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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                    FORM 10-K

[|X|]    ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
         THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (FEE REQUIRED)
                                       OR
[   ]    TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 or 15(d) OF THE
         SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (NO FEE REQUIRED)

For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998       Commission File Number 1-12579

                                OGE ENERGY CORP.
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

            Oklahoma                                      73-1481638
  (State or other jurisdiction of                      (I.R.S. Employer
  incorporation or organization)                       Identification No.)
        321 North Harvey
          P.O. Box 321
    Oklahoma City, Oklahoma                                73101-0321
  (Address of principal executive offices)                 (Zip Code)
  Registrant's telephone number, including area code:  405-553-3000
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

    Title of each class                Name of each exchange on which
       so registered                    each class is registered
    -------------------                ------------------------------
      Common Stock           New York Stock Exchange and Pacific Stock Exchange
Rights to Purchase-
 Series A Preferred Stock    New York Stock Exchange and Pacific Stock Exchange

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:  None

         Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has 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
registrant was required to file such reports),  and (2) has been subject to such
filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes |X| No
                                        
         Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent  filers  pursuant to
Item 405 of regulation S-K is not contained  herein,  and will not be contained,
to the best of  registrant's  knowledge,  in  definitive  proxy  or  information
statements  incorporated  by  reference  in Part  III of this  Form  10-K or any
amendment to this Form 10-K. | |

         As of February 26, 1999,  Common Shares  outstanding  were  77,801,317.
Based upon the closing  price on the New York Stock  Exchange  on  February  26,
1999, the aggregate  market value of the voting stock held by  nonaffiliates  of
the Company was: Common Stock $1,848,833,372.

         The proxy  statement  for the 1999  annual  meeting of  shareowners  is
incorporated by reference into Part III of this Report.

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                                TABLE OF CONTENTS
ITEM                                                                        PAGE
- ----                                                                        ----
                                                                          

                                     PART I

Item 1.  Business..............................................................1
         The Company...........................................................1
         Electric Operations...................................................2
                  General......................................................2
                  Regulation and Rates.........................................5
                  Rate Structure, Load Growth and Related Matters.............11
                  Fuel Supply.................................................12
         Enogex...............................................................14
         Origen...............................................................18
         Finance and Construction.............................................18
         Environmental Matters................................................19
         Employees............................................................21

Item 2.  Properties...........................................................22

Item 3.  Legal Proceedings....................................................23

Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders..................26

                                     PART II

Item 5.  Market for Registrant's Common Equity and Related
                Stockholder Matters...........................................31

Item 6.  Selected Financial Data..............................................32

Item 7.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
                Condition and Results of Operations...........................33

Item 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data..........................49

Item 9.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants
                and Financial Disclosure......................................80

                                    PART III

Item 10. Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant...................80

Item 11. Executive Compensation...............................................80

Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial
                Owners and Management.........................................80

Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.......................80

                                     PART IV

Item 14. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and
                Reports on Form 8-K...........................................80


                                        i



                                     PART I

ITEM 1. BUSINESS.
- ----------------

                                   THE COMPANY


         OGE Energy Corp. (the  "Company") is a public utility holding  company,
which was  incorporated  in August  1995 in the State of  Oklahoma.  The Company
became the parent company of Oklahoma Gas and Electric  Company ("OG&E") and its
former  subsidiary,  Enogex Inc. on  December  31, 1996  pursuant to a mandatory
share  exchange  whereby  each  share of  outstanding  common  stock of OG&E was
exchanged  on  a  share-for-share   basis  for  common  stock  of  the  Company.
Immediately following this exchange, OG&E transferred its shares of Enogex stock
to the Company and Enogex Inc. became a direct subsidiary of the Company.

         The  Company  now serves as the parent  company to OG&E,  Enogex  Inc.,
Origen Inc. and any other  companies that may be formed within the  organization
in the future.  The holding  company  structure  is intended to provide  greater
flexibility to take advantage of  opportunities  in an increasingly  competitive
business  environment  and to clearly  separate the Company's  electric  utility
business  from its  non-utility  businesses.  The  Company is not engaged in any
business  independent of that conducted  through its subsidiaries  OG&E,  Enogex
Inc.  and Enogex  Inc.'s  subsidiaries  ("Enogex"),  and Origen Inc.  and Origen
Inc.'s subsidiaries ("Origen").

         The  Company's  principal  subsidiary  is OG&E  and,  accordingly,  the
Company's  financial results and condition are  substantially  dependent at this
time on the financial results and conditions of OG&E. OG&E is a regulated public
utility engaged in the generation,  transmission and distribution of electricity
to retail and wholesale customers.  OG&E was incorporated in 1902 under the laws
of the Oklahoma  Territory and is the largest  electric  utility in the State of
Oklahoma. OG&E sold its retail gas business in 1928 and now owns and operates an
interconnected  electric production,  transmission and distribution system which
includes eight active  generating  stations with a total capability of 5,561,180
kilowatts.

         Enogex  owns and  operates  approximately  3,329  miles of natural  gas
transmission  and  gathering  pipelines,  has  interests in five gas  processing
plants, markets electricity, natural gas and natural gas products and invests in
the drilling for and production of crude oil and natural gas.

         OG&E's  regulated  utility  business  has been and will  continue to be
affected by competitive  changes to the utility  industry.  Significant  changes
already have occurred in the wholesale electric markets at the Federal level. In
Oklahoma,   legislation   was  passed  in  1997  to  provide   for  the  orderly
restructuring of the electric industry with the goal to provide retail customers
with the ability to choose  their  generation  suppliers  by July 1, 2002.  This
legislation,  if implemented as proposed,  would significantly  impact OG&E. The
Arkansas  Public  Service  Commission  ("APSC")  has  initiated  proceedings  to
consider the  implementation  of a competitive  retail  market in Arkansas.  See
"Electric  Operations - Regulation  and Rates - Recent  Regulatory  Matters" for
further discussion of these developments.

         The Company's  executive offices are located at 321 North Harvey, P. O.
Box 321, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73101-0321; telephone (405) 553-3000.





                               ELECTRIC OPERATIONS

GENERAL


         OG&E furnishes  retail  electric  service in 280  communities and their
contiguous rural and suburban areas.  During 1998, six other communities and two
rural  electric   cooperatives  in  Oklahoma  and  western  Arkansas   purchased
electricity from OG&E for resale. The service area, with an estimated population
of 1.8 million, covers approximately 30,000 square miles in Oklahoma and western
Arkansas;  including Oklahoma City, the largest city in Oklahoma, and Ft. Smith,
Arkansas,  the second largest city in that state. Of the 286 communities served,
257 are  located in Oklahoma  and 29 in  Arkansas.  Approximately  91 percent of
total electric  operating  revenues for the year ended  December 31, 1998,  were
derived from sales in Oklahoma and the remainder from sales in Arkansas.

         OG&E's  system  control  area peak  demand as  reported  by the  system
dispatcher  for the year was  approximately  5,529  megawatts,  and  occurred on
August 27, 1998. OG&E's load  responsibility peak demand was approximately 5,247
megawatts on July 30, 1998, resulting in a capacity margin of approximately 14.4
percent.  OG&E is a member, along with neighboring  utilities and other electric
suppliers,  in the  Southwest  Power  Pool  ("SPP"),  which  requires  that OG&E
maintain a capacity  reserve  margin of 13 percent.  As  reflected  in the table
below and in the  operating  statistics  on page 4,  total  kilowatt-hour  sales
increased  4.2 percent in 1998 as compared to an increase of 1.6 percent in 1997
and a 1.5  percent  increase  in  1996.  In  1998,  kilowatt-hour  sales to OG&E
customers  ("system  sales")  increased  6.6 percent  due to warmer  weather and
continued  customer  growth.  Sales  to  other  utilities  and  power  marketers
("off-system sales") decreased in 1998; however,  various factors (including the
summer heat,  unit  availability  and storms)  drove  prices of this  off-system
electricity  to record  levels,  increasing  operating  revenues  and at margins
significantly  higher  than had been  experienced  in the past.  There can be no
assurance that such margins on future off-system sales will occur again. In 1997
and 1996, total kilowatt-hour sales increased due to continued customer growth.

         Variations in kilowatt-hour  sales for the three years are reflected in
the following table:



                             SALES (Millions of Kwh)
                              INC/                  Inc/                  Inc/
                    1998     (DEC)        1997     (Dec)        1996     (Dec)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      
System Sales       23,642     6.6%       22,183     3.0%       21,541     3.4%
Off-System Sales      728   (39.5%)       1,202   (18.5%)       1,475   (20.4%)
                   -------               -------               -------
Total Sales        24,370     4.2%       23,385     1.6%       23,016     1.5%
                   =======               =======               =======


         In 1998, OG&E's Sooner Generating Station (consisting of two coal-fired
units with an  aggregate  capability  of 1,031 Mw) and OG&E's  three  coal-fired
units at its Muskogee Generating Station (with an aggregate  capability of 1,491
Mw) were again  recognized  by an industry  survey as being in the top 20 lowest
cost producers of electricity for the third consecutive year.

         OG&E is subject to competition in various degrees from government-owned
electric   systems,   municipally-owned   electric   systems,   rural   electric
cooperatives  and, in certain  respects,  from other  private  utilities,  power
marketers  and  cogenerators.  Oklahoma law forbids the granting of an exclusive
franchise to a utility for providing electricity.


                                       2



         Besides  competition  from other suppliers or marketers of electricity,
OG&E competes with suppliers of other forms of energy. The degree of competition
between  suppliers  may vary  depending on relative  costs and supplies of other
forms of  energy.  See  "Electric  Operations  -  Regulation  and Rates - Recent
Regulatory Matters" for a discussion of the potential impact on competition from
federal and state legislation.


                                       3





                        OKLAHOMA GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
                          CERTAIN OPERATING STATISTICS


                             YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                                     1998              1997              1996
                                                                -------------     -------------     -------------
                                                                                           
ELECTRIC ENERGY:
  (Millions of Kwh)
  Generation (exclusive of station use)...................            22,565            21,620            21,253
  Purchased...............................................             3,984             3,528             3,564
                                                                -------------     -------------     -------------
        Total generated and purchased.....................            26,549            25,148            24,817
  Company use, free service and losses....................            (2,179)           (1,763)           (1,801)
                                                                -------------     -------------     -------------
        Electric energy sold..............................            24,370            23,385            23,016
                                                                -------------     -------------     -------------


ELECTRIC ENERGY SOLD:
  (Millions of Kwh)
  Residential.............................................             7,959             7,179             7,143
  Commercial and industrial...............................            11,912            11,586            11,161
  Public street and highway lighting......................                68                68                67
  Other sales to public authorities.......................             2,352             2,202             2,096
  Sales for resale........................................             2,079             2,350             2,549
                                                                -------------     -------------     -------------
        Total.............................................            24,370            23,385            23,016
                                                                =============     =============     =============

ELECTRIC OPERATING REVENUES:
  (Thousands)
    Electric Revenues:
      Residential.........................................      $    537,486      $    474,419      $    479,574
      Commercial and industrial...........................           554,589           526,673           530,213
      Public street and highway lighting..................             9,618             9,456             9,367
      Other sales to public authorities...................           110,522            98,818            98,209
      Sales for resale....................................            76,198            57,695            60,141
      Provision for rate refund...........................               ---               ---            (1,221)
      Miscellaneous.......................................            23,665            24,630            24,054
                                                                -------------     -------------     -------------
        Total Electric Revenues...........................      $  1,312,078      $  1,191,691      $  1,200,337
                                                                =============     =============     =============


NUMBER OF ELECTRIC CUSTOMERS:
  (At end of period)
  Residential.............................................           598,378           593,699           588,778
  Commercial and industrial...............................            86,251            85,315            84,032
  Public street and highway lighting......................               249               249               249
  Other sales to public authorities.......................            11,183            10,897            10,688
  Sales for resale........................................                39                40                41
                                                                -------------     -------------     -------------
        Total.............................................           696,100           690,200           683,788
                                                                =============     =============     =============


RESIDENTIAL ELECTRIC SERVICE:
  Average annual use (Kwh)................................            13,342            12,133            12,178
  Average annual revenue..................................      $     900.94      $     801.74      $     817.62
  Average price per Kwh (cents)...........................              6.75              6.61              6.71



                                       4



REGULATION AND RATES


         OG&E's  retail  electric  tariffs  in  Oklahoma  are  regulated  by the
Oklahoma  Corporation  Commission  ("OCC"),  and in  Arkansas  by the APSC.  The
issuance  of certain  securities  by OG&E is also  regulated  by the OCC and the
APSC. OG&E's wholesale electric tariffs,  short-term borrowing authorization and
accounting  practices  are subject to the  jurisdiction  of the  Federal  Energy
Regulatory  Commission  ("FERC").  The Secretary of the Department of Energy has
jurisdiction over some of OG&E's facilities and operations.

         As part of the corporate  reorganization whereby the Company became the
holding company parent of OG&E, OG&E obtained the approval of the OCC. The order
of the OCC  authorizing  OG&E to  reorganize  into a holding  company  structure
contains certain provisions which, among other things,  ensure the OCC access to
the books and records of the Company and its affiliates relating to transactions
with OG&E;  require the Company and its  subsidiaries  to employ  accounting and
other  procedures and controls to protect against  subsidization  of non-utility
activities  by OG&E's  customers;  and prohibit the Company from  pledging  OG&E
assets or income for affiliate transactions.

         For the year  ended  December  31,  1998,  approximately  87 percent of
OG&E's  electric  revenue  was  subject to the  jurisdiction  of the OCC,  seven
percent to the APSC, and six percent to the FERC.

         RECENT REGULATORY  MATTERS:  In January 1998, OG&E filed an application
         --------------------------
with the OCC seeking approval to revise an existing  cogeneration  contract with
Mid-Continent Power Company ("MCPC"), a cogeneration plant near Pryor, Oklahoma.
As part of this  transaction,  the  Company  agreed  to  purchase  the  stock of
Oklahoma Loan Acquisition  Corporation ("OLAC"), the company that owned the MCPC
plant,  for  approximately  $25 million.  OG&E obtained the required  regulatory
approvals from the OCC, APSC and FERC. If the  transaction  had been  completed,
the term of the existing  cogeneration  contract would have been reduced by four
and one-half years, which would have reduced the amounts to be paid by OG&E, and
would have provided savings for its Oklahoma  customers,  of  approximately  $46
million  as  compared  to  the  existing  cogeneration  contract.  Following  an
arbitrator's  decision  that the owner of the  stock of OLAC  could not sell the
stock of OLAC to the Company until it had offered such stock to a third party on
the same terms as it was offered to the Company,  the third party  purchased the
stock of OLAC and assumed  ownership of the cogeneration  plant in October 1998.
The  effect  of this  transaction  is that  OG&E's  original  contract  with the
cogeneration plant remains in place.

