentucky 4 $ 1,752 Jurisdiction Rate Base 1 ($ millions) 8.5% I&M-Indiana I&M-Michigan I&M - FERC I&M Total $ 3,474 8.4% PSO-Oklahoma $ 2,552 11.1% SWEPCO-Louisiana SWEPCO-Arkansas SWEPCO-Texas SWEPCO - FERC SWEPCO Total $ 4,522 Transmission and Distribution Companies Jurisdiction AEP Ohio - Distribution AEP Ohio - Transmission AEP Ohio total TCC-Texas TNC-Texas AEP Texas Total Transcos Company 12 AEP Ohio Transco AEP Indiana Michigan Transco AEP Oklahoma Transco 10.50% 57/435 6/29/2010 10.20% 10.20% 9.98% 48/52 49/51 47/53 2/28/2013 3/29/2012 6/1/2013 10.15% 54/46 1/31/2011 10.00% 6 10.25% 9.65% 11.10% 49/51 54/46 51/49 50/50 2/28/2013 11/25/2009 1/29/2013 1/1/2013 7.5% $ Proforma 2 Earned Approved Approved Effective Date of last 1 ROE as of Rate base represents Net Plant less ROE Debt/Equity approved rate case Accumulated Deferred Income taxes 09/30/2013 10.20% 47/53 1/1/2012 from Ferc Form 1 11.49% 45/55 7/1/2013 2 Proforma adjusts GAAP results by 4,403 12.3% eliminating any material nonrecurring $ $ $ 2,439 901 3,340 Rate Base 1 ($ millions) 9.96% 9.96% 60/40 60/40 8/28/2013 1/25/2013 items and is not weather normalized 3 4 2 Includes Amos Unit 3 Includes 50% of Mitchell Plant 5 Proforma Earned Represents a negotiated settlement Approved Approved Effective Date of last ROE as of ROE Debt/Equity approved rate case 6 Represents the midpoint of the ROE 09/30/2013 462 9.0% 11.49% 50/50 7/1/2013 range approved in the formula rate case 104 11.9% 11.49% 50/50 7/1/2013 settled in February 2013 164 10.0% 11.20% 50/50 7/1/2013 Rate Base 1 ($ millions) $ $ $ 14.4% 9.3% Summary of Rate Case Filing Requirements Texas Virginia West Virginia FERC No No No No Yes No No No No Yes Annually Annually TriAnnually Annually Annually -- Yes 30 Yes 45 Yes 30 No Note 5 Yes 60 Yes 30 No No Forecast Optional Partially Projected Historical Historical Historical Historical Historical Forecast Optional Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes 4 Note 3 9 6 6 6 Note 6 Note 7 2 or 7 Arkansas Indiana GENERAL Time Limitations Between Cases Pancaking Permitted (Note 1) No No Yes No No No No No No No Note 4 Limited No No Fuel Clause Renewal Frequency Annually SemiAnnually Monthly Monthly Annually Quarterly Yes 60 Yes Varies Yes 28 No n/a Optional 45 Partially Projected Forecast Optional Other Rates Effective Subject to Refund Yes Yes Yes Approx. # of months after filing to implement rates subject to refund 10 Note 2 6 Notice of Intent Prior PSC Notice Required? Notice Period (days) Kentucky Louisiana Michigan Ohio Oklahoma Tennessee CASE COMPONENTS Base Case Test Year Historical Historical Note 1: Pancaking refers to paying multiple charges to more than one utility to transmit electric power across bulk-power systems. It impacts wholesale customers who are obligated to pay each transmission owner a separate rate to pass through. Note 2: If the Commission doesn't issue an order within 300 days (10 months) or doesn't extend the 300 days by an additional 60 days, I&M can implement 50% of the proposed rate increase, subject to refund. Note 3: If no order is received within 180 days of the filing, utility can implement interim rates, however they can not be implemented before the start of the test year. Note 4: In 2011 Ohio Distribution case settlement, AEP Ohio agreed not to file another distribution case until 2014 for rates to be effective no sooner than June 1 ,2015. Note 5: Notice is required for each municipality having original jurisdiction 30-days prior to filing. Note 6: Rates are put into effect approximately 10 months after filing, but are not subject to refund. Note 7: Rates are put into effect approximately 9 months after filing, but are not subject to refund. 13 Recovery Mechanisms Across Jurisdictions * Previously, for certain jurisdictions confirmation with the applicable Commission concerning replacement of CAIR with CSAPR may have been necessary. CSAPR was vacated; CAIR remains in effect ** SSO has component for environmental recovery through the transition period ending 05/31/2015. FAC goes through 5/31/2015 *** Also applicable for AEP-Texas AER - Alternative Energy Rider BR - Base Rates CCTR - Clean Coal Technology Rider CO2 - Carbon Dioxide DSM - Demand Side Management EAC - Environmental Adjustment Clause ECCR - Environmental Compliance Cost Rider ECR - Energy Cost Recovery Rider EE - Energy Efficiency EE/PDR - EE Peak Demand Reduction EECR - EE Cost Rate EECRF - Energy Efficiency Cost Recovery Factor Rider 14 ENEC - Expanded Net Energy Cost ERAC - Environmental Rate Adjustment Clause ESRR - Enhanced Service Reliability Rider FAC - Fuel Adjustment Clause FRP - Formula Rate Plan GHG - Green House Gas N/A - not applicable in this jurisdiction NOx - Nitrogen Oxide OATT - Open Access Transmission Tariff PPAR - Purchased Power Adjustment Rider PPC - Purchased Power Capacity Rider PSCR - Power Supply Cost Recovery Rider RAC - Rate Adjustment Clause REP - Renewable Energy Plan RPS-RAC - Renewable Portfolio Standard RAC RVU - Reliability Vegetation / Underground Rider SO2 - Sulfur Dioxide SSO - Standard Service Offer TCRF - Transmission Cost Recovery Factor TCRR - Transmission Cost Recovery Rider TRAC - Transmission Rate Adjustment Clause Storm Recovery Mechanisms by Jurisdiction STATE 15 Deferral Detail Arkansas Yes Storm expense is normally recorded as incurred without deferral although if it is a significant storm expense the commission has granted authority to defer and recover. Indiana Yes Recovery of storm costs is requested in base rate cases. Kentucky Yes Recovery of storm costs is requested in base rate cases. Louisiana No Storm costs are expensed and included in developing future formula rates. Amounts are not deferred. Michigan No Recovery of storm costs is requested in base rate cases. Ohio Yes 2012 Electric Security Plan and 2011 Distribution Base Case orders established a major storm $5M reserve and an over/under recovery mechanism. Oklahoma Yes Recovery of storm costs is requested in base rate cases. Significant storms are addressed in separate proceedings. Tennessee Yes May recover costs through base rate case or a separate mechanism. Texas (SPP) Yes Storm expense is normally recorded as incurred without deferral although if a test period includes a significant storm expense and authority is granted to defer costs it may be deferred for recovery. Texas (TNC) No Storm expense is normally recorded as incurred without deferral and is included in base rates during the test year. Texas (TCC) Yes Approved catastrophe reserve in base rates that allows deferral of all major storm O&M above $500K. Virginia Yes Deferral of major storm damages dependent on APCo’s VA Retail earned return on equity. Recovery of deferrals, if any, would be requested in a base case. West Virginia Yes Recovery of storm costs is requested in base rate cases. Renewable Portfolio/Energy Efficiency Standards Energy Efficiency Standards: Ohio: 22% reduction of retail electricity sales by 2025 phased in beginning in 2009 Indiana: 2% electricity sales reduction by 2019 phased in starting in 2010 Michigan – M: phase in starting at 2% in 2012 increasing to 10% by 2015 Michigan: 1% annual reduction of previous year retail sales by 2012 Texas: 25% reduction in annual growth in demand 2012; 30% reduction in annual growth in demand 2013 Virginia: 10% electricity savings by 2022 relative to 2006 base sales (voluntary) Ohio – M: phase in starting at 0.5% in 2009 increasing to 25% by 2024 Indiana – V: phase in starting at 4% in 2013 increasing to 10% by 2025 Oklahoma – V: goal of 15% by 2015 West Virginia – M: phase in starting at 10% in 2015 increasing to 25% by 2024 Virginia – V: phase in starting at 4% in 2010 increasing to 15% by 2025 Louisiana – pilot program to determine whether a standard is suitable Texas – M: starting at 2,280MW in 2007 increasing to 10,000MW statewide by 2025 There are no renewable portfolio standards in Tennessee , Kentucky or Arkansas currently 16 M: Mandatory V: Voluntary Jurisdictional Off-System Sales Sharing Summary STATE Detail Arkansas Yes, above and Up to $758,600 annual margin, ratepayers receive 100%. From $758,601 to $1,167,078, below base levels ratepayers receive 85%. Above $1,167,078, ratepayers receive 50%. Indiana Yes, above and Sharing occurs above and below levels included in base rates of $26.9M, ratepayers below base levels receive 50%. Kentucky* Yes, below base Below levels included in base rates of $15,290,363, ratepayers receive 100%. Above levels ratepayers receive zero. Louisiana Yes, above base Up to $874,000 annual margin, ratepayers receive 100%. From $874,001 to $1,314,000, levels ratepayers receive 85%. Above $1,314,000, ratepayers receive 50%. Michigan Ohio 17 OSS Sharing? Yes No Oklahoma Yes Tennessee No 80% of profits are shared with ratepayers. n/a 75% of profits are shared with ratepayers. n/a Texas (SPP) Yes 90% of profits are shared with ratepayers. Virginia Yes 75% of profits are shared with ratepayers. West Virginia Yes 100% of profits passed back to ratepayers through the Expanded Net Energy Cost (ENEC) clause. * Effective 01/01/2014 Commission Overview Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Commissioners Number: 5 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 5 Years Political Makeup: R: 2 D: 3 Qualifications for Commissioners The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is composed of up to five commissioners who are appointed by the President of the United States with the advice and consent of the Senate. Commissioners serve five-year terms, and have an equal vote on regulatory matters. To avoid any undue political influence or pressure, no more than three commissioners may belong to the same political party. Commissioners Jon Wellinghoff, Chairman (Dem.), since 2006; term expired June 2013. Chairman Wellinghoff is an energy law specialist with more than 30 years experience in the field. Before joining FERC, he was in private practice and focused exclusively on client matters related to renewable energy, energy efficiency and distributed generation. While in the private sector, Chairman Wellinghoff represented an array of clients from federal agencies, renewable developers, and large consumers of power to energy efficient product manufacturers and clean energy advocacy organizations. Phillip D. Moeller, Commissioner (Rep.), since 2006; term expires June 2015. From 1997 through 2000, Mr. Moeller served as an energy policy advisor to U.S. Senator Slade Gorton (R-Washington) where he worked on electricity policy, electric system reliability, hydropower, energy efficiency, nuclear waste, energy and water appropriations and other energy legislation. Before becoming a Commissioner, Mr. Moeller headed the Washington, D.C., office of Alliant Energy Corporation. Prior to Alliant Energy, Mr. Moeller worked in the Washington office of Calpine Corporation. Sheryl A. LaFleur, Commissioner (Dem.) since 2010; term expires June 2014. Retired in 2007 as executive vice president and acting CEO of National Grid USA, responsible for the delivery of electricity to 3.4 million customers in the Northeast. Her previous positions at National Grid and its predecessor New England Electric System included COO, president of New England distribution and general counsel. She practiced law in Boston earlier in her career, and has been a community and nonprofit leader. John R. Norris, Commissioner (Dem.) since 2010: term expires June 2017. Most recently served as Chief of Staff to Secretary Tom Vilsack of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Prior to joining the USDA, he served as Chairman of the Iowa Utilities Board (IUB) from 2005 to 2009. During his tenure as IUB Chairman, Commissioner Norris served on the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) Electricity Committee and was Co-Chair of the 2009 National Electricity Delivery Forum. Tony Clark, Commissioner (Rep.) since 2012: term expires June 2016. Most recently served as Chairman of the North Dakota Public Service Commission. In November 2010, Commissioner Clark was elected to serve a one-year term as President of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC). He is a graduate of North Dakota State University and holds an MPA from the University of North Dakota. 18 Overview President and Chief Operating Officer: Charles Patton Since July 2010 18 years with AEP Appalachian Power Company (APCo) ( organized in Virginia in 1926) is engaged in the generation, transmission and distribution of electric power to approximately 960,000 retail customers in the southwestern portion of Virginia and southern West Virginia, and in supplying and marketing electric power at wholesale to other electric utility companies, municipalities and other market participants. At December 31, 2012, APCo and its wholly owned subsidiaries had 2,128 employees. APCo is a member of PJM. Total Customers at 12/31/12: Residential 816,000 Commercial 133,000 Industrial 4,000 Other 7,000 Total PRINCIPAL INDUSTRIES SERVED: Coal Mining Primary Metals Chemical Manufacturing Paper Manufacturing Pipeline Transportation Owned Generating Capacity 7,018 MW Generating Capacity by Fuel Mix: • Coal: 72.6% • Hydro/Pump: 11.4% • Natural Gas: 16.0% Transmission Miles Distribution Miles 19 960,000 6,867 50,890 Financial & Operational Data CAPITAL STRUCTURE (in thousands) CAPITAL STRUCTURE Credit Ratings/Outlook 2012 Equity Debt Capitalization Per Balance Sheet % of Capitalization Per Balance Sheet 3,876,407 55.9% 3,052,562 44.1% FFO Interest Coverage FFO Total Debt Total Debt 6,928,969 3,704,693 100.0% 54.5% 4.34 17.0% 9/30/2013 Equity Total 3,088,041 45.5% 6,792,734 100.0% Moody's S&P Fitch Baa2/S BBB/S BBB/S 4.79^ 19.3% ^ - calculated on rolling 12-month avg. Capital Expenditures (in millions) 2013 Asset Data * (in thousands) Excludes AFUDC As of 9/30/13 2012A 2013E 2014E 2015E 2016E $ 462 $ 361 $ 527 $ 548 $ 561 Total Assets $ 10,321,166 Net Plant Assets $ 8,159,605 Cash Operating Information** 2012 retail electric sales in megawatt-hours 2012 firm wholesale sales in megawatt-hours 2012 average cost per kilowatt-hour (residential) 2012 System Peak – January 4 $ 4,130 29,785,880 3,386,617 10.18 cents 6,881MW Sources: * 3Q13 Form 10-Q (unaudited) ** 2012 FERC Form 1 20 Customer Statistics APPALACHIAN AREA TYPICAL BILL COMPARISON ** INVESTOR OWNED UTILITIES * West Virginia West Virginia Customers APCo 439,206 Monongahela Power 386,819 Potomac Edison 136,045 AEP – Wheeling 41,099 Virginia APCo Customers Virginia $/month Potomac Edison 95.13 Kentucky Utilities 93.35 Monongahela Power 95.13 Dominion Virginia 105.32 APCo 96.76 APCo 112.69 AEP – Wheeling 96.76 Tennessee AEP – Kingsport $/Month 86.27 521,923 Dominion Virginia 2,319,501 Kentucky Utilities 29,250 Tennessee AEP - Kingsport ** Typical bills are displayed in $/month, based on 1,000 kWh of residential usage. Billing amounts sourced from the EEI Typical Bills and Average Rates Report as of January 1, 2013. Customers 47,436 * Customer counts are as of December 31, 2011 and were sourced from table 10 at http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/esr/esr_sum.html Top 10 Customers = 27% of industrial sales Metropolitan areas account for 52% of ultimate sales 117 persons per square mile (U.S. = 87) (Data for 12 months ended December 2012) 21 $/month MAJOR CUSTOMERS: Roanoke Cement Co. LLC (VA) Greif Brothers Corporation (VA) Steel of WV, Inc. (WV) WVA Manufacturing (WV) Roanoke Electric Steel Corporation (VA) Georgia-Pacific Corporation (VA) Bayer Crop Science LP (WV) Felman Production (WV) Constellium Rolled Products (WV) The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. (VA) (Data for year ended December 2012) Generation Plant Name Appalachian Power Company Buck Byllesby Claytor Leesville London Marmet Niagara Reusens Winfield Smith Mountain Amos (Units 1&2) Clinch River^* Glen Lyn^* Kanawha River^ Mountaineer Sporn (Units 1&3)^* Dresden Ceredo Units 3 4 4 2 3 3 2 5 3 5 2 3 2 2 1 2 1 6 VA VA VA VA WV WV VA VA WV VA WV VA VA WV WV WV OH WV State Fuel Type Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Pumped