![Business Breakdowns - NextEra Energy: The Renewable Leader - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 38]](https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/episode_images/c2c25d85b9fcdb6ec110209d24467219197affe3250d2459765cbf027b6d5152.avif)
NextEra Energy: The Renewable Leader - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 38]
12/08/21 • 42 min
1 Listener
I’m Zack Fuss and today we’re breaking down NextEra Energy. NextEra is America’s most valuable energy firm and consists primarily of two businesses; a high-quality regulated utility and a renewables business that is the world’s largest generator of wind and solar energy.
To help break down the business, I’m joined by Mark Tomasovic, an investor at Energize VC. In our conversation, we discuss the structure of the energy market, what’s changed in the renewables space over the past twenty years, and how NextEra takes advantage of its cost of capital advantage. Please enjoy this breakdown of NextEra Energy.
For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.
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Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.
Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.
Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss
Show Notes
[00:03:16] - [First question] - Mark’s background and how he thinks about the energy markets
[00:03:46] - A broad overview of the electricity market and how it’s structured
[00:05:22] - The value chain and production line of energy from facility to customer
[00:06:59] - What informs how much an energy company is allowed to earn
[00:09:16] - Unregulated versus regulated markets and the risks and benefits of both
[00:11:29] - How the retail electric market looks today and alternative production methods
[00:12:40] - NextEra’s business fundamentals and their current scope and scale
[00:14:45] - The two business arms of NextEra
[00:16:00] - Inputs and costs of the low cost regulated utility side of NextEra
[00:18:33] - NEER being the world’s largest generator of wind and solar
[00:19:43] - How they’re able to get contracts and how they work
[00:20:03] - Comparison of revenue generated between their different branches
[00:21:26] - How the regulated and unregulated arms work together for NextEra vs its competitors
[00:22:30] - What their most important benchmark is and thoughts on gross margin and profits
[00:24:33] - Natural cost of capital advantage given the growing focus on ESG
[00:25:33] - How COVID impacted the energy space, specifically in electricity
[00:28:20] - Conventional energy production becoming more expensive in the near future
[00:30:10] - How reliant NextEra is on government subsidies
[00:31:20] - Where they spend all their revenue, the price of projects, and ROI
[00:33:01] - How they evaluate projects
[00:34:19] - Structural differences in renewable energy business models today
[00:36:18] - What could happen that could negatively impact NextEra’s growth
[00:38:22] - Considering risks when underwriting turbines
[00:39:15] - Is nuclear power a potential tail risk?
[00:40:05] - Being forward-leaning when adopting digital technology and innovation
[00:41:23] - Lessons that can be learned from NextEra for builders and investors
I’m Zack Fuss and today we’re breaking down NextEra Energy. NextEra is America’s most valuable energy firm and consists primarily of two businesses; a high-quality regulated utility and a renewables business that is the world’s largest generator of wind and solar energy.
To help break down the business, I’m joined by Mark Tomasovic, an investor at Energize VC. In our conversation, we discuss the structure of the energy market, what’s changed in the renewables space over the past twenty years, and how NextEra takes advantage of its cost of capital advantage. Please enjoy this breakdown of NextEra Energy.
For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.
-----
Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.
Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.
Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss
Show Notes
[00:03:16] - [First question] - Mark’s background and how he thinks about the energy markets
[00:03:46] - A broad overview of the electricity market and how it’s structured
[00:05:22] - The value chain and production line of energy from facility to customer
[00:06:59] - What informs how much an energy company is allowed to earn
[00:09:16] - Unregulated versus regulated markets and the risks and benefits of both
[00:11:29] - How the retail electric market looks today and alternative production methods
[00:12:40] - NextEra’s business fundamentals and their current scope and scale
[00:14:45] - The two business arms of NextEra
[00:16:00] - Inputs and costs of the low cost regulated utility side of NextEra
[00:18:33] - NEER being the world’s largest generator of wind and solar
[00:19:43] - How they’re able to get contracts and how they work
[00:20:03] - Comparison of revenue generated between their different branches
[00:21:26] - How the regulated and unregulated arms work together for NextEra vs its competitors
[00:22:30] - What their most important benchmark is and thoughts on gross margin and profits
[00:24:33] - Natural cost of capital advantage given the growing focus on ESG
[00:25:33] - How COVID impacted the energy space, specifically in electricity
[00:28:20] - Conventional energy production becoming more expensive in the near future
[00:30:10] - How reliant NextEra is on government subsidies
[00:31:20] - Where they spend all their revenue, the price of projects, and ROI
[00:33:01] - How they evaluate projects
[00:34:19] - Structural differences in renewable energy business models today
[00:36:18] - What could happen that could negatively impact NextEra’s growth
[00:38:22] - Considering risks when underwriting turbines
[00:39:15] - Is nuclear power a potential tail risk?
