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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C.  20549
 
FORM 8-K
 
Current Report
 
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
 
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported):  June 15, 2012

 
 
Commission
File Number
 
Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter, State of Incorporation,
Address of Principal Executive Offices and
Telephone Number
 
 
I.R.S. Employer
Identification
No.
         
         
001-32206
 
GREAT PLAINS ENERGY INCORPORATED
 
43-1916803
   
(A Missouri Corporation)
   
   
1200 Main Street
   
   
Kansas City, Missouri  64105
   
   
(816) 556-2200
   
         
   
NOT APPLICABLE
   
   
(Former name or former address,
if changed since last report)
   
         
000-51873
 
KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
 
44-0308720
   
(A Missouri Corporation)
   
   
1200 Main Street
   
   
Kansas City, Missouri  64105
   
   
(816) 556-2200
   
         
   
NOT APPLICABLE
   
   
(Former name or former address,
if changed since last report)
   

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:

[  ]
Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
   
[  ]
Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
   
[  ]
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act
 
(17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
   
[  ]
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

 
 

 

 
This combined Current Report on Form 8-K is being provided by Great Plains Energy Incorporated (Great Plains Energy) and Kansas City Power & Light Company (KCP&L).  KCP&L is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Great Plains Energy and represents a significant portion of its assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses and operations.  Thus, all information contained in this report relates to, and is furnished or filed by, Great Plains Energy.  Information that is specifically identified in this report as relating solely to Great Plains Energy, such as its financial statements and all information relating to Great Plains Energy’s other operations, businesses and subsidiaries, including KCP&L Greater Missouri Operations Company (GMO), does not relate to, and is not furnished or filed by, KCP&L.  KCP&L makes no representation as to that information.  Neither Great Plains Energy nor GMO has any obligation in respect of KCP&L’s debt securities and holders of such securities should not consider Great Plains Energy’s or GMO’s financial resources or results of operations in making a decision with respect to KCP&L’s debt securities.  Similarly, KCP&L has no obligation in respect of securities of Great Plains Energy or GMO.

Item 7.01
Regulation FD Disclosure

Representatives of Great Plains Energy will participate in meetings with investors throughout the month of June, beginning June 19, 2012.  A copy of the investor handout to be used in such meetings is attached as Exhibit 99.1 hereto.  The investor handout contains information regarding KCP&L.  Accordingly, information in the investor handout relating to KCP&L is also being furnished on behalf of KCP&L.

The information under this Item 7.01 and in Exhibit 99.1 hereto is being furnished and shall not be deemed “filed” for the purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended or otherwise subject to the liabilities of that section.  The information under this Item 7.01 and Exhibit 99.1 hereto shall not be deemed incorporated by reference into any registration statement or other document pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, unless otherwise expressly indicated in such registration statement or other document.
 
Item 8.01        Other Events
 
On June 15, 2012, Great Plains Energy settled the obligations under the purchase contracts underlying its 5,747,720 outstanding Equity Units by issuing approximately 17.1 million shares of its common stock, no par value, in exchange for $287,386,000, which had been raised through the remarketing of the debt securities underlying the Equity Units completed on March 22, 2012.  In March 2012, Great Plains Energy issued 6,784 shares of its common stock in exchange for $114,000 to settle the obligations under the purchase contracts underlying 2,280 Equity Units that settled early.  The settlement on June 15, 2012 satisfies Great Plains Energy’s obligations on the Equity Units.  The New York Stock Exchange will delist the Equity Units from trading on the exchange and the Equity Units will be deregistered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.


 
Item 9.01
 
Exhibits
   
(d)  Exhibits
 
   
99.1
Investor presentation slides

 
 
 

 

 
SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrants have duly caused this report to be signed on their behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.