Storage Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Natural Gas Natural Gas * Plants on extended start-up: Clinch River Unit 3, Glen Lyn Units 5&6, Sporn Unit 3 Net Maximum Capacity Year Plant (MW) Commissioned 9 22 76 50 14 14 2 13 15 586 2,033 705 335 400 1,320 300 608 516 7,018 1912 1912 1939 1964 1935 1935 1906 1904 1938 1965 1971 1958 1918 1953 1980 1950 2012 2001 ^ To be retired: all units at Glen Lyn, Kanawha River, and Sporn, Clinch River Unit 3 (235MW), Project Name State Renewable Type Long-Term Renewable Purchase Power Agreements Camp Grove IL Beech Ridge WV Fowler Ridge III IN Grand Ridge II and III IL 22 Wind Wind Wind Wind Net Maximum Capacity (MW) 75 100 100 100 375 Contract Initiated 2008 2009 2009 2009 Commission Overview Virginia State Corporation Commission Commissioners Number: 3 Appointed/Elected: Elected Term: 6 Years Political Makeup: R: 2 D: 1 Qualifications for Commissioners The Virginia State Corporation Commission (VSCC) is composed of three members elected by the General Assembly. Commissioners are elected to serve sixyear terms, staggered in two year increments. The chair rotates annually among the three commissioners on February 1. Commissioners Mark C. Christie, (Rep.), since 2004; current term expires 2016. Prior counsel to the Speaker of the House of delegates of the Virginia General Assembly. Lawyer, private practice. Law degree from Georgetown. Judith Williams Jagdmann, (Rep.), since 2006; current term expires 2018. Law degree from T.C. Williams School of Law at the University of Richmond. Served as Deputy Attorney General for Civil Litigation Division from 1998 to 2005. Attorney General for Commonwealth of Virginia from 2005 to 2006. James C. Dimitri, Chairman, (Dem.), since 2008; current term expires 2014. Prior to being named Commissioner, Dimitri was in private practice in Richmond. From 1994 to 2000 he served as Senior Counsel, then General Counsel at the SCC. He was an assistant Attorney General from 1983 to 1987. Dimitri received his undergraduate degree in economics from the University of Virginia and his J.D. from the Boston University School of Law. AEP Regulatory Status APCo-VA provides retail electric service in Virginia at unbundled rates. In 2007, the General Assembly passed legislation re-establishing retail rate regulation in the Commonwealth. The legislation provides for biennial rate reviews beginning in 2009, sharing of off-system sales margins at a rate of a minimum of 25% retained by the company effective July 1, 2007 and a post-2008 rider for DSM, renewable programs and new generation. APCo-VA is entitled to adjustments to fuel rates to recover its actual fuel costs, the fuel component of its purchased power costs and certain capacity charges. Virginia currently has a voluntary renewable energy standard which is phased in starting at 4% and increasing to 10% from 2010 - 2025 . The next biennial filing is due March 31, 2014. 23 Commission Overview Public Service Commission of West Virginia Commissioners Number: 3 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 6 Years Political Makeup: R: 1 D: 2 Qualifications for Commissioners The West Virginia Public Service Commission (WVPSC) consists of three members, appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the senate. No more than two members of the commission may belong to the same political party. The Commissioners serve six year staggered terms, with one term expiring as of July 1 of each odd numbered year. One Commissioner is designated as Chairman of the Commission by the Governor. The Chairman serves as the chief fiscal officer of the Commission. Commissioners Michael A. Albert, Chairman (Rep.), since 2007; term expires June 2019. Served as a member in the Business Law Department of Jackson Kelly. President and Chairman of the board of directors of the Kanawha County Public Library. Bachelor’s degree and Doctorate of Jurisprudence, West Virginia University. Jon W. McKinney, Commissioner (Dem.), since 2005; term expired June 2011. Currently on the board of directors of the NARUC and second VP of the MidAtlantic Conference of Regulated Utilities Commissioners. Formerly served as plant manager of Flexsys’ Nitro, W .V. operations, chairman of Chemical Industry Committee for W.V., board member of W.V. Chamber of Commerce, W.V. Manufacturer’s Association, Chemical Alliance Zone, W.V. Roundtable, Advantage Valle, St. Francis Hospital & Thomas Memorial Hospital. Ryan B. Palmer, Commissioner (Dem.), since 2010; term expires June 2015. Served as Deputy General Counsel to West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin, III; as Attorney/Advisor to Commissioner Charlotte R. Lane of the United States International Trade Commission and Law Clerk to the Honorable W. Craig Broadwater of the United States District Court, Northern District of West Virginia. Bachelor’s degree and Doctorate of Jurisprudence, West Virginia University. AEP Regulatory Status APCo and Wheeling Power in WV provide retail electric service at bundled rates approved by the WV PSC. West Virginia has an active annual ENEC (Expanded Net Energy Cost) mechanism, which provides for a rate adjustment for fuel costs, among other items. West Virginia also has a special construction surcharge permitted, primarily related to environmental-related construction. West Virginia currently has a renewable energy standard which is phased in starting at 10% and increasing to 25% from 2015-2025. 24 Commission Overview Tennessee Regulatory Authority Commissioners Number: 5 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 6 Years Qualifications for Commissioners The Tennessee Regulatory Authority (TRA) directors are appointed, one each, by the Governor, Lieutenant Governor (as Speaker of the Senate), Speaker of the House and two joint appointments by the three together, and are confirmed by the Tennessee General Assembly. The directors are appointed for six and three-year staggered terms. The chairmanship rotates every year in an agreed upon decision by the directors. Commissioners James M. Allison, Chairman, since 2012; current term expires June 2018. Allison is an accomplished utility executive with over 35 years industry management experience. His career has spanned all sectors of the utility industry with service at the officer/CEO level. He has served on numerous corporate boards and governing bodies including experience working with Public Service Commissions in six states. Herbert H Hilliard, Vice-Chairman, since 2012; current term expires June 2017. Former Executive Vice President and Chief Government Relations Officer for Frist Horizon National Corporation. Serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors of The National Civil Rights Museum, Board member of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee and Commissioner for the Memphis Shelby County Airport Authority. BBA in Personnel Administration and Industrial Relations from University of Memphis. David Jones, Director, since 2012; current term expires June 2018. President of Complete Holding Group. Certified facilitator/executive coach with the Alternative Board. BS in Business from University of Tennessee, Knoxville and an MBA from the University of Houston. Kenneth C. Hill, Director (Rep.), since 2009; current term expires June 2014. At the time of his appointment to the TRA, Hill was Chief Executive Officer of Appalachian Educational Communication Corporation and served as General Manager of five radio stations reaching portions of East Tennessee and four surrounding states. Doctor of Religious Education, Andersonville Baptist Seminary. Robin Bennett, Director (), since 2013; current term expires June 2014. Vice President and financial center manager for First Tennessee bank. Member Chattanooga Bar Association Auxiliary. Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration-Finance from the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga. AEP Regulatory Status No deregulation legislation and no base rate freeze or cap. Tennessee has an active fuel clause. 25 Debt Schedules Appalachian Power Company 26 Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Pollution Control Bond 3.250% 05/01/2019 95648NAB3 $30,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 3.250% 05/01/2019 95648NAC1 $40,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.625% 11/01/2021 782470AR9 $17,500,000 Pollution Control Bond 2.000% 1 10/1/2022 575200BA7 $100,000,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 2/1/20362 95648VAL3 $50,275,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 2/1/20362 95648VAK5 $75,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 5.375% 12/01/2038 95648VAS8 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 2.250% 1/1/20413 95648VAT6 $65,350,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 12/1/20424 95648VAP4 $54,375,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 4 12/1/2042 95648VAQ2 $50,000,000 Senior Notes 4.950% 02/01/2015 037735CB1 $200,000,000 Senior Notes 3.400% 05/24/2015 037735CQ8 $300,000,000 Senior Notes 5.000% 06/01/2017 037735CD7 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 7.950% 01/15/2020 037735CP0 $350,000,000 Senior Notes 4.600% 03/30/2021 037735CR6 $350,000,000 Senior Notes 5.950% 05/15/2033 037735BZ9 $200,000,000 Senior Notes 5.800% 10/01/2035 037735CE5 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 6.375% 04/01/2036 037735CG0 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 6.700% 08/15/2037 037735CK1 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 7.000% 04/01/2038 037735CM7 $500,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.62% 1 Put date 10/01/2014 2 Put date 03/17/2015 3 Put date 09/01/2016 4 Put date 03/24/2014 $3,432,500,000 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * PPN – Private Placement Number Overview President and Chief Operating Officer: Paul Chodak Since July 2010 12 years with AEP Indiana Michigan Power Company (I&M) (organized in Indiana in 1907) is engaged in the generation, transmission and distribution of electric power to approximately 584,000 retail customers in northern and eastern Indiana and southwestern Michigan, and in supplying and marketing electric power at wholesale to other electric utility companies, rural electric cooperatives, municipalities and other market participants. At December 31, 2012, I&M had 2,649 employees. I&M is a member of PJM. Total Customers at 12/31/12: Residential 508,000 Commercial 69,000 Industrial 5,000 Other 2,000 Total 584,000 Owned Generating Capacity 4,518MW Generating Capacity by Fuel Mix: PRINCIPAL INDUSTRIES SERVED: Primary Metals Chemical Manufacturing Transportation Equipment Plastics and Rubber Products Fabricated Metal Products 27 • Coal: 51.0% • Nuclear: 48.5% • Hydro: Transmission Miles Distribution Miles 0.5% 5,363 20,312 Financial & Operational Data CAPITAL STRUCTURE (in thousands) Credit Ratings/Outlook CAPITAL STRUCTURE 2012 Equity Debt Capitalization Per Balance Sheet % of Capitalization Per Balance Sheet 2,057,666 53.3% 1,803,775 46.7% FFO Interest Coverage FFO Total Debt Total Debt 3,861,441 2,271,613 100.0% 54.4% 4.53 21.4% 9/30/2013 Equity 1,902,579 45.6% Total 4,174,192 100.0% Moody's S&P Fitch Baa2/S BBB/S BBB/S 4.79^ 20.6% ^ - calculated on rolling 12-month avg. Capital Expenditures (in millions) 2013 Asset Data * (in thousands) Excludes AFUDC As of 9/30/13 Total Assets 2012A 2013E 2014E 2015E 2016E $ 383 $ 456 $ 444 $ 454 $ 488 $ 8,187,792 Net Plant Assets $ 4,900,559 ` Cash Operating Information** 2012 retail electric sales in megawatt-hours 2012 firm wholesale sales in megawatt-hours 2012 average cost per kilowatt-hour (residential) 2012 System Peak – July 6 $ 18,403,788 5,036,929 8.74 cents 4,726MW Sources: * 3Q13 Form 10-Q (unaudited) ** 2012 FERC Form 1 28 1,798 Customer Statistics INDIANA & MICHIGAN INVESTOR OWNED UTILITIES * Indiana TYPICAL BILL COMPARISON ** Customers Indiana Michigan $/month I&M 454,952 I&M 86.24 I&M 101.89 IP & L 468,195 IP & L 98.18 Consumers Energy 129.43 NIPSCO 456,953 Duke Energy Indiana 112.16 Detroit Edison 149.81 Duke Energy Indiana 782,879 NIPSCO 132.15 SIGECo 146,136 SIGECo 152.88 Michigan I&M Customers 127,844 Consumers Energy 1,779,1841,788,799 Detroit Edison 2,156,2142,122,473 ** Typical bills are displayed in $/month, based on 1,000 kWh of residential usage. Billing amounts sourced from the EEI Typical Bills and Average Rates Report as of January 1, 2013. * Customer counts are as of December 31, 2011 and were sourced from table 10 at http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/esr/esr_sum.html Top 10 Customers = 45% of industrial sales Metropolitan areas account for 67% of ultimate sales 205 persons per square mile (U.S. = 87) (Data for 12 months ended December 2012) 29 $/month MAJOR CUSTOMERS: Steel Dynamics Inc. (IN) Metal Technologies Inc. (MI) American Axle and Mfg. Co, Inc. (MI) IN TEK (IN) Rettenmaier USA LP (MI) Saint Gobain Containers Inc. (IN) White Pigeon Paper Company (MI) Air Products & Chemicals. Inc. (IN) The Minute Maid Company (MI) BOC Gases (IN) (Data for year ended December 2012) Generation Plant Name Units Indiana Michigan Power Company Berrien Springs 12 Buchanan 10 Constantine 4 Elkhart 3 Mottville 4 Twin Branch 6 Rockport 2 Tanners Creek^* 4 Cook 2 State MI MI MI IN MI IN IN IN MI Fuel Type Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Nuclear Net Maximum Capacity Year Plant (MW) Commissioned 7 4 1 3 2 5 1,310 995 2,191 4,518 1908 1919 1921 1913 1923 1904 1984 1951 1975 * Plants on extended start-up: Tanners Creek Units 1&2 ^ Plants to be retired Project Name State Renewable Type Net Maximum Capacity (MW) Contract Initiated Long-Term Renewable Purchase Power Agreements Fowler Ridge I Fowler Ridge II Wildcat Headwaters IN IN IN IN # Under contract but not yet on-line, expected 2015 30 Wind Wind Wind Wind 100 50 100 200 450 2009 2009 2012 # Commission Overview Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission Commissioners Number: 5 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 4 Years Political Makeup: R: 3 D: 2 Qualifications for Commissioners Five members, appointed by the Governor from among persons nominated by a legislatively mandated utility commission nominating committee; four-year, staggered terms, full-time positions. Not more than three of the members of the IURC shall be members of the same political party. At least one of the commissioners must be an attorney qualified to practice law before the Indiana Supreme Court. The Governor appoints one of the five as chairperson. Commissioners James D. Atterholt, Chairman (Rep.), since 2009; current term ends April 2017. Prior to joining the Commission, he was the State Insurance Commissioner for more than four years where he also served as a member of the Governor’s Cabinet. Atterholt worked as Director of Government Affairs for AT&T--Indiana from 2003 – 2004. Holds a Bachelors degree from the University of Wisconsin. David E. Ziegner, Commissioner (Dem.), since 1990; current term ends April 2015. Lawyer, staff attorney for Legislative Services Agency, General Counsel for IURC. Treasurer of NARUC, vice-chair NARUC Committee on Electricity and former chairman of the NARUC clean coal and carbon sequestration subcommittee. Law degree from the Indiana University School of Law in Indianapolis. Larry S. Landis, Commissioner (Rep.), since 2002; current term ends December 2015. Former president of a marketing and communications agency, VP Corporate Advertising, American Fletcher National Bank. Bachelor’s degrees in political science and economics. Carolene R. Mays, Commissioner (Dem.), since 2010; current term ends December 2013. Former publisher and president of the Indianapolis Recorder Newspaper and the Indiana Minority Business Magazine. From 2002 to 2008, served in the Indiana House of Representatives and sat on the committees for Small Business and Economic Development, Ways and Means and Public Health. Kari A. E. Bennett, Commissioner (Rep.), since 2011;current term ends March 2014. Prior to joining the Commission, she was chief legal counsel of the Indiana Department of Natural Resources. From 2005 to 2007 she was Policy Director for Environments and Natural Resources for Indiana Governor Daniels. She graduated from Miami University of Ohio with a degree in environmental science and received her Juris Doctorate from the University of Minnesota. AEP Regulatory Status I&M–Indiana provides retail electric service at bundled rates approved by the IURC. Rates are set on a cost-of-service basis with a fuel recovery mechanism. I&M–Indiana has trackers in place for PJM expenses, OSS sharing, clean coal technology, environmental, nuclear life cycle management and DSM. Indiana currently has a voluntary renewable standard which phases in starting at 4% and ending at 10% from 2013-2025. 