         On February 11, 1997, the OCC issued an order that, among other things,
effectively lowered OG&E's rates to its Oklahoma retail customers by $50 million
annually (based on a test year ended December 31, 1995). Of the $50 million rate
reduction,  approximately $45 million became effective on March 5, 1997, and the
remaining $5 million became effective March 1, 1998. The February 11, 1997 order
also  directed  OG&E  to   transition   to   competitive   bidding  of  its  gas
transportation requirements currently met by Enogex no later than April 30, 2000
and set annual  compensation for the transportation  services provided by Enogex
to OG&E at $41.3 million until  competitively-bid gas transportation  begins. In
1998,  approximately  $41.6  million or 8.2  percent of Enogex's  revenues  were
attributable to transporting  gas for OG&E.  Other pipelines  seeking to compete
with  Enogex for OG&E's  business  will  likely  have to pay a fee to Enogex for
transporting gas on Enogex's system or incur capital expenditures to develop the
necessary  infrastructure to connect with OG&E's gas-fired  generating stations.
Nevertheless, a potential outcome of the competitive bidding process is that the
revenues of Enogex derived from  transporting  gas for OG&E may be significantly
less after April 30, 2000.


                                       5



         The Order also  contained a  Generation  Efficiency  Performance  Rider
("GEP Rider"), which is designed so that when OG&E's average annual cost of fuel
per kwh is less than 96.261 percent of the average non-nuclear fuel cost per kwh
of certain  other  investor-owned  utilities  in the region,  OG&E is allowed to
collect,  through the GEP Rider, one-third of the amount by which OG&E's average
annual  cost of fuel comes in below  96.261  percent of the average of the other
specified  utilities.  If OG&E's fuel cost exceeds 103.739 percent of the stated
average,  the Company will not be allowed to recover one-third of the fuel costs
above that average from Oklahoma customers.

         The fuel cost  information  used to calculate the GEP Rider is based on
fuel cost data  submitted  by each of the  utilities  in their Form No. 1 Annual
Report filed with the FERC.  The GEP Rider is revised  effective  July 1 of each
year to reflect any changes in the relative annual cost of fuel reported for the
preceding  calendar  year.  For  1998,  the  GEP  Rider  increased  revenues  by
approximately  $10.0 million,  or approximately $0.08 per share. The current GEP
Rider is estimated to positively  impact revenue by $33 million or approximately
$0.26 per share during the 12 months ending June 1999.

         As  previously  reported,  Oklahoma  enacted in April 1997 the Electric
Restructuring Act of 1997 (the "Act"). In June 1998,  various  amendments to the
Act were enacted. If implemented as proposed,  the Act will significantly affect
OG&E's future  operations.  The following summary of the Act does not purport to
be  complete  and is subject to the  specific  provisions  of the Act,  which is
codified at Sections 190.2 et. seq. of Title 17 of the Oklahoma Statutes.

         The Act consists of eight sections, with Section 1 designating the name
of the Act.  Section 2 describes the purposes of the Act,  which is generally to
restructure  the  electric  industry  to provide  for more  competition  and, in
particular,  to provide for the orderly  restructuring  of the electric  utility
industry  in the State of  Oklahoma  in order to allow  direct  access by retail
consumers to the  competitive  market for the  generation of  electricity  while
maintaining the safety and reliability of the electric system in the state.

         The primary goals of a restructured  electric utility industry,  as set
forth in Section 2 of the Act, are as follows:

         l.   To reduce the cost of  electricity  for as many  consumers  as
              possible,  helping industry to be more competitive,  to create
              more jobs in Oklahoma and help lower the cost of government by
              reducing  the  amount and type of  regulation  now paid for by
              taxpayers;

         2.   To encourage  the  development  of a  competitive  electricity
              industry  through the  unbundling  of prices and  services and
              separation  of  generation   services  from  transmission  and
              distribution services;

         3.   To enable retail electric  energy  suppliers to engage in fair
              and equitable  competition  through open, equal and comparable
              access to transmission and  distribution  systems and to avoid
              wasteful duplication of facilities;

         4.   To  ensure  that  direct  access by  retail  consumers  to the
              competitive  market for  generation be implemented in Oklahoma
              by July 1, 2002; and


                                       6



         5.   To ensure that proper  standards  of safety,  reliability  and
              service are  maintained  in a  restructured  electric  service
              industry.

         Section 3 of the Act sets  forth  various  definitions  and  exempts in
large part several electric  cooperatives and municipalities from the Act unless
they choose to be governed by it.

         Sections 4, 5 and 6 of the Act are designed to  implement  the goals of
the Act and provide for various studies and task forces to assess the issues and
consequences  associated with the proposed restructuring of the electric utility
industry.  In Section 4, the Joint Electric  Utility Task Force (the "Joint Task
Force"),  which is  described  below,  is directed  to  undertake a study of all
relevant  issues  relating to  restructuring  the electric  utility  industry in
Oklahoma  including,  but not limited to, the issues set forth in Section 4, and
to  develop a proposed  electric  utility  framework  for  Oklahoma.  The OCC is
prohibited from promulgating orders relating to the restructuring  without prior
authorization of the Oklahoma Legislature. Also, in developing a framework for a
restructured  electric  utility  industry,  the  OCC is to  adhere  to  fourteen
principles set forth in Section 4, including the following:

         1.   Appropriate rules shall be promulgated, ensuring that reliable
              and safe electric service is maintained.

         2.   Consumers  shall be allowed to choose  among  retail  electric
              energy  suppliers to help ensure  competitive  and  innovative
              markets.  A process should be  established  whereby all retail
              consumers are permitted to choose their retail electric energy
              suppliers by July 1, 2002.

         3.   When consumer  choice is introduced,  rates shall be unbundled
              to  provide  clear  price  information  on the  components  of
              generation,   transmission  and  distribution  and  any  other
              ancillary   charges.   Charges  for  public  benefit  programs
              currently  authorized by statute or the OCC, or both, shall be
              unbundled and appear in line item format on electric bills for
              all classes of consumers.

         4.   An entity providing distribution services shall be relieved of
              its  traditional  obligation  to provide  electric  supply but
              shall have a  continuing  obligation  to provide  distribution
              service for all consumers in its service territory.

         5.   The  benefits  associated  with  implementing  an  independent
              system  planning  committee  composed  of owners  of  electric
              distribution  systems to develop  and  maintain  planning  and
              reliability  criteria  for  distribution  facilities  shall be
              evaluated.

         6.   A defined period for the transition to a restructured electric
              utility industry shall be established.  The transition  period
              shall reflect a suitable time frame for full  compliance  with
              the requirements of a restructured utility industry.

         7.   Electric  rates for all consumer  classes shall not rise above
              current levels throughout the transition  period. If possible,
              electric  rates  for  all  consumers  shall  be  lowered  when
              feasible as markets  become more  efficient in a  restructured
              industry.


                                       7



         8.   The OCC shall  consider the  establishment  of a  distribution
              access  fee  to be  assessed  to  all  consumers  in  Oklahoma
              connected to electric  distribution  systems  regulated by the
              OCC. This fee shall be charged to cover social costs,  capital
              costs, operating costs, and other appropriate costs associated
              with the  operation of electric  distribution  systems and the
              provision of electric services to the retail consumer.

         9.   Electric  utilities  have  traditionally  had an obligation to
              provide service to consumers within their established  service
              territories  and  have  entered  into   contracts,   long-term
              investments and federally mandated  cogeneration  contracts to
              meet the needs of consumers.  These  investments and contracts
              have  resulted  in costs,  which may not be  recoverable  in a
              competitive  restructured  market and thus may be  "stranded."
              Procedures   shall  be   established   for   identifying   and
              quantifying stranded investments and for allocating costs; and
              mechanisms  shall be proposed for  recovery of an  appropriate
              amount  of  prudently  incurred,  unmitigable  and  verifiable
              stranded costs and investments.  As part of this process, each
              entity  shall be  required  to propose a  recovery  plan which
              establishes its unmitigable and verifiable  stranded costs and
              investments and a limited  recovery period designed to recover
              such costs  expeditiously,  provided that the recovery  period
              and the amount of  qualified  transition  costs  shall yield a
              transition  charge  which  shall not cause the total price for
              electric  power,   including   transmission  and  distribution
              services,   for  any   consumer   to   exceed   the  cost  per
              kilowatt-hour  paid on the  effective  date of this Act during
              the transition  period. The transition charge shall be applied
              to all consumers including direct access consumers,  and shall
              not  disadvantage  one  class of  consumer  or  supplier  over
              another,  nor impede competition and shall be allocated over a
              period  of not less than  three (3) years nor more than  seven
              (7) years.

         10.  It is the intent that all transition  costs shall be recovered
              by virtue of the savings generated by the increased efficiency
              in markets  brought  about by  restructuring  of the  electric
              utility industry.  All classes of consumers shall share in the
              transition costs.

         Subject to the  principles set forth in Section 4, the Joint Task Force
is directed to prepare a four-part  study.  As a result of the 1998  amendments,
the  time  frame  for the  delivery  of the  remaining  parts of the  Study  was
accelerated to October 1, 1999. This study is to address:  (i) technical  issues
(including  reliability,  safety,  unbundling of  generation,  transmission  and
distribution  services,  transition  issues and market  power);  (ii)  financial
issues (including  rates,  charges,  access fees,  transition costs and stranded
costs);  (iii)  consumer  issues  (such  as the  obligation  to  serve,  service
territories,  consumer choices,  competition and consumer safeguards);  and (iv)
tax issues (including sales and use taxes, ad valorem taxes and franchise fees).

         Section 5 of the Act directs the Joint Task Force to study and submit a
report on the impact of the  restructuring  of the electric  utility industry on
state tax revenues and all other facets of the current  utility tax structure on
the  state  and all  political  subdivisions  of the  state.  The  Oklahoma  Tax
Commission  and the OCC are  precluded  from  issuing any rules on such  matters
without the approval of the  Oklahoma  Legislature.  Also,  the Act requires the
establishment,  on or before July 1, 2002,  of an uniform tax policy that allows
all competitors to be taxed on a fair and equitable basis.


                                       8



         Section 6 creates  the Joint Task Force,  which shall  consist of seven
members from the Oklahoma  Senate and seven  members from the Oklahoma  House of
Representatives.  The Joint Task Force is directed to undertake  the studies set
forth in Sections 4 and 5 of the Act.  The Joint Task Force is permitted to make
final recommendations to the Governor and Oklahoma  Legislature.  The Joint Task
Force is also  empowered  to  retain  consultants  to study the  creation  of an
Independent  System  Operator,  which would  coordinate  the physical  supply of
electricity throughout Oklahoma and maintain reliability, security and stability
of the bulk power system.  In addition,  such study shall assess the benefits of
establishing  a power exchange that would operate as a power pool allowing power
producers to compete on common ground in Oklahoma.  In fulfilling its tasks, the
Joint Task Force can appoint  advisory  councils made up of electric  utilities,
regulators, residential customers and other constituencies.

         Section  7  provides   generally   that,   with   respect  to  electric
distribution providers, no customer switching will be allowed from the effective
date of the Act until July 1, 2002,  except by mutual consent.  It also provides
that any municipality that fails to become subject to the Act will be prohibited
from selling power  outside its municipal  limits except from lines owned on the
effective date of the Act.  Furthermore,  this section  provides  generally that
out-of-state suppliers of electricity and their affiliates who make retail sales
of  electricity in Oklahoma  through the use of  transmission  and  distribution
facilities of in-state suppliers must provide equal access to their transmission
and  distribution  facilities  outside  of  Oklahoma.  Section 8 sets  forth the
effective date of the Act as April 25, 1997.

         A new bill was  introduced  in the State  Senate in January 1999 and if
enacted would clarify ambiguities by defining key terms in the Act.

         In December  1997,  the APSC  established  four generic  proceedings to
consider the implementation of a competitive retail electric market in the State
of Arkansas.  During 1998, the APSC held hearings to consider competitive retail
generation, market structure, market power, taxation, recovery and mitigation of
stranded costs,  service and  reliability,  low income  assistance,  independent
system operators and transition  issues.  The Company  participated  actively in
those  proceedings,  and in  October  1998 the APSC  issued  its  report  to the
Arkansas  legislature  recommending  competitive  retail electric  generation to
begin no later than January 1, 2002. Several bills calling for electric industry
restructuring were introduced after the Arkansas General Assembly began its 1999
session.  While  it is  not  expected  that  the  General  Assembly  will  enact
legislation in regular session, a special session of the General Assembly may be
called to continue the debate.

         The OCC has  adopted  rules that are  designed  to make the gas utility
business in Oklahoma  more  competitive.  These rules do not impact the electric
industry.  Yet,  if  implemented,  the rules  are  expected  to offer  increased
opportunities to Enogex's pipeline and related businesses.

         On February  13,  1998,  the APSC Staff filed a motion for a show cause
order to review  OG&E's  electric  rates in the State of Arkansas.  The staff is
recommending a $3.1 million  annual rate  reduction  (based on a test year ended
December 31, 1996). OG&E has filed its cost of service study and has requested a
$1.7 million annual rate  increase.  A decision on this rate case is expected in
the next few months.

         AUTOMATIC FUEL ADJUSTMENT CLAUSES: Variances in the actual cost of fuel
         ---------------------------------
used in electric  generation and certain  purchased  power costs, as compared to
that component in cost-of-service  for ratemaking,  are charged to substantially
all of the  Company's  electric  customers  through  automatic  fuel  adjustment
clauses, which are subject to periodic review by the OCC, the APSC and the FERC.


                                       9



         NATIONAL   ENERGY    LEGISLATION:    Federal   law   imposes   numerous
         --------------------------------
responsibilities  and  requirements  on  OG&E.  The  Public  Utility  Regulatory
Policies Act of 1978  requires  electric  utilities,  such as OG&E,  to purchase
electric  power  from,  and  sell  electric  power  to,  qualified  cogeneration
facilities and small power  production  facilities  ("QFs").  Generally  stated,
electric  utilities must purchase  electric energy and production  capacity made
available by QFs at a rate  reflecting the cost that the purchasing  utility can
avoid as a result  of  obtaining  energy  and  production  capacity  from  these
sources;  rather  than  generating  an  equivalent  amount of  energy  itself or
purchasing  the energy or capacity from other  suppliers.  OG&E has entered into
agreements with four such cogenerators. See "Finance and Construction." Electric
utilities also must furnish electric energy to QFs on a non-discriminatory basis
at a rate  that is just  and  reasonable  and in the  public  interest  and must
provide  certain types of service which may be requested by QFs to supplement or
back up those facilities' own generation.