 
GREAT PLAINS ENERGY INCORPORATED
   
   
   
 
/s/ Kevin E. Bryant
 
Kevin E. Bryant
 
Vice President – Investor Relations and Treasurer

 
KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
   
   
   
 
/s/ Kevin E. Bryant
 
Kevin E. Bryant
 
Vice President – Investor Relations and Treasurer




Date: June 15, 2012




 
 

 

ex99_1.htm
 
Exhibit 99.1
Great Plains Energy
Investor Presentation
June 2012
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 
 
 


 
 

 
 
Statements made in this presentation that are not based on historical facts are forward-looking, may involve risks and
uncertainties, and are intended to be as of the date when made. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to,
the outcome of regulatory proceedings, cost estimates of capital projects and other matters affecting future operations. In
connection with the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Great Plains Energy and
KCP&L are providing a number of important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the provided
forward-looking information. These important factors include: future economic conditions in regional, national and
international markets and their effects on sales, prices and costs, including but not limited to possible further deterioration in
economic conditions and the timing and extent of economic recovery; prices and availability of electricity in regional and
national wholesale markets; market perception of the energy industry, Great Plains Energy and KCP&L; changes in business
strategy, operations or development plans; effects of current or proposed state and federal legislative and regulatory actions
or developments, including, but not limited to, deregulation, re-regulation and restructuring of the electric utility industry;
decisions of regulators regarding rates the companies can charge for electricity; adverse changes in applicable laws,
regulations, rules, principles or practices governing tax, accounting and environmental matters including, but not limited to,
air and water quality; financial market conditions and performance including, but not limited to, changes in interest rates
and credit spreads and in availability and cost of capital and the effects on nuclear decommissioning trust and pension plan
assets and costs; impairments of long-lived assets or goodwill; credit ratings; inflation rates; effectiveness of risk
management policies and procedures and the ability of counterparties to satisfy their contractual commitments; impact of
terrorist acts, including but not limited to cyber terrorism; ability to carry out marketing and sales plans; weather conditions
including, but not limited to, weather-related damage and their effects on sales, prices and costs; cost, availability, quality
and deliverability of fuel; the inherent uncertainties in estimating the effects of weather, economic conditions and other
factors on customer consumption and financial results; ability to achieve generation goals and the occurrence and duration
of planned and unplanned generation outages; delays in the anticipated in-service dates and cost increases of additional
generation, transmission, distribution or other projects; the inherent risks associated with the ownership and operation of a
nuclear facility including, but not limited to, environmental, health, safety, regulatory and financial risks; workforce risks,
including, but not limited to, increased costs of retirement, health care and other benefits; and other risks and uncertainties.
This list of factors is not all-inclusive because it is not possible to predict all factors. Other risk factors are detailed from time
to time in Great Plains Energy’s and KCP&L’s quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and annual report on Form 10-K filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date of the particular
statement. Great Plains Energy and KCP&L undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking
statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
Forward-Looking Statement
2
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Overview
3
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
 Solid Midwest fully regulated electric utility operating under the
 KCP&L brand
 Company attributes
  Regulated operations in Kansas and Missouri
  ~826,000 customers / 3,100 employees
  ~6,600 MW of primarily low-cost coal baseload generation
  ~3,600 circuit miles of transmission lines; ~ 22,200 circuit
 miles of distribution lines
  ~$9.1bn in assets at 2011YE