[00:40:05] - Being forward-leaning when adopting digital technology and innovation
[00:41:23] - Lessons that can be learned from NextEra for builders and investors
Previous Episode
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Novocure: Using Physics to Fight Cancer - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 37]
Today, we’re breaking down Novocure, a global oncology company that has pioneered a new approach to cancer treatment. For over 100 years, the tools used to fight cancer have largely remained unchanged, but there are promising signs of a renaissance and Novocure is at the vanguard of that charge.
To explain the state of cancer research and how the business has developed over the past twenty years, I’m joined by Bill Doyle – Novocure’s Executive Chairman. Please enjoy this breakdown of Novocure.
For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.
-----
Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.
Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.
Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss
Show Notes
[00:03:05] - [First question] - The current state of cancer treatment today writ large
[00:05:43] - What cancer is and how it becomes life threatening
[00:06:38] - Why uncontrolled cell growth is so bad
[00:07:27] - The main three ways we currently treat cancer
[00:11:29] - Whether or not there are targeted ways we can treat cancer like mRNA
[00:14:08] - How we’ve historically detected cancer and what future detection could look like
[00:17:12] - Death rates of cancer in the US annually and the business side as it stands today
[00:18:20] - Key players in the cancer treatment space that serve patients
[00:19:13] - The pioneering technology that Novocure created to treat cancer
[00:22:38] - The mechanism that allows their tech to target the right cells
[00:25:35] - Overview of the actual procedure that takes place with their therapy
[00:28:36] - The impact and results of their new treatment method
[00:33:37] - A future where we can take this in a prophylactic and preventive sense
[00:34:44] - Why this approach to cancer treatment isn’t more widely known and accepted
[00:38:09] - Financials of Novocure and the opportunities it presents for their business
[00:43:10] - How they spend their R&D dollars and horizontal and vertical growth
[00:48:01] - Unique ways how they spend their revenue to scale their business
[00:51:05] - Biggest criticisms of the size and scope of Novocure
[00:52:18] - Broader business lessons learned while building a cancer treatment company
[00:55:23] - The future of healthcare more generally and what has him most excited
Next Episode
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The National Football League - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 39]
Today, we are breaking down The National Football League or, as most know it, The NFL. It’s a sport that dominates American Sundays from late summer into early winter. Behind what happens on the field is a $15 billion dollar business with a unique operating and ownership structure and many stakeholders.
To help break down the NFL, Jesse Pujji is joined by Jay Kapoor. Jay is currently General Partner of venture fund VSC Ventures, and prior to his career as an investor, Jay worked in the League Strategy office at the NFL. During the conversation, we break down some of the fascinating dynamics of the NFL, including how it dominates linear TV, the unique revenue considerations for the league and its teams, and what makes the NFL stand out relative to other sports. I hope you enjoy this breakdown of the NFL.
For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.
-----
Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.
Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.
Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss
Show Notes
[00:02:18] - [First question] - What is the NFL?
[00:03:26] - The size and scale of the NFL as a business
[00:04:55] - Points of growth on the league side and the team side
[00:06:42] - The growth rate of the NFL over the past five years
[00:07:24] - How many people are watching the NFL and the size of their audience
[00:09:53] - The structure of the NFL compared to other major sports leagues
[00:14:08] - Distribution of the revenue generated by media rights
[00:15:53] - Other factors that make the NFL’s model unique
[00:18:11] - How the NFL came to dominate the landscape of American sports
[00:21:26] - When the NFL became bigger than the MLB and why
[00:23:00] - How viewership and media rights have changed over the years
[00:24:52] - Complexity of scheduling games and creating scarcity
[00:26:14] - How the NFL Schedule is Created
[00:27:43] - Additional sources of revenue at the league level
[00:30:54] - Major costs to operate the NFL at the national level
[00:31:50] - Contributing factors that make annual operating costs $1.5 billion
[00:32:29] - How much it costs to run an NFL game
[00:33:35] - Major drivers and ways to increase the topline of the business
[00:36:09] - How much of the league revenue share is distributed to team owners and players
[00:39:06] - Seat sales, boxes, and sponsorship revenue
[00:40:40] - Who owns stadiums and an overview from a management and cost perspective
[00:42:43] - Non-player related operating costs
[00:45:46] - Operating leverage as an owner in this business
[00:47:08] - What a commissioner is and the governance model of the NFL
[00:51:31] - Overview of an executive team beneath the owners
[00:53:01] - Collective Bargaining Agreements
[00:57:15] - How enterprise value is created and why it’s growing so fast for the teams
[00:59:11] - His perspective on comparing teams to assets generating revenue multiples
[01:00:51] - Defining relevance in regards to the NFL and what it means for the future
[01:04:39] - Plans to embrace a D2C model and the impact streaming might have on them
[01:06:56] - How the Superbowl became such a pivotal sporting event and why they made it
[01:11:35] - What will have to go right in order to grow exponentially over the coming decade
[01:17:34] - Potential risks and concerns that could negatively impact the NFL’s growth
[01:22:21] - A big lesson we can learn from the NFL for entrepreneurs
[01:23:29] - Lessons for investors when studying the NFL
[01:24:48] - Learn more about professional sports and the NFL; The Game Plan; Tailgating, Sacks, and Salary Caps (book)
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