         The  Energy  Policy  Act  of  1992   ("EPAct")  has  resulted  in  some
significant  changes in the operations of the electric  utility industry and the
federal  policies  governing the generation,  transmission  and sale of electric
power. The EPAct, among other things,  authorized the FERC to order transmitting
utilities  to provide  transmission  services to any electric  utility,  Federal
power marketing agency, or any other person generating  electric energy for sale
or resale, at transmission  rates set by the FERC. The EPAct also is designed to
promote  competition  in the  development of wholesale  power  generation in the
electric  industry.  It exempts a new class of independent  power producers from
regulation under the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.

         In April 1996,  FERC issued two final rules,  Orders 888 and 889, which
are  having a  significant  impact  on  wholesale  markets.  These  orders  were
subsequently  amended in orders issued in March and November 1997. Order 888 set
forth rules on  non-discriminatory  open access transmission  service to promote
wholesale competition.  Order 888, which was effective on July 9, 1996, requires
utilities and other transmission users to abide by comparable terms,  conditions
and pricing in  transmitting  power.  Order 889,  which had its  effective  date
extended to January 3, 1997, requires public utilities to implement Standards of
Conduct and an Open Access Same Time Information System ("OASIS," formerly known
as "Real-Time Information Networks"). These rules require transmission personnel
to  provide  the  same  information   about  the  transmission   system  to  all
transmission  customers  using the OASIS.  In 1997,  the FERC issued  clarifying
final orders in response to rehearing  requests by numerous market  participants
regarding  Orders No. 888 and 889.  During 1998,  OG&E submitted  filings to the
FERC to comply with these Orders, and those filings have been accepted.  As OG&E
continues to prepare for  restructuring at the retail level, it is expected that
additional filings will be made in order to maintain continuing  compliance with
the FERC's wholesale restructuring orders.

         Another impact of complying with FERC's Order 888 is a requirement  for
utilities to offer a  transmission  tariff that  includes  network  transmission
service  ("NTS") to  transmission  customers.  NTS allows  transmission  service
customers to fully integrate load and resources on an instantaneous  basis, in a
manner similar to how OG&E has  historically  integrated its load and resources.
Under NTS, OG&E and participating  customers share the total annual transmission
cost for their combined joint-use systems, net of related transmission revenues,
based upon each  company's  share of the total system load.  Management  expects
minimal annual expenses as a result of Orders 888 and 889.

         As  discussed  previously,   Oklahoma  enacted  legislation  that  will
restructure  the electric  utility  industry in Oklahoma by July 2002,  assuming
that all the  conditions  in the  legislation  are met. This  legislation  would
deregulate OG&E's electric  generation assets and the continued use of Statement
of Financial  Accounting  Standards ("SFAS") No. 71, "Accounting for the Effects
of Certain Types of Regulation",  with respect to the related  regulatory assets
may no longer  be  appropriate.  This may  result


                                       10



in either full recovery of generation-related  regulatory assets (net of related
regulatory  liabilities) or a non-cash,  pre-tax  write-off as an  extraordinary
charge of up to $31 million, depending on the transition mechanisms developed by
the  legislature  for the  recovery of all or a portion of these net  regulatory
assets.

         The  enacted  Oklahoma  legislation  does not  affect  OG&E's  electric
transmission and distribution assets and the Company believes that the continued
use of SFAS No. 71 with respect to the related regulatory assets is appropriate.
However, if utility regulators in Oklahoma and Arkansas were to adopt regulatory
methodologies in the future that are not based on cost-of-service, the continued
use of SFAS No. 71 with respect to the regulatory assets related to the electric
transmission and distribution assets may no longer be appropriate.

         Based on a current  evaluation  of the various  factors and  conditions
that are expected to impact future cost recovery,  management  believes that its
regulatory assets, including those related to generation, are probable of future
recovery.

         The EPAct,  the  actions of the FERC,  the  restructuring  proposal  in
Oklahoma,  the  Arkansas  legislative  debate and other  factors are expected to
significantly  increase  competition in the electric  industry.  The Company has
taken steps in the past and intends to take  appropriate  steps in the future to
remain a competitive  supplier of  electricity.  Past actions include a redesign
and  restructuring  effort in 1994,  continuing  actions to reduce  fuel  costs,
improvements  in  customer  service  and  efforts  to  improve  OG&E's  electric
transmission  and distribution  network to reduce outages,  all of which enhance
OG&E's  ability  to  deliver  electricity  competitively.  While the  Company is
supportive  of  competition,  it believes  that all electric  suppliers  must be
required to compete on a fair and equitable  basis and the Company is advocating
this position vigorously.


RATE STRUCTURE, LOAD GROWTH
AND RELATED MATTERS


         Two of OG&E's primary goals are: (i) to increase  electric  revenues by
attracting and expanding  job-producing  businesses and industries;  and (ii) to
encourage the efficient  electrical  energy use by all of OG&E's  customers.  In
order to meet these goals,  OG&E has reduced and  restructured  its rates to its
customers.  At the same time,  OG&E had implemented  numerous energy  efficiency
programs and tariff schedules.  In 1998, these programs and schedules  included:
(i)  the  "Surprise  Free  Guarantee"  program,   which  guarantees  residential
customers comfort and annual energy  consumption for heating,  cooling and water
heating  for  new  homes  built  to  energy  efficient  standards;  (ii)  a load
curtailment  rate for industrial and commercial  customers who can demonstrate a
load  curtailment of at least 500 kilowatts (the minimum load of the curtailment
rate was raised in the February 11, 1997, OCC order);  and (iii) the time-of-use
rate  schedules for various  commercial,  industrial and  residential  customers
designed to shift  energy usage from peak demand  periods  during the hot summer
afternoon to non-peak hours.

         OG&E  continued  a Real  Time  Pricing  ("RTP")  pilot  program,  first
implemented in 1997, for qualifying  industrial and commercial  customers.  This
tariff gives customers  additional options on total kilowatt-hour growth and the
control of growth of peak demand.  Real Time Pricing is a tariff  option,  which
prices  electricity  so that current  price  varies  hourly with short notice to
reflect  current  expected  costs.  The RTP  technique  will  allow a measure of
competitive   pricing,  a  broadening  of  customer  choice,


                                       11



the balancing of electricity  usage and capacity in the short and long term, and
provide customers assistance in controlling their costs.

         OG&E's  1998  marketing   efforts   included   geothermal  heat  pumps,
electrotechnologies,  electric food service  promotion and a heat pump promotion
in the residential,  commercial and industrial markets.  OG&E works closely with
individual customers to provide the best information on how current technologies
can be combined  with OG&E's  marketing  programs  to  maximize  the  customer's
benefit.

         Other  recent   efforts  to  improve  OG&E's   services   included  the
implementation  of a new customer  service  telephone system capable of handling
approximately  ten times more  calls  simultaneously  than the prior  system and
implementation of a Company-wide  enterprise software system that, besides being
Year 2000 ready,  enables OG&E and the Company's  other  subsidiaries  to obtain
extensive business information on nearly a real-time basis. Also, OG&E is in the
process of  implementing  a new outage  management  system that  should  improve
OG&E's  ability  to  restore  service,  and  a new  mapping  system  that,  when
completed,  will provide OG&E  up-to-date  information on its  transmission  and
distribution assets.

         Electric and magnetic fields  ("EMFs")  surround all electric tools and
appliances, internal home wiring and external power lines such as those owned by
OG&E.  During the last  several  years  considerable  attention  has  focused on
possible health effects from EMFs.  While some studies  indicate a possible weak
correlation,  other similar  studies  indicate no  correlation  between EMFs and
health  effects.   The  nation's  electric   utilities,   including  OG&E,  have
participated  with  the  Electric  Power  Research  Institute  ("EPRI")  in  the
sponsorship  of more than $75  million in  research to  determine  the  possible
health effects of EMFs. In addition,  the Edison Electric  Institute  ("EEI") is
helping fund $65 million for EMF studies over a five-year period,  that began in
1994.  One-half  of  this  amount  is  expected  to be  funded  by  the  federal
government, and two-thirds of the non-federal funding is expected to be provided
by the electric utility industry.  Through its  participation  with the EPRI and
EEI,  OG&E will continue its support of the research with regard to the possible
health effects of EMFs.  OG&E is dedicated to delivering  electric  service in a
safe, reliable, environmentally acceptable and economical manner.


FUEL SUPPLY


         During 1998,  approximately 68 percent of the OG&E-generated energy was
produced by coal-fired  units and 32 percent by natural  gas-fired  units. It is
estimated  that  the  fuel  mix for  1999  through  2003,  based  upon  expected
generation for these years, will be as follows:


                                    1999      2000      2001      2002      2003
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              
Coal............................     70%       76%       76%       74%       74%
Natural Gas.....................     30%       24%       24%       26%       26%


         The  increase  from 70  percent  to 76  percent  in the  percentage  of
coal-fired  generation  relative to total  generation is expected to result from
improvements in coal delivery performance. The slight decline from 76 percent to
74 percent in 2002 and 2003 is  expected  to result  from  increases  in natural
gas-fired  generation in those years,  not from a reduction in Kwh of coal-fired
generation.


                                       12



         The average cost of fuel used, by type, per million Btu for each of the
5 years was as follows:


                                    1998      1997      1996      1995      1994
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            
Coal............................   $0.85     $0.84     $0.83     $0.83     $0.78
Natural Gas.....................   $2.83     $3.60     $3.61     $3.19     $3.58
Weighted Avg....................   $1.48     $1.39     $1.45     $1.41     $1.58


         A portion of the fuel cost is  included  in base rates and  differs for
each jurisdiction. The portion of these costs that is not included in base rates
is recovered through automatic fuel adjustment clauses. See "Electric Operations
- - Regulation and Rates - Automatic Fuel Adjustment Clauses."

         COAL-FIRED UNITS: All OG&E coal units, with an aggregate  capability of
         ----------------
2,522  megawatts,  are designed to burn low sulfur western coal.  OG&E purchases
coal under a mix of long- and short-term contracts.  During 1998, OG&E purchased
9.9 million tons of coal from the following Wyoming  suppliers:  Amax Coal West,
Inc., Caballo Rojo, Inc.,  Kennecott Energy Company,  Thunder Basin Coal Company
and  Powder  River Coal  Company.  The  combination  of all coals has a weighted
average  sulfur  content of 0.3  percent  and can be burned in these units under
existing federal, state and local environmental standards (maximum of 1.2 pounds
of sulfur  dioxide  per million  Btu)  without  the  addition of sulfur  dioxide
removal  systems.  Based upon the  average  sulfur  content,  OG&E units have an
approximate  emission rate of 0.63 pounds of sulfur  dioxide per million Btu. In
anticipation  of the more  strict  provisions  of Phase II of The  Clean Air Act
starting  in the year 2000,  OG&E has  contracts  in place that will allow for a
supply of very low sulfur coal from  suppliers in the Powder River Basin to meet
the new sulfur dioxide standards.

         During 1998,  rail congestion  continued on the Union Pacific  Railroad
causing coal shortage  among many of the  utilities in the Southwest  Power Pool
and the state of Texas.  As a result,  OG&E depleted its coal stockpiles and was
forced to take some coal conservation  measures in November and December.  Since
that time,  rail service has improved.  During 1998,  1997, and 1996,  OG&E used
larger unit  trains with a maximum of 135 cars  instead of a maximum of 112 cars
in unit train service to the Muskogee  Generating  Station.  Increasing the unit
train size allows for an increase of delivered tons by approximately 21 percent.
The combination of high volume,  aluminum design and increased train size to the
Muskogee  Generating  Station  reduces  the  number  of trips  from  Wyoming  by
approximately 29 percent. OG&E continued its efforts to maximize the utilization
of its coal units by  optimizing  the boiler  operations  at both the Sooner and
Muskogee  generating plants. See "Environmental  Matters" for a discussion of an
environmental  proposal that, if  implemented as proposed,  could inhibit OG&E's
ability to use coal as its primary boiler fuel.

         GAS-FIRED  UNITS:  For calendar year 1999, OG&E expects to acquire less
         ----------------
than 1 percent of its gas needs  from  long-term  gas  purchase  contracts.  The
remainder  of OG&E's gas needs  during 1999 will be supplied by  contracts  with
at-market pricing or through day-to-day purchases on the spot market.

         In 1993,  OG&E began  utilizing a natural gas  storage  facility  which
helps lower fuel costs by allowing OG&E to optimize  economic  dispatch  between
fuel types and take advantage of seasonal  variations in natural gas prices.  By
diverting  gas into storage  during low demand  periods,  OG&E is able to use as
much coal as possible to generate electricity and utilize the stored gas to meet
the additional demand for electricity.


                                       13



                                     ENOGEX


         The Company's wholly-owned  non-utility subsidiary,  Enogex, Inc. is an
Oklahoma  intrastate  natural gas pipeline  which also  conducts  operations  in
related business segments through subsidiary companies.  These business segments
include gas processing  operations ("Gas  Processing")  conducted by and through
Enogex Products Corporation ("Products");  development and production of oil and
natural gas ("Development and Production")  conducted through Enogex Exploration
Corporation  ("Exploration");  and the  marketing  of natural  gas,  natural gas
liquids,  and electricity  ("Marketing")  conducted by OGE Energy Resources Inc.
("Resources").  In addition Enogex's  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  Enogex Arkansas
Pipeline Company ("EAPC") owns a 75percent  interest in Ozark Gas  Transmission,
LLC and related companies which are involved in gas gathering and interstate gas
transmission  operations  in  eastern  Oklahoma  and  Arkansas,  through  EAPC's
75percent interest in the Noark Pipeline System LP ("NOARK").

         For the year  ended  December  31,  1998,  and  before  elimination  of
intercompany items between OG&E and Enogex,  Enogex's  consolidated revenues and
net income were approximately $505.5 million and $8.5 million, respectively.

         Recent Actions.  Enogex is the exclusive  transporter of natural gas to
         --------------
OG&E's electric power generating stations.  The OCC in its order on February 11,
1997  directed  OG&E  to   transition   to   competitive   bidding  of  its  gas
transportation  no later  than  April  30,  2000.  The  order  also  set  annual
compensation for the transportation services provided by Enogex to OG&E at $41.3
million until  competitively-bid  gas transportation  begins. As a result of the
foregoing,  Enogex  expects  that  revenues  generated  from its  transportation
services  for OG&E  (which in 1997 and 1998  represented  12.9  percent  and 8.2
percent,  respectively,  of Enogex's consolidated revenues) will remain at $41.3
million per year through  1999 and will  decline  after 1999 since Enogex may no
longer be the exclusive provider of transportation services to OG&E after 1999.