  ~$5.6bn in rate base at 2011YE
Service Territories: KCP&L and GMO
Business Highlights
2011 Retail MWh Sold by Customer Type
2011 Retail MWh Sales by Jurisdiction
2011 MWh Generated by Fuel Type
Total: ~ 23,404 MWhs*
Total: ~ 23,404 MWhs*
Total: ~ 25,952 MWhs*
Solid Vertically-Integrated Midwest Utility
* In thousands
4
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
GXP’s Transformation: 2005 - 2011
2005 - 2,382
2011 - 3,053
INCREASE = 28%
2005 - 500,000
2011 - 823,000
INCREASE = 65%
2005 - 14,400
2011 - 25,800
INCREASE = 79%
2005 - 2,788 MW
2011 - 4,349 MW
INCREASE = 56%
2005 - $2.12 Billion
2011 - $5.59 Billion
INCREASE = 164%
Customers
5
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Focused on Delivering Value to Shareholders
Earnings Growth
Expected Through Reduced Regulatory Lag, Disciplined Cost
Management and Long-Term Rate Base Growth
Competitive Dividend
Goal to Maintain Competitive Dividend While Strengthening Key Credit
 Metrics; Objective to Grow Dividend In Line With Payout Ratio Targets
Objective: Improved Total Shareholder Returns
6
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
 Strong emphasis on improving credit metrics
  Objective is visibility to sustainable FFO / Adjusted Debt* of 16%+
 Dividend is reviewed quarterly in context of this objective as well as a
 belief that a
sustainable and increasing dividend is a key driver of TSR
 and therefore a desirable goal
 Target payout ratio remains 50-70%
Commitment to Solid Dividend
Competitive Dividend
Goal to Maintain Competitive Dividend While Strengthening Key Credit
 Metrics; Objective to Grow Dividend In Line With Payout Ratio Targets
 Company’s objective is to create shareholder value through
  Increased earnings from reduced lag, disciplined cost management and
 long-term asset growth
  A competitive dividend that complements this growth platform
*FFO / Adjusted Debt is a non-GAAP measure that is defined in the Appendix
7
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
 Proven track record of constructive regulatory treatment
 Credibility with regulators in terms of planning and execution of large, complex projects
 Competitive retail rates on a regional and national level supportive of potential future
 investment
Diligent Regulatory
Approach
 Target significant reduction in regulatory lag
 Seek to deliver earnings growth and increasing and sustainable cash dividends as a
    key component of TSR
 Improvement in / stability of key credit metrics is a priority
Focused on
Shareholder Value
Creation
Excellent Relationships
with Key Stakeholders
 Customers - focused on top tier customer satisfaction
 Suppliers - strategic supplier alliances focused on long-term supply chain value
 Employees - strong relations between management and labor (3 IBEW locals)
 Communities - leadership, volunteerism and high engagement in the areas we serve
 Environmental - additional ~$1 billion of “High Likelihood” capital projects planned to
 comply with existing / proposed environmental rules
 Transmission - formed Transource Energy, LLC joint venture to pursue competitive
 transmission projects
 Renewables - driven by Collaboration Agreement and MO/KS RPS
 Other Growth Opportunities - selective future initiatives that will leverage our core
 strengths
Attractive Platform for
Long-Term Growth
GXP - Platform for Shareholder Value
8
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Operations and Regulatory Strategy
9
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Environmental
 Estimated cost of compliance with current
 / proposed legislation = approximately $1
 billion:
  La Cygne
  Unit 1 (368 MW*) - scrubber
 and baghouse - 2015
  Unit 2 (343 MW*) - full Air
 Quality Control System
 (“AQCS”) - 2015
  Montrose 3 (176 MW) - full AQCS -
 2020 (approximately)
  Sibley 3 (364 MW) - scrubber and
 baghouse - 2017 (approximately)
 Other retrofits less likely and therefore
     not included in estimated cost of
     compliance:
  Montrose 1 (170 MW)
  Montrose 2 (164 MW**)
  Sibley 1 and 2 (total capacity 99
 MW)
  Lake Road 4 and 6 (93 MW**)
Upon completion of La Cygne during the second quarter 2015, we expect
that 72 percent of our coal fleet will have emission-reducing scrubbers
installed.
Net book value of “Less
Likely” projects total
approximately $100 million
* KCP&L’s share of jointly-owned facility
** In connection with KCP&L’s and GMO’s Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) filings with the Missouri Public Service Commission in April 2012, these projects
 may move from less likely to more likely but it is not expected to materially impact the overall $1 billion current estimate of capital expenditures.