31 Commission Overview Michigan Public Service Commission Commissioners Number: 3 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 6 Years Political Makeup: I: 2 R: 1 Qualifications for Commissioners The Michigan Public Service Commission (MPSC) is composed of three members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. Commissioners are appointed to serve staggered six-year terms. No more than two commissioners may represent the same political party. One commissioner is designated as chairman by the Governor. Commissioners John D. Quackenbush, Chairman (Rep), since 2011; current term expires July 2017. Former managing director and senior investment analyst at UBS Global Asset Management responsible for equity research of transportation, utilities and coal industries in the US and Canada. Undergraduate degree in business economics from Calvin College and master’s degree in finance from Michigan State University. Sally Talberg, Commissioner (Ind), since 2013; current term expires July 2019. Former senior consultant at Public Sector Consultants. Previously served as an analyst at the MPSC, managed enforcement and contested cases at the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality and advised commissioners at the Public Utility Commission of Texas. Holds a bachelor of science from Michigan State University and a master’s of Public Administration from the University of Texas – Austin.. Greg R. White, Commissioner, (Ind.) , since 2009; current term expires July 2015. Former legislative liaison for the MPSC and liaison for the MPSC to the Michigan Department of Energy, Labor and Economic Growth. Holds a bachelor of science from Michigan State University and master’s of public administration from Grand Valley State University. AEP Regulatory Status Customer choice began January 2002. Generation was not deregulated. Retail rates were unbundled (though they continue to be regulated) to allow customers to evaluate generation costs. In 2008, legislation was enacted to limit customer choice load to no more than 10% of the annual retail load for the preceding calendar year but there is currently active legislation attempting to increase this cap. I&M-Michigan has an active fuel clause and return on CWIP can be included in base rates. Michigan currently has a mandatory renewable energy standard which phases in starting at 2% and ending at 10% from 20122015 . 32 Debt Schedules Indiana Michigan Power Company Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Floating 10/01/20191 520453AL5 $25,000,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 2 11/01/2021 520453AK7 $52,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.625% 06/01/2025 773835AV5 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 6.250% 06/01/20253 773835BF9 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 6.250% 06/01/20253 773835BE2 $50,000,000 Nuclear Fuel Lease 5.440% 10/01/2013 N/A $7,865,587 Nuclear Fuel Lease 4.000% 10/13/2014 N/A $13,298,845 Nuclear Fuel Lease Floating 06/07/2015 N/A $14,279,766 Nuclear Fuel Lease 2.120% 05/01/2016 N/A $18,113,241 Nuclear Fuel Lease Floating 05/01/2016 N/A $26,153,507 Nuclear Fuel Lease Floating 10/27/2016 N/A $60,116,617 Nuclear Fuel Lease Floating 10/27/2016 N/A $93,149,930 Term Loan Floating 05/15/2015 45488QAA6 $105,913,672 Senior Notes 5.050% 11/15/2014 454889AK2 $175,000,000 Senior Notes 5.650% 12/01/2015 454889AL0 $125,000,000 Senior Notes 7.000% 03/15/2019 454889AN6 $475,000,000 Senior Notes 6.050% 03/15/2037 454889AM8 $400,000,000 Senior Notes 3.200% 03/15/2023 454889 AP1 $250,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.653% Pollution Control Bond 1 Put date is 03/22/2015 2 Put date is 03/16/2015 3 Put date is 06/02/2014 $1,990,891,165 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * Private Placement Number 33 Overview President and Chief Operating Officer: Greg Pauley Since August 2010 39 years with AEP Kentucky Power Company (KPCo) (organized in Kentucky in 1919) is engaged in the generation, transmission and distribution of electric power to approximately 173,000 retail customers in an area in eastern Kentucky, and in supplying and marketing electric power at wholesale to other electric utility companies, municipalities and other market participants. At December 31, 2012, KPCo had 392 employees. KPCo is a member of PJM. Total Customers at 12/31/12: Residential 141,000 Commercial 30,000 Industrial 1,500 Other 500 Total 173,000 Owned Generating Capacity* 1,078 MW Big Sandy Plant – Louisa, KY PRINCIPAL INDUSTRIES SERVED: Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing Coal Mining Primary Metals Chemical Manufacturing Mining Support Activities Generating Capacity by Fuel Mix: • Coal: 100% PPA: ecoPower Biomass ** Transmission Miles Distribution Miles 59MW 1,251 10,029 * As of 1/1/2014 also includes 50% of Mitchell Units 1&2 – 780MW ** Pending regulatory approval 34 Financial & Operational Data CAPITAL STRUCTURE (in thousands) Credit Ratings/Outlook CAPITAL STRUCTURE Debt Capitalization Per Balance Sheet % of Capitalization Per Balance Sheet 562,581 54.0% 2012 Equity Total 479,610 46.0% 1,042,191 100.0% FFO Interest Coverage FFO Total Debt 3.79 18.1% Debt 9/30/2013 Equity 549,347 54.0% 468,417 46.0% Total 1,017,764 100.0% Moody's S&P Fitch Baa2/S BBB/S BBB/N 4.01^ 19.7% ^ - calculated on rolling 12-month avg. Capital Expenditures (in millions) 2013 Asset Data * (in thousands) Excludes AFUDC As of 9/30/13 Total Assets 2012A 2013E $ 102 $ 2014E 2015E $ 1,550,269 Net Plant Assets $ 1,219,054 2016E 74 $ 117 $ 120 $ 77 Cash Operating Information** 2012 retail electric sales in megawatt-hours 2012 firm wholesale sales in megawatt-hours 2012 average cost per kilowatt-hour (residential) 2012 System Peak – January 4 $ 845 6,660,656 94,158 9.18 cents 1,378MW Sources: * 3Q13 Financial Statements (unaudited) ** 2012 FERC Form 1 35 Customer Statistics KENTUCKY INVESTOR OWNED UTILITIES * Kentucky Customers TYPICAL BILL COMPARISON ** Kentucky $/month KPCo 173,642 Kentucky Utilities 87.07 Duke Energy Kentucky 135,574 KPCo 87.91 Kentucky Utilities 511,585 Duke Energy Kentucky 90.86 LG & E 394,062 LG&E 94.29 * Customer counts are as of December 31, 2011 and were sourced from table 10 at http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/esr/esr_sum.html ** Typical bills are displayed in $/month, based on 1,000 kWh of residential usage. Billing amounts sourced from the EEI Typical Bills and Average Rates Report as of January 1, 2013. MAJOR CUSTOMERS: Catlettsburg Refining LLC AK Steel Holding Corporation Sidney Coal Company, Inc. KES Acquisition Company LLC Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. Air Liquide Calgon Carbon Corp Markwest Energy Appalachia LLC Huntington Alloys Czar Coal Corporation (Data for year ended December 2012) 36 Top 10 customers = 68% of industrial sales Metropolitan areas account for 42% of ultimate sales 67 persons per square mile (U.S. = 87) (Data for 12 months ended December 2012) Commission Overview Kentucky Public Service Commission AEP Regulated Electric Utilities Kentucky Power Co. Commissioners Number: 3 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 4 Years Political Makeup: R: 1 D: 2 Qualifications for Commissioners Typically three members, appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state senate for four years, staggered terms, full-time positions. The governor appoints one of the three as chairman and another of the three as vice chairman to serve in the chairman’s absence. Not more than two members of the KPSC shall be of the same profession or occupation. Commissioners David L. Armstrong, Chairman (Dem.), since 2008; current term expires June 2015. Former practicing attorney in private practice. Board member of NARUC and serves on its Electricity Committee and the Subcommittee on Clean Coal Technology. J.D. from University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law. Mr. Armstrong is also the former Mayor for the city of Louisville, KY (1999-2003). James W. Gardner, Vice Chairman (Rep.), since 2008; current term expires June 2016. Prior to joining the PSC Mr. Gardner was a partner at the law firm Henry Watz Gardner & Sellars PLLC where he specialized in bankruptcy law. JD degree from the University of Kentucky College of Law. Linda Breathitt, Commissioner (Dem.), since 2012; current term expires June 2017. Before joining the PSC, Commissioner Breathitt served as the federal representative to the Southern States Energy Board. She has previously served on the PSC from 1993 to 1997 and also served a five year term as a member of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. BA from the University of Kentucky. AEP Regulatory Status KPCo provides service at regulated bundled rates in Kentucky. Kentucky has an environmental surcharge to recover approved environmental costs and it has an active fuel clause. Kentucky also has an OSS sharing mechanism and a monthly adjustment clause in place for DSM. 37 Debt Schedules Kentucky Power Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Senior Notes 6.000% 09/15/2017 491386AM0 $325,000,000 Senior Notes 7.250% 06/18/2021 491386 C*7 $40,000,000 Senior Notes 8.030% 06/18/2029 491386 C@5 $30,000,000 Senior Notes 5.625% 12/01/2032 491386AL2 $75,000,000 Senior Notes 8.130% 06/18/2039 491386 C#3 $60,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 6.397% $530,000,000 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. 38 * Private Placement Number Overview President and Chief Operating Officer: Pablo Vegas Since May 2012 8 years with AEP AEP Ohio- Ohio Power Company (OPCo) (organized in Ohio in 1907 and re-incorporated in 1924) is engaged in the generation, transmission and distribution of electric power to approximately 1,459,000 retail customers in the northwestern, east central, eastern and southern sections of Ohio, and in supplying and marketing electric power at wholesale to other electric utility companies, municipalities and other market participants. At December 31, 2012, OPCo had 3,131 employees. Ohio is transitioning to competitive electricity markets for generation service. OPCo expects corporate separation to be completed at the end of 2013 wherein all the generation assets currently owned by OPCo will be transferred to AEP Generation Resources and legacy OPCo will become a wires only company. As of June 1, 2015 AEP Generation Resources will be fully competitive. OPCo is a member of PJM. Total Customers at 12/31/12: Residential 1,273,000 Commercial 173,000 Industrial 10,000 Other 3,000 Total 1,459,000 Owned Generating Capacity 11,652 MW Generating Capacity by Fuel Mix: PRINCIPAL INDUSTRIES SERVED: Primary Metals Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing Chemical Manufacturing Rubber & Plastic Products Fabricated Metal Products 39 • Coal: 88.0% • Natural Gas: 11.6% • Hydro: Transmission Miles Distribution Miles 0.4% 8,971 45,583 Financial & Operational Data CAPITAL STRUCTURE (in thousands) Credit Ratings/Outlook CAPITAL STRUCTURE Debt Capitalization Per Balance Sheet % of Capitalization Per Balance Sheet 3,860,440 46.0% 2012 Equity 4,525,709 54.0% FFO Interest Coverage FFO Total Debt Total Debt 9/30/2013 Equity 8,386,149 3,699,299 100.0% 44.6% 5.23 24.0% Total 4,587,574 55.4% 8,286,873 100.0% Moody's S&P Fitch Baa1/S BBB/S A-/N 4.90^ 22.9% ^ - calculated on rolling 12-month avg. Capital Expenditures (in millions) 2013 Asset Data * (in thousands) Excludes AFUDC As of 9/30/13 2012A 2013E 2014E 2015E 2016E $ 524 $ 616 $ 356 $ 315 $ 307 Total Assets $ 12,556,214 Net Plant Assets $ 10,028,455 ` As of 01/01/2014 AEP Ohio is a wires only company – post 2013 capex is more indicative of run rate Operating Information** 2012 retail electric sales in megawatt-hours 2012 firm wholesale sales in megawatt-hours 2012 average cost per kilowatt-hour (residential) 2012 System Peak – June 29 Cash $ 30,897,005 2,596,133 13.19 cents 9,670MW Sources: * 3Q13 Form 10-Q (unaudited) ** 2012 FERC Form 1 40 4,341 Customer Statistics OHIO INVESTOR OWNED UTILITIES * Ohio TYPICAL BILL COMPARISON *** Ohio Customers AEP Ohio 1,435,614 Duke Energy Ohio 112.26 FirstEnergy ** 664,111 FE (Toledo Edison) 113.89 Duke Energy Ohio 474,243 FE (CEI) 113.95 DP&L 484,278 FE (Ohio Edison) 116.03 AEP (OPCo) 129.38 DP&L 131.66 AEP (CSPCo) 132.68 ** FirstEnergy -Toledo Edison = 106,547 CEI = 188,592 Ohio Edison = 368,972 * Customer counts are as of December 31, 2011 and were sourced from table 10 at http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/esr/esr_sum.html MAJOR CUSTOMERS: Lima Refining Co Republic Engineered Products, LLC The Timken Company E.I. Du Pont de Nemour Eramet Marietta, Inc. Kraton Polymers US, LLC Glatfelter Company Amsted Rail Company, Inc. Globe Metallurgical, Inc. (Data for year ended December 2012) 41 $/month *** Typical bills are displayed in $/month, based on 1,000 kWh of residential usage. Billing amounts sourced from the EEI Typical Bills and Average Rates Report as of January 1, 2013. Ohio rates represent provider of last resort bundled residential rates. Top 10 OPCo customers = 47% of industrial sales Metropolitan areas account for 67% of ultimate sales 169 persons per square mile (U.S. = 87) (Data for 12 months ended December 2012) Generation Plant Name Units State Fuel Type Net Maximum Capacity Year Plant (MW) Commissioned Ohio Power Company (to AEP Generation Resources effective 01/01/2014) Racine 2 OH Hydro Darby 6 OH Natural Gas Waterford 4 OH Natural Gas Cardinal 1 OH Steam - Coal Gavin 2 OH Steam - Coal Muskingum River^* 5 OH Steam - Coal Picway^* 1 OH Steam - Coal Beckjord (CCD)^** 1 OH Steam - Coal Conesville (Unit 4) (CCD)** 1 OH Steam - Coal Stuart (CCD)** 4 OH Steam - Coal Stuart (CCD)** 4 OH Oil Zimmer (CCD)** 1 OH Steam - Coal Amos (Unit 3)*** 1 WV Steam - Coal Conesville (Units 5&6) 2 OH Steam - Coal Kammer^ 3 WV Steam - Coal Mitchell*** 2 WV Steam - Coal Sporn (Units 2&4)^* 2 WV Steam - Coal ^ Plants to be retired * Plants on extended start-up: MR Unit 4, Picway Unit 5, Sporn Unit 4 ** CCD Plants jointly owned by AEP Ohio, Duke, and DP&L *** To be transferred to APCo (Amos 3) and KPCo (50% Mitchell) Project Name Fowler Ridge II Wyandot Solar Timber Road 42 State IN OH OH Renewable Type Wind Solar Wind 48 507 840 595 2,640 1,440 100 53 339 600 3 330 867 800 630 1,560 300 11,652 Net Maximum Capacity (MW) 100 10 99 209 1982 2001 2003 1967 1974 1953 1926 1969 1957 1971 1970 1991 1973 1957 1958 1971 1950 Contract Initiated 2009 2010 2013 Commission Overview Ohio Public Utilities Commission Commissioners Number: 5 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 5 Years Political Makeup: R: 2 D: 1 I: 2 Qualifications for Commissioners Five members, appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state senate; five year, staggered terms, full-time positions, commissioners shall be selected from the lists of qualified persons submitted to the governor by the PUC nominating council. Not more than three of the members of the PUCO shall be members of the same political party. The governor appoints one of the five as chairman, who serves at the pleasure of the governor until a successor has been designated. Commissioners Todd A. Snitchler, Chairman, (Rep.) , since 2011; term expires April 2014. Before joining the commission was elected to two terms in the Ohio House of Representatives. Past chairman and secretary of the Lake Township Chamber of Commerce. Received his B.S. from Grove City College in history and secondary education/social science and his law degree from the University of Akron School of Law. M. Beth Trombold, Commissioner, (Ind.) since 2013; term expires April 2018. Prior to joining the commission, was the assistant director of the Ohio Development Services Agency. Prior to that was on PUC staff for 16 years. Bachelor’s degree in international business and marketing from Ohio University and master’s in public policy from Ohio State University. Steven D. Lesser, Commissioner, (Dem.) since 2010; term expires April 2015. Juris Doctorate from Capital University; previously served as PUCO chief of staff, assistant director of the legal department, deputy director of the transportation department and administrative law judge/attorney examiner in the legal department. Asim Haque, Commissioner, (Ind.) since 2013; term expires April 2016. Prior to joining the commission was assistant counsel at Honda of America. Prior to that was an attorney with Ice Miller LLP. Bachelor’s degrees in chemistry and political science from Case Western Reserve University and Juris Doctorate from Ohio State University. Lynn Slaby, Commissioner, (Rep.) since 2012; term expires April 2017. Juris Doctorate and Bachelor of Science from University of Akron; previously served in Ohio House of Representatives representing 41st District. For 14 years Commissioner Slaby served as Summit County Prosecuting Attorney. AEP Regulatory Status The currently approved electric security plan expires in May 2015. Corporate Separation expected as of January 1, 2014 at which time OPCo will be a wires only company. Transmission rates are currently regulated by FERC as reflected in the OATT. SB221 allows that OPCo has an active fuel clause effective January 1, 2009. Ohio currently has a mandatory renewable energy standard of 25% by 2025, phased in beginning in 2009. 