Consumer Group Asks SEC To Stop Southern Co.'s Asia Move

Fortnightly Magazine - February 1 1997
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A Georgia-based consumer advocacy group, the Campaign for a Prosperous Georgia (CPG), has asked the Securities and Exchange Commission to halt a move by The Southern Company to use up to 100 percent of its retained earnings for a $2.75 billion acquisition of 80 percent of the Asian utility company, Consolidated Electric Power of Asia.

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Among other claims, CPG wants the SEC to reconsider an April 1996 decision that granted an exemption to The Southern Company from the provisions of the Public Utility Holding Company Act (PUHCA).

Worries in Congress. According to CPG, that exemption has raised concerns with some members of Congress and state utility commissions. In particular, CPG says that U.S. Representatives Edward Markey and John Dingell (principal authors of PUHCA amendments passed in 1992 to mandate certain

consumer protections) have suggested in a series of letters to addressed to SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt that the exemption granted Southern does not fulfill the law.

Concerns in Georgia. Also, the Georgia PSC reportedly has expressed concern to the SEC that the proposed takeover could hurt domestic customers by raising the cost of Southern's capital.

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