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UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, DC 20549
FORM 10-Q
     
þ   QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended June 30, 2009
OR
     
o   TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from                      to                     
         
Commission   Registrant; State of Incorporation;   IRS Employer
File Number   Address; and Telephone Number   Identification No.
 
1-9513   CMS ENERGY CORPORATION   38-2726431
    (A Michigan Corporation)
One Energy Plaza, Jackson, Michigan 49201
   
    (517) 788-0550    
         
1-5611   CONSUMERS ENERGY COMPANY   38-0442310
    (A Michigan Corporation)    
    One Energy Plaza, Jackson, Michigan 49201    
    (517) 788-0550    
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrants (1) have filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrants were required to file such reports), and (2) have been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes þ No o
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrants have submitted electronically and posted on their corporate Web sites, if any, every Interactive Data file required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrants were required to submit and post such files).
CMS Energy Corporation : Yes o      No o Consumers Energy Company : Yes o      No o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):
CMS Energy Corporation :
             
Large accelerated filer þ   Accelerated filer o   Non-accelerated filer o
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
  Smaller reporting company   o
Consumers Energy Company :
             
Large accelerated filer o   Accelerated filer o   Non-accelerated filer þ
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
  Smaller reporting company o
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).
CMS Energy Corporation : Yes o      No þ Consumers Energy Company : Yes o      No þ
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer’s classes of common stock at July 29, 2009:
         
CMS Energy Corporation:
       
CMS Energy Common Stock, $.01 par value
    228,916,926  
Consumers Energy Company:
       
Consumers Energy Common Stock, $10 par value, privately held by CMS Energy Corporation
    84,108,789  
 
 

 


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CMS Energy Corporation
Consumers Energy Company
Quarterly reports on Form 10-Q to the
United States Securities and Exchange Commission
for the Quarter Ended June 30, 2009
This combined Form 10-Q is separately filed by CMS Energy Corporation and Consumers Energy Company. Information in this combined Form 10-Q relating to each individual registrant is filed by such registrant on its own behalf. Consumers Energy Company makes no representation regarding information relating to any other companies affiliated with CMS Energy Corporation other than its own subsidiaries. None of CMS Energy Corporation, CMS Enterprises Company nor any of CMS Energy Corporation’s other subsidiaries (other than Consumers Energy Company) has any obligation in respect of Consumers Energy Company’s debt securities and holders of such securities should not consider the financial resources or results of operations of CMS Energy Corporation, CMS Enterprises Company nor any of CMS Energy Corporation’s subsidiaries (other than Consumers Energy Company and its own subsidiaries (in relevant circumstances)) in making a decision with respect to Consumers Energy Company’s debt securities. Similarly, none of Consumers Energy Company nor any other subsidiary of CMS Energy Corporation has any obligation in respect of debt securities of CMS Energy Corporation.
This report should be read in its entirety. No one section of this report deals with all aspects of the subject matter of this report. This report should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and related notes and with Management’s Discussion and Analysis included in CMS Energy Corporation’s and Consumers Energy Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008 (each, the “2008 Form 10-K”).
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  EX-3.(a)
  EX-12.(a)
  EX-12.(b)
  EX-31.(a)
  EX-31.(b)
  EX-31.(c)
  EX-31.(d)
  EX-32.(a)
  EX-32.(b)

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GLOSSARY
Certain terms used in the text and financial statements are defined below
     
2008 Energy Legislation
  Comprehensive energy reform package enacted in October 2008 with the approval of Michigan Senate Bill 213 and Michigan House Bill 5524
ALJ
  Administrative Law Judge
AOC
  Administrative Order on Consent
APB
  Accounting Principles Board
ARB
  Accounting Research Bulletin
Bay Harbor
  A residential/commercial real estate area located near Petoskey, Michigan. In 2002, CMS Energy sold its interest in Bay Harbor.
bcf
  Billion cubic feet of gas
Beeland
  Beeland Group LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Land
Big Rock
  Big Rock Point nuclear power plant, formerly owned by Consumers
Big Rock ISFSI
  Big Rock Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation
Breckenridge
  Breckenridge Brewery of Colorado, LLC, a non-affiliated company
CAIR
  Clean Air Interstate Rule
CAMR
  Clean Air Mercury Rule
CEO
  Chief Executive Officer
CFO
  Chief Financial Officer
Chrysler
  Chrysler LLC, a non-affiliated company
CKD
  Cement kiln dust
Clean Air Act
  Federal Clean Air Act, as amended
CMS Capital
  CMS Capital, L.L.C., a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Energy
CMS Energy
  CMS Energy Corporation, the parent of Consumers and Enterprises
CMS Energy Common Stock or common stock
  Common stock of CMS Energy, par value $.01 per share
CMS ERM
  CMS Energy Resource Management Company, formerly CMS MST, a wholly owned subsidiary of Enterprises
CMS Field Services
  CMS Field Services, Inc., a former wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Gas Transmission
CMS Gas Transmission
  CMS Gas Transmission Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Enterprises
CMS Generation
  CMS Generation Co., a former wholly owned subsidiary of Enterprises
CMS Land
  CMS Land Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Energy
CMS MST
  CMS Marketing, Services and Trading Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Enterprises, whose name was changed to CMS ERM effective January 2004
CMS Oil and Gas
  CMS Oil and Gas Company, formerly a wholly owned subsidiary of Enterprises
CMS Viron
  CMS Viron Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS ERM

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Consumers
  Consumers Energy Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Energy
Customer Choice Act
  Customer Choice and Electricity Reliability Act, a Michigan statute
Detroit Edison
  The Detroit Edison Company, a non-affiliated company
DOE
  U.S. Department of Energy
DOJ
  U.S. Department of Justice
Dow
  The Dow Chemical Company, a non-affiliated company
DSSP
  Deferred Salary Savings Plan
EITF
  Emerging Issues Task Force
EITF Issue 07-5
  EITF Issue No. 07-5, “Determining Whether an Instrument (or Embedded Feature) Is Indexed to an Entity’s Own Stock”
EITF Issue 08-5
  EITF Issue No. 08-5, “Issuer’s Accounting for Liabilities Measured at Fair Value with a Third-Party Credit Enhancement”
EnerBank
  EnerBank USA, a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Capital
Entergy
  Entergy Corporation, a non-affiliated company
Enterprises
  CMS Enterprises Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Energy
EPA
  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
EPS
  Earnings per share
Exchange Act
  Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
FASB
  Financial Accounting Standards Board
FDIC
  Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
FERC
  Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
FIN 46(R)
  Revised FASB Interpretation No. 46, “Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities”
FMB
  First Mortgage Bonds
FMLP
  First Midland Limited Partnership, a partnership that holds a lessor interest in the MCV Facility
FOV
  Finding of Violation
FSP
  FASB Staff Position
FSP APB 14-1
  FASB Staff Position on APB Opinion No. 14, “Accounting for Convertible Debt and Debt Issued with Stock Purchase Warrants”
FSP EITF 03-6-1
  FASB Staff Position on EITF Issue No. 03-6, “Participating Securities and the Two-class Method under FASB Statement No. 128”
FSP FAS 107-1 and APB 28-1
  FASB Staff Position on SFAS No. 107, “Disclosures about Fair Value of Financial Instruments” and APB Opinion No. 28, “Interim Financial Reporting”
FSP FAS 115-2 and FAS 124-2
  FASB Staff Position on SFAS No. 115, “Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities” and SFAS No. 124, “Accounting for Certain Investments Held by Not-for-Profit Organizations”
FSP FAS 132(R)-1
  FASB Staff Position on SFAS No. 132(R), “Employers’ Disclosures about Pensions and Other Postretirement Benefits”
FSP FAS 157-4
  FASB Staff Position on SFAS No. 157, “Fair Value Measurements”
GAAP
  U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
GCR
  Gas cost recovery
GM
  General Motors Corporation, a non-affiliated company

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Grayling
  Grayling Generating Station Limited Partnership, a consolidated variable interest entity in which CMS Energy has a 50 percent interest
GWh
  Gigawatt hour (a unit of energy equal to one million kilowatt hours)
IRS
  Internal Revenue Service
Jorf Lasfar
  A 1,356 MW coal-fueled power plant in Morocco, in which CMS Generation formerly owned a 50 percent interest
kWh
  Kilowatt-hour (a unit of energy equal to one thousand watt hours)
Ludington
  Ludington pumped storage plant, jointly owned by Consumers and Detroit Edison
MACT
  Maximum Achievable Control Technology; a stringent emission limitation for hazardous pollutants
Marathon
  Marathon Oil Company, Marathon E.G. Holding, Marathon E.G. Alba, Marathon E.G. LPG, Marathon Production LTD, and Alba Associates, LLC, each a non-affiliated company
MBT
  Michigan Business Tax
mcf
  Thousand cubic feet of gas
MCV Facility
  A natural gas-fueled, combined-cycle cogeneration facility operated by the MCV Partnership
MCV Partnership
  Midland Cogeneration Venture Limited Partnership
MD&A
  Management’s Discussion and Analysis
MDEQ
  Michigan Department of Environmental Quality
METC
  Michigan Electric Transmission Company, LLC, a non-affiliated company owned by ITC Holdings Corporation and a member of MISO
MGP
  Manufactured gas plant
MISO
  Midwest Independent Transmission System Operator, Inc.
MPSC
  Michigan Public Service Commission
MW
  Megawatt (a unit of power equal to one million watts)
MWh
  Megawatt hour (a unit of energy equal to one million watt hours)
NAV
  Net Asset Values
NERC
  North American Electric Reliability Corporation, a non-affiliated company
NOV
  Notice of Violation
NREPA
  Part 201 of Michigan Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act, a statute that covers environmental activities including remediation
NSR
  New Source Review
NYMEX
  New York Mercantile Exchange
OPEB
  Postretirement benefit plans other than pensions
Palisades
  Palisades nuclear power plant, formerly owned by Consumers
Panhandle
  Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, including its wholly owned subsidiaries Trunkline, Pan Gas Storage, Panhandle Storage, and Panhandle Holdings, a former wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Gas Transmission
PCB
  Polychlorinated biphenyl
Pension Plan
  The trusteed, non-contributory, defined benefit pension plan of Panhandle, Consumers and CMS Energy
PSCR
  Power supply cost recovery

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PSD
  Prevention of Significant Deterioration
Quicksilver
  Quicksilver Resources, Inc., a non-affiliated company
RFC
  ReliabilityFirst Corporation, a non-affiliated company
RMRR
  Routine maintenance, repair and replacement
ROA
  Retail Open Access, which allows electric generation customers to choose alternative electric suppliers pursuant to the Customer Choice Act
SEC
  U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Securitization
  A financing method authorized by statute and approved by the MPSC which allows a utility to sell its right to receive a portion of the rate payments received from its customers for the repayment of securitization bonds issued by a special purpose entity affiliated with such utility
SERP
  Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
SFAS
  Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
SFAS No. 158
  SFAS No. 158, “Employers’ Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans — an amendment of FASB Statement No. 87, 88, 106, and 132 (R)”
SFAS No. 160
  SFAS No. 160, “Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements — an amendment of ARB No. 51”
SFAS No. 161
  SFAS No. 161, “Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities, an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133”
Stranded Costs
  Costs incurred by utilities in order to serve their customers in a regulated monopoly environment, which may not be recoverable in a competitive environment because of customers leaving their systems and ceasing to pay for their costs. These costs could include owned and purchased generation and regulatory assets.
Superfund
  Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act
Supplemental Environmental Programs
  Environmentally beneficial projects which a party agrees to undertake as part of the settlement of an enforcement action, but which the party is not otherwise legally required to perform
TAQA
  Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, a subsidiary of Abu Dhabi Water and Electricity Authority, a non-affiliated company
TGN
  A natural gas transportation and pipeline business located in Argentina, in which CMS Gas Transmission formerly owned a 23.54 percent interest
Trunkline
  CMS Trunkline Gas Company, LLC, formerly a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Panhandle Holdings, LLC
TSU
  Texas Southern University, a non-affiliated entity
VIE
  Variable interest entity
Wolverine
  Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative, Inc., a non-affiliated company

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CMS Energy Corporation
Consumers Energy Company

MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
This MD&A is a combined report of CMS Energy and Consumers. It has been prepared in accordance with the instructions to Form 10-Q and Item 303 of Regulation S-K. This MD&A should be read in conjunction with the MD&A contained in CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ 2008 Form 10-K.
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS AND INFORMATION
This Form 10-Q and other written and oral statements that CMS Energy and Consumers make contain forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The use of “might,” “may,” “could,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “expects,” “intends,” “plans,” and other similar words is intended to identify forward-looking statements that involve risk and uncertainty. This discussion of potential risks and uncertainties is designed to highlight important factors that may impact CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ business and financial outlook. CMS Energy and Consumers have no obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements regardless of whether new information, future events, or any other factors affect the information contained in the statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to various factors that could cause CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ actual results to differ materially from the results anticipated in these statements. These factors include CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ inability to predict or control:
    the price of CMS Energy Common Stock, capital and financial market conditions, and the effect of these market conditions on CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ postretirement benefit plans, interest costs, and access to the capital markets, including availability of financing (including Consumers’ accounts receivable sales program and CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ revolving credit facilities) to CMS Energy, Consumers, or any of their affiliates, and the energy industry;
 
    the impact of the continued downturn in the economy and the sharp downturn and extreme volatility in the financial and credit markets on CMS Energy, Consumers, or any of their affiliates, including their:
  §   revenues;
 
  §   capital expenditure programs and related earnings growth;
 
  §   ability to collect accounts receivable from customers;
 
  §   cost of capital and availability of capital; and
 
  §   Pension Plan and postretirement benefit plans assets and required contributions;
    changes in the economic and financial viability of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ suppliers, customers, and other counterparties and the continued ability of these third parties, particularly third parties in bankruptcy, to meet their obligations to CMS Energy and Consumers;
    population growth or decline in the geographic areas where CMS Energy and Consumers conduct business;
    changes in applicable laws, rules, regulations, principles or practices, or in their interpretation, including those related to taxes, the environment, and accounting matters, that could have an impact on CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ businesses, including the impact of any future regulations or laws regarding:
  §   carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions, including potential future legislation to establish a cap and trade system;

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  §   mercury emissions;
 
  §   coal ash;
 
  §   limitations on the use or construction of coal-fueled electric power plants; and
 
  §   renewable portfolio standards and energy efficiency mandates;
    national, regional, and local economic, competitive, and regulatory policies, conditions, and developments;
    adverse regulatory or legal interpretations or decisions, including those related to environmental laws and regulations, and potential environmental remediation costs associated with these interpretations or decisions, including but not limited to those that may affect Bay Harbor or Consumers’ RMRR classification under NSR regulations;
    potentially adverse regulatory treatment or failure to receive timely regulatory orders concerning a number of significant matters affecting Consumers that are presently or potentially before the MPSC, including:
  §   sufficient and timely recovery of:
  §   Clean Air Act capital and operating costs and other environmental and safety-related expenditures;
 
  §   power supply and natural gas supply costs;     
 
  §   operating and maintenance expenses;     
 
  §   additional utility rate-based investments;     
 
  §   increased MISO energy and transmission costs;     
 
  §   costs associated with energy efficiency investments and state or federally mandated renewable resource standards; and
 
  §   Big Rock decommissioning funding shortfalls;         
  §   actions of regulators to prevent or curtail shutoffs for non-paying customers;
 
  §   regulatory orders preventing or curtailing rights to self-implement rate requests;
 
  §   regulatory orders potentially requiring a refund of previously self-implemented rates;
 
  §   authorization of a new coal-fueled plant; and
 
  §   implementation of new energy legislation;
    potentially adverse regulatory treatment resulting from pressure on regulators to oppose annual rate increases or to lessen rate impacts upon customers, particularly in difficult economic times;
 
    the ability of Consumers to recover its regulatory assets in full and in a timely manner;
 
    the ability of Consumers to recover nuclear fuel storage costs incurred as a result of the DOE’s failure to accept spent nuclear fuel on schedule, and the outcome of pending litigation with the DOE;
 
    the impact of expanded enforcement powers and investigation activities at the FERC;
 
    federal regulation of electric sales and transmission of electricity, including periodic re-examination by federal regulators of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ market-based sales authorizations in wholesale power markets without price restrictions;
 
    effects of weather conditions, such as unusually cool weather during the summer or warm weather during the winter, on sales;
 
    the market perception of the energy industry or of CMS Energy, Consumers, or any of their affiliates;

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    the credit ratings of CMS Energy or Consumers;
 
    the impact of credit markets, economic conditions, and new banking regulations on EnerBank;
 
    disruptions in the normal commercial insurance and surety bond markets that may increase costs or reduce traditional insurance coverage, particularly terrorism and sabotage insurance, performance bonds, and tax-exempt debt insurance, and stability of insurance providers;
 
    energy markets, including availability of capacity and the timing and extent of changes in commodity prices for oil, coal, natural gas, natural gas liquids, electricity, and certain related products due to lower or higher demand, shortages, transportation problems, or other developments, and their impact on CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ cash flows and working capital;
 
    changes in construction material prices and the availability of qualified construction personnel to implement Consumers’ construction program;
 
    factors affecting operations, such as unusual weather conditions, catastrophic weather-related damage, unscheduled generation outages, maintenance or repairs, environmental incidents, or electric transmission or gas pipeline system constraints;
 
    potential disruption or interruption of facilities or operations due to accidents, war, or terrorism, and the ability to obtain or maintain insurance coverage for these events;
 
    technological developments in energy production, delivery, usage, and storage;
 
    achievement of capital expenditure and operating expense goals;
 
    the impact of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ integrated business software system on their operations, including utility customer billing and collections;
 
    the effectiveness of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ risk management policies and procedures;
 
    CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ ability to achieve generation planning goals and the occurrence and duration of planned or unplanned generation outages;
 
    adverse outcomes regarding tax positions;
 
    adverse consequences resulting from any past or future assertion of indemnity or warranty claims associated with assets and businesses previously owned by CMS Energy or Consumers, including the F.T. Barr matter and claims resulting from attempts by foreign or domestic governments to assess taxes on past operations or transactions;
 
    the outcome, cost, and other effects of legal or administrative proceedings, settlements, investigations, or claims;
 
    earnings volatility resulting from the application of fair value accounting to certain energy commodity contracts, such as electricity sales agreements and interest rate and foreign currency contracts;
 
    changes in financial or regulatory accounting principles or policies, including possible changes to rules involving fair value accounting;

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    new or revised interpretations of GAAP by regulators, which could affect how accounting principles are applied, and could impact future periods’ financial statements or previously filed financial statements;
 
    a possible future requirement to comply with International Financial Reporting Standards, which differ from GAAP in various ways, including the present lack of special accounting treatment for regulated activities; and
 
    other business or investment matters that may be disclosed from time to time in CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ SEC filings, or in other publicly issued documents.
For additional details regarding these and other uncertainties, see the “Outlook” section included in this MD&A, Note 3, Contingencies, Note 4, Utility Rate Matters, and Part II, Item 1A. Risk Factors.

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EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW
CMS Energy is an energy company operating primarily in Michigan and is the parent holding company of several subsidiaries, including Consumers and Enterprises. Consumers is a combination electric and gas utility company serving Michigan’s Lower Peninsula. Consumers’ electric utility operations include the generation, purchase, distribution, and sale of electricity. Consumers’ gas utility operations include the purchase, transportation, storage, distribution, and sale of natural gas. Consumers’ customer base includes a mix of residential, commercial, and diversified industrial customers. Enterprises, through its equity investments and subsidiaries, is primarily engaged in independent power production.
CMS Energy and Consumers manage their businesses by the nature of services each provides. CMS Energy operates principally in three business segments: electric utility; gas utility; and enterprises, its non-utility investments and operations. Consumers operates principally in two business segments: electric utility and gas utility.
CMS Energy and Consumers earn revenue and generate cash from operations by providing electric and natural gas utility services, electric power generation, gas distribution, transmission and storage, and other energy-related services. Their businesses are affected primarily by:
    weather, especially during the heating and cooling seasons;
 
    economic conditions;
 
    regulation and regulatory matters;
 
    energy commodity prices;
 
    interest rates; and
 
    CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ debt credit ratings.
During the past several years, CMS Energy’s business strategy has emphasized improving its consolidated balance sheet and maintaining focus on its core strength, which is Consumers’ utility operations and service.
Consumers’ forecast calls for capital investments in excess of $6 billion from 2009 through 2013, with a key aspect of its strategy being the balanced energy initiative. The balanced energy initiative is a comprehensive energy resource plan to meet Consumers’ projected short-term and long-term electric power requirements with energy efficiency, demand management, expanded use of renewable energy, development of new power plants, and pursuit of additional power purchase agreements to complement existing generating sources.
The 2008 Energy Legislation requires that at least ten percent of Consumers’ electric sales volume come from renewable energy sources by 2015, and includes requirements for specific capacity additions. In compliance with this legislation, Consumers filed a renewable energy plan with the MPSC in February 2009 outlining its plans to build or contract for additional renewable energy capacity of 200 MW by December 31, 2013, and an additional 300 MW of renewable energy capacity by December 31, 2015. Consumers’ plan proposed that half of the new renewable capacity would be obtained through long-term agreements to purchase power from third parties, with the remaining capacity to be supplied by facilities built and owned by Consumers. At the same time, Consumers filed an energy optimization plan, also called for by the 2008 Energy Legislation, under which Consumers will promote energy efficiency and provide incentives to reduce customer usage. Consumers’ filings include a request for recovery of the cost of the renewable energy and energy optimization measures. In May 2009, the MPSC approved the energy optimization plan and, with minor exceptions, the renewable energy plan.
Furthermore, in April 2009, Consumers filed tariff sheets indicating that it planned to self-implement an electric rate increase in the annual amount of $179 million beginning in May 2009. The MPSC issued an

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order in May 2009 requiring that, if Consumers self-implemented the $179 million electric rate increase, it must simultaneously refund to customers $36 million of excess proceeds from the April 2007 sale of Palisades. Accordingly, Consumers self-implemented an annual electric rate increase of $179 million, subject to refund with interest, and also implemented a one-time refund of $36 million. Consumers anticipates a final order in this rate filing in November 2009. Additionally, in May 2009, Consumers filed an application with the MPSC seeking an annual increase in gas revenue of $114 million based on an 11 percent authorized return on equity. These rate filings include requests for increases in rates to cover various costs, including capital additions under the balanced energy initiative.
Consumers filed an air permit application with the MDEQ in October 2007 for its proposed new 830 MW coal-fueled plant. Consumers expects the MDEQ to act on the application by the end of the year. Consumers prepared and filed with the MDEQ and the MPSC a needs-and-alternatives analysis that supported Consumers’ current balanced energy initiative and the construction of its proposed power plant.
There is uncertainty associated with federal legislative and regulatory proposals related to the regulation of carbon dioxide emissions, particularly associated with coal-fueled generation. Federal legislation is being considered to establish a cap and trade system, or alternatively, to tax carbon dioxide emissions. In addition, in April 2009, the EPA issued a proposed finding that greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, contribute to air pollution that may endanger the public health and welfare, thus setting the stage for regulation of carbon dioxide emissions under the Clean Air Act. CMS Energy and Consumers are monitoring these developments for potential effects on their plans and operations.
Consumers is developing an advanced metering infrastructure system that will provide enhanced controls over and information about energy usage, as well as timely notification of service interruptions. Consumers is using a phased implementation approach that will allow it to analyze, test, and pilot the new technology prior to widespread investment and deployment. Consumers will also make certain modifications to its software to enable the new system.
In the future, CMS Energy will focus its strategy on:
    investing in Consumers’ utility system;
    growing earnings and operating cash flow while controlling operating and fuel costs; and
    maintaining principles of safe, efficient operations, customer value, fair and timely regulation, and consistent financial performance.
As CMS Energy and Consumers execute this strategy, they will need to overcome a Michigan economy that has been impacted adversely by the continued downturn and uncertainty in Michigan’s automotive industry marked by the bankruptcies of GM and Chrysler. The financial market crisis, the effects of which became evident in a global economic downturn during the fourth quarter of 2008, continues to result in a negative economic outlook. A range of possible outcomes exists due to the uncertain financial market environment and ongoing government policy responses. Consumers expects its annual 2009 weather-adjusted sales to decline by 3.5 percent for the electric utility and five percent for the gas utility and it projects slower growth in the longer term. While CMS Energy and Consumers believe that their sources of liquidity will be sufficient to meet their requirements, they continue to monitor developments in the financial and credit markets and government policy responses to those developments for potential implications for CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ businesses and their future financial needs.

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RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
CMS ENERGY’S CONSOLIDATED RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
                         
In Millions (except for per share amounts)  
Three months ended June 30   2009     2008     Change  
 
Net Income Available to Common Stockholders
  $ 74     $ 44     $ 30  
Basic Earnings Per Share
  $ 0.33     $ 0.20     $ 0.13  
Diluted Earnings Per Share
  $ 0.32     $ 0.18     $ 0.14  
 
 
                       
Electric Utility
  $ 66     $ 57     $ 9  
Gas Utility
    5       2       3  
Enterprises
    (17 )     10       (27 )
Corporate Interest and Other
    (9 )     (24 )     15  
Discontinued Operations
    29       (1 )     30  
 
Net Income Available to Common Stockholders
  $ 74     $ 44     $ 30  
 
For the three months ended June 30, 2009, net income was $74 million, compared with $44 million for 2008. Combined net income for Consumers’ electric and gas utility segments increased, as the impact of MPSC rate orders, a self-implemented rate increase, and a favorable sales mix more than offset lower electric deliveries and increased operating expenses and interest expense. CMS Energy’s consolidated net income was also positively impacted by the expiration of an indemnity obligation related to a 2007 asset sale and a gain on the retirement of debt, which were partially offset by an increase in projected Bay Harbor remediation costs.
Specific after-tax changes to net income available to common stockholders for the three months ended June 30, 2009 versus 2008 are:
                 
            After Tax, In Millions  
 
     
Increase in electric and gas revenues at Consumers due to MPSC rate orders and a self-implemented rate increase
  $ 44  
     
Increase from discontinued operations due primarily to a benefit from the expiration of an indemnity obligation
    30  
     
Improvement in corporate interest and other due primarily to a gain on the retirement of debt
    15  
     
Increase in electric and gas revenues at Consumers due to a favorable sales mix
    14  
     
Increase in projected Bay Harbor remediation costs at Enterprises
    (22 )
     
Decrease in electric and gas revenues at Consumers due to decreased deliveries, primarily reflecting unfavorable economic conditions
    (21 )
     
Increase in other net expenses at Consumers, primarily reflecting higher pension and OPEB expenses, higher interest expense, and higher plant maintenance expense
    (19 )
     
Absence of resource conservation savings received in 2008 related to the power purchase agreement with the MCV Partnership
    (6 )
     
Increased maintenance expenses and lower revenues at certain Enterprises plants
    (5 )
 
Total change   $ 30  
 

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In Millions (except for per share amounts)  
Six months ended June 30   2009     2008     Change  
 
Net Income Available to Common Stockholders
  $ 143     $ 146     $ (3 )
Basic Earnings Per Share
  $ 0.63     $ 0.64     $ (0.01 )
Diluted Earnings Per Share
  $ 0.61     $ 0.60     $ 0.01  
 
 
                       
Electric Utility
  $ 104     $ 124     $ (20 )
Gas Utility
    64       64        
Enterprises
    (17 )     8       (25 )
Corporate Interest and Other
    (37 )     (49 )     12  
Discontinued Operations
    29       (1 )     30  
 
Net Income Available to Common Stockholders
  $ 143     $ 146     $ (3 )
 
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, net income was $143 million, compared with $146 million for 2008. Net income from Consumers’ electric utility segment decreased, reflecting increased seasonal variations associated with a new electric rate design structure, decreased deliveries, the absence of gains from the sale of sulfur dioxide allowances recognized in 2008, and an increase in operating expenses and interest expense. These changes were partially offset by increased earnings from MPSC rate orders, a self-implemented rate increase, and a favorable sales mix. CMS Energy’s consolidated net income was also positively impacted by the expiration of an indemnity obligation related to a 2007 asset sale and a gain on the retirement of debt, which were partially offset by an increase in projected Bay Harbor remediation costs.

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Specific after-tax changes to net income available to common stockholders for the six months ended June 30, 2009 versus 2008 are:
                 
            After Tax, In Millions  
 
     
Increase in electric and gas revenues at Consumers due to MPSC rate orders and a self-implemented rate increase
  $ 51  
     
Increase from discontinued operations due primarily to a benefit from the expiration of an indemnity obligation
    30  
     
Increase in electric and gas revenues at Consumers due to a favorable sales mix
    20  
     
Improvement in corporate interest and other due primarily to a gain on the retirement of debt
    12  
     
Decrease in electric and gas revenues at Consumers due to decreased deliveries, primarily reflecting unfavorable economic conditions
    (40 )
     
Increase in projected Bay Harbor remediation costs at Enterprises
    (22 )
     
Increase in pension and OPEB expenses at Consumers
    (12 )
     
Absence of gains from the sale of sulfur dioxide credits recognized at Consumers in 2008
    (12 )
     
Increase in other net expenses at Consumers primarily related to higher interest, and uncollectible accounts expense
    (10 )
     
Increase in plant maintenance expense at Consumers
    (9 )
     
Absence of resource conservation savings received in 2008 related to the power purchase agreement with the MCV Partnership
    (8 )
     
Increased maintenance expense at certain Enterprises plants
    (3 )
 
Total change   $ (3 )
 
CONSUMERS’ ELECTRIC UTILITY RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
                         
            In Millions  
June 30   2009     2008     Change  
 
Three months ended
  $ 66     $ 57     $ 9  
Six months ended
  $ 104     $ 124     $ (20 )
 
                 
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
Reasons for the change:   June 30, 2009 vs. 2008     June 30, 2009 vs. 2008  
 
Electric deliveries and rate increase
  $ 37     $ 36  
Power supply costs and related revenue
    (1 )     3  
Other income
    3       (1 )
Maintenance and other operating expenses
    (16 )     (50 )
Depreciation and amortization
    3       (3 )
General taxes
          (2 )
Interest charges
    (10 )     (10 )
Income taxes
    (7 )     7  
 
Total change
  $ 9     $ (20 )
 

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Electric deliveries and rate increase: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, electric delivery revenues increased by $37 million compared with 2008. The increase primarily resulted from a combined $64 million of additional revenue from the June 2008 MPSC rate order and the May 2009 self-implemented rate increase, including an $11 million increase from a new rate design structure that provides lower winter and higher summer rates to encourage conservation. These variances, together with a $16 million increase in revenues from a favorable sales mix, were partially offset by $30 million in lower deliveries. Deliveries to end-use customers were 8 billion kWh, a decrease of 0.6 billion kWh or 7.0 percent compared with 2008, primarily reflecting unfavorable economic conditions in Michigan. Surcharge revenues decreased by $13 million, due primarily to the absence of $12 million of retirement benefits expense recovered in revenue in 2008.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, electric delivery revenues increased by $36 million compared with 2008. The increase primarily resulted from a combined $70 million of additional revenue from the June 2008 MPSC rate order and the May 2009 self-implemented rate increase, net of a $20 million decrease from a new rate design structure that provides lower winter and higher summer rates to encourage conservation. These variances, together with a $27 million increase in revenues from a favorable sales mix, were partially offset by $48 million in lower deliveries. Deliveries to end-use customers were 17 billion kWh, a decrease of 1 billion kWh or 5.6 percent compared with 2008, primarily reflecting unfavorable economic conditions in Michigan. Surcharge revenues decreased by $13 million, due primarily to the absence of $12 million of retirement benefits expense recovered in revenue in 2008.
Power supply costs and related revenue: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, PSCR and related revenue decreased $1 million compared with 2008, due primarily to a decrease in wholesale fuel recovery revenue.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, PSCR and related revenue increased by $3 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to the absence of a reduction to revenue in 2008 related to amounts excluded from recovery in the 2006 PSCR reconciliation case. The increase was offset partially by a decrease in wholesale fuel recovery revenue.
Other income: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, other income increased by $3 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to proceeds received from a land sale in 2009, partially offset by a decrease in interest income, reflecting lower levels of short-term cash investments.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, other income decreased by $1 million compared with 2008. The decrease was due primarily to lower interest income, reflecting lower levels of short-term cash investments, partially offset by proceeds received from a land sale in 2009.
Maintenance and other operating expenses: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, maintenance and other operating expenses increased $16 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to cost increases for plant maintenance of $8 million, the absence of $9 million of resource conservation savings received in 2008 related to Consumers’ power purchase agreement with the MCV Partnership, and a $4 million increase in uncollectible accounts expense. These increases were partially offset by $5 million of lower pension and OPEB expenses, as the absence of $12 million of expense associated with retirement benefits recovered in revenue in 2008 more than offset the $7 million increase due to market performance of retirement benefit plan assets.

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For the six months ended June 30, 2009, maintenance and other operating expenses increased $50 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to cost increases for plant maintenance of $14 million, and the absence of an $18 million benefit from the sale of sulfur dioxide credits recognized in 2008. Also contributing to the increase were the absence of $12 million of resource conservation savings received in 2008 related to Consumers’ power purchase agreement with the MCV Partnership, and an increase in other net expenses of $6 million. The increase in other net expenses included $2 million of higher pension and OPEB expenses, as a $14 million increase due to the market performance of retirement benefit plan assets more than offset the absence of $12 million of expense associated with retirement benefits expense recovered in revenue in 2008.
Depreciation and amortization: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, depreciation and amortization expense decreased $3 million compared with 2008. The decrease was due primarily to a $5 million reduction in amortization expense on certain regulatory assets, partially offset by a $2 million increase from higher plant in service.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, depreciation and amortization expense increased $3 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to a $7 million increase from higher plant in service, offset by $4 million due to the expiration of amortization expense on certain regulatory assets.
General taxes: For the six months ended June 30, 2009, general taxes increased $2 million compared with 2008, due primarily to higher property tax expense, reflecting higher capital spending.
Interest charges: Interest charges increased by $10 million for the three months and the six months ended June 30, 2009, due primarily to the issuance of debt in 2009.
Income taxes: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, income taxes increased $7 million compared with 2008, due primarily to higher earnings in the second quarter of 2009.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, income taxes decreased $7 million compared with 2008, due primarily to lower earnings in the first quarter of 2009.
CONSUMERS’ GAS UTILITY RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
                         
            In Millions  
June 30   2009     2008     Change  
 
Three months ended
  $ 5     $ 2     $ 3  
Six months ended
  $ 64     $ 64     $  
 
                 
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
Reasons for the change:   June 30, 2009 vs. 2008     June 30, 2009 vs. 2008  
 
Gas deliveries and rate increase
  $ 6     $ 4  
Gas wholesale and retail services, other gas revenues, and other income
          1  
Maintenance and other operating expenses
    (1 )     (14 )
Depreciation and amortization
    2       8  
General taxes
          (1 )
Interest charges
    (1 )     (1 )
Income taxes
    (3 )     3  
 
Total change
  $ 3     $  
 

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Gas deliveries and rate increase: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, gas delivery revenue increased $6 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to additional revenue of $4 million from the MPSC’s December 2008 gas rate order and $4 million from a favorable sales mix, partially offset by lower deliveries of $2 million reflecting unfavorable economic conditions in Michigan. Gas deliveries, including miscellaneous transportation to end-use customers, were 41 bcf, a decrease of 1.9 bcf or 4.4 percent compared with 2008.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, gas delivery revenue increased $4 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to additional revenue of $11 million from the MPSC’s December 2008 gas rate order and $6 million from a favorable sales mix, largely offset by lower deliveries of $13 million reflecting unfavorable economic conditions in Michigan. Gas deliveries, including miscellaneous transportation to end-use customers, were 172 bcf, a decrease of 8.4 bcf or 4.7 percent compared with 2008.
Gas wholesale and retail services, other gas revenues, and other income: For the six months ended June 30, 2009, gas wholesale and retail services, other gas revenues and other income increased $1 million compared with 2008, due to an increase in appliance service plan program revenue.
Maintenance and other operating expenses: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, maintenance and other operating expenses increased $1 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to a $3 million increase in OPEB expense, reflecting market performance of Consumers’ retirement benefit plan assets, partially offset by a $2 million decrease in uncollectible accounts expense.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, maintenance and other operating expenses increased $14 million compared with 2008. The increase was due primarily to an increase in uncollectible accounts expense of $9 million and higher OPEB expense of $6 million, reflecting market performance of Consumers’ retirement benefit plan assets, partially offset by a $1 million net decrease in other expenses.
Depreciation and amortization: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, depreciation and amortization expense decreased $2 million compared with 2008. The MPSC’s December 2008 gas rate order reduced amortization expense by $3 million, and delayed collection of an equal amount of amortization in rates. This decrease was partially offset by $1 million of higher depreciation expense due to an increase in plant in service.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, depreciation and amortization expense decreased $8 million compared with 2008. The MPSC’s December 2008 gas rate order reduced amortization expense by $11 million, and delayed collection of an equal amount of amortization in rates. This decrease was partially offset by $3 million of higher depreciation expense due to an increase in plant in service.
General taxes: For the six months ended June 30, 2009, general taxes increased $1 million, compared with 2008, due primarily to increased property taxes, reflecting higher capital spending.
Interest charges: For the three months and six months ended June 30, 2009, interest charges increased $1 million compared with 2008, due primarily to the issuance of debt in 2009.
Income taxes: For the three months ended June 30, 2009, income taxes increased $3 million compared with 2008, due primarily to higher earnings in the second quarter of 2009.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, income taxes decreased $3 million compared with 2008. The decrease reflected $1 million due to lower earnings in the first quarter of 2009 and $2 million related to the treatment of property, plant and equipment, as required by MPSC orders.

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ENTERPRISES RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
                         
            In Millions  
June 30   2009     2008     Change  
 
Three months ended
  $ (17 )   $ 10     $ (27 )
Six months ended
  $ (17 )   $ 8     $ (25 )
 
For the three months ended June 30, 2009, Enterprises recorded a net loss of $17 million, compared with net income of $10 million in 2008. The reduction was due primarily to a $22 million after-tax expense associated with an increase in projected future environmental remediation costs at Bay Harbor. An additional $5 million decrease was related primarily to higher maintenance expense and lower revenues due to outages.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, Enterprises recorded a net loss of $17 million compared with net income of $8 million in 2008. The reduction was due primarily to a $22 million after-tax expense associated with an increase in projected future environmental remediation costs associated with Bay Harbor. An additional $3 million decrease was primarily related to higher maintenance expense.
CORPORATE INTEREST AND OTHER RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
                         
            In Millions  
June 30   2009     2008     Change  
 
Three months ended
  $ (9 )   $ (24 )   $ 15  
Six months ended
  $ (37 )   $ (49 )   $ 12  
 
For the three months ended June 30, 2009, corporate interest and other net expenses decreased $15 million, due primarily to a gain recognized on the retirement of debt, partially offset by higher administrative expenses.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, corporate interest and other net expenses decreased $12 million, due primarily to a gain recognized on the retirement of debt, partially offset by an increase in tax expense due to legislation related to the MBT and higher other operating expenses.
DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS
For the three and six months ended June 30, 2009, net income from discontinued operations, net of tax, was $29 million, compared with a net loss of $1 million in 2008. The improvement was due to the expiration of an indemnity obligation related to a 2007 asset sale.
CAPITAL RESOURCES AND LIQUIDITY
Components of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ cash management plan include controlling operating expenses and capital expenditures and evaluating market conditions for financing opportunities, if needed. Recent major financing transactions and commitments are as follows:
    In March 2009, Consumers issued $500 million in FMB;
    In June 2009, CMS Energy issued $173 million in convertible senior notes and $300 million in senior notes, and retired $144 million of its $178 million of Long-term debt — related parties;
    In June 2009, CMS Energy commenced cash tender offers to repurchase up to $330 million of CMS Energy’s senior notes due 2010 and 2011. In July 2009, under the terms of the tender offer, CMS Energy repurchased and retired $233 million principal amount of the senior notes due 2010 and $87 million principal amount of the senior notes due 2011, funded partially by a draw on its revolving credit facility; and

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    In June 2009, CMS Energy’s preferred stock became convertible at the holders’ option for the third quarter of 2009.
Despite the present market volatility, CMS Energy and Consumers expect to continue to have access to the financial and capital markets. Recent and upcoming credit renewals and maturities are as follows:
    Consumers’ accounts receivable sales program was renewed in April 2009 through February 2010;
 
    Consumers’ planned renewals of letters of credit and revolving credit facilities are $342 million in 2009 and $500 million in 2012;
 
    Consumers’ FMB maturities are $150 million for the remainder of 2009, $250 million in 2010, and $300 million in 2012;
 
    Consumers’ tax-exempt pollution control revenue bond maturities are $58 million in 2010;
 
    CMS Energy’s senior notes maturities, after reflecting the July 2009 retirements, are $67 million in 2010, $213 million in 2011, and $150 million in 2012; and
 
    CMS Energy’s $550 million revolving credit facility is planned for renewal in 2012.
CMS Energy and Consumers believe that their present level of cash and their expected cash flows from operating activities, together with access to sources of liquidity, will be sufficient to meet cash requirements. In particular, Consumers expects to complete the renewal of its $150 million 364-day revolving credit facility in the third quarter of 2009. If access to the capital markets were to become diminished or otherwise restricted, CMS Energy and Consumers would implement contingency plans to address debt maturities, which could include reduced capital spending. For additional details, see Note 5, Financings and Capitalization.
At June 30, 2009, CMS Energy and Consumers were each in compliance with the financial covenants in their respective debt agreements.
Cash Position, Investing, and Financing
CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ operating, investing, and financing activities meet their consolidated cash needs. At June 30, 2009, CMS Energy had $1.056 billion of consolidated cash and cash equivalents, which includes $31 million of restricted cash and cash equivalents and $11 million of cash and cash equivalents held by consolidated VIEs. At June 30, 2009, Consumers had $760 million of consolidated cash and cash equivalents, which includes $23 million of restricted cash and cash equivalents.
CMS Energy’s primary ongoing source of cash is dividends and other distributions from its subsidiaries. Consumers paid $130 million in common stock dividends and Enterprises paid $55 million in common stock dividends to CMS Energy for the six months ended June 30, 2009. For details on dividend restrictions, see Note 5, Financings and Capitalization.
Operating Activities: For the six months ended June 30, 2009, CMS Energy generated $803 million in cash from operations and Consumers generated $856 million in cash from operations. For the six months ended June 30, 2008, CMS Energy generated $651 million in cash from operations and Consumers generated $954 million in cash from operations. Specific components of cash provided by operating activities for the six months ended June 30, 2009 and 2008 are:

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CMS Energy, including Consumers
                                 
    In Millions
        Six months ended June 30   2009   2008   Change
 
     
Net income attributable to CMS Energy
  $ 149     $ 152     $ (3 )
     
Non-cash transactions (a)
    477       480       (3 )
             
       
 
    626       632       (6 )
     
Sale of gas purchased in prior year
    576       548       28  
     
Purchase of gas in current year
    (293 )     (417 )     124  
     
Electric sales contract termination payment
          (275 )     275  
     
Accounts receivable sales
    (170 )           (170 )
     
Pension contribution
    (206 )           (206 )
     
Other core working capital
    243       198       45  
     
Other changes in assets and liabilities, net
    27       (35 )     62  
 
Net cash provided by operating activities   $ 803     $ 651     $ 152  
 
Consumers
                                 
    In Millions
        Six months ended June 30   2009   2008   Change
 
     
Net income
  $ 169     $ 190     $ (21 )
     
Non-cash transactions (a)
    450       428       22  
             
       
 
    619       618       1  
     
Sale of gas purchased in prior year
    576       548       28  
     
Purchase of gas in current year
    (293 )     (417 )     124  
     
Accounts receivable sales
    (170 )           (170 )
     
Pension contribution
    (199 )           (199 )
     
Other core working capital
    247       187       60  
     
Other changes in assets and liabilities, net
    76       18       58  
 
Net cash provided by operating activities   $ 856     $ 954     $ (98 )
 
 
(a)   Non-cash transactions comprise depreciation and amortization, changes in deferred income taxes, postretirement benefits expense, and other non-cash items.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, net cash provided by operating activities at CMS Energy increased $152 million compared with 2008. This increase was due to the absence in 2009 of a payment made by CMS ERM in 2008 to terminate electricity sales agreements, partially offset by changes affecting Consumers’ cash provided by operating activities described in the following paragraph.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, net cash provided by operating activities at Consumers decreased $98 million compared with 2008. This decrease was due primarily to a 2009 pension contribution and the absence of 2008 accounts receivable sales. These decreases were partially offset by the impact of lower gas prices on inventory purchased in 2009, collection of increased billings due to recent regulatory actions, and other timing differences.
Investing Activities: For the six months ended June 30, 2009, net cash used in investing activities was $436 million at CMS Energy and $423 million at Consumers. For the six months ended June 30, 2008, net cash used in investing activities was $344 million at CMS Energy and $345 million at Consumers. Specific components of cash used in investing activities for the six months ended June 30, 2009 and 2008 are:

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CMS Energy, including Consumers
                                 
    In Millions
        Six months ended June 30   2009   2008   Change
 
     
Capital expenditures
  $ (412 )   $ (340 )   $ (72 )
     
Costs to retire property and other
    (24 )     (4 )     (20 )
 
Net cash used in investing activities   $ (436 )   $ (344 )   $ (92 )
 
Consumers
                                 
    In Millions
        Six months ended June 30   2009   2008   Change
 
     
Capital expenditures
  $ (407 )   $ (338 )   $ (69 )
     
Costs to retire property and other
    (16 )     (7 )     (9 )
 
Net cash used in investing activities   $ (423 )   $ (345 )   $ (78 )
 
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, net cash used in investing activities at CMS Energy increased $92 million compared with 2008. For the six months ended June 30, 2009, net cash used in investing activities at Consumers increased $78 million compared with 2008. These increases were due primarily to an increase in Consumers’ capital expenditures and costs to retire property.
Financing Activities: For the six months ended June 30, 2009, CMS Energy generated $445 million in cash from financing activities and Consumers generated $235 million in cash from financing activities. For the six months ended June 30, 2008, net cash used in financing activities was $128 million at CMS Energy and $361 million at Consumers. Specific components of cash provided by (used in) financing activities for the six months ended June 30, 2009 and 2008 are:
CMS Energy, including Consumers
                                 
    In Millions
        Six months ended June 30   2009   2008   Change
 
     
Issuance of FMB, convertible senior notes and senior notes
  $ 973     $ 250     $ 723  
     
Borrowings on revolving credit facility
          225       (225 )
     
Other long-term debt issuances
    89       51       38  
     
Retirement of debt and other debt maturity payments
    (423 )     (474 )     51  
     
Payments on revolving credit facility
    (105 )     (120 )     15  
     
Payments of common and preferred stock dividends
    (63 )     (47 )     (16 )
     
Other financing activities
    (26 )     (13 )     (13 )
 
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities   $ 445     $ (128 )   $ 573  
 
Consumers
                                 
    In Millions
        Six months ended June 30   2009   2008   Change
 
     
Issuance of FMB
  $ 500     $ 250     $ 250  
     
Retirement of debt and other debt maturity payments
    (218 )     (426 )     208  
     
Payments of common stock dividends
    (130 )     (168 )     38  
     
Stockholder’s contribution from CMS Energy
    100             100  
     
Other financing activities
    (17 )     (17 )      
 
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities   $ 235     $ (361 )   $ 596  
 
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, net cash provided by financing activities at CMS Energy increased $573 million compared with 2008. This increase was due primarily to an increase in net proceeds from issuance of long-term debt at both CMS Energy and Consumers.

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For the six months ended June 30, 2009, net cash provided by financing activities at Consumers increased $596 million compared with 2008. This increase was due primarily to an increase in net proceeds from Consumers’ issuance of long-term debt and a stockholder’s contribution from CMS Energy.
For additional details on long-term debt activity, see Note 5, Financings and Capitalization.
Retirement Benefits
The following table provides the most recent estimates of pension cost and pension cash contributions:
                 
            In Millions  
    Pension Cost     Pension Contributions  
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers
               
2009
  $ 97     $ 206  
2010
    92       157  
2011
    88       98  
 
Consumers
               
2009
  $ 93     $ 199  
2010
    89       152  
2011
    85       95  
 
Based on recent guidance from the federal Pension Protection Act of 2006, IRS notices, and the federal Worker, Retiree, and Employer Recovery Act of 2008, CMS Energy reduced its estimated pension contribution for 2009 by $94 million to $206 million. During the first six months of 2009, CMS Energy contributed $206 million to its pension fund, which includes a contribution of $199 million by Consumers. Actual future pension cost and contributions will depend on future investment performance, changes in discount rates, and various other factors related to the Pension Plan participants.
For additional details on retirement benefits, see Note 8, Retirement Benefits.
Obligations And Commitments
Revolving Credit Facilities: For details on CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ revolving credit facilities, see Note 5, Financings and Capitalization.
Dividend Restrictions: For details on CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ dividend restrictions, see Note 5, Financings and Capitalization.

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Off-Balance-Sheet Arrangements
Off-Balance-Sheet Arrangements: CMS Energy, Consumers, and certain of their subsidiaries enter into various arrangements in the normal course of business to facilitate commercial transactions with third parties. These arrangements include indemnifications, surety bonds, letters of credit, and financial and performance guarantees. Indemnifications are usually agreements to reimburse a counterparty that may incur losses due to outside claims or breach of contract terms. The maximum payment that could be required under a number of these indemnity obligations is not estimable. While CMS Energy and Consumers believe it is unlikely that they will incur any material losses related to indemnities they have not recorded as liabilities, they cannot predict the impact of these contingent obligations on their liquidity and financial condition. For additional details on these and other guarantee arrangements, see Note 3, Contingencies, “Guarantees.”
Sale of Accounts Receivable: Under Consumers’ revolving accounts receivable sales program, Consumers may sell up to $250 million of accounts receivable, subject to certain eligibility requirements. At June 30, 2009, $134 million of accounts receivable were eligible for sale, and no accounts receivable were sold under the program.
OUTLOOK
Several business trends and uncertainties may affect CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ financial condition and future results of operations. These trends and uncertainties could have a material impact on CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ consolidated income, cash flows, or financial position. For additional details regarding these and other uncertainties, see the “Forward-Looking Statements and Information” section included in this MD&A and Part II, Item 1A. Risk Factors.
Consumers’ Electric Utility Business Outlook and Uncertainties
Balanced Energy Initiative : Consumers’ balanced energy initiative is a comprehensive energy resource plan designed to meet its projected short-term and long-term electric power requirements through:
    energy efficiency;
 
    demand management;
 
    expanded use of renewable energy; and
 
    development of new power plants and pursuit of additional power purchase agreements to complement existing generating sources.
Consumers’ balanced energy initiative includes plans to build an 830 MW coal-fueled plant at its Karn/Weadock generating complex near Bay City, Michigan. Consumers expects the plant to be in operation in 2017 and plans to use five-eighths of the plant’s output to serve its own customers, with the remaining output to be committed to others. The 2008 Energy Legislation provided guidelines with respect to the MPSC’s review and approval of energy resource plans and proposed power plants through the issuance of a certificate of need. Consumers plans to file a new case with the MPSC seeking a certificate of need that conforms to the legislation.
Proposed Coal Plant Projects: In October 2007, Consumers filed an air permit application with the MDEQ for its proposed coal-fueled plant. The MDEQ published Consumers’ draft air permit for public comment in March 2009 and, in response to public comments, indicated that it would require a needs-and-alternatives analysis. In June 2009, Consumers prepared and filed with the MDEQ and the MPSC a needs-and-alternatives analysis that supported Consumers’ current balanced energy initiative and the construction of its proposed coal-fueled power plant. Both the MDEQ and the MPSC published Consumers’ analysis for public comment.