43 Debt Schedules Ohio Power Company Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Pollution Control Bond Floating 07/01/2014 572287AT7 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 05/1/20261 677525MQ7 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 2.875% 12/01/20272 677525TX5 $39,130,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 06/1/20373 95648VAD1 $65,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 3.875% 12/01/20384 677525TL1 $60,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 5.800% 12/01/2038 677525TM9 $32,245,000 Pollution Control Bond 3.250% 06/01/20415 677525TV9 $79,450,000 Pollution Control Bond 3.125% 6 03/01/2043 95648VAR0 $86,000,000 Term Loan Floating 05/13/2015 N/A $200,000,000 Term Loan Floating 05/13/2015 N/A $400,000,000 Senior Notes 4.850% 01/15/2014 677415CG4 $225,000,000 Senior Notes 6.000% 06/01/2016 677415CL3 $350,000,000 Senior Notes 6.050% 05/01/2018 199575AW1 $350,000,000 Senior Notes 5.375% 10/01/2021 677415CP4 $500,000,000 Senior Notes 6.600% 02/15/2033 677415CF6 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 6.600% 03/01/2033 199575AT8 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 5.850% 10/01/2035 199575AV3 $250,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.590% Securitization Bond 0.958% 07/01/2017 67741Y AA6 $164,900,000 Securitization Bond 2.049% 07/01/2019 67741Y AB4 $102,508,000 Weighted Average or Total 1.376% 1 Put date 11/21/2014 2 Put date 08/01/2014 3 Put date 07/01/2014 4 Put date 06/01/2014 5 Put date 06/02/2014 6 Put date 04/01/2015 $3,236,825,000 $267,408,000 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * Private Placement Number 44 Interest Overview President and Chief Operating Officer: Stuart Solomon Since June 2004 24 years with AEP Public Service Company of Oklahoma (PSO) (organized in Oklahoma in 1913) is engaged in the generation, transmission and distribution of electric power to approximately 535,000 retail customers in eastern and southwestern Oklahoma, and in supplying and marketing electric power at wholesale to other electric utility companies, municipalities, rural electric cooperatives and other market participants. At December 31, 2012, PSO had 1,127 employees. PSO benefits from the largest percentage of natural gas fired plants in the AEP fleet. PSO is a member of SPP. Total Customers at 12/31/12: Residential 460,500 Commercial 61,000 Industrial 6,000 Other 7,500 Total PRINCIPAL INDUSTRIES SERVED: Paper Manufacturing Oil & Gas Extraction Transportation Equipment Plastics and Rubber Products Petroleum & Coal Products Manufacturing Owned Generating Capacity 4,436 MW Generating Capacity by Fuel Mix: • Coal: 23.3% • Natural Gas: 76.4% • Oil: Transmission Miles Distribution Miles 45 535,000 0.4% 3,526 22,080 Financial & Operational Data CAPITAL STRUCTURE (in thousands) CAPITAL STRUCTURE Debt Capitalization Per Balance Sheet % of Capitalization Per Balance Sheet 2012 Equity 949,871 50.9% Total 916,278 49.1% 1,866,149 100.0% Debt 9/30/2013 Equity 949,826 49.5% 967,656 50.5% Credit Ratings/Outlook Total 1,917,482 100.0% Moody's Baa1/S FFO Interest Coverage FFO Total Debt 5.84 28.3% S&P BBB/S BBB+/S 4.32^ 19.0% ^ - calculated on rolling 12-month avg. Capital Expenditures (in millions) 2013 Asset Data * (in thousands) Excludes AFUDC As of 9/30/13 Total Assets 2012A 2013E 2014E Fitch 2015E 2016E $ 221 $ 302 $ 343 $ 353 $ 308 $ 3,432,965 Net Plant Assets $ 3,059,120 ` Cash Operating Information** 2012 retail electric sales in megawatt-hours 2012 firm wholesale sales in megawatt-hours 2012 average cost per kilowatt-hour (residential) 2012 System Peak – August 1 $ 17,963,562 7,728 8.01 cents 4,419MW Sources: * 3Q13 Form 10-Q (unaudited) ** 2012 FERC Form 1 46 2,000 Customer Statistics OKLAHOMA INVESTOR OWNED UTILITIES * Oklahoma Customers TYPICAL BILL COMPARISON ** Oklahoma $/month PSO 532,395 PSO 72.84 OG&E 721,269 OG&E 83.53 Empire District 99.98 Empire District 4,727 * Customer counts are as of December 31, 2011 and were sourced from table 10 at http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/esr/esr_sum.html ** Typical bills are displayed in $/month, based on 1,000 kWh of residential usage. Billing amounts sourced from the EEI Typical Bills and Average Rates Report as of January 1, 2013. MAJOR CUSTOMERS: Weyerhaeuser Valliant Company Transok, Inc. Kimberly Clark Corp. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company American Airlines Sinclair Tulsa Refining Company Sun Refining & Marketing Terra Nitrogen Kelco (Data for year ended December 2012) 47 Top 10 customers = 43% of industrial sales Metropolitan areas account for 76% of ultimate sales 49 persons per square mile (U.S. = 87) (Data for 12 months ended December 2012) Generation Plant Name Units Public Service Company of Oklahoma Tulsa 2 Riverside (1&2) 2 Riverside (3&4) 2 Riverside 1 Northeastern (1&2) 4 Northeastern 1 Southwestern (1-3) 3 Southwestern (4&5) 2 Southwestern 1 Comanche 3 Comanche 2 Weleetka 3 Weleetka 2 Northeastern (3&4)^ 2 Northeastern 1 Oklaunion 1 State OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK TX Fuel Type Steam Steam Steam Oil Steam Oil Steam Steam Oil Steam Oil Steam Oil Steam Oil Steam - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Coal - Coal ^ Plants to be retired: Northeastern Unit 4 (470MW) Project Name Weatherford Blue Canyon II* Sleeping Bear Blue Canyon V Minco Elk City Balko** Seling** Goodwell** 48 * Expires 2015 ** Pending regulatory approval State Renewable Type OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Net Maximum Capacity Year Plant (MW) Commissioned 309 909 157 3 920 3 466 170 2 260 4 196 4 930 1 102 4,436 Net Maximum Capacity (MW) 1923 1974 2008 1976 1961 1961 1952 2008 1962 1973 1962 1975 1963 1979 1980 1986 Contract Initiated 147 2005 151 2005 95 2008 99 2009 99 2010 99 2010 199 *** 200 *** 199 *** 1,288 *** Under contract but not yet on-line, expected 2016 Commission Overview Oklahoma Corporation Commission AEP Regulated Electric Utilities Public Service Company of Oklahoma Commissioners Number: 3 Appointed/Elected: Elected Term: 6 Years Political Makeup: R: 3 D: 0 Qualifications for Commissioners The Oklahoma Corporation Commission (OCC) is composed of three commissioners who are elected by state-wide vote. Commissioners serve staggered sixyear terms. The election pattern was established when the Commission was created by the state constitution. Commissioners Bob Anthony, Vice Chairman, (Rep.), since 1989; current term expires January 2019. Member, NARUC. Served on the boards of the Oklahoma State, Oklahoma City, and South Oklahoma City chambers of commerce. Earned an M.Sc. from the London School of Economics, an M.A. from Yale University and an M.P.A. from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. Patrice Douglas, Chairperson, (Rep.), since 2011; current term ends January 2015. Served as president of SpiritBank and executive vice president of First Fidelity Bank. Received her undergraduate degree from Oklahoma Christian and her juris doctorate from the University of Oklahoma. Dana Murphy, Commissioner, (Rep.), since 2008; current term expires January 2017. Member, NARUC. Murphy’s prior experience includes working as an administrative law judge at the Commission. She has more than 20 years experience in the petroleum industry including owning and operating her own private law practice and working as a geologist in the Oklahoma petroleum industry. Juris Doctorate Oklahoma City University. AEP Regulatory Status PSO provides retail electric service in Oklahoma at bundled rates approved by the OCC. PSO’s rates are set on a cost-of-service basis. Fuel and purchased energy costs above the amount included in base rates are recovered by applying a fuel adjustment factor to retail kilowatt-hour sales. The factor is generally adjusted annually and is based upon forecasted fuel and purchased energy costs. Over or under collections of fuel costs for prior periods are returned to or recovered from customers when new annual factors are established. PSO has an OSS margin sharing mechanism. Oklahoma currently has a voluntary renewable energy standard of 15% by 2015. 49 Debt Schedules Public Service Company of Oklahoma Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Notes Payable 3.000% 12/01/2025 N/A $6,846,018 Pollution Control Bond 5.250% 06/01/2014 67884LAB9 $33,700,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.450% 06/01/2020 756864BT0 $12,660,000 Senior Notes 6.150% 08/01/2016 744533BH2 $150,000,000 Senior Notes 5.150% 12/01/2019 744533BK5 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 4.400% 02/01/2021 744533BL3 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 6.625% 11/15/2037 744533BJ8 $250,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.455% $953,206,018 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. 50 * Private Placement Number Overview President and Chief Operating Officer: Venita McCellon-Allen Since July 2010 30 years with AEP Southwestern Electric Power Company (SWEPCO) (organized in Delaware in 1912) is engaged in the generation, transmission and distribution of electric power to approximately 524,000 retail customers in northeastern Texas, northwestern Louisiana and western Arkansas, and in supplying and marketing electric power at wholesale to other electric utility companies, municipalities, rural electric cooperatives and other market participants. At December 31, 2012, SWEPCO had 1,472 employees. The territory served by SWEPCO also includes several military installations, colleges, and universities. SWEPCO also owns and operates a lignite coal mining operation. SWEPCO is a member of SPP. Total Customers at 12/31/12: Residential 444,500 Commercial 72,000 Industrial 7,000 Other PRINCIPAL INDUSTRIES SERVED: Food Manufacturing Paper Manufacturing Oil and Gas Extraction Primary Metals Petroleum & Coal Products Manufacturing Total 524,000 Owned Generating Capacity 5,730 MW Generating Capacity by Fuel Mix: • Coal: 39.9% • Natural Gas: 45.5% • Lignite: 14.6% Transmission Miles 51 500 Distribution Miles 3,959 26,312 Financial & Operational Data CAPITAL STRUCTURE (in thousands) CAPITAL STRUCTURE Debt Capitalization Per Balance Sheet % of Capitalization Per Balance Sheet 2,048,831 50.3% 2012 Equity 2,021,212 49.7% FFO Interest Coverage FFO Total Debt Total Debt 4,070,043 2,043,244 100.0% 50.8% 5.26 26.7% 9/30/2013 Equity 1,975,437 49.2% Credit Ratings/Outlook Total 4,018,681 100.0% Moody's Baa3/P 2013 Asset Data * (in thousands) Excludes AFUDC As of 9/30/13 Total Assets 2013E 2014E 2015E 2016E $ 412 $ 392 $ 488 $ 573 $ 439 $ 6,250,394 Net Plant Assets $ 5,308,648 ` Cash Operating Information** 2012 retail electric sales in megawatt-hours 2012 firm wholesale sales in megawatt-hours 2012 average cost per kilowatt-hour (residential) 2012 System Peak – July 30 $ 17,651 18,146,517 6,117,257 8.09 cents 5,205MW Sources: * 3Q13 Form 10-Q (unaudited) ** 2012 FERC Form 1 52 Fitch BBB/S BBB/S 3.84^ 18.0% ^ - calculated on rolling 12-month avg. Capital Expenditures (in millions) 2012A S&P Customer Statistics SOUTHWESTERN INVESTOR OWNED UTILITIES * TYPICAL BILL COMPARISON ** Arkansas Arkansas Customers SWEPCO 113,656 Entergy AR 695,385 OG&E 65,253 Empire District Louisiana $/month SWEPCO 227,287 CLECO 276,973 Entergy 1,212,995 $/month Texas 62.86 Entergy Gulf St. 88.33 SWEPCO 67.78 SWEPCO 82.39 SWEPCO 88.70 Entergy TX 84.84 97.63 Entergy NO 97.55 SPSCo 87.97 101.32 Entergy LA 102.27 El Paso 104.98 CLECO 115.32 Empire District Entergy AR ** Typical bills are displayed in $/month, based on 1,000 kWh of residential usage. Billing amounts sourced from the EEI Typical Bills and Average Rates Report as of January 1, 2013. MAJOR CUSTOMERS: Texas Customers SWEPCO 180,658 El Paso 287,516 SPSCo 261,904 Entergy TX 411,690 * Customer counts are as of December 31, 2011 and were sourced from table 10 at http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/esr/esr_sum.html Top 10 customers = 37% of industrial sales Lone Star Steel Company (TX) International Paper Company (TX) Calumet Lubricants (LA) Pratt Paper (LA) Domtar, Inc. (AR) Exxon Mobil Corp (TX) Cooper Tire & Rubber Company (AR) Libbey Glass, Inc. (LA) Big Three Industrial Gas (TX) Superior Industries (AR) Glad Manufacturing (AR) Metropolitan areas account for 72% of ultimate sales 75 persons per square mile (U.S. = 87) (Data for 12 months ended December 2012) 53 $/month OG&E 4,333 Customers Louisiana (Data for year ended December 2012) Generation Plant Name Units State Southwestern Electric Power Company Arsenal Hill 1 Lieberman 4 Knox Lee 4 Wilkes 3 Lone Star 1 Stall 1 Mattison 4 Welsh^ 3 Flint Creek 1 Turk 1 Pirkey 1 Dolet Hills 1 LA LA TX TX TX LA AR TX AR AR TX LA Net Maximum Capacity Year Plant (MW) Commissioned Fuel Type Steam - Natural Steam - Natural Steam - Natural Steam - Natural Steam - Natural Natural Gas Natural Gas Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Lignite Steam - Lignite Gas Gas Gas Gas Gas 110 268 475 845 49 543 316 1,584 264 440 580 256 5,730 1960 1947 1950 1964 1954 2010 2007 1977 1978 2012 1985 1986 ^ Plants to be retired: Welsh Unit 2 (528MW) Project Name Majestic Majestic II Flat Ridge Canadian Hills 54 State TX TX OK OK Renewable Type Wind Wind Wind Wind Net Maximum Capacity (MW) 80 80 109 201 470 Contract Initiated 2009 2012 2013 2012 Commission Overview Arkansas Public Service Commission Commissioners Number: 3 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 6 Years Political Makeup: R: 1 D: 2 Qualifications for Commissioners The Arkansas Public Service Commission (APSC) is composed of 3 members. The Governor appoints the Commissioners as well as the Chairman. Governor Beebe has appointed all of the current commissioners. Commissioners Collette D. Honorable, Chairperson (Dem.), since 2007; current term expires in Jan 2017. Commissioner Honorable is a member of NARUC and serves on the Consumer Affairs and Investment Committees. She previously served on the Smart Grid Collaborative, a joint effort of NARUC and the FERC. Honorable received her Juris Doctorate