10
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency
 Company-owned assets and commitments
 in place that will increase renewable
 portfolio to approximately 600 MW of wind
 and hydroelectric power
 Future renewable requirements driven by
 the Renewable Portfolio Standards (“RPS”)
 in Missouri and Kansas
 Flexibility regarding acquisition of future
 renewable resources:
  Through Purchased Power Agreements
 (“PPAs”) and purchases of Renewable
 Energy Credits (“RECs”); or
  Adding to rate base if supported by
 credit profile and available equity and
 debt financing
 Energy efficiency expected to be a key
 component of future resource portfolio:
  Aggressive pursuit planned with
 appropriate regulatory recovery
The 99 turbines at our Spearville, Kan., Wind Energy Facility produce
enough environmentally friendly, emission-free electricity to supply
nearly 49,000 homes annually.
11
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Transmission
 Formed Transource Energy, LLC, a
 joint venture with American Electric
 Power, to pursue competitive
 transmission projects
 GXP will seek regulatory approval to
 novate two significant projects to
 Transource:
  Iatan-Nashua 345kV line -
 Projected $54M total cost and
 2015 in-service date
  Sibley-Maryville-Nebraska City
 345kV line - Projected $380M
 total cost and 2017 in-service
 date
 Iatan-Nashua 345kV, 30 miles, $54M
 Expected in-service: 2015
 Sibley-Maryville-Nebraska City 345kV, 170 miles,
 projected cost ~$380M
12
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Plant Operations
 No additional baseload
 generation expected for
 several years
 Targeting modest
 improvements in existing fleet
 performance in the coming
 years
 No changes currently planned
 regarding nuclear’s role in the
 portfolio
Iatan 2,850-megawatt coal-fired power plant recognized as
power plant of the year by Power Magazine
13
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Regulatory
 Our rates continue to compare well regionally and nationally
 During the Comprehensive Energy Plan, the Company received
 fair and constructive rate treatment in both Kansas and
 Missouri, allowing for recovery of substantially all of our capital
 additions
 Aggressively pursuing strategies to improve our operating cost
 structure and the best combination of rate cases and
 riders/trackers to reduce regulatory lag while minimizing the
 impact on customers
14
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Regulatory, Transmission
and La Cygne Update
15
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Kansas Rate Case Summary
Jurisdiction
Case Number
Date Filed
Requested
Increase
(in Millions)
Requested
Increase
(Percent)
Rate Base
(in Millions)
Requested
ROE
Rate-
making
Equity Ratio
Anticipated
Effective Date of
New Rates
KCP&L - KS
12-KCPE-764-RTS
4/20/2012
$63.6
12.9%
$1,820.81
10.40%
51.8%
1/1/2013
Total
Increase
$63.6 M
16
1 Projected rate base is approximately $40 million or 2% higher than at the conclusion of the last rate case
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
 Based on test year ending December 31, 2011
  Known and measurable changes projected through June 30, 2012
 Rate base increase includes
  La Cygne environmental CWIP - $66 million
  48 MW Spearville 2 Wind Facility - $51 million
  Additional infrastructure investments
  Additions to rate base largely offset by increase in accumulated
 deferred income tax primarily as a result of bonus depreciation
 Requested authorization to file abbreviated rate case for additional
 La Cygne environmental CWIP following the conclusion of this rate case
 Requested change to jurisdictional-allocation method of capital
 investment in facilities
 Requested change to depreciation rates to more accurately assign costs
 to the customers who benefit from the use of those assets
2012 Kansas Rate Case
17
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Missouri Rate Case Summary
Jurisdiction
Case Number
Date Filed
Requested
Increase
(in Millions)
Requested
Increase
(Percent)
Rate Base
(in Millions)
Requested
ROE
Rate-
making
Equity Ratio
Anticipated
Effective Date
of New Rates
KCP&L - MO
ER-2012-0174
2/27/2012
$105.7
15.1%
$2,129.9
10.40%
52.5%
Late January
2013
GMO - MPS
ER-2012-0175
2/27/2012
 $58.3
10.9%
$1,411.9
10.40%
52.5%
Late January
2013
GMO - L&P
ER-2012-0175
2/27/2012
 $25.2
14.6%
 $479.5
10.40%
52.5%
Late January
2013
Total
$189.2
 