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Renewable Energy Plan: The 2008 Energy Legislation prescribed renewable energy standards for energy and capacity. The energy standard requires that at least ten percent of Consumers’ electric sales volume come from renewable sources by 2015 with interim target requirements. Using the guidelines of the standard, four percent of Consumers’ electric sales volume now comes from renewable sources. The capacity standard requires Consumers to add new renewable energy capacity of 200 MW by December 31, 2013, and an additional 300 MW by December 31, 2015, from owned renewable energy sources or agreements to purchase power. Consumers has secured more than 48,000 acres of land easements in Michigan’s Tuscola and Mason Counties for potential wind generation development and is collecting wind speed and other meteorological data at the sites.
In February 2009, Consumers filed its renewable energy plan with the MPSC. The plan detailed how Consumers would meet the renewable energy standards for energy and capacity, with wind generation as Consumers’ primary resource. Consumers’ plan proposed that half of the new renewable capacity would be obtained through long-term agreements to purchase power from third parties, with the remaining capacity to be supplied by facilities built and owned by Consumers. Consumers’ plan was approved by the MPSC in May 2009 with minor exceptions. It is subject to biennial review and annual cost and revenue reconciliation proceedings.
Energy Optimization Plan: The 2008 Energy Legislation requires utilities to prepare energy optimization plans and achieve annual sales reduction targets beginning in 2009 through at least 2015. The targets are incremental with the goal of achieving a six percent reduction in customers’ electricity use and a four percent reduction in natural gas use by December 31, 2015. In February 2009, Consumers filed its energy optimization plan with the MPSC. The plan detailed Consumers’ proposals for energy cost savings among all customer classes through incentives to reduce customer usage by offering customer energy audits, rebates and discounts on purchases of highly efficient appliances, and other incentives and programs. The plan also sought recovery of program costs. Consumers’ plan was approved by the MPSC in May 2009. It is subject to biennial review and annual cost and revenue reconciliation proceedings.
Electric Customer Revenue: Michigan’s economy has suffered from plant closures, restructurings, and bankruptcies in the automotive sector and from the depressed housing market. The Michigan economy also has been harmed by the present volatility in the financial and credit markets. Although Consumers’ electric utility results are not substantially dependent upon a single customer, or even a few customers, customers in the automotive sector and their direct suppliers represented four percent of Consumers’ total 2008 electric revenue and 2.5 percent of Consumers’ 2008 electric operating income.
In the second quarter of 2009, GM and Chrysler each declared bankruptcy. As a result, Consumers has charged off $3 million of accounts receivable and unbilled revenue due from those customers. Chrysler emerged from bankruptcy in June 2009, and GM emerged from bankruptcy in July 2009. Consumers could, however, incur additional charge-offs presently estimated at $7 million in the event that all direct suppliers in the automotive sector and other significant related suppliers were to declare bankruptcy. This estimate does not include the potential indirect impacts on other sectors and customers. Consumers cannot predict the financial impact of the Michigan economy on its electric customer revenue.
Electric Deliveries: Consumers expects weather-adjusted electric deliveries to decrease in 2009 by 3.5 percent compared with 2008. Consumers’ outlook for 2009 includes continuing growth in deliveries to its largest customer, which produces semiconductor and solar energy components. Excluding this customer’s growth, Consumers expects weather-adjusted electric deliveries in 2009 to decrease five percent compared with 2008. Consumers’ outlook reflects reduced deliveries associated with its investment in energy efficiency programs included in the 2008 Energy Legislation, as well as recent projections of Michigan economic conditions.
Beginning in 2010, Consumers expects economic conditions to stabilize, resulting in modestly growing

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deliveries of electricity through 2014. This modest growth expectation takes into account the predicted effects of energy efficiency programs. Actual deliveries will depend on:
    energy conservation measures and results of energy efficiency programs;
 
    fluctuations in weather; and
 
    changes in economic conditions, including utilization and expansion or contraction of manufacturing facilities, population trends, and housing activity.
Electric Supply Resources: Consumers, through its supply resources, which consist of electric generating plants, long-term power purchase contracts, and short-term purchases of capacity and energy, is planning to meet the resource adequacy requirements established by MISO.
Electric Transmission Expenses: Consumers expects the transmission charges it incurs to increase by $48 million in 2009 compared with 2008, due primarily to a 25 percent increase in METC and Wolverine transmission rates. This increase was included in Consumers’ 2009 PSCR plan filed with the MPSC in September 2008. For details on litigation concerning Consumers’ recovery of its electric transmission expense, see Note 3, Contingencies, “Consumers’ Electric Utility Contingencies — Litigation.”
Electric ROA: The Customer Choice Act allows Consumers’ electric customers to buy electric generation service from Consumers or from an alternative electric supplier. However, the 2008 Energy Legislation generally limits alternative electric supply to ten percent of Consumers’ weather-adjusted retail sales of the preceding calendar year. At June 2009, alternative electric suppliers were providing 443 MW of generation service to ROA customers, a 33 percent increase from December 31, 2008. Alternative electric supply represented four percent of Consumers’ weather-adjusted retail sales of the preceding calendar year.
Electric Environmental Estimates: Consumers’ operations are subject to various state and federal environmental laws and regulations. Generally, Consumers has been able to recover, in customer rates, its costs to operate its facilities in compliance with these laws and regulations.
Clean Air Act: Consumers continues to focus on complying with the federal Clean Air Act and numerous state and federal environmental regulations. Consumers estimates expenditures of $1.36 billion from 2009 through 2017 for equipment installation to comply with a number of environmental regulations, including regulations limiting nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, and mercury emissions. Consumers expects to recover these costs in customer rates.
Consumers has applied for early reduction nitrogen oxide allowances with the MDEQ. It is expected that allowances and installation of pollution control equipment will cover the shortfall in nitrogen oxide emission allowances through 2015. If the early reduction nitrogen oxide allowances are granted, no additional purchases of allowances will be necessary. Consumers also plans to purchase sulfur dioxide emission allowances, between 2012 and 2015, at an average cost of $5 million per year. Consumers expects to recover emission allowance costs from its customers through the PSCR process.
Clean Air Interstate Rule: In 2005, the EPA adopted the CAIR, which required additional coal-fueled electric generating plant emission controls for nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide. The CAIR was appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. The court initially nullified the CAIR and the CAIR federal implementation plan in its entirety, but subsequently, the court changed course and remanded the rule to the EPA maintaining the rule in effect pending EPA revision. At this time, the CAIR remains in effect, with 2009 as the first annual nitrogen oxides compliance year. The EPA must now revise the rule to resolve the court’s concerns. The impacts of this revision are unknown, but stricter regulation is envisioned. A draft rule is expected in 2010.

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State and Federal Mercury Air Rules: In 2005, the EPA issued the CAMR, which required initial reductions of mercury emissions from coal-fueled electric generating plants by 2010 and further reductions by 2018. A number of states and other entities appealed certain portions of the CAMR to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. In 2008, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia determined that the rules developed by the EPA were not consistent with the Clean Air Act. The U.S. Supreme Court denied a request to review this decision. The EPA has initiated the development of a revised rule based on MACT. The rule is expected to be proposed in early 2010, at which time Consumers will have a better understanding of the potential impact.
In 2006, Michigan’s governor proposed a plan that would result in mercury emissions reductions of 90 percent by 2015. The MDEQ has proposed a rule in response to this proposal, which is presently undergoing technical review in the state’s Office of Administrative Hearings and Rules. Consumers cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this matter.
Greenhouse Gases : In June 2009, the United States House of Representatives passed the American Clean Energy and Security Act, which requires reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide. The bill proposes to reduce carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions by 3 percent below 2005 levels by 2012, 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, and 42 percent below 2005 levels by 2030. The bill also contains provisions for the direct granting of substantial free greenhouse gas emission allowances to load-serving entities in order to mitigate price impacts to customers. Consumers considers it likely that Congress will enact this bill or other greenhouse gas legislation, but the form of any final bill is difficult to predict. These laws, or similar state laws or rules, if enacted, could require Consumers to replace equipment, install additional equipment for emission controls, purchase allowances, curtail operations, arrange for alternative sources of supply, or take other steps to manage or lower the emission of greenhouse gases. In April 2009, the EPA issued a proposed finding that greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, contribute to air pollution that may endanger the public health and welfare. If other administrative actions are taken, such as finalization of the proposed endangerment finding following public comment, it could lead to the regulation of carbon dioxide as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act.
Although associated capital or operating costs relating to greenhouse gas regulation or legislation could be material, and cost recovery cannot be assured, Consumers expects to have an opportunity to recover these costs and capital expenditures in rates consistent with the recovery of other reasonable costs of complying with environmental laws and regulations.
Water: In 2004, the EPA issued rules that govern existing electric generating plant cooling water intake systems. These rules require a significant reduction in the number of fish harmed by intake structures at existing power plants. The EPA compliance options in the rule were challenged before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which remanded the bulk of the rule back to the EPA for reconsideration in 2007. In April 2009, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the utility industry’s position that the EPA can rely on cost-benefit analysis in setting the national performance standards for fish protection. The EPA is planning to issue a revised draft rule in early 2010. Consumers estimates capital expenditures of $150 million to comply with these regulations.
Other electric environmental matters, including routine maintenance classification, could have a major impact on Consumers’ outlook. For additional details on these and other electric environmental matters, see Note 3, Contingencies, “Consumers’ Electric Utility Contingencies - Electric Environmental Matters.”
Electric Rate Matters: Rate matters are critical to Consumers’ electric utility business. For details on Consumers’ stranded cost recovery, power supply cost recovery, electric rate case, Palisades regulatory proceedings, and Big Rock decommissioning proceedings, see Note 4, Utility Rate Matters, “Consumers’ Electric Utility Rate Matters.”

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Consumers’ Gas Utility Business Outlook and Uncertainties
Gas Deliveries: Consumers expects weather-adjusted gas deliveries to decline in 2009 by five percent compared with 2008, due to continuing conservation and overall economic conditions in Michigan. In addition, Consumers expects weather-adjusted gas deliveries to decline an average of two percent annually from 2010 through 2014, which reflects expected effects of energy efficiency programs. Actual delivery levels from year to year may vary from this trend due to:
    fluctuations in weather;
 
    use by independent power producers;
 
    availability and development of renewable energy sources;
 
    changes in gas prices;
 
    Michigan economic conditions including population trends and housing activity;
 
    the price of competing energy sources or fuels; and
 
    energy efficiency and conservation.
Gas Environmental Estimates: Consumers expects to incur investigation and remedial action costs at a number of sites, including 23 former manufactured gas plant sites. For additional details, see Note 3, Contingencies, “Consumers’ Gas Utility Contingencies — Gas Environmental Matters.”
Gas Rate Matters: Rate matters are critical to Consumers’ gas utility business. For details on Consumers’ gas cost recovery, gas depreciation, gas rate case, and lost and unaccounted for gas, see Note 4, Utility Rate Matters, “Consumers’ Gas Utility Rate Matters.”
Enterprises’ Outlook and Uncertainties
The primary focus with respect to CMS Energy’s remaining non-utility businesses is to optimize cash flow and maximize the value of their assets.
Trends and uncertainties that could have a material impact on CMS Energy’s consolidated income, cash flows, or financial position include:
    the impact of indemnity and environmental remediation obligations at Bay Harbor;
 
    the outcome of certain legal proceedings;
 
    the impact of representations, warranties, and indemnities provided by CMS Energy or its subsidiaries in connection with the sales of assets;
 
    the impact of changes in commodity prices and interest rates on certain derivative contracts that do not qualify for hedge accounting and must be marked to market through earnings; and
 
    the impact of economic conditions in Michigan, including population trends and housing activity.
For additional details regarding Enterprises’ uncertainties, see Note 3, Contingencies and Part II, Item 1. Legal Proceedings.

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Other Outlook and Uncertainties
Advanced Metering Infrastructure: Consumers’ development of an advanced metering infrastructure system is proceeding as planned. This system is designed to provide two-way communications between Consumers and its customers and should allow Consumers to read meters, receive outage and restoration notification, and turn service on and off without visiting the meter. It should enable customers to monitor and manage their energy usage and help reduce demand during critical peak times, resulting in higher energy efficiency and environmental benefits. Due to this system’s complexity and relative market immaturity, Consumers is using a phased implementation approach that will allow it to analyze, test, and pilot the new technology prior to widespread investment and deployment. Consumers will also make certain modifications to its software to enable the new system. Mass deployment of the system and installation of new meters is planned for 2011.
Litigation: CMS Energy, Consumers, and certain of their subsidiaries are named as a party in various litigation matters, as well as in administrative proceedings before various courts and governmental agencies arising in the ordinary course of business. For additional details regarding these and other legal matters, see Note 3, Contingencies and Part II, Item 1. Legal Proceedings.
EnerBank: EnerBank, a wholly owned subsidiary of CMS Capital that represents one percent of CMS Energy’s net assets, is a state-chartered, FDIC-insured industrial bank providing unsecured home improvement loans. The carrying value of EnerBank’s loan portfolio was $196 million at June 30, 2009. Its loan portfolio was funded primarily by deposit liabilities of $160 million and borrowings from the U.S. Federal Reserve bank of $19 million. Twelve-month rolling average default rates on loans held by EnerBank have risen from 1.4 percent at December 31, 2008 to 2.0 percent at June 30, 2009. Due to the economic downturn, EnerBank expects the level of loan defaults to continue to increase throughout the remainder of 2009 and into 2010, returning to lower levels thereafter.
NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
For details regarding the implementation of new accounting standards and new accounting standards issued that are not yet effective, see Note 1, Accounting Policies.

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CMS Energy Corporation
Consolidated Statements of Income
(Unaudited)
                                 
                    In Millions  
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
Operating Revenue
  $ 1,228     $ 1,365     $ 3,334     $ 3,549  
 
                               
Loss from Equity Method Investees
          (1 )     (1 )     (2 )
 
                               
Operating Expenses
                               
Fuel for electric generation
    118       135       253       297  
Purchased and interchange power
    282       297       571       620  
Cost of gas sold
    208       351       1,171       1,335  
Other operating expenses
    254       209       481       397  
Maintenance
    63       49       111       89  
Depreciation and amortization
    121       128       294       301  
General taxes
    48       48       113       108  
Gain on asset sales, net
    (8 )     (8 )     (8 )     (8 )
     
 
    1,086       1,209       2,986       3,139  
 
 
                               
Operating Income
    142       155       347       408  
 
                               
Other Income (Deductions)
                               
Interest and dividends
    6       9       11       18  
Regulatory return on capital expenditures
    6       8       13       16  
Other income
    33       3       38       6  
Other expense
    (3 )     (5 )     (5 )     (6 )
     
 
    42       15       57       34  
 
 
                               
Interest Charges
                               
Interest on long-term debt
    95       87       184       176  
Interest on long-term debt — related parties
    3       4       6       7  
Other interest
    8       7       16       18  
Capitalized interest
    (1 )     (1 )     (2 )     (3 )
     
 
    105       97       204       198  
 
 
                               
Income Before Income Taxes
    79       73       200       244  
Income Tax Expense
    29       24       77       87  
     
 
                               
Income from Continuing Operations
    50       49       123       157  
Income (Loss) From Discontinued Operations, Net of Tax
(Tax Benefit) of $19, $(1), $19 and $(1)
    29       (1 )     29       (1 )
     
 
                               
Net Income
    79       48       152       156  
Income Attributable to Noncontrolling Interests
    2       1       3       4  
     
 
                               
Net Income Attributable to CMS Energy
    77       47       149       152  
Preferred Stock Dividends
    3       3       6       6  
     
 
                               
Net Income Available to Common Stockholders
  $ 74     $ 44     $ 143     $ 146  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

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            In Millions, Except Per Share Amounts  
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
CMS Energy
                               
Net Income Available to Common Stockholders
  $ 74     $ 44     $ 143     $ 146  
     
 
                               
Basic Earnings Per Average Common Share
                               
Income from Continuing Operations
  $ 0.20     $ 0.21     $ 0.50     $ 0.65  
Income (Loss) from Discontinued Operations
    0.13       (0.01 )     0.13       (0.01 )
     
Net Income Attributable to Common Stock
  $ 0.33     $ 0.20     $ 0.63     $ 0.64  
     
 
                               
Diluted Earnings Per Average Common Share
                               
Income from Continuing Operations
  $ 0.19     $ 0.19     $ 0.48     $ 0.61  
Income (Loss) from Discontinued Operations
    0.13       (0.01 )     0.13       (0.01 )
     
Net Income Attributable to Common Stock
  $ 0.32     $ 0.18     $ 0.61     $ 0.60  
     
 
                               
Dividends Declared Per Common Share
  $ 0.125     $ 0.09     $ 0.25     $ 0.18  
 

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CMS Energy Corporation
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
(Unaudited)
                 
    In Millions  
Six Months Ended June 30   2009     2008  
 
Cash Flows from Operating Activities
               
Net income attributable to CMS Energy
  $ 149     $ 152  
Adjustments to reconcile net income attributable to CMS Energy to net cash provided by operating activities
               
Depreciation and amortization
    294       301  
Deferred income taxes and investment tax credit
    94       81  
Income attributable to noncontrolling interests
    3       4  
Regulatory return on capital expenditures
    (13 )     (16 )
Postretirement benefits expense
    91       76  
Capital lease and other amortization
    19       23  
Gain on indemnification
    (50 )      
Gain on sale of assets
    (3 )     (8 )
Gain on extinguishment of long-term debt — related parties
    (28 )      
Increase in environmental remediation accrual
    35        
Bad debt expense
    34       17  
Loss from equity method investees
    1       2  
Postretirement benefits contributions
    (232 )     (25 )
Electric sales contract termination payment
          (275 )
Changes in other assets and liabilities:
               
Decrease in accounts receivable and accrued revenue
    115       187  
Decrease in accrued power supply and gas revenue
    5       40  
Decrease in inventories
    267       139  
Increase (decrease) in accounts payable
    (26 )     3  
Decrease in accrued expenses
    (7 )     (49 )
Decrease in other current and non-current assets
    110       111  
Decrease in other current and non-current liabilities
    (55 )     (112 )
     
Net cash provided by operating activities
    803       651  
 
 
               
Cash Flows from Investing Activities
               
Capital expenditures (excludes assets placed under capital lease)
    (412 )     (340 )
Cost to retire property
    (25 )     (12 )
Proceeds for sale of assets
    7        
Restricted cash and cash equivalents
    6       7  
Other investing
    (12 )     1  
     
Net cash used in investing activities
    (436 )     (344 )
 
 
               
Cash Flows from Financing Activities
               
Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt
    973       475  
Proceeds from EnerBank notes, net
    4       7  
Issuance of common stock
    5       4  
Retirement of bonds and other long-term debt, including related parties
    (443 )     (550 )
Payment of common stock dividends
    (57 )     (41 )
Payment of preferred stock dividends
    (6 )     (6 )
Payment of capital and finance lease obligations
    (12 )     (12 )
Debt issuance costs, financing fees, and other
    (19 )     (5 )
     
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities
    445       (128 )
 
 
               
Net Increase in Cash and Cash Equivalents
    812       179  
 
               
Cash and Cash Equivalents, Beginning of Period
    213       348  
     
 
               
Cash and Cash Equivalents, End of Period
  $ 1,025     $ 527  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

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CMS Energy Corporation
Consolidated Balance Sheets
(Unaudited)
ASSETS
                 
            In Millions  
    June 30     December 31  
    2009     2008  
 
Plant and Property (at cost)
               
Electric utility
  $    9,235     $ 8,965  
Gas utility
    3,667       3,622  
Enterprises
    395       390  
Other
    33       33  
     
 
    13,330       13,010  
Less accumulated depreciation, depletion and amortization
    4,462       4,428  
     
 
    8,868       8,582  
Construction work in progress
    553       608  
     
 
    9,421       9,190  
 
 
               
Investments
               
Enterprises
    4       5  
Other
    6       6  
     
 
    10       11  
 
 
               
Current Assets
               
Cash and cash equivalents
    1,025       213  
Restricted cash and cash equivalents
    31       35  
Accounts receivable and accrued revenue, less allowances of $31 in 2009 and $26 in 2008
    701       851  
Notes receivable
    87       95  
Accrued power supply and gas revenue
    2       7  
Inventories at average cost
               
Gas in underground storage
    887       1,168  
Materials and supplies
    115       110  
Generating plant fuel stock
    136       127  
Deferred property taxes
    128       165  
Regulatory assets — postretirement benefits
    19       19  
Prepayments and other
    25       37  
     
 
    3,156       2,827  
 
 
               
Non-current Assets
               
Regulatory assets
               
Securitized costs
    392       416  
Postretirement benefits
    1,386       1,431  
Customer Choice Act
    68       90  
Other
    469       482  
Notes receivable, less allowances of $5 in 2009 and $34 in 2008
    196       186  
Other
    179       268  
     
 
    2,690       2,873  
 
 
               
Total Assets
  $    15,277     $ 14,901  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

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STOCKHOLDERS’ INVESTMENT AND LIABILITIES
                 
            In Millions  
    June 30     December 31  
    2009     2008  
 
Capitalization
               
Common stockholders’ equity
               
Common stock, authorized 350.0 shares; outstanding 227.0 shares in 2009 and 226.4 shares in 2008
  $    2     $ 2  
Other paid-in capital
    4,552       4,533  
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
    (27 )     (28 )
Accumulated deficit
    (1,945 )     (2,031 )
     
 
    2,582       2,476  
Noncontrolling interests
    51       52  
Preferred stock of subsidiary
    44       44  
Preferred stock
    243       243  
     
Total equity
    2,920       2,815  
 
               
Long-term debt
    6,356       5,837  
Long-term debt — related parties
    34       178  
Non-current portion of capital and finance lease obligations
    197       206  
     
 
    9,507       9,036  
 
 
               
Current Liabilities
               
Current portion of long-term debt, capital and finance lease obligations
    604       514  
Notes payable
    19        
Accounts payable
    406       466  
Accrued rate refunds
    58       7  
Accrued interest
    113       107  
Accrued taxes
    225       289  
Deferred income taxes
    129       100  
Regulatory liabilities
    114       120  
Other
    155       260  
     
 
    1,823       1,863  
 
 
               
Non-current Liabilities
               
Regulatory liabilities
               
Cost of removal
    1,227       1,203  
Income taxes, net
    532       519  
Other
    146       146  
Postretirement benefits
    1,324       1,502  
Asset retirement obligation
    211       206  
Deferred investment tax credit
    53       54  
Deferred income taxes
    114       55  
Other
    340       317  
     
 
    3,947       4,002  
 
 
               
Commitments and Contingencies (Notes 3, 5 and 7)
               
 
               
Total Stockholders’ Investment and Liabilities
  $    15,277     $ 14,901  
 

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CMS Energy Corporation
Consolidated Statements of Common Stockholders’ Equity
(Unaudited)
                                 
                            In Millions  
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
Common Stock
                               
At beginning and end of period
  $ 2     $ 2     $ 2     $ 2  
 
 
                               
Other Paid-in Capital
                               
At beginning of period
    4,538       4,520       4,533       4,517  
Common stock issued
    3       5       8       8  
Conversion option on convertible debt
    11             11        
     
At end of period
    4,552       4,525       4,552       4,525  
 
 
                               
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss
                               
Retirement benefits liability
                               
At beginning of period
    (27 )     (16 )     (27 )     (15 )
Retirement benefits liability adjustments (a)
                      (1 )
     
At end of period
    (27 )     (16 )     (27 )     (16 )
     
 
                               
Investments
                               
At beginning of period
    (4 )     (4 )            
Unrealized gain (loss) on investments (a)
    5       (1 )     1       (5 )
     
At end of period
    1       (5 )     1       (5 )
     
 
                               
Derivative instruments
                               
At beginning and end of period
    (1 )     (1 )     (1 )     (1 )
     
 
                               
Foreign currency translation
                               
At beginning of period
          (128 )           (128 )
Sale of interests in TGN (a)
          128             128  
     
At end of period
                       
     
 
                               
Total Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss
    (27 )     (22 )     (27 )     (22 )
 
 
                               
Accumulated Deficit
                               
At beginning of period
    (1,991 )     (2,151 )     (2,031 )     (2,227 )
Effects of changing the retirement plans measurement date pursuant to SFAS No. 158
                               
Service cost, interest cost, and expected return on plan assets for December 1 through December 31, 2007, net of tax
                      (4 )
Additional loss from December 1 through December 31, 2007, net of tax
                      (2 )
Net income attributable to CMS Energy (a)
    77       47       149       152  
Preferred stock dividends declared
    (3 )     (3 )     (6 )     (6 )
Common stock dividends declared
    (28 )     (21 )     (57 )     (41 )
     
At end of period
    (1,945 )     (2,128 )     (1,945 )     (2,128 )
     
 
                               
Total Common Stockholders’ Equity
  $ 2,582     $ 2,377     $ 2,582     $ 2,377  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

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                            In Millions  
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
(a) Disclosure of Comprehensive Income:
                               
 
                               
Net income attributable to CMS Energy
  $ 77     $ 47     $ 149     $ 152  
 
                               
Retirement benefits liability adjustments, net of tax of $-, $-, $-, and $2, respectively
                      (1 )
 
                               
Unrealized gain (loss) on investments, net of tax (tax benefit) of $-, $(1), $-, and $(3), respectively
    5       (1 )     1       (5 )
 
                               
Sale of interests in TGN, net of tax of $69
          128             128  
     
 
                               
Total Comprehensive Income
  $ 82     $ 174     $ 150     $ 274  
     

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Consumers Energy Company
Consolidated Statements of Income
(Unaudited)
                                 
                    In Millions  
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
Operating Revenue
  $ 1,184     $ 1,263     $ 3,218     $ 3,354  
 
                               
Operating Expenses
                               
Fuel for electric generation
    105       118       216       245  
Purchased and interchange power
    280       293       564       610  
Purchased power — related parties
    17       17       35       37  
Cost of gas sold
    195       289       1,131       1,233  
Other operating expenses
    200       194       409       364  
Maintenance
    54       44       98       80  
Depreciation and amortization
    118       124       288       294  
General taxes
    46       45       107       102  
Gain on asset sales, net
    (3 )           (3 )      
     
 
    1,012       1,124       2,845       2,965  
 
 
                               
Operating Income
    172       139       373       389  
 
                               
Other Income (Deductions)
                               
Interest
    5       9       10       16  
Regulatory return on capital expenditures
    6       8       13       16  
Other income
    3       2       8       5  
Other expense
    (2 )     (5 )     (4 )     (6 )
     
 
    12       14       27       31  
 
 
                               
Interest Charges
                               
Interest on long-term debt
    65       55       124       113  
Other interest
    5       4       10       11  
Capitalized interest
    (1 )     (1 )     (2 )     (3 )
     
 
    69       58       132       121  
 
 
                               
Income Before Income Taxes
    115       95       268       299  
 
                               
Income Tax Expense
    44       35       99       109  
     
 
                               
Net Income
    71       60       169       190  
 
                               
Preferred Stock Dividends
                1       1  
     
 
                               
Net Income Available to Common Stockholder
  $ 71     $ 60     $ 168     $ 189  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

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Consumers Energy Company
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
(Unaudited)
                 
            In Millions  
Six Months Ended June 30   2009     2008  
 
Cash Flows from Operating Activities
               
Net income
  $ 169     $ 190  
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities
               
Depreciation and amortization
    288       294  
Deferred income taxes and investment tax credit
    46       44  
Regulatory return on capital expenditures
    (13 )     (16 )
Postretirement benefits expense
    89       74  
Capital lease and other amortization
    13       16  
Bad debt expense
    30       16  
Gain on sale of assets
    (3 )      
Postretirement benefits contributions
    (225 )     (24 )
Changes in assets and liabilities:
               
Decrease in accounts receivable, notes receivable and accrued revenue
    114       199  
Decrease in accrued power supply and gas revenue
    5       40  
Decrease in inventories
    266       122  
Decrease in accounts payable
    (20 )     (3 )
Increase in accrued expenses
    2       7  
Decrease in other current and non-current assets
    112       101  
Decrease in other current and non-current liabilities
    (17 )     (106 )
     
Net cash provided by operating activities
    856       954  
 
 
               
Cash Flows from Investing Activities
               
Capital expenditures (excludes assets placed under capital lease)
    (407 )     (338 )
Cost to retire property
    (25 )     (12 )
Proceeds from sale of assets
    7        
Restricted cash and cash equivalents
    2       5  
     
Net cash used in investing activities
    (423 )     (345 )
 
 
               
Cash Flows from Financing Activities
               
Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt
    500       250  
Retirement of long-term debt
    (218 )     (426 )
Payment of common stock dividends
    (130 )     (168 )
Payment of capital and finance lease obligations
    (12 )     (12 )
Stockholder’s contribution
    100        
Payment of preferred stock dividends
    (1 )     (1 )
Debt issuance and financing costs
    (4 )     (4 )
     
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities
    235       (361 )
 
 
               
Net Increase in Cash and Cash Equivalents
    668       248  
 
               
Cash and Cash Equivalents, Beginning of Period
    69       195  
     
 
               
Cash and Cash Equivalents, End of Period
  $ 737     $ 443  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

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Consumers Energy Company
Consolidated Balance Sheets
(Unaudited)
ASSETS
                 
            In Millions  
    June 30     December 31  
    2009     2008  
 
Plant and Property (at cost)
               
Electric utility
  $    9,235     $ 8,965  
Gas utility
    3,667       3,622  
Other
    15       15  
     
 
    12,917       12,602  
Less accumulated depreciation, depletion, and amortization
    4,271       4,242  
     
 
    8,646       8,360  
Construction work in progress
    553       607  
     
 
    9,199       8,967  
 
 
               
Investments
               
Stock of affiliates
    22       19  
 
 
               
Current Assets
               
Cash and cash equivalents
    737       69  
Restricted cash and cash equivalents
    23       25  
Accounts receivable and accrued revenue, less allowances of $28 in 2009 and $24 in 2008
    683       829  
Notes receivable
    80       93  
Accrued power supply and gas revenue
    2       7  
Accounts receivable — related parties
    1       2  
Inventories at average cost
               
Gas in underground storage
    885       1,168  
Materials and supplies
    108       103  
Generating plant fuel stock
    130       118  
Deferred property taxes
    128       165  
Regulatory assets — postretirement benefits
    19       19  
Prepayments and other
    21       30  
     
 
    2,817       2,628  
 
 
               
Non-current Assets
               
Regulatory assets
               
Securitized costs
    392       416  
Postretirement benefits
    1,386       1,431  
Customer Choice Act
    68       90  
Other
    469       482  
Other
    124       213  
     
 
    2,439       2,632  
 
 
               
Total Assets
  $    14,477     $ 14,246  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

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STOCKHOLDER’S INVESTMENT AND LIABILITIES
                 
            In Millions  
    June 30     December 31  
    2009     2008  
 
Capitalization
               
Common stockholder’s equity
               
Common stock, authorized 125.0 shares; outstanding 84.1 shares for both periods
  $    841     $ 841  
Other paid-in capital
    2,582       2,482  
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
    3       (1 )
Retained earnings
    421       383  
     
 
    3,847       3,705  
Preferred stock
    44       44  
     
Total equity
    3,891       3,749  
 
               
Long-term debt
    4,081       3,908  
Non-current portion of capital and finance lease obligations
    197       206  
     
 
    8,169       7,863  
 
 
               
Current Liabilities
               
Current portion of long-term debt, capital and finance lease obligations
    515       408  
Accounts payable
    394       444  
Accrued rate refunds
    58       7  
Accounts payable — related parties
    10       14  
Accrued interest
    78       69  
Accrued taxes
    232       289  
Deferred income taxes
    232       277  
Regulatory liabilities
    114       120  
Other
    118       151  
     
 
    1,751       1,779  
 
 
               
Non-current Liabilities
               
Deferred income taxes
    872       792  
Regulatory liabilities
               
Cost of removal
    1,227       1,203  
Income taxes, net
    532       519  
Other
    146       146  
Postretirement benefits
    1,266       1,436  
Asset retirement obligations
    210       205  
Deferred investment tax credit
    53       54  
Other
    251       249  
     
 
    4,557       4,604  
 
 
               
Commitments and Contingencies (Notes 3, 5 and 7)
               
 
               
Total Stockholder’s Investment and Liabilities
  $    14,477     $ 14,246  
 

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Consumers Energy Company
Consolidated Statements of Common Stockholder’s Equity
(Unaudited)
                                 
                            In Millions  
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
Common Stock
                               
At beginning and end of period (a)
  $ 841     $ 841     $ 841     $ 841  
 
 
                               
Other Paid-in Capital
                               
At beginning of period
    2,482       2,482       2,482       2,482  
Stockholder’s contribution
    100             100        
     
At end of period
    2,582       2,482       2,582       2,482  
 
 
                               
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss
                               
Retirement benefits liability
                               
At beginning of period
    (7 )     (9 )     (7 )     (15 )
Retirement benefits liability adjustments (b)
                      6  
     
At end of period
    (7 )     (9 )     (7 )     (9 )
     
 
                               
Investments
                               
At beginning of period
    7       7       6       15  
Unrealized gain (loss) on investments (b)
    3       1       4       (7 )
     
At end of period
    10       8       10       8  
     
 
                               
Total Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)
    3       (1 )     3       (1 )
 
 
                               
Retained Earnings
                               
At beginning of period
    408       334       383       324  
Effects of changing the retirement plans measurement date pursuant to SFAS No. 158
                               
Service cost, interest cost, and expected return on plan assets for December 1 through December 31, 2007, net of tax
                      (4 )
Additional loss from December 1 through December 31, 2007, net of tax
                      (2 )
Net income (b)
    71       60       169       190  
Common stock dividends declared
    (58 )     (55 )     (130 )     (168 )
Preferred stock dividends declared
                (1 )     (1 )
     
At end of period
    421       339       421       339  
     
 
                               
Total Common Stockholder’s Equity
  $ 3,847     $ 3,661     $ 3,847     $ 3,661  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

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                            In Millions  
    Three Months Ended     Six Months Ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
(a) Number of shares of common stock outstanding was 84,108,789 for all periods presented.
                               
 
                               
(b) Disclosure of Comprehensive Income:
                               
 
                               
Net income
  $ 71     $ 60     $ 169     $ 190  
 
                               
Retirement benefits liability
                               
Retirement benefits liability adjustments, net of tax of $-, $-, $-, and $2, respectively
                      6  
 
                               
Investments
                               
Unrealized gain (loss) on investments, net of tax (tax benefit) of $-, $1, $-, and $(3), respectively
    3       1       4       (7 )
     
 
                               
Total Comprehensive Income
  $ 74     $ 61     $ 173     $ 189  
     

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CMS Energy Corporation
Consumers Energy Company
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Unaudited)
These interim Consolidated Financial Statements have been prepared by CMS Energy and Consumers in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States for interim financial information and with the instructions to Form 10-Q and Article 10 of Regulation S-X. As a result, CMS Energy and Consumers have condensed or omitted certain information and Note disclosures normally included in consolidated financial statements prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States. CMS Energy and Consumers have reclassified certain prior year amounts to conform to the presentation in the current year. The Consolidated Financial Statements for the six months ended June 30, 2008 have been updated for amounts previously reported. In management’s opinion, the unaudited information contained in this report reflects all adjustments of a normal recurring nature necessary to ensure the fair presentation of financial position, results of operations and cash flows for the periods presented. The Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements and the related Consolidated Financial Statements should be read in conjunction with the Consolidated Financial Statements and related Notes contained in CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ 2008 Form 10-K. Due to the seasonal nature of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ operations, the results presented for this interim period are not necessarily indicative of results to be achieved for the fiscal year.
These interim Consolidated Financial Statements and accompanying Note disclosures include the evaluation of subsequent events through July 30, 2009, the date of issuance.
1: ACCOUNTING POLICIES
SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Self-implemented Rates: Consumers is allowed to self-implement new energy rates six months after a new rate case filing if the MPSC has not issued an order in the case. The MPSC then has another six months to issue a final order. If the MPSC does not issue an order, the filed rates are considered approved. If the MPSC issues an order, the rates that Consumers self-implemented may be subject to refund, with interest. Consumers recognizes revenue associated with self-implemented rates. If Consumers considers it probable that it will be required to refund a portion of its self-implemented rates, then Consumers records a provision for revenue subject to refund.
IMPLEMENTATION OF NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
SFAS No. 160, Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements — an amendment to ARB No. 51: Under this standard, which was effective for CMS Energy and Consumers January 1, 2009, ownership interests in subsidiaries held by third parties, previously referred to as minority interests, are presented as noncontrolling interests and shown separately on the parent’s balance sheet within equity. In addition, net income attributable to noncontrolling interests is included in net income on the income statement. CMS Energy has applied these provisions to current and prior periods presented in its consolidated financial statements. The standard had no impact on Consumers’ consolidated financial statements for the periods presented. The standard also affects the accounting for changes in a parent’s ownership interest, including deconsolidation of a subsidiary. CMS Energy and Consumers will apply these provisions of the standard to any such future transactions.
SFAS No. 161, Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities, an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133: This standard, which was effective for CMS Energy and Consumers January 1, 2009, requires enhanced disclosures about how and why derivatives are used, how derivatives and related

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hedged items are accounted for, and how derivatives and any related hedged items affect financial position, financial performance, and cash flows. The standard did not impact CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ consolidated income, cash flows, or financial position. For additional details on CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ derivatives, see Note 7, Financial and Derivative Instruments.
FSP APB 14-1, Accounting for Convertible Debt Instruments That May Be Settled In Cash Upon Conversion (Including Partial Cash Settlement): This standard, which was effective for CMS Energy and Consumers January 1, 2009, requires CMS Energy to account for the liability and equity components of its convertible debt securities separately and in a manner that reflects CMS Energy’s borrowing rate for nonconvertible debt. The following table summarizes the effects of adopting this standard on CMS Energy’s consolidated financial statements:
                 
Increases (decreases)   In Millions, Except Per Share Amounts
Three months ended June 30   2009   2008
 
Interest on long-term debt
  $ 2     $ 3  
Income tax expense
    (1 )     (1 )
     
Net income
  $ (1 )   $ (2 )
     
 
               
Earnings Per Average Common Share
               
Basic
  $ (0.01 )   $  
Diluted
  $ (0.01 )   $  
 
 
Six months ended June 30   2009   2008
 
Interest on long-term debt
  $ 4     $ 5  
Income tax expense
    (2 )     (2 )
     
Net income
  $ (2 )   $ (3 )
     
 
               
Earnings Per Average Common Share
               
Basic
  $ (0.01 )   $ (0.01 )
Diluted
  $ (0.01 )   $ (0.01 )
 
 
Increases (decreases)   December 31, 2008   January 1, 2008
 
Assets
               
Non-current deferred income tax assets
  $     $ (12 )
     
 
               
Liabilities
               
Long-term debt
  $ (22 )   $ (30 )
Non-current deferred income tax liabilities
    9        
     
Total
  $ (13 )   $ (30 )
     
 
               
Common Stockholders’ Equity
               
Other paid-in capital
  $ 37     $ 37  
Accumulated deficit
    24       19  
     
Total
  $ 13     $ 18  
 
The standard had no impact on Consumers’ consolidated financial statements. For additional details on CMS Energy’s convertible debt instruments, see Note 5, Financings and Capitalization.
FSP EITF 03-6-1, Determining Whether Instruments Granted in Share-Based Payment Transactions Are Participating Securities: Under this standard, which was effective for CMS Energy and Consumers

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January 1, 2009, share-based payment awards that accrue cash dividends when common shareholders receive dividends are considered participating securities if the dividends are not required to be returned to the company when the employee forfeits the award. The standard applies to CMS Energy’s outstanding unvested restricted stock awards, which are considered participating securities and thus are included in the computation of basic EPS. Implementation of the standard for CMS Energy did not have a material impact for the six months ended June 30, 2009 or 2008. Retrospective implementation of the standard at CMS Energy will reduce basic and diluted EPS by $0.01 for the year ended December 31, 2008. The standard had no impact on Consumers’ consolidated financial statements.
FSP FAS 157-4, Determining Fair Value When the Volume and Level of Activity for the Asset or Liability Have Significantly Decreased and Identifying Transactions That Are Not Orderly: The standard, which was effective for the quarter ended June 30, 2009 for CMS Energy and Consumers, provides guidance on determining whether there has been a significant decrease in market activity for an asset or liability and whether quoted prices may reflect distressed transactions. The guidance indicates that entities should not rely on distressed prices in determining fair value, but may instead use alternative valuation techniques, such as discounting future cash flows assuming an orderly transaction. The standard requires quarterly disclosures about the inputs and valuation techniques used in fair value measurements. Previously, these disclosures were required only annually. See Note 2, Fair Value Measurements, for the required disclosures. The standard had no impact on CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ consolidated income, cash flows, or financial position.
FSP FAS 115-2 and FAS 124-2, Recognition and Presentation of Other-Than-Temporary Impairments: The standard, which was effective for the quarter ended June 30, 2009 for CMS Energy and Consumers, amends the other-than-temporary impairment guidance for debt securities. Entities no longer need to assert both the intent and ability to hold an impaired debt security until recovery to avoid recording an other-than-temporary impairment. Instead, an entity must consider whether it intends to sell the security or whether it is more likely than not that it will be required to sell the security prior to recovery. If either of these criteria are met, the full impairment should be recognized in earnings. If neither criterion is met, only impairments due to credit losses should be recorded to earnings, while impairments related to other factors should be recorded to other comprehensive income. The standard also includes additional disclosure requirements. The standard had no impact on CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ consolidated financial statements; however, the new guidance will be incorporated in future assessments of other-than-temporary impairments of debt securities.
FSP FAS 107-1 and APB 28-1, Interim Disclosures about Fair Value of Financial Instruments: This standard, which was effective for the quarter ended June 30, 2009 for CMS Energy and Consumers, requires quarterly disclosures of the fair values of financial instruments. Previously, these disclosures were required only annually. The standard also requires quarterly disclosure of the methods and significant assumptions used in the fair value measurements. The standard did not impact CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ consolidated income, cash flows, or financial position.
EITF Issue 07-5, Determining Whether an Instrument (or Embedded Feature) Is Indexed to an Entity’s Own Stock: This standard, which was effective for CMS Energy and Consumers January 1, 2009, establishes new criteria for determining whether freestanding instruments or embedded features are considered “indexed to an entity’s own stock” for the purpose of assessing potential derivative accounting or balance sheet classification. This guidance applies to the equity conversion features in CMS Energy’s contingently convertible senior notes and preferred stock. Under the new criteria, these features remain exempt from derivative accounting, and thus, this standard had no impact on CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ consolidated financial statements.
EITF Issue 08-5, Issuer’s Accounting for Liabilities Measured at Fair Value with a Third-Party Credit Enhancement: This standard, which was effective for CMS Energy and Consumers January 1, 2009, concludes that the fair value measurement of a liability should not consider the effect of a third-party credit enhancement or guarantee supporting the liability. To comply with the standard, CMS Energy and

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Consumers adjusted the methods they use to determine the fair values of certain long-term debt instruments for their fair value disclosures, resulting in a minor reduction in the fair values disclosed. For the fair value disclosures, see Note 7, Financial and Derivative Instruments. The standard had no impact on CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ consolidated income, cash flows, or financial position.
NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NOT YET EFFECTIVE
SFAS No. 166, Accounting for Transfers of Financial Assets, an amendment of FASB Statement No. 140: This standard, which will be effective for CMS Energy and Consumers January 1, 2010, removes the concept of a qualifying special purpose entity (QSPE) from guidance relating to transfers of financial assets and extinguishments of liabilities. It also removes the exceptions from applying guidance relating to VIEs to QSPEs. The standard revises and clarifies when an entity is required to derecognize a financial asset that it has transferred to another entity. It further clarifies how to measure beneficial interests received as proceeds in connection with a transfer of a financial asset, and introduces the concept of a “participating interest,” the conditions of which must be met for a partial asset transfer to qualify for sale accounting treatment. The standard also requires enhanced disclosures related to continuing involvement with transferred financial assets. CMS Energy and Consumers are evaluating the impact of this standard on their consolidated financial statements.
SFAS No. 167, Amendments to FASB Interpretation No. 46(R): This standard, which will be effective for CMS Energy and Consumers January 1, 2010, amends FIN 46(R) to replace the quantitative calculation of risks and rewards used to determine which enterprise, if any, has a controlling financial interest in a VIE. The standard establishes a qualitative approach focused on identifying which enterprise (1) has the power to direct the activities of a VIE that most significantly impact the entity’s economic performance and (2) has the obligation to absorb losses of the entity or the right to receive benefits from the entity. The standard also requires ongoing assessments of whether an enterprise is the primary beneficiary of a VIE. CMS Energy and Consumers are evaluating the impact of this standard on their consolidated financial statements.
FSP FAS 132(R)-1, Employers’ Disclosures about Postretirement Benefit Plan Assets: This standard, which will be effective for the year ending December 31, 2009 for CMS Energy and Consumers, requires expanded annual disclosures about postretirement benefit plan assets. The required disclosures include information about investment allocation decisions, major categories of plan assets, the inputs and valuation techniques used in the fair value measurements, the effects of significant unobservable inputs on changes in plan assets, and significant concentrations of risk within plan assets. The standard will not impact CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ consolidated income, cash flows, or financial position.
2: FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS
Accounting standards define fair value as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants. When measuring fair value, CMS Energy and Consumers are required to incorporate all assumptions that market participants would use in pricing an asset or liability, including assumptions about risk. A fair value hierarchy prioritizes inputs used to measure fair value according to their observability in the market. The three levels of the fair value hierarchy are as follows:

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    Level 1 inputs are unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities. These markets must be accessible to CMS Energy and Consumers at the measurement date.
 
    Level 2 inputs are observable, market-based inputs, other than Level 1 prices. Level 2 inputs may include quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets, quoted prices in inactive markets, interest rates and yield curves observable at commonly quoted intervals, credit risks, default rates, and inputs derived from or corroborated by observable market data.
 
    Level 3 inputs are unobservable inputs that reflect CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ own assumptions about how market participants would value their assets and liabilities.
To the extent possible, CMS Energy and Consumers use quoted market prices or other observable market pricing data in valuing assets and liabilities measured at fair value. If this information is unavailable, they use market-corroborated data or reasonable estimates about market participant assumptions. CMS Energy and Consumers classify fair value measurements within the fair value hierarchy based on the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety.

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Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis
The following table summarizes, by level within the fair value hierarchy, CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ assets and liabilities reported at fair value on a recurring basis at June 30, 2009:
                                 
In Millions
    Total   Level 1   Level 2   Level 3
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers
                               
Assets:
                               
Cash equivalents
  $ 985     $ 985     $     $  
Restricted cash equivalents
    5       5              
Nonqualified deferred compensation plan assets
    4       4              
SERP
                               
Equity securities
    41       41              
Debt securities
    27             27        
Derivative instruments (a)
    1             1        
     
Total
  $ 1,063     $ 1,035     $ 28     $  
     
 
                               
Liabilities:
                               
Nonqualified deferred compensation plan liabilities
  $ 5     $ 5     $     $  
Derivative instruments (b)
    17       3       3       11  
     
Total (c)
  $ 22     $ 8     $ 3     $ 11  
     
 
                               
Consumers
                               
Assets:
                               
Cash equivalents
  $ 713     $ 713     $     $  
Restricted cash equivalents
    5       5              
CMS Energy Common Stock
    22       22              
Nonqualified deferred compensation plan assets
    3       3              
SERP
                               
Equity securities
    27       27              
Debt securities
    18             18        
     
Total
  $ 788     $ 770     $ 18     $  
     
 
                               
Liabilities:
                               
Nonqualified deferred compensation plan liabilities
  $ 3     $ 3     $     $  
     
Total (c)
  $ 3     $ 3     $     $  
 
(a)   This amount is gross and excludes the $1 million impact of offsetting derivative assets and liabilities under master netting arrangements.
 
(b)   This amount is gross and excludes the $1 million impact of offsetting derivative assets and liabilities under master netting arrangements and the $3 million impact of offsetting cash margin deposits paid by CMS ERM to other parties.
 
(c)   At June 30, 2009, CMS Energy’s liabilities classified as Level 3 represent 50 percent of CMS Energy’s total liabilities measured at fair value. Consumers did not have any assets or liabilities classified as Level 3.

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The following table summarizes, by level within the fair value hierarchy, CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ assets and liabilities reported at fair value on a recurring basis at December 31, 2008:
                                 
In Millions
    Total   Level 1   Level 2   Level 3
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers
                               
Assets:
                               
Cash equivalents
  $ 176     $ 176     $     $  
Restricted cash equivalents
    5       5              
Nonqualified deferred compensation plan assets
    5       5              
SERP
                               
Equity securities
    39       39              
Debt securities
    29             29        
Derivative instruments (a)
    1             1        
     
Total
  $ 255     $ 225     $ 30     $  
     
 
                               
Liabilities:
                               
Nonqualified deferred compensation plan liabilities
  $ 5     $ 5     $     $  
Derivative instruments (b)
    20       2       2       16  
     
Total (c)
  $ 25     $ 7     $ 2     $ 16  
     
 
                               
Consumers
                               
Assets:
                               
Cash equivalents
  $ 56     $ 56     $     $  
Restricted cash equivalents
    5       5              
CMS Energy Common Stock
    19       19              
Nonqualified deferred compensation plan assets
    3       3              
SERP
                               
Equity securities
    25       25              
Debt securities
    19             19        
     
Total
  $ 127     $ 108     $ 19     $  
     
 
                               
Liabilities:
                               
Nonqualified deferred compensation plan liabilities
  $ 3     $ 3     $     $  
Derivative instruments
    1             1        
     
Total (c)
  $ 4     $ 3     $ 1     $  
 
(a)   This amount is gross and excludes the immaterial impact of offsetting derivative assets and liabilities under master netting arrangements.
 
(b)   This amount is gross and excludes the immaterial impact of offsetting derivative assets and liabilities under master netting arrangements and the $2 million impact of offsetting cash margin deposits paid by CMS ERM to other parties.
 
(c)   At December 31, 2008, CMS Energy’s liabilities classified as Level 3 represent 64 percent of CMS Energy’s total liabilities measured at fair value. Consumers did not have any assets or liabilities classified as Level 3.