         As a result, the Company's plan has been and is for Enogex to diversify
its revenue and income sources by increasing revenues from transmission services
provided to third parties, by increasing the net income of Enogex  subsidiaries'
natural  gas  processing  and  development  and  production  operations,  and by
actively  evaluating  potential  acquisitions  of  complementary  businesses  or
assets.

         In May 1997,  Products  acquired  an 80 percent  interest in the NuStar
Joint Venture from Nuevo Liquids Inc. for $26 million.  The joint venture assets
include a 66.67  percent  interest in the Benedum gas  processing  plant with an
inlet  capacity of 110 million  cubic feet per day; a 100 percent  interest in a
second  bypass plant with a capacity of 30 million  cubic feet per day; 52 miles
of natural  gas liquid  pipeline  and over 200 miles of  related  gas  gathering
facilities located in Upton,  Crockett,  Reagan and neighboring  counties in the
Permian Basin in West Texas.

         In January  1998,  Enogex,  through its newly formed  subsidiary,  EAPC
acquired a 40 percent interest in the partnership that owns NOARK, a natural gas
pipeline,  for  approximately  $30 million and agreed to acquire Ozark  Pipeline
("Ozark"),  for  approximately  $55  million.  The  NOARK  line  is  a  302-mile
intra-state  pipeline  system that extends from near Fort  Chaffee,  Arkansas to
near  Paragould,  Arkansas.  The Ozark line is a 437-mile  inter-state  pipeline
system  that  begins  near  McAlester,  Oklahoma  and  terminates  near  Searcy,
Arkansas.  In July 1998, EAPC completed its acquisition of Ozark and contributed
Ozark to NOARK.  The two pipelines  were  integrated  into a single,  interstate
transmission


                                       14



system on November 1, 1998 at an additional cost of  approximately  $16 million.
EAPC,  which  funded the  integration,  owns a 75 percent  interest in NOARK and
Southwestern  Energy Pipeline  Company owns the remaining 25 percent interest in
the partnership.  Current capacity of the integrated system,  operating as Ozark
Gas Transmission LLC is approximately 330 million cubic feet per day.

         In July 1998 Products  acquired the Belvan  Corporation  and the Belvan
and Todd Ranch Limited  Partnerships  which possess  gathering,  processing  and
treating  assets in the vicinity of Products'  NuStar  processing  operations in
Crockett,  Upton and Reagan Counties in West Texas. Acquired assets included 345
miles of gathering system,  capable of gathering  approximately 15 million cubic
feet per day from 250 wells,  natural gas liquid recovery  facilities and sulfur
recovery  facilities with an effective current capacity of 15 million cubic feet
per day and an eight-mile natural gas liquids pipeline. The acquisition cost was
approximately $13.7 million.

         The fees charged by Ozark and by NOARK's  second  interstate  pipeline,
Arkansas  Western Pipeline ("AWP") are subject to regulation by the FERC. AWP is
an eight-mile  pipeline segment crossing the border between eastern Arkansas and
Missouri.  In November  1998, the FERC approved a maximum lawful rate of $0.2455
per mmbtu for the new, integrated  NOARK-Ozark system and required Ozark to file
for a rate review by not later than March 2000.  While Ozark cannot  predict the
ultimate  outcome of this  forthcoming  rate review,  no material  change in the
current maximum lawful rate is anticipated. AWP's current maximum lawful rate is
$0.0311 per mmbtu with no current requirement for filing for rate review.

         Gas   Transportation.   Enogex's   primary   business  is  natural  gas
         --------------------
transportation and it consists  primarily of gathering and transporting  natural
gas in Oklahoma for OG&E and on an  interruptible  basis,  for other  customers.
Enogex's system  consists of  approximately  3,329 miles of pipeline,  extending
from the  Arkoma  Basin in eastern  Oklahoma  to the  Anadarko  Basin in western
Oklahoma.'  Since 1960,  Enogex has had a gas  transmission  agreement with OG&E
under which Enogex  transports  OG&E's natural gas supply on a fee basis.  Under
the gas  transmission  agreement,  OG&E  agrees to tender to Enogex  and  Enogex
agrees to transport, on a firm,  load-following basis, all of OG&E's natural gas
requirements  for  boiler  fuel  for its  seven  gas-fired  electric  generating
stations.  In 1998, Enogex  transported 204 billion Btu of natural gas; of which
approximately  76 billion  Btu, or about 37  percent,  was  delivered  to OG&E's
electric   generating   stations  and  storage   facility,   which  resulted  in
approximately  63  percent of Enogex  Inc.'s  transportation  revenues  of $65.8
million for 1998.

         Enogex's  pipeline  system  also  gathers  and  transports  natural gas
destined for interstate markets through  interconnections in Oklahoma with other
pipeline  companies.  Among others,  these  interconnections  include  Panhandle
Eastern Pipeline, Williams Natural Gas Pipeline, Natural Gas Pipeline Company of
America,  Northern Natural Gas Company, NorAm Gas Transmission Company and Ozark
Gas Transmission Company.

         The rates charged by Enogex for  transporting  natural gas on behalf of
an  interstate  natural gas  pipeline  company or a local  distribution  company
served  by an  interstate  natural  gas  pipeline  company  are  subject  to the
jurisdiction  of FERC under  Section  311 of the  Natural  Gas Policy  Act.  The
statute entitles Enogex to charge a "fair and equitable" rate that is subject to
review  and  approval  by the FERC at least once every  three  years.  This rate
review may involve an administrative-type  trial and an administrative appellate
review.  In  addition,  Enogex has  agreed to open its system to all  interstate
shippers that are  interested in moving  natural gas through the Enogex  system.
Enogex is required to conduct this transportation on a non-discriminatory basis,
although this  transportation  is subordinate  to that performed for OG&E.  This
decision does not increase  appreciably the federal regulatory burden on


                                       15



Enogex,  but does give Enogex the  opportunity to utilize any unused capacity on
an interruptible basis and thus increase its transportation revenues.

         The fees  charged by Enogex for  transporting  natural gas for OG&E and
other intrastate  shippers are not subject to FERC  regulation.  With respect to
state regulation,  the fees charged by Enogex for any intrastate  transportation
service have not been subject to direct state regulation by the OCC. Even though
the intrastate pipeline business of Enogex is not directly  regulated,  the OCC,
the APSC and the FERC have the authority to examine the  appropriateness  of any
transportation  charge or other fees paid by OG&E to Enogex, which OG&E seeks to
recover from  ratepayers.  As stated above,  OCC issued an order on February 11,
1997  directing   OG&E  to  transition  to   competitive   bidding  of  its  gas
transportation  no later than April 30, 2000 and set an annual  compensation for
the  transportation  services  provided by Enogex to OG&E at $41.3 million until
competitively-bid gas transportation begins.

         In 1998,  Resources  successfully  initiated  wholesale  electric power
purchase  and  reselling   operations.   Resources  received  market-based  rate
authority in 1997 from the FERC.  See  "Electric  Operations  -  Regulation  and
Rates".  With 1998  power  sales of 1.4  million  Mwh,  Resources  ranked as the
nation's 71st largest power marketer in terms of Mwh sold. Resources acts as the
Company's  natural gas purchasing arm for the natural gas fuel  requirements  of
the OG&E power stations.  Additionally,  beginning in 1999, all of the Company's
surplus power sales activity will be done through Resources.

         Gas  Processing.  Products has been active since 1968 in the processing
         ---------------
of natural gas and marketing of natural gas liquids.  The NuStar Joint  Venture,
in which Products recently acquired an 80 percent interest,  has been engaged in
the  processing of natural gas since 1951.  Products'  and NuStar's  natural gas
processing  plant  operations  consist of the extraction and sale of natural gas
liquids.  The products  extracted from the gas stream include marketable ethane,
propane,  butane and natural  gasoline mix. The residue gas remaining  after the
liquid products have been extracted consists primarily of ethane and methane. In
addition to the 66.67 percent interest in the Benedum gas processing plant owned
by NuStar  Joint  Venture,  Products  also owns the second  largest  natural gas
processing  plant in Oklahoma,  which is located near Calumet,  Oklahoma and has
the capacity to process 250 million cubic feet of natural gas per day.  Products
also owns  interests in three other natural gas  processing  plants in Oklahoma,
which have, in the aggregate,  the capacity to process  approximately 46 million
cubic feet of natural gas per day.

         Most of the  commercial  grade propane  processed at Products'  Calumet
facility is sold on the local market.  The other  natural gas liquids,  commonly
referred to as Group 140 are  delivered to Conway,  Kansas  (which is one of the
nation's largest wholesale markets for gas liquids),  where they are sold on the
spot  market.  Ethane,  which is  produced  at all of  Products'  plants  except
Calumet, is sold under a contract with Equistar Chemicals. This contract expires
in February 2000, but is renewable  annually on an evergreen basis.  Natural gas
liquids are  marketed by  Resources.  Natural gas liquids  from the NuStar Joint
Venture are sold to the Huntsman  Chemicals plant (formerly Rexene Chemicals) in
Midland,  Texas  pursuant to a recently  renewed  contract  expiring in February
2002.

         In processing and marketing  natural gas liquids,  the Enogex companies
compete against virtually all other gas processors  selling natural gas liquids.
The Enogex companies  believe they will be able to continue to compete favorably
against  such  companies.  With  respect to factors  affecting  the  natural gas
liquids industry  generally,  as the price of natural gas liquids fall without a
corresponding  decrease in the price of natural gas, it may become  uneconomical
to extract  certain  natural gas  liquids.  As to factors  affecting  the Enogex
companies  specifically,  the volume of natural gas processed at their plants is
dependent upon the volume of natural gas transported through the pipeline system
located  "behind the


                                       16



plants." If the volume of natural gas  transported  by such  pipeline  increases
"behind the plants,"  then the volume of liquids  extracted  by Products  should
normally increase.

         Marketing.   Enogex's  natural  gas  marketing  is  conducted   through
         ---------
Resources.  Resources  serves both  producers  and  consumers  of natural gas by
buying  natural gas at the wellhead or at  gathering  points both on and off the
Enogex  pipeline  system and  reselling to  interstate  pipelines,  end-users or
downstream  purchasers  both within and outside  Oklahoma.  Resources has placed
emphasis  on the  purchase  and sale of  volumes  of gas  moving  on the  Enogex
pipeline  system in order to enhance  utilization of pipeline  capacity.  During
1998,  Resources sold  approximately  434 billion Btu of natural gas per day, of
which about 70 percent moved on the Enogex pipeline system.

         Resources purchases and sells gas under long-term contracts, as well as
in the "spot" market.  In response to changes  currently taking place in the gas
industry,  Resources has been  de-emphasizing  its  short-term  markets,  and an
increasing  proportion  of its revenues are earned  pursuant to long-term  sales
contracts.  However,  short-term or "spot" sales of natural gas will continue to
play a critical  role in overall  strategy  because  they  provide an  important
source of market  intelligence,  while serving a portfolio  balancing  function.
Price risk on extended  term gas  purchase or sales  contracts  entered  into by
Resources  is hedged  on the NYMEX  futures  exchange  as a matter of  corporate
policy.  Commencing in 1995,  Resources began serving Products by purchasing and
marketing the natural gas liquids produced by Products.  In addition,  Resources
also markets natural gas developed by Exploration  when volumes are sufficiently
concentrated to justify  Resources  marketing these volumes  directly instead of
through the property  operator.  Other services  provided include energy forward
price evaluations and centralized corporate commodity price risk management.

         In its marketing and transportation  services for third parties, Enogex
Inc. and Resources encounter competition from other natural gas transporters and
marketers and from other available  alternative  energy  sources.  The effect of
competition from  alternative  energy sources is dependent upon the availability
and  cost of  competing  supply  sources.  Resources  competes  with  all  major
suppliers of natural gas and natural gas liquids in the geographic  markets they
serve. For natural gas, those geographic  markets are primarily the areas served
by pipelines with which Enogex is interconnected.  Although the price of the gas
is an  important  factor to a buyer of natural gas from  Resources,  the primary
factor is the total  cost  (including  transportation  fees) that the buyer must
pay.  Natural gas transported for Resources by Enogex Inc. is billed at the same
rate Enogex Inc. charges for comparable third-party transportation.

         Development and Production. Exploration was formed in 1988 primarily to
         --------------------------
engage in the  development  and  production of oil and natural gas.  Exploration
focused its early  drilling  activity in the Antrim  Devonian shale trend in the
state of Michigan  and also has  interests in Oklahoma,  Utah,  Texas,  Indiana,
Mississippi and Louisiana. As of December 31, 1998, Exploration had interests in
550 active wells. Exploration's estimated proved reserves were 90,877 Mmcfe. The
standardized  measure of discounted future net cash flow with related Section 29
tax credits of  Exploration's  proved reserves was $56.9 million at December 31,
1998.  During  the  fourth  quarter  of 1998,  Exploration  (through  Resources)
initiated a program of hedging the future gas selling  price on a portion of its
lease  production   through  commodity  futures  contracts  to  cushion  against
unfavorable monthly price swings.


                                       17



                                     ORIGEN


         The Company's newest wholly-owned  non-regulated subsidiary,  Origen is
currently  engaged in geothermal  heat pump systems and the  development  of new
products.

         Origen plans to initiate  another energy related business unit in 1999.
This new unit is  anticipated to be a  contractor/distributor  in the geothermal
industry,  located in the Detroit,  Michigan area. In addition,  Origen plans to
discontinue  operations of its business unit, Geothermal Design and Engineering,
Inc.,  in the first  quarter of 1999.  Origen did not  contribute to earnings in
1998 and is not anticipated to contribute to earnings in 1999.


                            FINANCE AND CONSTRUCTION


         The Company generally meets its cash needs through internally generated
funds, short-term borrowings and permanent financing. Cash flows from operations
remained  strong in 1998 and 1997,  which  enabled  the  Company  to  internally
generate the required funds to satisfy  construction  expenditures  during these
years.

         Management  expects that  internally  generated  funds will be adequate
over  the  next  three  years to meet  the  Company's  anticipated  construction
expenditures.  The  primary  capital  requirements  for  1999  through  2001 are
estimated as follows:


(DOLLARS IN MILLIONS)                          1999           2000         2001
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                
Electric utility construction
  expenditures including AFUDC............   $101.7         $100.0       $100.0

Non-utility construction expenditures
  and pending acquisitions................     35.0           25.0         30.0

Maturities of long-term debt..............      2.0          169.0          2.0
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total.................................   $138.7         $294.0       $132.0
================================================================================


         The three-year  estimate includes  expenditures for construction of new
facilities to meet anticipated demand for service, to replace or expand existing
facilities  in both its electric  and  non-utility  businesses,  to fund pending
acquisitions  (including any related capital expenditures),  and to some extent,
for  satisfying  maturing  debt.  Approximately  $0.5  million of the  Company's
construction  expenditures  budgeted  for 1999 are to comply with  environmental
laws and regulations.  OG&E's  construction  program was developed to support an
anticipated  peak demand  growth of one to two percent  annually and to maintain
minimum  capacity reserve margins as stipulated by the Southwest Power Pool. See
"Electric Operations - Rate Structure, Load Growth and Related Matters."