$4,021.31
 
 
 
1 Projected combined rate base is approximately $226 million or 6% higher than at the conclusion of the last rate cases for these jurisdictions
* Reflects revised wholesale margin cap request of $22.7 M
Total
Increase
$105.7 M
Total
Increase
$83.5 M
18
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
2012 KCP&L-MO Rate Case
 Based on test year ending September 30, 2011
  August 31, 2012 true-up date
 Revised wholesale margin cap requested
  Wholesale margin threshold of $22.7 million Missouri jurisdictional
 share (40th percentile) compared to current cap of $45.9 million
 (40th percentile)
 Additional infrastructure capital investment
 New trackers requested
  Property taxes
  Transmission
  Renewable energy standard (RES)
  Fuel interim energy charge (IEC) including wholesale margin offset
  Wholesale margin sharing mechanism proposed
 Other operating costs increases
19
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
 Based on test year ending September 30, 2011
  August 31, 2012 true-up date
GMO-MPS
 Demand side management (DSM) / Energy Efficiency (EE) investment
 recovery based on Missouri Energy Efficiency Investment Act (MEEIA)
 filing
 Additional infrastructure capital investment
 Fuel cost increases since previous rate case due to rebasing fuel
 adjustment clause (FAC)
 New trackers requested
 - Property taxes, transmission and RES
GMO-L&P
 DSM / EE investment recovery based on MEEIA filing
 Additional infrastructure capital investment
 Fuel cost increases since previous rate case due to rebasing FAC
 New trackers requested
 - Property taxes, transmission and RES
2012 GMO Rate Case
20
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
 Great Plains Energy (GXP) and American Electric Power (AEP) have formed a joint
 venture, Transource Energy, LLC (Transource), to pursue competitive transmission
 projects
  GXP owns 13.5% through a newly-formed subsidiary (GPE Transmission Holding Company, LLC)
  AEP owns 86.5% through its subsidiary (AEP Transmission Holding Company, LLC)
 
 GXP’s regulated subsidiaries, KCP&L and GMO, will seek regulatory approval to novate
 two Southwest Power Pool (SPP) regional transmission projects they have committed
 to build that are in the initial stages of development
  Sibley-Nebraska City an SPP Priority Project - 345kV, GMO’s share is approximately 170 miles
    (175 miles total project), estimated total costs of approximately $380 million, expected in service:
    2017
  Iatan-Nashua an SPP Balanced Portfolio Project - 345kV, approximately 30 miles, estimated total
 costs of approximately $54 million, expected in-service: 2015
  KCP&L and GMO to fund 100% of the costs of the two SPP projects until they are novated and will
 be reimbursed by Transource
 Estimated timeframe to obtain Missouri Public Service Commission (MPSC) and Federal
 Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) approvals to novate the projects is
 approximately 18 months
Transource Overview
21
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
GPE Transmission Holding
Company, LLC
AEP Transmission Holding
Company, LLC
86.5%
13.5%
Transource Ownership Structure
Great Plains Energy Incorporated
American Electric Power
Company, Inc.
100%
100%
Transmission Projects
22
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Transource Overview
23
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 Exclusive vehicle for GXP and AEP to pursue future competitive transmission projects
 throughout the continental United States that fall within the scope of FERC Order 1000
 (regional and inter-regional transmission projects subject to regional cost allocation)
  Initial focus on three regional transmission organizations (RTO) - SPP, Midwest Independent
 Transmission System Operator (MISO) and PJM Interconnection (PJM). Pursuit of new
 transmission in other regions as markets mature
  The venture excludes transmission projects in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT)
     and AEP’s existing transmission project joint ventures
 AEP will operate Transource and provide the majority of staff and services for the
 venture through its service company
  GXP will leverage AEP project execution strengths on the current SPP projects in completing the
    Sibley-Nebraska City and Iatan-Nashua projects
 No earnings impact expected through 2015
  Consistent with GXP stand alone build of two current SPP projects
 Transource funding requirements will be consistent with ownership structure
 
 