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Cash Equivalents: Cash equivalents and restricted cash equivalents consist of money market funds with daily liquidity. The funds invest in U.S. Treasury notes, other government-backed securities, and repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. Treasury notes.
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Plan Assets: CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ nonqualified deferred compensation plan assets are invested in various mutual funds. CMS Energy and Consumers value these assets using a market approach, using the daily quoted NAV provided by the fund managers that are the basis for transactions to buy or sell shares in each fund. CMS Energy and Consumers report these assets in Other non-current assets on their Consolidated Balance Sheets.
SERP Assets: CMS Energy and Consumers value their SERP assets using a market approach, incorporating prices and other relevant information from market transactions. The SERP equity securities consist of an investment in a Standard & Poor’s 500 Index mutual fund. The fund’s equity securities are listed on an active exchange. The fair value of the SERP equity securities is based on the NAV of the mutual fund, derived from the daily closing prices of the equity securities held by the fund. The NAV is the basis for transactions to buy or sell shares in the fund.
CMS Energy and Consumers value their SERP debt securities, which are investment grade municipal bonds, using a matrix pricing model that incorporates market-based information. The fair value of the SERP debt securities is derived from various observable inputs, including benchmark yields, reported securities trades, broker/dealer quotes, bond ratings, and general information on market movements for investment grade municipal securities normally considered by market participants when pricing such debt securities. CMS Energy and Consumers report their SERP assets in Other non-current assets on their Consolidated Balance Sheets. For additional details about SERP securities, see Note 7, Financial and Derivative Instruments.
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Plan Liabilities: CMS Energy and Consumers value their non-qualified deferred compensation plan liabilities based on the fair values of the plan assets, as they reflect what CMS Energy and Consumers owe the plan participants in accordance with their investment elections. CMS Energy reports these liabilities, except for liabilities related to its DSSP, in Other non-current liabilities on its Consolidated Balance Sheets; its DSSP liability is included in Non-current postretirement benefits. Consumers reports all of its nonqualified deferred compensation plan liabilities in Other non-current liabilities on its Consolidated Balance Sheets.
Derivative Instruments: CMS Energy and Consumers value their derivative instruments using either a market approach that incorporates information from market transactions, or an income approach that discounts future expected cash flows to a present value amount. They use various inputs to value the derivatives depending on the type of contract and the availability of market data. CMS Energy has exchange-traded derivative contracts that are valued based on Level 1 quoted prices in actively traded markets, as well as derivatives that are valued using Level 2 inputs, including commodity market prices, interest rates, credit ratings, default rates, and market-based seasonality factors. CMS Energy also has derivative instruments that extend beyond time periods in which quoted prices are available. For these instruments, CMS Energy uses modeling methods to project future prices. Such fair value measurements are classified in Level 3 unless modeling was required only for an insignificant portion of the total derivative value.
CMS Energy’s derivatives include an electricity sales agreement held by CMS ERM. This agreement, classified as Level 3, extends beyond the term for which quoted electricity prices are available. To value this agreement, CMS Energy uses a proprietary forward power pricing curve that is based on forward gas prices and an implied heat rate. CMS Energy also increases the fair value of the liability for this agreement by an amount that reflects the uncertainty of its model.

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For all fair values other than Level 1 prices, CMS Energy and Consumers incorporate adjustments for the risk of nonperformance. For derivative assets, a credit adjustment is applied against the asset based on the published default rate for the credit rating that CMS Energy and Consumers assign to the counterparty based on an internal credit-scoring model. This model considers various inputs, including the counterparty’s financial statements, credit reports, trade press, and other information that would be available to market participants. To the extent that the internal ratings are comparable to credit ratings published by independent rating agencies, the resulting credit adjustment is classified within Level 2. If the internal model results in a rating that is outside of the range of ratings given by the independent agencies and the credit adjustment is significant to the overall valuation, the derivative fair value is classified as Level 3. CMS Energy and Consumers adjust their derivative liabilities downward to reflect the risk of their own nonperformance, based on their published credit ratings. Adjustments for credit risk using the approach outlined above are not materially different from the adjustments that would result from using credit default swap rates for the contracts presently held. For details about derivative contracts, see Note 7, Financial and Derivative Instruments.
Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis using Level 3 Inputs
The following table is a reconciliation of changes in the fair values of Level 3 assets and liabilities at CMS Energy:
                 
In Millions
Three months ended June 30   2009   2008
 
Balance at April 1
  $ (10 )   $ (21 )
Total gains (realized and unrealized) Included in earnings (a)
          (3 )
Purchases, sales, issuances, and settlements (net)
    (1 )      
     
Balance at June 30
    (11 )     (24 )
 
Unrealized gains (losses) included in earnings for the quarter ended June 30 relating to assets and liabilities still held at June 30 (a)
  $ (1 )   $ (4 )
 
                 
In Millions
Six months ended June 30   2009   2008
 
Balance at January 1
  $ (16 )   $ (19 )
Total gains (realized and unrealized) Included in earnings (a)
    6       (6 )
Purchases, sales, issuances, and settlements (net)
    (1 )     1  
     
Balance at June 30
    (11 )     (24 )
 
Unrealized gains (losses) included in earnings for the six months ended June 30 relating to assets and liabilities still held at June 30 (a)
  $ 4     $ (8 )
 
(a)   CMS Energy records realized and unrealized gains and losses for Level 3 recurring fair values in earnings as a component of Operating Revenue or Operating Expenses in its Consolidated Statements of Income.
3: CONTINGENCIES
CMS ENERGY CONTINGENCIES
Gas Index Price Reporting Investigation: In 2002, CMS Energy notified appropriate regulatory and governmental agencies that some employees at CMS MST and CMS Field Services appeared to have provided inaccurate information regarding natural gas trades to various energy industry publications, which compile and report index prices. CMS Energy cooperated with an investigation by the DOJ regarding this matter. Although CMS Energy has not received any formal notification that the DOJ has

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completed its investigation, the DOJ’s last request for information occurred in 2003, and CMS Energy completed its response to this request in 2004. CMS Energy is unable to predict the outcome of the DOJ investigation and what effect, if any, the investigation will have on its business.
Gas Index Price Reporting Litigation: CMS Energy, along with CMS MST, CMS Field Services, Cantera Natural Gas, Inc. (the company that purchased CMS Field Services) and Cantera Gas Company are named as defendants in various class action and individual lawsuits arising as a result of allegedly inaccurate natural gas price reporting. Allegations include manipulation of NYMEX natural gas futures and options prices, price-fixing conspiracies, and artificial inflation of natural gas retail prices in California, Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.
In 2007, CMS MST settled a master class action suit in California state court for $7 million and the CMS Energy defendants settled four class action suits originally filed in California federal court. CMS MST is the only remaining defendant in the California state court cases. In July 2009, CMS MST entered into a settlement of the remaining California state court cases. The settlement amount is immaterial to CMS Energy.
All CMS Energy defendants were dismissed from the Missouri Public Service Commission case, a state action, and the Breckenridge case, a federal action. Appeals are pending in both cases. CMS Energy was also dismissed from three federal cases, while the other CMS Energy defendants remain. CMS Energy defendants were also dismissed from a federal case in Wisconsin, but the plaintiffs have filed a motion for reconsideration and refiled the complaint in Michigan federal court. The Michigan case was transferred to the multi-district litigation proceeding in Nevada. In addition, the Tennessee Supreme Court has granted the CMS Energy defendants’ application for leave to appeal the Tennessee class action lawsuit. Other cases in several jurisdictions remain pending.
Another class action complaint was filed in March 2009 in circuit court in Wood County, Wisconsin, against CMS Energy defendants, along with 19 other non-CMS Energy companies, alleging conspiracy to restrain trade through inaccurate natural gas price reporting. Defendants removed the case to federal court in Wisconsin and it was transferred through the multi-district litigation process to the consolidated actions in Nevada. CMS Energy cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of these matters.
Bay Harbor: As part of the development of Bay Harbor by certain subsidiaries of CMS Energy, and under an agreement with the MDEQ, third parties constructed a golf course and park over several abandoned CKD piles left over from the former cement plant operations on the Bay Harbor site. The third parties also undertook a series of remedial actions, including constructing a leachate collection system at an identified seep. Leachate is produced when water enters into the CKD piles. In 2002, CMS Energy sold its interest in Bay Harbor, but retained its obligations under environmental indemnities entered into at the start of the project.
In 2005, the EPA, along with CMS Land and CMS Capital, voluntarily executed an AOC under Superfund and approved a Removal Action Work Plan to address contamination issues at Bay Harbor. Collection systems required under the plan have been installed and effectiveness monitoring of the systems at the shoreline is ongoing. CMS Land, CMS Capital, and the EPA have agreed upon augmentation measures to address areas where pH measurements are not satisfactory. The augmentation measures are being implemented and are expected to be completed this year.
In 2008, the MDEQ and the EPA granted permits for CMS Land or its affiliate, Beeland, to construct and operate a deep injection well in Antrim County, Michigan, to dispose of leachate from Bay Harbor. Certain environmental groups, a local township, and a local county filed lawsuits appealing the permits. One appeal relating to the permit remains pending in the state court. Groups opposed to the injection well filed a lawsuit in Antrim County against development of the well and in January 2009, the trial judge issued an injunction. Beeland filed an application for leave to appeal the court’s order with the Michigan Court of Appeals and the Michigan Supreme Court. Both appeals were denied.

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CMS Land and CMS Capital, the MDEQ, the EPA, and other parties are discussing the long-term remedy for the Bay Harbor sites, including:
    the disposal of leachate;
 
    the capping and excavation of CKD;
 
    the location and design of collection lines and upstream diversion of water;
 
    potential flow of leachate below the collection system;
 
    applicable criteria for various substances such as mercury; and
 
    other matters that are likely to affect the scope of remedial work that CMS Land and CMS Capital may be obligated to undertake.
CMS Energy has recorded a cumulative charge related to Bay Harbor, including accretion expense, of $177 million, of which $36 million was recorded in the second quarter of 2009. Several factors contributed to the revised remediation cost estimates in the second quarter of 2009. These factors include increased costs related to the disposal of collected leachate and delays in identifying and securing a long-term water management solution. In addition, CMS Land and CMS Capital are projecting higher costs for operating and maintaining the existing collection system.
At June 30, 2009, CMS Energy had a recorded liability of $90 million for its remaining obligations. CMS Energy calculated this liability based on discounted projected costs, using a discount rate of 4.32 percent and an inflation rate of 1 percent on annual operating and maintenance costs. CMS Energy based the discount rate on the interest rate for 30-year U.S. Treasury securities on June 30, 2009. The undiscounted amount of the remaining obligation is $116 million. CMS Energy expects to pay $22 million in 2009, $13 million in 2010, $6 million in 2011, and the remainder on long-term liquid disposal and operating and maintenance costs.
CMS Energy’s estimate of remedial action costs and the timing of expenditures could change if there are additional major changes in circumstances or assumptions, including but not limited to:
    an increase in the number of contamination areas;
 
    different remediation techniques;
 
    the nature and extent of contamination;
 
    continued inability to reach agreement with the MDEQ or the EPA over required remedial actions;
 
    delays in the receipt of requested permits;
 
    delays following the receipt of any requested permits due to legal appeals of third parties;
 
    further increases in water disposal costs;
 
    delays in developing a long-term water disposal option;
 
    additional or new legal or regulatory requirements; or
 
    new or different landowner claims.
Depending on the size of any indemnity obligation or liability under environmental laws, an adverse outcome of this matter could have a material adverse effect on CMS Energy’s liquidity and financial condition and could negatively impact CMS Energy’s financial results. CMS Energy cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this matter.
Quicksilver Resources, Inc.: In 2001, Quicksilver sued CMS MST in Texas state court in Fort Worth, Texas for breach of contract in connection with a base contract for the sale and purchase of natural gas. The jury verdict awarded Quicksilver no compensatory damages but $10 million in punitive damages. In 2007, the trial court nullified the jury award of punitive damages but held that the contract should be rescinded prospectively. The judicial rescission of the contract caused CMS Energy to record a charge in

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the second quarter of 2007 of $24 million, net of tax. In June 2009, the Texas Court of Appeals ruled in favor of CMS MST and, pursuant to a settlement agreement to end the litigation, Quicksilver paid $5 million to CMS MST, which caused CMS Energy to recognize a $5 million credit to Cost of gas sold. The parties have agreed not to appeal. The Quicksilver matter has now been resolved.
State Street Bank and TSU Litigation: In 1998, CMS Viron installed a number of energy savings measures at TSU. CMS Viron sold the master lease for the project to a third-party, which transferred its interest to State Street Bank. Although TSU accepted the improvements, it refused to pay on the grounds that the Texas Board of Higher Education had not approved the expenditure. In 2002, State Street Bank sued CMS Viron in the District Court of Harris County, Texas, claiming primarily a breach of warranty. The plaintiffs are seeking $6 million plus interest from CMS Viron. CMS Viron has filed a motion for summary disposition. The trial is scheduled to begin in August 2009. CMS Viron believes it has a valid defense to the claim, but cannot predict the outcome of this litigation.
Equatorial Guinea Tax Claim: In 2004, CMS Energy received a request for indemnification from the purchaser of CMS Oil and Gas. The indemnity claim relates to the sale of CMS Energy’s oil, gas and methanol projects in Equatorial Guinea and the claim of the government of Equatorial Guinea that CMS Energy owes $142 million in taxes in connection with that sale. CMS Energy concluded that the government’s tax claim is without merit and the purchaser of CMS Oil and Gas submitted a response to the government rejecting the claim. The government of Equatorial Guinea has indicated that it still intends to pursue its claim. CMS Energy cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this matter.
Moroccan Tax Claim: In 2007, CMS Energy sold its 50 percent interest in Jorf Lasfar. As part of the sale agreement, CMS Energy agreed to indemnify the purchaser for 50 percent of any tax assessments on Jorf Lasfar attributable to tax years prior to the sale. In 2007, the Moroccan tax authority concluded its audit of Jorf Lasfar for tax years 2003 through 2005. The audit asserted deficiencies in certain corporate and withholding taxes. In January 2009, CMS Energy paid $18 million, which it charged against a tax indemnification liability established when it recorded the sale of Jorf Lasfar, and accordingly, the payment did not affect earnings. The Moroccan tax authority may also assess taxes for 2006. At June 30, 2009, CMS Energy had a recorded liability of $4 million for its potential indemnity obligation for corporate and withholding taxes for 2006. CMS Energy cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this matter.
Marathon Indemnity Claim regarding F.T. Barr Claim: In 2001, F. T. Barr, an individual with an overriding royalty interest in production from the Alba field, filed a lawsuit in Harris County District Court in Texas against CMS Energy, CMS Oil and Gas and other defendants alleging that his overriding royalty payments related to Alba field production were improperly calculated. CMS Oil and Gas believes that Barr was properly paid on gas sales and that he was not entitled to the additional overriding royalty payment sought. All parties signed a confidential settlement agreement in 2004. The settlement resolved claims between Barr and the defendants, and the involved CMS Energy entities reserved all defenses to any indemnity claim relating to the settlement. Issues exist between Marathon and certain present or former CMS Energy entities as to the existence and scope of any indemnity obligation to Marathon in connection with the matter. In April 2008, Marathon indicated its intent to pursue the indemnity claim, and certain present and former CMS Energy entities and Marathon entered into a one-year agreement tolling the statute of limitations on any claim by Marathon under the indemnity. In April 2009, certain Marathon entities filed a case in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas against Enterprises for indemnification. CMS Energy entities dispute Marathon’s claim, and will vigorously oppose it. CMS Energy entities also will assert that Marathon has suffered minimal, if any, damages. CMS Energy cannot predict the outcome of this matter. If Marathon’s claim were sustained, it would have a material effect on CMS Energy’s future earnings and cash flow.

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CONSUMERS’ ELECTRIC UTILITY CONTINGENCIES
Electric Environmental Matters: Consumers’ operations are subject to environmental laws and regulations. Generally, Consumers has been able to recover, in customer rates, the costs to operate its facilities in compliance with these laws and regulations.
Cleanup and Solid Waste: Under the NREPA, Consumers will ultimately incur investigation and response activity costs at a number of sites. Consumers believes that these costs will be recoverable in rates under current ratemaking policies. At June 30, 2009, Consumers had a recorded liability of $1 million, the minimum amount in the range of its estimated probable NREPA liability, in accordance with applicable accounting standards.
Consumers is a potentially responsible party at a number of contaminated sites administered under the Superfund. Superfund liability is joint and several. However, many other creditworthy parties with substantial assets are potentially responsible with respect to the individual sites. Based on its experience, Consumers estimates that its share of the total liability for known Superfund sites will be between $2 million and $11 million. Various factors, including the number of potentially responsible parties involved with each site, affect Consumers’ share of the total liability. At June 30, 2009, Consumers had a recorded liability of $2 million, the minimum amount in the range of its estimated probable Superfund liability, in accordance with applicable accounting standards.
The timing of payments related to Consumers’ investigation and response activities at its Superfund and NREPA sites is uncertain. Periodically, Consumers receives information about new sites, which leads it to review its response activity estimates. Any significant change in the underlying assumptions, such as an increase in the number of sites, different remediation techniques, nature and extent of contamination, and legal and regulatory requirements, could affect its estimates of NREPA and Superfund liability.
Ludington PCB: In 1998, during routine maintenance activities, Consumers identified PCB as a component in certain paint, grout, and sealant materials at Ludington. Consumers removed and replaced part of the PCB material with non-PCB material. Since proposing a plan to take action with respect to the remaining materials, Consumers has had several communications with the EPA. Consumers is not able to predict when the EPA will issue a final ruling and cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this matter.
Electric Utility Plant Air Permit Issues and Notices of Violation: In 2007, Consumers received a NOV/FOV from the EPA alleging that fourteen utility boilers exceeded the visible emission limits in their associated air permits. The utility boilers are located at the Karn/Weadock Generating Complex, Campbell Plant, Cobb Electric Generating Station and Whiting Plant, which are all in Michigan. Consumers has responded formally to the NOV/FOV denying the allegations and is awaiting the EPA’s response to its submission.
In addition, the EPA has alleged that some utilities have incorrectly classified major plant modifications as RMRR rather than seeking permits from the EPA to modify their plants. Consumers responded to information requests from the EPA on this subject in 2000, 2002, 2006, and 2008. Consumers believes that it has properly interpreted the requirements of RMRR. In addition, in 2008, Consumers received a NOV for three of its coal-fueled facilities alleging, among other things, violations of NSR and PSD regulations relating to ten projects from 1986 to 1998 allegedly subject to NSR review.
Consumers is engaged in discussions with the EPA on both of these matters. Depending upon the outcome of these discussions, the EPA could bring legal action against Consumers and/or Consumers could be required to install additional pollution control equipment at some or all of its coal-fueled electric generating plants, surrender emission allowances, engage in Supplemental Environmental Programs, and/or pay fines. Additionally, Consumers would need to assess the viability of continuing operations at certain plants. Consumers cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of these matters.

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RFC Initial Notice of Alleged Violation : In July 2008, Consumers notified RFC, the NERC-affiliated regional reliability organization in the region that includes Consumers’ generating plants, that certain generation equipment covered by the NERC standards for maintenance and testing of certain electrical protection equipment was not covered by Consumers’ Generation Reliability Compliance Program. Since notifying RFC, Consumers has submitted and implemented a mitigation plan. It has also responded to the February 2009 initial notice of violation. Consumers cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this matter.
Litigation: The transmission charges Consumers pays to MISO have been subject to regulatory review and recovery through the annual PSCR process. Michigan’s attorney general has argued that the statute governing the PSCR process does not permit recovery of transmission charges in that manner and that those expenses should be considered in general rate cases. Several decisions of the Michigan Court of Appeals have ruled against the Michigan attorney general’s arguments, but in September 2008, the Michigan Supreme Court granted the Michigan attorney general’s applications for leave to appeal two of those decisions. In May 2009, the Michigan Supreme Court issued an order affirming Consumers’ ability to recover transmission costs through the PSCR process. The Michigan attorney general filed a petition for reconsideration/rehearing on this decision, which the Michigan Supreme Court denied.
Nuclear Matters:
DOE Litigation: In 1997, a United States Court of Appeals decision confirmed that the DOE was to begin accepting deliveries of spent nuclear fuel for disposal by January 1998. Subsequent United States Court of Appeals litigation, in which Consumers and other utilities participated, has not been successful in producing more specific relief for the DOE’s failure to accept the spent nuclear fuel.
A number of court decisions support the right of utilities to pursue damage claims in the United States Court of Claims against the DOE for failure to take delivery of spent nuclear fuel. Consumers filed a complaint in 2002. If Consumers’ litigation against the DOE is successful, Consumers plans to use any recoveries as reimbursement for the incurred costs of spent nuclear fuel storage during Consumers’ ownership of Palisades and Big Rock. Consumers cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this matter. The sale of Palisades and the Big Rock ISFSI did not transfer the right to any recoveries from the DOE related to costs of spent nuclear fuel storage incurred during Consumers’ ownership of Palisades and Big Rock.
Nuclear Fuel Disposal Cost: Consumers deferred payment for disposal of spent nuclear fuel used before April 7, 1983. Its DOE liability is $163 million at June 30, 2009. This amount includes interest, and is payable upon the first delivery of spent nuclear fuel to the DOE. Consumers recovered the amount of this liability, excluding a portion of interest, through electric rates. In conjunction with the sale of Palisades and the Big Rock ISFSI in 2007, Consumers retained this obligation and provided a $162 million letter of credit to Entergy as security for this obligation.
CONSUMERS’ GAS UTILITY CONTINGENCIES
Gas Environmental Matters: Consumers expects to incur investigation and remediation costs at a number of sites under the NREPA. These sites include 23 former manufactured gas plant facilities. Consumers operated the facilities on these sites for some part of their operating lives. For some of these sites, it has no current ownership or may own only a portion of the original site. In December 2008, Consumers estimated its undiscounted remaining costs to be between $38 million and $52 million. Consumers expects to fund most of these costs through proceeds from insurance settlements and MPSC-approved rates.

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At June 30, 2009, Consumers had a recorded liability of $37 million and a regulatory asset of $66 million that included $30 million of deferred MGP expenditures. The timing of payments related to the remediation of Consumers’ manufactured gas plant sites is uncertain. Consumers expects annual response activity costs to range between $5 million and $6 million over the next five years. Consumers periodically reviews these response activity cost estimates. Any significant change in the underlying assumptions, such as an increase in the number of sites, changes in remediation techniques, or legal and regulatory requirements, could affect Consumers’ estimates of annual response activity costs and MGP liability.
FERC Investigation: In February 2008, Consumers received a data request relating to an investigation the FERC is conducting into possible violations of the FERC’s posting and competitive bidding regulations related to releases of firm capacity on natural gas pipelines. Consumers responded to the FERC’s first data request in the first quarter of 2008. The FERC has also taken depositions and Consumers has responded to additional data requests. Consumers cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this matter.
GUARANTEES
The following table describes CMS Energy’s guarantees at June 30, 2009:
                       
In Millions
    Issue   Expiration   Maximum     Carrying
Guarantee Description   Date   Date   Obligation     Amount
 
Indemnity obligations from asset sales and other agreements (a)
  Various   Indefinite   1,369 (b)   $ 15
Surety bonds and other indemnity obligations (c)
  Various   Indefinite     35      
Guarantees and put options (d)
  Various   Various through September 2023     4       1
 
(a)   In May 2007, CMS Energy provided an indemnity to TAQA in connection with the sale of its ownership interests in businesses in the Middle East, Africa, and India, and recorded a $50 million provision for the contingent liability. This indemnity expired on May 2, 2009. CMS Energy eliminated the liability from its balance sheet, recognizing a $45 million benefit to Income (Loss) from Discontinued Operations, Net of Tax (Tax Benefit) and a $5 million benefit to Gain on asset sales, net.
 
(b)   The majority of this amount arises from stock and asset sales agreements under which CMS Energy indemnified the purchaser for losses resulting from various matters, including claims related to tax disputes, claims related to power purchase agreements, and the defects in title to the assets or stock sold to the purchaser by CMS Energy subsidiaries. Except for items described elsewhere in this Note, CMS Energy believes the likelihood of loss to be remote for the indemnity obligations not recorded as liabilities.
 
(c)   In the normal course of business, CMS Energy issues surety bonds and indemnifications to counterparties to facilitate commercial transactions. CMS Energy would be required to pay a counterparty if it incurred losses due to a breach of contract terms or nonperformance under the contract.

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(d)   In 1987, Consumers issued an $85 million guarantee of the MCV Partnership’s performance under a steam and electric power agreement with Dow. In May 2009, the parties mutually terminated the steam and electric power agreement. The termination of the agreement released Consumers from its $85 million guarantee to Dow. At June 30, 2009, the maximum obligation and the carrying amount of CMS Energy’s put option agreements with certain Bay Harbor property owners were $1 million. Additionally, if CMS Energy is required to purchase a Bay Harbor property under a put option agreement, it may sell the property to recover the amount paid under the option.
At June 30, 2009, the maximum obligation and carrying amount for Consumers’ guarantees were immaterial.
The following table provides additional information regarding CMS Energy’s guarantees:
         
        Events That Would Require
Guarantee Description   How Guarantee Arose   Performance
 
Indemnity obligations from asset sales and other agreements
  Stock and asset sales agreements   Findings of misrepresentation, breach of warranties, tax claims, and other specific events or circumstances
 
       
Surety bonds and other indemnity obligations
  Normal operating activity, permits and licenses   Nonperformance
 
       
Guarantees and put options
  Normal operating activity   Nonperformance or non-payment by a subsidiary under a related contract
 
       
 
  Bay Harbor remediation efforts   Owners exercising put options requiring CMS Land and CMS Capital to purchase property
 
CMS Energy and Consumers also enter into various agreements containing tax and other indemnity provisions for which they are unable to estimate the maximum potential obligation. These factors include unspecified exposure under certain agreements. CMS Energy and Consumers consider the likelihood that they would be required to perform or incur substantial losses related to these indemnities to be remote.
OTHER CONTINGENCIES
In addition to the matters disclosed in this Note, CMS Energy, Consumers, and certain other subsidiaries of CMS Energy are parties to certain lawsuits and administrative proceedings before various courts and governmental agencies arising from the ordinary course of business. These lawsuits and proceedings may involve personal injury, property damage, contracts, environmental issues, federal and state taxes, rates, licensing, and other matters. CMS Energy and Consumers believe that the outcome of any one of these proceedings will not have a material adverse effect on their consolidated results of operations, financial position, or cash flows.

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4: UTILITY RATE MATTERS
CONSUMERS’ ELECTRIC UTILITY RATE MATTERS
Stranded Cost Recovery: In 2004, the MPSC approved recovery of Consumers’ Stranded Costs incurred in 2002 and 2003 plus interest through the period of collection through a surcharge on ROA customers. Consumers presently has fewer ROA customers than at the time of the 2004 MPSC order, but has experienced a recent upward trend in ROA customers. The 2008 Energy Legislation amended the Customer Choice Act and directed the MPSC to approve rates that will allow recovery of Stranded Costs within five years. In January 2009, Consumers filed an application with the MPSC requesting recovery of these Stranded Costs through a surcharge on both full service and ROA customers. In June 2009, the ALJ’s proposal for decision supported Consumers’ request for recovery. At June 30, 2009, Consumers had a regulatory asset for Stranded Costs of $72 million.
Power Supply Cost Recovery: The PSCR process is designed to allow Consumers to recover all of its power supply costs if incurred under reasonable and prudent policies and practices. The MPSC reviews these costs, policies, and practices in annual plan and reconciliation proceedings. Consumers adjusts its PSCR billing factor monthly in order to minimize the over- or underrecovery amount in the annual PSCR reconciliation.
The following table summarizes the PSCR reconciliation filings pending with the MPSC:
Power Supply Cost Recovery Reconciliation
 
                     
            Net Over-   PSCR Cost    
PSCR   Date   (Under)   of Power    
Year   Filed   recovery (a)   Sold   Description
 
  2007     March 2008   $(42) million (b)   $1.628 billion  
In the 2007 PSCR Plan, Consumers expected to offset power supply costs by including a $44 million credit for Palisades sale proceeds due customers. However, the MPSC directed that the Palisades sale proceeds be refunded through bill credits outside of the PSCR process.
                   
 
  2008     March 2009   $2 million   $1.670 billion  
The overrecovery amount includes accrued interest and reflects an overrecovery for 2008 less underrecoveries from 2007.
 
(a)   Amount includes prior year over- or underrecoveries as allowed by the MPSC order in Consumers’ 2007 PSCR plan case.
 
(b)   In May 2009, the ALJ’s proposal for decision recommended no PSCR recovery for economic development discounts of $3 million and disallowance of $4 million of net replacement power costs associated with a crane incident at Consumers’ Campbell Plant.
2009 PSCR Plan : In September 2008, Consumers submitted its 2009 PSCR plan to the MPSC. The plan seeks approval to apply a uniform maximum PSCR factor of up to $0.02680 per kWh to all classes of customers, which includes recovery of an expected $22 million discount in power supply charges provided to a large industrial customer. The MPSC approved this discount in 2005 to promote long-term investments in the industrial infrastructure of Michigan. In June 2009, the ALJ’s proposal for decision recommended that recovery of this discount should not be included in the PSCR, but should be determined through a general rate case.

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Consumers self-implemented the 2009 PSCR charge in January 2009. The August 2009 PSCR billing factor is $0.01529 per kWh. While Consumers expects to recover all of its PSCR costs, it cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of these proceedings.
Electric Rate Case: In November 2008, Consumers filed an application with the MPSC seeking an annual increase in revenue of $214 million based on an 11 percent authorized return on equity. The filing seeks recovery of costs associated with new plant investments including Clean Air Act investments, higher operating and maintenance costs, and the approval to recover costs associated with Consumers’ advanced metering infrastructure program. The following table details the components of the requested increase in revenue:
         
In Millions
Components of the increase in revenue        
 
Operating and maintenance
  $ 50  
Rate of return
    17  
Rate base
    104  
Sales
    43  
 
     
Total
  $ 214  
 
In April 2009, the MPSC staff and intervenors filed testimony concerning the rate case. The MPSC staff recommended a revenue increase of $75 million, based on an 11 percent return on equity. The MPSC staff subsequently filed revised testimony recommending a $111 million revenue increase.
This is the first electric rate case under the new streamlined regulatory process enacted by the 2008 Energy Legislation. The new provisions generally allow utilities to self-implement rates six months after filing, subject to refund with interest, unless the MPSC finds good cause to prohibit self-implementation. The new provisions require the MPSC to issue an order 12 months after filing or the rates, as filed, become permanent. In April 2009, Consumers filed tariff sheets indicating that it planned to self-implement an electric rate increase in the annual amount of $179 million beginning in May 2009. The MPSC issued an order in May 2009 requiring that, if Consumers self-implemented the $179 million electric rate increase, it must simultaneously refund to customers $36 million of excess proceeds from the April 2007 sale of Palisades. Accordingly, in May 2009 Consumers self-implemented an annual electric rate increase of $179 million, subject to refund with interest, and also implemented a one-time refund of $36 million to customers. Consumers does not consider it probable that it will be required to refund a portion of its self-implemented rates, and therefore it has not recorded a provision for revenue subject to refund.
Consumers cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this electric rate case.
Palisades Regulatory Proceedings: The MPSC order approving the Palisades sale transaction required that Consumers credit $255 million of excess sales proceeds and decommissioning amounts to its retail customers by December 2008. There are additional excess sales proceeds and decommissioning fund balances of $135 million above the amount in the MPSC order. The MPSC order in Consumers’ 2007 electric rate case instructed Consumers to offset the excess sales proceeds and decommissioning fund balances with $26 million of transaction costs from the Palisades sale, excluding interest. In addition, as described in the preceding paragraph the MPSC required Consumers to offset its self-implemented electric rate increase with $36 million of these funds. The distribution of the remaining balance of $73 million is still pending with the MPSC.
Big Rock Decommissioning: The MPSC and the FERC regulate the recovery of costs to decommission Big Rock. In 2000, Consumers stopped funding a Big Rock trust fund because the MPSC-authorized decommissioning surcharge collection period expired. The level of funds provided by the trust fell short of the amount needed to complete decommissioning. As a result, Consumers provided $44 million of corporate contributions for decommissioning costs. Consumers also paid $30 million to Entergy to

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assume ownership and responsibility for the Big Rock ISFSI and paid $55 million for nuclear fuel storage costs incurred as a result of the DOE’s failure to accept spent nuclear fuel on schedule. At June 30, 2009, Consumers has a $129 million regulatory asset recorded on its Consolidated Balance Sheets for these costs.
In 2008, Consumers filed an application with the MPSC seeking the deferral of ratemaking treatment for the recovery of its nuclear fuel storage costs and the payment to Entergy, until the litigation regarding these costs is resolved in the federal courts. In the application, Consumers is seeking to recover the $44 million Big Rock decommissioning shortfall from customers. The MPSC staff and other interveners have filed testimony in this case recommending that the MPSC deny Consumers’ request and requesting rate refunds of various amounts. Consumers continues to believe that recovery of its regulatory asset is probable, but it cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this proceeding.
CONSUMERS’ GAS UTILITY RATE MATTERS
Gas Cost Recovery: The GCR process is designed to allow Consumers to recover all of its purchased natural gas costs if incurred under reasonable and prudent policies and practices. The MPSC reviews these costs, policies, and practices in annual plan and reconciliation proceedings. Consumers adjusts its GCR billing factor monthly in order to minimize the over- or underrecovery amount in the annual GCR reconciliation.
The following table summarizes the GCR reconciliation filings pending with the MPSC:
                 
Gas Cost Recovery Reconciliation 
        Net Over-        
        (Under)   GCR Cost of Gas    
GCR Year   Date Filed   recovery   Sold   Description
 
2007-2008   June 2008   $17 million   $1.7 billion  
The overrecovery amount reflects an overrecovery of $15 million plus $2 million in accrued interest owed to customers.
2008-2009   June 2009   $(15) million   $1.8 billion  
The underrecovery amount reflects an underrecovery of $16 million less $1 million in accrued interest owed to customers.
 
GCR plan for year 2009-2010: In December 2008, Consumers filed an application with the MPSC seeking approval of a GCR plan for its 2009-2010 GCR plan year. The request proposed the use of a base GCR ceiling factor of $8.10 per mcf, plus a quarterly GCR ceiling price adjustment contingent upon future events. Using the proposed base GCR ceiling factor, Consumers self-implemented the 2009-2010 GCR charge in April 2009. The August 2009 GCR billing factor is $7.36 per mcf. While Consumers expects to recover all of its GCR costs, it cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of these proceedings.
Gas Depreciation: In August 2008, Consumers filed a gas depreciation case using 2007 data with the MPSC-ordered variations on traditional cost-of-removal methodologies. In December 2008, the MPSC approved a partial settlement agreement allowing Consumers to implement the filed depreciation rates, on an interim basis, concurrent with the implementation of settled rates in its 2008 gas rate case. The interim depreciation rates, which reduced Consumers’ recovery of depreciation expense by $20 million per year, will remain in effect until the MPSC issues a final order in the gas depreciation case. In July 2009, the ALJ’s proposal for decision recommended an additional reduction to Consumers’ recovery of

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depreciation expense of $28 million per year. The final order in Consumers’ gas depreciation case may increase or decrease its annual recovery of depreciation expense.
Gas Rate Case: In May 2009, Consumers filed an application with the MPSC seeking an annual increase in revenue of $114 million based on an 11 percent authorized return on equity. The filing seeks recovery of costs associated with ongoing investments in gas utility assets, increases in operating and maintenance costs, and recognition of a decrease in expected sales related to the continued decline in the Michigan economy. The following table details the components of the requested increase in revenue:
         
In Millions
Components of the increase in revenue        
 
Operating and maintenance
  $ 25  
Rate of return
    8  
Rate base
    40  
Sales
    41  
 
     
Total
  $ 114  
 
Under the new streamlined regulatory process described in the “Consumers’ Electric Utility Rate Matters — Electric Rate Case” section of this Note, utilities may be allowed to self-implement rates six months after filing. If the MPSC were to take action to prevent or delay Consumers’ self-implementation, it could have a materially negative impact on Consumers’ earnings and cash flows. Consumers cannot predict the financial impact or outcome of this gas rate case.
Lost and Unaccounted for Gas: Gas utilities typically lose some gas as it is injected into and withdrawn from storage and sent through transmission and distribution systems. Consumers recovers the cost of lost and unaccounted for gas through general rate cases, which have provided for recovery based on an average of the previous five years of actual losses. To the extent that Consumers’ annual lost and unaccounted for gas cost exceeds the previous five-year average, Consumers may be unable to recover these amounts in rates.

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5: FINANCINGS AND CAPITALIZATION
Long-term debt is summarized as follows:
                 
In Millions
    June 30, 2009     December 31, 2008  
 
CMS Energy
               
Senior notes
  $ 2,175     $ 1,703  
Revolving credit facility
          105  
 
           
Total — CMS Energy
    2,175       1,808  
Consumers
    4,579       4,297  
Other CMS Energy Subsidiaries
    232       252  
 
           
Total CMS Energy principal amounts outstanding
    6,986       6,357  
Current amounts
    (581 )     (489 )
Net unamortized discount
    (49 )     (31 )
 
           
 
               
Total CMS Energy Long-term debt
  $ 6,356     $ 5,837  
 
           
Consumers
               
First mortgage bonds
  $ 3,815     $ 3,517  
Senior notes and other
    503       503  
Securitization bonds
    261       277  
 
           
Total Consumers principal amounts outstanding
    4,579       4,297  
Current amounts
    (492 )     (383 )
Net unamortized discount
    (6 )     (6 )
 
           
 
               
Total Consumers Long-term debt
  $ 4,081     $ 3,908  
 
Financings: The following is a summary of major long-term debt transactions during the six months ended June 30, 2009:
                                 
    Principal   Interest   Issue/Retirement    
    (in millions)   Rate (%)   Date   Maturity Date
 
Debt Issuances:
                               
CMS Energy
                               
Convertible senior notes
  $ 173       5.50 %   June 2009   June 2029
Senior notes
    300       8.75 %   June 2009   June 2019
Consumers
                               
First mortgage bonds
    500       6.70 %   March 2009   September 2019
 
Debt Retirements:
                               
CMS Energy
                               
Long-term debt — related parties (a)
  $ 144       7.75 %   June 2009   July 2027
Consumers
                               
First mortgage bonds
    200       4.80 %   February 2009   February 2009
 
(a)   CMS Energy retired this debt at a discount, and recorded a gain on extinguishment of debt of $28 million in Other income in its Consolidated Statements of Income.
In June 2009, CMS Energy commenced cash tender offers to repurchase up to $330 million of CMS Energy’s 7.75 percent senior notes due 2010 and 8.50 percent senior notes due 2011. In July 2009, under the terms of the tender offers, CMS Energy repurchased and retired $233 million principal amount of the 7.75 percent senior notes and $87 million principal amount of the 8.50 percent senior notes.

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Revolving Credit Facilities: The following secured revolving credit facilities with banks were available at June 30, 2009:
                                         
In Millions
                            Letters of    
            Amount of   Amount   Credit   Amount
Company   Expiration Date   Facility   Borrowed   Outstanding   Available
 
CMS Energy (a)
  April 2, 2012   $ 550     $  (b)   $ 3     $ 547  
Consumers
  March 30, 2012     500             172       328  
Consumers (c)
  November 30, 2009     192             192        
Consumers
  September 9, 2009     150                   150  
 
(a)   CMS Energy’s average borrowings during the six months ended June 30, 2009, totaled $69 million, with a weighted average annual interest rate of 1.32 percent, at LIBOR plus 0.75 percent.
 
(b)   In July 2009, CMS Energy borrowed $130 million on its revolving credit facility to fund the repurchase and retirement of senior notes.
 
(c)   Consumers’ secured revolving letter of credit facility.
Sale of Accounts Receivable: Under Consumers’ revolving accounts receivable sales program, Consumers may sell up to $250 million of accounts receivable, subject to certain eligibility requirements. At June 30, 2009, $134 million of accounts receivable were eligible for sale, and no accounts receivable were sold under the program.
Contingently Convertible Securities: At June 30, 2009, the significant terms of CMS Energy’s contingently convertible securities were as follows:
                                 
            Outstanding   Adjusted   Adjusted
Security   Maturity   (In Millions)   Conversion Price   Trigger Price
 
4.50% preferred stock (a)
        $ 243     $ 9.32     $ 11.18  
3.375% senior notes (b)
    2023       140       10.05       12.06  
2.875% senior notes
    2024       288       13.89       16.67  
5.50% senior notes (c)
    2029       173       14.46       18.80  
 
(a)   During 20 of the last 30 trading days ended June 30, 2009, the $11.18 per share adjusted trigger price was met for these securities and, as a result, the securities are convertible at the option of the security holders for the three months ending September 30, 2009.
 
(b)   CMS Energy has the option to redeem these securities at par.
 
(c)   The $173 million of 5.50 percent convertible senior notes issued in June 2009 become convertible for the calendar quarter beginning October 1, 2009, if the price of CMS Energy’s common stock remains at or above the trigger price for 20 of 30 consecutive trading days ending on the last trading day of the third quarter of 2009. The trigger price at which these securities become convertible is 130 percent of the conversion price. The conversion and trigger prices are subject to adjustment under certain circumstances, including payments or distributions to CMS Energy’s common stockholders.
During the quarter ended June 30, 2009, no other trigger price contingencies were met that would have allowed CMS Energy or the holders of the convertible securities to convert the securities to cash and equity.

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Dividend Restrictions: Under provisions of CMS Energy’s senior notes indenture, at June 30, 2009, payment of common stock dividends by CMS Energy was limited to $677 million.
Under the provisions of its articles of incorporation, at June 30, 2009, Consumers had $364 million of unrestricted retained earnings available to pay common stock dividends to CMS Energy. Provisions of the Federal Power Act and the Natural Gas Act appear to restrict dividends payable by Consumers to the amount of Consumers’ retained earnings. Several decisions from the FERC suggest that under a variety of circumstances common stock dividends from Consumers would not be limited to amounts in Consumers’ retained earnings. Any decision by Consumers to pay common stock dividends in excess of retained earnings would be based on specific facts and circumstances and would result only after a formal regulatory filing process.
For the six months ended June 30, 2009, CMS Energy received $130 million of common stock dividends from Consumers.

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6: EARNINGS PER SHARE — CMS ENERGY
The following table presents CMS Energy’s basic and diluted EPS computations based on Earnings from Continuing Operations:
                 
In Millions, Except Per Share Amounts
Three months ended June 30   2009     2008  
 
Earnings Available to Common Stockholders
               
Earnings from Continuing Operations
  $ 50     $ 49  
Less Earnings Attributable to Noncontrolling Interests
    (2 )     (1 )
Less Preferred Dividends
    (3 )     (3 )
 
           
Earnings from Continuing Operations Available to Common Stockholders — Basic and Diluted
  $ 45     $ 45  
 
           
Average Common Shares Outstanding
               
Weighted Average Shares — Basic
    226.9       225.4  
Add dilutive impact of Contingently Convertible Securities
    7.6       15.0  
Add dilutive Stock Options and Warrants
    0.1       0.2  
 
           
Weighted Average Shares — Diluted
    234.6       240.6  
 
           
Earnings Per Average Common Share Available to Common Stockholders
               
Basic
  $ 0.20     $ 0.21  
Diluted
  $ 0.19     $ 0.19  
 
                 
In Millions, Except Per Share Amounts
Six months ended June 30   2009     2008  
 
Earnings Available to Common Stockholders
               
Earnings from Continuing Operations
  $ 123     $ 157  
Less Earnings Attributable to Noncontrolling Interests
    (3 )     (4 )
Less Preferred Dividends
    (6 )     (6 )
 
           
Earnings from Continuing Operations Available to Common Stockholders — Basic and Diluted
  $ 114     $ 147  
 
           
Average Common Shares Outstanding
               
Weighted Average Shares — Basic
    226.8       225.3  
Add dilutive impact of Contingently Convertible Securities
    7.2       14.3  
Add dilutive Stock Options and Warrants
    0.1       0.2  
 
           
Weighted Average Shares — Diluted
    234.1       239.8  
 
           
Earnings Per Average Common Share Available to Common Stockholders
               
Basic
  $ 0.50     $ 0.65  
Diluted
  $ 0.48     $ 0.61  
 
Contingently Convertible Securities: When CMS Energy has earnings from continuing operations, its contingently convertible securities dilute EPS to the extent that the conversion value of a security, which is based on the average market price of CMS Energy’s common stock, exceeds the principal value of that security. For additional details on contingently convertible securities, see Note 5, Financings and Capitalization.

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Stock Options and Warrants: For the three and six months ended June 30, 2009, outstanding options and warrants to purchase 0.6 million shares of CMS Energy common stock had no impact on diluted EPS, since the exercise price was greater than the average market price of common stock. These stock options have the potential to dilute EPS in the future.
Convertible Debentures: For the three and six months ended June 30, 2009 and 2008, there was no impact on diluted EPS from CMS Energy’s 7.75 percent convertible subordinated debentures. Using the if-converted method, the debentures would have:
    increased the numerator of diluted EPS by $2 million for the three months ended June 30, 2009 and 2008 and by $4 million for the six months ended June 30, 2009 and 2008, from an assumed reduction of interest expense, net of tax; and
 
    increased the denominator of diluted EPS by 3.6 million shares for the three months ended June 30, 2009 and by 3.9 million shares for the six months ended June 30, 2009. The denominator of diluted EPS would have increased by 4.2 million shares for the three months and six months ended June 30, 2008.
CMS Energy can revoke the conversion rights if certain conditions are met.
7: FINANCIAL AND DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS
Financial Instruments: The carrying amounts of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ cash, current accounts and notes receivable, short-term investments, and current liabilities approximate their fair values because of their short-term nature. The cost or carrying amount and fair value of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ long-term financial instruments were as follows:
                                 
In Millions
    June 30, 2009   December 31, 2008
    Cost or           Cost or    
    Carrying           Carrying    
    Amount   Fair Value   Amount   Fair Value
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers
                               
Securities held to maturity
  $ 3     $ 3     $ 3     $ 3  
Securities available for sale
    67       68       68       68  
Notes receivable, net
    196       207       186       201  
Long-term debt (a)
    6,937       6,979       6,326       5,962  
Long-term debt — related parties
    34       27       178       107  
Consumers
                               
Securities available for sale
  $ 52     $ 67     $ 52     $ 63  
Long-term debt (b)
    4,573       4,575       4,291       4,073  
 
(a)   Includes current maturities of $581 million at June 30, 2009 and $489 million at December 31, 2008.
 
(b)   Includes current maturities of $492 million at June 30, 2009 and $383 million at December 31, 2008.
Notes receivable, net consist of EnerBank’s fixed-rate installment loans. EnerBank estimates the fair value of these loans using a discounted cash flows technique that incorporates current market interest rates as well as assumptions about the remaining life of the loans and credit risk. Fair values for impaired loans are estimated using discounted cash flows or underlying collateral values.
CMS Energy and Consumers estimate the fair value of their long-term debt using quoted prices from market trades of the debt, if available. In the absence of quoted prices, CMS Energy and Consumers calculate market yields and prices for the debt using a matrix method that incorporates market data for similarly rated debt. Depending on the information available, other valuation techniques may be used that

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rely on internal assumptions and models. For its convertible securities, CMS Energy incorporates, as appropriate, information on the market prices of CMS Energy common stock. CMS Energy’s long-term debt includes $290 million principal amount that is supported by third-party insurance or other credit enhancements. Of this amount, $273 million principal amount is at Consumers. The effects of this third-party credit support were excluded from the measurement of fair value at June 30, 2009.
The following table summarizes CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ investment securities:
                                                                 
In Millions
    June 30, 2009   December 31, 2008
            Unrealized   Unrealized   Fair           Unrealized   Unrealized   Fair
    Cost   Gains   Losses   Value   Cost   Gains   Losses   Value
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers                                                
Available for sale:
                                                               
SERP:
                                                               
Equity securities
  $ 40     $ 1     $     $ 41     $ 39     $     $     $ 39  
Debt securities
    27                   27       29                   29  
Held to maturity:
                                                               
Debt securities
    3                   3       3                   3  
Consumers
                                                               
Available for sale:
                                                               
SERP:
                                                               
Equity securities
  $ 26     $ 1     $     $ 27     $ 25     $     $     $ 25  
Debt securities
    18                   18       19                   19  
Common stock of CMS Energy
    8       14             22       8       11             19  
 
Equity securities classified as available for sale consist of an investment in a Standard & Poor’s 500 Index mutual fund. Debt securities classified as available for sale consist of investment-grade municipal bonds. Debt securities classified as held to maturity consist of municipal bonds and mortgage-backed securities held by EnerBank.
Derivative Instruments: In order to limit exposure to certain market risks, primarily changes in commodity prices, interest rates, and foreign exchange rates, CMS Energy and Consumers may enter into various risk management contracts, such as forward contracts, futures, and swaps. In entering into these contracts, they follow established policies and procedures, under the direction of an executive oversight committee consisting of senior management representatives and a risk committee consisting of business unit managers. Neither CMS Energy nor Consumers holds any of its derivatives for trading purposes.
The contracts used to manage market risks may qualify as derivative instruments. If a contract is a derivative and does not qualify for the normal purchases and sales exception, the contract is recorded on the balance sheet at its fair value. Each quarter, the resulting asset or liability is adjusted to reflect any change in the fair value of the contract, a practice known as marking the contract to market. Since none of CMS Energy’s or Consumers’ derivatives have been designated as accounting hedges, all mark-to-market gains and losses are reported in earnings. For a discussion of how CMS Energy and Consumers determine the fair value of their derivatives, see Note 2, Fair Value Measurements.
Commodity Price Risk : In order to support ongoing operations, CMS Energy and Consumers enter into contracts for the future purchase and sale of various commodities, such as electricity, natural gas, and coal. These forward contracts are generally long-term in nature and result in physical delivery of the commodity at a contracted price. Most of these contracts are not subject to derivative accounting because:

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    they do not have a notional amount (that is, a number of units specified in a derivative instrument, such as MWh of electricity or bcf of natural gas);
 
    they qualify for the normal purchases and sales exception; or
 
    there is not an active market for the commodity.
CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ coal purchase contracts are not derivatives because there is not an active market for the coal they purchase. If an active market for coal develops in the future, some of these contracts may qualify as derivatives. For Consumers, which is subject to regulatory accounting, the resulting mark-to-market gains and losses would be offset by changes in regulatory assets and liabilities and would not affect net income. For other subsidiaries, CMS Energy does not believe the resulting mark-to-market impact on earnings would be material.
CMS ERM has not designated its contracts to purchase and sell electricity and natural gas as normal purchases and sales and, therefore, CMS Energy accounts for those contracts as derivatives. At June 30, 2009, CMS ERM held a forward contract for the physical sale of 889 GWh of electricity through 2015 on behalf of one of CMS Energy’s non-utility generating plants. CMS ERM also held futures contracts through 2011 as an economic hedge of 42 percent of the generating plant’s natural gas requirements needed to serve a steam sales contract, for a total of 1.2 bcf of natural gas. In its role as a marketer of natural gas for third-party producers, CMS ERM also held forward contracts to purchase 9.6 bcf of natural gas and to sell 7.7 bcf of natural gas through 2010.
Interest rate risk : In order to mitigate its exposure to changes in interest rates, Grayling executed an interest rate collar as an economic hedge of the variable interest rate charged on its outstanding revenue bonds. At June 30, 2009, the notional amount of this contract was $17 million.
At June 30, 2009, the fair value of Consumers’ derivative instruments was immaterial. The following table summarizes the fair values of CMS Energy’s derivative instruments:
                                 
In Millions
June 30, 2009   Asset Derivatives     Liability Derivatives  
    Balance Sheet             Balance Sheet        
    Location     Fair Value     Location     Fair Value  
 
CMS Energy
                               
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
                               
Commodity contracts (a)
  Other assets   $ 1     Other liabilities   $ (16 )
Interest rate contracts
  Other assets         Other liabilities     (1 )
 
                           
Total CMS Energy Derivatives
          $ 1             $ (17 )
 
(a)   Assets and liabilities are presented gross and exclude the $1 million impact of offsetting derivative assets and liabilities under master netting arrangements. The liability also excludes the $3 million impact of offsetting cash margin deposits paid by CMS ERM to other parties. CMS Energy presents these assets and liabilities net of these impacts on its Consolidated Balance Sheets.