from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Law. Olan W. Reeves, Commissioner (Rep.), since 2009; current term expires in Jan 2015. Chairman of the Workers’ Compensation Commission from January, 2003 until January, 2009. Prior to these appointments, Commissioner Reeves was Chief Legal Counsel to the Governor from 1998-2003 and served as the State Drug Director from 1996 to 1998. Reeves received his Juris Doctorate from the University of Arkansas School of Law in Fayetteville. Elana C. Wills, Commissioner (Dem.), since 2011; current term expired Jan 2013. Served as an Associate Justice on the Arkansas Supreme Court by gubernatorial appointment from October 2008 – December 2010. Received her Juris Doctorate from the University of Arkansas School of Law in Fayetteville. AEP Regulatory Status SWEPCO-AR provides service at regulated bundled rates in Arkansas. Arkansas has an active fuel pass-through clause. Arkansas has an OSS margin sharing mechanism and allows CWIP in rate base for a plant that is placed in service within six months after the end of the test year. 55 Commission Overview Louisiana Public Service Commission Commissioners Number: 5 Appointed/Elected: Elected Term: 6 Years Political Makeup: R: 3 D: 2 Qualifications for Commissioners The Louisiana Public Service Commission (LPSC) is composed of five elected members. The commissioners serve overlapping terms of six years. Commissioners Scott Angelle, (Rep.), since 2013; current term ends December 2018. Appointed in 2004 as Secretary of the Department of Natural Resources and Chairman of State’s Mineral Board. Left the DNR to seek office on PSC. Bachelor’s degree in petroleum land management from University of LouisianaLafayette. Foster L. Campbell, (Dem.), since 2003; current term ends December 2014. Member, Louisiana State Senate (1976-2002). Independent insurance businessman and farmer, former school teacher and agricultural products salesman. Bachelor’s degree from Northwestern State University. Lambert C. Bossiere, III (Dem.), since 2005; current term ends December 2016. B.S. Business Administration from Southern University. American University of Paris – International Trade Law – Paralegal Certificate. Former First City Court Constable for the City of New Orleans. Member of NARUC. Eric Skrmetta, (Chairman) (Rep.), since 2009; current term ends December 2014. Practicing Attorney since 1985. Practicing Mediator since 1989. Republican State Central Committee District 81. Juris Doctorate Southern University Law School. Clyde Holloway, (Vice-Chairman) (Rep.), since 2009; current term ends December 2016. Elected to Congress in 1987 and served in the United States House of Representatives until 1993. In October 2006 he received an appointment by President Bush as the USDA State Director of Rural Development where he served until 2009. AEP Regulatory Status SWEPCO-LA provides service at regulated bundled rates in Louisiana. Louisiana has an active fuel pass-through clause and an OSS margin sharing mechanism. Formula rate plans are permitted in Louisiana including a potential for a partial CWIP return on new generation projects. A formula rate plan was implemented August 1, 2008 with annual true-ups required. A new FRP was implemented in January 2013. 56 Commission Overview Public Utility Commission of Texas Commissioners Number: 3 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 6 Years Political Makeup: R: 3 D: 0 Qualifications for Commissioners To be eligible for appointment, a commissioner must be: a qualified voter and a citizen of the U.S.; a competent and experienced administrator; well informed and qualified in the field of public utilities and public utility regulation; and, have at least five years of experience in the administration of business or government or as a practicing attorney or certified public accountant. Chairman appointed by the Governor. Commissioners Donna L. Nelson, Chairman (Rep.), since August 2008; current term expires August 2015. Nelson served as a special assistant and advisor to Governor Perry on energy, telecommunications and cable budget and policy issues. She previously served as director of the PUC telecommunication's section and legal advisor to the PUC chairman. Nelson holds a law degree from Texas Tech University. Kenneth W. Anderson Jr., (Rep.) since September 2008; current term expires August 2017. Past Director of Governmental Appointments under Governor Perry. Prior to that Anderson served in private practice as a corporate attorney in the area of securities law and regulatory matters. He also served as a member of the Texas Securities Board from 1999-2006. Anderson holds a law degree from Southern Methodist University. Brandy Marty (Rep.), since 2013; current term expires August 2019. Formerly Governor Perry’s chief of staff. Has also held positions as: governor’s Deputy Chief of Staff, Director of the Budget, Planning and Policy Division and deputy legislative director/liaison to the Texas House of Representatives. Bachelor’s degree in government from University of Texas and juris doctorate from St Mary’s University. AEP Regulatory Status Retail competition has been delayed by the PUCT in the SPP area of Texas (including SWEPCO). SWEPCO-TX has an active fuel pass-through clause as well as OSS margin sharing. In some circumstances, CWIP is allowed in rate base. Texas currently has a mandatory renewable energy standard of 5% by 2015. 57 Debt Schedules Southwestern Electric Power Company Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Notes Payable 6.370% 10/31/2024 78532* AC7 $25,000,000 Notes Payable 4.580% 02/21/2032 78532* AD5 $60,125,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.950% 03/01/2018 785652CJ5 $81,700,000 Pollution Control Bond 3.250% 1 01/01/2019 241627AV0 $53,500,000 Senior Notes 5.375% 04/15/2015 845437BE1 $100,000,000 Senior Notes 4.900% 07/01/2015 845437BG6 $150,000,000 Senior Notes 5.550% 01/15/2017 845437BH4 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 5.875% 03/01/2018 845437BJ0 $300,000,000 Senior Notes 6.450% 01/15/2019 845437BK7 $400,000,000 Senior Notes 3.550% 02/15/2022 845437BM3 $275,000,000 Senior Notes 6.200% 03/15/2040 845437BL5 $350,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.457% 1 $2,045,325,000 Put date 01/02/2015 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. 58 * Private Placement Number Overview President and Chief Operating Officer: Wade Smith Since July 2010 24 years with AEP AEP Texas Central Company (TCC) (organized in Texas in 1945) is engaged in the transmission and distribution of electric power to approximately 799,000 retail customers through REPs in southern Texas. At December 31, 2012, TCC had 996 employees. TCC is a member of ERCOT. MAJOR CUSTOMERS: Valero Energy Corporation Javelina Refinery Equistar Koch Refinery West Air Liquide America Ingles PRINCIPAL INDUSTRIES SERVED: Petroleum & Coal Products Manufacturing Chemical Manufacturing Oil and Gas Extraction Food Manufacturing (Data for year ended December 2012) Top 10 customers = 66% of industrial sales Total Customers at 12/31/12: (Based on electric meters) Residential 681,000 Commercial 111,000 Industrial 5,000 Other 2,000 Total 799,000 Metropolitan areas account for 78% ultimate sales 60 persons per square mile (U.S. = 87) (data for 12 months ended December 2012) 59 Transmission Miles Distribution Miles 4,342 29,783 Financial & Operational Data CAPITAL STRUCTURE (in thousands) CAPITAL STRUCTURE 2012 Equity Debt^ Capitalization Per Balance Sheet % of Capitalization Per Balance Sheet 3,027,901 82.1% 658,015 17.9% Total Debt^ 3,685,916 2,941,927 100.0% 80.1% Credit Ratings/Outlook 9/30/2013 Equity 732,531 19.9% Total 3,674,458 100.0% Moody's S&P Baa2/P BBB/S FFO Interest Coverage FFO Total Debt 4.77 23.0% Fitch A-/S 4.70^^ 21.0% ^^ - calculated on rolling 12-month avg. ^ includes securitization debt of $2,281M and $2,071 at December 31, 2012 and Sept. 30, 2013 respectively Capital Expenditures (in millions) 2013 Asset Data * (in thousands) Excludes AFUDC As of 9/30/13 2012A 2013E 2014E 2015E 2016E $ 276 $ 386 $ 359 $ 351 $ 311 Total Assets $ 5,699,800 Net Plant Assets $ 3,090,864 ` Cash $ 100 Sources: * 3Q13 Financial Statements (unaudited) 60 Overview President and Chief Operating Officer: Wade Smith Since July 2010 24 years with AEP AEP Texas North Company (TNC) (organized in Texas in 1927) is engaged in the transmission and distribution of electric power to approximately 187,000 retail customers through REPs in west and central Texas. TNC’s remaining generating capacity that is not deactivated has been transferred to an affiliate at TNC’s cost pursuant to an agreement effective through 2027. At December 31, 2012, TNC had 319 employees. The territory served by TNC also includes several military installations and correctional facilities. TNC is a member of ERCOT. MAJOR CUSTOMERS: Equilon Haskell Sheridan Production Co. Plains All American Kinder Morgan Energy TXN (Data for year ended December 2012) PRINCIPAL INDUSTRIES SERVED: Oil and Gas Extraction Support Activities for Mining Pipeline Transportation Food Manufacturing Nonmetallic Mineral Products Total Customers at 12/31/12: (Based on electric meters) Residential 147,000 Commercial 30,000 Industrial 5,000 Other 5,000 Total Top 10 customers = 70% industrial sales Owned Generating Capacity Oklaunion Plant – Vernon, TX Metropolitan areas account for 55% ultimate sales Generating Capacity by Fuel Mix: 9 persons per square mile (U.S. = 87) (Data for 12 months ended December 2012) 61 187,000 • Coal: Transmission Miles Distribution Miles 355 MW 100% 4,182 13,868 Financial & Operational Data CAPITAL STRUCTURE (in thousands) CAPITAL STRUCTURE Debt Capitalization Per Balance Sheet % of Capitalization Per Balance Sheet 2012 Equity 420,660 55.6% 336,242 44.4% Total Debt 756,902 100.0% 439,493 55.1% FFO Interest Coverage FFO Total Debt 4.82 20.1% 9/30/2013 Equity 358,518 44.9% Credit Ratings/Outlook Total 798,011 100.0% Moody's S&P Fitch Baa2/P BBB/S A-/S 4.82^ 18.9% ^ - calculated on rolling 12-month avg. 2013 Asset Data * (in thousands) Capital Expenditures (in millions) Excludes AFUDC As of 9/30/13 Total Assets 2012A $ 2013E 2014E 2015E 2016E 88 $ 103 $ 114 $ 131 $ 127 $ 1,244,836 Net Plant Assets $ 1,111,276 ` Cash $ - Sources: * 3Q13 Financial Statements (unaudited) 62 Commission Overview Public Utility Commission of Texas Commissioners Number: 3 Appointed/Elected: Appointed Term: 6 Years Political Makeup: R: 3 D: 0 Qualifications for Commissioners To be eligible for appointment, a commissioner must be: a qualified voter and a citizen of the U.S.; a competent and experienced administrator; well informed and qualified in the field of public utilities and public utility regulation; and, have at least five years of experience in the administration of business or government or as a practicing attorney or certified public accountant. Chairman appointed by the Governor. Commissioners Donna L. Nelson, Chairman (Rep.), since August 2008; current term expires August 2015. Nelson served as a special assistant and advisor to Governor Perry on energy, telecommunications and cable budget and policy issues. She previously served as director of the PUC telecommunication's section and legal advisor to the PUC chairman. Nelson holds a law degree from Texas Tech University. Kenneth W. Anderson Jr., (Rep.) since September 2008; current term expires August 2017. Past Director of Governmental Appointments under Governor Perry. Prior to that Anderson served in private practice as a corporate attorney in the area of securities law and regulatory matters. He also served as a member of the Texas Securities Board from 1999-2006. Anderson holds a law degree from Southern Methodist University. Brandy Marty (Rep.), since 2013; current term expires August 2019. Formerly Governor Perry’s chief of staff. Has also held positions as: governor’s Deputy Chief of Staff, Director of the Budget, Planning and Policy Division and deputy legislative director/liaison to the Texas House of Representatives. Bachelor’s degree in government from University of Texas and juris doctorate from St Mary’s University. AEP Regulatory Status TCC and TNC provide retail transmission and distribution service on a cost-of-service basis at rates approved by the PUCT and wholesale transmission service under tariffs approved by the FERC consistent with PUCT rules. Transmission riders provide annual recovery dependent on the level of transmission investment and ERCOT load growth rates. AFUDC is permitted in limited circumstances. 63 Debt Schedules AEP Texas North Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Pollution Control Bond 4.450% 06/01/2020 Senior Notes 5.890% Senior Notes 6.760% Senior Notes Amount 756864BT0 $44,310,000 04/01/2018 0010EQ A*7 $30,000,000 04/01/2038 0010EQ A@5 $70,000,000 3.090% 02/28/2023 0010EQ A#3 $125,000,000 Senior Notes 4.480% 02/28/2043 0010EQ B*6 $75,000,000 Term Loan Floating 07/31/2016 N/A $75,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 4.558% AEP Texas Central Interest $419,310,000 Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Pollution Control Bond 5.625% 10/01/2017 40053QAQ4 Pollution Control Bond 4.450% 06/01/2020 756864BT0 $40,890,000 $6,330,000 Pollution Control Bond 6.300% 11/01/2029 576528DM2 $100,635,000 Pollution Control Bond 5.200% 05/01/2030 576528DE0 $60,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.400% 05/01/2030 576528CY7 $111,700,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.550% 05/01/2030 576528CZ4 $50,000,000 Senior Notes 6.650% 02/15/2033 0010EPAF5 $275,000,000 Term Loan Floating 07/31/2016 N/A $75,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.821% Securitization Bond 6.250% Weighted Average or Total 6.250% Securitization Bond 5.090% 07/01/2015 00110AAC8 $208,096,401 Securitization Bond 5.170% 01/01/2018 00110AAD6 $437,000,000 Securitization Bond 5.306% 07/01/2020 00110AAE4 $494,700,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.215% Securitization Bond 0.880% 12/01/2017 00104UAA6 $246,906,438 Securitization Bond 1.976% 06/01/2020 00104UAB4 $180,200,000 Securitization Bond 2.845% 12/01/2024 00104UAC2 $311,900,000 Weighted Average or Total 1.977% $719,555,000 01/15/2016 12617AAE7 $191,856,858 $191,856,858 $1,139,796,401 $739,006,438 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/12. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. 