 
 Long-term growth opportunity through creation of national transmission platform
  Provides opportunity for sustainable, long-term growth in competitive transmission market
  Ability to co-invest in transmission with AEP on a national scale
  First-class partner with largest US transmission system, strong balance sheet and demonstrated
 commitment to transmission growth
  Project execution expertise creates greatest value for customers
  Provides geographic investment diversity
 Diversifies earnings
  Transmission investments help diversify long-term investments
  Enhances returns on future capital investments by way of FERC’s regulatory construct for
 transmission
  Improves ability to earn authorized ROE
 Enhances financial flexibility
  Reduces medium-term capital expenditure requirements and external financing needs
  Smoothes capital requirements with near-term environmental investments and longer term
 transmission opportunities
  Reduces regulatory lag due to FERC cost recovery mechanisms
GXP Benefits from Transource Joint Venture
24
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
SPP $4.2
*Projected capital expenditure excludes Allowance for Funds Used During Construction (AFUDC)
25
June 2012 Investor Presentation
GXP Projected Capital Expenditures*
 
 

 
La Cygne Environmental Upgrade
Construction Update
Key Steps to Completion
 Site Prep; Major Equipment Purchase
Q3 2011 - Q3 2012
 New Chimney Shell Erected
Q3 2012
 Installation of Low Nox Burners for La Cygne 2
Q2 2013
 Major Construction
Q4 2012 - Q2 2014
 Startup Testing
Q3 2014
 Tie-in Outage Unit 2
Q4 2014
 Tie-in Outage Unit 1
Q1 2015
 In-service
Q2 2015
LaCygne Generation Station
 La Cygne Coal Unit 1 368 MW* - Wet scrubber, baghouse, activated carbon injection
 La Cygne Coal Unit 2 343 MW* - Selective catalytic reduction system, wet scrubber,
 baghouse, activated carbon injection, over-fired air, low Nox burners
 Project cost estimate, excluding AFUDC and property tax, $615 million*. Kansas
 jurisdictional share is $281 million
 2011 predetermination order issued in Kansas deeming project as requested and cost
 estimate to be reasonable
 Project is on schedule and on budget
* KCP&L’s 50% share
26
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
2011 Review and First Quarter
2012 Operations and Financial Update
27
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
2011 Review
Financial
 Full-year earnings per share of $1.25
 
 Increased quarterly dividend to $0.2125
 
 
Operational
 Presented the ReliabilityOne award for the Plains Region for fifth consecutive
 year
 
 Rated Tier 1 in J.D. Power and Associates 2011 Electric Utility Residential
 Satisfaction Study for third consecutive year
 
 Introduced initiatives to streamline business and improve field communications
 
 
Strategic
 Contracted PPAs increasing renewable energy portfolio to approximately 600
 MWs
 
 Right-sized the Company with Organizational Realignment and Voluntary
 Separation Program
 
 
Regulatory
 Completed the Comprehensive Energy Plan
 - Completed the Missouri rate cases - annual increase of $100 million
 - Iatan 2 in rate base
 
 Kansas Corporation Commission approved predetermination for La Cygne
 environmental upgrades
28
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Plant Performance
29
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Retail MWh Sales
1 As of March 31
30
June 2012 Investor Presentation
1
 
 

 
2012 First Quarter EPS Reconciliation Versus 2011
 
2011 EPS
2012 EPS
Change in EPS
1Q
$ 0.01
($0.07)
($0.08)
Contributors to Change in 2012 EPS Compared to 2011
 
Weather
Wolf Creek
Interest
Expense
New Retail
Rates
2011
Special
Factors
Total
1Q 2012
$  (0.11)
$  (0.07)
$  (0.10)
$  0.13
$ 0.07
$ (0.08)
31
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
 
Earnings (in Millions)
Earnings per Share
 
2012
2011
2012
2011
Electric Utility
 $ 4.5
$ 7.0
$ 0.03
$ 0.05
Other
(13.8)
(4.7)
(0.10)
(0.04)
 Net income (loss)
(9.3)
2.3
(0.07)
0.01
Less: Net loss attributable to noncontrolling interest
0.2
0.1
-
-
 Net income (loss) attributable to Great Plains Energy
(9.1)
2.4
(0.07)
0.01
Preferred dividends
(0.4)
(0.4)
-
-
 Earnings (loss) available for common shareholders
$ (9.5)
$ 2.0
$ (0.07)
$ 0.01
Great Plains Energy Consolidated Earnings
and Earnings Per Share - Three Months Ended March 31
(Unaudited)
32
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
March 31, 2012 Debt Profile and Liquidity
Great Plains Energy Debt
($ in Millions)
KCP&L
GMO (1)
GPE
Consolidated
 