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The following tables summarize the effect of CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ derivative instruments on their Consolidated Statements of Income:
             
In Millions  
    Location of Gain (Loss)          Amount of Gain (Loss)  
    Recognized in Income on   Recognized in Income on  
Three months ended June 30, 2009   Derivatives             Derivatives  
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers
           
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
           
Commodity contracts
  Operating Revenue   $ (2 )
 
  Fuel for electric generation      
 
  Cost of gas sold      
 
  Other income     1  
Interest rate contracts
  Other expense      
 
         
Total CMS Energy
      $ (1 )
 
         
 
           
Consumers
           
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
           
Commodity contracts
  Other income   $ 1  
 
             
In Millions  
    Location of Gain (Loss)          Amount of Gain (Loss)  
    Recognized in Income on   Recognized in Income on  
Six months ended June 30, 2009   Derivatives             Derivatives  
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers
           
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
           
Commodity contracts
  Operating Revenue   $ 5  
 
  Fuel for electric generation     (2 )
 
  Cost of gas sold     (3 )
 
  Other income     1  
Interest rate contracts
  Other expense      
Foreign exchange contracts (a)
  Other expense     (1 )
 
         
Total CMS Energy
      $  
 
         
 
           
Consumers
           
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
           
Commodity contracts
  Other income   $ 1  
 
(a)   This derivative loss relates to a foreign-exchange forward contract CMS Energy held at December 31, 2008. CMS Energy settled this obligation and the related derivative in January 2009.
At June 30, 2009, none of CMS Energy’s derivative liabilities was subject to credit-risk-related contingent features. Therefore, there is no credit-risk-related circumstance in which CMS Energy would have to post collateral or settle its derivative liabilities.

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8: RETIREMENT BENEFITS
CMS Energy and Consumers provide pension, OPEB, and other retirement benefit plans to their employees.
The following tables show the costs and other changes in plan assets and benefit obligations incurred in CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ retirement benefits plans:
                                 
In Millions
    Pension  
    Three months ended     Six months ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers
                               
Service cost
  $ 10     $ 10     $ 20     $ 21  
Interest expense
    24       24       48       48  
Expected return on plan assets
    (22 )     (21 )     (43 )     (41 )
Amortization of:
                               
Net loss
    11       11       21       21  
Prior service cost
    1       2       3       3  
     
Net periodic cost
    24       26       49       52  
Regulatory adjustment
          8             4  
     
Net periodic cost after regulatory adjustment
  $ 24     $ 34     $ 49     $ 56  
     
Consumers
                               
Service cost
  $ 10     $ 10     $ 20     $ 20  
Interest expense
    23       23       46       46  
Expected return on plan assets
    (22 )     (20 )     (42 )     (39 )
Amortization of:
                               
Net loss
    10       10       20       20  
Prior service cost
    2       2       3       3  
     
Net periodic cost
    23       25       47       50  
Regulatory adjustment
          8             4  
     
Net periodic cost after regulatory adjustment
  $ 23     $ 33     $ 47     $ 54  
 
CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ expected long-term rate of return on plan assets is 8.25 percent. For the six months ended June 30, 2009, the actual return on pension plan assets was 4.8 percent, and for 2008 the actual return was a negative 23.2 percent. The expected rate of return is an assumption about long-term asset performance that CMS Energy and Consumers review annually for reasonableness and appropriateness.

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In Millions
    OPEB  
    Three months ended     Six months ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
CMS Energy, including Consumers
                               
Service cost
  $ 7     $ 5     $ 13     $ 11  
Interest expense
    20       18       40       36  
Expected return on plan assets
    (13 )     (17 )     (26 )     (33 )
Amortization of:
                               
Net loss
    9       2       17       4  
Prior service credit
    (3 )     (2 )     (5 )     (5 )
     
Net periodic cost
    20       6       39       13  
Regulatory adjustment
          2             3  
     
Net periodic cost after regulatory adjustment
  $ 20     $ 8     $ 39     $ 16  
     
Consumers
                               
Service cost
  $ 6     $ 5     $ 12     $ 11  
Interest expense
    19       18       39       36  
Expected return on plan assets
    (12 )     (17 )     (24 )     (33 )
Amortization of:
                               
Net loss
    9       3       17       5  
Prior service credit
    (3 )     (2 )     (5 )     (5 )
     
Net periodic cost
    19       7       39       14  
Regulatory adjustment
          2             3  
     
Net periodic cost after regulatory adjustment
  $ 19     $ 9     $ 39     $ 17  
 
9: INCOME TAXES
The actual income tax expense on continuing operations differs from the amount computed by applying the statutory federal tax rate of 35 percent to income before income taxes, as follows:
                 
In Millions
Six months ended June 30   2009     2008  
 
Income from continuing operations before income taxes less income attributable to noncontrolling interests
  $ 197     $ 240  
Statutory federal income tax rate
  35 %   35 %
     
Expected income tax expense
    69       84  
Increase (decrease) in taxes from:
               
State and local income taxes, net of federal benefit
    12       4  
Medicare Part D exempt income
    (3 )     (3 )
Other, net
    (1 )     2  
     
Recorded income tax expense
  $ 77     $ 87  
 
Effective tax rate
    39.1 %     36.3 %
 
The increase in the effective tax rate for the six months ended June 30, 2009 was due to increases in the MBT from legislative changes that increased the tax, as well as the recognition of deferred MBT for the electric utility segment of Consumers, beginning with the second quarter of 2009.

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10: REPORTABLE SEGMENTS
Reportable segments consist of business units defined by the products and services they offer. CMS Energy and Consumers evaluate performance based on the net income of each segment. The reportable segments for CMS Energy and Consumers are:
CMS Energy:
    electric utility, consisting of regulated activities associated with the generation and distribution of electricity in Michigan;
 
    gas utility, consisting of regulated activities associated with the transportation, storage, and distribution of natural gas in Michigan;
 
    enterprises, consisting of various subsidiaries engaging primarily in domestic independent power production; and
 
    other, including corporate interest and other expenses and discontinued operations.
Consumers:
    electric utility, consisting of regulated activities associated with the generation and distribution of electricity in Michigan;
 
    gas utility, consisting of regulated activities associated with the transportation, storage, and distribution of natural gas in Michigan; and
 
    other, including a consolidated special-purpose entity for the sale of accounts receivable.

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The following tables show financial information by reportable segment:
                                 
In Millions  
    Three months ended     Six months ended  
June 30   2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
Operating Revenue
                               
CMS Energy, including Consumers
                               
Electric utility
  $ 850     $ 841     $ 1,662     $ 1,701  
Gas utility
    334       422       1,556       1,653  
Enterprises
    38       97       104       185  
Other
    6       5       12       10  
     
Total Operating Revenue — CMS Energy
  $ 1,228     $ 1,365     $ 3,334     $ 3,549  
Consumers
                               
Electric utility
  $ 850     $ 841     $ 1,662     $ 1,701  
Gas utility
    334       422       1,556       1,653  
     
Total Operating Revenue — Consumers
  $ 1,184     $ 1,263     $ 3,218     $ 3,354  
 
                               
Net Income Available to Common Stockholders
                               
CMS Energy, including Consumers
                               
Electric utility
  $ 66     $ 57     $ 104     $ 124  
Gas utility
    5       2       64       64  
Enterprises
    (17 )     10       (17 )     8  
Other
    20       (25 )     (8 )     (50 )
     
Total Net Income Available to Common Stockholders — CMS Energy
  $ 74     $ 44     $ 143     $ 146  
Consumers
                               
Electric utility
  $ 66     $ 57     $ 104     $ 124  
Gas utility
    5       2       64       64  
Other
          1             1  
     
Total Net Income Available to Common Stockholder — Consumers
  $ 71     $ 60     $ 168     $ 189  
 

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In Millions  
    June 30, 2009     December 31, 2008  
 
Assets
               
CMS Energy, including Consumers
               
Electric utility (a)
  $ 9,346     $ 8,904  
Gas utility (a)
    4,396       4,565  
Enterprises
    301       313  
Other
    1,234       1,119  
     
Total Assets — CMS Energy
  $ 15,277     $ 14,901  
Consumers
               
Electric utility (a)
  $ 9,346     $ 8,904  
Gas utility (a)
    4,396       4,565  
Other
    735       777  
     
Total Assets — Consumers
  $ 14,477     $ 14,246  
 
(a)   Amounts include a portion of Consumers’ other common assets attributable to both the electric and the gas utility businesses.

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Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
CMS ENERGY
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk is contained in PART I, Item 2. — MD&A, which is incorporated by reference herein.
CONSUMERS
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk is contained in PART I, Item 2. — MD&A, which is incorporated by reference herein.
Item 4. Controls and Procedures
CMS ENERGY
Disclosure Controls and Procedures: CMS Energy’s management, with the participation of its CEO and CFO, has evaluated the effectiveness of its disclosure controls and procedures (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act) as of the end of the period covered by this report. Based on such evaluation, CMS Energy’s CEO and CFO have concluded that, as of the end of such period, its disclosure controls and procedures are effective.
Internal Control Over Financial Reporting: There have not been any changes in CMS Energy’s internal control over financial reporting (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act) during the last fiscal quarter that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, its internal control over financial reporting.
Item 4T. Controls and Procedures
CONSUMERS
Disclosure Controls and Procedures: Consumers’ management, with the participation of its CEO and CFO, has evaluated the effectiveness of its disclosure controls and procedures (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act) as of the end of the period covered by this report. Based on such evaluation, Consumers’ CEO and CFO have concluded that, as of the end of such period, its disclosure controls and procedures are effective.
Internal Control Over Financial Reporting: There have not been any changes in Consumers’ internal control over financial reporting (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act) during the last fiscal quarter that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, its internal control over financial reporting.
PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1. Legal Proceedings
The discussion in the following paragraphs is limited to an update of developments that have occurred in various judicial and administrative proceedings, many of which are more fully described in CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ 2008 Form 10-K and their Form 10-Q for the three months ended March 31, 2009. Reference is also made to the NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, in particular, Note 3, Contingencies and Note 4, Utility Rate Matters, included herein for additional information regarding various pending administrative and judicial proceedings involving rate, operating, regulatory, and environmental matters.

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CMS ENERGY
GAS INDEX PRICE REPORTING LITIGATION
In the Arandell Corporation, et al v. XCEL Energy Inc., et al class action complaint, filed in Wisconsin, the federal court granted the motion to dismiss all CMS Energy defendants in February 2009. Plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration. CMS Energy defendants filed a response in opposition to that motion in June 2009. This motion is pending.
All CMS Energy defendants were dismissed from the Missouri Public Service Commission case, a state action, and the Breckenridge case, a federal action. Appeals are pending in both cases.
In July 2009, CMS MST entered into a settlement of the remaining California state court cases. The settlement amount is immaterial to CMS Energy.
QUICKSILVER RESOURCES, INC.
In 2001, Quicksilver sued CMS MST in Texas state court in Fort Worth, Texas for breach of contract in connection with a base contract for the sale and purchase of natural gas. The jury verdict awarded Quicksilver no compensatory damages but $10 million in punitive damages. In 2007, the trial court nullified the jury award of punitive damages but held that the contract should be rescinded prospectively. The judicial rescission of the contract caused CMS Energy to record a charge in the second quarter of 2007 of $24 million, net of tax. In June 2009, the Texas Court of Appeals ruled in favor of CMS MST and, pursuant to a settlement agreement to end the litigation, Quicksilver paid $5 million to CMS MST, which caused CMS Energy to recognize a $5 million credit to Cost of gas sold. The parties have agreed not to appeal. The Quicksilver matter has now been resolved.
Item 1A. Risk Factors
There have been no material changes to the Risk Factors as previously disclosed in Part I, Item 1A. Risk Factors, in CMS Energy’s and Consumers’ 2008 Form 10-K.

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Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
(c) Issuer Repurchases of Equity Securities
The table below shows CMS Energy’s repurchases of equity securities for the three months ended June 30, 2009:
                                 
                            Maximum Number of
    Total   Average   Total Number of Shares   Shares that May Yet
    Number   Price   Purchased as Part of   Be Purchased Under
    of Shares   Paid per   Publicly Announced   Publicly Announced
Period   Purchased*   Share   Plans or Programs   Plans or Programs
 
April 1, 2009 to April 30, 2009
    1,313     $ 11.59              
May 1, 2009 to May 31, 2009
        $              
June 1, 2009 to June 30, 2009
        $              
     
Total
    1,313                    
 
 
*   CMS Energy repurchases certain restricted shares upon vesting under the performance incentive stock plan from participants in the performance incentive stock plan, equal to its minimum statutory income tax withholding obligation. Shares repurchased have a value based on the market price on the vesting date.
Item 3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities
None.

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Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
At the CMS Energy annual meeting of shareholders held on May 22, 2009, the CMS Energy shareholders voted upon five proposals, as follows:
    Ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the independent registered public accounting firm to audit CMS Energy’s financial statements for the year ending December 31, 2009, with a vote of 193,907,401 shares in favor, 604,346 against and 292,177 abstentions;
 
    Approval of an amendment to CMS Energy’s performance incentive stock plan with a vote of 154,453,235 shares in favor, 22,232,738 against, 591,626 abstentions, and 17,523,740 broker non-votes;
 
    Approval of the performance measures used in CMS Energy’s bonus plan with a vote of 188,952,229 shares in favor, 5,206,594 against and 645,087 abstentions;
 
    Approval of an amendment to CMS Energy’s restated articles of incorporation addressing a majority vote standard for uncontested director elections with a vote of 192,052,494 shares in favor, 1,997,626 against and 753,796 abstentions; and
 
    Election of eleven members to the CMS Energy board of directors. The votes for individual nominees were as follows:
CMS ENERGY
                         
Number of Votes:   For   Withheld   Total
 
Merribel S. Ayres
    193,355,306       1,448,612       194,803,918  
Jon E. Barfield
    193,340,237       1,463,681       194,803,918  
Richard M. Gabrys
    193,308,493       1,495,425       194,803,918  
David W. Joos
    192,123,123       2,680,795       194,803,918  
Philip R. Lochner, Jr.
    190,948,758       3,855,160       194,803,918  
Michael T. Monahan
    190,920,491       3,883,427       194,803,918  
Joseph F. Paquette, Jr.
    193,264,751       1,539,167       194,803,918  
Percy A. Pierre
    190,915,288       3,888,630       194,803,918  
Kenneth L. Way
    192,049,427       2,754,491       194,803,918  
Kenneth Whipple
    192,325,170       2,478,748       194,803,918  
John B. Yasinsky
    190,902,008       3,901,910       194,803,918  
CONSUMERS
Consumers did not solicit proxies for the matters submitted to votes at the contemporaneous May 22, 2009 Consumers’ annual meeting of shareholders. All 84,108,789 shares of Consumers common stock were voted in favor of electing the above-named individuals as directors of Consumers and in favor of the remaining proposals for Consumers: (1) ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the independent registered public accounting firm to audit Consumers’ financial statements for the year ending December 31, 2009; (2) approval of an amendment to CMS Energy’s performance incentive stock plan; and (3) approval of the performance measures used in CMS Energy’s bonus plan. None of the 441,599 shares of Consumers preferred stock were voted at the annual meeting.

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Item 5. Other Information
None.

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Item 6. Exhibits
     
(3)(a)
  Restated Articles of Incorporation of CMS Energy, effective June 1, 2004, as amended May 22, 2009
 
   
(4)(a)
  Twenty-Second Supplemental Indenture dated as of June 15, 2009 between CMS Energy and The Bank of New York Mellon, as Trustee. (Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K filed June 15, 2009 and incorporated herein by reference)
 
   
(4)(b)
  Twenty-Third Supplemental Indenture dated as of June 15, 2009 between CMS Energy and The Bank of New York Mellon, as Trustee. (Exhibit 4.3 to Form 8-K filed June 15, 2009 and incorporated herein by reference)
 
   
(10)(a)
  CMS Energy’s Performance Incentive Stock Plan, amended and restated effective June 1, 2009 (Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K filed May 27, 2009 and incorporated herein by reference)
 
   
(12)(a)
  Statement regarding computation of CMS Energy’s Ratios of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Combined Fixed Charges and Preferred Dividends
 
   
(12)(b)
  Statement regarding computation of Consumers’ Ratios of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Combined Fixed Charges and Preferred Dividends
 
   
(31)(a)
  CMS Energy Corporation’s certification of the CEO pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
 
   
(31)(b)
  CMS Energy Corporation’s certification of the CFO pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
 
   
(31)(c)
  Consumers Energy Company’s certification of the CEO pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
 
   
(31)(d)
  Consumers Energy Company’s certification of the CFO pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
 
   
(32)(a)
  CMS Energy Corporation’s certifications pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
 
   
(32)(b)
  Consumers Energy Company’s certifications pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

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SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, each registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized. The signature for each undersigned company shall be deemed to relate only to matters having reference to such company or its subsidiary.
             
    CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
   
    (Registrant)
   
 
           
Dated: July 30, 2009
  By:   /s/ Thomas J. Webb    
 
           
 
      Thomas J. Webb    
 
      Executive Vice President and    
 
      Chief Financial Officer    
 
           
    CONSUMERS ENERGY COMPANY
   
    (Registrant)
   
 
           
Dated: July 30, 2009
  By:   /s/ Thomas J. Webb    
 
           
 
      Thomas J. Webb    
 
      Executive Vice President and    
 
      Chief Financial Officer    

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Exhibit (3)(a)
FILED AND EFFECTIVE JUNE 1, 2004
STATE OF MICHIGAN
MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF LABOR & ECONOMIC GROWTH
BUREAU OF COMMERCIAL SERVICES — CORPORATION DIVISION
LANSING, MICHIGAN
RESTATED ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
(Profit Corporation)
Corporation Identification Number 485-283
     These Restated Articles of Incorporation of CMS Energy Corporation (the “Corporation”) are executed pursuant to the provisions of Sections 641 through 651, Act 284, Public Acts of 1972, as amended, (the “Act”). These Restated Articles of Incorporation were authorized by the Board of Directors at its meeting held on May 28, 2004 without a vote of the shareholders pursuant to the provisions of Section 642 of the Act in order to restate and integrate the Articles and do not further amend the Articles as theretofore amended, and there is no material discrepancy between those provisions and the provisions of these Restated Articles.
     The present name of the Corporation is CMS Energy Corporation. There are no former names.
     The date of filing the original Articles of Incorporation in Michigan was February 26, 1987.
RESTATED ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
     The following Restated Articles of Incorporation supersede the original Articles as amended and shall be the Articles of Incorporation of CMS Energy Corporation.
ARTICLE I
     The name of the corporation is CMS Energy Corporation (hereinafter called the “Corporation”).
ARTICLE II
     The purpose or purposes for which the Corporation is organized is to engage in any activity within the purposes for which corporations may be organized under the Business Corporation Act of Michigan.
ARTICLE III
     The total number of shares of all classes of stock which the Corporation shall have authority to issue is 360,000,000, of which 10,000,000 shares, par value $.01 per share, are of a class designated Preferred Stock (“Preferred Stock”), and 350,000,000 shares, par value $.01 per share, are of a class designated Common Stock (“Common Stock”).

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     The statement of the designations and the voting and other powers, preferences and rights, and the qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereof, of the Common Stock and of the Preferred Stock is as follows:
PREEMPTIVE RIGHTS
     The holders of shares of Preferred Stock or of Common Stock shall have no preemptive rights to subscribe for or purchase any additional issues of shares of the capital stock of the Corporation of any class now or hereafter authorized or any Preferred Stock, bonds, debentures, or other obligations or rights or options convertible into or exchangeable for or entitling the holder or owner to subscribe for or purchase any shares of capital stock, or any rights to exchange shares issued for shares to be issued.
PREFERRED STOCK
     The shares of Preferred Stock may be issued from time to time in one or more series with such relative rights and preferences of the shares of any such series as may be determined by the Board of Directors. The Board of Directors is authorized to fix by resolution or resolutions adopted prior to the issuance of any shares of each particular series of Preferred Stock, the designation, powers, preferences and relative, participating, optional and other rights, and the qualifications, limitations and restrictions thereof, if any, of such series, including, but without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the following:
     (a) The rate of dividend, if any;
     (b) The price at and the terms and conditions upon which shares may be redeemed;
     (c) The rights, if any, of the holders of shares of the series upon voluntary or involuntary liquidation, merger, consolidation, distribution or sale of assets, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation;
     (d) Sinking fund or redemption or purchase provisions, if any, to be provided for shares of the series;
     (e) The terms and conditions upon which shares may be converted into shares of other series or other capital stock, if issued with the privilege of conversion; and
     (f) The voting rights in the event of default in the payment of dividends or under such other circumstances and upon such conditions as the Board of Directors may determine.
     No holder of any shares of any series of Preferred Stock shall be entitled to vote in the election of directors or in respect of any other matter except as may be required by the Michigan Business Corporation Act, as amended, or as is permitted by the resolution or resolutions adopted by the Board of Directors authorizing the issue of such series of Preferred Stock.

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Series Established By Articles
     There is hereby established one series of Preferred Stock designated as 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock. The number of shares that shall constitute such series shall be 5,000,000 shares.
4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock
     The Board of Directors hereby establishes a series of the preferred stock of the Corporation and hereby states that the series’ voting powers, designations, preferences and relative, participating, optional or other special rights, and qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereof (in addition to the provisions set forth in the Articles of Incorporation which are applicable to the preferred stock of all series), shall be as follows:
     1. Designation and Amount; Ranking.
     (a) There shall be created from the 10,000,000 shares of preferred stock, par value $0.01 per share, of the Corporation authorized to be issued pursuant to the Articles of Incorporation, a series of preferred stock, designated as the “4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock,” par value $0.01 per share (the “4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock”), and the number of shares of such series shall be 5,000,000. Such number of shares may be decreased by resolution of the Board of Directors; provided that no decrease shall reduce the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to a number less than that of the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock then outstanding plus the number of shares issuable upon exercise of options or rights then outstanding.
     (b) The 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock will, with respect to both dividend rights and rights upon the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation, rank (i) senior to all Junior Stock and (ii) on a parity with all other Parity Stock.
     2. Definitions. As used herein, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
     “Accumulated Dividends” shall mean, with respect to any share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, as of any date, the aggregate accumulated and unpaid dividends on such share from and including the most recent Dividend Payment Date to which dividends have been paid (or the Issue Date, if such date is prior to the first Dividend Payment Date) to but not including such date.
     “Additional Dividends” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 3(b).
     “Affiliate” shall have the meaning ascribed to it, on the date hereof, under Rule 405 of the Securities Act.
     “Agent Members” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 11(a)(ii).
     “Board of Directors” shall mean the Board of Directors of the Corporation or, with respect to any action to be taken by the Board of Directors, any committee (special or otherwise) of the Board of Directors duly authorized to take such action.

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     “Business Day” shall mean any day other than a Saturday, Sunday or other day on which commercial banks in The City of New York are authorized or required by law or executive order to close.
     “Certificate of Designation” means the designation if the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock in this Article III.
     “Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(f).
     “Common Equity” of any Person means capital stock of such Person that is generally entitled to (i) vote in the election of directors of such Person or (ii) if such Person is not a corporation, vote or otherwise participate in the selection of the governing body, partners, managers or others that will control the management or policies of such Person.
     “Common Stock” shall mean the common stock, par value $0.01 per share, of the Corporation, or any other class of stock resulting from successive changes or reclassifications of such common stock consisting solely of changes in par value, or from par value to no par value, or as a result of a subdivision, combination or merger, consolidation or similar transaction in which the Corporation is a constituent corporation.
     “Continuing Director” means a director who either was a member of the Board of Directors on December 5, 2003 or who becomes a member of the Board of Directors subsequent to that date and whose appointment, election or nomination for election by the Corporation’s shareholders is duly approved by a majority of the Continuing Directors on the Board of Directors at the time of such approval, either by a specific vote or by approval of the proxy statement issued by the Corporation on behalf of the Board of Directors in which such individual is named as nominee for director.
     “Conversion Agent” means the office or agency designated by the Corporation where 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock may be presented for conversion. Initially, the Conversion Agent shall be the Corporation located at One Energy Plaza, Jackson, Michigan 49201.
     “Conversion Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(b).
     “Conversion Notice” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(a).
     “Conversion Price” shall mean $9.893 per share of Common Stock.
     “Conversion Rate” shall mean the number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion of a share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock per Liquidation Preference. The initial Conversion Rate is 5.0541 shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion of a share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock per Liquidation Preference.
     “Corporation Notice” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(e).
     “Corporation Notice Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(e).
     “Distributed Assets or Securities” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(iii).

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     “Dividend Payment Date” shall mean March 1, June 1, September 1 and December 1 of each year, commencing March 1, 2004.
     “Dividend Rate” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 3(a).
     “Dividend Record Date” shall mean February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 of each year.
     “DTC” or “Depository” means The Depository Trust Company.
     “Equity Interests” means any capital stock, partnership, joint venture, member or limited liability or unlimited liability company interest, beneficial interest in a trust or similar entity or other equity interest or investment of whatever nature.
     “Exchange Act” shall mean the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.
     “Fair Market Value” means the amount which a willing buyer would pay a willing seller in an arm’s length transaction.
     A “Fundamental Change” shall be deemed to have occurred at such time after the original issuance of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock that any of the following occurs: (i) the Common Stock or other capital stock into which the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is convertible is neither listed for trading on a United States national securities exchange nor approved for trading on the NASDAQ National Market or another established automated over-the-counter trading market in the United States; (ii) a “person” or “group” within the meaning of Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act, other than the Corporation, any subsidiary of the Corporation or any employee benefit plan of the Corporation or any such subsidiary, files a Schedule TO (or any other schedule, form or report under the Exchange Act) disclosing that such person or group has become the direct or indirect ultimate “beneficial owner” (as such term is used in Rules 13d-3 and 13d-5 under the Exchange Act, except that a person or group shall be deemed to have “beneficial ownership” of all shares that such Person or group has the right to acquire whether such right is exercisable immediately or only after the passage of time) of Common Equity of the Corporation representing more than 50% of the voting power of the Corporation’s Common Equity; (iii) consummation of any share exchange, consolidation or merger of the Corporation pursuant to which the Common Stock will be converted into cash, securities or other property or any sale, lease or other transfer (in one transaction or a series of transactions) of all or substantially all of the consolidated assets of the Corporation and its subsidiaries, taken as a whole, to any Person (other than the Corporation or one or more of the Corporation’s subsidiaries); provided, however, that a transaction where the holders of the Corporation’s Common Equity immediately prior to such transaction own, directly or indirectly, more than 50% of the aggregate voting power of all classes of Common Equity of the continuing or surviving corporation or transferee immediately after such event shall not be a Fundamental Change; or (iv) Continuing Directors cease to constitute at least a majority of the Board of Directors; provided, however, that a Fundamental Change shall not be deemed to have occurred in respect of any of the foregoing if either (A) the Last Reported Sale Price per share of Common Stock for any five Trading Days within the period of 10 consecutive Trading Days ending immediately before the later of the Fundamental Change or the public announcement thereof shall equal or exceed 105% of the Conversion Price in effect immediately before the Fundamental Change or the public announcement thereof or (B) at

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least 90% of the consideration (excluding cash payments for fractional shares) in the transaction or transactions constituting the Fundamental Change consists of shares of capital stock traded on a national securities exchange or quoted on the NASDAQ National Market (or which shall be so traded or quoted when issued or exchanged in connection with such Fundamental Change) (such securities being referred to as “Publicly Traded Securities”) and as a result of such transaction or transactions the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock becomes convertible into such Publicly Traded Securities (excluding cash payments for fractional shares).
     “Fundamental Change Purchase Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(a).
     “Fundamental Change Purchase Notice” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(c).
     “Fundamental Change Purchase Price” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(a).
     “Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 11(a)(i).
     “Holder” or “holder” shall mean a holder of record of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     “Issue Date” shall mean December 5, 2003, the original date of issuance of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     “Junior Stock” shall mean all classes of common stock of the Corporation and each other class of capital stock or series of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock established after the Issue Date, by the Board of Directors, the terms of which do not expressly provide that such class or series ranks senior to or on parity with the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock as to dividend rights or rights upon the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation.
     “Last Reported Sale Price” of Common Stock on any date means the closing sale price per share (or, if no closing sale price is reported, the average of the bid and ask prices or, if more than one in either case, the average of the average bid and the average ask prices) on that date as reported in composite transactions for the principal U.S. securities exchange on which Common Stock is traded or, if the Common Stock is not listed on a U.S. national or regional securities exchange, as reported by the NASDAQ National Market. If the Common Stock is not listed for trading on a U.S. national or regional securities exchange and not reported by the NASDAQ National Market on the relevant date, the Last Reported Sale Price shall be the last quoted bid price for Common Stock in the over-the-counter market on the relevant date as reported by the National Quotation Bureau or similar organization. If the Common Stock is not so quoted, the Last Reported Sale Price will be the average of the mid-point of the last bid and ask prices for the Common Stock on the relevant date from each of at least three nationally recognized independent investment banking firms selected by the Corporation for this purpose.
     “Liquidation Preference” shall mean, with respect to each share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, $50.
     “Mandatory Conversion Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 8(b).
     “Market Price” means the average of the Last Reported Sales Price per share of Common

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Stock for the 20 Trading Day period ending on the applicable date of determination (if the applicable date of determination is a Trading Day or, if not, then on the last Trading Day prior to such applicable date of determination), appropriately adjusted to take into account the occurrence, during the period commencing on the first of the Trading Days during such 20 Trading Day period and ending on the applicable date of determination, of any event that would result in an adjustment of the Conversion Rate under this Certificate of Designation.
     “Market Value” shall mean the average closing price of the Common Stock for a five consecutive Trading Day period on the NYSE (or such other national securities exchange or automated quotation system on which the Common Stock is then listed or authorized for quotation or, if the Common Stock is not so listed or authorized for quotation, an amount determined in good faith by the Board of Directors to be the fair value of the Common Stock).
     “Maximum Conversion Rate” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(viii).
     “NYSE” shall mean the New York Stock Exchange, Inc.
     “Officer” means the Chairman of the Board of Directors, the President, any Vice President, the Treasurer, the Secretary or any Assistant Secretary of the Corporation.
     “Officers’ Certificate” means a certificate signed by two Officers.
     “Opinion of Counsel’ means a written opinion from legal counsel who is acceptable to the Transfer Agent. The counsel may be an employee of or counsel to the Corporation or the Transfer Agent.
     “Parity Stock” shall mean any class of capital stock or series of preferred stock established as of or after the Issue Date by the Board of Directors, the terms of which expressly provide that such class or series will rank on parity with the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock as to dividend rights or rights upon the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation.
     “Paying Agent” means any Person authorized by the Corporation to pay the dividends or Fundamental Change Purchase Price on any of the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock on behalf of the Corporation. Initially, the Paying Agent shall be the Corporation.
     “Person” shall mean any individual, corporation, general partnership, limited partnership, limited liability partnership, joint venture, association, joint-stock company, trust, limited liability company, unincorporated organization or government or any agency or political subdivision thereof.
     “Registration Default” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 3(b).
     “Registration Rights Agreement” means the Registration Rights Agreement dated as of December 5, 2003, among the Corporation, Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated and the certain other initial purchasers of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     “SEC” or “Commission” shall mean the Securities and Exchange Commission.
     “Securities Act” means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

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     “Security Register” means the security register recording the holders of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock kept at the offices of the Corporation.
     “Security Registrar” shall be the Person holding the Security Register, and the Corporation will initially be designated as the Security Registrar.
     “Senior Stock” shall mean each class of capital stock or series of preferred stock established after the Issue Date by the Board of Directors, the terms of which expressly provide that such class or series will rank senior to the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock as to dividend rights or rights upon the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation.
     “Shelf Registration Statement” shall mean a shelf registration statement filed with the SEC to cover resales of Transfer Restricted Securities by holders thereof, as required by the Registration Rights Agreement.
     “Spin-Off Market Price” per share of Common Stock of the Corporation or the Equity Interests in a Subsidiary or other business unit of the Corporation on any day means the average of the daily Last Reported Sale Prices for the 10 consecutive Trading Days commencing on and including the fifth Trading Day after the ex date with respect to the issuance or distribution requiring such computations. As used herein, the term “ex date,” when used with respect to any issuance or distribution, shall mean the first date on which the security trades regular way on the NYSE or such other national regional exchange or market in which the security trades without the right to receive such issuance or distribution.
     “Subsidiary” means a Person more than 50% of the outstanding voting stock of which is owned, directly or indirectly, by the Corporation or by one or more other Subsidiaries, or by the Corporation and one or more other Subsidiaries. For the purposes of this definition, “voting stock” means stock which ordinarily has voting power of the election of directors, whether at all times or only so long as no senior class of stock has such voting power by reason of any contingency.
     “Trading Day” means (i) if the applicable security is listed, admitted for trading or quoted on the NYSE, the NASDAQ National Market or another national security exchange, a day on which the NYSE, the NASDAQ National Market or another national security exchange is open for business or (ii) if the applicable security is not so listed, admitted for trading or quoted, any day other than a Saturday or Sunday or a day on which banking institutions in the State of New York are authorized or obligated by law, regulation or executive order to close.
     “Trading Exception” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(a)(ii).
     “Trading Price” of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock on any date of determination means the average of the secondary market bid quotations per share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock obtained by the Conversion Agent for $5,000,000 Liquidation Preference of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock at approximately 3:30 p.m., New York City time, on such determination date from three independent nationally recognized securities dealers the Corporation selects, provided that if three such bids cannot reasonably be obtained by the Conversion Agent, but two such bids are obtained, then the average of the two bids shall be used, and if only one such bid can reasonably be obtained by the Conversion Agent, this one bid shall be used. If the Conversion Agent cannot reasonably obtain at least one bid for

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$5,000,000 Liquidation Preference of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock from a nationally recognized securities dealer, then the Trading Price will be deemed to be less than 95% of the product of the sale price of Common Stock and the then applicable Conversion Rate.
     “Transfer Agent” shall mean the Corporation’s duly appointed transfer agent for the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. Initially, the Corporation will be the Transfer Agent.
     “Transfer Restricted Securities” shall mean each share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock (or the shares of Common Stock into which such share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is convertible) until (i) the date on which such security or its predecessor has been effectively registered under the Securities Act and disposed of in accordance with the Shelf Registration Statement, (ii) the date on which such security or predecessor is distributed to the public pursuant to Rule 144 under the Securities Act or is saleable pursuant to Rule 144(k) under the Securities Act or (iii) the date that such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock ceases to be outstanding.
     “Voting Rights Class” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 5(a)(i).
     “Voting Rights Triggering Event” shall mean the failure of the Corporation to pay dividends on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock with respect to six or more quarterly periods (whether or not consecutive).
     “Voting Stock” shall mean, with respect to any Person, securities of any class or classes of Capital Stock in such Person entitling the holders thereof (whether at all times or only so long as no senior class of stock has voting power by reason of contingency) generally to vote in the election of members of the Board of Directors or other governing body of such Person. For purposes of this definition, “Capital Stock” shall mean, with respect to any Person, any and all shares, interests, participations or other equivalents (however designated) of corporate stock or partnership interests and any and all warrants, options and rights with respect thereto (whether or not currently exercisable), including each class of common stock and preferred stock of such Person.
     3. Dividends.
     (a) The holders of shares of the outstanding 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be entitled, when, as and if declared by the Board of Directors out of funds of the Corporation legally available therefor, to receive cumulative cash dividends at the rate per annum of 4.50% per share on the Liquidation Preference (equivalent to $2.25 per annum per share), payable quarterly in arrears (the “Dividend Rate”). The Dividend Rate may be increased in the circumstances described in Section 3(b) below. Dividends payable for each full dividend period will be computed by dividing the Dividend Rate by four and shall be payable in arrears on each Dividend Payment Date (commencing March 1, 2004) for the quarterly period ending immediately prior to such Dividend Payment Date, to the holders of record of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock at the close of business on the Dividend Record Date applicable to such Dividend Payment Date. Such dividends shall be cumulative from the most recent date as to which dividends shall have been paid or, if no dividends have been paid, from the Issue Date (whether or not in any dividend period or periods the Board of Directors shall have declared such dividends or there shall be funds of the Corporation legally available for the payment of such dividends) and shall accumulate on a day-to-day basis, whether or not earned or declared, from and after the Issue Date. Dividends payable for any partial dividend period shall be computed on the basis of days elapsed over a 360-day year consisting of twelve 30-

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day months. Accumulated unpaid dividends accrue and cumulate dividends at the annual rate of 4.50% and are payable in the manner provided in this Section 3.
     (b) If (i) by November 5, 2004, the Shelf Registration Statement has not been filed with the Commission, (ii) by March 5, 2005, the Shelf Registration Statement has not been declared effective by the Commission, (iii) after the Shelf Registration Statement has been declared effective the Corporation fails to file a post-effective amendment, prospectus supplement, amendment or supplement to any document incorporated by reference into such prospectus or document if required by applicable law with the SEC within five business days after a Holder provides the Corporation with certain required information, if such filing is necessary to enable the Holder to deliver the prospectus to purchasers of such Holder’s Transfer Restricted Securities, (iv) the Shelf Registration Statement ceases to be effective or fails to be usable without being succeeded within 30 days by a post-effective amendment or an additional registration statement filed and declared effective (other than as permitted in (iii) above) pursuant to the Exchange Act that cures the failure of the registration statement to be effective or usable, and (v) the aggregate duration of any suspension periods in any period exceeds certain limits described in the Registration Rights Agreement (each such event referred to in clauses (i), (ii), (iii), (iv) and (v) a “Registration Default”), additional dividends shall accumulate on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, from and including the date on which any such Registration Default shall occur to, but excluding, the date on which the Registration Default has been cured, at the rate of 0.25% per year for the first 90 days following such date and at a rate of 0.50% per year thereafter (“Additional Dividends”). With respect to shares of Common Stock issued upon conversion of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, Additional Dividends will accumulate on the then applicable conversion price from and including the date on which any such Registration Default shall occur to, but excluding, the date on which the Registration Default has been cured, at the rate of 0.25% per year for the first 90 days following such date and at a rate of 0.50% per year thereafter. Except as mentioned above, the Corporation will have no other liabilities for monetary damages with respect to its registration obligations. The receipt of Additional Dividends will be the sole monetary remedy available to a Holder if the Corporation fails to meet these obligations.
     (c) No dividend will be declared or paid upon, or any sum set apart for the payment of dividends upon, any outstanding share of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock with respect to any dividend period unless all dividends for all preceding dividend periods have been declared and paid or declared and a sufficient sum set apart for the payment of such dividend upon all outstanding shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     (d) No dividends or other distributions (other than a dividend or distribution payable solely in shares of Parity Stock or Junior Stock (in the case of Parity Stock) or Junior Stock (in the case of Junior Stock) and other than cash paid in lieu of fractional shares) may be declared, made or paid, or set apart for payment upon, any Parity Stock or Junior Stock, nor may any Parity Stock or Junior Stock be redeemed, purchased or otherwise acquired for any consideration (or any money paid to or made available for a sinking fund for the redemption of any Parity Stock or Junior Stock) by or on behalf of the Corporation (except by conversion into or exchange for shares of Parity Stock or Junior Stock (in the case of Parity Stock) or Junior Stock (in the case of Junior Stock)), unless full Accumulated Dividends shall have been or contemporaneously are declared and paid, or are declared and a sum sufficient for the payment thereof is set apart for such payment, on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and any Parity Stock for all dividend payment periods terminating on or prior to the date of such declaration, payment, redemption, purchase or acquisition. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if full dividends have not been paid on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and any Parity Stock, dividends may be declared and paid on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and such Parity Stock so long as the dividends are declared and paid pro rata so that the amounts of dividends

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declared per share on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and such Parity Stock will in all cases bear to each other the same ratio that accumulated and unpaid dividends per share on the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and such other Parity Stock bear to each other.
     (e) Holders of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall not be entitled to any dividends on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, whether payable in cash, property or stock, in excess of full cumulative dividends and Additional Dividends (if any).
     (f) The holders of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock at the close of business on a Dividend Record Date will be entitled to receive the dividend payment on those shares on the corresponding Dividend Payment Date notwithstanding the subsequent conversion thereof or the Corporation’s default in payment of the dividend due on that Dividend Payment Date. However, shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock surrendered for conversion during the period between the close of business on any Dividend Record Date and the close of business on the Business Day immediately preceding the applicable Dividend Payment Date must be accompanied by payment of an amount equal to the dividend payable on the shares on that Dividend Payment Date; provided, however, that no such payment need be made if (1) the Corporation has specified a Mandatory Conversion Date that is after a Dividend Record Date and on or prior to the immediately following Dividend Payment Date or (2) any accumulated and unpaid dividends exist at the time of conversion with respect to such shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to the extent of such accumulated and unpaid dividends. A holder of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock on a Dividend Record Date who (or whose transferee) tenders any shares for conversion on the corresponding Dividend Payment Date will receive the dividend payable by the Corporation on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock on that date, and the converting holder need not include payment in the amount of such dividend upon surrender of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for conversion. Except as provided above with respect to a voluntary conversion pursuant to Section 7, the Corporation shall make no payment or allowance for unpaid dividends, whether or not in arrears, on converted shares or for dividends on the shares of Common Stock issued upon conversion.
     (g) In any case where any Dividend Payment Date or Conversion Date (including upon the occurrence of a Fundamental Change) of any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall not be a Business Day, at any place of payment, then payment of dividends (and Additional Dividends, if any) need not be made on such date, but may be made on the next succeeding Business Day at such place of payment with the same force and effect as if made on the dividend payment date or Conversion Date (including upon the occurrence of a Fundamental Change); and no interest shall accumulate on the amount so payable for the period from and after such Dividend Payment Date or Conversion Date, as the case may be, to such Business Day.
     (h) The Paying Agent shall return to the Corporation upon written request any money or property held by it for the payment of any amount with respect to the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock that remains unclaimed for two years, provided, however, that the Paying Agent, before being required to make any such return, shall at the expense of the Corporation cause to be published once in a newspaper of general circulation in The City of New York or mail to each such Holder notice that such money or property remains unclaimed and that, after a date specified therein, which shall not be less than 30 days from the date of such publication or mailing, any unclaimed money or property then remaining shall be returned to the Corporation. After return to the Corporation, Holders entitled to the money or property must look to the Corporation for payment as general creditors unless an applicable abandoned property law designates another Person.

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     4. Fundamental Change.
     (a) Purchase at the Option of the Holder Upon a Fundamental Change. Each Holder shall have the right, at such Holder’s option, to require the Corporation to purchase any or all of such Holder’s 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for cash or a check on the date that is no earlier than 60 days nor later than 90 days after the date of the Corporation Notice of the occurrence of such Fundamental Change (subject to extension to comply with applicable law, as provided in Section 4(h) (the “Fundamental Change Purchase Date”). The 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be repurchased in integral multiples of $50.00 (representing the Liquidation Preference). The Corporation shall purchase such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock at a price (the “Fundamental Change Purchase Price”) equal to 100% of the Liquidation Price of the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be purchased plus accumulated and unpaid dividends, including Additional Dividends, if any, to the Fundamental Change Purchase Date.
     (b) Notice of Fundamental Change. The Corporation, or at its request (which must be received by the Paying Agent at least three Business Days (or such lesser period as agreed to by the Paying Agent) prior to the date the Paying Agent is requested to give such notice as described below), the Paying Agent, in the name of and at the expense of the Corporation, shall mail to all Holders a Corporation Notice of the occurrence of a Fundamental Change and of the purchase right arising as a result thereof, including the information required by Section 4(e) hereof, on or before the 30th day after the occurrence of such Fundamental Change.
     (c) Exercise of Option. For 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be so purchased at the option of the Holder, the Paying Agent must receive at its office in Jackson, Michigan, or any other offices of the Paying Agent maintained for such purposes, such shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock duly endorsed for transfer, together with a written notice of purchase in the form attached hereto as Exhibit A (a “Fundamental Change Purchase Notice”) duly completed, on or before the 30th day prior to the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, subject to extension to comply with applicable law. The Fundamental Change Purchase Notice shall state:
  (i)   if certificated, the certificate numbers of the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock which the Holder shall deliver to be purchased, or, if not certificated, the Fundamental Change Purchase Notice must comply with appropriate Depository procedures;
 
  (ii)   the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock which the Holder shall deliver to be purchased, which portion must be $50.00 or an integral multiple thereof; and
 
  (iii)   that such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be purchased as of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date pursuant to the terms and conditions specified in the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and in this Certificate of Designation.
     (d) Procedures. The Corporation shall purchase from a Holder, pursuant to this Section 4, shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or multiples of $50.00 if so requested by such Holder.
     Any purchase by the Corporation contemplated pursuant to the provisions of this Section 4 shall be consummated by the delivery of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price to be received by the Holder promptly following the later of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date or the time of book-entry transfer or delivery of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.

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     Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, any Holder delivering to the Paying Agent the Fundamental Change Purchase Notice contemplated by Section 4(c) hereof shall have the right at any time prior to the close of business on the Business Day prior to the Fundamental Change Purchase Date to withdraw such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice (in whole or in part) by delivery of a written notice of withdrawal to the Paying Agent in accordance with Section 4(f) hereof.
     The Paying Agent shall promptly notify the Corporation of the receipt by it of any Fundamental Change Purchase Notice or written notice of withdrawal thereof.
     On or before 10:00 a.m. (New York City time) on the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, the Corporation shall deposit with the Paying Agent (or if the Corporation or an Affiliate of the Corporation is acting as the Paying Agent, shall segregate and hold in trust) money sufficient to pay the aggregate Fundamental Change Purchase Price of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be purchased pursuant to this Section 4. Payment by the Paying Agent of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price for such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be made promptly following the later of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date or the time of book-entry transfer or delivery of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. If the Paying Agent holds, in accordance with the terms of this Certificate of Designation, money sufficient to pay the Fundamental Change Purchase Price of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock on the Business Day following the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, then, on and after such date, such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall cease to be outstanding and dividends (including Additional Dividends, if any) on such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall cease to accumulate, whether or not book-entry transfer of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is made or such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is delivered to the Paying Agent, and all other rights of the Holder shall terminate (other than the right to receive the Fundamental Change Purchase Price upon delivery or transfer of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock). Nothing herein shall preclude any withholding tax required by law.
     The Corporation shall require each Paying Agent to agree in writing that the Paying Agent shall hold in trust for the benefit of Holders all money held by the Paying Agent for the payment of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price. If the Corporation or an Affiliate of the Corporation acts as Paying Agent, it shall segregate the money held by it as Paying Agent and hold it as a separate trust fund.
     All questions as to the validity, eligibility (including time of receipt) and acceptance of any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock pursuant to a Fundamental Change shall be determined by the Corporation, whose determination shall be final and binding.
     (e) Notice of Fundamental Change. The Corporation shall send notices (each, a “Corporation Notice”) to the Holders (and to beneficial owners as required by applicable law) at their addresses shown in the Security Register maintained by the Security Registrar, and delivered to the Paying Agent on or before the 30th day after the occurrence of the Fundamental Change (“Corporation Notice Date”). Each Corporation Notice shall include a form of Fundamental Change Purchase Notice to be completed by a Holder and shall state:
  (i)   the applicable Fundamental Change Purchase Price, excluding accumulated and unpaid dividends, Conversion Rate at the time of such notice (and any adjustments to the Conversion Rate) and, to the extent known at the time of such notice, the amount of dividends (including Additional Dividends, if any), if any, that will be payable with respect to the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock on the applicable Fundamental Change Purchase Date;

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  (ii)   the events causing the Fundamental Change and the date of the Fundamental Change;
 
  (iii)   the Fundamental Change Purchase Date;
 
  (iv)   the last date on which a Holder may exercise its purchase right;
 
  (v)   the name and address of the Paying Agent and the Conversion Agent;
 
  (vi)   that the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock must be surrendered to the Paying Agent to collect payment of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price;
 
  (vii)   that the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock as to which a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been given may be converted only if the applicable Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been withdrawn in accordance with the terms of this Certificate of Designation;
 
  (viii)   that the Fundamental Change Purchase Price for any of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock as to which a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been given and not withdrawn shall be paid by the Paying Agent promptly following the later of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date or the time of book-entry transfer or delivery of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock;
 
  (ix)   the procedures the Holder must follow under this Section 4;
 
  (x)   briefly, the conversion rights of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock;
 
  (xi)   that, unless the Corporation defaults in making payment of such Fundamental Change Purchase Price on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock covered by any Fundamental Change Purchase Notice, dividends (including Additional Dividends, if any) will cease to accumulate on and after the Fundamental Change Purchase Date;
 
  (xii)   the CUSIP or ISIN number of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock; and
 
  (xiii)   the procedures for withdrawing a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice.
     In connection with providing such Corporation Notice, the Corporation will issue a press release and publish a notice containing the information in such Corporation Notice in a newspaper of general circulation in The City of New York or publish such information on the Corporation’s then existing Web site or through such other public medium as the Corporation may use at the time.
     At the Corporation’s request, made at least five Business Days prior to the date upon which such notice is to be mailed, and at the Corporation’s expense, the Paying Agent shall give the Corporation Notice in the Corporation’s name; provided , however , that, in all cases, the text of the Corporation Notice shall be prepared by the Corporation.
     (f) Effect of Fundamental Change Purchase Notice. Upon receipt by the Corporation of the Fundamental Change Purchase Notice specified in this Section 4, the Holder of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock in respect of which such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice was given shall (unless such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice is withdrawn as specified in this Section 4(f)) thereafter be entitled to receive solely the Fundamental Change Purchase Price with respect to such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. Such Fundamental Change Purchase Price shall be paid by the Paying Agent to such Holder promptly following the later of (x) the Fundamental

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Change Purchase Date with respect to such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock (provided the conditions in this Section 4 have been satisfied) and (y) the time of delivery or book-entry transfer of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to the Paying Agent by the Holder thereof in the manner required by this Section 4. 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock in respect of which a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been given by the Holder thereof may not be converted for shares of Common Stock on or after the date of the delivery of such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice unless such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has first been validly withdrawn as specified in this Section 4(f). Payment of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price for shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock in registered, certificated form (“Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock”) for which a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been delivered and not withdrawn is conditioned upon delivery of such Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock (together with necessary endorsements) to the Paying Agent at its office in Jackson, Michigan, or any other office of the Paying Agent maintained for such purpose, at any time (whether prior to, on or after the Fundamental Change Purchase Date) after the delivery of such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice. Payment of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price for such Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock will be made promptly following the later of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date or the time of delivery of such Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     If the Paying Agent holds, in accordance with the terms of this Certificate of Designation, money sufficient to pay the Fundamental Change Purchase Price of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock on the Business Day following the Fundamental Change Purchase Date for such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, then, on and after such date, dividends on such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock will cease to accumulate, whether or not such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is delivered to the Paying Agent, and all other rights of the Holder shall terminate (other than the right to receive the Fundamental Change Purchase Price upon delivery of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock).
     A Fundamental Change Purchase Notice may be withdrawn by means of a written notice of withdrawal delivered to the office of the Paying Agent at any time prior to 5:00 p.m. New York City time on the Business Day prior to the Fundamental Change Purchase Date to which it relates specifying:
  (i)   if certificated, the certificate number of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock in respect of which such notice of withdrawal is being submitted, or, if not certificated, the written notice of withdrawal must comply with appropriate Depository procedures;
 
  (ii)   the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock with respect to which such notice of withdrawal is being submitted; and
 
  (iii)   the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, if any, which remains subject to the original Fundamental Change Purchase Notice and which have been or shall be delivered for purchase by the Corporation.
     (g) 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock Purchased in Part. Any shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock that are to be purchased only in part shall be surrendered (in physical or book-entry form) at the office of the Paying Agent (with, if the Corporation so requires, due endorsement by, or a written instrument of transfer in form satisfactory to the Corporation duly executed by, the Holder thereof or such Holder’s attorney duly authorized in writing) and the Corporation shall execute and the Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver to the Holder of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, without service charge, new shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, as requested by

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such Holder in an amount equal to, and in exchange for, the portion of the Liquidation Preference of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock so surrendered which is not purchased.
     (h) Covenant to Comply with Securities Laws Upon Purchase of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. In connection with any offer to purchase 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock under this Section 4, the Corporation shall, to the extent applicable: (i) comply with Rules 13e-4 and 14e-1 (and any successor provisions thereto) under the Exchange Act, if applicable; (ii) file the related Schedule TO (or any successor schedule, form or report) under the Exchange Act, if applicable; and (iii) otherwise comply with all applicable federal and state securities laws so as to permit the rights and obligations under this Section 4 hereof to be exercised in the time and in the manner specified in this Section 4.
     (i) Repayment to the Corporation. The Paying Agent shall return to the Corporation any cash or property that remains unclaimed as provided in the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, together with interest that the Paying Agent has agreed to pay, if any, held by it for the payment of a Fundamental Change Purchase Price; provided, however, that to the extent that the aggregate amount of cash or property deposited by the Corporation pursuant to this Section 4 exceeds the aggregate Fundamental Change Purchase Price of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or portions thereof which the Corporation is obligated to purchase as of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, then promptly on and after the Business Day following the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, the Paying Agent shall return any such excess to the Corporation together with interest that the Paying Agent has agreed to pay, if any.
     (j) Officers’ Certificate. At least five Business Days before the Corporation Notice Date, the Corporation shall deliver an Officers’ Certificate to the Paying Agent (provided, that, at the Corporation’s option, the matters to be addressed in such Officers’ Certificate may be divided among two such certificates) specifying:
  (i)   the manner of payment selected by the Corporation; and
 
  (ii)   whether the Corporation desires the Paying Agent to give the Corporation Notice required by Section 4(e) hereof.
     5. Voting.
     (a) The shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall have no voting rights except as set forth below or as otherwise required by Michigan law from time to time:
  (i)   If and whenever at any time or times a Voting Rights Triggering Event occurs, then the holders of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, voting as a single class with any other 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or preference securities having similar voting rights that are exercisable (the “Voting Rights Class”), will be entitled at the next regular or special meeting of shareholders of the Corporation to elect two additional directors of the Corporation, unless the Board of Directors is comprised of fewer than six directors at such time, in which case the Voting Rights Class shall be entitled to elect one additional director. Upon the election of any such additional directors, the number of directors that comprise the Board of Directors shall be increased by such number of additional directors.
 