64 * Private Placement Number Generation & Environmental • • • • 65 Units Generation and Fuel Statistics Regulated Coal Procurement and Delivery Regulated Environmental and Announced Unit Retirements Generation Generation Capacity* Company AEP Generating Co Appalachian Power Co Indiana Michigan Power Co Kentucky Power Co Ohio Power Co (To be AEP Generation Resources at 01/01/2014)** Public Service Company of Oklahoma Southwestern Electric Power Co Texas North Co OVEC Capacity *** Domestic IPPs Long Term Renewable Purchase Power Agreements**** MW Capacity 2,496 7,018 4,518 1,078 11,652 4,436 5,730 355 980 311 2,371 40,945 * Capacity amounts represent the maximum capacity ** After transfer of Amos 3 to APCo and 50% of Mitchell plant to KPCo, 10,005MW w ill transfer to AEP Generation Resources *** Represents AEP's 43.5% interest in Ohio Valley Electric Corporation (OVEC) **** Excludes agreements pending regulatory approval AEP Total System Coal/Lignite 25,531 Natural Gas/Oil 9,670 Nuclear 2,191 Wind/Hydro/Pumped Storage 3,553 Total Generating Capacity 40,945 # # Includes AEP's 43.5% ow nership of OVEC Vertically Integrated Utilities - PJM Coal/Lignite # 12,413 71% Natural Gas/Oil 1,124 6% Nuclear 2,191 12% Wind/Hydro/Pumped Storage 1,857 11% Total Generating Capacity 17,585 100% # Includes 43.5% ow nership of OVEC 66 63% 24% 5% 9% 100% Vertically Integrated Utilities - SPP Coal/Lignite 4,156 37% Natural Gas/Oil 6,010 53% Wind/Hydro/Pumped Storage 1,160 7% Total Generating Capacity 11,326 100% AEP Generation Resources^ as of 01/01/2014 Coal 8,962 74% Natural Gas/Oil 2,536 21% Wind/Hydro/Solar 536 4% Total Generating Capacity 12,034 100% ^ Includes all PJM, and ERCOT capacity including Lawrenceburg PPA, Renewable PPAs and plants slated for retirement. Generation Plant Name AEP Generating Company Rockport Lawrenceburg* 67 Units State 2 6 IN IN Appalachian Power Company Buck Byllesby Claytor Leesville London Marmet Niagara Reusens Winfield Smith Mountain Amos (Units 1&2) Clinch River^** Glen Lyn^** Kanawha River^ Mountaineer Sporn (Units 1&3)^** Dresden Ceredo 3 4 4 2 3 3 2 5 3 5 2 3 2 2 1 2 1 6 Kentucky Power Company Big Sandy^ 2 Fuel Type Net Maximum Capacity Year Plant (MW) Commissioned Steam - Coal Natural Gas 1,310 1,186 2,496 1984 2004 VA VA VA VA WV WV VA VA WV VA WV VA VA WV WV WV OH WV Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Pumped Storage Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Natural Gas Natural Gas 9 22 76 50 14 14 2 13 15 586 2,033 705 335 400 1,320 300 608 516 7,018 1912 1912 1939 1964 1935 1935 1906 1904 1938 1965 1971 1958 1918 1953 1980 1950 2012 2001 KY Steam - Coal 1,078 1963 * Capacity and energy entitlements considered part of AEP Generation Resources as of January 1, 2014 ** Plants on extended start-up: Clinch River Unit 3, Glen Lyn Units 5&6, Sporn Unit 3 ^ To be retired: All units at Glen Lyn, Kanawha River and Sporn, Clinch River Unit 3 (235MW), Big Sandy Unit 2 (800MW) Generation Plant Name Indiana Michigan Power Company Berrien Springs Buchanan Constantine Elkhart Mottville Twin Branch Rockport Tanners Creek^* Cook Units State 12 10 4 3 4 6 2 4 2 MI MI MI IN MI IN IN IN MI Fuel Type Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Hydro Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Nuclear Ohio Power Company (to AEP Generation Resources effective 01/01/2014) Racine 2 OH Hydro Darby 6 OH Natural Gas Waterford 4 OH Natural Gas Cardinal 1 OH Steam - Coal Gavin 2 OH Steam - Coal Muskingum River^* 5 OH Steam - Coal Picway^* 1 OH Steam - Coal Beckjord (CCD)^** 1 OH Steam - Coal Conesville (Unit 4) (CCD)** 1 OH Steam - Coal Stuart (CCD)** 4 OH Steam - Coal Stuart (CCD)** 4 OH Oil Zimmer (CCD)** 1 OH Steam - Coal Amos (Unit 3)*** 1 WV Steam - Coal Conesville (Units 5&6) 2 OH Steam - Coal Kammer^ 3 WV Steam - Coal Mitchell*** 2 WV Steam - Coal Sporn (Units 2&4)^* 2 WV Steam - Coal 68 Net Maximum Capacity Year Plant (MW) Commissioned 7 4 1 3 2 5 1,310 995 2,191 4,518 1908 1919 1921 1913 1923 1904 1984 1951 1975 48 507 840 595 2,640 1,440 100 53 339 600 3 330 867 800 630 1,560 300 11,652 1982 2001 2003 1967 1974 1953 1926 1969 1957 1971 1970 1991 1973 1957 1958 1971 1950 ^ Plants to be retired * Plants on extended start-up: Tanners Creek Units 1&2, MR Unit 4, Picway, Sporn Unit 4 ** CCD Plants jointly owned by AEP Ohio, Duke, and DP&L *** To be transferred to APCo (Amos 3) and KPCo (50% Mitchell) Generation Plant Name Units Public Service Company of Oklahoma Tulsa 2 Riverside (1&2) 2 Riverside (3&4) 2 Riverside 1 Northeastern (1&2) 4 Northeastern 1 Southwestern (1-3) 3 Southwestern (4&5) 2 Southwestern 1 Comanche 3 Comanche 2 Weleetka 3 Weleetka 2 Northeastern (3&4)^ 2 Northeastern 1 Oklaunion 1 69 State Fuel Type OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK TX Steam Steam Steam Oil Steam Oil Steam Steam Oil Steam Oil Steam Oil Steam Oil Steam - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Natural Gas - Coal - Coal Southwestern Electric Power Company Arsenal Hill Lieberman Knox Lee Wilkes Lone Star Stall Mattison Welsh^ Flint Creek Turk Pirkey Dolet Hills 1 4 4 3 1 1 4 3 1 1 1 1 LA LA TX TX TX LA AR TX AR AR TX LA Steam - Natural Steam - Natural Steam - Natural Steam - Natural Steam - Natural Natural Gas Natural Gas Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Coal Steam - Lignite Steam - Lignite Texas North Company Oklaunion 1 TX Steam - Coal ^ Net Maximum Capacity Year Plant (MW) Commissioned Gas Gas Gas Gas Gas Plants to be retired: Northeastern Unit 4 (470MW) and Welsh Unit 2 (528MW) 309 909 157 3 920 3 466 170 2 260 4 196 4 930 1 102 4,436 1923 1974 2008 1976 1961 1961 1952 2008 1962 1973 1962 1975 1963 1979 1980 1986 110 268 475 845 49 543 316 1,584 264 440 580 256 5,730 1960 1947 1950 1964 1954 2010 2007 1977 1978 2012 1985 1986 355 1986 Generation Operating Company Project Name Domestic Independent Power Projects* Trent Mesa AEPEP^ Desert Sky AEPEP^ 70 PSO PSO PSO PSO PSO PSO PSO I&M I&M I&M I&M SWEPCO SWEPCO SWEPCO SWEPCO Contract Initiated State Renewable Type TX TX Wind Wind 150 161 311 2001 2001 Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Biomass Wind Solar Wind Wind Wind 75 102 75 100 100 100 59 100 10 99 147 151 2005 2008 2008 2009 2009 2009 2009 2009 2010 2013 2005 2005 95 99 99 99 199 200 199 100 50 100 200 80 80 109 201 3,028 2008 2009 2010 2010 *** *** *** 2009 2009 2012 **** 2009 2012 2013 2012 Long-Term Renewable Purchase Power Agreements Southwest Mesa AEPEP^ TX South Trent AEPEP^ TX Camp Grove APCo IL Beech Ridge APCo WV Fowler Ridge III APCo IN Grand Ridge II and III APCo IL ecoPower** KPCo IN Fowler Ridge II OPCo IN Wyandot Solar OPCo OH Timber Road OPCo OH Weatherford PSO OK Blue Canyon II# PSO OK Sleeping Bear Blue Canyon V Minco Elk City Balko** Seling** Goodwell** Fowler Ridge I Fowler Ridge II Wildcat Headwaters Majestic Majestic II Flat Ridge II Canadian Hills Net Maximum Capacity (MW) OK OK OK OK OK OK OK IN IN IN IN TX TX OK OK * Owned capacity, energy sold through wholesale energy supply contracts ** Pending Regulatory Approval # Expires 2015 Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind Wind *** Under contract but not yet on-line, expected 2016 **** Under contract but not yet on-line, expected 2015 ^ AEP Energy Partners Generation Statistics Equivalent Availability Factors 2011 2012 AEP East 72.65% 74.89% 73.23% 69.57% 71.08% 70.36% Equivalent Forced Outage Rate (EFOR) 2011 2012 AEP East 13.33% 12.93% 12.77% 14.48% 14.56% 14.20% Net Capacity Factors 2011 2012 AEP East 53.96% 49.89% 47.67% 57.46% 49.15% 49.14% S upe r Critic a l* 64.31% 58.09% 57.83% S upe r Critic a l* 72.26% 72.66% 70.72% S upe r Critic a l* 12.40% 11.83% 11.20% S ub- Critic a l* 36.55% 22.57% 22.31% S ub- Critic a l* 61.36% 66.38% 69.24% S ub- Critic a l* 22.27% 25.89% 26.77% 20.98% 39.81% 25.79% Gas 78.04% 84.40% 79.59% Gas - See Below Hydro** 9.80% 9.77% 14.73% Hydro** 84.74% 82.54% 78.49% Hydro** 23.20% 7.07% 17.50% Nuclear 90.44% 92.07% 88.25% Nuclear 89.84% 91.30% 86.76% Nuclear 2.50% 1.26% 0.80% 43.85% 41.76% 41.78% 83.54% 80.39% 83.69% 4.65% 7.11% 6.96% 81.40% 74.06% 73.26% 87.51% 83.58% 86.30% 1.47% 3.87% 4.35% S upe r Critic a l* 87.09% 72.93% 76.85% S upe r Critic a l* 89.82% 81.24% 86.44% S upe r Critic a l* 1.87% 3.84% 4.82% S ub- Critic a l* 79.45% 75.14% 70.32% S ub- Critic a l* 86.54% 84.57% 83.68% S ub- Critic a l* 1.31% 3.88% 4.12% 23.24% 23.68% 19.63% 81.36% 78.60% 81.85% 7.41% 9.88% 10.27% 3.31% Coal Gas AEP SPP Coal*** Gas AEP Texas YTD SEPT 13 Coal AEP SPP Coal*** Gas AEP Texas YTD SEPT 13 Coal AEP SPP Coal*** Gas AEP Texas YTD SEPT 13 62.92% 60.31% 76.50% 78.05% 87.28% 85.93% 8.63% 2.77% Coal**** 62.92% 60.31% 76.50% Coal**** 78.05% 87.28% 85.93% Coal**** 8.63% 2.77% 3.31% AEP System 51.57% 48.03% 46.40% AEP System 75.40% 76.38% 76.07% AEP System 11.09% 11.30% 11.06% Equivalent Forced Outage Rate (EFOR) 2011 2012 Net Capacity Factors 2011 2012 East Gas CC 37.17% 62.82% YTD SEPT 13 40.20% Equivalent Availability Factors 2011 2012 East Gas CC 74.24% 82.86% YTD SEPT 13 75.06% East Gas CC 6.25% 4.45% YTD SEPT 13 6.02% * Super-critical includes coal units with a net maximum capacity of 500MW or greater; sub-critical includes coal units with a net maximum capacity less than 420MW. ** Includes all AEP owned Hydro and Pumped Storage generation. *** CF, EAF, and EFOR do not include Dolet Hills. **** Oklaunion reported as owned. 71 ***** East Gas Units evaluated using Equivalent Forced Outage Factor. Since these units are run less frequently, this factor gauges their performance based on Period Hours instead of Service Hours. EFOR uses Service Hours in the denominator, and EFOF uses Period Hours in the denominator. Equivalent Forced Outage Factor (EFOF) AEP East Gas***** 2011 6.25% 2012 2.60% YTD SEPT 13 2.21% Generation Statistics MWh Produced Operating Company AEP Generating Company Appalachian Power Indiana Michigan Power Kentucky Power Ohio Power Public Service Company of Oklahoma Southwestern Electric Power Texas North Company AEP System Total Net Generation 2010 2011 10,362,410 22,287,975 28,476,693 6,552,258 61,289,647 14,376,653 22,343,172 2,098,311 12,215,480 25,361,448 29,578,992 6,372,925 56,508,205 14,823,903 24,072,538 1,951,343 16,024,054 23,058,020 30,016,071 2,661,344 49,428,700 13,458,301 23,493,468 1,781,718 12,867,315 23,569,148 29,357,252 5,195,509 55,742,184 14,219,619 23,303,059 1,943,791 167,787,119 170,884,834 159,921,676 166,197,876 Note: Figures represent generation produced from AEP-owned assets only. 72 2012 Three Year Average Coal and Natural Gas Statistics Coal/Lignite Consumption in Tons Operating Company 2010 2011 2012 Three Year Average AEP Generating Company Appalachian Power Indiana Michigan Power Kentucky Power Ohio Power Public Service Company of Oklahoma Southwestern Electric Power Texas North Company 4,850,666 8,932,179 6,857,261 2,573,985 25,247,488 3,917,577 12,910,825 1,258,369 4,556,325 10,045,636 6,584,936 2,558,936 22,629,431 4,544,540 12,905,370 1,221,615 5,138,504 8,265,026 6,638,832 1,139,610 18,631,018 3,960,205 12,213,046 1,122,390 4,848,498 9,080,947 6,693,676 2,090,844 22,169,312 4,140,774 12,676,414 1,200,791 AEP System Total Consumption 66,548,350 65,046,789 57,108,631 62,901,257 Natural Gas Consumption in MCFs* Operating Company AEP Generating Company Appalachian Power** Ohio Power Public Service Company of Oklahoma Southwestern Electric Power AEP System Total Consumption 2010 2011 11,232,441 572,848 9,417,195 76,915,672 43,271,124 28,799,060 336,583 18,007,337 71,481,426 48,205,761 46,573,386 18,054,300 36,660,130 68,769,285 49,712,383 28,868,296 6,321,244 21,361,554 72,388,794 47,063,089 141,409,280 166,830,167 219,769,484 176,002,977 * MCF: thousand cubic feet ** 2012 increase due to Dresden Plant coming on-line in January 2012 73 2012 Three Year Average AEP System Historical Gas Consumption AEP System Annual Natural Gas Consumption (2008 - 2013*) MMBtu $/MMBtu 9 250,000,000 8 200,000,000 7 6 150,000,000 5 4 100,000,000 3 2 50,000,000 1 0 0 2008 * YTD August Actual + Estimate for rest of year 74 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013* Total System MMBtu Actual $/MMBtu Regulated Coal Procurement – 2014 Projected Total AEP System - Regulated Lignite 12% Northern Appalachian 16% AEP East - Regulated Powder River Basin 39% Northern Appalachian 33% Central Appalachian 14% Powder River Basin 58% Central Appalachian 28% AEP West - Regulated Coal Stats: Expected 2014 coal burn: approx. 40M tons Lignite 24% 76% contracted for 2014 and 51% contracted for 2015 Avg. 2013 YTD regulated system delivered price ~ $48/ton* • East ~ $59/ton* West ~ $37/ton* Projected regulated system price in 2014 ~ $45/ton* • East ~ $54/ton*, West ~ $37/ton *excludes Ohio units moving to AEP Generation Resources- competitive 75 Powder River Basin 76% Coal Delivery Total AEP System Truck Combo Truck 4% 7% 2012 Actual Belt 10% Rail/ Barge* 16% Railcar Direct 37% ` Barge Direct 26% AEP East Truck Combo Belt 3% 6% Truck 11% Rail/ Barge* 24% AEP West Railcar Direct 18% Belt 26% Barge Direct 38% * Reflects coal delivered to AEP plants transported through a combination of rail and barge 76 Railcar Direct 74% Jurisdictional Fuel Clause Summary Jurisdiction Active Fuel Clause Frequency Arkansas Yes Annually Indiana Yes Semi-Annually Kentucky Yes Monthly Louisiana Yes Monthly Michigan Yes Annually Ohio Yes* Quarterly Oklahoma Yes Annually Tennessee Yes Monthly Texas (SPP) Yes Tri-Annually Virginia Yes Annually West Virginia Yes Annually * Through the end of the Electric Security Plan period, May 31, 2015 77 EPA Regulatory Deadlines Rule Vacated Aug 21, 2012 CSAPR* (SO2 & NOx) Final Rule Published Feb 16, 2012 Rule Vacated pending Supreme Court Appeal Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) in effect in the meantime Potential for One Year Compliance Extension MATS (mercury & air toxics) Proposed Rule Sept 20, 2013 Proposed and/or Finalized Rules New Source CO2 NSPS** Compliance Required from Rule Proposal Date Coal Combustion Residuals Assumed Final Rule 2014 Compliance Timeline Contingent on Permit Renewal Cycle Effluent Limit Guidelines (water discharge limits) Assumed Final Rule May 2014 Compliance Timeline Will Vary Assumed Final Rule November 2013 316(b) Rule (water intake structures) Compliance Timeline Contingent on State Implementation Plans Anticipated Rules Anticipated Proposed Rule June 2014 2012 2013 Existing Source CO2 NSPS** 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Time From Rule Finalization to Compliance 78 * Cross-State Air Pollution Rule ** New Source Performance Standard 2020 2021 2022 Emission Limits In compliance with our 2007 NSR settlement, as amended in 2013 the following limits are applicable to AEP’s eastern generation fleet: 79 Emissions caps do not include any of the gas-fired units, or any new units AEP might build or purchase in the east. Capacity Mix Shift & Emissions Reductions AEP Coal and Natural Gas Capacity Existing regulations and market conditions drive a 64% increase in gas capacity and a 27% decrease in coal capacity by 2016 80 AEP Emissions Reductions AEP fleet expected to meet President’s 17% reduction target for CO2 five years sooner and without additional regulation Regulated Environmental Retrofit Status Plant Name MW Capacity SCR Projected In-Service FGD Projected In-Service ACI Projected In-Service DSI Projected In-Service Baghouse Projected In-Service Gas Conversion Projected In-Service APCo Amos 1 800 Amos 2 800 Amos 3 433 Clinch River 1* 235 x 2015 Clinch River 2* 235 x 2016 x 2015 Mountaineer 1,320 KPCo Big Sandy 1* 278 Big Sandy 2** 800 Rockport 1* 1,310 x 2017 x 2015 Rockport 2* 1,310 x 2019 x 2014 x 2016 I&M PSO Oklaunion 102 Northeastern 3 460 x 2015 x 2016 x 2015 x 2016 x 2015 x 2016 x 2015 SWEPCO Dolet Hills 256 Flint Creek 1 264 x Pirkey 580 Welsh 1 528 x 2016 x 2016 Welsh 3 528 x 2015 x 2015 81 2016 * Pending regulatory approval In-service ** To be retired x Projected Regulated Environmental Investment & Retirements Operating Company Plant APCO Clinch River 1(1,2) Clinch River 2(1,2) I&M Rockport(3) Potential Type of MW retrofit 242 Refuel with Natural Gas 242 Refuel with Natural Gas 2,620 KPCO Big Sandy 1(4) PSO Oklaunion Northeastern 3 SWEPCO Welsh 1 Welsh 3 Pirkey Dolet Hills Flint Creek Operating Company APCO DSI, SCR 278 Refuel with Natural Gas 102 460 ACI ACI, DSI, Baghouse 528 528 580 256 264 ACI, Baghouse ACI, Baghouse ACI ACI, Baghouse FGD, ACI Existing Coal Plant 235MW (2) Case on file, subject to regulatory and other approvals (3) Pending approval of settlement on file with IURC Pending filing for CCN at KPSC (4) ACI – Activated Carbon Injection DSI – Dry Sorbent Injection FGD – Flue Gas Desulfurization 82 SCR – Selective Catalytic Reduction Expected MW Retirement 95 2015 240 2015 235 2015 150 2015 150 2015 200 2015 200 2015 1,270 I&M Tanners Creek 1 - 4 Total MW 995 995 2015 KPCo Big Sandy 2 Total MW 800 800 2015 SWEPCO Welsh 2 Total MW 528 528 2016 PSO Northeastern 4 Total MW 470 470 2016 Total Regulated retrofits = 6,100 (1) Plant Glen Lyn 5 Glen Lyn 6 Clinch River 3 Sporn 1 Sporn 3 Kanawha River 1 Kanawha River 2 Total MW Total Regulated Retirements = 4,063 Competitive Operations • • • • • • • • 83 Structure Fleet Footprint Fleet Characteristics 2012 Fleet Statistics Coal Procurement Environmental River Operations AEP Retail Competitive Operations Ownership Structure AEP AEP Energy Supply AEP Generation Resources Generation Wind Farms AEP Resources CSW Energy AEP Energy Retail AEP Energy Partners Wholesale, Trading and Marketing 84 AEP River Operations AEP Generation Resources Footprint Fleet Characteristics 01/01/2014 (excludes retiring plants) (In MWs) Wholly-owned, AEP operated, 72% of fleet PJM: 8,668MW Gavin Cardinal 1 Mitchell 1,2* Conesville 5, 6 Waterford Darby Racine 2,640 595 780 800 840 