Amount
Rate(2)
Amount
Rate(2)
Amount
Rate(2)
Amount
Rate(2)
Short-term debt
$ 366.0
0.67%
$110.8
0.92%
$ 30.0
2.00%
$ 506.8
0.80%
Long-term debt (3)
1,902.3
6.02%
633.0
10.97%
993.4
4.65%
3,528.7
6.51%
Total
$2,268.3
5.16%
$743.8
9.45%
$1,023.4
4.57%
$4,035.5
6.44%
Secured debt = $750 (19%), Unsecured debt = $3,285 (81%)
(1) GPE guarantees substantially all of GMO’s debt
(2) Weighted Average Rates - excludes premium / discounts and fair market value adjustments
(3) Includes current maturities of long-term debt
(4) Includes long-term debt maturities through December 31, 2021
(5) 2013 reflects mode maturity for $167.6 million of KCP&L tax-exempt
  bonds subject to remarketing prior to final maturity date
(6) Includes KCP&L $110M accounts receivable securitization facility
Long-Term Debt Maturities(4)(5)
Liquidity
33
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Credit Profile for Great Plains Energy
Current Credit Ratings
 
Moody’s
Standard & Poor’s
Great Plains Energy
Outlook
Corporate Credit Rating
Preferred Stock
Senior Unsecured Debt
 
Stable
-
Ba2
Baa3
 
Stable
BBB
BB+
BBB-
KCP&L
Outlook
Senior Secured Debt
Senior Unsecured Debt
Commercial Paper
 
Stable
A3
Baa2
P-2
 
Stable
BBB+
BBB
A-2
GMO
Outlook
Senior Unsecured Debt
Commercial Paper
 
Stable
Baa3
P-3
 
Stable
BBB
A-2
* All ratios calculated using Standard and Poor’s methodology. Ratios are non-GAAP measures that are defined and reconciled to GAAP in Appendix
** Last twelve months (LTM) as of March 31, 2012
34
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
*Based on Third Quarter 2011 Earnings Presentation
**2012 includes conversion to 17.1 million shares of GXP common stock in June
2012 Considerations
(a) Wholesale Margin
 Lower natural gas prices and related off-system sales impact due to KCP&L-MO wholesale margin cap
 Majority of 2011 lag allocated to Special Factors for flooding and Wolf Creek extended outage
b) Other Lag and Variability
 Lower projected weather-normalized load growth from 1% to 0.5%
 2011 includes $0.12 EPS due to weather, 2012 assumes normal weather
(c) Regulatory Earned
 Regulatory earned ROE improving by 0 to 110 basis points over 2011
35
June 2012 Investor Presentation
2012 Earnings Guidance $1.20 - $1.40***
***Slide is from 2011 Fourth Quarter Earnings Webcast Presentation
 
 

 
 Affirming 2012 guidance of $1.20 - $1.40
  Assumes normal weather for the remainder of the year
  Assumes full-year weather-normalized demand growth
 of 50 basis points
 Affirming 2013 target of 50 basis points of lag in
 regulated operations
  Outcomes of 2012 rate cases and timing of effective
 dates of new rates will be key drivers
2012 EPS Guidance Range and 2013 Target
36
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Appendix
37
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Gross margin is a financial measure that is not calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP). Gross margin, as used by Great Plains Energy, is defined as operating revenues less
fuel, purchased power and transmission of electricity by others. The Company’s expense for fuel,
purchased power and transmission of electricity by others, offset by wholesale sales margin, is subject to
recovery through cost adjustment mechanisms, except for KCP&L’s Missouri retail operations. As a result,
operating revenues increase or decrease in relation to a significant portion of these expenses. 
Management believes that gross margin provides a more meaningful basis for evaluating the Electric Utility
segment’s operations across periods than operating revenues because gross margin excludes the revenue
effect of fluctuations in these expenses. Gross margin is used internally to measure performance against
budget and in reports for management and the Board of Directors. The Company’s definition of gross
margin may differ from similar terms used by other companies. A reconciliation to GAAP operating
revenues is provided in the table above.
Great Plains Energy Reconciliation of
Gross Margin to Operating Revenues
(Unaudited)
 