  (ii)   Such voting rights may be exercised at a special meeting of the holders of the shares of the Voting Rights Class, called as hereinafter provided, or at any annual meeting of

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      shareholders held for the purpose of electing directors, and thereafter at each such annual meeting until such time as all dividends in arrears on the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall have been paid in full, at which time or times such voting rights and the term of the directors elected pursuant to Section 5(a)(i) shall terminate.
 
  (iii)   At any time when such voting rights shall have vested in holders of shares of the Voting Rights Class, an Officer of the Corporation may call, and, upon written request of the record holders of shares representing at least twenty-five percent (25%) of the voting power of the shares then outstanding of the Voting Rights Class, addressed to the Secretary of the Corporation, shall call a special meeting of the holders of shares of the Voting Rights Class. Such meeting shall be held at the earliest practicable date upon the notice required for annual meetings of shareholders at the place for holding annual meetings of shareholders of the Corporation, or, if none, at a place designated by the Board of Directors. Notwithstanding the provisions of this Section 5(a)(iii), no such special meeting shall be called during a period within the 60 days immediately preceding the date fixed for the next annual meeting of shareholders, in which such case the election of directors pursuant to Section 5(a)(i) shall be held at such annual meeting of shareholders.
 
  (iv)   At any meeting held for the purpose of electing directors at which the holders of the Voting Rights Class shall have the right to elect directors as provided herein, the presence in person or by proxy of the holders of shares representing more than fifty percent (50%) in voting power of the then outstanding shares of the Voting Rights Class shall be required and shall be sufficient to constitute a quorum of such class for the election of directors by such class. The affirmative vote of the holders of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock constituting a majority of the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock present at such meeting, in person or by proxy shall be sufficient to elect any such director.
 
  (v)   Any director elected pursuant to the voting rights created under this Section 5(a) shall hold office until the next annual meeting of shareholders (unless such term has previously terminated pursuant to Section 5(a)(ii)) and any vacancy in respect of any such director shall be filled only by vote of the remaining director so elected by holders of the Voting Rights Class, or, if there be no such remaining director, by the holders of shares of the Voting Rights Class at a special meeting called in accordance with the procedures set forth in this Section 5, or, if no such special meeting is called, at the next annual meeting of shareholders. Upon any termination of such voting rights, the term of office of all directors elected pursuant to this Section 5 shall terminate.
 
  (vi)   So long as any shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock remain outstanding, unless a greater percentage shall then be required by law, the Corporation shall not, without the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of all of the outstanding 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock voting or consenting, as the case may be, separately as one class, (i) create, authorize or issue any class or series of Senior Stock (or any security convertible into Senior Stock) or (ii) amend the Articles of Incorporation so as to affect adversely the specified rights, preferences, privileges or voting rights of holders of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
 
  (vii)   In exercising the voting rights set forth in this Section 5(a), each share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be entitled to one vote.

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     (b) The Corporation may authorize, increase the authorized amount of, or issue any class or series of Parity Stock or Junior Stock, without the consent of the holders of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, and in taking such actions the Corporation shall not be deemed to have affected adversely the rights, preferences, privileges or voting rights of holders of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     6. Liquidation Rights.
     (a) In the event of any liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation, whether voluntary of involuntary, each holder of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive and to be paid out of the assets of the Corporation available for distribution to its shareholders the Liquidation Preference plus Accumulated Dividends and Additional Dividends thereon in preference to the holders of, and before any payment or distribution is made on, any Junior Stock, including, without limitation, on any Common Stock.
     (b) Neither the sale, conveyance, exchange or transfer (for cash, shares of stock, securities or other consideration) of all or substantially all the assets or business of the Corporation (other than in connection with the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of its business) nor the merger or consolidation of the Corporation into or with any other Person shall be deemed to be a liquidation, winding-up or dissolution, voluntary or involuntary, for the purposes of this Section 6.
     (c) After the payment to the holders of the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock of full preferential amounts provided for in this Section 6, the holders of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock as such shall have no right or claim to any of the remaining assets of the Corporation.
     (d) In the event the assets of the Corporation available for distribution to the holders of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock upon any liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation, whether voluntary or involuntary, shall be insufficient to pay in full all amounts to which such holders are entitled pursuant to Section 6(a), no such distribution shall be made on account of any shares of Parity Stock upon such liquidation, dissolution or winding-up unless proportionate distributable amounts shall be paid on account of the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, ratably, in proportion to the full distributable amounts for which holders of all 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and of any Parity Stock are entitled upon such liquidation, winding-up or dissolution.
     7. Conversion.
     (a) Conversion Rights. A Holder may convert 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock into Common Stock during the periods and upon satisfaction of at least one of the conditions set forth below:
  (i)   in any calendar quarter (and only during such calendar quarter) if the Last Reported Sale Price for Common Stock for at least 20 Trading Days during the period of 30 consecutive Trading Days ending on the last Trading Day of the previous calendar quarter is greater than or equal to 120% of the Conversion Price per share of Common Stock on such last Trading Day;
 
  (ii)   during the five Business Days immediately following any ten consecutive Trading Day period in which the Trading Price per Liquidation Preference of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock (as determined following a request by a Holder of 4.50% Convertible

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      Preferred Stock in accordance with the procedures described herein) for each day of that period was less than 95% of the product of the sale price of Common Stock and the then applicable Conversion Rate (the “Trading Exception”); provided, however, that a Holder may not convert its 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock if the average closing sale price of Common Stock for such ten consecutive Trading Day period is between the then current Conversion Price and 120% of the then applicable Conversion Price; in connection with any conversion upon satisfaction of such Trading Price condition, the Conversion Agent shall have no obligation to determine the Trading Price unless the Corporation has requested such determination; and the Corporation shall have no obligation to make such request unless the Holder provides reasonable evidence that the Trading Price would be less than 95% of the product of the sale price of Common Stock and the then applicable Conversion Rate; at which time, the Corporation shall instruct the Conversion Agent to determine the Trading Price beginning on the next Trading Day and on each successive Trading Day until the Trading Price is greater than or equal to 95% of the product of the sale price of Common Stock and the then applicable Conversion Rate;
 
  (iii)   the Corporation becomes a party to a consolidation, merger or binding share exchange pursuant to which the Common Stock would be converted into cash or property (other than securities), in which case a Holder may surrender 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for conversion at any time from and after the date which is 15 days prior to the anticipated effective date for the transaction until 15 days after the actual effective date of such transaction; or
 
  (iv)   the Corporation elects to (i) distribute to all holders of Common Stock assets, debt securities or rights to purchase securities of the Corporation, which distribution has a per share value as determined by the Board of Directors exceeding 15% of the Last Reported Sale Price of a share of Common Stock on the Trading Day immediately preceding the declaration date for such distribution, or (ii) distribute to all holders of Common Stock rights entitling them to purchase, for a period expiring within 60 days after the date of such distribution, shares of Common Stock at less than the Last Reported Sale Price of Common Stock on the Trading Day immediately preceding the declaration date of the distribution. In the case of the foregoing clauses (i) and (ii), the Corporation must notify the Holders at least 20 Business Days immediately prior to the ex-dividend date for such distribution. Once the Corporation has given such notice, Holders may surrender their 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for conversion at any time thereafter until the earlier of the close of business on the Business Day immediately prior to the ex-dividend date or the Corporation’s announcement that such distribution will not take place; provided, however, that a Holder may not exercise this right to convert if the Holder may participate in the distribution without conversion. As used herein, the term “ex dividend date,” when used with respect to any issuance or distribution, shall mean the first date on which the Common Stock trades regular way on such exchange or in such market without the right to receive such issuance or distribution.
     The initial Conversion Rate is 5.0541 shares of Common Stock per share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, subject to adjustment in certain events as described herein. The Corporation shall deliver cash or a check in lieu of any fractional share of Common Stock. A Holder may convert fewer than all of its 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock so long as the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock converted is an integral multiple of the Liquidation Preference.

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     Holders of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock at the close of business on a Dividend Record Date will receive payment of dividends, payable on the corresponding Dividend Payment Date notwithstanding the conversion of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock at any time after the close of business on such Dividend Record Date. 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock surrendered for conversion by a Holder during the period from the close of business on any Dividend Record Date to the opening of business on the immediately following Dividend Payment Date must be accompanied by payment of an amount equal to the dividend that the Holder is to receive on such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock; provided, however, that no such payment need be made if (1) the Corporation has specified a Mandatory Conversion Date that is after a Dividend Record Date and on or prior to the immediately following Dividend Payment Date or (2) any accumulated and unpaid dividends exist at the time of conversion with respect to such shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to the extent of such accumulated and unpaid dividends.
     To convert 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock a Holder must (i) complete and manually sign the irrevocable conversion notice in the form attached hereto as Exhibit B (a “Conversion Notice”) (or complete and manually sign a facsimile of such notice) and deliver such notice to the Conversion Agent at its office in Jackson, Michigan or any other offices of the Conversion Agent maintained by the Conversion Agent for such purpose, (ii) surrender the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to the Conversion Agent, (iii) furnish appropriate endorsements and transfer documents if required by the Conversion Agent or the Corporation and (iv) pay any transfer or similar tax, if required.
     (b) Conversion Procedures. To convert 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, a Holder must satisfy the requirements in this Section 7 and in the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. The date on which the Holder satisfies all those requirements is the conversion date (the “Conversion Date”). As soon as practicable, but in no event later than the fifth Business Day following the Conversion Date, the Corporation shall update the global security representing the shares of Common Stock to record the Holder’s interest in the Common Stock, or deliver to the Holder, through the Conversion Agent, a certificate for the number of full shares of Common Stock issuable upon the conversion and cash or a check in lieu of any fractional share determined pursuant to Section 7(c) hereof. The Person in whose name the certificate is registered shall be treated as a shareholder of record on and after the Conversion Date; provided, however, that no surrender of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock on any date when the stock transfer books of the Corporation shall be closed shall be effective to constitute the Person or Persons entitled to receive the shares of Common Stock upon such conversion as the record holder or holders of such shares of Common Stock on such date, but such surrender shall be effective to constitute the Person or Persons entitled to receive such shares of Common Stock as the record holder or holders thereof for all purposes at the close of business on the next succeeding day on which such stock transfer books are open; such conversion shall be at the Conversion Rate in effect on the date that such shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall have been surrendered for conversion, as if the stock transfer books of the Corporation had not been closed. Upon conversion of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, such Person shall no longer be a Holder of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     No payment or adjustment shall be made for dividends on or other distributions with respect to any Common Stock except as provided in Section 7(f) hereof or as otherwise provided in this Certificate of Designation.
     On conversion of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, that portion of Accumulated Dividends with respect to the converted 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock will be deemed canceled,

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extinguished or forfeited, rather than paid in full to the Holder thereof through delivery of the Common Stock (together with the cash or check payment, if any, in lieu of fractional shares) in exchange for the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock being converted pursuant to the provisions hereof, and the Fair Market Value of such shares of Common Stock (together with any such cash or check payment in lieu of fractional shares) shall be treated as issued, to the extent thereof, first in exchange for Accumulated Dividends through the Conversion Date, and the balance, if any, of such Fair Market Value of such Common Stock (and any such cash or check payment) shall be treated as issued in exchange for the Liquidation Preference of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock being converted pursuant to the provisions hereof.
     Upon surrender of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock that is converted in part, the Corporation shall execute, and the Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver to the Holder, new shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock in a number equal to the unconverted portion of the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock surrendered.
     If the last day on which 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock may be converted is a legal holiday in a place where a Conversion Agent is located, the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock may be surrendered to that Conversion Agent on the next succeeding day that it is not a legal holiday.
     (c) Cash or Check Payments in Lieu of Fractional Shares. The Corporation shall not issue a fractional share of Common Stock upon conversion of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. Instead the Corporation shall deliver cash (or Corporation’s check) for the current market value of the fractional share. The current market value of a fractional share shall be determined to the nearest 1/10,000th of a share by multiplying the Last Reported Sale Price of a full share of Common Stock on the Trading Day immediately preceding the Conversion Date by the fractional amount and rounding the product to the nearest whole cent.
     (d) Taxes on Conversion. If a Holder converts 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, the Corporation shall pay any documentary, stamp or similar issue or transfer tax due on the issue of shares of Common Stock upon the conversion. However, the Holder shall pay any such tax which is due because the Holder requests the shares to be issued in a name other than the Holder’s name. The Conversion Agent may refuse to deliver the certificates representing the Common Stock being issued in a name other than the Holder’s name until the Conversion Agent receives a sum sufficient to pay any tax which shall be due because the shares are to be issued in a name other than the Holder’s name. Nothing herein shall preclude any withholding tax required by law.
     (e) Covenants of the Corporation. The Corporation shall, prior to issuance of any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock hereunder, and from time to time as may be necessary, reserve out of its authorized but unissued Common Stock a sufficient number of shares of Common Stock to permit the conversion of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     All shares of Common Stock delivered upon conversion of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be newly issued shares or treasury shares, shall be duly and validly issued and fully paid and nonassessable and shall be free from preemptive rights and free of any lien or adverse claim.
     The Corporation shall endeavor promptly to comply with all federal and state securities laws regulating the order and delivery of shares of Common Stock upon the conversion of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, if any, and shall cause to have listed or quoted all such shares of Common Stock on each United States national securities exchange or over-the-counter or other domestic market on which the Common Stock is then listed or quoted.

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     (f) Adjustments to Conversion Rate. The Conversion Rate shall be adjusted from time to time, without duplication, as follows:
  (i)   In case the Corporation shall: (a) pay a dividend, or make a distribution, exclusively in shares of its capital stock, on the Common Stock; (b) subdivide its outstanding Common Stock into a greater number of shares; (c) combine its outstanding Common Stock into a smaller number of shares; or (d) reclassify its Common Stock, the Conversion Rate in effect immediately prior to the record date or effective date, as the case may be, for the adjustment pursuant to this Section 7(f) as described below, shall be adjusted so that the Holder of any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock thereafter surrendered for conversion shall be entitled to receive the number of shares of Common Stock of the Corporation which such Holder would have owned or have been entitled to receive after the happening of any of the events described above had such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock been converted immediately prior to such record date or effective date, as the case may be. An adjustment made pursuant to this Section 7(f) shall become effective immediately after the applicable record date in the case of a dividend or distribution and shall become effective immediately after the applicable effective date in the case of subdivision, combination or reclassification of the Corporation’s Common Stock. If any dividend or distribution of the type described in clause (a) above is not so paid or made, the Conversion Rate shall again be adjusted to the Conversion Rate which would then be in effect if such dividend or distribution had not been declared.
 
  (ii)   In case the Corporation shall issue rights or warrants to all holders of the Common Stock entitling them (for a period expiring within 60 days after the date of issuance of such rights or warrants) to subscribe for or purchase Common Stock at a price per share less than the Market Price per share of Common Stock on the record date fixed for determination of shareholders entitled to receive such rights or warrants, the Conversion Rate in effect immediately after such record date shall be adjusted so that the same shall equal the Conversion Rate determined by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately after such record date by a fraction of which (a) the numerator shall be the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding on such record date plus the number of additional shares of Common Stock offered for subscription or purchase, and (b) the denominator shall be the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding on such record date plus the number of shares which the aggregate offering price of the total number of shares so offered would purchase at the Market Price per share of Common Stock on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such issuance of rights or warrants. Such adjustment shall be made successively whenever any such rights or warrants are issued, and shall become effective immediately after the opening of business on the day following the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such rights or warrants. To the extent that shares of Common Stock are not delivered after the expiration of such rights or warrants, the Conversion Rate shall be readjusted to the Conversion Rate which would then be in effect had the adjustments made upon the issuance of such rights or warrants been made on the basis of delivery of only the number of shares of Common Stock actually delivered. If such rights or warrants are not so issued, the Conversion Rate shall again be adjusted to be the Conversion Rate which would then be in effect if such record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such rights or warrants had not been fixed. In determining whether any rights or warrants entitle the holders to subscribe for or purchase shares of Common Stock at less than such Market Price, and in determining the aggregate offering price of such shares of Common Stock,

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      there shall be taken into account any consideration received by the Corporation for such rights or warrants, the value of such consideration, if other than cash, to be determined by the Board of Directors.
 
  (iii)   In case the Corporation shall, by dividend or otherwise, distribute to all holders of Common Stock any assets, debt securities or rights or warrants to purchase any of its securities (excluding (a) any dividend, distribution or issuance covered by those referred to in Section 7(f)(i) or Section 7(f)(ii) hereof and (b) any dividend or distribution paid exclusively in cash) (any of the foregoing hereinafter in this Section 7(f)(iii) called the “Distributed Assets or Securities”) in an aggregate amount per share of Common Stock that, combined together with the aggregate amount of any other such distributions to all holders of its Common Stock made within the 12 months preceding the date of payment of such distribution, and in respect of which no adjustment pursuant to this Section 7(f)(iii) has been made, exceeds 15% of the Market Price on the Trading Day immediately preceding the declaration of such distribution, then the Conversion Rate shall be adjusted so that the same shall equal the Conversion Rate determined by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately prior to the close of business on the record date mentioned below by a fraction of which (A) the numerator shall be the Market Price per share of the Common Stock on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such dividend or distribution, and (B) the denominator shall be (1) the Market Price per share of the Common Stock on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such dividend or distribution less (2) the Fair Market Value on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such dividend or distribution (as determined by the Board of Directors, whose determination shall be conclusive, and described in a certificate filed with the Paying Agent) of the Distributed Assets or Securities so distributed applicable to one share of Common Stock. Such adjustment shall become effective immediately after the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution; provided , however , that, if (a) the Fair Market Value of the portion of the Distributed Assets or Securities so distributed applicable to one share of Common Stock is equal to or greater than the Market Price of the Common Stock on the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution or (b) the Market Price of the Common Stock on the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution is greater than the Fair Market Value per share of such Distributed Assets or Securities by less than $1.00, then, in lieu of the foregoing adjustment, adequate provision shall be made so that each Holder shall have the right to receive upon conversion, in addition to the shares of Common Stock, the kind and amount of assets, debt securities, or rights or warrants comprising the Distributed Assets or Securities the Holder would have received had such Holder converted such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock immediately prior to the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution. In the event that such distribution is not so paid or made, the Conversion Rate shall again be adjusted to the Conversion Rate which would then be in effect if such distribution had not been declared.
 
  (iv)   In case the Corporation shall make (a) any distributions, by dividend or otherwise, during any quarterly fiscal periods consisting exclusively of cash to all holders of outstanding shares of Common Stock in an aggregate amount that, together with (b) other all-cash or all-check distributions made to all holders of outstanding shares of Common Stock during such quarterly fiscal period, and (c) any cash and the Fair Market

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      Value, as of the expiration of any tender or exchange offer (other than consideration payable in respect of any odd-lot tender offer) of consideration payable in respect of any tender or exchange offer by the Corporation or any of the Corporation’s Subsidiaries for all or any portion of shares of Common Stock concluded during such quarterly fiscal period, exceed the product of $0 multiplied by the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding on the record date for such distribution, then, and in each such case, the Conversion Rate shall be adjusted so that the same shall equal the Conversion Rate determined by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately prior to the close of business on the record date fixed for the determination of holders of Common Stock entitled to receive such distribution by a fraction of which (A) the numerator shall be the Market Price per share of the Common Stock on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such dividend or distribution and (B) the denominator shall be (1) the Market Price per share of Common Stock on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such dividend or distribution plus (2) $0 less (3) an amount equal to the quotient of (x) the combined amount distributed or payable in the transactions described in clauses (a), (b) and (c) above during such quarterly fiscal period and (y) the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding on such record date, such adjustment to become effective immediately after the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution.
 
  (v)   With respect to Section 7(f)(iii) hereof, in the event that the Corporation makes any distribution to all holders of Common Stock consisting of Equity Interests in a Subsidiary or other business unit of the Corporation, the Conversion Rate shall be adjusted so that the same shall equal the Conversion Rate determined by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately prior to the close of business on the record date fixed for the determination of holders of Common Stock entitled to receive such distribution by a fraction of which (i) the numerator shall be (x) the Spin-off Market Price per share of the Common Stock on such record date plus (y) the Spin-off Market Price per Equity Interest of the Subsidiary or other business unit of the Corporation on such record date and (ii) the denominator shall be the Spin-off Market Price per share of the Common Stock on such record date, such adjustment to become effective 10 Trading Days after the effective date of such distribution of Equity Interests in a Subsidiary or other business unit of the Corporation.
 
  (vi)   Upon conversion of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, the Holders shall receive, in addition to the Common Stock issuable upon such conversion, the rights issued under any future shareholder rights plan the Corporation implements (notwithstanding the occurrence of an event causing such rights to separate from the Common Stock at or prior to the time of conversion) unless, prior to conversion, the rights have expired, terminated or been redeemed or exchanged in accordance with such rights plan. If, and only if, the Holders of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock receive rights under such shareholder rights plans as described in the preceding sentence upon conversion of their 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, then no other adjustment pursuant to this Section 7(f) shall be made in connection with such shareholder rights plans.
 
  (vii)   For purposes of this Section 7(f), the number of shares of Common Stock at any time outstanding shall not include shares held in the treasury of the Corporation but shall include shares issuable in respect of scrip certificates issued in lieu of fractions of shares

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      of Common Stock. The Corporation shall not pay any dividend or make any distribution on shares of Common Stock held in the treasury of the Corporation.
 
  (viii)   Notwithstanding the foregoing, in no event shall the Conversion Rate exceed the maximum conversion rate specified under this Section 7(f)(viii) (the “Maximum Conversion Rate”) as a result of an adjustment pursuant to Section 7(f)(iii) or Section 7(f)(iv) hereof. The Maximum Conversion Rate shall initially be 6.5703 and shall be appropriately adjusted from time to time for any stock dividends on or subdivisions or combinations of the Common Stock. The Maximum Conversion Rate shall not apply to any adjustments made pursuant to any of the events in Section 7(f)(i) or Section 7(f)(ii) hereof.
     (g) Calculation Methodology. No adjustment in the Conversion Price need be made unless the adjustment would require an increase or decrease of at least 1% in the Conversion Price then in effect, provided that any adjustment that would otherwise be required to be made shall be carried forward and taken into account in any subsequent adjustment. Except as stated in this Section 7, the Conversion Rate will not be adjusted for the issuance of Common Stock or any securities convertible into or exchangeable for Common Stock or carrying the right to purchase any of the foregoing. Any adjustments that are made shall be carried forward and taken into account in any subsequent adjustment. All calculations under Section 4 and Section 7(f) hereof and this Section 7(g) shall be made to the nearest cent or to the nearest 1/10,000th of a share, as the case may be.
  (h)   When No Adjustment Required. No adjustment to the Conversion Rate need be made:
 
  (i)   upon the issuance of any shares of Common Stock pursuant to any present or future plan providing for the reinvestment of dividends or interest payable on securities of the Corporation and the investment of additional optional amounts in shares of Common Stock under any plan;
 
  (ii)   upon the issuance of any shares of Common Stock or options or rights to purchase those shares pursuant to any present or future employee, director or consultant benefit plan or program of or assumed by the Corporation or any of its Subsidiaries;
 
  (iii)   upon the issuance of any shares of Common Stock pursuant to any option, warrant, right, or exercisable, exchangeable or convertible security not described in clause (ii) above and outstanding as of the date of this Certificate of Designation;
 
  (iv)   for a change in the par value or no par value of the Common Stock;
 
  (v)   for accumulated and unpaid dividends (including Additional Dividends, if any); or
 
  (vi)   if Holders are to participate in a merger or consolidation on a basis and with notice that the Board of Directors determines to be fair and appropriate in light of the basis and notice on which holders of Common Stock participate in the transaction; provided that the basis on which the Holders are to participate in the transaction shall not be deemed to be fair if it would require the conversion of securities at any time prior to the expiration of the conversion period specified for such securities.
     To the extent the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock becomes convertible into cash, assets or property (other than capital stock of the Corporation or securities to which Section 7(l) hereof

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applies), no adjustment shall be made thereafter as to the cash, assets or property. Interest shall not accumulate on such cash.
     (i) Notice of Adjustment. Whenever the Conversion Rate is adjusted, the Corporation shall promptly mail to Holders a notice of the adjustment. The Corporation shall file with the Conversion Agent such notice. The certificate shall, absent manifest error, be conclusive evidence that the adjustment is correct. No Conversion Agent shall be under any duty or responsibility with respect to any such certificate except to exhibit the same to any Holder desiring inspection thereof.
     (j) Voluntary Increase. The Corporation may make such increases in the Conversion Rate, in addition to those required by Section 7(f) hereof, as the Board of Directors considers to be advisable to avoid or diminish any income tax to holders of Common Stock or rights to purchase Common Stock resulting from any dividend or distribution of stock (or rights to acquire stock) or from any event treated as such for income tax purposes. To the extent permitted by applicable law, the Corporation may from time to time increase the Conversion Rate by any amount, temporarily or otherwise, for any period of at least 20 days if the increase is irrevocable during the period and the Board of Directors shall have made a determination that such increase would be in the best interests of the Corporation, which determination shall be conclusive. Whenever the Conversion Rate is so increased, the Corporation shall mail to Holders and file with the Conversion Agent a notice of such increase. The Conversion Agent shall not be under any duty or responsibility with respect to any such notice except to exhibit the same to any holder desiring inspection thereof. The Corporation shall mail the notice at least 15 days before the date the increased Conversion Rate takes effect. The notice shall state the increased Conversion Rate and the period it shall be in effect.
  (k)   Notice to Holders Prior to Certain Actions. In case:
 
  (i)   the Corporation shall declare a dividend (or any other distribution) on its Common Stock that would require an adjustment in the Conversion Rate pursuant to Section 7(f) hereof;
 
  (ii)   the Corporation shall authorize the granting to all or substantially all the holders of its Common Stock of rights or warrants to subscribe for or purchase any share of any class or any other rights or warrants;
 
  (iii)   of any reclassification or reorganization of the Common Stock of the Corporation (other than a subdivision or combination of its outstanding Common Stock, or a change in par value, or from par value to no par value, or from no par value to par value), or of any consolidation or merger to which the Corporation is a party and for which approval of any shareholders of the Corporation is required, or of the sale or transfer of all or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation; or
 
  (iv)   of the voluntary or involuntary dissolution, liquidation or winding-up of the Corporation,
 
      the Corporation shall cause to be filed with the Conversion Agent and to be mailed to each Holder at its address appearing on the Security Register, as promptly as possible but in any event at least 15 days prior to the applicable date hereinafter specified, a notice stating (x) the date on which a record is to be taken for the purpose of such dividend, distribution or rights or warrants, or, if a record is not to be taken, the date as of which the holders of Common Stock of record to be entitled to such dividend, distribution, or rights or warrants are to be determined or (y) the date on which such

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      reclassification, reorganization, consolidation, merger, sale, transfer, dissolution, liquidation or winding-up is expected to become effective or occur, and the date as of which it is expected that holders of Common Stock of record shall be entitled to exchange their Common Stock for securities or other property deliverable upon such reclassification, reorganization, consolidation, merger, sale, transfer, dissolution, liquidation or winding-up. Failure to give such notice, or any defect therein, shall not affect the legality or validity of such dividend, distribution, reclassification, reorganization, consolidation, merger, sale, transfer, dissolution, liquidation or winding-up.
     (l) Effect of Reclassification, Consolidation, Merger, Binding Share Exchange or Sale. If any of the following events occur, namely: (i) any reclassification or change of outstanding shares of Common Stock (other than a change in par value, or from par value to no par value, or from no par value to par value, or as a result of a subdivision or combination); (ii) any consolidation, merger, combination or binding share exchange of the Corporation with another Person as a result of which holders of Common Stock shall be entitled to receive stock, securities or other property or assets (including cash) with respect to or in exchange for such Common Stock; or (iii) any sale or conveyance of the properties and assets of the Corporation as, or substantially as, an entirety to any other Person as a result of which holders of Common Stock shall be entitled to receive stock, securities or other property or assets (including cash) with respect to or in exchange for such Common Stock, then the Corporation or the successor or purchasing Person, as the case may be, shall cause an amendment to this Certificate of Designation to be executed and filed in accordance with Michigan law, providing that each share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be convertible into the kind and amount of shares of stock and other securities or property or assets (including cash) receivable upon such reclassification, change, consolidation, merger, combination, binding share exchange, sale or conveyance by a holder of a number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock immediately prior to such reclassification, change, consolidation, merger, combination, binding share exchange, sale or conveyance. Such amended Certificate of Designation shall provide for adjustments which shall be as nearly equivalent as may be practicable to the adjustments provided for in this Section 7(l).
     The Corporation shall cause notice of the execution of such amended Certificate of Designation to be mailed to each Holder, at its address appearing on the Security Register, within 20 days after filing thereof. Failure to deliver such notice shall not affect the legality or validity of such supplemental indenture.
     The above provisions of this Section 7(l) shall similarly apply to successive reclassifications, changes, consolidations, mergers, combinations, binding share exchanges, sales and conveyances.
     If this Section 7(l) applies to any event or occurrence, Section 7(f) hereof shall not apply.
     (m) Responsibility of Conversion Agent. The Conversion Agent shall not at any time be under any duty or responsibility to any Holder to either calculate the Conversion Rate or determine whether any facts exist which may require any adjustment of the Conversion Rate, or with respect to the nature or extent or calculation of any such adjustment when made, or with respect to the method employed, or herein or in any amended Certificate of Designation provided to be employed, in making the same and shall be protected in relying upon an Officers’ Certificate with respect to the same. The Conversion Agent shall not be accountable with respect to the validity or value (or the kind or amount) of any shares of Common Stock, or of any securities or property, which may at any time be issued or delivered upon the conversion of any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and the

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Conversion Agent makes no representations with respect thereto. The Conversion Agent shall not be responsible for any failure of the Corporation to issue, transfer or deliver any shares of Common Stock or stock certificates or other securities or property or cash upon the surrender of any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for the purpose of conversion or to comply with any of the duties, responsibilities or covenants of the Corporation contained in this Section 7(m). Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Conversion Agent shall not be under any responsibility to determine the correctness of any provisions contained in any amended Certificate of Designation entered into pursuant to this Section 7 relating either to the kind or amount of shares of stock or securities or property (including cash) receivable by Holders upon the conversion of their 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock after any event referred to in this Section 7 or to any adjustment to be made with respect thereto, but may accept as conclusive evidence of the correctness of any such provisions, and shall be protected in relying upon, the Officers’ Certificate (which the Corporation shall be obligated to file with the Conversion Agent prior to the execution of any such amended Certificate of Designation) with respect thereto.
     (n) Simultaneous Adjustments. In the event that Section 7(f) hereof requires adjustments to the Conversion Rate under more than one of Section 7(f)(i), Section 7(f)(ii), Section 7(f)(iii) or Section 7(f)(iv) hereof, and the Dividend Record Dates for the distributions giving rise to such adjustments shall occur on the same date, then such adjustments shall be made by applying, first, the provisions of Section 7(f)(iii) hereof, second, the provisions of Section 7(f)(i) hereof and third, the provisions of Section 7(f)(ii) hereof; provided, however, that nothing in this Section 7(n) shall be done to evade the principle set forth in Section 7(f)(viii) hereof that the Maximum Conversion Rate shall not apply to any adjustments made with respect to any of the events in Section 7(f)(i) or Section 7(f)(ii) hereof.
     (o) Successive Adjustments. After an adjustment to the Conversion Rate under Section 7(f) hereof, any subsequent event requiring an adjustment under Section 7(f) shall cause an adjustment to the Conversion Rate as so adjusted.
     (p) General Considerations. Whenever successive adjustments to the Conversion Rate are called for pursuant to this Section 7, such adjustments shall be made to the Market Price as may be necessary or appropriate to effectuate the intent of this Section 7 and to avoid unjust or inequitable results as determined in good faith by the Board of Directors.
     (q) Corporation Determination Final. Any determination which the Board of Directors must make pursuant to this Section 7 shall be conclusive and binding on the Holders.
     8. Mandatory Conversion.
     (a) At any time on or after December 5, 2008, the Corporation shall have the right, at its option, to cause the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, in whole but not in part, to be automatically converted into that number of whole shares of Common Stock for each share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock equal to the quotient of (i) the Liquidation Preference divided by (ii) the Conversion Price then in effect, with any resulting fractional shares of Common Stock to be settled in accordance with Section 7(c). The Corporation may exercise its right to cause a mandatory conversion pursuant to this Section 8(a) only if the Last Reported Sale Price of the Common Stock equals or exceeds 130% of the Conversion Price then in effect for at least 20 Trading Days in any consecutive 30-day trading period on the NYSE (or such other national securities exchange or automated quotation system on which the Common Stock is then listed or authorized for quotation), including the last

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Trading Day of such 30-day period, ending on the Trading Day prior to the Corporation’s issuance of a press release announcing the mandatory conversion as described in Section 8(b).
     (b) To exercise the mandatory conversion right described in Section 8(a), the Corporation must issue a press release for publication on the Dow Jones News Service prior to the opening of business on the first trading day following any date on which the conditions described in Section 8(a) are met, announcing such a mandatory conversion. The Corporation shall also give notice by mail or by publication (with subsequent prompt notice by mail) to the holders of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock (not more than four Business Days after the date of the press release) of the mandatory conversion announcing the Corporation’s intention to convert the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. The conversion date will be a date selected by the Corporation (the “Mandatory Conversion Date”) and will be no more than five days after the date on which the Corporation issues the press release described in this Section 8(b).
     (c) In addition to any information required by applicable law or regulation, the press release and notice of a mandatory conversion described in Section 8(b) shall state, as appropriate: (i) the Mandatory Conversion Date; (ii) the number of shares of Common Stock to be issued upon conversion of each share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock; (iii) the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be converted; and (iv) that dividends on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be converted will cease to accumulate on the Mandatory Conversion Date.
     (d) On and after the Mandatory Conversion Date, dividends will cease to accumulate on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock called for a mandatory conversion pursuant to Section 8(a) and all rights of holders of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock will terminate except for the right to receive the whole shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion thereof and cash, in lieu of any fractional shares of Common Stock in accordance with Section 7(c). The dividend payment with respect to the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock called for a mandatory conversion pursuant to Section 8(a) on a date during the period between the close of business on any Dividend Record Date to the close of business on the corresponding Dividend Payment Date will be payable on such Dividend Payment Date to the record holder of such share on such Dividend Record Date if such share has been converted after such Dividend Record Date and prior to such Dividend Payment Date. Except as provided in the immediately preceding sentence with respect to a mandatory conversion pursuant to Section 8(a), no payment or adjustment will be made upon conversion of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for Accumulated Dividends or for dividends with respect to the Common Stock issued upon such conversion.
     (e) The Corporation may not authorize, issue a press release or give notice of any mandatory conversion pursuant to Section 8(a) unless, prior to giving the mandatory conversion notice, all Accumulated Dividends on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for periods ended prior to the date of such mandatory conversion notice shall have been paid in cash.
     (f) In addition to the mandatory conversion right described in Section 8(a), if there are less than 250,000 shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock outstanding, the Corporation shall have the right, at any time on or after December 5, 2008, at its option, to cause the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be automatically converted into that number of whole shares of Common Stock equal to the quotient of (i) the Liquidation Preference divided by (ii) the lesser of (A) the Conversion Price then in effect and (B) the Market Value for the period ending on the second Trading Day immediately prior to the Mandatory Conversion Date, with any resulting fractional shares of Common Stock to be settled in cash in accordance with Section 7(c). The provisions of clauses (b),

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(c), (d) and (e) of this Section 8 shall apply to any mandatory conversion pursuant to this clause (f); provided, that (i) the Mandatory Conversion Date described in Section 8(b) shall not be less than 15 days nor more than 30 days after the date on which the Corporation issues a press release pursuant to Section 8(b) announcing such mandatory conversion and (ii) the press release and notice of mandatory conversion described in Section 8(c) will not state the number of shares of Common Stock to be issued upon conversion of each share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     9. Consolidation, Merger and Sale of Assets.
     (a) The Corporation, without the consent of the Holders of any of the outstanding 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, may consolidate with or merge into any other Person or convey, transfer or lease all or substantially all its assets to any Person or may permit any Person to consolidate with or merge into, or transfer or lease all or substantially all its properties to, the Corporation; provided, however, that: (a) the successor, transferee or lessee is organized under the laws of the United States or any political subdivision thereof; (b) the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock will become shares of such successor, transferee or lessee, having in respect of such successor, transferee or lessee the same powers, designations, preferences and relative, participating, optional or other rights on which, and the qualification, limitations or restrictions thereon, the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock had immediately prior to such transaction; and (c) the Corporation delivers to the Transfer Agent an Officers’ Certificate and an Opinion of Counsel stating that such transaction complies with this Certificate of Designation (including without limitation the requirements of Section 7(l).
     (b) Upon any consolidation by the Corporation with, or merger by the Corporation into, any other Person or any conveyance, transfer or lease of all or substantially all the assets of the Corporation as described in Section 9(a), the successor resulting from such consolidation or into which the Corporation is merged or the transferee or lessee to which such conveyance, transfer or lease is made will succeed to, and be substituted for, and may exercise every right and power of, the Corporation under the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, and, thereafter, except in the case of a lease, the predecessor (if still in existence) will be released from its obligations and covenants with respect to the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     10. SEC Reports.
     Whether or not the Corporation is required to file reports with the Commission, if any shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock are outstanding, the Corporation shall file with the Commission all such reports and other information as it would be required to file with the Commission by Section 13(a) or 15(d) under the Exchange Act. The Corporation shall supply each holder of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, upon request, without cost to such holder, copies of such reports or other information.
     11. Certificates.
     (a) Form and Dating. The 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and the Transfer Agent’s certificate of authentication shall be substantially in the form of Exhibit C, which is hereby incorporated in and expressly made a part of this Certificate of Designation. The 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate may have notations, legends or endorsements required by law, stock exchange rule, agreements to which the Corporation is subject, if any, or usage (provided that any such notation, legend or endorsement is in a form acceptable to the Corporation). Each 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate shall be dated the date of its authentication. The terms of the

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4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate set forth in Exhibit C are part of the terms of this Certificate of Designation.
  (i)   Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. The 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be issued initially in the form of one or more fully registered global certificates with the global securities legend and restricted securities legend set forth in Exhibit C hereto (the “Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock”), which shall be deposited on behalf of the purchasers represented thereby with DTC (or with such custodian as DTC may direct), and registered in the name of DTC or a nominee of DTC, duly executed by the Corporation and authenticated by the Transfer Agent as hereinafter provided. The number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock represented by Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock may from time to time be increased or decreased by adjustments made on the records of the Transfer Agent and DTC or its nominee as hereinafter provided. With respect to shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock that are not “restricted securities” as defined in Rule 144 under the Securities Act on a Conversion Date, all shares of Common Stock distributed on such Conversion Date will be freely transferable without restriction under the Securities Act (other than by affiliates), and such shares will be eligible for receipt in global form through the facilities of DTC.
  (ii)   Book-Entry Provisions. In the event Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is deposited with or on behalf of DTC, the Corporation shall execute and the Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver initially one or more Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificates that (a) shall be registered in the name of DTC as depository for such Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or the nominee of DTC and (b) shall be delivered by the Transfer Agent to DTC or pursuant to DTC’s instructions or held by the Transfer Agent as custodian for DTC.
 
      Members of, or participants in, DTC (“Agent Members”) shall have no rights under this Certificate of Designation with respect to any Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock held on their behalf by DTC or by the Transfer Agent as the custodian of DTC or under such Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, and DTC may be treated by the Corporation, the Transfer Agent and any agent of the Corporation or the Transfer Agent as the absolute owner of such Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for all purposes whatsoever. Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing herein shall prevent the Corporation, the Transfer Agent or any agent of the Corporation or the Transfer Agent from giving effect to any written certification, proxy or other authorization furnished by DTC or impair, as between DTC and its Agent Members, the operation of customary practices of DTC governing the exercise of the rights of a holder of a beneficial interest in any Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
  (iii)   Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. Except as provided in Section 11(c), owners of beneficial interests in Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock will not be entitled to receive Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     (b) Execution and Authentication. Two Officers shall sign the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate for the Corporation by manual or facsimile signature.

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     If an Officer whose signature is on a 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate no longer holds that office at the time the Transfer Agent authenticates the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate, the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate shall be valid nevertheless.
     A 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate shall not be valid until an authorized signatory of the Transfer Agent and the Security Registrar manually signs the certificate of authentication on the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate. The signature shall be conclusive evidence that the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate has been authenticated under this Certificate of Designation.
     The Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver certificates for up to 5,000,000 shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for original issue upon a written order of the Corporation signed by two Officers or by an Officer and an Assistant Treasurer of the Corporation. Such order shall specify the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be authenticated and the date on which the original issue of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is to be authenticated.
     The Transfer Agent may appoint an authenticating agent reasonably acceptable to the Corporation to authenticate the certificates for 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. Unless limited by the terms of such appointment, an authenticating agent may authenticate certificates for 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock whenever the Transfer Agent may do so. Each reference in this Certificate of Designation to authentication by the Transfer Agent includes authentication by such agent. An authenticating agent has the same rights as the Transfer Agent or agent for service of notices and demands.
     (c) Transfer and Exchange of Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. The transfer and exchange of Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or beneficial interests therein shall be effected through DTC, in accordance with this Certificate of Designation (including applicable restrictions on transfer set forth herein, if any) and the procedures of DTC therefor.
  (i)   Restrictions on Transfer and Exchange of Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
  (1)   Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Certificate of Designation (other than the provisions set forth in Section 11(c)(ii)), Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock may not be transferred as a whole except by DTC to a nominee of DTC or by a nominee of DTC to DTC or another nominee of DTC or by DTC or any such nominee to a successor depository or a nominee of such successor depository.
 
  (2)   In the event that the Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is exchanged for 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock in definitive registered form pursuant to Section 11(c)(ii) prior to the effectiveness of a Shelf Registration Statement with respect to such securities, such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock may be exchanged only in accordance with such procedures as are substantially consistent with the provisions of this Section 11(c) (including the certification requirements set forth in the Exhibits to this Certificate of Designation intended to ensure that such transfers comply with Rule 144A or such other applicable exemption from registration under the Securities Act, as the case may be) and such other procedures as may from time to time be adopted by the Corporation.
 
  (3)   The 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, and any shares of Common Stock distributed pursuant to the conversion of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock,

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      may not be sold or otherwise transferred until the expiration of two years following the date of payment for and delivery of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, except (a) pursuant to registration under the Securities Act, (b) in accordance with Rule 144 (if available) or Rule 144A under the Securities Act (if available) or (c) in offshore transactions in reliance on Regulation S, and will bear a legend to this effect.
  (ii)   Authentication of Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. If at any time:
  (1)   DTC notifies the Corporation that DTC is unwilling or unable to continue as depository for the Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and a successor depository for the Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is not appointed by the Corporation within 90 days after delivery of such notice;
 
  (2)   DTC ceases to be a clearing agency registered under the Exchange Act and a successor depository for the Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is not appointed by the Corporation within 90 days; or
 
  (3)   the Corporation, in its sole discretion, notifies the Transfer Agent in writing that it elects to cause the issuance of Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock under this Certificate of Designation,
 
      then the Corporation will execute, and the Transfer Agent, upon receipt of a written order of the Corporation signed by two Officers or by an Officer and an Assistant Treasurer of the Corporation requesting the authentication and delivery of Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to the Persons designated by the Corporation, will authenticate and deliver Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock equal to the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock represented by the Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, in exchange for such Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
  (iii)   Cancellation or Adjustment of Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. At such time as all beneficial interests in Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock have either been exchanged for Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, converted or canceled, such Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be returned to DTC for cancellation or retained and canceled by the Transfer Agent. At any time prior to such cancellation, if any beneficial interest in Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is exchanged for Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, converted or canceled, the number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock represented by such Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be reduced and an adjustment shall be made on the books and records of the Transfer Agent with respect to such Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, by the Transfer Agent or DTC, to reflect such reduction.
  (iv)   Obligations with Respect to Transfers and Exchanges of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.

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     (1) To permit registrations of transfers and exchanges, the Corporation shall execute and the Transfer Agent shall authenticate Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock as required pursuant to the provisions of this Section 11(c).
     (2) All Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock issued upon any registration of transfer or exchange of Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be the valid obligations of the Corporation, entitled to the same benefits under this Certificate of Designation as the Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock surrendered upon such registration of transfer or exchange.
     (3) Prior to due presentment for registration of transfer of any shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, the Transfer Agent and the Corporation may deem and treat the Person in whose name such shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock are registered as the absolute owner of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and neither the Transfer Agent nor the Corporation shall be affected by notice to the contrary.
     (4) No service charge shall be made to a Holder for any registration of transfer or exchange upon surrender of any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate or Common Stock certificate at the office of the Transfer Agent maintained for that purpose. However, the Corporation may require payment of a sum sufficient to cover any tax or other governmental charge that may be imposed in connection with any registration of transfer or exchange of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificates or Common Stock certificates.
     (5) Upon any sale or transfer of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock (including any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock represented by a Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate) or of certificated Common Stock pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act or pursuant to Rule 144 or another exemption from registration under the Securities Act (and based upon an Opinion of Counsel reasonably satisfactory to the Corporation if it so requests):
     (A) in the case of any Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or certificated Common Stock, the Corporation and the Transfer Agent shall permit the holder thereof to exchange such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or certificated Common Stock for Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or certificated Common Stock, as the case may be, that does not bear the restrictive legend set forth on Exhibit C and rescind any restriction on the transfer of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or Common Stock issuable in respect of the conversion of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock; and
     (B) in the case of any Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall not be required to bear the restrictive legend set forth on Exhibit C; provided, however, that with respect to any request for an exchange of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock that is represented by Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock for Certificated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock that does not bear a restrictive as set forth on

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Exhibit C in connection with a sale or transfer thereof pursuant to Rule 144 or another exemption from registration under the Securities Act (and based upon an Opinion of Counsel if the Corporation so requests), the Holder thereof shall certify in writing to the Transfer Agent that such request is being made pursuant to such exemption (such certification to be substantially in the form of Exhibit D hereto).
  (v)   No Obligation of the Transfer Agent.
  (1)   The Transfer Agent shall have no responsibility or obligation to any beneficial owner of Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, a member of, or a participant in, DTC or any other Person with respect to the accuracy of the records of DTC or its nominee or of any participant or member thereof, with respect to any ownership interest in the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock or with respect to the delivery to any participant, member, beneficial owner or other Person (other than DTC) of any notice or the payment of any amount, under or with respect to such Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock. All notices and communications to be given to the Holders and all payments to be made to Holders under the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be given or made only to the Holders (which shall be DTC or its nominee in the case of the Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock). The rights of beneficial owners in any Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be exercised only through DTC subject to the applicable rules and procedures of DTC. The Transfer Agent may rely and shall be fully protected in relying upon information furnished by DTC with respect to its members, participants and any beneficial owners.
  (2)   The Transfer Agent shall have no obligation or duty to monitor, determine or inquire as to compliance with any restrictions on transfer imposed under this Certificate of Designation or under applicable law with respect to any transfer of any interest in any 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock (including any transfers between or among DTC participants, members or beneficial owners in any Global 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock) other than to require delivery of such certificates and other documentation or evidence as are expressly required by, and to do so if and when expressly required by, the terms of this Certificate of Designation, and to examine the same to determine substantial compliance as to form with the express requirements hereof.
     (d) Replacement Certificates. If a mutilated 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate is surrendered to the Transfer Agent or if the Holder of a 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate claims that the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate has been lost, destroyed or wrongfully taken, the Corporation shall issue and the Transfer Agent shall countersign a replacement 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate if the reasonable requirements of the Transfer Agent are met. If required by the Transfer Agent or the Corporation, such Holder shall furnish an indemnity bond sufficient in the judgment of the Corporation and the Transfer Agent to protect the Corporation and the Transfer Agent from any loss which either of them may suffer if a 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate is replaced. The Corporation and the Transfer Agent may charge the Holder for their expenses in replacing a 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate.