         OG&E intends to meet its customers' increased  electricity needs during
the foreseeable  future  primarily by maintaining the reliability and increasing
the utilization of existing capacity.  OG&E's current resource strategy includes
the reactivation of existing plants and the addition of peaking resources.  OG&E
does not  anticipate  the need for another  base-load  plant in the  foreseeable
future.


                                       18



         The  Company  will  continue  to  use  short-term  borrowings  to  meet
temporary  cash  requirements.  OG&E has the necessary  regulatory  approvals to
incur up to $400 million in short-term  borrowings at any one time.  The maximum
amount of outstanding short-term borrowings during 1998 was $183.5 million.

         In October  1995,  OG&E changed its primary  method of  long-term  debt
financing  from issuing first mortgage bonds under its First Mortgage Bond Trust
Indenture  to issuing  Senior  Notes under a new  Indenture  (the  "Senior  Note
Indenture").  Each series of Senior Notes issued under the Senior Note Indenture
was secured in essence by a series of first  mortgage  bonds (the "Back-up First
Mortgage  Bonds"),  subject to the condition that, upon retirement or redemption
of all first  mortgage  bonds  issued  prior to October  1995 (the "Prior  First
Mortgage   Bonds"),   each  series  of  Back-up  First   Mortgage   Bonds  would
automatically be canceled.  In April 1998, all of the Prior First Mortgage Bonds
were  redeemed or retired  with the result that no first  mortgage  bonds remain
outstanding.  OG&E has  cancelled its First  Mortgage  Bond Trust  Indenture and
caused the related first mortgage lien on substantially all of its properties to
be discharged  and  released.  OG&E expects to have more  flexibility  in future
financings under its Senior Note Indenture than existed under the First Mortgage
Bond Trust Indenture.

         In  accordance  with  the  requirements  of the  PURPA  (see  "Electric
Operations  -  Regulation  and Rates - National  Energy  Legislation"),  OG&E is
obligated  to  purchase  110   megawatts   of  capacity   annually   from  Smith
Cogeneration,  Inc., 320 megawatts annually from Applied Energy Services,  Inc.,
another qualified cogeneration facility and up to 110 megawatts of capacity from
MCPC.  OG&E also has agreed to purchase energy not needed by the Sparks Regional
Medical Center from its nominal seven megawatt cogeneration facility.

         The Company's  financial  results  continue to depend to a large extent
upon the tariffs OG&E charges customers and the actions of the regulatory bodies
that set those tariffs, the amount of energy used by OG&E's customers,  the cost
and availability of external  financing and the cost of conforming to government
regulations.


                              ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS


         The  Company's  management  believes  all  of  its  operations  are  in
substantial  compliance  with  present  federal,  state and local  environmental
standards.  It is estimated that the Company's total  expenditures  for capital,
operating,  maintenance  and other costs to preserve  and enhance  environmental
quality  will  be   approximately   $41.5  million  during  1999,   compared  to
approximately $44.6 million utilized in 1998.  Approximately $0.5 million of the
Company's  construction  expenditures  budgeted  for  1999  are to  comply  with
environmental  laws and  regulations.  The Company  continues  to  evaluate  its
environmental management systems to ensure compliance with existing and proposed
environmental  legislation  and  regulations  and to better position itself in a
competitive market.

         As  required  by  Title  IV of the  Clean  Air Act  Amendments  of 1990
("CAAA"),  OG&E has completed  installation  and  certification  of all required
continuous emissions monitors ("CEMs") at its generating stations.  OG&E submits
emissions  data  quarterly to the  Environmental  Protection  Agency  ("EPA") as
required by the CAAA. Phase II sulfur dioxide ("SO2") emission requirements will
affect


                                       19



OG&E beginning in the year 2000. Based on current information,  OG&E believes it
can meet the SO2 limits without additional capital  expenditures.  In 1998, OG&E
emitted 54,801 tons of SO2.

         With respect to the nitrogen  oxide ("NOx")  regulations of Title IV of
the CAAA,  OG&E committed to meeting a 0.45 lbs/mmbtu NOx emission level in 1997
on all coal-fired boilers. As a result, OG&E was eligible to exercise its option
to extend the effective  date of the lower emission  requirements  from the year
2000 until 2008. OG&E's average NOx emissions for 1998 was 0.36 lbs/mmbtu.

         OG&E has submitted all of its required Title V permit applications.  As
a result of the Title V Program, OG&E paid approximately $0.3 million in fees in
1998.

         Other  potential air  regulations  have emerged that could impact OG&E.
The Ozone Transport  Assessment  Group ("OTAG")  studied long range transport of
ozone  and its  precursors  across a  thirty-seven  state  area.  The  study was
completed  in 1997 but as a result of the efforts of OG&E and  others,  Oklahoma
and 14 other states were exempted from any OTAG emission reduction requirements.
However,  in the fall of 1998,  EPA proposed a further study of ozone  transport
from these 15 states to determine if  emissions  reductions  in these states are
warranted.  If reductions  had been  required in Oklahoma,  OG&E could have been
forced to reduce its NOx emissions even further from the limits imposed by Title
IV of the Act.

         In 1997, EPA finalized  revisions to the ambient ozone and  particulate
standards.  Based on current ozone data, Tulsa and Oklahoma counties will likely
fail to meet the proposed  standard for ozone.  In addition,  EPA projects  that
Muskogee,  Kay,  Tulsa and Comanche  counties in Oklahoma would fail to meet the
standard for particulate matter. If reductions are required in Muskogee, Kay and
Oklahoma counties, significant capital expenditures could be required by OG&E.

         By mid-1999,  EPA is expected to issue regulations  concerning regional
haze.  This  regulation is intended to protect  visibility in national parks and
wilderness  areas  throughout  the  United  States.  In  Oklahoma,  the  Wichita
Mountains  would be the only area  covered  under the  regulation.  Emissions of
sulfates and nitrate aerosols (both emitted from coal-fired boilers) can lead to
the degradation of visibility.  It is possible that controls on sources hundreds
of miles away from the affected  area may be required.  Both Sooner and Muskogee
Generating  Stations could face significant  capital  expenditures if reductions
are required.

         In  December  1997,  the  United  States was a  signatory  to the Kyoto
Protocol  for the  reduction  of  greenhouse  gases  that  contribute  to global
warming.  The U.S.  committed to a 7 percent  reduction from the 1990 levels. If
the Senate ratifies the Kyoto Protocol,  this reduction could have a significant
impact on OG&E's use of coal as a boiler  fuel.  Based on current  load and fuel
budget projections, a 7 percent reduction of greenhouse gases would require OG&E
to  substantially  increase  gas  burning in the year 2008 and to  significantly
reduce its use of coal as a boiler fuel.  Since there are numerous  issues which
will affect how this reduction would be implemented,  if at all, the cost to the
Company to comply with this reduction cannot be established at this time, but is
expected to be substantial.

         The Company  has and will  continue  to seek new  pollution  prevention
opportunities  and to evaluate the  effectiveness of its waste reduction,  reuse
and recycling  efforts.  In 1998, the Company  obtained refunds of approximately
$155,000 from its recycling efforts. This figure does not include the additional
savings  gained  through the reduction  and/or a avoidance of disposal costs and
the reduction in material purchases due to reuse of existing materials.  Similar
savings are anticipated in future years.


                                       20



         OG&E has made application for renewal of all of its National  Pollutant
Discharge  Elimination  system permits.  OG&E has received all of the permits in
final form  except one which is pending  regulatory  action.  All of the permits
issued to date offer greater operational flexibility than those in the past.

         OG&E  has  requested  that  the  State  agency   responsible   for  the
development of Water Quality  Standards  remove the  agriculture  beneficial use
classification from one of its cooling water reservoirs. Without removal of this
classification,  the facility  could be subjected to standards that will require
costly treatment and/or facility reconfiguration. The request for the removal of
this  classification  has been  approved  at the  state  level  and is  awaiting
approval by EPA.

         OG&E  remains  a  party  to two  separate  actions  brought  by the EPA
concerning cleanup of disposal sites for hazardous and toxic waste. See "Item 3.
Legal Proceedings".

         The  Company  has and will  continue  to  evaluate  the  impact  of its
operations on the  environment.  As a result,  contamination on Company property
may be  discovered  from  time to  time.  One site  identified  as  having  been
contaminated  by  historical  operations  was  addressed  during 1998.  Remedial
options based on the future use of this site are being pursued with  appropriate
regulatory  agencies.  The  cost  of  these  actions  has  not  had  and  is not
anticipated  to  have a  material  adverse  impact  on the  Company's  financial
position or results of operations.


                                    EMPLOYEES


         The Company and its  subsidiaries  had 2,779  employees at December 31,
1998.


                                       21



ITEM 2. PROPERTIES.
- ------------------

         OG&E  owns  and  operates  an   interconnected   electric   production,
transmission and distribution system,  located in Oklahoma and western Arkansas,
which  includes  eight  active  generating  stations  with an  aggregate  active
capability of 5,561 megawatts.  The following table sets forth  information with
respect to present electric generating  facilities,  all of which are located in
Oklahoma:


                                                      Unit             Station
                                    Year           Capability        Capability
Station & Unit        Fuel        Installed        (Megawatts)       (Megawatts)
- --------------        ----        ---------        -----------       -----------
                                                         
Seminole     1        Gas           1971              515.0
             2        Gas           1973              507.0
             3        Gas           1975              500.0             1,522

Muskogee     3        Gas           1956              165.0
             4        Coal          1977              492.5
             5        Coal          1978              492.5
             6        Coal          1984              506.0             1,656

Sooner       1        Coal          1979              514.0
             2        Coal          1980              517.0             1,031

Horseshoe    6        Gas           1958              172.0
Lake         7        Gas           1963              237.0
             8        Gas           1969              396.0               805

Mustang      1        Gas           1950               58.0            Inactive
             2        Gas           1951               57.0            Inactive
             3        Gas           1955              120.0
             4        Gas           1959              260.0
             5        Gas           1971               63.0               443

Conoco       1        Gas           1991               25.5
             2        Gas           1991               29.5                55

Arbuckle     1        Gas           1953               74.0            Inactive

Enid         1        Gas           1965                9.8
             2        Gas           1965                9.6
             3        Gas           1965               11.0
             4        Gas           1965                9.6                40

Woodward     1        Gas           1963                9.0                 9
                                                                     -----------
Total Active Generating Capability (all stations)                       5,561
                                                                     ===========



                                       22



         At December 31,  1998,  OG&E's  transmission  system  included:  (i) 65
substations  with a  total  capacity  of  approximately  15.5  million  kVA  and
approximately  4,003  structure  miles  of  lines  in  Oklahoma;  and  (ii)  six
substations  with  a  total  capacity  of  approximately  1.9  million  kVA  and
approximately  241  structure  miles of lines in Arkansas.  OG&E's  distribution
system included:  (i) 300 substations with a total capacity of approximately 4.1
million  kVA,  19,998  structure  miles  of  overhead  lines,   1,623  miles  of
underground conduit and 6,623 miles of underground  conductors in Oklahoma;  and
(ii) 30 substations  with a total capacity of  approximately  617,500 kVA, 1,658
structure  miles of overhead  lines,  165 miles of  underground  conduit and 369
miles of underground conductors in Arkansas.

         Substantially all of OG&E's electric facilities were previously subject
to a direct first mortgage lien under the Trust Indenture  securing OG&E's first
mortgage  bonds.  The Trust  Indenture and related lien were discharged in April
1998.

         Enogex owns: (i) approximately 3,329 miles of natural gas gathering and
transmission pipeline extending from the Arkoma Basin in eastern Oklahoma to the
Anadarko  Basin in western  Oklahoma;  (ii) a 75 percent  interest  in the Noark
Pipeline LP which in turn owns 100 percent of the Ozark Gas Transmission LLC and
related  companies,  a 924 mile  interstate  pipeline  system with gathering and
transmission  operations  in eastern  Oklahoma and  Arkansas and an  approximate
current  capacity  of 330  million  cubic  feet per  day;  (iii) a  natural  gas
processing plant near Calumet,  Oklahoma,  which has the capacity to process 250
Mmcf of  natural  gas per  day;  (iv)  interests  in  three  other  natural  gas
processing  plants in Oklahoma,  which have, in the  aggregate,  the capacity to
process approximately 46 Mmcf of natural gas per day; (v) an 80 percent interest
in the NuStar Joint Venture,  whose assets  include a 66.67 percent  interest in
the Benedum gas  processing  plant with an inlet  capacity of 110 million  cubic
feet per day, a 100 percent interest in a second bypass plant with a capacity of
30 million cubic feet per day, 52 miles of natural gas liquid  pipeline and over
200 miles of related gas gathering facilities located in Upton, Crockett, Reagan
and  neighboring  counties in the Permian Basin in West Texas;  and (vi) 100% of
the gas gathering,  processing and treating assets of the Belvan Corporation and
Belvan and Todd Ranch Limited Partnerships, consisting of 345 miles of gathering
system,  gas liquid  recovery and sulfur  extraction  facilities with a combined
effective  current  capacity of 15 million cubic feet per day, and an eight-mile
natural gas liquids pipeline.

         During the three years ended  December 31, 1998,  the  Company's  gross
property,  plant and  equipment  additions  approximated  $652 million and gross
retirements   approximated  $136  million.  These  additions  were  provided  by
internally generated funds. The additions during this three-year period amounted
to approximately 14.7 percent of total property, plant and equipment at December
31, 1998.

ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.
- -------------------------

         1.   On July 8,1994, an employee of OG&E filed a lawsuit in state court
against OG&E in  connection  with OG&E's VERP.  The case was removed to the U.S.
District Court in Tulsa,  Oklahoma.  On August 23, 1994, the trial court granted
OG&E's Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff's Complaint in its entirety.

         On September  12,  1994,  Plaintiff,  along with two other  Plaintiffs,
filed an Amended Complaint  alleging  substantially the same allegations,  which
were in the original  complaint.  The action was filed as a class action, but no
motion to certify a class was ever filed. Plaintiffs want credit, for retirement
purposes,  for years they worked  prior to a pre-ERISA  (1974) break in service.
They allege  violations of ERISA, the Veterans  Reemployment Act, Title VII, and
the Age  Discrimination  in Employment Act. State law claims,  including one for
intentional infliction of emotional distress, are also alleged.