507 48 PJM PJM PJM PJM PJM PJM PJM Coal, controlled Coal, controlled Coal, controlled Coal, FGD only Gas, CC Gas, CT Hydro Joint Venture, AEP operated, 4% of fleet Conesville 4 339 PJM Coal, controlled Joint Venture, operated by others, 11% of fleet Zimmer Stuart 330 603 PJM PJM Coal, controlled Coal, controlled Capacity / energy entitlements, 13% of fleet Lawrenceburg Total 1,186 PJM Gas, CC 8,668 * Represents 50% ownership of Units 1&2; operated by Kentucky Power The portfolio also includes non-PJM assets including the Oklaunion Coal Plant (355 MW), Texas Wind Farms (310 MW) and Renewable PPAs (177 MW) 85 Competitive Fleet Characteristics Plant/Unit Capacity Fuel Type Coal Type Fuel Delivery FGD? SCR? Gavin 1, 2 Cardinal 1 Conesville 4* Conesville 5, 6 Mitchell 1, 2** Zimmer*** Stuart 1-4*** Oklaunion**** Lawrenceburg Waterford Darby Racine Trent Mesa/Desert Sky Renewable PPAs 2,640 595 339 800 780 330 603 355 1,186 840 507 48 311 177 9,511 coal coal coal coal coal coal coal coal gas gas gas hydro wind wind NAPP NAPP NAPP NAPP NAPP 60%/CAPP 40% NAPP CAPP 40%/ILB 60% PRB n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a barge barge & truck rail & truck rail & truck rail, barge, belt barge barge rail TX Gas Transmission (Zone 4) TX Eastern Transmission (Zone M2) Columbia Gas Transmission/Dominion Transmission n/a n/a n/a Y-lime Y-limestone Y-limestone Y-lime Y-limestone Y-limestone Y-limestone Y n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a Y Y Y N Y Y Y N n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 840 600 100 300 630 53 2,523 coal coal coal coal coal coal NAPP CAPP NAPP CAPP PRB 40%/NAPP 60% ILB rail & truck rail & truck truck barge barge barge N N N N N N N Y N N N N Plants slated for retirement Muskingum River 1-4 Muskingum River 5 Picway 5 Sporn 2-4 Kammer 1-3 Beckjord * Jointly owned unit operated by AEP ** Represents 50% ownership of Units 1&2; operated by Kentucky Power *** Jointly owned unit operated by a third-party utility **** Jointly owned unit operated by PSO 86 Competitive 2012 Fleet Statistics Plant/Unit Capacity Gavin 1, 2 Cardinal 1 Conesville 4* Conesville 5, 6 Mitchell 1, 2** Zimmer*** Stuart 1-4*** Okalunion**** Lawrenceburg Waterford Darby Racine Plants slated for retirement Muskingum River 1-5 Picway 5 Sporn 2-4 Kammer 1-3 Beckjord Fuel Type 2012 FOB Plant (per ton) 2012 MWh Produced 2012 Capacity Factor 2,640 595 339 800 780 330 603 355 1,186 840 507 48 9,023 coal coal coal coal coal coal coal coal gas gas gas hydro $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 55.11 47.03 78.96 57.76 70.25 57.45 59.60 33.30 n/a n/a n/a n/a 2.31 1.89 3.28 2.50 2.83 2.48 2.57 1.99 3.02 2.89 3.68 n/a 17,220,105 2,969,568 999,774 3,307,999 3,772,169 1,142,482 2,935,173 1,781,718 6,634,276 5,027,420 77,009 138,403 74.29% 54.39% 36.21% 42.06% 55.12% 41.87% 56.75% 54.27% 63.59% 68.14% 1.73% 33.17% 1,440 100 300 630 53 2,523 coal coal coal coal coal $ $ $ $ $ 84.14 76.92 73.08 69.51 56.23 3.42 3.47 3.07 3.08 2.31 1,789,615 3,957 585,060 1,784,836 226,966 14.15% 0.45% 22.20% 32.25% 51.35% * Jointly owned unit operated by AEP ** Represents 50% ownership of Units 1&2; operated by Kentucky Power *** Jointly owned unit operated by a third-party utility **** Jointly owned unit operated by PSO 87 2012 $/MMBtu Competitive Coal Procurement – 2014 Projected Illinois Basin 12% Powder River Basin 2% Central Appalachian 12% Northern Appalachian 74% Coal Stats: Expected 2014 coal burn: approx. 16M tons 95% contracted for 2014 and 91% contracted for 2015 YTD 09/30/2013 delivered price ~$59/ton* Projected price in 2014 ~ $58/ton* 88 *reflects only Ohio units operated by AEP moving to AEP Generation Resources - competitive Competitive Environmental Investment & Retirements Operating Company Plant MW (1) AEP Generation Resources Conesville 5 & 6 800 TNC Oklaunion 355 Potential Type of retrofit Mercury Solution ACI Total Competitive Retrofits = 1,155 (1) Assumes investment is able to clear the market Operating Company Plant AEP Generation Resources Muskingum River 1-5 Picway 5 Sporn 2-4 Kammer 1-3 Beckjord Total Competitive Retirements = 89 Expected MW Retirement 1,440 2015 100 2015 300 2015 630 2015 53 2015 2,523 Competitive Environmental Retrofit Status Plant Name MW Capacity SCR FGD ACI Projected In-Service Mercury Solution Projected In-Service AEP Generation Resources Cardinal 1 595 Conesville 4 339 Conesville 5 400 x 2016 Conesville 6 400 x 2016 2,640 Mitchell 1&2* 780 Muskingum River 5** 600 Stuart 1-4 600 Zimmer 330 Gavin 1&2 TNC Oklaunion 355 x * Represents 50% ownership of Units 1&2; operated by Kentucky Power ** To be retired In-service x Projected 90 2015 AEP River Operations Full-service Inland Waterways carrier 3,100 hopper barges 60 towboats and 25 fleet & shuttle boats Tonnage & Commodity (2012): Captive: (for AEP) 32MM tons of coal/ consumables Commercial: 42MM tons of coal/grain/bulk Gulf Operations Barge cleaning and repair Fleeting and shifting Midstream transfers Operating Centers in Lakin, WV, Paducah, KY, Convent and Belle Chase, LA and Mobile, AL 91 Inland Waterway Routes For AEP River Operations AEP Energy Customer Accounts* Geography of customers* YTD Sept 2013 Delivered Load 200,000 retail customer accounts YTD served 7.4 TWh of load* Seven states, focus on Ohio Profitable in first year and through the third quarter of 2013 92 * As of September 30, 2013 Transmission Initiatives • • • • 93 Structure Transcos Joint Ventures Competitive Transmission AEP Transmission Ownership Structure American Electric Power Company, Inc. 100% AEP Transmission Company, LLC (“AEP Transco”) AEP Appalachian Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Transmission Holding Company, LLC (“AEP Trans Holdco” or “AEPTHC”) 50% 100% 50% Pioneer Transmission, LLC AEP Kentucky Transmission Holding Company, Inc. Electric Transmission America, LLC $20 Equity Investment in PWT ($ in millions) $221 Net Plant* ($ in millions) $269 Net Plant* ($ in millions) AEP Indiana Michigan Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Ohio Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Oklahoma Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Southwestern Transmission Company, Inc. AEP West Virginia Transmission Company, Inc. $784 Net Plant* ($ in millions) Currently Operating Not Currently Operating * As of 09/30/2013 94 86.5% Transource Energy, LLC 50% Electric Transmission Texas, LLC $2,153* Net Plant ($ in millions) AEPTHC Growth Plan Project Summary Regional Projects Generation Retirements Over 13 GW of generation retiring in PJM; could reach 18 GW by 2015. Many of the retirements are in AEP and FirstEnergy territories. Significant changes in regional power flows, resulting in reliability issues. Major issues identified and projects underway, but additional retirements are possible. Integration of Renewables Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) and tax credits continue to promote renewable energy development. Renewable resources – primarily wind and to an extent solar – are typically located far from load centers, requiring transmission build-out to reliably connect and delivery these resources. Opportunities continue to evolve in PJM, SPP, and MISO. Economic & Market Efficiency driven projects FERC Order 1000 increasing focus on projects that reduce congestion and promote market efficiency. Economic-driven projects subject of recent PJM competitive window and on-going PJM-MISO joint operating agreement study. Aging Infrastructure 65% of AEP’s transmission lines were built 40+ years ago. Target assets > 45 years old, ~$400m of transmission assets, each successive year adding ~$75-$100m Potential to invest $9-$11 billion, growing at $1 billion per year 95 Local Reliability Plans Local transmission facilities (< 138 kV) account for the majority of AEP Transmission facilities. Local facilities tend to be older and more susceptible to trees, storms, and other threats to reliability and have a direct impact on customers. Recent storms such as the Derecho and Superstorm Sandy have raised awareness of the vulnerability of these facilities, and the need to strengthen local transmission facilities against future events. AEP recently undertook studies to (1) identify areas where poorperforming transmission facilities are causing customer outages, and (2) identify areas where new transmission projects could solve distribution/customer reliability issues. These studies identified significant (~$2B) of opportunity to enhance local transmission reliability. Customer Driven Projects Customer interconnection requests dominated by shale gas activity. AEP transmission system encompasses large portions of major shale plays. Marcellus, Utica, Huron (East) Barnett, Eagle Ford, Woodford, Fayetteville (West) Midstream processing facilities require transmission service (10-100 MW), and rural locations may require significant, long-term transmission buildout. Pumping loads (<5 MW) also adding to localized load growth in some areas. AEP using innovative technology, including skid stations, to provide quick service in as little as 6 weeks. AEP Transco Has a Large, Diverse Footprint The State Transcos exist within the expansive service territories of AEP’s distribution companies, operating across two RTOs and 10 states ISO RTO Regions PJM SPP AEP State Transcos AEP Appalachian Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Kentucky Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Indiana Michigan Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Ohio Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Oklahoma Transmission Company, Inc. AEP Southwestern Transmission Company, Inc. AEP West Virginia Transmission Company, Inc. Non-Transco Operating Companies AEP Texas 96 State Transco Regulatory Compacts AEP Transco and its seven State Transco subsidiaries were formed in 2009 to focus on upgrades to AEP’s transmission system and thereby provide flexibility to AEP’s integrated utility Operating Companies to direct their capital resources to the distribution businesses and generation fleets A summary of regulatory approval status is provided in the table below: State Transco State Operational and Project Approval Status OH Transco No state regulatory agency approval was required to operate transmission assets in the state of Ohio. However, in Case No. 10-245EL-UNC, OH Transco did receive approval from the PUCO to transfer certain assets under construction from Ohio Power Company and Columbus Southern Power Company to OH Transco. OH Transco is fully operational with assets in-service. IM Transco Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission approval received November 2011; no Michigan approval required. IM Transco is fully operational with assets in-service. OK Transco No state regulatory approval required for utility status. OK Transco is fully operational with assets in-service. WV Transco Based on a previous ruling by the West Virginia Public Service Commission (“WVPSC”), WV Transco is required to obtain a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity (“CPCN”) to build any project that costs more than $500K. In 2013, WV Transco filed various CPCN applications for approval from the WVPSC. On September 25, 2013, the WVPSC granted a CPCN for WV Transco to build one of these projects, the Kanawha River Transformer Installation Project (~$19M). Construction will begin immediately. The other CPCN applications are pending. AP Transco In Feb. 2012, the Virginia State Corporation Commission (“VSCC”) approved a service agreement between AP Transco and APCo limited to studying and evaluating potential transmission projects and for preparation of applications for future submission of project certificate applications to the VSCC. In May 2013, AP Transco and APCo filed a joint application with the Virginia SCC for the approval of the Cloverdale Extra High Voltage Transmission Improvements Project. AP Transco’s portion of the project is approximately $222 million. The CPCN application is pending. KY Transco In Feb 2011, KY Transco filed an application with the Kentucky Public Service Commission (“KPSC”) in Case No. 2011-00042 to seek a CPCN to operate as a transmission-only public utility in Kentucky. In June 2013, the KPSC issued an order stating the KPSC lacked authority to grant the requested CPCN since KY Transco would not be providing a regulated service under KPSC jurisdiction and, on that basis, denied KY Transco’s application for a CPCN. As a result of the KPSC order, KY Transco will develop transmission projects in Kentucky subject to certificate authority by the Kentucky State Board on Electric Generation and Transmission Siting, but not subject to the regulatory authority of the KPSC. KY Transco has identified 7 projects that do not require siting approval and one additional project that does require siting approval (filing expected late 2013). SW Transco Filed for approval in AR and LA in May 2011 and August 2011, respectively; decisions anticipated in 2014. 97 State Transco Rates are Regulated by FERC Conservative FERC regulation results in timely recovery of costs In April 2011, the FERC approved a formula rate mechanism for the State Transcos The FERC order dictates how the State Transcos determine their rates, including the recovery of all authorized expenses and the return on and of invested plant The approved formula rate mechanism established an annual revenue requirement for transmission services over the facilities of the State Transcos under the PJM and SPP OATTs, as applicable, and implemented a transmission cost of service formula rate Annual rate settings provide a highly predictable and stable source of revenues and income 98 Each State Transco’s annual transmission revenue requirement (“ATRR”) is reset in July based on the prior year’s financial activity plus the current year’s projected plant balances, thus establishing rates for the one-year forward period of July to June (“Rate Year”) The revenue requirements are derived from the following capital structure limitations and authorized ROEs: Company RTO Capital Structure % Equity Cap Authorized ROE* Rate Base AP Transco PJM 50% 11.49% - IM Transco PJM 50% 11.49% $136M KY Transco PJM 50% 11.49% $19K OH Transco PJM 50% 11.49% $416M WV Transco PJM 50% 11.49% $129K OK Transco SPP 50% 11.20% $224M SW Transco SPP 50% 11.20% - (as of 07/01/2013) * Includes 50bps adder for RTO participation Project Selection Guidelines State Transcos will develop new projects that are attached to AEP’s existing system A Project Selection Guideline (“PSG”) is used to determine which facilities are developed by the State Transco and which are developed by an AEP Operating Company All projects developed by AEP go through an internal process that requires approval by AEP management and ensures compliance with all proper strategic and financial controls Projects developed as part of an RTO-driven process are subject to approval by the RTO Board of Directors, and certain high-voltage projects must meet state siting requirements The following projects are eligible for development by a State Transco: Type of Project Greenfield Facility Additions Facility Replacements Component Replacements Spare/Mobile Equipment 99 Definition New transmission assets that do not require replacement or modification of existing facilities or components New transmission components installed at existing AEP Operating Company-owned transmission or distribution facilities Replacement of an entire existing AEP Operating Company-owned facility with a new AEP Transco-owned facility An apportioned replacement of an existing AEP Operating Company-owned transmission facility or replacement of component(s) within a transmission facility Purchases of major transmission equipment as capitalized spares or mobiles used to supply any Transco companies Active Joint Venture Projects Location Projected Completion Date Texas (ERCOT) Prairie Wind Pioneer Project Name ETT Transource Owners (ownership %) Base RTO Project Risk Total 2017 MEHC Texas Transco, LLC (50%), AEP (50%) $3.1 billion 9.96% 0.00% 0.00% 