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     12. Additional Rights of Holders. In addition to the rights provided to Holders under this Certificate of Designation, Holders shall have the rights set forth in the Registration Rights Agreement.
     13. Other Provisions.
     (a) With respect to any notice to a Holder of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock required to be provided hereunder, neither failure to mail such notice, nor any defect therein or in the mailing thereof, to any particular Holder shall affect the sufficiency of the notice or the validity of the proceedings referred to in such notice with respect to the other Holders or affect the legality or validity of any distribution, rights, warrant, reclassification, consolidation, merger, conveyance, transfer, dissolution, liquidation or winding-up, or the vote upon any such action. Any notice which was mailed in the manner herein provided shall be conclusively presumed to have been duly given whether or not the Holder receives the notice.
     (b) Shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock issued and reacquired will be retired and canceled promptly after reacquisition thereof and, upon compliance with the applicable requirements of Michigan law, have the status of authorized but unissued shares of preferred stock of the Corporation undesignated as to series and may with any and all other authorized but unissued shares of preferred stock of the Corporation be designated or redesignated and issued or reissued, as the case may be, as part of any series of preferred stock of the Corporation, except that any issuance or reissuance of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock must be in compliance with this Certificate of Designation.
     (c) The shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be issuable only in whole shares.
     (d) All notice periods referred to herein shall commence on the date of the mailing of the applicable notice.

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EXHIBIT A
FORM OF FUNDAMENTAL CHANGE PURCHASE NOTICE
To: CMS Energy Corporation
     The undersigned registered holder of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock hereby acknowledges receipt of a notice from CMS Energy Corporation (the “Corporation”) as to the occurrence of a Fundamental Change with respect to the Corporation and requests and instructs the Corporation to repurchase the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock ($50.00 liquidation preference or an integral multiple thereof) designated below, in accordance with the terms of the Certificate of Designation referred to in such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and directs that the check of the Corporation, in payment for these shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, be issued and delivered to the registered holder hereof unless a different name has been indicated below. If any portion of these shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock are not repurchased and are to be issued in the name of a Person other than the undersigned, the undersigned shall pay all transfer taxes payable with respect thereto.
     
Dated:
   
 
   
 
  Signature(s)
Signature(s) must be guaranteed by a commercial bank or trust company or a member firm of a major stock exchange if shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock are to be delivered other than to or in the name of the registered holder.
     
 
   
 
  Signature Guarantee
     
Fill in for registration of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock if to be issued other than to and in the name of registered holder:
   
 
   
 
(Name)
  Number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be purchased (if less than all are to be purchased):
 
   
 
(Street Address)
   
 
 
   
 
(City, state and zip code)
Please print name and address
  Certificate Number (if shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock are Certificated):
 
   
 
   
 
  Social Security or other taxpayer number:
 
   
 
   

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EXHIBIT B
FORM OF CONVERSION NOTICE
To: CMS Energy Corporation
     The undersigned registered holder of these shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock hereby exercises the option to convert these shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, or portion hereof (which is $50.00 liquidation preference or an integral multiple thereof) designated below, for shares of Common Stock of CMS Energy Corporation in accordance with the terms of the Certificate of Designation referred to in the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, and directs that the shares, if any, issuable and deliverable upon such conversion, together with any check for cash deliverable upon such conversion, and any shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock representing any unconverted shares hereof, be issued and delivered to the registered holder hereof unless a different name has been indicated below. If shares or any portion of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock not converted are to be issued in the name of a Person other than the undersigned, the undersigned shall pay all transfer taxes payable with respect thereto.
     This notice shall be deemed to be an irrevocable exercise of the option to convert these shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     
Dated:
   
 
   
 
  Signature(s)
     
 
  Signature(s) must be guaranteed by a commercial bank or trust company or a member firm of a major stock exchange if shares of Common Stock are to be issued, or shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be delivered, other than to or in the name of the registered holder.
     
 
   
 
  Signature Guarantee
     
Fill in for registration of shares if to be delivered, and shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock if to be issued other than to and in the name of registered holder:
   
 
   
(Name)
  Number of shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock to be converted (if less than all):
 
   
 
(Street Address)
   
 
 
 
(City, state and zip code)
Please print name and address
  Certificate Number (if shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock are Certificated):
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
  Social Security or other taxpayer number:
 
   
 
   

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EXHIBIT C
FORM OF PREFERRED STOCK
FACE OF SECURITY
     THIS SECURITY (OR ITS PREDECESSOR) WAS ORIGINALLY ISSUED IN A TRANSACTION EXEMPT FROM REGISTRATION UNDER THE UNITED STATES SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 (THE “SECURITIES ACT”), AND THIS SECURITY AND THE COMMON STOCK ISSUABLE UPON CONVERSION HEREOF MAY NOT BE OFFERED, SOLD OR OTHERWISE TRANSFERRED IN THE ABSENCE OF SUCH REGISTRATION OR AN APPLICABLE EXEMPTION THEREFROM. EACH PURCHASER OF THIS SECURITY IS HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT THE SELLER OF THIS SECURITY MAY BE RELYING ON THE EXEMPTION FROM THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 5 OF THE SECURITIES ACT PROVIDED BY RULE 144A THEREUNDER. THE HOLDER OF THIS SECURITY AGREES FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE COMPANY THAT (A) THIS SECURITY AND THE COMMON STOCK ISSUABLE UPON CONVERSION HEREOF MAY BE OFFERED, RESOLD, PLEDGED OR OTHERWISE TRANSFERRED ONLY (I) IN THE UNITED STATES TO A PERSON WHOM THE SELLER REASONABLY BELIEVES IS A QUALIFIED INSTITUTIONAL BUYER (AS DEFINED IN RULE 144A UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT (“RULE 144A”)) IN A TRANSACTION MEETING THE REQUIREMENTS OF RULE 144A PURCHASING FOR ITS OWN ACCOUNT OR FOR THE ACCOUNT OF A QUALIFIED INSTITUTIONAL BUYER IN A TRANSACTION MEETING THE REQUIREMENTS OF RULE 144A, (II) OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES IN AN OFFSHORE TRANSACTION IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 903 OR RULE 904 UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT, (III) PURSUANT TO AN EXEMPTION FROM REGISTRATION UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT PROVIDED BY RULE 144 THEREUNDER (IF AVAILABLE), (IV) IN ACCORDANCE WITH ANOTHER EXEMPTION FROM THE REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS OF THE SECURITIES ACT, (V) TO CMS ENERGY CORPORATION OR (VI) PURSUANT TO AN EFFECTIVE REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT, IN EACH OF CASES (I) THROUGH (VI) IN ACCORDANCE WITH ANY APPLICABLE SECURITIES LAWS OF ANY STATE OF THE UNITED STATES, AND (B) THE HOLDER WILL, AND EACH SUBSEQUENT HOLDER IS REQUIRED TO, NOTIFY ANY PURCHASER OF THE SECURITY FROM IT OF THE RESALE RESTRICTIONS REFERRED TO IN CLAUSE (A) ABOVE.
     THE HOLDER OF THIS SECURITY AGREES THAT SUCH HOLDER WILL NOT ENGAGE IN HEDGING TRANSACTIONS INVOLVING THIS SECURITY AND THE COMMON STOCK ISSUABLE UPON CONVERSION HEREOF UNLESS IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE SECURITIES ACT.
     THIS SECURITY AND ANY RELATED DOCUMENTATION MAY BE AMENDED OR SUPPLEMENTED FROM TIME TO TIME TO MODIFY THE RESTRICTIONS ON AND PROCEDURES FOR RESALES AND OTHER TRANSFERS OF THIS SECURITY TO REFLECT ANY CHANGE IN APPLICABLE LAW OR REGULATION (OR THE INTERPRETATION THEREOF) OR IN PRACTICES RELATING TO THE RESALE OR TRANSFER OF RESTRICTED SECURITIES GENERALLY. THE HOLDER OF THIS SECURITY SHALL BE DEEMED BY THE ACCEPTANCE OF THIS SECURITY TO HAVE AGREED TO ANY SUCH AMENDMENT OR SUPPLEMENT.
     THE HOLDER OF THIS SECURITY IS SUBJECT TO, AND ENTITLED TO THE BENEFITS OF, A REGISTRATION RIGHTS AGREEMENT, DATED AS OF DECEMBER 5, 2003 ENTERED INTO BY THE COMPANY FOR THE BENEFIT OF CERTAIN HOLDERS OF SECURITIES FROM TIME TO TIME.

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     Certificate Number   Number of Shares
[  ]   [  ]
     
    CUSIP NO.:                     
4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock (par value $0.01) (liquidation
preference $50 per share)
of

CMS Energy Corporation
      CMS Energy Corporation, a Michigan corporation (the ‘Corporation”), hereby certifies that [                      ] (the “Holder”) is the registered owner of [                      ] fully paid and non-assessable preferred securities of the Corporation designated the 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock (par value $0.01) (liquidation preference $50 per share) (the “4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock”). The shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock are transferable on the books and records of the Transfer Agent, in person or by a duly authorized attorney, upon surrender of this certificate duly endorsed and in proper form for transfer. The designations, rights, privileges, restrictions, preferences and other terms and provisions of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock represented hereby are issued and shall in all respects be subject to the provisions of the Certificate of Designation dated December 4, 2003, as the same may be amended from time to time (the “Certificate of Designation”). Capitalized terms used herein but not defined shall have the meaning given them in the Certificate of Designation. The Corporation will provide a copy of the Certificate of Designation to a Holder without charge upon written request to the Corporation at its principal place of business.
     Reference is hereby made to select provisions of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock set forth on the reverse hereof, and to the Certificate of Designation, which select provisions and the Certificate of Designation shall for all purposes have the same effect as if set forth at this place.
     Upon receipt of this certificate, the Holder is bound by the Certificate of Designation and is entitled to the benefits thereunder.
     Unless the Transfer Agent’s Certificate of Authentication hereon has been properly executed, these shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall not be entitled to any benefit under the Certificate of Designation or be valid or obligatory for any purpose.
     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Corporation has executed this certificate this                      day of                      , 2003.
         
  CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
 
 
  By:      
    Name:      
    Title:      
 
     
  By:      
    Name:      
    Title:      
 

40


 

TRANSFER AGENT’S AND SECURITY REGISTRAR’S CERTIFICATE OF
AUTHENTICATION
     These are shares of the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock referred to in the within-mentioned Certificate of Designation.
     Dated:                                           , 2003
         
  CMS Energy Corporation, as Transfer Agent and Security Registrar
 
 
  By:      
    Authorized Signatory   
REVERSE OF SECURITY
     Cash dividends on each share of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be payable at a rate per annum set forth on the face hereof or as provided in the Certificate of Designation.
     The shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock shall be convertible into the Corporation’s Common Stock in the manner and according to the terms set forth in the Certificate of Designation.
     The Corporation will furnish without charge to each holder who so requests the powers, designations, preferences and relative, participating, optional or other rights of each class of stock and the qualifications, limitations or restrictions of such preferences and/or rights.
ASSIGNMENT
     FOR VALUE RECEIVED, the undersigned assigns and transfers the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock evidenced hereby to:
     (Insert assignee’s social security or tax identification number)
     (Insert address and zip code of assignee)
     and irrevocably appoints                                           agent to transfer the shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock evidenced hereby on the books of the Transfer Agent. The agent may substitute another to act for him or her.
         
Date: 
       
 
 
   
Signature:
     
 
 
 
   
     (Sign exactly as your name appears on the other side of this 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock certificate)
         
      Signature Guarantee: (1)
       
 
 
 
   
 
1   (Signature must be guaranteed by an “eligible guarantor institution” that is a bank, stockbroker, savings and loan association or credit union meeting the requirements of the Transfer Agent, which requirements include membership or participation in the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program (“stamp”) or such other “signature guarantee program” as may be determined by the Transfer Agent in addition to, or in substitution for, stamp, all in accordance with the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.)

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EXHIBIT D
CERTIFICATE TO BE DELIVERED UPON EXCHANGE OR
REGISTRATION OF TRANSFER OF PREFERRED STOCK
     Re:   4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock (the “4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock”) of CMS Energy Corporation (the “Corporation”)
     This Certificate relates to                      shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock held in o */ book- entry or o */ definitive form by                                           (the “Transferor”).
     The Transferor*:
      o has requested the Transfer Agent by written order to deliver in exchange for its beneficial interest in the 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock held by the Depository shares of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock in definitive, registered form equal to its beneficial interest in such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock (or the portion thereof indicated above); or
      o has requested the Transfer Agent by written order to exchange or register the transfer of 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock.
     In connection with such request and in respect of such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock, the Transferor does hereby certify that the Transferor is familiar with the Certificate of Designation relating to the above-captioned 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock and that the transfer of this 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock does not require registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”) because */:
      o Such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is being acquired for the Transferor’s own account without transfer.
      o Such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is being transferred to the Corporation.
      o Such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is being transferred to a qualified institutional buyer (as defined in Rule 144A under the Securities Act), in reliance on Rule 144A.
      o Such 4.50% Convertible Preferred Stock is being transferred in reliance on and in compliance with another exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act (and based on an Opinion of Counsel if the Corporation so requests).
 
*/   Please check applicable box.
     
 
  [NAME OF TRANFEROR]
 
   
 
   
 
  By:
 
  Its:
Date:                                          
   

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COMMON STOCK
     The shares of Common Stock may be issued from time to time as the Board of Directors shall determine for such consideration as shall be fixed by the Board of Directors. Each share of Common Stock of the Corporation shall be equal to every other share of said stock in every respect. The voting, distribution, dividend, liquidation and other rights and limitations of the Common Stock are as follows:
     (1)  Dividend Rights. Subject to the express terms of any outstanding series of Preferred Stock, dividends or distributions may be declared and paid in cash or otherwise upon the Common Stock out of the assets of the Corporation legally available therefore.
     (2)  Voting Rights.
     (a) Except as provided in Section 2(b) and except as otherwise provided by law, the holders of Common Stock are entitled to one vote on all matters as to which holders of Common Stock are entitled to vote. Subject to Article XI, a majority of the votes cast by the holders of Common Stock entitled to vote thereon is sufficient for the adoption of any question presented except as otherwise required by law or these Articles of Incorporation.
     (b) Unless the vote or consent of the holders of a greater number of shares shall then be required by law, the vote or consent of the holders of a majority of all of the shares of Common Stock then outstanding, shall be necessary for authorizing, effecting or validating the merger or consolidation of the Corporation into or with any other entity if such merger or consolidation would adversely affect the powers or special rights of Common Stock either directly by amendment of these Articles of Incorporation or indirectly by requiring the holders of Common Stock to accept or retain, in such merger or consolidation, anything other than (i) shares of Common Stock or (ii) shares of the surviving or resulting corporation having, in either case, powers and special rights identical to those of Common Stock prior to such merger or consolidation.
     (3)  Liquidation Rights. Subject to Section 4, in the event of the dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the Corporation, whether voluntary or involuntary, after payment or provision for payment of the debts and other liabilities of the Corporation and after there shall have been paid or set apart for the holders of Preferred Stock the full preferential amounts (including any accumulated and unpaid dividends) to which they are entitled, the holders of Common Stock shall be entitled to receive, on a per share basis, the assets of the Corporation remaining for distribution to the holders of Common Stock. Neither the merger or consolidation of the Corporation into or with any other corporation, nor the merger or consolidation of any other corporation into or with the Corporation nor any sale, transfer or lease of all or any part of the assets of the Corporation, shall be deemed to be a dissolution, liquidation or winding up for purposes of this Section 3.
     (4)  Subdivision or Combination. If the Corporation shall in any manner subdivide (by stock split, stock dividend or otherwise) or combine (by reverse stock split or otherwise) the outstanding shares of Common Stock, the voting and liquidation rights of Common Stock shall be appropriately adjusted so as to avoid any dilution in the aggregate voting or liquidation rights of Common Stock.

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ARTICLE IV
     The address of the registered office is One Energy Plaza, Jackson, Michigan, 49201. The name of the resident agent at the registered office is Michael D. VanHemert. The mailing address of the registered office is One Energy Plaza Jackson, Michigan 49201.
ARTICLE V
     Special meetings of the shareholders may be called only by the Board of Directors or by the Chairman of the Board.
ARTICLE VI
     The number of directors of the Corporation shall be as specified in, or determined in the manner provided in, the bylaws of the Corporation.
     Any vacancies occurring on the Corporation’s Board of Directors (whether by reason of the death, resignation or removal of a director) may be filled by a majority vote of the directors then in office although less than a quorum. An increase in the number of members of the Board of Directors shall be construed as creating a vacancy.
ARTICLE VII
     A director may be removed by the affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the Board of Directors then in office. A director also may be removed by shareholders, but only for cause, at an annual meeting of shareholders and by the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares then entitled to vote for the election of directors. For purposes of this section, cause for removal shall be construed to exist only if a director whose removal is proposed has been convicted of a felony by a court of competent jurisdiction and such conviction is no longer subject to appeal or has been adjudged by a court of competent jurisdiction to be liable for willful misconduct in the performance of his or her duty to the Corporation in a matter of substantial importance to the Corporation and such adjudication is no longer subject to appeal.
ARTICLE VIII
     A director shall not be personally liable to the Corporation or its shareholders for monetary damages for breach of duty as a director except (i) for a breach of the director’s duty of loyalty to the Corporation or its shareholders, (ii) for acts or omissions not in good faith or that involve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law, (iii) for a violation of Section 551(1) of the Michigan Business Corporation Act, and (iv) for any transaction from which the director derived an improper personal benefit. No amendment to or repeal of this Article VIII, and no modification to its provisions by law, shall apply to, or have any effect upon, the liability or alleged liability of any director of the Corporation for or with respect to any acts or omissions of such director occurring prior to such amendment, repeal or modification.
ARTICLE IX
     Each director and each officer of the Corporation shall be indemnified by the Corporation to the fullest extent permitted by law against expenses (including attorneys’ fees), judgments, penalties,

44


 

fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and reasonably incurred by him or her in connection with the defense of any proceeding in which he or she was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party by reason of being or having been a director or an officer of the Corporation. Such right of indemnification is not exclusive of any other rights to which such director or officer may be entitled under any now or hereafter existing statute, any other provision of these Articles, bylaw, agreement, vote of shareholders or otherwise. If the Business Corporation Act of the State of Michigan is amended after approval by the shareholders of this Article IX to authorize corporate action further eliminating or limiting the personal liability of directors, then the liability of a director of the Corporation shall be eliminated or limited to the fullest extent permitted by the Business Corporation Act of the State of Michigan, as so amended. Any repeal or modification of this Article IX by the shareholders of the Corporation shall not adversely affect any right or protection of a director of the Corporation existing at the time of such repeal or modification.
ARTICLE X
     Each director shall be a shareholder of the Corporation and any director ceasing to be a shareholder shall thereupon immediately cease to be a director.
ARTICLE XI
     The Corporation reserves the right to amend, alter, change or repeal any provision in these Articles of Incorporation as permitted by law, and all rights conferred on shareholders herein are granted subject to this reservation. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the provisions of Articles V, VI, VII, VIII, IX and this Article XI may not be amended, altered, changed or repealed unless such amendment, alteration, change or repeal is approved by the affirmative vote of the holders of not less than 75% of the outstanding shares entitled to vote thereon.

45


 

Signed on May 28, 2004
             
 
      CMS ENERGY CORPORATION    
 
           
 
  By:   /s/ Michael D. VanHemert
 
Michael D. VanHemert
   
 
      Vice President and Corporate Secretary    
                 
STATE OF MICHIGAN
    )          
 
    )     ss.    
COUNTY OF JACKSON
    )          
     On this 28 th day of May 2004, before me appeared Michael D. VanHemert, to me personally known, who, being by me duly sworn, did say that he is Vice President and Corporate Secretary of CMS Energy Corporation, which executed the foregoing instrument, and that the seal affixed to said instrument is the corporate seal of said corporation, and that said instrument was signed and sealed in behalf of said corporation by authority of its Board of Directors and shareholders, and said officer acknowledged said instrument to be the free act and deed of said corporation.
         
 
  /s/ Joyce H. Norkey
 
Joyce N. Norkey
   
 
  Notary Public for Jackson County    
 
  State of Michigan    
 
  My Commission Expires September 2006    

46


 

CERTIFICATE OF DESIGNATION
OF
4.50% CUMULATIVE CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK, SERIES B
OF
CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
     Pursuant to Section 302(4) of the Michigan Business Corporation Act, MCLA §450.1302(4):
     CMS ENERGY CORPORATION, a Michigan corporation (the “Corporation”), does hereby certify that the following resolution was duly adopted pursuant to the authority of the Board of Directors of the Corporation, with the provisions thereof fixing the number of shares of the series and the dividend rate being set through a Special Financing Committee of the Board of Directors:
     RESOLVED: That, pursuant to the authority expressly granted to and vested in the Board of Directors of the Corporation by the provisions of Article III of the Restated Articles of Incorporation of the Corporation, as amended from time to time (the “Articles of Incorporation”), and pursuant to Section 302(4) of the Michigan Business Corporation Act, the Board of Directors hereby establishes a series of the preferred stock of the Corporation and hereby states that the series’ voting powers, designations, preferences and relative, participating, optional or other special rights, and qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereof (in addition to the provisions set forth in the Articles of Incorporation which are applicable to the preferred stock of all series), shall be as follows:
     1. Designation and Amount; Ranking.
     (a) There shall be created from the 10,000,000 shares of preferred stock, par value $0.01 per share, of the Corporation authorized to be issued pursuant to the Articles of Incorporation, a series of preferred stock, designated as the “4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, Series B,” par value $0.01 per share (the “Preferred Stock”), and the number of shares of such series shall be 4,910,000. Such number of shares may be decreased by resolution of the Board of Directors; provided that no decrease shall reduce the number of shares of Preferred Stock to a number less than that of the shares of Preferred Stock then outstanding plus the number of shares issuable upon exercise of options or rights then outstanding. The Preferred Stock was exchanged for 4,910,000 of then outstanding shares of 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, par value $0.01 per share (the “Original Preferred Stock”), established pursuant to the Certificate of Designation of 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock of CMS Energy Corporation dated December 4, 2003 pursuant to an exchange offer.
     (b) The Preferred Stock will, with respect to both dividend rights and rights upon the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation, rank (i) senior to all Junior Stock and (ii) on a parity with all other Parity Stock.
     2. Definitions. As used herein, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
     “Accumulated Dividends” shall mean, with respect to any share of Preferred Stock, as of any date, the aggregate accumulated and unpaid dividends on such share from and including the most recent Dividend Payment Date to which dividends have been paid (or the Issue Date, if such date is prior to the first Dividend Payment Date) to but not including such date.
     “Additional Dividends” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 3(b).
     “Additional Shares” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(vi).
     “Affiliate” shall have the meaning ascribed to it, on the date hereof, under Rule 405 of the Securities Act.
     “Agent Members” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 11(a)(ii).

1


 

     “Board of Directors” shall mean the Board of Directors of the Corporation or, with respect to any action to be taken by the Board of Directors, any committee (special or otherwise) of the Board of Directors duly authorized to take such action.
     “Business Day” shall mean any day other than a Saturday, Sunday or other day on which commercial banks in The City of New York are authorized or required by law or executive order to close.
     “Certificate of Designation” means this certificate of designation designating the Preferred Stock.
     “Certificated Preferred Stock” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(f).
     “Common Equity” of any Person means capital stock of such Person that is generally entitled to (i) vote in the election of directors of such Person or (ii) if such Person is not a corporation, vote or otherwise participate in the selection of the governing body, partners, managers or others that will control the management or policies of such Person.
     “Common Stock” shall mean the common stock, par value $0.01 per share, of the Corporation, or any other class of stock resulting from successive changes or reclassifications of such common stock consisting solely of changes in par value, or from par value to no par value, or as a result of a subdivision, combination or merger, consolidation or similar transaction in which the Corporation is a constituent corporation.
     “Continuing Director” means a director who either was a member of the Board of Directors on November 9, 2004 or who becomes a member of the Board of Directors subsequent to that date and whose appointment, election or nomination for election by the Corporation’s shareholders is duly approved by a majority of the Continuing Directors on the Board of Directors at the time of such approval, either by a specific vote or by approval of the proxy statement issued by the Corporation on behalf of the Board of Directors in which such individual is named as nominee for director.
     “Conversion Agent” means the office or agency designated by the Corporation where Preferred Stock may be presented for conversion. Initially, the Conversion Agent shall be the Corporation located at One Energy Plaza, Jackson, Michigan 49201.
     “Conversion Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(b).
     “Conversion Notice” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(a).
     “Conversion Price” shall mean $9.893 per share of Common Stock.
     “Conversion Rate” shall mean the number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion of a share of Preferred Stock per Liquidation Preference, subject to adjustment as herein set forth. The initial Conversion Rate is 5.0541 shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion of a share of Preferred Stock per Liquidation Preference.
     “Conversion Value” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(m)(i).
     “Corporation Notice” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(e).
     “Corporation Notice Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(e).
     “Determination Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(m).
     “Distributed Assets or Securities” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(iii).
     “Dividend Adjustment Amount” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(iv)(B).

2


 

     “Dividend Payment Date” shall mean March 1, June 1, September 1 and December 1 of each year, commencing March 1, 2005.
     “Dividend Rate” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 3(a).
     “Dividend Record Date” shall mean February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 of each year.
     “DTC” or “Depository” means The Depository Trust Company.
     “Effective Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(a)(iii).
     “Equity Interests” means any capital stock, partnership, joint venture, member or limited liability or unlimited liability company interest, beneficial interest in a trust or similar entity or other equity interest or investment of whatever nature.
     “Exchange Act” shall mean the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.
     “Fair Market Value” means the amount which a willing buyer would pay a willing seller in an arm’s length transaction.
     A “Fundamental Change” shall be deemed to have occurred at such time after the original issuance of the Preferred Stock that any of the following occurs: (i) the Common Stock or other capital stock into which the Preferred Stock is convertible is neither listed for trading on a United States national securities exchange nor approved for trading on the NASDAQ National Market or another established automated over-the-counter trading market in the United States; (ii) a “person” or “group” within the meaning of Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act, other than the Corporation, any subsidiary of the Corporation or any employee benefit plan of the Corporation or any such subsidiary, files a Schedule TO (or any other schedule, form or report under the Exchange Act) disclosing that such person or group has become the direct or indirect ultimate “beneficial owner” (as such term is used in Rules 13d-3 and 13d-5 under the Exchange Act, except that a person or group shall be deemed to have “beneficial ownership” of all shares that such Person or group has the right to acquire whether such right is exercisable immediately or only after the passage of time) of Common Equity of the Corporation representing more than 50% of the voting power of the Corporation’s Common Equity; (iii) consummation of any share exchange, consolidation or merger of the Corporation pursuant to which the Common Stock will be converted into cash, securities or other property or any sale, lease or other transfer (in one transaction or a series of transactions) of all or substantially all of the consolidated assets of the Corporation and its subsidiaries, taken as a whole, to any Person (other than the Corporation or one or more of the Corporation’s subsidiaries); provided, however, that a transaction where the holders of the Corporation’s Common Equity immediately prior to such transaction own, directly or indirectly, more than 50% of the aggregate voting power of all classes of Common Equity of the continuing or surviving corporation or transferee immediately after such event shall not be a Fundamental Change; or (iv) Continuing Directors cease to constitute at least a majority of the Board of Directors; provided, however, that a Fundamental Change shall not be deemed to have occurred in respect of any of the foregoing if either (1) the Last Reported Sale Price of Common Stock for any five Trading Days within the ten consecutive Trading Days ending immediately before the later of the Fundamental Change or the public announcement thereof equals or exceeds 105% of the applicable Conversion Price of the Preferred Stock in effect immediately before the Fundamental Change or the public announcement thereof or (2) at least 90% of the consideration (excluding cash payments for fractional shares) in the transaction or transactions constituting the Fundamental Change consists of shares of capital stock traded on a national securities exchange or quoted on the NASDAQ National Market (or which shall be so traded or quoted when issued or exchanged in connection with such Fundamental Change) (such securities being referred to as “Publicly Traded Securities”) and as a result of such transaction or transactions the Preferred Stock becomes convertible into such Publicly Traded Securities (excluding cash payments for fractional shares).

3


 

     “Fundamental Change Purchase Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(a).
     “Fundamental Change Purchase Notice” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(c).
     “Fundamental Change Purchase Price” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 4(a).
     “Global Preferred Stock” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 11(a)(i).
     “Holder” or “holder” shall mean a holder of record of the Preferred Stock.
     “Issue Date” shall mean December 15, 2004, the original date of issuance of the Preferred Stock.
     “Junior Stock” shall mean all classes of common stock of the Corporation and each other class of capital stock or series of preferred stock established after the Issue Date, by the Board of Directors, the terms of which do not expressly provide that such class or series ranks senior to or on parity with the Preferred Stock as to dividend rights or rights upon the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation.
     “Last Reported Sale Price” of the applicable security on any date means the closing sale price per share (or, if no closing sale price is reported, the average of the bid and ask prices or, if more than one in either case, the average of the average bid and the average ask prices) on that date as reported in composite transactions for the principal U.S. securities exchange on which the applicable security is traded or, if the applicable security is not listed on a U.S. national or regional securities exchange, as reported by the NASDAQ National Market. If the applicable security is not listed for trading on a U.S. national or regional securities exchange and not reported by the NASDAQ National Market on the relevant date, the Last Reported Sale Price shall be the last quoted bid price for the applicable security in the over-the-counter market on the relevant date as reported by the National Quotation Bureau or similar organization. If the applicable security is not so quoted, the Last Reported Sale Price will be the average of the mid-point of the last bid and ask prices for the applicable security on the relevant date from each of at least three nationally recognized independent investment banking firms selected by the Corporation for this purpose.
     “Liquidation Preference” shall mean, with respect to each share of Preferred Stock, $50.00.
     “Mandatory Conversion Date” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 8(b).
     “Market Price” means the average of the Last Reported Sales Price per share of Common Stock for the 20 Trading Day period ending on the applicable date of determination (if the applicable date of determination is a Trading Day or, if not, then on the last Trading Day prior to such applicable date of determination), appropriately adjusted to take into account the occurrence, during the period commencing on the first of the Trading Days during such 20 Trading Day period and ending on the applicable date of determination, of any event that would result in an adjustment of the Conversion Rate under this Certificate of Designation.
     “Market Value” shall mean the average closing price of the Common Stock for a five consecutive Trading Day period on the NYSE (or such other national securities exchange or automated quotation system on which the Common Stock is then listed or authorized for quotation or, if the Common Stock is not so listed or authorized for quotation, an amount determined in good faith by the Board of Directors to be the fair value of the Common Stock).
     “Maximum Conversion Rate” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(xi).
     “Net Shares” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(m)(ii)(B).
     “Net Share Amount” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(m)(ii)(B).

4


 

     “NYSE” shall mean the New York Stock Exchange, Inc.
     “Officer” means the Chairman of the Board of Directors, the President, any Vice President, the Treasurer, the Secretary or any Assistant Secretary of the Corporation.
     “Officers’ Certificate” means a certificate signed by two Officers.
     “Opinion of Counsel’ means a written opinion from legal counsel who is acceptable to the Transfer Agent. The counsel may be an employee of or counsel to the Corporation or the Transfer Agent.
     “Original Preferred Stock” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 3(a).
     “Parity Stock” shall mean any class of capital stock or series of preferred stock established as of or after the Issue Date by the Board of Directors, the terms of which expressly provide that such class or series will rank on parity with the Preferred Stock as to dividend rights or rights upon the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation.
     “Paying Agent” means any Person authorized by the Corporation to pay the dividends or Fundamental Change Purchase Price on any of the shares of Preferred Stock on behalf of the Corporation. Initially, the Paying Agent shall be the Corporation.
     “Person” shall mean any individual, corporation, general partnership, limited partnership, limited liability partnership, joint venture, association, joint-stock company, trust, limited liability company, unincorporated organization or government or any agency or political subdivision thereof.
     “Pre-Dividend Sale Price” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(iv)(A).
     “Principal Return” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(m)(ii)(A).
     “Public Acquirer Change of Control” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(vii).
     “Public Acquirer Common Stock” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(f)(vii).
     “Registration Default” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 3(b).
     “Registration Rights Agreement” means the Registration Rights Agreement dated as of December 5, 2003, among the Corporation, Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated and the certain other initial purchasers of the Original Preferred Stock.
     “SEC” or “Commission” shall mean the Securities and Exchange Commission.
     “Securities Act” means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
     “Security Register” means the security register recording the holders of Preferred Stock kept at the offices of the Corporation.
     “Security Registrar” shall be the Person holding the Security Register, and the Corporation will initially be designated as the Security Registrar.
     “Senior Stock” shall mean each class of capital stock or series of preferred stock established after the Issue Date by the Board of Directors, the terms of which expressly provide that such class or series will rank senior to the Preferred Stock as to dividend rights or rights upon the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation.

5


 

     “Share Price” means the price per share of Common Stock paid in connection with a corporate transaction described in Section 7(m)(v) hereof, which shall be equal to (i) if holders of Common Stock receive only cash in such corporate transaction, the cash amount paid per share of Common Stock and (ii) in all other cases, the average of the Last Reported Sale Prices of Common Stock on the five Trading Days up to but not including the Effective Date.
     “Shelf Registration Statement” shall mean the shelf registration statement on Form S-3 filed with the SEC on September 24, 2004 to cover resales of Transfer Restricted Securities by holders thereof, as required by the Registration Rights Agreement.
     “Spin-Off Market Price” per share of Common Stock or the Equity Interests in a Subsidiary or other business unit of the Corporation on any day means the average of the daily Last Reported Sale Prices for the 10 consecutive Trading Days commencing on and including the fifth Trading Day after the ex date with respect to the issuance or distribution requiring such computations. As used herein, the term “ex date,” when used with respect to any issuance or distribution, shall mean the first date on which the security trades regular way on the NYSE or such other national regional exchange or market in which the security trades without the right to receive such issuance or distribution.
     “Subsidiary” means a Person more than 50% of the outstanding voting stock of which is owned, directly or indirectly, by the Corporation or by one or more other Subsidiaries, or by the Corporation and one or more other Subsidiaries. For the purposes of this definition, “voting stock” means stock which ordinarily has voting power of the election of directors, whether at all times or only so long as no senior class of stock has such voting power by reason of any contingency.
     “Ten Day Average Closing Stock Price” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(m)(i)(B).
     “Trading Day” means (i) if the applicable security is listed, admitted for trading or quoted on the NYSE, the NASDAQ National Market or another national security exchange, a day on which the NYSE, the NASDAQ National Market or another national security exchange is open for business or (ii) if the applicable security is not so listed, admitted for trading or quoted, any day other than a Saturday or Sunday or a day on which banking institutions in the State of New York are authorized or obligated by law, regulation or executive order to close.
     “Trading Exception” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 7(a)(ii).
     “Trading Price” of the Preferred Stock on any date of determination means the average of the secondary market bid quotations per share of Preferred Stock obtained by the Conversion Agent for $5,000,000 Liquidation Preference of the Preferred Stock at approximately 3:30 p.m., New York City time, on such determination date from three independent nationally recognized securities dealers the Corporation selects, provided that if three such bids cannot reasonably be obtained by the Conversion Agent, but two such bids are obtained, then the average of the two bids shall be used, and if only one such bid can reasonably be obtained by the Conversion Agent, this one bid shall be used. If the Conversion Agent cannot reasonably obtain at least one bid for $5,000,000 Liquidation Preference of the Preferred Stock from a nationally recognized securities dealer, then the Trading Price will be deemed to be less than 95% of the product of the sale price of Common Stock and the then applicable Conversion Rate.
     “Transfer Agent” shall mean the Corporation’s duly appointed transfer agent for the Preferred Stock. Initially, the Corporation will be the Transfer Agent.
     “Transfer Restricted Securities” shall mean each share of Preferred Stock (or the shares of Common Stock into which such share of Preferred Stock is convertible) until (i) the date on which such security or its predecessor has been effectively registered under the Securities Act and disposed of in accordance with the Shelf Registration Statement, (ii) the date on which such security or predecessor is distributed to the public pursuant to Rule 144 under the Securities Act or is saleable pursuant to Rule 144(k) under the Securities Act

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or (iii) the date that such Preferred Stock ceases to be outstanding.
     “Voting Rights Class” shall have the meaning given to it in Section 5(a)(i).
     “Voting Rights Triggering Event” shall mean the failure of the Corporation to pay dividends on the Preferred Stock with respect to six or more quarterly periods (whether or not consecutive).
     “Voting Stock” shall mean, with respect to any Person, securities of any class or classes of Capital Stock in such Person entitling the holders thereof (whether at all times or only so long as no senior class of stock has voting power by reason of contingency) generally to vote in the election of members of the Board of Directors or other governing body of such Person. For purposes of this definition, “Capital Stock” shall mean, with respect to any Person, any and all shares, interests, participations or other equivalents (however designated) of corporate stock or partnership interests and any and all warrants, options and rights with respect thereto (whether or not currently exercisable), including each class of common stock and preferred stock of such Person.
     3. Dividends.
     (a) The holders of shares of the outstanding Preferred Stock shall be entitled, when, as and if declared by the Board of Directors out of funds of the Corporation legally available therefor, to receive cumulative cash dividends at the rate per annum of 4.50% per share on the Liquidation Preference (equivalent to $2.25 per annum per share), payable quarterly in arrears (the “Dividend Rate”). The Dividend Rate may be increased in the circumstances described in Section 3(b) below. Dividends payable for each full dividend period will be computed by dividing the Dividend Rate by four and shall be payable in arrears on each Dividend Payment Date (commencing March 1, 2005) for the quarterly period ending immediately prior to such Dividend Payment Date, to the holders of record of Preferred Stock at the close of business on the Dividend Record Date applicable to such Dividend Payment Date. Such dividends shall be cumulative from the most recent date as to which dividends shall have been paid on the Original Preferred Stock or, if no dividends have been paid, from the Issue Date (whether or not in any dividend period or periods the Board of Directors shall have declared such dividends or there shall be funds of the Corporation legally available for the payment of such dividends) and shall accumulate on a day-to-day basis, whether or not earned or declared, from and after the Issue Date. Dividends payable for any partial dividend period shall be computed on the basis of days elapsed over a 360-day year consisting of twelve
30-day months. Accumulated unpaid dividends accrue and cumulate dividends at the annual rate of 4.50% and are payable in the manner provided in this Section 3.
     (b) If (i) by March 5, 2005, the Shelf Registration Statement has not been amended to cover resales of the Preferred Stock and declared effective by the Commission, (ii) after the Shelf Registration Statement has been declared effective the Corporation fails to file a post-effective amendment, prospectus supplement, amendment or supplement to any document incorporated by reference into such prospectus or document if required by applicable law with the SEC within five business days after a Holder provides the Corporation with certain required information, if such filing is necessary to enable the Holder to deliver the prospectus to purchasers of such Holder’s Transfer Restricted Securities, (iii) the Shelf Registration Statement ceases to be effective or fails to be usable without being succeeded within 30 days by a post-effective amendment or an additional registration statement filed and declared effective (other than as permitted in (ii) above) pursuant to the Exchange Act that cures the failure of the registration statement to be effective or usable, and (iv) the aggregate duration of any suspension periods in any period exceeds certain limits described in the Registration Rights Agreement (each such event referred to in clauses (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv) a “Registration Default”), additional dividends shall accumulate on the Preferred Stock, from and including the date on which any such Registration Default shall occur to, but excluding, the date on which the Registration Default has been cured, at the rate of 0.25% per year for the first 90 days following such date and at a rate of 0.50% per year thereafter (“Additional Dividends”). With respect to shares of Common Stock issued upon conversion of the Preferred Stock, Additional Dividends will accumulate on the then applicable conversion price from and including the date on which any such Registration Default shall occur to, but excluding, the date on which the Registration Default has been cured, at the rate of 0.25% per year for the first 90 days following such date and at a rate of 0.50% per year thereafter. Except as mentioned above, the Corporation will have no other liabilities for

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monetary damages with respect to its registration obligations. The receipt of Additional Dividends will be the sole monetary remedy available to a Holder if the Corporation fails to meet these obligations.
     (c) No dividend will be declared or paid upon, or any sum set apart for the payment of dividends upon, any outstanding share of the Preferred Stock with respect to any dividend period unless all dividends for all preceding dividend periods have been declared and paid or declared and a sufficient sum set apart for the payment of such dividend upon all outstanding shares of Preferred Stock.
     (d) No dividends or other distributions (other than a dividend or distribution payable solely in shares of Parity Stock or Junior Stock (in the case of Parity Stock) or Junior Stock (in the case of Junior Stock) and other than cash paid in lieu of fractional shares) may be declared, made or paid, or set apart for payment upon, any Parity Stock or Junior Stock, nor may any Parity Stock or Junior Stock be redeemed, purchased or otherwise acquired for any consideration (or any money paid to or made available for a sinking fund for the redemption of any Parity Stock or Junior Stock) by or on behalf of the Corporation (except by conversion into or exchange for shares of Parity Stock or Junior Stock (in the case of Parity Stock) or Junior Stock (in the case of Junior Stock)), unless full Accumulated Dividends shall have been or contemporaneously are declared and paid, or are declared and a sum sufficient for the payment thereof is set apart for such payment, on the Preferred Stock and any Parity Stock for all dividend payment periods terminating on or prior to the date of such declaration, payment, redemption, purchase or acquisition. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if full dividends have not been paid on the Preferred Stock and any Parity Stock, dividends may be declared and paid on the Preferred Stock and such Parity Stock so long as the dividends are declared and paid pro rata so that the amounts of dividends declared per share on the Preferred Stock and such Parity Stock will in all cases bear to each other the same ratio that accumulated and unpaid dividends per share on the shares of Preferred Stock and such other Parity Stock bear to each other.
     (e) Holders of shares of Preferred Stock shall not be entitled to any dividends on the Preferred Stock, whether payable in cash, property or stock, in excess of full cumulative dividends and Additional Dividends (if any).
     (f) The holders of shares of Preferred Stock at the close of business on a Dividend Record Date will be entitled to receive the dividend payment on those shares on the corresponding Dividend Payment Date notwithstanding the subsequent conversion thereof or the Corporation’s default in payment of the dividend due on that Dividend Payment Date. However, shares of Preferred Stock surrendered for conversion during the period between the close of business on any Dividend Record Date and the close of business on the Business Day immediately preceding the applicable Dividend Payment Date must be accompanied by payment of an amount equal to the dividend payable on the shares on that Dividend Payment Date; provided, however, that no such payment need be made if (1) the Corporation has specified a Mandatory Conversion Date that is after a Dividend Record Date and on or prior to the immediately following Dividend Payment Date or (2) any accumulated and unpaid dividends exist at the time of conversion with respect to such shares of Preferred Stock to the extent of such accumulated and unpaid dividends. A holder of shares of Preferred Stock on a Dividend Record Date who (or whose transferee) tenders any shares for conversion on the corresponding Dividend Payment Date will receive the dividend payable by the Corporation on the Preferred Stock on that date, and the converting holder need not include payment in the amount of such dividend upon surrender of shares of Preferred Stock for conversion. Except as provided above with respect to a voluntary conversion pursuant to Section 7, the Corporation shall make no payment or allowance for unpaid dividends, whether or not in arrears, on converted shares or for dividends on the shares of Common Stock issued upon conversion.
     (g) In any case where any Dividend Payment Date or Conversion Date (including upon the occurrence of a Fundamental Change) of any Preferred Stock shall not be a Business Day, at any place of payment, then payment of dividends (and Additional Dividends, if any) need not be made on such date, but may be made on the next succeeding Business Day at such place of payment with the same force and effect as if made on the dividend payment date or Conversion Date (including upon the occurrence of a Fundamental Change); and no dividends shall accumulate on the amount so payable for the period from and after such Dividend Payment Date or Conversion Date, as the case may be, to such Business Day.

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     (h) The Paying Agent shall return to the Corporation upon written request any money or property held by it for the payment of any amount with respect to the Preferred Stock that remains unclaimed for two years, provided, however, that the Paying Agent, before being required to make any such return, shall at the expense of the Corporation cause to be published once in a newspaper of general circulation in The City of New York or mail to each such Holder notice that such money or property remains unclaimed and that, after a date specified therein, which shall not be less than 30 days from the date of such publication or mailing, any unclaimed money or property then remaining shall be returned to the Corporation. After return to the Corporation, Holders entitled to the money or property must look to the Corporation for payment as general creditors unless an applicable abandoned property law designates another Person.
     4. Fundamental Change.
     (a) Purchase at the Option of the Holder Upon a Fundamental Change. Each Holder shall have the right, at such Holder’s option, to require the Corporation to purchase any or all of such Holder’s Preferred Stock for cash or a check on the date that is no earlier than 60 days nor later than 90 days after the date of the Corporation Notice of the occurrence of such Fundamental Change (subject to extension to comply with applicable law, as provided in Section 4(h) (the “Fundamental Change Purchase Date”). The Preferred Stock shall be repurchased in integral multiples of $50.00 (representing the Liquidation Preference). The Corporation shall purchase such Preferred Stock at a price (the “Fundamental Change Purchase Price”) equal to 100% of the Liquidation Price of the number of shares of Preferred Stock to be purchased plus accumulated and unpaid dividends, including Additional Dividends, if any, to the Fundamental Change Purchase Date.
     (b) Notice of Fundamental Change. The Corporation, or at its request (which must be received by the Paying Agent at least three Business Days (or such lesser period as agreed to by the Paying Agent) prior to the date the Paying Agent is requested to give such notice as described below), the Paying Agent, in the name of and at the expense of the Corporation, shall mail to all Holders a Corporation Notice of the occurrence of a Fundamental Change and of the purchase right arising as a result thereof, including the information required by Section 4(e) hereof, on or before the 30th day after the occurrence of such Fundamental Change.
     (c) Exercise of Option. For Preferred Stock to be so purchased at the option of the Holder, the Paying Agent must receive at its office in Jackson, Michigan, or any other offices of the Paying Agent maintained for such purposes, such shares of Preferred Stock duly endorsed for transfer, together with a written notice of purchase in the form attached hereto as Exhibit A (a “Fundamental Change Purchase Notice”) duly completed, on or before the 30th day prior to the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, subject to extension to comply with applicable law. The Fundamental Change Purchase Notice shall state:
  (i)   if certificated, the certificate numbers of the shares of Preferred Stock which the Holder shall deliver to be purchased, or, if not certificated, the Fundamental Change Purchase Notice must comply with appropriate Depository procedures;
 
  (ii)   the number of shares of Preferred Stock which the Holder shall deliver to be purchased, which portion must be $50.00 or an integral multiple thereof; and
 
  (iii)   that such Preferred Stock shall be purchased as of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date pursuant to the terms and conditions specified in the Preferred Stock and in this Certificate of Designation.
     (d) Procedures. The Corporation shall purchase from a Holder, pursuant to this Section 4, shares of Preferred Stock or multiples of $50.00 if so requested by such Holder.
     Any purchase by the Corporation contemplated pursuant to the provisions of this Section 4 shall be consummated by the delivery of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price to be received by the Holder promptly following the later of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date or the time of book-entry transfer or delivery of the Preferred Stock.