                                       23



         On October 10, 1994,  Defendants  filed a Motion to Dismiss  Counts II,
IV, V, VI and VII of Plaintiffs' Amended Complaint.  With regard to Counts I and
III,  Defendants  filed a Motion for Summary  Judgment on January 18,  1996.  On
September  8,  1997,  the  United  States   Magistrate  Judge   recommended  the
Defendant's  motions to dismiss and for summary  judgment  should be granted and
that the case be dismissed in its  entirety and judgment  entered for OG&E.  The
United States District Judge accepted the  recommendation  of the Magistrate and
entered  judgement for OG&E.  Plaintiffs have filed an appeal,  which is pending
with the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals.

         While the Company cannot predict the precise outcome of the proceeding,
the Company  continues to believe that the lawsuit is without merit and will not
have a material  adverse  effect on its  consolidated  results of  operations or
financial condition.

         2.   OG&E  is also  involved,  along  with  numerous  other Potentially
Responsible  Parties  ("PRP"),  in an EPA  administrative  action  involving the
facility  in  Holden,  Missouri,  of Martha C. Rose  Chemicals,  Inc.  ("Rose").
Beginning  in early 1983  through  1986,  Rose was  engaged in the  business  of
brokering of polychlorinated biphenyls ("PCBs") and PCB items, processing of PCB
capacitors and transformers  for disposal,  and  decontamination  of mineral oil
dielectric fluids containing PCBs. During this time period,  various  generators
of PCBs ("Generators"), including OG&E, shipped materials containing PCBs to the
facility. Contrary to its contractual obligation with OG&E and other Generators,
it appears  that Rose  failed to manage,  handle and dispose of the PCBs and the
PCB items in accordance with the applicable law. Rose has been issued  citations
by both the EPA and the Occupational Safety and Health  Administration.  Several
Generators, including OG&E, formed a Steering Committee to investigate and clean
up the Rose facility.

         The Company's share of the total hazardous  wastes at the Rose facility
was less than six percent. The remediation of this site was completed in 1995 by
the Steering  Committee and is currently in the final stages of closure with the
EPA,  which  includes  operation and  maintenance  activities as required in the
Administrative  Order on Consent with the EPA. Due to additional funds resulting
from  payments  by third  party  companies  who were not a part of the  Steering
Committee,  and also reduced remedy implementation costs, the Company received a
refund  in  December  1995  under the  allocation  formula.  OG&E has  reached a
settlement agreement with its insurance carrier,  AEGIS Insurance Company,  with
respect to costs  incurred at this site.  The Company  considers  this insurance
matter to be closed.

         Management  believes that OG&E's ultimate  liability for any additional
cleanup  costs of this site will not have a  material  adverse  effect on OG&E's
financial position or its results of operations.  Management's  opinion is based
on the  following:  (i) the present  status of the site;  (ii) the cleanup costs
already  paid by certain  parties;  (iii) the  financial  viability of the other
PRPs; (iv) the portion of the total waste disposed at this site  attributable to
OG&E; and (v) the Company's  settlement  agreement with its insurer.  Management
also believes that costs  incurred in connection  with this site,  which are not
recovered from insurance  carriers or other parties,  may be allowable costs for
future ratemaking purposes. Absent an unforeseen contingency, OG&E believes this
matter is now closed.

         3.   On January 11, 1993, OG&E received a Section 107 (a) Notice Letter
from the EPA,  Region VI, as authorized by the CERCLA,  42 USC Section 9607 (a),
concerning  the Double Eagle  Refinery  Superfund  Site located at 1900 NE First
Street in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The EPA has named OG&E and 45 others as PRPs.
Each PRP could be held  jointly and  severally  liable for  remediation  of this
site.


                                       24



         On February 15, 1996,  OG&E  elected to  participate  in the de minimis
settlement  of EPA's  Administrative  Order on Consent.  This would limit OG&E's
financial  obligation and also would eliminate its involvement in the design and
implementation of the site remedy. A third party is currently  contesting OG&E's
participation  as a de minimis  party.  Regardless of the outcome of this issue,
OG&E  believes  that its ultimate  liability  for this site will not be material
primarily due to the limited volume of waste sent by OG&E to the site.

         4.   As previously reported, on September 18,1996, Trigen-Oklahoma City
Energy  Corporation  ("Trigen")  sued OG&E in the United States  District Court,
Western District of Oklahoma, Case No. CIV-96-1595-M.  Trigen alleged six causes
of action: (i) monopolization in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act; (ii)
attempt to monopolize  in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act;  (iii) acts
in restraint of trade in violation of Oklahoma  law, 79 O.S.  1991,  ss. 1; (iv)
discriminatory  sales  in  violation  of 79  O.S.  1991,  ss.  4;  (v)  tortuous
interference  with contract;  and (vi) tortuous  interference with a prospective
economic  advantage.  On December 21, 1998, the jury awarded Trigen in excess of
$30 million in actual and punitive  damages.  On February  19,  1999,  the trial
court  entered  judgement  in favor of Trigen as follows:  (i) $6.8  million for
various antitrust violations,  (ii) $4 million for tortious interference with an
existing contract, (iii) $7 million for tortious interference with a prospective
economic advantage and (iv) $10 million in punitive damages. The trial judge, in
a companion  order,  acknowledged  that the portions of the  judgement  could be
duplicative, that the antitrust amounts could be tripled and that parties should
address these issues in their post-trial motions.  OG&E has filed its post trial
motions  requesting  judgement  in its  favor or a new  trial.  If a  successful
result  is not obtained at the trial level, OG&E will appeal.  While the outcome
of an appeal is  uncertain,  legal  counsel  and  management  believe  it is not
probable  that  Trigen  will  ultimately  succeed in  preserving  the  verdicts.
Accordingly,  the Company has not accrued any loss  associated  with the damages
awarded. The Company believes that the ultimate resolution of this case will not
have a material adverse effect on the Company's  consolidated financial position
or results of operations.

         5.   As  previously  reported, the State of  Oklahoma,  ex rel., Teresa
Harvey  (Carroll);  Margaret  B.  Fent and  Jerry R.  Fent v.  Oklahoma  Gas and
Electric   Company,   et  al.,  District  Court,   Oklahoma  County,   Case  No.
CJ-97-1242-63. On February 24, 1997, the taxpayers instituted litigation against
OG&E and Co-Defendants Oklahoma Corporation Commission,  Oklahoma Tax Commission
and individual  commissioners  seeking judgment in the amount of $970,184.14 and
treble  penalties of  $2,910,552.42,  plus interest and costs,  for  overcharges
refunded by OG&E to its ratepayers in compliance  with an Order of the OCC which
Plaintiffs  allege was illegal.  Plaintiffs  allege the refunds should have been
paid into the state  Unclaimed  Property  Fund. In June 1997,  OG&E's Motion for
Summary Judgment was granted.  Plaintiffs appealed. On April 10, 1998, the Court
of Civil  Appeals  affirmed the order of the trial court  granting  OG&E Summary
Judgement.  On April 29, 1998,  Plaintiffs petitioned the Court of Civil Appeals
for  rehearing.  Plaintiffs'  Petition for Rehearing was  overruled.  Plaintiffs
timely filed a Petition for  Certiorari  with the Oklahoma  Supreme  Court.  The
Oklahoma Supreme Court denied Certiorari. Plaintiffs did not file their Petition
for  Certiorari  with the United  States  Supreme Court in time  required.  Case
closed.

         6.   As reported,  the City of Enid, Oklahoma ("Enid") through its City
Council,  notified OG&E of its intent to purchase OG&E's  electric  distribution
facilities  for Enid and to terminate  OG&E's  franchise to provide  electricity
within Enid as of June 26, 1998.  On August 22,  1997,  the City Council of Enid
adopted  Ordinance  No.  97-30,  which in  essence  granted  OG&E a new  25-year
franchise subject to approval of the electorate of Enid on November 18, 1997. In
October 1997,  eighteen residents of Enid filed a lawsuit against Enid, OG&E and
others in the District  Court of Garfield  County,  State of Oklahoma,  Case No.
CJ-97-829-01.  Plaintiffs seek a declaration  holding that (a) the Mayor of Enid
and the City Council  breached  their  fiduciary duty to the public and violated
Article 10, Section 17 of the Oklahoma  Constitution  by


                                       25



allegedly  "gifting" to OG&E the option to acquire OG&E's  electric  system when
the City Council  approved the new  franchise by Ordinance  No.  97-30;  (b) the
subsequent  approval of the new franchise by the  electorate of the City of Enid
at the November 18, 1997,  franchise  election cannot cure the alleged breach of
fiduciary duty or the alleged  constitutional  violation;  (c) violations of the
Oklahoma  Open  Meetings  Act  occurred  and that  such  violations  render  the
resolution approving Ordinance No. 97-30 invalid; (d) OG&E's support of the Enid
Citizens'  Against the Government  Takeover was improper;  (e) OG&E has violated
the favored nations clause of the existing  franchise;  and (f) the City of Enid
and OG&E have violated the  competitive  bidding  requirements  found at 11 O.S.
35-201,  et seq.  Plaintiffs seek money damages against the Defendants  under 62
O.S.  372 and 373.  Plaintiffs  allege  that the  action of the City  Council in
approving the proposed  franchise allowed the option to purchase OG&E's property
to be  transferred  to OG&E  for  inadequate  consideration.  Plaintiffs  demand
judgment for treble the value of the property allegedly  wrongfully  transferred
to OG&E. On October 28, 1997,  another  resident filed a similar lawsuit against
OG&E,  Enid and the Garfield  County  Election  Board in the  District  Court of
Garfield County,  State of Oklahoma,  Case No. CJ-97-852-01.  However,  Case No.
CJ-97-852-01  was dismissed  without  prejudice in December 1997. On December 8,
1997, OG&E filed a Motion to Dismiss Case No.  CJ-97-829-01 for failure to state
claims upon which relief may be granted. This motion is currently pending. While
the Company cannot predict the precise outcome of this  proceeding,  the Company
believes at the present time that this  lawsuit is without  merit and intends to
vigorously defend this case.

         7.   On February 18, 1998,  Enogex was sued by  Melvin Scoggin  and Oak
Tree Resources,LLC, in the District Court of Oklahoma County, State of Oklahoma,
for alleged breach of contract, fraud,breach of fiduciary duty, misappropriation
and  unjust  enrichment  arising  from  communications  that  allegedly  created
agreements regarding oil and gas exploration activities. Plaintiffs seek damages
in  excess  of  $25  million.   enogex  filed  an  answer  denying   Plaintiffs'
allegations.  Various  discovery  disputes have been heard and favorable rulings
for Enogex were entered by the Court.  Plaintiffs sought a Writ of Mandamus from
the Oklahoma  Supreme Court regarding  discovery denied by the district court on
three  occaisions.  On  March  23,  1999,  the  Oklahoma  Supreme  court  denied
Plaintiffs'  request.   Discovery  continues.  While  Enogex  believes  all  the
aforementioned  claims are without  merit,  Enogex  cannot  predict the ultimate
outcome of this litigation.

ITEM 4.  SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.
- ------------------------------------------------------------

         None


                                       26



EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT.
- ------------------------------------


         The following  persons were Executive  Officers of the Registrant as of
March 15, 1999:


         Name                 Age                          Title
- --------------------          ---         --------------------------------------
                                    
Steven E. Moore               52          Chairman of the Board, President
                                            and Chief Executive Officer

Al M. Strecker                55          Executive Vice President and
                                            Chief Operating Officer

Michael G. Davis              49          Vice President - Marketing and
                                            Customer Care

James R. Hatfield             41          Vice President and Treasurer

Irma B. Elliott               60          Vice President and
                                            Corporate Secretary

Steven R. Gerdes              42          Vice President, Shared
                                            Services

Melvin D. Bowen, Jr.          57          Vice President - Power Delivery - OG&E

Jack T. Coffman               55          Vice President - Power Supply - OG&E

Donald R. Rowlett             41          Controller Corporate Accounting

Don L. Young                  58          Controller Corporate Audits

         No family  relationship exists between any of the Executive Officers of
the Registrant. Messrs. Moore, Strecker, Davis, Hatfield, Gerdes, Rowlett, Young
and Ms. Elliott are also officers of OG&E.  Each Officer is to hold office until
the Board of Directors meeting following the next Annual Meeting of Shareowners,
currently scheduled for May 27, 1999.

         The  business  experience  of each  of the  Executive  Officers  of the
Registrant for the past five years is as follows:


                                       27




         Name                                   Business Experience
- --------------------            ------------------------------------------------
                                             

Steven E. Moore                 1996-Present:      Chairman of the Board,
                                                     President and Chief
                                                     Executive Officer
                                1996-Present:      Chairman of the Board,
                                                     President and Chief
                                                     Executive Officer - OG&E
                                1995-1996:         President and Chief
                                                     Operating Officer - OG&E
                                1994-1995:         Senior Vice President - Law
                                                     and Public Affairs - OG&E


Al M. Strecker                  1998-Present:      Executive Vice President and
                                                     Chief Operating Officer
                                1998-Present:      Executive Vice President and
                                                     Chief Operating Officer -
                                                     OG&E
                                1996-1998:         Senior Vice President
                                1994-1998:         Senior Vice President -
                                                     Finance and
                                                     Administration - OG&E
                                1994:              Vice President and
                                                     Treasurer - OG&E


Michael G. Davis                1998-Present:      Vice President - Marketing
                                                     and Customer Care
                                1998-Present:      Vice President - Marketing
                                                     and Customer Care -
                                                     OG&E
                                1996-1998:         Vice President
                                1994-1998:         Vice President -
                                                     Marketing and Customer
                                                     Services - OG&E
                                1994:              Director - Marketing
                                                     Division - OG&E


James R. Hatfield               1997-Present:      Vice President and Treasurer
                                1997-Present:      Vice President and
                                                     Treasurer - OG&E
                                1994-1997:         Treasurer - OG&E


                                       28





         Name                                   Business Experience
- --------------------            ------------------------------------------------
                                             


                                1994:              Vice President - Investor
                                                     Relations & Corporate
                                                     Secretary - Aquila Gas
                                                     Pipeline Corporation


Irma B. Elliott                 1996-Present:      Vice President and
                                                     Corporate Secretary
                                1996-Present:      Vice President and
                                                     Corporate Secretary -
                                                     OG&E
                                1994-1996:         Corporate Secretary - OG&E


Steven R. Gerdes                1998-Present:      Vice President, Shared
                                                     Services
                                1998-Present:      Vice President, Shared
                                                     Services - OG&E
                                1997-1998:         Director, Shared Services
                                1997:              Manager, Enterprise Support
                                1994-1997:         Manager, Purchasing &
                                                     Material Management
                                1994:              Manager, Purchasing


Melvin D. Bowen, Jr.            1994-Present:      Vice President -
                                                     Power Delivery - OG&E
                                1994:              Metro Region
                                                     Superintendent - OG&E


Jack T. Coffman                 1994-Present:      Vice President -
                                                     Power Supply - OG&E
                                1994:              Manager - Generation
                                                     Services - OG&E


Donald R. Rowlett               1998-Present:      Controller Corporate
                                                     Accounting
                                1996-Present:      Controller Corporate
                                                     Accounting - OG&E
                                1994-1996:         Assistant Controller - OG&E
                                1994:              Senior Specialist -
                                                     Tax Accounting - OG&E


                                       29



         Name                                   Business Experience
- --------------------            ------------------------------------------------
                                             


Don L. Young                    1998-Present:      Controller Corporate
                                                     Audits
                                1996-Present:      Controller Corporate
                                                     Audits - OG&E
                                1994-1996:         Controller - OG&E


                                       30



                                     PART II

ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED
- ---------------------------------------------------------
STOCKHOLDER MATTERS.
- -------------------

         The  Company's  Common  Stock is listed for trading on the New York and
Pacific Stock Exchanges under the ticker symbol "OGE." Quotes may be obtained in
daily  newspapers where the common stock is listed as "OGE Engy" in the New York
Stock Exchange listing table. The following table gives information with respect
to price  ranges,  as  reported  in THE WALL  STREET  JOURNAL  as New York Stock
                                    -------------------------
Exchange Composite Transactions, and dividends paid for the periods shown.