Three Months Ended March 31
(millions)
 
2012
2011
Operating revenues
$ 479.7
$ 492.9
Fuel
(119.3)
(104.9)
Purchased power
(24.7)
(54.9)
Transmission of electricity by others
(7.3)
(7.5)
 Gross margin
$ 328.4
$ 325.6
38
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Credit Metric Reconciliation to GAAP
Funds from operations (FFO) to adjusted debt is a
financial measure that is not calculated in
accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP). FFO to adjusted debt, as used
by Great Plains Energy, is defined in accordance
with Standard & Poor’s methodology used for
calculating FFO to debt. The numerator of the ratio
is defined as net cash from operating activities
(GAAP) plus non-GAAP adjustments related to
operating leases, hybrid securities, post-retirement
benefit obligations, capitalized interest, power
purchase agreements, asset retirement obligations,
changes in working capital and decommissioning
fund contributions. The denominator of the ratio is
defined as the sum of debt balances (GAAP) plus
non-GAAP adjustments related to some of the same
items adjusted for in the numerator and other
adjustments related to securitized receivables and
accrued interest. Management believes that FFO to
adjusted debt provides a meaningful way to better
understand the Company’s credit profile. FFO to
adjusted debt is used internally to help evaluate the
possibility of a change in the Company’s credit rating.
39
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Credit Metric Reconciliation to GAAP
Funds from operations (FFO) interest coverage
ratio is a financial measure that is not calculated
in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP). FFO interest coverage, as
used by Great Plains Energy, is defined in
accordance with Standard & Poor’s methodology
used for calculating FFO interest coverage. The
numerator of the ratio is defined as net cash from
operating activities (GAAP) plus non-GAAP
adjustments related to operating leases, hybrid
securities, post-retirement benefit obligations,
capitalized interest, power purchase agreements,
asset retirement obligations, changes in working
capital and decommissioning fund contributions
plus adjusted interest expense (non-GAAP). The
denominator of the ratio, adjusted interest
expense, is defined as interest charges (GAAP)
plus non-GAAP adjustments related to some of
the same items adjusted for in the numerator and
other adjustments needed to match Standard &
Poor’s calculation. Management believes that
FFO interest coverage provides a meaningful way
to better understand the Company’s credit profile.
FFO interest coverage is used internally to help
evaluate the possibility of a change in the
Company’s credit rating.
40
June 2012 Investor Presentation
 
 

 
Credit Metric Reconciliation to GAAP
Adjusted debt to total adjusted capitalization is
a financial measure that is not calculated in
accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP). Adjusted debt to total
adjusted capitalization, as used by Great Plains
Energy, is defined in accordance with Standard
& Poor’s methodology used for calculating the
ratio of debt to debt and equity. The numerator
of the ratio, adjusted debt, is defined as the
sum of debt balances (GAAP) plus non-GAAP
adjustments related to securitized receivables,
operating leases, hybrid securities, post-
retirement benefit obligations, accrued interest,
power purchase agreements and asset
retirement obligations. The denominator of the
ratio, total adjusted capitalization, is defined as
the sum of equity balances (GAAP) plus non-
GAAP adjustments related to hybrid securities
plus the non-GAAP adjusted debt as defined for
the numerator. Management believes that
adjusted debt to total adjusted capitalization
provides a meaningful way to better understand
the Company’s credit profile. Adjusted debt to
total adjusted capitalization is used internally to
help evaluate the possibility of a change in the
Company’s credit rating.
41
June 2012 Investor Presentation