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     Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, any Holder delivering to the Paying Agent the Fundamental Change Purchase Notice contemplated by Section 4(c) hereof shall have the right at any time prior to the close of business on the Business Day prior to the Fundamental Change Purchase Date to withdraw such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice (in whole or in part) by delivery of a written notice of withdrawal to the Paying Agent in accordance with Section 4(f) hereof.
     The Paying Agent shall promptly notify the Corporation of the receipt by it of any Fundamental Change Purchase Notice or written notice of withdrawal thereof.
     On or before 10:00 a.m. (New York City time) on the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, the Corporation shall deposit with the Paying Agent (or if the Corporation or an Affiliate of the Corporation is acting as the Paying Agent, shall segregate and hold in trust) money sufficient to pay the aggregate Fundamental Change Purchase Price of the Preferred Stock to be purchased pursuant to this Section 4. Payment by the Paying Agent of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price for such Preferred Stock shall be made promptly following the later of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date or the time of book-entry transfer or delivery of such Preferred Stock. If the Paying Agent holds, in accordance with the terms of this Certificate of Designation, money sufficient to pay the Fundamental Change Purchase Price of such Preferred Stock on the Business Day following the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, then, on and after such date, such Preferred Stock shall cease to be outstanding and dividends (including Additional Dividends, if any) on such Preferred Stock shall cease to accumulate, whether or not book-entry transfer of such Preferred Stock is made or such Preferred Stock is delivered to the Paying Agent, and all other rights of the Holder shall terminate (other than the right to receive the Fundamental Change Purchase Price upon delivery or transfer of the Preferred Stock). Nothing herein shall preclude any withholding tax required by law.
     The Corporation shall require each Paying Agent to agree in writing that the Paying Agent shall hold in trust for the benefit of Holders all money held by the Paying Agent for the payment of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price. If the Corporation or an Affiliate of the Corporation acts as Paying Agent, it shall segregate the money held by it as Paying Agent and hold it as a separate trust fund.
     All questions as to the validity, eligibility (including time of receipt) and acceptance of any Preferred Stock pursuant to a Fundamental Change shall be determined by the Corporation, whose determination shall be final and binding.
     (e) Notice of Fundamental Change. The Corporation shall send notices (each, a “Corporation Notice”) to the Holders (and to beneficial owners as required by applicable law) at their addresses shown in the Security Register maintained by the Security Registrar, and delivered to the Paying Agent on or before the 30th day after the occurrence of the Fundamental Change (“Corporation Notice Date”). Each Corporation Notice shall include a form of Fundamental Change Purchase Notice to be completed by a Holder and shall state:
  (i)   the applicable Fundamental Change Purchase Price, excluding accumulated and unpaid dividends, Conversion Rate at the time of such notice (and any adjustments to the Conversion Rate) and, to the extent known at the time of such notice, the amount of dividends (including Additional Dividends, if any), if any, that will be payable with respect to the Preferred Stock on the applicable Fundamental Change Purchase Date;
 
  (ii)   the events causing the Fundamental Change and the date of the Fundamental Change;
 
  (iii)   the Fundamental Change Purchase Date;
 
  (iv)   the last date on which a Holder may exercise its purchase right;
 
  (v)   the name and address of the Paying Agent and the Conversion Agent;
 
  (vi)   that the Preferred Stock must be surrendered to the Paying Agent to collect payment of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price;

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  (vii)   that the Preferred Stock as to which a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been given may be converted only if the applicable Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been withdrawn in accordance with the terms of this Certificate of Designation;
 
  (viii)   that the Fundamental Change Purchase Price for any of the Preferred Stock as to which a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been given and not withdrawn shall be paid by the Paying Agent promptly following the later of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date or the time of book-entry transfer or delivery of such Preferred Stock;
 
  (ix)   the procedures the Holder must follow under this Section 4;
 
  (x)   briefly, the conversion rights of the Preferred Stock;
 
  (xi)   that, unless the Corporation defaults in making payment of such Fundamental Change Purchase Price on the Preferred Stock covered by any Fundamental Change Purchase Notice, dividends (including Additional Dividends, if any) will cease to accumulate on and after the Fundamental Change Purchase Date;
 
  (xii)   the CUSIP or ISIN number of the Preferred Stock; and
 
  (xiii)   the procedures for withdrawing a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice.
     In connection with providing such Corporation Notice, the Corporation will issue a press release and publish a notice containing the information in such Corporation Notice in a newspaper of general circulation in The City of New York or publish such information on the Corporation’s then existing Web site or through such other public medium as the Corporation may use at the time.
     At the Corporation’s request, made at least five Business Days prior to the date upon which such notice is to be mailed, and at the Corporation’s expense, the Paying Agent shall give the Corporation Notice in the Corporation’s name; provided, however, that, in all cases, the text of the Corporation Notice shall be prepared by the Corporation.
     (f) Effect of Fundamental Change Purchase Notice. Upon receipt by the Corporation of the Fundamental Change Purchase Notice specified in this Section 4, the Holder of the Preferred Stock in respect of which such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice was given shall (unless such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice is withdrawn as specified in this Section 4(f)) thereafter be entitled to receive solely the Fundamental Change Purchase Price with respect to such Preferred Stock. Such Fundamental Change Purchase Price shall be paid by the Paying Agent to such Holder promptly following the later of (x) the Fundamental Change Purchase Date with respect to such Preferred Stock (provided the conditions in this Section 4 have been satisfied) and (y) the time of delivery or book-entry transfer of such Preferred Stock to the Paying Agent by the Holder thereof in the manner required by this Section 4. Preferred Stock in respect of which a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been given by the Holder thereof may not be converted for shares of Common Stock on or after the date of the delivery of such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice unless such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has first been validly withdrawn as specified in this Section 4(f). Payment of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price for shares of Preferred Stock in registered, certificated form (“Certificated Preferred Stock”) for which a Fundamental Change Purchase Notice has been delivered and not withdrawn is conditioned upon delivery of such Certificated Preferred Stock (together with necessary endorsements) to the Paying Agent at its office in Jackson, Michigan, or any other office of the Paying Agent maintained for such purpose, at any time (whether prior to, on or after the Fundamental Change Purchase Date) after the delivery of such Fundamental Change Purchase Notice. Payment of the Fundamental Change Purchase Price for such Certificated Preferred Stock will be made promptly following the later of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date or the time of delivery of such Certificated Preferred Stock.
     If the Paying Agent holds, in accordance with the terms of this Certificate of Designation, money sufficient to pay the Fundamental Change Purchase Price of shares of Preferred Stock on the Business Day following the Fundamental Change Purchase Date for such Preferred Stock, then, on and after such date, dividends on such

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Preferred Stock will cease to accumulate, whether or not such Preferred Stock is delivered to the Paying Agent, and all other rights of the Holder shall terminate (other than the right to receive the Fundamental Change Purchase Price upon delivery of the Preferred Stock).
     A Fundamental Change Purchase Notice may be withdrawn by means of a written notice of withdrawal delivered to the office of the Paying Agent at any time prior to 5:00 p.m. New York City time on the Business Day prior to the Fundamental Change Purchase Date to which it relates specifying:
  (i)   if certificated, the certificate number of Preferred Stock in respect of which such notice of withdrawal is being submitted, or, if not certificated, the written notice of withdrawal must comply with appropriate Depository procedures;
 
  (ii)   the number of shares of Preferred Stock with respect to which such notice of withdrawal is being submitted; and
 
  (iii)   the number of shares of Preferred Stock, if any, which remains subject to the original Fundamental Change Purchase Notice and which have been or shall be delivered for purchase by the Corporation.
     (g) Preferred Stock Purchased in Part. Any shares of Preferred Stock that are to be purchased only in part shall be surrendered (in physical or book-entry form) at the office of the Paying Agent (with, if the Corporation so requires, due endorsement by, or a written instrument of transfer in form satisfactory to the Corporation duly executed by, the Holder thereof or such Holder’s attorney duly authorized in writing) and the Corporation shall execute and the Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver to the Holder of such Preferred Stock, without service charge, new shares of Preferred Stock, as requested by such Holder in an amount equal to, and in exchange for, the portion of the Liquidation Preference of the Preferred Stock so surrendered which is not purchased.
     (h) Covenant to Comply with Securities Laws Upon Purchase of the Preferred Stock. In connection with any offer to purchase Preferred Stock under this Section 4, the Corporation shall, to the extent applicable: (i) comply with Rules 13e-4 and 14e-1 (and any successor provisions thereto) under the Exchange Act, if applicable; (ii) file the related Schedule TO (or any successor schedule, form or report) under the Exchange Act, if applicable; and (iii) otherwise comply with all applicable federal and state securities laws so as to permit the rights and obligations under this Section 4 hereof to be exercised in the time and in the manner specified in this Section 4.
     (i) Repayment to the Corporation. The Paying Agent shall return to the Corporation any cash or property that remains unclaimed as provided in the Preferred Stock, together with interest that the Paying Agent has agreed to pay, if any, held by it for the payment of a Fundamental Change Purchase Price; provided, however, that to the extent that the aggregate amount of cash or property deposited by the Corporation pursuant to this Section 4 exceeds the aggregate Fundamental Change Purchase Price of the Preferred Stock or portions thereof which the Corporation is obligated to purchase as of the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, then promptly on and after the Business Day following the Fundamental Change Purchase Date, the Paying Agent shall return any such excess to the Corporation together with interest that the Paying Agent has agreed to pay, if any.
     (j) Officers’ Certificate. At least five Business Days before the Corporation Notice Date, the Corporation shall deliver an Officers’ Certificate to the Paying Agent (provided, that, at the Corporation’s option, the matters to be addressed in such Officers’ Certificate may be divided among two such certificates) specifying:
  (i)   the manner of payment selected by the Corporation; and
 
  (ii)   whether the Corporation desires the Paying Agent to give the Corporation Notice required by Section 4(e) hereof.
     5. Voting.
     (a) The shares of Preferred Stock shall have no voting rights except as set forth below or as otherwise required by Michigan law from time to time:

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  (i)   If and whenever at any time or times a Voting Rights Triggering Event occurs, then the holders of shares of Preferred Stock, voting as a single class with any other preferred stock or preference securities having similar voting rights that are exercisable (the “Voting Rights Class”), will be entitled at the next regular or special meeting of shareholders of the Corporation to elect two additional directors of the Corporation, unless the Board of Directors is comprised of fewer than six directors at such time, in which case the Voting Rights Class shall be entitled to elect one additional director. Upon the election of any such additional directors, the number of directors that comprise the Board of Directors shall be increased by such number of additional directors.
 
  (ii)   Such voting rights may be exercised at a special meeting of the holders of the shares of the Voting Rights Class, called as hereinafter provided, or at any annual meeting of shareholders held for the purpose of electing directors, and thereafter at each such annual meeting until such time as all dividends in arrears on the shares of Preferred Stock shall have been paid in full, at which time or times such voting rights and the term of the directors elected pursuant to Section 5(a)(i) shall terminate.
 
  (iii)   At any time when such voting rights shall have vested in holders of shares of the Voting Rights Class, an Officer of the Corporation may call, and, upon written request of the record holders of shares representing at least twenty-five percent (25%) of the voting power of the shares then outstanding of the Voting Rights Class, addressed to the Secretary of the Corporation, shall call a special meeting of the holders of shares of the Voting Rights Class. Such meeting shall be held at the earliest practicable date upon the notice required for annual meetings of shareholders at the place for holding annual meetings of shareholders of the Corporation, or, if none, at a place designated by the Board of Directors. Notwithstanding the provisions of this Section 5(a)(iii), no such special meeting shall be called during a period within the 60 days immediately preceding the date fixed for the next annual meeting of shareholders, in which such case the election of directors pursuant to Section 5(a)(i) shall be held at such annual meeting of shareholders.
 
  (iv)   At any meeting held for the purpose of electing directors at which the holders of the Voting Rights Class shall have the right to elect directors as provided herein, the presence in person or by proxy of the holders of shares representing more than fifty percent (50%) in voting power of the then outstanding shares of the Voting Rights Class shall be required and shall be sufficient to constitute a quorum of such class for the election of directors by such class. The affirmative vote of the holders of shares of Preferred Stock constituting a majority of the shares of Preferred Stock present at such meeting, in person or by proxy shall be sufficient to elect any such director.
 
  (v)   Any director elected pursuant to the voting rights created under this Section 5(a) shall hold office until the next annual meeting of shareholders (unless such term has previously terminated pursuant to Section 5(a)(ii)) and any vacancy in respect of any such director shall be filled only by vote of the remaining director so elected by holders of the Voting Rights Class, or, if there be no such remaining director, by the holders of shares of the Voting Rights Class at a special meeting called in accordance with the procedures set forth in this Section 5, or, if no such special meeting is called, at the next annual meeting of shareholders. Upon any termination of such voting rights, the term of office of all directors elected pursuant to this Section 5 shall terminate.
 
  (vi)   So long as any shares of Preferred Stock remain outstanding, unless a greater percentage shall then be required by law, the Corporation shall not, without the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of all of the outstanding Preferred Stock voting or consenting, as the case may be, separately as one class, (i) create, authorize or issue any class or series of Senior Stock (or any security convertible into Senior Stock) or (ii) amend the Articles of Incorporation so as to affect adversely the specified rights, preferences, privileges or voting rights of holders of shares of Preferred Stock.
 
  (vii)   In exercising the voting rights set forth in this Section 5(a), each share of Preferred Stock shall be entitled to one vote.

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     (b) The Corporation may authorize, increase the authorized amount of, or issue any class or series of Parity Stock or Junior Stock, without the consent of the holders of Preferred Stock, and in taking such actions the Corporation shall not be deemed to have affected adversely the rights, preferences, privileges or voting rights of holders of shares of Preferred Stock.
     6. Liquidation Rights.
     (a) In the event of any liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation, whether voluntary of involuntary, each holder of shares of Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive and to be paid out of the assets of the Corporation available for distribution to its shareholders the Liquidation Preference plus Accumulated Dividends and Additional Dividends thereon in preference to the holders of, and before any payment or distribution is made on, any Junior Stock, including, without limitation, on any Common Stock.
     (b) Neither the sale, conveyance, exchange or transfer (for cash, shares of stock, securities or other consideration) of all or substantially all the assets or business of the Corporation (other than in connection with the liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of its business) nor the merger or consolidation of the Corporation into or with any other Person shall be deemed to be a liquidation, winding-up or dissolution, voluntary or involuntary, for the purposes of this Section 6.
     (c) After the payment to the holders of the shares of Preferred Stock of full preferential amounts provided for in this Section 6, the holders of Preferred Stock as such shall have no right or claim to any of the remaining assets of the Corporation.
     (d) In the event the assets of the Corporation available for distribution to the holders of shares of Preferred Stock upon any liquidation, winding-up or dissolution of the Corporation, whether voluntary or involuntary, shall be insufficient to pay in full all amounts to which such holders are entitled pursuant to Section 6(a), no such distribution shall be made on account of any shares of Parity Stock upon such liquidation, dissolution or winding- up unless proportionate distributable amounts shall be paid on account of the shares of Preferred Stock, ratably, in proportion to the full distributable amounts for which holders of all Preferred Stock and of any Parity Stock are entitled upon such liquidation, winding-up or dissolution.
     7. Conversion.
     (a) Conversion Rights. A Holder may convert Preferred Stock into cash and shares of Common Stock during the periods and upon satisfaction of at least one of the conditions set forth below:
  (i)   in any calendar quarter (and only during such calendar quarter) if the Last Reported Sale Price for Common Stock for at least 20 Trading Days during the period of 30 consecutive Trading Days ending on the last Trading Day of the previous calendar quarter is greater than or equal to 120% of the Conversion Price per share of Common Stock on such last Trading Day;
 
  (ii)   during the five Business Days immediately following any ten consecutive Trading Day period in which the Trading Price per Liquidation Preference of Preferred Stock (as determined following a request by a Holder of Preferred Stock in accordance with the procedures described herein) for each day of that period was less than 95% of the product of the sale price of Common Stock and the then applicable Conversion Rate (the “Trading Exception”); provided, however, that a Holder may not convert its Preferred Stock if the average closing sale price of Common Stock for such ten consecutive Trading Day period is between the then current Conversion Price and 120% of the then applicable Conversion Price; in connection with any conversion upon satisfaction of such Trading Price condition, the Conversion Agent shall have no obligation to determine the Trading Price unless the Corporation has requested such determination; and the Corporation shall have no obligation to make such request unless the Holder provides reasonable evidence that the Trading Price would be less than 95% of the product of the sale price of Common Stock and the then applicable Conversion Rate; at which time, the Corporation shall instruct the Conversion Agent to determine the Trading Price beginning on the next

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      Trading Day and on each successive Trading Day until the Trading Price is greater than or equal to 95% of the product of the sale price of Common Stock and the then applicable Conversion Rate;
 
  (iii)   the Corporation becomes a party to a consolidation, merger or binding share exchange pursuant to which the Common Stock would be converted into cash or property (other than securities), in which case a Holder may surrender Preferred Stock for conversion at any time from and after the date which is 15 days prior to the anticipated effective date for the transaction until 15 days after the actual effective date (the “Effective Date”) of such transaction; or
 
  (iv)   the Corporation elects to (i) distribute to all holders of Common Stock assets, debt securities or rights to purchase securities of the Corporation, which distribution has a per share value as determined by the Board of Directors exceeding 15% of the Last Reported Sale Price of a share of Common Stock on the Trading Day immediately preceding the declaration date for such distribution, or (ii) distribute to all holders of Common Stock rights entitling them to purchase, for a period expiring within 60 days after the date of such distribution, shares of Common Stock at less than the Last Reported Sale Price of Common Stock on the Trading Day immediately preceding the declaration date of the distribution. In the case of the foregoing clauses (i) and (ii), the Corporation must notify the Holders at least 20 Business Days immediately prior to the ex-dividend date for such distribution. Once the Corporation has given such notice, Holders may surrender their Preferred Stock for conversion at any time thereafter until the earlier of the close of business on the Business Day immediately prior to the ex-dividend date or the Corporation’s announcement that such distribution will not take place; provided, however, that a Holder may not exercise this right to convert if the Holder may participate in the distribution without conversion. As used herein, the term “ex dividend date,” when used with respect to any issuance or distribution, shall mean the first date on which the Common Stock trades regular way on such exchange or in such market without the right to receive such issuance or distribution.
     The initial Conversion Rate is 5.0541 shares of Common Stock per share of Preferred Stock, subject to adjustment in certain events as described herein. The Corporation shall deliver cash or a check in lieu of any fractional share of Common Stock. A Holder may convert fewer than all of its Preferred Stock so long as the Preferred Stock converted is an integral multiple of the Liquidation Preference.
     Holders of Preferred Stock at the close of business on a Dividend Record Date will receive payment of dividends, payable on the corresponding Dividend Payment Date notwithstanding the conversion of such Preferred Stock at any time after the close of business on such Dividend Record Date. Preferred Stock surrendered for conversion by a Holder during the period from the close of business on any Dividend Record Date to the opening of business on the immediately following Dividend Payment Date must be accompanied by payment of an amount equal to the dividend that the Holder is to receive on such Preferred Stock; provided, however, that no such payment need be made if (1) the Corporation has specified a Mandatory Conversion Date that is after a Dividend Record Date and on or prior to the immediately following Dividend Payment Date or (2) any accumulated and unpaid dividends exist at the time of conversion with respect to such shares of Preferred Stock to the extent of such accumulated and unpaid dividends.
     To convert Preferred Stock a Holder must (i) complete and manually sign the irrevocable conversion notice in the form attached hereto as Exhibit B (a “Conversion Notice”) (or complete and manually sign a facsimile of such notice) and deliver such notice to the Conversion Agent at its office in Jackson, Michigan or any other offices of the Conversion Agent maintained by the Conversion Agent for such purpose, (ii) surrender the shares of Preferred Stock to the Conversion Agent, (iii) furnish appropriate endorsements and transfer documents if required by the Conversion Agent or the Corporation and (iv) pay any transfer or similar tax, if required.
     (b) Conversion Procedures. To convert Preferred Stock, a Holder must satisfy the requirements in this Section 7 and in the Preferred Stock. The date on which the Holder satisfies all those requirements is the conversion date (the “Conversion Date”). Subject to the procedures set forth in Section 7(f) hereof, as soon as practicable, but in no event later than the fifth Business Day following the Conversion Date, the Corporation shall deliver the Conversion Value in cash and deliver the Common Stock by either of the following methods: (i) update the global security representing the shares of Common Stock to record the Holder’s interest in the Common Stock,

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or (ii) deliver to the Holder, through the Conversion Agent, a certificate for the number of full shares representing Net Shares, if any, together with, in either case, cash or a check in lieu of any fractional share determined pursuant to Section 7(c) hereof. The Person in whose name the certificate is registered shall be treated as a shareholder of record on and after the Conversion Date; provided, however, that no surrender of Preferred Stock on any date when the stock transfer books of the Corporation shall be closed shall be effective to constitute the Person or Persons entitled to receive the shares of Common Stock upon such conversion as the record holder or holders of such shares of Common Stock on such date, but such surrender shall be effective to constitute the Person or Persons entitled to receive such shares of Common Stock as the record holder or holders thereof for all purposes at the close of business on the next succeeding day on which such stock transfer books are open; such conversion shall be at the Conversion Rate in effect on the date that such shares of Preferred Stock shall have been surrendered for conversion, as if the stock transfer books of the Corporation had not been closed. Upon conversion of Preferred Stock, such Person shall no longer be a Holder of such Preferred Stock.
     No payment or adjustment shall be made for dividends on or other distributions with respect to any Common Stock except as provided in Section 7(f) hereof or as otherwise provided in this Certificate of Designation.
     On conversion of Preferred Stock, delivery of the Principal Return, the Net Shares and the cash or check payment, if any, in lieu of fractional shares will be deemed to satisfy the Corporation’s obligation to pay the Liquidation Preference of the converted Preferred Stock, including Accumulated Dividends, if any. Accumulated Dividends with respect to the converted Preferred Stock will be deemed canceled, extinguished or forfeited, rather than paid in full to the Holder thereof.
     Upon surrender of Preferred Stock that is converted in part, the Corporation shall execute, and the Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver to the Holder, new shares of Preferred Stock in a number equal to the unconverted portion of the shares of Preferred Stock surrendered.
     If the last day on which Preferred Stock may be converted is a legal holiday in a place where a Conversion Agent is located, the Preferred Stock may be surrendered to that Conversion Agent on the next succeeding day that it is not a legal holiday.
     (c) Cash or Check Payments in Lieu of Fractional Shares. The Corporation shall not issue a fractional share of Common Stock upon conversion of Preferred Stock. Instead the Corporation shall deliver cash (or Corporation’s check) for the current market value of the fractional share. The current market value of a fractional share shall be determined to the nearest 1/10,000th of a share by multiplying the Last Reported Sale Price of a full share of Common Stock on the Trading Day immediately preceding the Conversion Date by the fractional amount and rounding the product to the nearest whole cent.
     (d) Taxes on Conversion. If a Holder converts Preferred Stock, the Corporation shall pay any documentary, stamp or similar issue or transfer tax due on the issue of shares of Common Stock upon the conversion. However, the Holder shall pay any such tax which is due because the Holder requests the shares to be issued in a name other than the Holder’s name. The Conversion Agent may refuse to deliver the certificates representing the Common Stock being issued in a name other than the Holder’s name until the Conversion Agent receives a sum sufficient to pay any tax which shall be due because the shares are to be issued in a name other than the Holder’s name. Nothing herein shall preclude any withholding tax required by law.
     (e) Covenants of the Corporation. The Corporation shall, prior to issuance of any Preferred Stock hereunder, and from time to time as may be necessary, reserve out of its authorized but unissued Common Stock a sufficient number of shares of Common Stock to permit the conversion of the Preferred Stock.
     All shares of Common Stock delivered upon conversion of the Preferred Stock shall be newly issued shares or treasury shares, shall be duly and validly issued and fully paid and nonassessable and shall be free from preemptive rights and free of any lien or adverse claim.

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     The Corporation shall endeavor promptly to comply with all federal and state securities laws regulating the order and delivery of shares of Common Stock upon the conversion of Preferred Stock, if any, and shall cause to have listed or quoted all such shares of Common Stock on each United States national securities exchange or over-the-counter or other domestic market on which the Common Stock is then listed or quoted.
     (f) Adjustments to Conversion Rate. The Conversion Rate shall be adjusted from time to time, without duplication, as follows:
  (i)   In case the Corporation shall: (A) pay a dividend, or make a distribution, exclusively in shares of its capital stock, on the Common Stock; (B) subdivide its outstanding Common Stock into a greater number of shares; (C) combine its outstanding Common Stock into a smaller number of shares; or (D) reclassify its Common Stock, the Conversion Rate in effect immediately prior to the record date or effective date, as the case may be, for the adjustment pursuant to this Section 7(f) as described below, shall be adjusted so that the Holder of any Preferred Stock thereafter surrendered for conversion shall be entitled to receive the cash and number of shares of Common Stock of the Corporation which such Holder would have owned or have been entitled to receive after the happening of any of the events described above had such Preferred Stock been converted immediately prior to such record date or effective date, as the case may be. An adjustment made pursuant to this Section 7(f) shall become effective immediately after the applicable record date in the case of a dividend or distribution and shall become effective immediately after the applicable effective date in the case of subdivision, combination or reclassification of the Corporation’s Common Stock. If any dividend or distribution of the type described in clause (A) above is not so paid or made, the Conversion Rate shall again be adjusted to the Conversion Rate which would then be in effect if such dividend or distribution had not been declared.
 
  (ii)   In case the Corporation shall issue rights or warrants to all holders of the Common Stock entitling them (for a period expiring within 60 days after the date of issuance of such rights or warrants) to subscribe for or purchase Common Stock at a price per share less than the Market Price per share of Common Stock on the record date fixed for determination of shareholders entitled to receive such rights or warrants, the Conversion Rate in effect immediately after such record date shall be adjusted so that the same shall equal the Conversion Rate determined by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately after such record date by a fraction of which (A) the numerator shall be the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding on such record date plus the number of additional shares of Common Stock offered for subscription or purchase, and (B) the denominator shall be the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding on such record date plus the number of  shares which the aggregate offering price of the total number of shares so offered would purchase at the Market Price per share of Common Stock on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such issuance of rights or warrants. Such adjustment shall be made successively whenever any such rights or warrants are issued, and shall become effective immediately after the opening of business on the day following the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such rights or warrants. To the extent that shares of Common Stock are not delivered after the expiration of such rights or warrants, the Conversion Rate shall be readjusted to the Conversion Rate which would then be in effect had the adjustments made upon the issuance of such rights or warrants been made on the basis of delivery of only the number of shares of Common Stock actually delivered. If such rights or warrants are not so issued, the Conversion Rate shall again be adjusted to be the Conversion Rate which would then be in effect if such record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such rights or warrants had not been fixed. In determining whether any rights or warrants entitle the holders to subscribe for or purchase  shares of Common Stock at less than such Market Price, and in determining the aggregate offering price of such shares of Common Stock, there shall be taken into account any consideration received by the Corporation for such rights or warrants, the value of such consideration, if other than cash, to be determined by the Board of Directors.

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  (iii)   In case the Corporation shall, by dividend or otherwise, distribute to all holders of Common Stock any assets, debt securities or rights or warrants to purchase any of its securities (excluding (a) any dividend, distribution or issuance covered by those referred to in Section 7(f)(i) or Section 7(f)(ii) hereof and (b) any dividend or distribution paid exclusively in cash) (any of the foregoing hereinafter in this Section 7(f)(iii) called the “Distributed Assets or Securities”) in an aggregate amount per share of Common Stock that, combined together with the aggregate amount of any other such distributions to all holders of its Common Stock made within the 12 months preceding the date of payment of such distribution, and in respect of which no adjustment pursuant to this Section 7(f)(iii) has been made, exceeds 15% of the Market Price on the Trading Day immediately preceding the declaration of such distribution, then the Conversion Rate shall be adjusted so that the same shall equal the Conversion Rate determined by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately prior to the close of business on the record date mentioned below by a fraction of which (A) the numerator shall be the Market Price per share of the Common Stock on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such dividend or distribution, and (B) the denominator shall be (1) the Market Price per share of the Common Stock on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such dividend or distribution less (2) the Fair Market Value on the earlier of such record date or the Trading Day immediately preceding the ex-dividend date for such dividend or distribution (as determined by the Board of Directors, whose determination shall be conclusive, and described in a certificate filed with the Paying Agent) of the Distributed Assets or Securities so distributed applicable to one share of Common Stock. Such adjustment shall become effective immediately after the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution; provided, however, that, if (a) the Fair Market Value of the portion of the Distributed Assets or Securities so distributed applicable to one share of Common Stock is equal to or greater than the Market Price of the Common Stock on the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution or (b) the Market Price of the Common Stock on the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution is greater than the Fair Market Value per share of such Distributed Assets or Securities by less than $1.00, then, in lieu of the foregoing adjustment, adequate provision shall be made so that each Holder shall have the right to receive upon conversion, in addition to the cash and shares of Common Stock, the kind and amount of assets, debt securities, or rights or warrants comprising the Distributed Assets or Securities the Holder would have received had such Holder converted such Preferred Stock immediately prior to the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to receive such distribution. In the event that such distribution is not so paid or made, the applicable Conversion Rate shall again be adjusted to the Conversion Rate which would then be in effect if such distribution had not been declared.
 
  (iv)   In case the Corporation shall declare a cash dividend or cash distribution to all or substantially all of the holders of Common Stock, the Conversion Rate shall be increased so that the applicable Conversion Rate shall equal the price determined by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately prior to the record date for such dividend or distribution by a fraction,
(A) the numerator of which shall be the average of the Last Reported Sale Price of Common Stock for the five consecutive Trading Days ending on the Trading Day immediately preceding the record date for such dividend or distribution (the “Pre-Dividend Sale Price”), and
(B) the denominator of which shall be the Pre-Dividend Sale Price, minus the full amount of such cash dividend or cash distribution applicable to one share of Common Stock (the “Dividend Adjustment Amount”), with
such adjustment to become effective immediately after the record date for such dividend or distribution; provided that if the denominator of the foregoing fraction is less than $1.00 (including a negative amount), then in lieu of the foregoing adjustment, adequate provision shall be made so that each Holder shall have the right to receive upon conversion, in addition to the cash and Common Stock issuable upon such conversion, the amount of cash such Holder would have received had such

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      Holder converted its Preferred Stock solely into Common Stock at the then applicable Conversion Rate immediately prior to the record date for such cash dividend or cash distribution. If such cash dividend or cash distribution is not so paid or made, the applicable Conversion Rate shall again be adjusted to be the Conversion Rate that would then be in effect if such dividend or distribution had not been declared.
 
  (v)   In the case the Corporation shall make (a) any distributions, by dividend or otherwise, during any quarterly fiscal periods consisting exclusively of cash to all holders of outstanding shares of Common Stock in an aggregate amount that, together with (b) other all-cash or all-check distributions made to all holders of outstanding shares of Common Stock during such quarterly fiscal period, and (c) any cash and the Fair Market Value, as of the expiration of any tender or exchange offer (other than consideration payable in respect of any odd-lot tender offer) of consideration payable in respect of any tender or exchange offer by the Corporation or any of the Corporation’s Subsidiaries for all or any portion of  shares of Common Stock concluded during such quarterly fiscal period, exceed the product of $0 multiplied by the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding on the record date for such distribution, then, and in each such case, the Conversion Rate shall be increased in accordance with the provisions of clause (iv) above.
 
  (vi)   If a Holder elects to convert Preferred Stock in connection with a corporate transaction that occurs on or prior to December 5, 2008 that constitutes a Fundamental Change (other than as described in clause (iv) of the definition of Fundamental Change) and 10% or more of the Fair Market Value of the consideration for the Common Stock (as determined by the Board of Directors, whose determination shall be conclusive evidence of such Fair Market Value) in the corporate transaction consists of (A) cash, (B) other property or (C) securities that are not traded or scheduled to be traded immediately following such transaction on a U.S. national securities exchange or the Nasdaq National Market, then the Conversion Rate for the Preferred Stock surrendered for conversion by such Holder shall be adjusted so that such Holder will be entitled to receive cash and shares of Common Stock equal to the sum of (1) the Conversion Value and (2) the number of additional  shares of Common Stock (the “Additional Shares”) determined in the manner set forth below, subject in each case to the Corporation’s payment elections as described in Section 7 hereof. For the avoidance of doubt, the adjustment provided for in this Section 7(f)(vi) shall only be made with respect to the Preferred Stock being converted in connection with such Fundamental Change and shall not be effective as to any Preferred Stock not so converted.
 
      The number of Additional Shares will be determined by reference to the table below, based on the date on which such corporate transaction becomes effective (the “Effective Date”) and the Share Price; provided that if the Share Price is between two Share Price amounts in the table below or the Effective Date is between two Effective Dates in the table, the number of Additional Shares will be determined by a straight-line interpolation between the number of Additional Shares set forth for the higher and lower Share Price amounts and the two dates, as applicable, based on a 365-day year.
 
      The Share Prices set forth in the first row of the table below (i.e., column headers) will be adjusted as of any date on which the applicable Conversion Rate of the Preferred Stock is adjusted pursuant to this Section 7(f). The adjusted Share Prices will equal the Share Prices applicable immediately prior to such adjustment, multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the Conversion Rate immediately prior to the adjustment giving rise to the Share Price adjustment and the denominator of which is the Conversion Rate as so adjusted.
 
      The following table sets forth the hypothetical Share Price and number of Additional Shares to be received per Liquidation Preference of the Preferred Stock:

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    Share Price
Effective Date
  $ 7.81     $ 8.00     $ 9.00     $ 10.00     $ 11.00     $ 12.00     $ 13.00     $ 14.00     $ 15.00     $ 20.00     $ 25.00     $ 30.00     $ 35.00     $ 40.00     $ 50.00  
     
November 9, 2004
    1.52       1.52       1.42       1.20       1.02       0.88       0.79       0.70       0.63       0.39       0.27       0.20       0.15       0.12       0.00  
 
                                                                                                                       
December 5, 2005
    1.52       1.52       1.33       1.11       0.93       0.79       0.71       0.61       0.55       0.33       0.23       0.17       0.13       0.10       0.00  
 
                                                                                                                       
December 5, 2006
    1.52       1.52       1.23       1.00       0.82       0.89       0.62       0.52       0.47       0.27       0.18       0.13       0.10     0.08     0.00  
 
                                                                                                                       
December 5, 2007
    1.52       1.43       1.12       0.89       0.70       0.57       0.50       0.41       0.34       0.19       0.12       0.09       0.07       0.05       0.00  
 
                                                                                                                       
December 5, 2008
    1.52       1.36       1.03       0.77       0.57       0.43       0.37       0.27       0.20       0.10       0.06       0.05       0.04       0.03       0.00  
      The Share Prices and Additional Share amounts set forth above are based upon an initial Conversion Rate per share of 5.0541 per Liquidation Preference of the Preferred Stock.
 
      If the Share Price is equal to or in excess of $50.00 per share (subject to adjustment), no Additional Shares will be issued upon conversion.
 
      If the Share Price is less than $7.61 per share (subject to adjustment), no Additional Shares will be issued upon conversion.
 
      Notwithstanding the foregoing, any adjustment to the applicable Conversion Rate relating to the issuance of Additional Shares as described in this Section 7(f)(vi) will not exceed the Maximum Conversion Rate.
 
  (vii)   Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the case of a Public Acquirer Change of Control, the Corporation may, in lieu of increasing the applicable Conversion Rate by Additional Shares as described in Section 7(f)(vii) hereof, elect to adjust the applicable Conversion Rate and the related conversion obligation such that upon conversion the Issuer will deliver cash and a number of shares of Public Acquirer Common Stock such that by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately before the Public Acquirer Change of Control shall be adjusted by a fraction:
(A) the numerator of which will be the average of the Last Reported Sale Price of the Common Stock for the five consecutive trading days prior to but excluding the effective date of such Public Acquirer Change of Control; and
(B) the denominator of which will be the average of the Last Reported Sale Price of the Public Acquirer Common Stock for the five consecutive trading days commencing on the Trading Day next succeeding the effective date of such Public Acquirer Change of Control.
A “Public Acquirer Change of Control” means any event described in Section 7(f)(vi) hereof that would otherwise obligate the Corporation to increase the Conversion Rate as described in Section 7(f)(vi) hereof and the acquirer (or any entity of which the acquirer is a directly or indirectly wholly-owned Subsidiary and such entity provides a guarantee to the Preferred Stock) has a class of common stock traded on a U.S. national securities exchange or quoted on the Nasdaq National Market or which will be so traded or quoted when issued or exchanged in connection with such event (the “Public Acquirer Common Stock”).
After the adjustment of the applicable Conversion Rate in connection with a Public Acquirer Change of Control, the applicable Conversion Rate will be subject to further similar adjustments in the event that any of the events described in this Section 7(f) occur thereafter.
The Corporation is required to notify Holders of its election in writing of such transaction, which notice shall be made five Business Days prior to the effective date of such Public Acquirer Change of Control. In addition, the Holder can also, subject to certain conditions, require the Corporation to repurchase all or a portion of its Preferred Stock as described under Section 4.
  (viii)   With respect to Section 7(f)(iii) hereof, in the event that the Corporation makes any distribution to all holders of Common Stock consisting of Equity Interests in a Subsidiary or other business unit of the

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      Corporation, the Conversion Rate shall be adjusted so that the same shall equal the Conversion Rate determined by multiplying the Conversion Rate in effect immediately prior to the close of business on the record date fixed for the determination of holders of Common Stock entitled to receive such distribution by a fraction of which (A) the numerator shall be (x) the Spin-off Market Price per share of the Common Stock on such record date plus (y) the Spin-off Market Price per Equity Interest of the Subsidiary or other business unit of the Corporation on such record date and (B) the denominator shall be the Spin-off Market Price per share of the Common Stock on such record date, such adjustment to become effective 10 Trading Days after the effective date of such distribution of Equity Interests in a Subsidiary or other business unit of the Corporation.
 
  (ix)   Upon conversion of the Preferred Stock, the Holders shall receive, in addition to the cash and Common Stock issuable upon such conversion, the rights issued under any future shareholder rights plan the Corporation implements (notwithstanding the occurrence of an event causing such rights to separate from the Common Stock at or prior to the time of conversion) unless, prior to conversion, the rights have expired, terminated or been redeemed or exchanged in accordance with such rights plan. If, and only if, the Holders of Preferred Stock receive rights under such shareholder rights plans as described in the preceding sentence upon conversion of their Preferred Stock, then no other adjustment pursuant to this Section 7(f) shall be made in connection with such shareholder rights plans.
 
  (x)   For purposes of this Section 7(f), the number of shares of Common Stock at any time outstanding shall not include shares held in the treasury of the Corporation but shall include shares issuable in respect of scrip certificates issued in lieu of fractions of shares of Common Stock. The Corporation shall not pay any dividend or make any distribution on shares of Common Stock held in the treasury of the Corporation.
 
  (xi)   Notwithstanding the foregoing, in no event shall the Conversion Rate exceed the maximum conversion rate specified under this Section 7(f)(xi) (the “Maximum Conversion Rate”) as a result of an adjustment pursuant to Sections 7(f)(iii), 7(f)(iv) or 7(f)(vi) hereof. The Maximum Conversion Rate shall initially be 6.5703 and shall be appropriately adjusted from time to time for any stock dividends on or subdivisions or combinations of the Common Stock. The Maximum Conversion Rate shall not apply to any adjustments made pursuant to any of the events in Section 7(f)(i) or Section 7(f)(ii) hereof.
     (g) Calculation Methodology. No adjustment in the Conversion Price need be made unless the adjustment would require an increase or decrease of at least 1% in the Conversion Price then in effect, provided that any adjustment that would otherwise be required to be made shall be carried forward and taken into account in any subsequent adjustment. Except as stated in this Section 7, the Conversion Rate will not be adjusted for the issuance of Common Stock or any securities convertible into or exchangeable for Common Stock or carrying the right to purchase any of the foregoing. Any adjustments that are made shall be carried forward and taken into account in any subsequent adjustment. All calculations under Section 4 and Section 7(f) hereof and this Section 7(g) shall be made to the nearest cent or to the nearest 1/10,000th of a share, as the case may be.
  (h)   When No Adjustment Required. No adjustment to the Conversion Rate need be made:
 
  (i)   upon the issuance of any shares of Common Stock pursuant to any present or future plan providing for the reinvestment of dividends or interest payable on securities of the Corporation and the investment of additional optional amounts in  shares of Common Stock under any plan;
 
  (ii)   upon the issuance of any shares of Common Stock or options or rights to purchase those shares pursuant to any present or future employee, director or consultant benefit plan or program of or assumed by the Corporation or any of its Subsidiaries;
 
  (iii)   upon the issuance of any shares of Common Stock pursuant to any option, warrant, right, or exercisable, exchangeable or convertible security not described in clause (ii) above and outstanding as of the date of this Certificate of Designation;

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  (iv)   for a change in the par value or no par value of the Common Stock;
 
  (v)   for accumulated and unpaid dividends (including Additional Dividends, if any); or
 
  (vi)   if Holders are to participate in a merger or consolidation on a basis and with notice that the Board of Directors determines to be fair and appropriate in light of the basis and notice on which holders of Common Stock participate in the transaction; provided that the basis on which the Holders are to participate in the transaction shall not be deemed to be fair if it would require the conversion of securities at any time prior to the expiration of the conversion period specified for such securities.
     To the extent the Preferred Stock becomes convertible into cash, assets or property (other than capital stock of the Corporation or securities to which Section 7(l) hereof applies), no adjustment shall be made thereafter as to the cash, assets or property. Interest shall not accumulate on such cash.
     (i) Notice of Adjustment. Whenever the Conversion Rate is adjusted, the Corporation shall promptly mail to Holders a notice of the adjustment. The Corporation shall file with the Conversion Agent such notice. The certificate shall, absent manifest error, be conclusive evidence that the adjustment is correct. No Conversion Agent shall be under any duty or responsibility with respect to any such certificate except to exhibit the same to any Holder desiring inspection thereof.
     (j) Voluntary Increase. The Corporation may make such increases in the Conversion Rate, in addition to those required by Section 7(f) hereof, as the Board of Directors considers to be advisable to avoid or diminish any income tax to holders of Common Stock or rights to purchase Common Stock resulting from any dividend or distribution of stock (or rights to acquire stock) or from any event treated as such for income tax purposes. To the extent permitted by applicable law, the Corporation may from time to time increase the Conversion Rate by any amount, temporarily or otherwise, for any period of at least 20 days if the increase is irrevocable during the period and the Board of Directors shall have made a determination that such increase would be in the best interests of the Corporation, which determination shall be conclusive. Whenever the Conversion Rate is so increased, the Corporation shall mail to Holders and file with the Conversion Agent a notice of such increase. The Conversion Agent shall not be under any duty or responsibility with respect to any such notice except to exhibit the same to any holder desiring inspection thereof. The Corporation shall mail the notice at least 15 days before the date the increased Conversion Rate takes effect. The notice shall state the increased Conversion Rate and the period it shall be in effect.
     (k) Notice to Holders Prior to Certain Actions. In case:
  (i)   the Corporation shall declare a dividend (or any other distribution) on its Common Stock that would require an adjustment in the Conversion Rate pursuant to Section 7(f) hereof;
 
  (ii)   the Corporation shall authorize the granting to all or substantially all the holders of its Common Stock of rights or warrants to subscribe for or purchase any share of any class or any other rights or warrants;
 
  (iii)   of any reclassification or reorganization of the Common Stock of the Corporation (other than a subdivision or combination of its outstanding Common Stock, or a change in par value, or from par value to no par value, or from no par value to par value), or of any consolidation or merger to which the Corporation is a party and for which approval of any shareholders of the Corporation is required, or of the sale or transfer of all or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation; or
 
  (iv)   of the voluntary or involuntary dissolution, liquidation or winding-up of the Corporation, the Corporation shall cause to be filed with the Conversion Agent and to be mailed to each Holder at its address appearing on the Security Register, as promptly as possible but in any event at least 15 days prior to the applicable date hereinafter specified, a notice stating (x) the date on which a record is to be taken for the purpose of such dividend, distribution or rights or warrants, or, if a record is not to be taken, the date as of which the holders of Common Stock of record to be entitled to such dividend,

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      distribution, or rights or warrants are to be determined or (y) the date on which such reclassification, reorganization, consolidation, merger, sale, transfer, dissolution, liquidation or winding-up is expected to become effective or occur, and the date as of which it is expected that holders of Common Stock of record shall be entitled to exchange their Common Stock for securities or other property deliverable upon such reclassification, reorganization, consolidation, merger, sale, transfer, dissolution, liquidation or winding-up. Failure to give such notice, or any defect therein, shall not affect the legality or validity of such dividend, distribution, reclassification, reorganization, consolidation, merger, sale, transfer, dissolution, liquidation or winding-up.
     (l) Effect of Reclassification, Consolidation, Merger, Binding Share Exchange or Sale. If any of the following events occur, namely; (i) any reclassification or change of outstanding  shares of Common Stock (other than a change in par value, or from par value to no par value, or from no par value to par value, or as a result of a subdivision or combination); (ii) any consolidation, merger, combination or binding share exchange of the Corporation with another Person as a result of which holders of Common Stock shall be entitled to receive stock, securities or other property or assets (including cash) with respect to or in exchange for such Common Stock; or (iii) any sale or conveyance of the properties and assets of the Corporation as, or substantially as, an entirety to any other Person as a result of which holders of Common Stock shall be entitled to receive stock, securities or other property or assets (including cash) with respect to or in exchange for such Common Stock, then the Corporation or the successor or purchasing Person, as the case may be, shall cause an amendment to this Certificate of Designation to be executed and filed in accordance with Michigan law, providing that each share of Preferred Stock shall be convertible into the kind and amount of shares of stock and other securities or property or assets (including cash) receivable upon such reclassification, change, consolidation, merger, combination, binding share exchange, sale or conveyance by a holder of a number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion of such Preferred Stock immediately prior to such reclassification, change, consolidation, merger, combination, binding share exchange, sale or conveyance. Such amended Certificate of Designation shall provide for adjustments which shall be as nearly equivalent as may be practicable to the adjustments provided for in this Section 7(l).
     The Corporation shall cause notice of the execution of such amended Certificate of Designation to be mailed to each Holder, at its address appearing on the Security Register, within 20 days after filing thereof. Failure to deliver such notice shall not affect the legality or validity of such supplemental indenture.
     The above provisions of this Section 7(l) shall similarly apply to successive reclassifications, changes, consolidations, mergers, combinations, binding share exchanges, sales and conveyances.
     If this Section 7(l) applies to any event or occurrence, Section 7(f) hereof shall not apply.
     (m) Conversion Value of Preferred Stock Tendered.
  (i)   Subject to certain exceptions described in Sections 7(a)(ii), 7(a)(iii) and 7(a)(iv), Holders tendering the Preferred Stock for conversion shall be entitled to receive, upon conversion of such Preferred Stock, per the Liquidation Preference, cash and shares of Common Stock, the value of which (the “Conversion Value”) shall be equal to the product of:
(A) the then applicable Conversion Rate; and
(B) the average of the Common Stock prices for the ten consecutive Trading Days (appropriately adjusted to take into account the occurrence during such period of stock splits, stock dividends and similar events) beginning on the second Trading Day immediately following the day the Preferred Stock is tendered for conversion (the ‘Ten Day Average Closing Stock Price”).
  (ii)   Subject to certain exceptions described below and under Sections 7(a)(ii), 7(a)(iii) and 7(a)(iv), the Corporation shall deliver the Conversion Value to converting Holders as follows;

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(A) an amount in cash (the “Principal Return”) equal to the lesser of (1) the Conversion Value of the Preferred Stock to be converted and (2) the aggregate Liquidation Preference per share of Preferred Stock to be converted;
(B) if the aggregate Conversion Value of the Preferred Stock to be converted is greater than the Principal Return, an amount in whole shares (the “Net Shares”), determined as set forth below, equal to such aggregate Conversion Value less the Principal Return (the “Net Share Amount”); and
(C) an amount paid in cash, determined as set forth below, in lieu of any fractional shares of Common Stock.
     The number of Net Shares to be paid shall be determined by dividing the Net Share Amount by the Ten Day Average Closing Stock Price. Holders of Preferred Stock will not receive fractional shares upon conversion of Preferred Stock. In lieu of fractional shares. Holders will receive cash for the value of the fractional shares, which cash payment shall be based on the Ten Day Average Closing Stock Price.
     The Conversion Value, Principal Return, number of Net Shares and Net Share Amount shall be determined by the Corporation at the end of the ten consecutive Trading Day period beginning on the second Trading Day immediately following the day the Preferred Stock are tendered for conversion (the “Determination Date”).
     The Corporation shall pay the Principal Return and cash for fractional shares and deliver the Net Shares, if any, as promptly as practicable after the Determination Date, but in no event later than five Business Days thereafter. Except as provided in Section 7, delivery of the Principal Return, Net Shares and cash in lieu of fractional shares shall be deemed to satisfy the Corporation’s obligation to pay the Liquidation Preference, including Additional Dividends, if any. Any accumulated and unpaid dividends, including Additional Dividends, shall be deemed canceled, extinguished or forfeited rather than paid in full.
     (n) Responsibility of Conversion Agent. The Conversion Agent shall not at any time be under any duty or responsibility to any Holder to either calculate the Conversion Rate or determine whether any facts exist which may require any adjustment of the Conversion Rate, or with respect to the nature or extent or calculation of any such adjustment when made, or with respect to the method employed, or herein or in any amended Certificate of Designation provided to be employed, in making the same and shall be protected in relying upon an Officers’ Certificate with respect to the same. The Conversion Agent shall not be accountable with respect to the validity or value (or the kind or amount) of any shares of Common Stock, or of any securities or property, which may at any time be issued or delivered upon the conversion of any Preferred Stock and the Conversion Agent makes no representations with respect thereto. The Conversion Agent shall not be responsible for any failure of the Corporation to issue, transfer or deliver any shares of Common Stock or stock certificates or other securities or property or cash upon the surrender of any Preferred Stock for the purpose of conversion or to comply with any of the duties, responsibilities or covenants of the Corporation contained in this Section 7(n). Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Conversion Agent shall not be under any responsibility to determine the correctness of any provisions contained in any amended Certificate of Designation entered into pursuant to this Section 7 relating either to the kind or amount of shares of stock or securities or property (including cash) receivable by Holders upon the conversion of their Preferred Stock after any event referred to in this Section 7 or to any adjustment to be made with respect thereto, but may accept as conclusive evidence of the correctness of any such provisions, and shall be protected in relying upon, the Officers’ Certificate (which the Corporation shall be obligated to file with the Conversion Agent prior to the execution of any such amended Certificate of Designation) with respect thereto.
     (o) Simultaneous Adjustments. In the event that Section 7(f) hereof requires adjustments to the Conversion Rate under more than one of Section 7(f)(i), Section 7(f)(ii), Section 7(f)(iii) or Section 7(f)(iv) hereof, and the Dividend Record Dates for the distributions giving rise to such adjustments shall occur on the same date, then such adjustments shall be made by applying, first, the provisions of Section 7(f)(iii) hereof, second, the provisions of Section 7(f)(i) hereof and third, the provisions of Section 7(f)(ii) hereof; provided, however, that nothing in this Section 7(o) shall be done to evade the principle set forth in Section 7(f)(x) hereof that the

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Maximum Conversion Rate shall not apply to any adjustments made with respect to any of the events in Section 7(f)(i) or Section 7(f)(ii) hereof.
     (p) Successive Adjustments. After an adjustment to the Conversion Rate under Section 7(f) hereof, any subsequent event requiring an adjustment under Section 7(f) shall cause an adjustment to the Conversion Rate as so adjusted.
     (q) General Considerations. Whenever successive adjustments to the Conversion Rate are called for pursuant to this Section 7, such adjustments shall be made to the Market Price as may be necessary or appropriate to effectuate the intent of this Section 7 and to avoid unjust or inequitable results as determined in good faith by the Board of Directors.
     (r) Corporation Determination Final. Any determination which the Board of Directors must make pursuant to this Section 7 shall be conclusive and binding on the Holders.
     8. Mandatory Conversion.
     (a) At any time on or after December 5, 2008, the Corporation shall have the right, at its option, to cause the Preferred Stock, in whole but not in part, to be automatically converted into cash and shares of Common Stock equal to the Conversion Value and in accordance with the provisions of Section 7 hereof. The Corporation may exercise its right to cause a mandatory conversion pursuant to this Section 8(a) only if the Last Reported Sale Price of the Common Stock equals or exceeds 130% of the Conversion Price then in effect for at least 20 Trading Days in any consecutive 30-day trading period on the NYSE (or such other national securities exchange or automated quotation system on which the Common Stock is then listed or authorized for quotation), including the last Trading Day of such 30-day period, ending on the Trading Day prior to the Corporation’s issuance of a press release announcing the mandatory conversion as described in Section 8(b).
     (b) To exercise the mandatory conversion right described in Section 8(a), the Corporation must issue a press release for publication on the Dow Jones News Service prior to the opening of business on the first trading day following any date on which the conditions described in Section 8(a) are met, announcing such a mandatory conversion. The Corporation shall also give notice by mail or by publication (with subsequent prompt notice by mail) to the holders of Preferred Stock (not more than four Business Days after the date of the press release) of the mandatory conversion announcing the Corporation’s intention to convert the Preferred Stock. The conversion date will be a date selected by the Corporation (the “Mandatory Conversion Date”) and will be no more than five days after the date on which the Corporation issues the press release described in this Section 8(b).
     (c) In addition to any information required by applicable law or regulation, the press release and notice of a mandatory conversion described in Section 8(b) shall state, as appropriate: (i) the Mandatory Conversion Date; (ii) the Conversion Value, including the Principal Return, the Net Shares and the cash in lieu of fractional shares to be delivered upon conversion of the Preferred Stock; (iii) the number of shares of Preferred Stock to be converted; and (iv) that dividends on the Preferred Stock to be converted will cease to accumulate on the Mandatory Conversion Date.
     (d) On and after the Mandatory Conversion Date, dividends will cease to accumulate on the Preferred Stock called for a mandatory conversion pursuant to Section 8(a) and all rights of holders of such Preferred Stock will terminate except for the right to receive the cash and whole shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion thereof and cash, in lieu of any fractional shares of Common Stock in accordance with Section 7(c). The dividend payment with respect to the Preferred Stock called for a mandatory conversion pursuant to Section 8(a) on a date during the period between the close of business on any Dividend Record Date to the close of business on the corresponding Dividend Payment Date will be payable on such Dividend Payment Date to the record holder of such share on such Dividend Record Date if such share has been converted after such Dividend Record Date and prior to such Dividend Payment Date. Except as provided in the immediately preceding sentence with respect to a mandatory conversion pursuant to Section 8(a), no payment or adjustment will be made upon conversion of

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Preferred Stock for Accumulated Dividends or for dividends with respect to the Common Stock issued upon such conversion.
     (e) The Corporation may not authorize, issue a press release or give notice of any mandatory conversion pursuant to Section 8(a) unless, prior to giving the mandatory conversion notice, all Accumulated Dividends on the Preferred Stock for periods ended prior to the date of such mandatory conversion notice shall have been paid in cash.
     (f) In addition to the mandatory conversion right described in Section 8(a), if there are less than 250,000 shares of Preferred Stock outstanding, the Corporation shall have the right, at any time on or after December 5, 2008, at its option, to cause the Preferred Stock to be automatically converted into cash and shares of Common Stock equal to the Conversion Value and in accordance with the provisions of Section 7 hereof.
     9. Consolidation, Merger and Sale of Assets.
     (a) The Corporation, without the consent of the Holders of any of the outstanding Preferred Stock, may consolidate with or merge into any other Person or convey, transfer or lease all or substantially all its assets to any Person or may permit any Person to consolidate with or merge into, or transfer or lease all or substantially all its properties to, the Corporation; provided, however, that: (i) the successor, transferee or lessee is organized under the laws of the United States or any political subdivision thereof; (ii) the shares of Preferred Stock will become shares of such successor, transferee or lessee, having in respect of such successor, transferee or lessee the same powers, designations, preferences and relative, participating, optional or other rights on which, and the qualification, limitations or restrictions thereon, the Preferred Stock had immediately prior to such transaction; and (iii) the Corporation delivers to the Transfer Agent an Officers’ Certificate and an Opinion of Counsel stating that such transaction complies with this Certificate of Designation (including without limitation the requirements of
Section 7(l).
     (b) Upon any consolidation by the Corporation with, or merger by the Corporation into, any other Person or any conveyance, transfer or lease of all or substantially all the assets of the Corporation as described in Section 9(a), the successor resulting from such consolidation or into which the Corporation is merged or the transferee or lessee to which such conveyance, transfer or lease is made will succeed to, and be substituted for, and may exercise every right and power of, the Corporation under the shares of Preferred Stock, and, thereafter, except in the case of a lease, the predecessor (if still in existence) will be released from its obligations and covenants with respect to the Preferred Stock.
     10. SEC Reports.
     Whether or not the Corporation is required to file reports with the Commission, if any shares of Preferred Stock are outstanding, the Corporation shall file with the Commission all such reports and other information as it would be required to file with the Commission by Section 13(a) or 15(d) under the Exchange Act. The Corporation shall supply each holder of Preferred Stock, upon request, without cost to such holder, copies of such reports or other information.
     11. Certificates.
     (a) Form and Dating. The Preferred Stock and the Transfer Agent’s certificate of authentication shall be substantially in the form of Exhibit C , which is hereby incorporated in and expressly made a part of this Certificate of Designation. The Preferred Stock certificate may have notations, legends or endorsements required by law, stock exchange rule, agreements to which the Corporation is subject, if any, or usage (provided that any such notation, legend or endorsement is in a form acceptable to the Corporation). Each Preferred Stock certificate shall be dated the date of its authentication. The terms of the Preferred Stock certificate set forth in Exhibit C are part of the terms of this Certificate of Designation.