                           1998                               1997

                ----------------------------------------------------------------
                DIVIDEND                           Dividend
                  PAID     HIGH       LOW            Paid     High      Low
                ----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      
First Quarter   $0.33 1/4  $28 15/16  $25 11/16    $0.33 1/4  $21 1/2   $20 1/4

Second Quarter   0.33 1/4   28 15/16   26           0.33 1/4   22 15/16  20 5/16

Third Quarter    0.33 1/4   29 9/16    25 5/8       0.33 1/4   23 5/8    22

Fourth Quarter   0.33 1/4   30         25 15/16     0.33 1/4   27 3/8    23 5/32

         The number of record  holders of Common Stock at December 31, 1998, was
39,008.  The book value of the Company's  Common Stock at December 31, 1998, was
$12.91.


                                       31



ITEM 6.  SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA.
- --------------------------------


                                 HISTORICAL DATA


                                            1998            1997           1996            1995            1994
                                        ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                         
SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
  (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT
   FOR PER SHARE DATA)
  Operating revenues.................   $1,617,737      $1,443,610      $1,387,435      $1,302,037      $1,355,168
  Operating expenses.................    1,386,924       1,249,612       1,186,216       1,099,890       1,154,702
                                        -----------     -----------     -----------     -----------     -----------
  Operating income...................      230,813         193,998         201,219         202,147         200,466
  Other income and deductions........        5,758           5,047              97             800          (2,167)
  Interest charges...................       70,699          66,495          67,984          77,691          74,514
                                        -----------     -----------     -----------     -----------     -----------
  Net income.........................      165,872         132,550         133,332         125,256         123,785
  Preferred dividend
    requirements.....................          733           2,285           2,302           2,316           2,317
  Earnings available for
    common...........................   $  165,139      $  130,265      $  131,030      $  122,940      $  121,468
                                        ===========     ===========     ===========     ===========     ===========
  Long-term debt.....................   $  935,583      $  841,924      $  829,281      $  843,862      $  730,567
  Total assets.......................   $2,983,929      $2,765,865      $2,762,355      $2,754,871      $2,782,629
  Earnings per average common
    share............................   $     2.04      $     1.61      $     1.62      $     1.52      $     1.50


CAPITALIZATION RATIOS
  Common equity......................        52.72%          52.50%          52.26%          51.19%          54.13%
  Cumulative preferred stock.........          ---            2.63%           2.68%           2.73%           2.94%
  Long-term debt.....................        47.28%          44.87%          45.06%          46.08%          42.93%


INTEREST COVERAGES
  Before federal income taxes
    (including AFUDC)................         4.84X           4.11X           4.07X           3.48X           3.59X
    (excluding AFUDC)................         4.82X           4.10X           4.06X           3.46X           3.58X
  After federal income taxes
    (including AFUDC)................         3.31X           2.98X           2.94X           2.59X           2.64X
    (excluding AFUDC)................         3.30X           2.97X           2.93X           2.57X           2.62X


                                       32



ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OF OPERATIONS.
- -------------

MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS.

OVERVIEW


                                                                                   Percent Change
                                                                                   From Prior Year
                                                                                   ---------------
(THOUSANDS EXCEPT PER SHARE AMOUNTS)          1998          1997          1996       1998    1997
==================================================================================================
                                                                              
Operating revenues......................   $1,617,737    $1,443,610    $1,387,435    12.1     4.0
Earnings available for common stock.....   $  165,139    $  130,265    $  131,030    26.8    (0.6)
Average shares outstanding..............       80,772        80,745        80,734     ---     ---
Earnings per average common share.......   $     2.04    $     1.61    $     1.62    26.7    (0.6)
Earnings per average common share -
  assuming dilution.....................   $     2.04    $     1.61    $     1.62    26.7    (0.6)
Dividends paid per share................   $     1.33    $     1.33    $     1.33     ---     ---
==================================================================================================


         The  following  discussion  and analysis  presents  factors which had a
material  effect on the  operations  and financial  position of OGE Energy Corp.
(the  "Company")  and  its  subsidiaries:  Oklahoma  Gas  and  Electric  Company
("OG&E"),  Enogex Inc. and its  subsidiaries  ("Enogex") and Origen Inc. and its
subsidiaries  ("Origen")  during  the last  three  years  and  should be read in
conjunction  with the  Consolidated  Financial  Statements  and  Notes  thereto.
Average  shares  outstanding  and all per share  amounts  have been  restated to
reflect  the  two-for-one  stock split that  occurred  in June 1998.  Trends and
contingencies  of a  material  nature  are  discussed  to the  extent  known and
considered relevant.

         The  Company  became  the  parent  company  of OG&E and  OG&E's  former
subsidiary,  Enogex, on December 31, 1996, in a corporate reorganization whereby
all common  stock of OG&E was  exchanged on a  share-for-share  basis for common
stock of the Company.  Prior to December 31, 1996, the Company had no operations
and the financial  results  discussed herein for 1996 essentially  represent the
consolidated  statements of OG&E; and comparisons to the 1996 results  represent
comparisons to the consolidated results of OG&E. Under this corporate structure,
the Company serves as the parent holding company to OG&E, Enogex, Origen and any
other companies that may be formed within the  organization in the future.  This
holding company structure is intended to provide greater  flexibility,  allowing
the Company to take advantage of  opportunities  in an increasingly  competitive
business  environment  and to clearly  separate the Company's  electric  utility
business  from  its  non-utility  businesses.  Because  OG&E  is  the  Company's
principal  subsidiary,   the  Company's  financial  results  and  condition  are
substantially  dependent at this time on the financial  results and condition of
OG&E.

         Earnings for 1998  increased  26.7 percent from $1.61 per share in 1997
to $2.04 per share in 1998.  The  increase  was  primarily  the result of higher
revenues at OG&E due to warmer weather,  the Generation  Efficiency  Performance
Rider ("GEP Rider"),  higher margin sales to other utilities and power marketers
("off-system  sales"),  customer  growth  and lower  operation  and  maintenance
expense.  The increase in earnings  was  partially  offset by lower  earnings at
Enogex and Origen.  The GEP Rider allows OG&E to retain part of the fuel savings
achieved  through cost  efficiencies  and is discussed in more detail


                                       33



below.  The 1997  decrease  from  $1.62 per  share to $1.61  per share  resulted
primarily  from the $45 million annual  reduction in OG&E's  electric rates that
became effective in March 1997,  slightly lower earnings by Enogex and a loss by
Origen,  the Company's new  non-regulated  subsidiary,  during its first year of
operation.  The  decrease in  earnings  was  partially  offset by the GEP Rider,
customer growth in the OG&E service area and lower interest costs.

         The  dividend  payout  ratio  (expressed  as a  percentage  of earnings
available for common)  decreased to 65 percent (or 78 percent weather  adjusted)
in 1998 from 83 percent in 1997.  The  Company's  goal is to maintain a dividend
payout  ratio  of  approximately  75  percent  based  on  the  current  business
environment.

         The Company's  regulated utility business has been and will continue to
be affected by competitive changes to the utility industry.  Significant changes
already have occurred in the wholesale electric markets at the Federal level. In
Oklahoma,   legislation   was  passed  in  1997  to  provide   for  the  orderly
restructuring of the electric industry with the goal to provide retail customers
with the ability to choose their  generation  suppliers  by June 30,  2002.  The
Arkansas  Public  Service  Commission  ("APSC")  has  initiated  proceedings  to
consider the  implementation of a competitive  retail market in Arkansas.  These
developments are described in more detail below under "Regulation; Competition."

         In 1996, the Company decided upon an  enterprise-wide  software system,
which is Year 2000 ready.  Enterprise  software is a corporate  software  system
designed to handle most of the  Company's  information  processing  needs and to
improve work processes  throughout the Company.  The enterprise  software system
was  successfully  implemented  throughout the Company on January 1, 1997 and is
expected  to  significantly   enhance  the  Company's   abilities  in  the  more
competitive years ahead.

         Except for the  historical  statements  contained  herein,  the matters
discussed  in  the  following  discussion  and  analysis,   are  forward-looking
statements  that are subject to certain risks,  uncertainties  and  assumptions.
Such  forward-looking  statements are intended to be identified in this document
by the words "anticipate",  "estimate", "objective", "possible", "potential" and
similar  expressions.  Actual  results may vary  materially.  Factors that could
cause  actual  results to differ  materially  include,  but are not  limited to:
general  economic  conditions,  including their impact on capital  expenditures;
business  conditions  in  the  energy  industry;  competitive  factors;  unusual
weather;  regulatory decisions; and the other risk factors listed in the reports
filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission.


                                       34



RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

REVENUES



                                                                                   Percent Change
                                                                                   From Prior Year
                                                                                   ---------------
(THOUSANDS)                                   1998          1997          1996       1998    1997
===================================================================================================
                                                                              
Sales of electricity to OG&E customers...  $1,274,643    $1,168,663    $1,172,740      9.1    (0.3)
Sales of electricity to other utilities..      37,435        23,027        27,597     62.6   (16.6)
Enogex...................................     304,694       251,575       187,098     21.1    34.5
Origen...................................         965           345           ---    179.4     ---
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Total operating revenues...............  $1,617,737    $1,443,610    $1,387,435     12.1     4.0
===================================================================================================


System kilowatt-hour sales...............  23,642,599    22,182,992    21,540,670      6.6     3.0
Kilowatt-hour sales to other utilities...     727,601     1,201,933     1,475,449    (39.5)  (18.5)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Total kilowatt-hour sales..............  24,370,200    23,384,925    23,016,119      4.2     1.6
===================================================================================================


         In 1998,  approximately 81 percent of the Company's  revenues consisted
of regulated  sales of electricity as a public  utility,  while the remaining 19
percent  were  provided  primarily  by the  non-utility  operations  of  Enogex.
Revenues from sales of electricity are somewhat  seasonal,  with a large portion
of the Company's  annual electric  revenues  occurring  during the summer months
when  the  electricity  needs  of  its  customers  increase.   Enogex's  primary
operations  consist of gathering and processing  natural gas,  producing natural
gas  liquids,  transporting  natural gas through its  pipelines  in Oklahoma and
Arkansas for various customers (including OG&E), marketing electricity,  natural
gas and natural gas liquids and investing in the drilling for and  production of
crude oil and  natural  gas.  Origen's  operations  remained  immaterial  to the
Company  during 1998.  The Company  continues to evaluate the existing  business
lines  of  Origen  (which  to  date  has  consisted  of  geothermal  design  and
engineering)  and potential new ventures for Origen.  Actions of the  regulatory
commissions that set OG&E's electric rates will continue to affect the Company's
financial  results.  The  commissions  also have the  authority  to examine  the
appropriateness  of OG&E's  recovery  from its  customers  of fuel costs,  which
include the transportation  fees that OG&E pays Enogex for transporting  natural
gas to OG&E's  generating  units. See  "Regulation;  Competition" and Note 11 of
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for a discussion of the impact of the
Oklahoma  Corporation  Commission ("OCC") rate order dated February 11, 1997, on
these transportation fees.

         Operating  revenues  increased  $174.1  million or 12.1 percent  during
1998,  primarily due to a significant  increase in revenue from OG&E and Enogex.
In 1998, OG&E revenues increased $120.4 million or 10.1 percent primarily due to
an increase in  kilowatt-hour  sales to OG&E  customers  ("system  sales")  from
warmer weather,  the GEP Rider, higher margin sales to other utilities and power
marketers ("off-system sales") and customer growth.  Kilowatt-hour sales by OG&E
to other  utilities  decreased  39.5 percent in 1998;  however,  the summer heat
drove  prices  of this  off-system  electricity  to  record  levels,  increasing
operating  revenues   approximately   $14.4  million  in  1998  and  at  margins
significantly  higher  than had been  experienced  in the past.  There can be no
assurance that such margins on future off-system sales will occur again.


                                       35



         Enogex  revenues  increased  $53.1 million or 21.1 percent during 1998,
primarily  as a result of  significant  increases  in the volumes of natural gas
sold through its gas marketing  activities ($17.2 million),  gas  transportation
services  ($7.0  million) and marketing of electricity  ($46.3  million).  These
increases were partially  offset by a decrease in natural gas liquids  processed
and sold ($17.4 million).  The increased  gas-related revenues were attributable
primarily to significantly higher volumes sold which more than offset a decrease
in  sales  prices  as  such  commodity  prices  were  depressed.  Other  factors
contributing  to these  increases  were the  acquisitions  in 1998 of the  Noark
Pipeline  and  Ozark  Pipeline,   which  are  described   below.  The  increased
electricity-related  revenues  were  due to  the  expansion  in  1998  into  the
marketing of electricity.

         On February 11, 1997, the OCC issued an order (the "Order") that, among
other things,  effectively lowered OG&E's rates to its Oklahoma retail customers
by $50 million  annually  (based on a test year ended December 31, 1995). Of the
$50 million rate reduction,  approximately $45 million became effective on March
5, 1997, and the remaining $5 million became  effective  March 1, 1998. This $50
million rate  reduction was in addition to the $15 million rate  reduction  that
was  effective  January 1, 1995.  The Order also  directed OG&E to transition to
competitive  bidding of its gas  transportation  requirements,  currently met by
Enogex,  no later  than April 30,  2000,  and set  annual  compensation  for the
transportation  services  provided  by  Enogex  to OG&E at $41.3  million  until
competitively-bid gas transportation begins.