9.96% Kansas 2014 Westar Energy (50%), ETA (50%) $180 million 10.80% 0.50% 1.50% 12.80% Indiana 2018 Duke Energy (50%), AEP (50%) $330 million 10.54% 0.50% 1.50% 12.54% Missouri 2017 AEP (86.5%), Great Plains Energy(13.5%) $434 million 9.80% * Only approved for Sibley-Nebraksa City line Transource - Weighted average of 11.15% based on projected cost of each project. Non active joint ventures and prospects excluded from the financial forecasts 100 Approved Return on Equity Total Estimated Project costs at completion 0.50% 1.00%* 10.3 - 11.3% Competitive Transmission Transource Energy, a joint venture with Great Plains Energy (GPE), is the exclusive vehicle through which AEP will pursue new competitive transmission projects Transource is owned 86.5% by AEP and 13.5% by GPE Transource expects to begin active operations as a transmission owner in SPP in early 2014 SPP approval received to transfer two projects in Missouri from GPE to Transource, totaling approximately $445 million in investment The Sibley to Nebraska City project is estimated to cost $380M with an in-service date of 2017 The Iatan to Nashua project is estimated to cost $65 million with an in-service date of 2015 The Missouri Public Service Commission has approved the transfer of the projects to Transource FERC has approved the establishment of a base formula rate and incentives for the projects that will go into effect starting in 2014, including: 11.15% weighted average ROE approved for the projects and up to 55% equity in the permanent capital structure Incentives include: 100% CWIP in rate base, cost recovery in the event of abandonment, and hypothetical capital structure of 60% during construction Expect projects to transfer in early 2014 Transource has submitted multiple proposals to PJM for its ongoing competitive opportunities and to PJM/MISO for the competitive interregional process Submitted four proposals into the PJM “Artificial Island” competitive process Submitted two proposals into the PJM 2013 Market Efficiency competitive process Submitted twelve proposals into the PJM-MISO joint study competitive process 101 Financial Update • • • • • 102 Capitalization and Liquidity Position AEP Banking Group Credit Ratings Long-Term Debt Maturity Profile Debt Schedules Capitalization & Liquidity Total Debt / Total Capitalization Credit Statistics FFO Interest Coverage FFO To Total Debt Actual 4.6 19.7% Target >3.6x 15%- 20% Note: Credit statistics represent the trailing 12 months as of 09/30/2013 Liquidity Summary (09/30/2013) Liquidity Summary (unaudited) ($ in millions) Revolving Credit Facility Revolving Credit Facility Term Credit Facility Total Credit Facilities Actual Amount $ 1,750 1,750 1,000 4,500 Plus Cash & Cash Equivalents 147 Less Commercial Paper Outstanding Amount drawn on bank loans Letters of credit issued Net available Liquidity 103 (518) (600) (185) $ 3,344 Maturity Jul-17 Jun-16 May-15 AEP Banking Group $3.5B Core Credit Facilities Lender Composition Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Japanese Bank Lender mix gives AEP geopolitical diversification S&P Rating LT (ST) %Share Aa3 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 5.0% Barclays Bank British Bank A2 (P-1) A (A-1) 5.0% Citibank Major US Bank A3 (P-2) A (A-1) 5.0% Credit Suisse Investment Bank A1 (P-1) A (A-1) 5.0% JP Morgan Major US Bank Aa3 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 5.0% Key Bank US Regional Bank A3 (P-2) A- (A-2) 5.0% Royal Bank of Scotland British Bank Baa1 (P-2) A- (A-2) 5.0% Wells Fargo Major US Bank Aa3 (P-1) AA- (A-1+) 5.0% Bank of America Major US Bank Baa2 (P-2) A- (A-2) 3.9% Bank of New York US Regional Bank Aa3 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 3.9% BNP Paribas European Bank A2 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 3.9% Credit Agricole European Bank A2 (P-1) A (A-1) 3.9% Goldman Sachs Investment Bank A2 (P-1) A (A-1) 3.9% Mizuho Japanese Bank A1 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 3.9% Morgan Stanley Investment Bank Baa1 (P-2) A- (A-2) 3.9% Royal Bank of Canada Canadian Bank Aa3 (P-1) AA- (A-1+) 3.9% Scotia Capital Canadian Bank Aa2 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 3.9% SunTrust Bank US Regional Bank Baa1 (P-2) BBB (A-2) 3.9% UBS Investment Bank A2 (P-1) A (A-1) 3.9% US Bank US Regional Bank A1 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 3.9% BBVA European Bank Baa2 (P-2) BBB- (A-3) 2.6% Fifth-Third Bank US Regional Bank Baa1 (NR) BBB+ (A-2) 2.6% PNC Financial US Regional Bank A3 (NR) A- (A-2) 2.6% Sumitomo Bank Japanese Bank Aa3 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 2.6% Huntington National Bank US Regional Bank A3 (P-2) BBB+ (NR) 1.4% The Northern Trust Co. A1 (P-1) A+ (A-1) 1.4% Total 104 Moodys Rating LT (ST) US Regional Bank 100.0% AEP Credit Ratings Current Ratings for AEP, Inc. & Subsidiaries Company American Electric Power Company Inc. S&P Senior Unsecured Outlook Fitch Senior Unsecured Outlook Baa2 S BBB- S BBB N AEP, Inc. Short Term Rating P2 S A2 S F2 S AEP Texas Central Company Baa2 P BBB S A- S AEP Texas North Company Baa2 P BBB S A- S Appalachian Power Company Baa2 S BBB S BBB S Indiana Michigan Power Company Baa2 S BBB S BBB S Kentucky Power Company Baa2 S BBB S BBB N Ohio Power Company Baa1 S BBB S A- N Public Service Company of Oklahoma Baa1 S BBB S BBB+ S Southwestern Electric Power Company Baa3 P BBB S BBB S Ratings current as of September 30, 2013 105 Moody's Senior Unsecured Outlook Long-term Debt Maturity Profile Year 2013 2014 AEP, Inc. AEP Generating Company Appalachian Power Indiana Michigan Power Kentucky Power Ohio Power* Public Service of Oklahoma Southwestern Electric Power Texas Central Company** Texas North Company Total $8 $8 $45 $204 $288 $569 $34 $1,140 ($ in millions) 2015 $625 $322 $686 $304 $208 $2,145 2016 2017 2018 $65 $198 $350 $150 $267 $75 $1,105 $550 $250 $325 $165 $250 $288 $1,828 $350 $382 $437 $30 $1,199 * Includes $165 million of amortizing Ohio Securitization Bonds based upon scheduled final payment date ** Includes $1,084 million of amortizing Texas Securitization Bonds based upon scheduled final payment date Includes mandatory tenders (put bonds) Data as of September 30, 2013 106 Debt Schedules American Electric Power, Inc Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Senior Notes 1.650% 12/15/2017 025537 AF8 $550,000,000 Senior Notes 2.950% 12/15/2022 025537 AG6 $300,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 2.11% AEP Generating Interest $850,000,000 Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Pollution Control Bond Floating 07/01/20251 773835BG7 $22,500,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 07/01/20251 773835BH5 $22,500,000 Senior Notes 6.330% 09/30/2037 00113AA2 $174,545,520 Weighted Average or Total 6.330% 1 $219,545,520 Put date 7/15/2014 AEP Transmission Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Senior Notes 3.300% 10/18/2022 00114* AA1 $104,000,000 Senior Notes 4.000% 10/18/2032 00114* AB9 $85,000,000 Senior Notes 4.730% 10/18/2042 00114* AC7 $61,000,000 Senior Notes 4.780% 12/14/2042 00114* AD5 $75,000,000 Senior Notes 4.830% 03/18/2043 00114* AE3 $25,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 4.146% $350,000,000 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * PPN – Private Placement Number 107 Debt Schedules Appalachian Power Company 108 Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Pollution Control Bond 3.250% 05/01/2019 95648NAB3 $30,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 3.250% 05/01/2019 95648NAC1 $40,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.625% 11/01/2021 782470AR9 $17,500,000 Pollution Control Bond 2.000% 10/1/20221 575200BA7 $100,000,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 2/1/20362 95648VAL3 $50,275,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 2 2/1/2036 95648VAK5 $75,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 5.375% 12/01/2038 95648VAS8 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 2.250% 1/1/20413 95648VAT6 $65,350,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 12/1/20424 95648VAP4 $54,375,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 12/1/20424 95648VAQ2 $50,000,000 Senior Notes 4.950% 02/01/2015 037735CB1 $200,000,000 Senior Notes 3.400% 05/24/2015 037735CQ8 $300,000,000 Senior Notes 5.000% 06/01/2017 037735CD7 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 7.950% 01/15/2020 037735CP0 $350,000,000 Senior Notes 4.600% 03/30/2021 037735CR6 $350,000,000 Senior Notes 5.950% 05/15/2033 037735BZ9 $200,000,000 Senior Notes 5.800% 10/01/2035 037735CE5 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 6.375% 04/01/2036 037735CG0 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 6.700% 08/15/2037 037735CK1 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 7.000% 04/01/2038 037735CM7 $500,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.62% 1 Put date 10/01/2014 2 Put date 03/17/2015 3 Put date 09/01/2016 4 Put date 03/24/2014 $3,432,500,000 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * PPN – Private Placement Number Debt Schedules Indiana Michigan Power Company 109 Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Pollution Control Bond Floating 10/01/20196 520453AL5 $25,000,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 11/01/20217 520453AK7 $52,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.625% 06/01/2025 773835AV5 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 6.250% 06/01/20258 773835BF9 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 6.250% 8 06/01/2025 773835BE2 $50,000,000 Nuclear Fuel Lease 5.440% 10/01/2013 N/A $7,865,587 Nuclear Fuel Lease 4.000% 10/13/2014 N/A $13,298,845 Nuclear Fuel Lease Floating 06/07/2015 N/A $14,279,766 Nuclear Fuel Lease 2.120% 05/01/2016 N/A $18,113,241 Nuclear Fuel Lease Floating 05/01/2016 N/A $26,153,507 Nuclear Fuel Lease Floating 10/27/2016 N/A $60,116,617 Nuclear Fuel Lease Floating 10/27/2016 N/A $93,149,930 Term Loan Floating 05/15/2015 45488QAA6 $105,913,672 Senior Notes 5.050% 11/15/2014 454889AK2 $175,000,000 Senior Notes 5.650% 12/01/2015 454889AL0 $125,000,000 Senior Notes 7.000% 03/15/2019 454889AN6 $475,000,000 Senior Notes 6.050% 03/15/2037 454889AM8 $400,000,000 Senior Notes 3.200% 03/15/2023 454889 AP1 $250,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.653% 6 Put date is 03/22/2015 7 Put date is 03/16/2015 8 Put date is 06/02/2014 $1,990,891,165 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * PPN – Private Placement Number Debt Schedules Ohio Power Company Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Pollution Control Bond Floating 07/01/2014 572287AT7 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 05/1/20269 677525MQ7 $50,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 2.875% 12/01/202710 677525TX5 $39,130,000 Pollution Control Bond Floating 06/1/203711 95648VAD1 $65,000,000 12 Pollution Control Bond 3.875% 677525TL1 $60,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 5.800% 12/01/2038 677525TM9 $32,245,000 Pollution Control Bond 3.250% 06/01/204113 677525TV9 $79,450,000 Pollution Control Bond 3.125% 03/01/204314 95648VAR0 $86,000,000 Term Loan Floating 05/13/2015 N/A $200,000,000 Term Loan Floating 05/13/2015 N/A $400,000,000 Senior Notes 4.850% 01/15/2014 677415CG4 $225,000,000 Senior Notes 6.000% 06/01/2016 677415CL3 $350,000,000 Senior Notes 6.050% 05/01/2018 199575AW1 $350,000,000 Senior Notes 5.375% 10/01/2021 677415CP4 $500,000,000 Senior Notes 6.600% 02/15/2033 677415CF6 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 6.600% 03/01/2033 199575AT8 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 5.850% 10/01/2035 199575AV3 $250,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.590% Securitization Bond 0.958% 07/01/2017 67741Y AA6 $164,900,000 Securitization Bond 2.049% 07/01/2019 67741Y AB4 $102,508,000 Weighted Average or Total 1.376% 9 110 Interest 12/01/2038 $3,236,825,000 $267,408,000 Put date 11/21/2014 10 Put date 08/01/2014 11 Put date 07/01/2014 12 Put date 06/01/2014 13 Put date 06/02/2014 14 Put date 04/01/2015 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * PPN – Private Placement Number Debt Schedules Public Service Company of Oklahoma Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Notes Payable 3.000% 12/01/2025 N/A $6,846,018 Pollution Control Bond 5.250% 06/01/2014 67884LAB9 $33,700,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.450% 06/01/2020 756864BT0 $12,660,000 Senior Notes 6.150% 08/01/2016 744533BH2 $150,000,000 Senior Notes 5.150% 12/01/2019 744533BK5 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 4.400% 02/01/2021 744533BL3 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 6.625% 11/15/2037 744533BJ8 $250,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.455% Southwestern Electric Power Company Interest $953,206,018 Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Notes Payable 6.370% 10/31/2024 78532* AC7 $25,000,000 Notes Payable 4.580% 02/21/2032 78532* AD5 $60,125,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.950% 03/01/2018 785652CJ5 $81,700,000 241627AV0 $53,500,000 15 Pollution Control Bond 3.250% Senior Notes 5.375% 04/15/2015 845437BE1 $100,000,000 Senior Notes 4.900% 07/01/2015 845437BG6 $150,000,000 Senior Notes 5.550% 01/15/2017 845437BH4 $250,000,000 Senior Notes 5.875% 03/01/2018 845437BJ0 $300,000,000 Senior Notes 6.450% 01/15/2019 845437BK7 $400,000,000 Senior Notes 3.550% 02/15/2022 845437BM3 $275,000,000 Senior Notes 6.200% 03/15/2040 845437BL5 $350,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.457% 15 111 Interest 01/01/2019 $2,045,325,000 Put date 01/02/2015 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * PPN – Private Placement Number Debt Schedules Kentucky Power Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Senior Notes 6.000% 09/15/2017 Senior Notes 7.250% Senior Notes 8.030% Senior Notes Amount 491386AM0 $325,000,000 06/18/2021 491386 C*7 $40,000,000 06/18/2029 491386 C@5 $30,000,000 5.625% 12/01/2032 491386AL2 $75,000,000 Senior Notes 8.130% 06/18/2039 491386 C#3 $60,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 6.397% AEP Texas North 112 Interest Interest $530,000,000 Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Pollution Control Bond 4.450% 06/01/2020 Senior Notes 5.890% Senior Notes 6.760% Senior Notes Amount 756864BT0 $44,310,000 04/01/2018 0010EQ A*7 $30,000,000 04/01/2038 0010EQ A@5 $70,000,000 3.090% 02/28/2023 0010EQ A#3 $125,000,000 Senior Notes 4.480% 02/28/2043 0010EQ B*6 $75,000,000 Term Loan Floating 07/31/2016 N/A $75,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 4.558% $419,310,000 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * PPN – Private Placement Number Debt Schedules AEP Texas Central 113 Interest Maturity CUSIP / PPN* Amount Pollution Control Bond 5.625% 10/01/2017 40053QAQ4 Pollution Control Bond 4.450% 06/01/2020 756864BT0 $40,890,000 $6,330,000 Pollution Control Bond 6.300% 11/01/2029 576528DM2 $100,635,000 Pollution Control Bond 5.200% 05/01/2030 576528DE0 $60,000,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.400% 05/01/2030 576528CY7 $111,700,000 Pollution Control Bond 4.550% 05/01/2030 576528CZ4 $50,000,000 Senior Notes 6.650% 02/15/2033 0010EPAF5 $275,000,000 Term Loan Floating 07/31/2016 N/A $75,000,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.821% Securitization Bond 6.250% Weighted Average or Total 6.250% Securitization Bond 5.090% 07/01/2015 00110AAC8 $208,096,401 Securitization Bond 5.170% 01/01/2018 00110AAD6 $437,000,000 Securitization Bond 5.306% 07/01/2020 00110AAE4 $494,700,000 Weighted Average or Total 5.215% Securitization Bond 0.880% 12/01/2017 00104UAA6 $246,906,438 Securitization Bond 1.976% 06/01/2020 00104UAB4 $180,200,000 Securitization Bond 2.845% 12/01/2024 00104UAC2 $311,900,000 Weighted Average or Total 1.977% $719,555,000 01/15/2016 12617AAE7 $191,856,858 $191,856,858 $1,139,796,401 $739,006,438 Note: Debt schedules current as of 9/30/13. The weighted average coupon excludes all floating rate debt. * PPN – Private Placement Number