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  (i)   Global Preferred Stock. The Preferred Stock shall be issued initially in the form of one or more fully registered global certificates with the global securities legend and restricted securities legend set forth in Exhibit C hereto (the “Global Preferred Stock”), which shall be deposited on behalf of the purchasers represented thereby with DTC (or with such custodian as DTC may direct), and registered in the name of DTC or a nominee of DTC, duly executed by the Corporation and authenticated by the Transfer Agent as hereinafter provided. The number of shares of Preferred Stock represented by Global Preferred Stock may from time to time be increased or decreased by adjustments made on the records of the Transfer Agent and DTC or its nominee as hereinafter provided. With respect to shares of Preferred Stock that are not “restricted securities” as defined in Rule 144 under the Securities Act on a Conversion Date, all shares of Common Stock distributed on such Conversion Date will be freely transferable without restriction under the Securities Act (other than by affiliates), and such shares will be eligible for receipt in global form through the facilities of DTC.
 
  (ii)   Book-Entry Provisions. In the event Global Preferred Stock is deposited with or on behalf of DTC, the Corporation shall execute and the Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver initially one or more Global Preferred Stock certificates that (a) shall be registered in the name of DTC as depository for such Global Preferred Stock or the nominee of DTC and (b) shall be delivered by the Transfer Agent to DTC or pursuant to DTC’s instructions or held by the Transfer Agent as custodian for DTC.
 
      Members of, or participants in, DTC (“Agent Members”) shall have no rights under this Certificate of Designation with respect to any Global Preferred Stock held on their behalf by DTC or by the Transfer Agent as the custodian of DTC or under such Global Preferred Stock, and DTC may be treated by the Corporation, the Transfer Agent and any agent of the Corporation or the Transfer Agent as the absolute owner of such Global Preferred Stock for all purposes whatsoever. Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing herein shall prevent the Corporation, the Transfer Agent or any agent of the Corporation or the Transfer Agent from giving effect to any written certification, proxy or other authorization furnished by DTC or impair, as between DTC and its Agent Members, the operation of customary practices of DTC governing the exercise of the rights of a holder of a beneficial interest in any Global Preferred Stock.
 
  (iii)   Certificated Preferred Stock. Except as provided in Section 11(c), owners of beneficial interests in Global Preferred Stock will not be entitled to receive Certificated Preferred Stock.
 
  (b)   Execution and Authentication. Two Officers shall sign the Preferred Stock certificate for the Corporation by manual or facsimile signature.
     If an Officer whose signature is on a Preferred Stock certificate no longer holds that office at the time the Transfer Agent authenticates the Preferred Stock certificate, the Preferred Stock certificate shall be valid nevertheless.
     A Preferred Stock certificate shall not be valid until an authorized signatory of the Transfer Agent and the Security Registrar manually signs the certificate of authentication on the Preferred Stock certificate. The signature shall be conclusive evidence that the Preferred Stock certificate has been authenticated under this Certificate of Designation.
     The Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver certificates for 4,910,000 shares of Preferred Stock for original issue upon a written order of the Corporation signed by two Officers or by an Officer and an Assistant Treasurer of the Corporation. Such order shall specify the number of shares of Preferred Stock to be authenticated and the date on which the original issue of Preferred Stock is to be authenticated.
     The Transfer Agent may appoint an authenticating agent reasonably acceptable to the Corporation to authenticate the certificates for Preferred Stock. Unless limited by the terms of such appointment, an authenticating agent may authenticate certificates for Preferred Stock whenever the Transfer Agent may do so. Each reference in

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this Certificate of Designation to authentication by the Transfer Agent includes authentication by such agent. An authenticating agent has the same rights as the Transfer Agent or agent for service of notices and demands.
     (c) Transfer and Exchange of Global Preferred Stock. The transfer and exchange of Global Preferred Stock or beneficial interests therein shall be effected through DTC, in accordance with this Certificate of Designation (including applicable restrictions on transfer set forth herein, if any) and the procedures of DTC therefor.
  (i)   Restrictions on Transfer and Exchange of Global Preferred Stock.
  (A)   Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Certificate of Designation (other than the provisions set forth in Section 11(c)(ii)), Global Preferred Stock may not be transferred as a whole except by DTC to a nominee of DTC or by a nominee of DTC to DTC or another nominee of DTC or by DTC or any such nominee to a successor depository or a nominee of such successor depository.
 
  (B)   In the event that the Global Preferred Stock is exchanged for Preferred Stock in definitive registered form pursuant to Section 11(c)(ii) prior to the effectiveness of a Shelf Registration Statement with respect to such securities, such Preferred Stock may be exchanged only in accordance with such procedures as are substantially consistent with the provisions of this Section 11(c) (including the certification requirements set forth in the Exhibits to this Certificate of Designation intended to ensure that such transfers comply with Rule 144A or such other applicable exemption from registration under the Securities Act, as the case may be) and such other procedures as may from time to time be adopted by the Corporation.
 
  (C)   The Preferred Stock, and any shares of Common Stock distributed pursuant to the conversion of the Preferred Stock, may not be sold until December 5, 2005, except (a) pursuant to registration under the Securities Act, (b) in accordance with Rule 144 (if available) or Rule 144A under the Securities Act (if available) or (c) in offshore transactions in reliance on Regulation S, and will bear a legend to this effect.
  (ii)   Authentication of Certificated Preferred Stock. If at any time:
  (A)   DTC notifies the Corporation that DTC is unwilling or unable to continue as depository for the Global Preferred Stock and a successor depository for the Global Preferred Stock is not appointed by the Corporation within 90 days after delivery of such notice;
 
  (B)   DTC ceases to be a clearing agency registered under the Exchange Act and a successor depository for the Global Preferred Stock is not appointed by the Corporation within 90 days; or
 
  (C)   the Corporation, in its sole discretion, notifies the Transfer Agent in writing that it elects to cause the issuance of Certificated Preferred Stock under this Certificate of Designation,
 
      then the Corporation will execute, and the Transfer Agent, upon receipt of a written order of the Corporation signed by two Officers or by an Officer and an Assistant Treasurer of the Corporation requesting the authentication and delivery of Certificated Preferred Stock to the Persons designated by the Corporation, will authenticate and deliver Certificated Preferred Stock equal to the number of shares of Preferred Stock represented by the Global Preferred Stock, in exchange for such Global Preferred Stock.
  (iii)   Cancellation or Adjustment of Global Preferred Stock. At such time as all beneficial interests in Global Preferred Stock have either been exchanged for Certificated Preferred Stock, converted or canceled, such Global Preferred Stock shall be returned to DTC for cancellation or retained and canceled by the Transfer Agent. At any time prior to such cancellation, if any beneficial interest in Global Preferred Stock is exchanged for Certificated Preferred Stock, converted or canceled, the

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      number of shares of Preferred Stock represented by such Global Preferred Stock shall be reduced and an adjustment shall be made on the books and records of the Transfer Agent with respect to such Global Preferred Stock, by the Transfer Agent or DTC, to reflect such reduction.
 
  (iv)   Obligations with Respect to Transfers and Exchanges of Preferred Stock.
  (A)   To permit registrations of transfers and exchanges, the Corporation shall execute and the Transfer Agent shall authenticate Certificated Preferred Stock and Global Preferred Stock as required pursuant to the provisions of this Section 11(c).
 
  (B)   All Certificated Preferred Stock and Global Preferred Stock issued upon any registration of transfer or exchange of Certificated Preferred Stock or Global Preferred Stock shall be the valid obligations of the Corporation, entitled to the same benefits under this Certificate of Designation as the Certificated Preferred Stock or Global Preferred Stock surrendered upon such registration of transfer or exchange.
 
  (C)   Prior to due presentment for registration of transfer of any  shares of Preferred Stock, the Transfer Agent and the Corporation may deem and treat the Person in whose name such shares of Preferred Stock are registered as the absolute owner of such Preferred Stock and neither the Transfer Agent nor the Corporation shall be affected by notice to the contrary.
 
  (D)   No service charge shall be made to a Holder for any registration of transfer or exchange upon surrender of any Preferred Stock certificate or Common Stock certificate at the office of the Transfer Agent maintained for that purpose. However, the Corporation may require payment of a sum sufficient to cover any tax or other governmental charge that may be imposed in connection with any registration of transfer or exchange of Preferred Stock certificates or Common Stock certificates.
 
  (E)   Upon any sale or transfer of shares of Preferred Stock (including any Preferred Stock represented by a Global Preferred Stock certificate) or of certificated Common Stock pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act or pursuant to Rule 144 or another exemption from registration under the Securities Act (and based upon an Opinion of Counsel reasonably satisfactory to the Corporation if it so requests):
     (1) in the case of any Certificated Preferred Stock or certificated Common Stock, the Corporation and the Transfer Agent shall permit the holder thereof to exchange such Preferred Stock or certificated Common Stock for Certificated Preferred Stock or certificated Common Stock, as the case may be, that does not bear the restrictive legend set forth on Exhibit C and rescind any restriction on the transfer of such Preferred Stock or Common Stock issuable in respect of the conversion of the Preferred Stock; and
     (2) in the case of any Global Preferred Stock, such Preferred Stock shall not be required to bear the restrictive legend set forth on Exhibit C; provided, however, that with respect to any request for an exchange of Preferred Stock that is represented by Global Preferred Stock for Certificated Preferred Stock that does not bear a restrictive as set forth on Exhibit C in connection with a sale or transfer thereof pursuant to Rule 144 or another exemption from registration under the Securities Act (and based upon an Opinion of Counsel if the Corporation so requests), the Holder thereof shall certify in writing to the Transfer Agent that such request is being made pursuant to such exemption (such certification to be substantially in the form of Exhibit D hereto).
  (v)   No Obligation of the Transfer Agent.
  (A)   The Transfer Agent shall have no responsibility or obligation to any beneficial owner of Global Preferred Stock, a member of, or a participant in, DTC or any other Person with respect to the

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      accuracy of the records of DTC or its nominee or of any participant or member thereof, with respect to any ownership interest in the Preferred Stock or with respect to the delivery to any participant, member, beneficial owner or other Person (other than DTC) of any notice or the payment of any amount, under or with respect to such Global Preferred Stock. All notices and communications to be given to the Holders and all payments to be made to Holders under the Preferred Stock shall be given or made only to the Holders (which shall be DTC or its nominee in the case of the Global Preferred Stock). The rights of beneficial owners in any Global Preferred Stock shall be exercised only through DTC subject to the applicable rules and procedures of DTC. The Transfer Agent may rely and shall be fully protected in relying upon information furnished by DTC with respect to its members, participants and any beneficial owners.
 
  (B)   The Transfer Agent shall have no obligation or duty to monitor, determine or inquire as to compliance with any restrictions on transfer imposed under this Certificate of Designation or under applicable law with respect to any transfer of any interest in any Preferred Stock (including any transfers between or among DTC participants, members or beneficial owners in any Global Preferred Stock) other than to require delivery of such certificates and other documentation or evidence as are expressly required by, and to do so if and when expressly required by, the terms of this Certificate of Designation, and to examine the same to determine substantial compliance as to form with the express requirements hereof.
     (d) Replacement Certificates. If a mutilated Preferred Stock certificate is surrendered to the Transfer Agent or if the Holder of a Preferred Stock certificate claims that the Preferred Stock certificate has been lost, destroyed or wrongfully taken, the Corporation shall issue and the Transfer Agent shall countersign a replacement Preferred Stock certificate if the reasonable requirements of the Transfer Agent are met. If required by the Transfer Agent or the Corporation, such Holder shall furnish an indemnity bond sufficient in the judgment of the Corporation and the Transfer Agent to protect the Corporation and the Transfer Agent from any loss which either of them may suffer if a Preferred Stock certificate is replaced. The Corporation and the Transfer Agent may charge the Holder for their expenses in replacing a Preferred Stock certificate.
     12. Additional Rights of Holders. In addition to the rights provided to Holders under this Certificate of Designation, Holders shall have the rights set forth in the Registration Rights Agreement.
     13. Other Provisions.
     (a) With respect to any notice to a Holder of shares of Preferred Stock required to be provided hereunder, neither failure to mail such notice, nor any defect therein or in the mailing thereof, to any particular Holder shall affect the sufficiency of the notice or the validity of the proceedings referred to in such notice with respect to the other Holders or affect the legality or validity of any distribution, rights, warrant, reclassification, consolidation, merger, conveyance, transfer, dissolution, liquidation or winding-up, or the vote upon any such action. Any notice which was mailed in the manner herein provided shall be conclusively presumed to have been duly given whether or not the Holder receives the notice.
     (b) Shares of Preferred Stock issued and reacquired will be retired and canceled promptly after reacquisition thereof and, upon compliance with the applicable requirements of Michigan law, have the status of authorized but unissued shares of preferred stock of the Corporation undesignated as to series and may with any and all other authorized but unissued shares of preferred stock of the Corporation be designated or redesignated and issued or reissued, as the case may be, as part of any series of preferred stock of the Corporation, except that any issuance or reissuance of shares of Preferred Stock must be in compliance with this Certificate of Designation.
     (c) The shares of Preferred Stock shall be issuable only in whole shares.
     (d) All notice periods referred to herein shall commence on the date of the mailing of the applicable notice.

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     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Corporation has caused this certificate to be signed and attested this 15th day of December, 2004.
         
 
CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
 
 
  By:   /s/ Michael D. VanHemert    
    Name:   Michael D. VanHemert   
    Title:   Vice President and
Secretary 
 
 
         
Attest:
  /s/ Joyce H. Norkey
 
   
 
  Joyce H. Norkey    

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EXHIBIT A
FORM OF FUNDAMENTAL CHANGE PURCHASE NOTICE
To: CMS Energy Corporation
     The undersigned registered holder of shares of Preferred Stock hereby acknowledges receipt of a notice from CMS Energy Corporation (the “Corporation”) as to the occurrence of a Fundamental Change with respect to the Corporation and requests and instructs the Corporation to repurchase the shares of Preferred Stock ($50.00 liquidation preference or an integral multiple thereof) designated below, in accordance with the terms of the Certificate of Designation referred to in such Preferred Stock and directs that the check of the Corporation, in payment for these shares of Preferred Stock, be issued and delivered to the registered holder hereof unless a different name has been indicated below. If any portion of these shares of Preferred Stock are not repurchased and are to be issued in the name of a Person other than the undersigned, the undersigned shall pay all transfer taxes payable with respect thereto.
             
Dated:
           
 
           
 
      Signature(s)    
 
           
    Signature(s) must be guaranteed by a commercial bank or trust company or a member firm of a major stock exchange if cash and shares of Preferred Stock are to be delivered other than to or in the name of the registered holder.    
 
           
 
       
 
Signature Guarantee
   
 
           
Fill in for registration of Preferred Stock if to be issued other than to and in the name of registered holder:
           
 
           
(Name)
      Number of shares of Preferred Stock to be purchased (if less than all are to be purchased):    
 
           
 
 
(Street Address)
     
 
   
 
           
 
(City, state and zip code)
Please print name and address
      Certificate Number (if shares of Preferred Stock are Certificated):    
 
           
 
     
 
   
 
           
 
      Social Security or other taxpayer number:    
 
           
 
     
 
   

32


 

EXHIBIT B
FORM OF CONVERSION NOTICE
To: CMS Energy Corporation
     The undersigned registered holder of these shares of Preferred Stock hereby exercises the option to convert these shares of Preferred Stock, or portion hereof (which is $50.00 liquidation preference or an integral multiple thereof) designated below, for cash and shares of Common Stock of CMS Energy Corporation in accordance with the terms of the Certificate of Designation referred to in the Preferred Stock, and directs that the shares, if any, issuable and deliverable upon such conversion, together with any check for cash deliverable upon such conversion, and any shares of Preferred Stock representing any unconverted shares hereof, be issued and delivered to the registered holder hereof unless a different name has been indicated below. If shares or any portion of the Preferred Stock not converted are to be issued in the name of a Person other than the undersigned, the undersigned shall pay all transfer taxes payable with respect thereto.
     This notice shall be deemed to be an irrevocable exercise of the option to convert these shares of Preferred Stock.
             
Dated:
       
 
Signature(s)
   
 
           
    Signature(s) must be guaranteed by a commercial bank or trust company or a member firm of a major stock exchange if cash and shares of Common Stock are to be issued, or shares of Preferred Stock to be delivered, other than to or in the name of the registered holder.    
 
           
 
           
 
           
 
      Signature Guarantee    
 
           
Fill in for registration of shares if to be delivered, and shares of Preferred Stock if to be issued other than to and in the name of registered holder:
           
 
           
 
(Name)
      Number of shares of Preferred Stock to be converted (if less than all):    
 
           
 
 
(Street Address)
     
 
   
 
           
 
(City, state and zip code)
Please print name and address
      Certificate Number (if shares of Preferred Stock are Certificated):    
 
           
 
     
 
   
 
           
 
      Social Security or other taxpayer number:    
 
           
 
     
 
   

33


 

EXHIBIT C
FORM OF PREFERRED STOCK
FACE OF SECURITY
     THIS SECURITY (OR ITS PREDECESSOR) WAS ORIGINALLY ISSUED IN A TRANSACTION EXEMPT FROM REGISTRATION UNDER THE UNTIED STATES SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED (THE “SECURITIES ACT”), AND THIS SECURITY AND THE COMMON STOCK ISSUABLE UPON CONVERSION HEREOF MAY NOT BE OFFERED, SOLD OR OTHERWISE TRANSFERRED IN THE ABSENCE OF SUCH REGISTRATION OR AN APPLICABLE EXEMPTION THEREFROM. EACH PURCHASER OF THIS SECURITY IS HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT THE SELLER OF THIS SECURITY MAY BE RELYING ON THE EXEMPTION FROM THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 5 OF THE SECURITIES ACT PROVIDED BY RULE 144A THEREUNDER. THE HOLDER OF THIS SECURITY AGREES FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE COMPANY THAT (A) THIS SECURITY AND THE COMMON STOCK ISSUABLE UPON CONVERSION HEREOF MAY BE OFFERED, RESOLD, PLEDGED OR OTHERWISE TRANSFERRED ONLY (I) IN THE UNITED STATES TO A PERSON WHOM THE SELLER REASONABLY BELIEVES IS A QUALIFIED INSTITUTIONAL BUYER (AS DEFINED IN RULE 144A UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT (“RULE 144A”)) IN A TRANSACTION MEETING THE REQUIREMENTS OF RULE 144A PURCHASING FOR ITS OWN ACCOUNT OR FOR THE ACCOUNT OF A QUALIFIED INSTITUTIONAL BUYER IN A TRANSACTION MEETING THE REQUIREMENTS OF RULE 144A, (II) OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES IN AN OFFSHORE TRANSACTION IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 903 OR RULE 904 UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT, (III) PURSUANT TO AN EXEMPTION FROM REGISTRATION UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT PROVIDED BY RULE 144 THEREUNDER (IF AVAILABLE), (IV) IN ACCORDANCE WITH ANOTHER EXEMPTION FROM THE REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS OF THE SECURITIES ACT, (V) TO CMS ENERGY CORPORATION OR (VI) PURSUANT TO AN EFFECTIVE REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT, IN EACH OF CASES (I) THROUGH (VI) IN ACCORDANCE WITH ANY APPLICABLE SECURITIES LAWS OF ANY STATE OF THE UNITED STATES, AND (B) THE HOLDER WILL, AND EACH SUBSEQUENT HOLDER IS REQUIRED TO, NOTIFY ANY PURCHASER OF THE SECURITY FROM IT OF THE RESALE RESTRICTIONS REFERRED TO IN CLAUSE (A) ABOVE.
     THE HOLDER OF THIS SECURITY AGREES THAT SUCH HOLDER WILL NOT ENGAGE IN HEDGING TRANSACTIONS INVOLVING THIS SECURITY AND THE COMMON STOCK ISSUABLE UPON CONVERSION HEREOF UNLESS IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE SECURITIES ACT.
     THIS SECURITY AND ANY RELATED DOCUMENTATION MAY BE AMENDED OR SUPPLEMENTED FROM TIME TO TIME TO MODIFY THE RESTRICTIONS ON AND PROCEDURES FOR RESALES AND OTHER TRANSFERS OF THIS SECURITY TO REFLECT ANY CHANGE IN APPLICABLE LAW OR REGULATION (OR THE INTERPRETATION THEREOF) OR IN PRACTICES RELATING TO THE RESALE OR TRANSFER OF RESTRICTED SECURITIES GENERALLY. THE HOLDER OF THIS SECURITY SHALL BE DEEMED BY THE ACCEPTANCE OF THIS SECURITY TO HAVE AGREED TO ANY SUCH AMENDMENT OR SUPPLEMENT.
     THE HOLDER OF THIS SECURITY IS SUBJECT TO, AND ENTITLED TO THE BENEFITS OF, A REGISTRATION RIGHTS AGREEMENT, DATED AS OF DECEMBER 5, 2003 ENTERED INTO BY THE COMPANY FOR THE BENEFIT OF CERTAIN HOLDERS OF SECURITIES FROM TIME TO TIME.

34


 

     Certificate Number   Number of Shares
[ ]   [ ]
     
    CUSIP NO.: ___
4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, Series B (par value $0.01) (liquidation
preference $50 per share)
of
CMS Energy Corporation
     CMS Energy Corporation, a Michigan corporation (the “Corporation”), hereby certifies that [___] (the “Holder”) is the registered owner of [ ___] fully paid and non-assessable preferred securities of the Corporation designated the 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, Series B (par value $0.01) (liquidation preference $50 per share) (the “Preferred Stock”). The shares of Preferred Stock are transferable on the books and records of the Transfer Agent, in person or by a duly authorized attorney, upon surrender of this certificate duly endorsed and in proper form for transfer. The designations, rights, privileges, restrictions, preferences and other terms and provisions of the Preferred Stock represented hereby are issued and shall in all respects be subject to the provisions of the Certificate of Designation dated December 15, 2004, as the same may be amended from time to time (the “Certificate of Designation”). Capitalized terms used herein but not defined shall have the meaning given them in the Certificate of Designation. The Corporation will provide a copy of the Certificate of Designation to a Holder without charge upon written request to the Corporation at its principal place of business.
     Reference is hereby made to select provisions of the Preferred Stock set forth on the reverse hereof, and to the Certificate of Designation, which select provisions and the Certificate of Designation shall for all purposes have the same effect as if set forth at this place.
     Upon receipt of this certificate, the Holder is bound by the Certificate of Designation and is entitled to the benefits thereunder.
     Unless the Transfer Agent’s Certificate of Authentication hereon has been properly executed, these shares of Preferred Stock shall not be entitled to any benefit under the Certificate of Designation or be valid or obligatory for any purpose.
     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Corporation has executed this certificate this___ day of                      , 2004.
         
  CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
 
 
  By:        
    Name:      
    Title:      
 
     
  By:        
    Name:      
    Title:      
 

35


 

TRANSFER AGENT’S AND SECURITY REGISTRAR’S CERTIFICATE OF AUTHENTICATION
     These are shares of the Preferred Stock referred to in the within-mentioned Certificate of Designation.
     Dated:                      , 2004
         
  CMS Energy Corporation, as Transfer Agent and
Security Registrar
 
 
  By:        
    Authorized Signatory   
       
 
REVERSE OF SECURITY
     Cash dividends on each share of Preferred Stock shall be payable at a rate per annum set forth on the face hereof or as provided in the Certificate of Designation.
     The shares of Preferred Stock shall be convertible into cash and the shares of the Corporation’s Common Stock in the manner and according to the terms set forth in the Certificate of Designation.
     The Corporation will furnish without charge to each holder who so requests the powers, designations, preferences and relative, participating, optional or other rights of each class of stock and the qualifications, limitations or restrictions of such preferences and/or rights.
ASSIGNMENT
     FOR VALUE RECEIVED, the undersigned assigns and transfers the shares of Preferred Stock evidenced hereby to:
     (Insert assignee’s social security or tax identification number)
     (Insert address and zip code of assignee)
     and irrevocably appoints                      agent to transfer the shares of Preferred Stock evidenced hereby on the books of the Transfer Agent. The agent may substitute another to act for him or her.
       
  Date:    
       
       
  Signature:    
       
     
 
  (Sign exactly as your name appears on the other side of this Preferred Stock certificate)
             
 
  Signature Guarantee: (1)    
 
   
 
1   (Signature must be guaranteed by an “eligible guarantor institution” that is a bank, stockbroker, savings and loan association or credit union meeting the requirements of the Transfer Agent, which requirements include membership or participation in the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program (“STAMP”) or such other “signature guarantee program” as may be determined by the Transfer Agent in addition to, or in substitution for. STAMP, all in accordance with the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.)

36


 

EXHIBIT D
CERTIFICATE TO BE DELIVERED UPON EXCHANGE OR
REGISTRATION OF TRANSFER OF PREFERRED STOCK
     Re:   4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, Series B (the “Preferred Stock”) of CMS Energy Corporation (the “Corporation”)
     This Certificate relates to___ shares of Preferred Stock held in o */ book-entry or o */ definitive form by                      (the “Transferor”).
     The Transferor*:
      o has requested the Transfer Agent by written order to deliver in exchange for its beneficial interest in the Preferred Stock held by the Depository cash and shares of Preferred Stock in definitive, registered form equal to its beneficial interest in such Preferred Stock (or the portion thereof indicated above); or
      o has requested the Transfer Agent by written order to exchange or register the transfer of Preferred Stock.
     In connection with such request and in respect of such Preferred Stock, the Transferor does hereby certify that the Transferor is familiar with the Certificate of Designation relating to the above-captioned Preferred Stock and that the transfer of this Preferred Stock does not require registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”) because */:
      o Such Preferred Stock is being acquired for the Transferor’s own account without transfer.
      o Such Preferred Stock is being transferred to the Corporation.
      o Such Preferred Stock is being transferred to a qualified institutional buyer (as defined in Rule 144A under the Securities Act), in reliance on Rule 144A.
      o Such Preferred Stock is being transferred in reliance on and in compliance with another exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act (and based on an Opinion of Counsel if the Corporation so requests).
                    
* /Please check applicable box.
                 
 
          [NAME OF TRANSFEROR]    
 
               
 
           
 
By:
   
 
          Its:    
 
               
Date:
   
 
           

37


 

Michigan Department of Labor & Economic Growth
Filing Endorsement
This is to Certify that the CERTIFICATE OF CORRECTION
for
CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
ID NUMBER: 485283
received by facsimile transmission on February 27, 2006 is hereby endorsed
Filed on February 27, 2006 by the Administrator.
The document is effective on the date filed, unless a subsequent effective date within 90 days after received date is stated in the document.
Effective Date: December 20, 2004
         
(SEAL)
  In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the Seal
of the Department, in the City of Lansing, this 27TH day of February, 2006.

-S- SIGNATURE , Director

Bureau of Commercial Services
   
Sent by Facsimile Transmission 06058
       

 


 

             
BCS / CD - 518 (Rev. 12/05)
           
MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF LABOR & ECONOMIC GROWTH
BUREAU OF COMMERCIAL SERVICES
Date Received   (FOR BUREAU USE ONLY)
   
 
           
    This document is effective on the date filed, unless a subsequent effective date within 90 days after received date is stated in the document.    
 
           
Name
           
      Joyce H Norkey, Assistant Secretary, CMS Energy Corporation    
Address
           
      One Energy Plaza, EP1-420    
City
  State   Zip Code    
      Jackson, MI 49201-2276   EFFECTIVE DATE:
Document will be returned to the name and address you enter above.
   
If left blank document will be mailed to the registered office.
   
CERTIFICATE OF CORRECTION
For use by Corporations and Limited Liability Companies

(Please read information and instruction on last page)
      Pursuant to the provisions of Act 284, Public Acts of 1972 (profit corporations), Act 162, Public Acts of 1982 (nonprofit corporations), or Act 23, Public Acts of 1993 (limited liability companies), the undersigned corporation or limited liability company executes the following Certificate:
1.   The name of the corporation or limited liability company is:
 
    CMS Energy Corporation
 
2.   The identification number assigned by the Bureau is: 485–283
 
3.   The corporation or limited liability company is formed under the laws of the State of Michigan
 
4.   That a Certificate of Designation of 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, Series B (Title of Document Being Corrected) was filed by the Bureau on December 20, 2004 and that said document requires correction.
 
5.   Describe the inaccuracy or defect contained in the above named document:
 
    The amount of shares issued of the 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, Series B, should have been 5,000,000 shares instead of 4,910,000 shares in exchange for 5,000,000 shares, instead of 4,910,000 shares, of 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock . In addition, a correction needs to be made to the definition of “Fundamental Change”.
 
6.   The document is corrected as follows:
 
    See Attachment.
 
7.   This document is hereby executed in the same manner as the Act requires the document being corrected to be executed.
Signed this 27th day of February, 2006
                         
By
     
  /s/ Michael D. VanHemert
 
(Signature)
  By   /s/ Joyce H. Norkey
 
(Signature)
  By    
 
(Signature)
    
 
                       
 
  Michael D. VanHemert       JOYCE H. NORKEY
NOTARY PUBLIC JACKSON CO, MI
MY COMMISSION EXPIRES Sep 7, 2006
           
 
  (Type or Print Name and Title)       (Type or Print Name and Title)     (Type or Print Name and Title)    
    Vice President, Corporate
Secretary and Chief Governance Officer
             

 


 

ATTACHMENT TO CERTIFICATE OF CORRECTION
OF CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
(CORPORATION IDENTIFICATION NUMBER 485-283)
6. The Certificate of Designation of 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, Series B, of CMS Energy Corporation filed on December 20, 2004 is corrected as follows (corrections are in bold ):
           Page 1
          1. Designation and Amount; Ranking.
          (a) There shall be created from the 10,000,000 shares of preferred stock, par value $0.01 per share, of the Corporation authorized to be issued pursuant to the Articles of Incorporation, a series of preferred stock, designated as the “4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, Series B,” par value $0.01 per share (the “Preferred Stock”), and the number of shares of such series shall be 5,000,000. Such number of shares may be decreased by resolution of the Board of Directors; provided that no decrease shall reduce the number of shares of Preferred Stock to a number less than that of the shares of Preferred Stock then outstanding plus the number of shares issuable upon exercise of options or rights then outstanding. The Preferred Stock was exchanged for 5,000,000 of then outstanding shares of 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock, par value $0.01 per share (the “Original Preferred Stock”), established pursuant to the Certificate of Designation of 4.50% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock of CMS Energy Corporation dated December 4, 2003 pursuant to an exchange offer.
* * *
           Page 3
          A “Fundamental Change” shall be deemed to have occurred at such time after the original issuance of the Preferred Stock...; provided, however , that a Fundamental Change shall not be deemed to have occurred in respect of any of the foregoing if either (1) the Last Reported Sale Price of Common Stock for any five Trading Days within the ten consecutive Trading Days ending immediately before the later of the Fundamental Change or the public announcement thereof equals or exceeds 105% of the applicable Conversion Price of the Preferred Stock in effect immediately before the Fundamental Change or the public announcement thereof (except that this clause (1) shall not apply to the events described in Section 7(f)(vi) hereof) or (2) at least 90% of the consideration (excluding cash payments for fractional shares) in the transaction or transactions constituting the Fundamental Change consists of shares of capital stock traded on a national securities exchange or quoted on the NASDAQ National Market (or which shall be so traded or quoted when issued or exchanged in connection with such Fundamental Change) (such securities being referred to as “Publicly Traded Securities”) and as a result of such transaction or transactions the Preferred Stock becomes convertible into such Publicly Traded Securities (excluding cash payments for fractional shares).
* * *
           Page 27
          The Transfer Agent shall authenticate and deliver certificates for 5,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock for original issue upon a written order of the Corporation signed by two Officers or by an Officer and an Assistant Treasurer of the Corporation. Such order shall specify the number of shares of Preferred Stock to be authenticated and the date on which the original issue of Preferred Stock is to be authenticated.
* * *

 


 

Michigan Department of Labor & Economic Growth
Filing Endorsement
This is to Certify that the CERT. OF CHANGE OF REG. OFF./RES. AGENT
for
CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
ID NUMBER: 485283
received by facsimile transmission on October 27, 2006 is hereby endorsed
Filed on October 27, 2006 by the Administrator.
The document is effective on the date filed, unless a subsequent effective date within 90 days after received date is stated in the document.
     
(SEAL)
Sent by Facsimile Transmission 06300
  In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the Seal of the Department, in the City of Lansing, this 27TH day of October, 2006.
-S- SIGNATURE , Director
Bureau of Commercial Services

 


 

BCS / CD-520 (Rev. 12/05)
MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF LABOR & ECONOMIC GROWTH
BUREAU OF COMMERCIAL SERVICES
     
Date Received
  (FOR BUREAU USE ONLY)
     
 
  This document is effective on the date filed, unless a subsequent effective date within 90 days after received date is stated in the document.
                         
Name
Jane M. Kramer
                       
 
                       
         
Address
One Energy Plaza
                       
 
                       
         
City
  State
  Zip Code
       
Jackson
  MI
    49201     EFFECTIVE DATE:
Document will be returned to the name and address you enter above. If left blank document will be mailed to the registered office.
CERTIFICATE OF CHANGE OF REGISTERED OFFICE AND/OR CHANGE OF RESIDENT AGENT
For use by Domestic and Foreign Corporations and Limited Liability Companies
(Please read information and Instructions on reverse side)
     Pursuant to the provisions of Act 284, Public Acts of 1972 (profit corporations), Act 162, Public Acts of 1982 (nonprofit corporations), or Act 23, Public Acts of 1993 (limited liability companies), the undersigned corporation or limited liability company executes the following Certificate:
     1. The name of the corporation or limited liability company is:
               CMS Energy Corporation

     2. The identification number assigned by the Bureau is: 485-283
     3. a. The name of the resident agent on file with the Bureau is: Michael D. VanHemert
     b. The location of the registered office on file with the Bureau is:
                 
One Energy Plaza, EP1-420
  Jackson
, Michigan       49201—2276
(Street Address)
            (City)
  (Zip Code)          
     c. The mailing address of the above registered office on file with the Bureau is:
                 
One Energy Plaza, EP1-420
  Jackson
, Michigan       49201—2276
(Street Address or P.O. Box)
            (City)
  (Zip Code)          
ENTER IN ITEM 4 THE INFORMATION AS IT SHOULD NOW APPEAR ON THE PUBLIC RECORD
     4. a. The name of the resident agent is: Catherine M. Reynolds
     b. The address of the registered office is:
                 
One Energy Plaza, EP1-420
  Jackson
, Michigan       49201—2276
(Street Address)
            (City)
  (Zip Code)          
     c. The mailing address of the registered office IF DIFFERENT THAN 4B is:
                         
 
        , Michigan
       
               
(Street Address or P.O. Box)
            (City)
          (Zip Code)
  5.   The above changes were authorized by resolution duly adopted by: 1. ALL CORPORATIONS: its Board of Directors; 2. PROFIT CORPORATIONS ONLY: the resident agent if only the address of the registered office is changed, in which case a copy of this statement has been mailed to the corporation: 3. LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANIES: an operating agreement, affirmative vote of a majority of the members pursuant to section 502(1), managers pursuant to section 405, or the resident agent if only the address of the registered office is changed.
  6.   The corporation or limited liability company further states that the address of its registered office and the address of its resident agent, as changed, are identical.
         
Signature
  Type or Print Name and Title or Capacity   Date Signed
          /s/ Jane M. Kramer
  Jane M. Kramer, Assistant Secretary   10-27-06

 


 

Michigan Department Of Energy, Labor & Economic Growth
Filing Endorsement
This is to Certify that the CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT- CORPORATION
for
CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
ID NUMBER: 485283
received by facsimile transmission on May 22, 2009 is hereby endorsed

Filed on May
22, 2009 by the Administrator.
The document is effective on the date filed, unless a subsequent effective date within 90 days after received date is stated in the document.
         
(SEAL)
  In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the Seal of the Department, in the City of Lansing, this 22ND day of May, 2009.
-S- SIGNATURE
, Director
   
 
       

 


 

BCS / CD-515 (Rev. 03/07)
MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF LABOR & ECONOMIC GROWTH
BUREAU OF COMMERCIAL SERVICES
Date Received   (FOR BUREAU USE ONLY)    
This document is effective on the date filed, unless a
subsequent effective date within 90 days after received date
is stated in the document.
Name
     CMS Energy Corporation c/o Catherine M. Reynolds
Address
     One Energy Plaza, EP12-246
City                    State                    ZIP Code
     Jackson                 MI                 49201
     
Ç    Document will be returned to the name and address you enter above.    È
       EFFECTIVE DATE:
If left blank document will be mailed to the registered office.
   
CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT TO THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
For use by Domestic Profit and Nonprofit Corporations

(Please read information and instructions on the last page)
Pursuant to the provisions of Act 284, Public Acts of 1972, (profit corporations), or Act 162, Public Acts of 1982 (nonprofit corporations), the undersigned corporation executes the following Certificate:
1.   The present name of the corporation is: CMS Energy Corporation
 
2.   The identification number assigned by the Bureau is: 485-283
3.   Article XII of the Articles of Incorporation is hereby amended to read as follows:
     In an uncontested election of directors, each director of the Corporation shall be elected by a majority of the votes cast by the shares present in person or represented by proxy at the meeting and entitled to vote on the election of directors (a “majority vote”); however, in a contested election, the directors shall be elected by a plurality of the votes of the shares present in person or represented by proxy at the meeting and entitled to vote on the election of directors. For purposes of this provision, a majority of the votes cast means that the number of shares voted “for” a director must exceed 50% of the votes cast with respect to that director. For purposes of this Article XII, (i) an “uncontested election” is an election in which the number of nominees for director is not greater than the number to be elected, and (ii) a “contested election” is an election in which the number of nominees for director is greater than the number to be elected.
     Following any uncontested election, any incumbent director who failed to receive a majority vote, shall tender his or her resignation to the Board of Directors. A recommendation on whether or not to accept such resignation offer shall be made by (i) a designated standing committee of the Board of Directors (the “Committee”), or (ii) if each member of the Committee did not receive a majority vote, then the independent directors who did receive a majority vote may appoint a committee from amongst themselves to consider the resignation offer and make a recommendation to the Board of Directors, or (iii) if three or fewer independent directors received a majority vote, then all such directors may participate in the actions regarding the resignation offers and make a recommendation to the Board of Directors. The Board of Directors will act on the recommendation and publicly disclose its decision within 90 days from the date of the certification of the election results. The director who tenders his or her resignation will not participate in the Board of Directors’ decision.

 


 

COMPLETE ONLY ONE OF THE FOLLOWING:
4. Profit or Nonprofit Corporation: For amendments adopted by unanimous consent of Incorporators before the first meeting of the board of directors or trustees.
The foregoing amendment to the Articles of Incorporation was duly adopted on the                      day of                      ,                      , in accordance with the provisions of the Act by the unanimous consent of the incorporator(s) before the first meeting of the Board of Directors or Trustees.
                     
 
  Signed this       day of     ,  
 
                   
     
 
   
 
   
(Signature)
  (Signature)
 
   
 
   
(Type or Print Name)
  (Type or Print Name)
 
   
 
   
(Signature)
  (Signature)
 
   
 
   
(Type or Print Name)
  (Type or Print Name)
5. Profit Corporation Only: Shareholder or Board Approval
The foregoing amendment to the Articles of Incorporation proposed by the board was duly adopted on the 22nd day of May, 2009, by the: (check one of the following)
  þ   shareholders at a meeting in accordance with Section 611(3) of the Act.
 
  o   written consent of the shareholders having not less than the minimum number of votes required by statute in accordance with Section 407(1) of the Act. Written notice to shareholders who have not consented in writing has been given. (Note: Written consent by less than all of the shareholders is permitted only if such provision appears in the Articles of Incorporation.)
 
  o   written consent of all the shareholders entitled to vote in accordance with Section 407(2) of the Act.
 
  o   board of a profit corporation pursuant to section 611(2) of the Act.
             
    Profit Corporations and Professional Service Corporations    
 
           
    Signed this 22 day of May, 2009    
 
           
 
  By   /s/ Catherine M. Reynolds    
 
           
    (Signature of an authorized officer or agent)
   
 
           
    Catherine M. Reynolds, Vice President and Corporate Secretary
   
         
  (Type or Print Name)
   

Exhibit (12)(a)
CMS ENERGY CORPORATION
Ratios of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Combined Fixed Charges and Preferred Dividends
(Millions of Dollars)
                                                 
    Six                
    Months                
    Ended                
    June 30             Year Ended December 31        
    2009     2008     2007     2006     2005     2004  
                    (b)     (c)     (d)     (e)  
Earnings as defined (a)
                                               
Pretax income from continuing operations
  $ 200     $ 441     $ (317 )   $ (434 )   $ (772 )   $ 98  
Exclude equity basis subsidiaries
    1       (1 )     (22 )     (14 )     (17 )     (88 )
Fixed charges as defined
    220       429       489       535       539       637  
 
                                   
Earnings as defined
  $ 421     $ 869     $ 150     $ 87     $ (250 )   $ 647  
 
                                   
 
                                               
Fixed charges as defined (a)
                                               
Interest on long-term debt
  $ 184     $ 371     $ 415     $ 492     $ 514     $ 560  
Other interest charges
    22       33       51       35       19       73  
Estimated interest portion of lease rental
    14       25       23       8       6       4  
 
                                   
Fixed charges as defined
  $ 220     $ 429     $ 489     $ 535     $ 539     $ 637  
Preferred dividends
    9       17       12       11       10       11  
 
                                   
Combined fixed charges and preferred dividends
  $ 229     $ 446     $ 501     $ 546     $ 549     $ 648  
 
                                   
 
                                               
Ratio of earnings to fixed charges
    1.91       2.03                         1.02  
 
                                   
Ratio of earnings to combined fixed charges and preferred dividends
    1.84       1.95                          
 
                                   
 
NOTES: 
 
(a)   Earnings and fixed charges as defined in instructions for Item 503 of Regulation S-K.
 
(b)   For the year ended December 31, 2007, fixed charges exceeded earnings by $339 million and combined fixed charges and preferred dividends exceeded earnings by $351 million. Earnings as defined include $204 million in asset impairment charges and a $279 million charge for an electric sales contract termination.
 
(c)   For the year ended December 31, 2006, fixed charges exceeded earnings by $448 million and combined fixed charges and preferred dividends exceeded earnings by $459 million. Earnings as defined include $459 million of asset impairment charges.
 
(d)   For the year ended December 31, 2005, fixed charges exceeded earnings by $789 million and combined fixed charges and preferred dividends exceeded earnings by $799 million. Earnings as defined include $1.184 billion of asset impairment charges.
 
(e)   For 2004, fixed charges and combined fixed charges and preferred dividends, adjusted as defined, include $25 million of interest cost that was capitalized prior to 2004 and subsequently expensed in 2004. Combined fixed charges and preferred dividends exceeded earnings by $1 million. Earnings as defined include $160 million of asset impairments.

 

Exhibit (12)(b)
CONSUMERS ENERGY COMPANY
Ratios of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Combined Fixed Charges and Preferred Dividends
(Millions of Dollars)
                                                 
    Six                
    Months                
    Ended                
    June 30             Year Ended December 31        
    2009     2008     2007     2006     2005     2004  
                                    (b)          
Earnings as defined (a)
                                               
Pretax income from continuing operations
  $ 268     $ 562     $ 437     $ 167     $ (590 )   $ 439  
Exclude equity basis subsidiaries (c)
                      (1 )     (1 )     (1 )
Fixed charges as defined
    148        276        293       307        316        345  
 
                                   
Earnings as defined
  $ 416     $ 838     $ 730     $ 473     $ (275 )   $ 783  
 
                                   
 
                                               
Fixed charges as defined (a)
                                               
Interest on long-term debt
  $ 124     $ 229     $ 236     $ 286     $ 305     $ 328  
Other interest charges
    10       22       34       13       5       13  
Estimated interest portion of lease rental
    14       25       23       8       6       4  
 
                                   
Fixed charges as defined
  $ 148        276        293        307        316        345  
Preferred dividends
    2       3       3       3       3       3  
 
                                   
Combined fixed charges and preferred dividends
  $ 150     $ 279     $ 296     $ 310     $ 319     $ 348  
 
                                   
 
                                               
Ratio of earnings to fixed charges
    2.81       3.04       2.49       1.54             2.27  
 
                                   
Ratio of earnings to combined fixed charges and preferred dividends
    2.77       3.00       2.47       1.53             2.25  
 
                                   
 
NOTES: 
 
(a)   Earnings and fixed charges as defined in instructions for Item 503 of Regulation S-K.
 
(b)   For the year ended December 31, 2005, fixed charges exceeded earnings by $591 million and combined fixed charges and preferred dividends exceeded earnings by $594 million. Earnings as defined include $1.184 billion of asset impairment charges.
 
(c)   In 2004, Consumers consolidated the MCV Partnership and the FMLP in accordance with FIN 46(R).

 

Exhibit (31)(a)
CERTIFICATION OF DAVID W. JOOS
I, David W. Joos, certify that:
  1.   I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of CMS Energy Corporation;
 
  2.   Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
 
  3.   Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
 
  4.   The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d—15(f)) for the registrant and have:
     a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
     b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
     c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and
     d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and
  5.   The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
     a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
     b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.
             
Dated: July 30, 2009
  By:   /s/ David W. Joos
 
David W. Joos
   
 
      President and
Chief Executive Officer
   

 

Exhibit (31)(b)
CERTIFICATION OF THOMAS J. WEBB
I, Thomas J. Webb, certify that:
  1.   I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of CMS Energy Corporation;
 
  2.   Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
 
  3.   Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
 
  4.   The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d—15(f)) for the registrant and have:
     a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
     b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
     c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and
     d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and
  5.   The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
     a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
     b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.
             
Dated: July 30, 2009
  By   /s/ Thomas J. Webb
 
Thomas J. Webb
   
 
      Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
   

 

Exhibit (31)(c)
CERTIFICATION OF DAVID W. JOOS
I, David W. Joos, certify that:
  1.   I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Consumers Energy Company;
 
  2.   Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
 
  3.   Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
 
  4.   The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d—15(f)) for the registrant and have:
     a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
     b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
     c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and
     d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and
  5.   The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
     a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
     b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.
             
Dated: July 30, 2009
  By:   /s/ David W. Joos
 
David W. Joos
   
 
      Chief Executive Officer    

 

Exhibit (31)(d)
CERTIFICATION OF THOMAS J. WEBB
I, Thomas J. Webb, certify that:
  1.   I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Consumers Energy Company;
 
  2.   Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
 
  3.   Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
 
  4.   The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d—15(f)) for the registrant and have:
     a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
     b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
     c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and
     d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and
  5.   The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
     a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
     b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.
             
Dated: July 30, 2009
  By   /s/ Thomas J. Webb
 
Thomas J. Webb
   
 
      Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
   

 

Exhibit (32)(a)
Certification of CEO and CFO Pursuant to
18 U.S.C. Section 1350,
as Adopted Pursuant to
Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
In connection with the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of CMS Energy Corporation (the “Company”) for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2009 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the “Report”), David W. Joos, as President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company, and Thomas J. Webb, as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of the Company, each hereby certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that, to the best of his knowledge:
     (1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
     (2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.
         
     /s/ David W. Joos    
     
Name:
  David W. Joos    
Title:
  President and
Chief Executive Officer
   
Date:
  July 30, 2009    
 
       
     /s/ Thomas J. Webb    
     
Name:
  Thomas J. Webb    
Title:
  Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
   
Date:
  July 30, 2009    

 

Exhibit (32)(b)
Certification of CEO and CFO Pursuant to
18 U.S.C. Section 1350,
as Adopted Pursuant to
Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
In connection with the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of Consumers Energy Company (the “Company”) for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2009 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the “Report”), David W. Joos, as Chief Executive Officer of the Company, and Thomas J. Webb, as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of the Company, each hereby certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that, to the best of his knowledge:
     (1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
     (2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.
         
     /s/ David W. Joos    
     
Name:
  David W. Joos    
Title:
  Chief Executive Officer    
Date:
  July 30, 2009    
 
       
     /s/ Thomas J. Webb    
     
Name:
  Thomas J. Webb    
Title:
  Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
   
Date:
  July 30, 2009