         The Order also  established  the GEP Rider,  which is  designed so that
when OG&E's  average  annual cost of fuel per kwh is less than 96.261 percent of
the  average  non-nuclear  fuel  cost per kwh of  certain  other  investor-owned
utilities  in the  region,  OG&E is allowed to  collect,  through the GEP Rider,
one-third of the amount by which OG&E's average annual cost of fuel is less than
96.261 percent of the average of the other specified  utilities.  If OG&E's fuel
cost exceeds 103.739 percent of the stated average,  OG&E will not be allowed to
recover one-third of the fuel costs above that amount from Oklahoma customers.

         The fuel cost  information  used to calculate the GEP Rider is based on
fuel cost data  submitted  by each of the  utilities  in their Form No. 1 Annual
Report filed with the Federal Energy  Regulatory  Commission  ("FERC").  The GEP
Rider is revised  effective  July 1 of each year to reflect  any  changes in the
relative annual cost of fuel reported for the preceding calendar year. For 1998,
the GEP Rider  increased  revenues  (compared  to 1997) by  approximately  $10.0
million, or approximately $0.08 per share. The current GEP Rider is estimated to
positively impact revenue by $33 million or approximately $0.26 per share during
the 12 months ending June 1999.

         During 1997,  operating revenues increased $56.2 million or 4.0 percent
primarily due to a significant  increase in revenue from Enogex. In 1997, Enogex
revenues  increased  $64.5  million or 34.5  percent,  primarily  as a result of
significant  increases  in the  volume  of  natural  gas  sold  through  its gas
marketing  activities ($53.6 million),  and of natural gas liquids processed and
sold ($7.2  million),  mainly due to the acquisition of the NuStar Joint Venture
in May 1997, with a modest increase in prices for natural gas.

         The increased  revenues from Enogex were partially  offset by decreased
revenues at OG&E. Decreased revenues at OG&E were primarily  attributable to the
rate  reduction  in March  1997,  and  milder  weather  in the first and  second
quarters of 1997,  partially offset by continued  customer growth, the effect of
the GEP Rider and warmer weather in the third quarter of 1997.


                                       36



EXPENSES AND OTHER ITEMS



                                                                                   Percent Change
                                                                                   From Prior Year
                                                                                   ---------------
(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                         1998          1997          1996      1998    1997
==================================================================================================
                                                                              

Fuel ....................................  $  315,194    $  277,806    $  279,083    13.5    (0.5)
Purchased power..........................     240,542       222,464       222,070     8.1     0.2
Gas and electricity purchased for
     resale (Enogex).....................     216,432       172,764       117,343    25.3    47.2
Other operation and maintenance..........     305,106       311,337       307,154    (2.0)    1.4
Depreciation and amortization............     149,818       142,632       136,140     5.0     4.8
Taxes....................................     159,832       122,609       124,426    30.4    (1.5)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Total operating expenses...............  $1,386,924    $1,249,612    $1,186,216    11.0     5.3
==================================================================================================


         Total operating  expenses  increased  $137.3 million or 11.0 percent in
1998,  primarily  due to  increases  at OG&E in  quantities  of fuel  burned and
increased  taxes.  At Enogex,  the  increase was  primarily  due to increases in
quantities of gas and  electricity  purchased for resale by its gas and electric
marketing businesses.

         Enogex's  gas and  electricity  purchased  for resale  pursuant  to its
energy-marketing  operations  increased  $43.7  million or 25.3 percent for 1998
compared to $55.4 million or 47.2 percent for 1997. The 1998 increase was due to
a  significant  increase in sales  volumes of natural  gas (84,261  Bbtu or 97.2
percent)  which more than  offset a decrease  in sales  prices due to  depressed
commodity  prices.  This increase was also due to the recent  expansion into the
marketing of electricity. The 1997 increase was due to a significant increase in
sales volumes  (29,236 Bbtu or 53.7 percent) and an increase in purchase  prices
of approximately 15 percent.

         OG&E's generating  capability is fairly evenly divided between coal and
natural gas and provides for flexibility to use either fuel to the best economic
advantage for OG&E and its  customers.  In 1998,  fuel costs  increased due to a
modest increase in total generation and a slight increase in the average cost of
fuel  burned  for  generation  of  electricity.  During  1997,  despite a slight
increase  in kwh  sales,  fuel  costs  decreased  $1.3  million  or 0.5  percent
primarily due to an increase in the percentage of coal-fired generation relative
to total generation.

         Other operation and  maintenance  decreased $6.2 million or 2.0 percent
in 1998 primarily because of decreases at OG&E in post retirement  medical costs
($3.8 million), bad debt expense ($3.0 million),  completion in February 1997 of
the amortization of the $48.9 million regulatory asset established in connection
with  OG&E's 1994  workforce  reduction  ($3.8  million)  and general  corporate
expenses ($4.5  million).  These  decreases  were partially  offset by expansion
activities at Enogex ($8.4  million).  In 1997,  other operation and maintenance
expenses  increased $4.2 million primarily because of increased costs associated
with expansion activities at Enogex.

         In 1998, taxes increased $37.2 million or 30.4 percent primarily due to
significantly   higher   pre-tax   income  and  normally   occurring   temporary
differences.  In 1997,  taxes had a net  decrease of $1.8


                                       37



million or 1.5  percent  primarily  due to  slightly  lower  pre-tax  income and
normally occurring temporary differences.

         Purchased  power costs  increased  $18.1 million or 8.1 percent in 1998
primarily due to a 13 percent increase in the quantities purchased. During 1998,
OG&E also began  purchasing  power from  Mid-Continent  Power Company  ("MCPC").
Payments  to MCPC in 1998 were  approximately  $8  million.  MCPC is a qualified
cogeneration  facility from which OG&E is required to purchase  peaking capacity
through  2007. In 1997,  purchased  power costs were $222.5  million,  remaining
relatively  constant  compared to the $222.1 million in 1996. As required by the
Public Utility  Regulatory  Policy Act ("PURPA"),  OG&E is currently  purchasing
power from qualified cogeneration facilities.

         Variances  in the actual cost of fuel used in electric  generation  and
certain purchased power costs, as compared to that component in  cost-of-service
for  ratemaking,  are  passed  through  to  OG&E's  electric  customers  through
automatic fuel adjustment  clauses.  The automatic fuel  adjustment  clauses are
subject to periodic  review by the OCC, the APSC and the FERC. The OCC, the APSC
and the FERC have authority to review the  appropriateness of gas transportation
charges or other fees OG&E pays Enogex,  which OG&E seeks to recover through the
fuel adjustment  clause or other tariffs.  In addition to the February 11, 1997,
OCC Order, the APSC issued an order in July 1996 requiring,  among other things,
a $4.5 million refund. See Note 11 of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
for a discussion of the July 1996 order.

         OG&E has initiated  numerous  ongoing  programs that have helped reduce
the cost of generating  electricity over the last several years.  These programs
include:  1) utilizing a natural gas storage facility;  2) spot market purchases
of coal; 3) renegotiated  contracts for coal, gas, railcar  maintenance and coal
transportation;  and 4) a heat-rate awareness program to produce  kilowatt-hours
with less fuel. Reducing fuel costs helps OG&E remain competitive, which in turn
helps OG&E's electric customers remain competitive in a global economy.

         The  increases  in  depreciation  and  amortization  for  1998 and 1997
reflect higher levels of depreciable plant.

         The  increase  in  interest  expense  for 1998 was  attributable  to an
increase in the average daily balance of short-term debt.  Interest on long-term
debt decreased as a result of OG&E refinancing  $100.0 million of long-term debt
at favorable rates. The resulting savings was partially offset by Enogex issuing
$85.7 million of long-term  debt. In 1997, the decrease in interest  expense was
attributable  to OG&E retiring $15 million of 5.125 percent First Mortgage Bonds
in January 1997,  the  successful  refinancing of $336 million of short-term and
long-term  debt by OG&E and Enogex in 1997, and a lower average daily balance in
short-term debt.


                                       38



LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

         The primary  capital  requirements  for 1998 and as estimated  for 1999
through 2001 are as follows:



(DOLLARS IN MILLIONS)                      1998      1999      2000       2001
================================================================================
                                                             
Electric utility construction
  expenditures including AFUDC........... $ 96.7    $101.7    $100.0     $100.0
Non-utility construction expenditures
  and acquisitions.......................  138.5      35.0      25.0       30.0
Maturities of long-term debt.............   26.0       2.0     169.0        2.0
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Total................................ $261.2    $138.7    $294.0     $132.0
================================================================================


         The Company's  primary needs for capital are related to construction of
new facilities to meet  anticipated  demand for utility  service,  to replace or
expand existing facilities in both its electric and non-utility  businesses,  to
expand its non-utility  businesses and to some extent,  for satisfying  maturing
debt and sinking fund  obligations.  The Company  generally meets its cash needs
through a combination of internally generated funds,  short-term  borrowings and
permanent financing.

1998 CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES

         Capital  requirements were $261.2 million in 1998.  Approximately  $1.0
million  of the 1998  capital  requirements  were to comply  with  environmental
regulations. This compares to capital requirements of $163.6 million in 1997, of
which $1.1 million was to comply with environmental regulations.

         During 1998, the Company's sources of capital were internally generated
funds from operating cash flows,  permanent financing and short-term borrowings.
Operating  cash flow  remained  strong in 1998 as  internally  generated  funds,
short-term  debt and  long-term  debt  issued by NOARK  Pipeline  Systems,  L.P.
("NOARK"),  met virtually all of the Company's capital expenditures.  Variations
in  accounts  receivable  and  accounts  payable are not  generally  significant
indicators  of  the  Company's  liquidity,  as  such  variations  are  primarily
attributable to fluctuations in weather in OG&E's service territory, which has a
direct effect on sales of electricity.

         Short-term  borrowings  were used  during 1998 to meet  temporary  cash
requirements.  At December  31,  1998,  the Company had  outstanding  short-term
borrowings of $119.1 million.

         On January 2, 1998, OG&E retired $25 million  principal amount of 6.375
percent First Mortgage Bonds due January 1, 1998.

         On April 15, 1998,  OG&E issued $100.0  million in Senior Notes at 6.50
percent due April 15,  2028.  The  proceeds  from the sale of this new debt were
applied to the redemption on April 21, 1998 of $12.5 million principal amount of
OG&E's 7.125 percent  First  Mortgage  Bonds due January 1, 1999,  $40.0 million
principal  amount of OG&E's 7.125  percent First  Mortgage  Bonds due


                                       39



January 1, 2002 and $35.0 million principal amount of OG&E's 8.625 percent First
Mortgage Bonds due November 1, 2007 and for general corporate purposes.

         In October 1998, the Company made a $53 million capital contribution to
Enogex reflecting the Company's commitment to maintaining Enogex's strong credit
rating and financial health.

         In January  1998,  Enogex,  through a newly formed  subsidiary,  Enogex
Arkansas  Pipeline  Corp.  ("EAPC")  acquired  a  40  percent  interest  in  the
partnership  that owns NOARK,  a natural gas  pipeline,  for  approximately  $30
million and agreed to acquire Ozark Pipeline  ("Ozark"),  for  approximately $55
million.  The NOARK line is a 302-mile  intra-state pipeline system that extends
from near Fort Chaffee, Arkansas to near Paragould,  Arkansas. The Ozark line is
a 437-mile inter-state pipeline system that begins near McAlester,  Oklahoma and
terminates near Searcy,  Arkansas.  In July 1998, EAPC completed its acquisition
of Ozark and contributed  Ozark to NOARK. The two pipelines were integrated into
a single,  interstate  transmission  system on November 1, 1998 at an additional
cost  of  approximately  $16  million.   Current  throughput   capacity  on  the
NOARK/Ozark  line is  approximately  330 million cubic feet per day. EAPC, which
funded the  integration,  owns a 75 percent  interest in NOARK and  Southwestern
Energy  Pipeline   Company  owns  the  remaining  25  percent  interest  in  the
partnership.

         In January 1998, EAPC issued a $5.7 million Note at 7 percent, due July
1,  2020.  The  proceeds  from  the  Note  were  utilized  by EAPC in the  NOARK
acquisition.  Annual payments of approximately $0.8 million (including principal
and accrued interest) begin July 1, 2004.

         In June  1998,  NOARK  Pipeline  Finance,  L.L.C.,  a  finance  company
subsidiary  of  NOARK,  issued  $80.0  million  aggregate  principal  amount  of
unsecured 7.15 percent Notes due 2018.  These Notes are entitled to the benefits
of a  guaranty  issued by Enogex  pursuant  to which  Enogex has  guaranteed  40
percent (subject to certain adjustments) of the principal,  interest and premium
on such Notes.  The remaining 60 percent of the principal,  interest and premium
on such Notes are guaranteed by Southwestern Energy Company,  the parent company
of Southwestern Energy Pipeline Company. The proceeds from the sale of the Notes
were loaned by NOARK Pipeline Finance, L.L.C. to NOARK and utilized by NOARK (i)
to repay a bank revolving line of credit (approximately $29.75 million), (ii) to
repay an outstanding short-term loan from Enogex (approximately $48.825 million)
and (iii) for general  corporate  purposes.  Principal  payments of $1.0 million
plus accrued interest are due semi-annually.

         In July 1998,  Enogex  agreed to lease  underground  gas  storage  from
Central Oklahoma Oil and Gas Corp.  ("COOG").  COOG currently leases gas storage
capacity to OG&E. In connection with this lease transaction,  the Company agreed
to make up to a $12 million  secured loan to an  affiliate  of COOG.  As part of
this agreement, the Company has an $8 million loan outstanding repayable in 2003
and secured by the assets and stock of COOG.  This loan is  classified  as other
property and investments in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets.

FUTURE CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS

         The Company's  construction program for the next several years does not
include  additional  base-load  generating units.  Rather, to meet the increased
electricity  needs of OG&E's electric  utility  customers during the foreseeable
future,  OG&E will  concentrate on maintaining the  reliability,  increasing the
utilization of existing capacity and increasing  demand-side management efforts.
Approximately $0.5 million of the Company's  construction  expenditures budgeted
for 1999 are to comply with environmental laws and regulations.


                                       40



         In November  1998,  the Company  announced  plans to repurchase up to 6
million shares of its Common Stock over the next two years. On January 15, 1999,
the Company  repurchased 3 million  shares of its Common Stock under an Advanced
Share Repurchase  Agreement with CIBC  Oppenheimer  Corp. The purchase price was
$80.4  million or $26.8125  per share,  the closing  price on January 15,  1999.
Under the terms of this Advanced Share  Repurchase  Agreement,  the Company will
bear the risk of  increases  and the  benefit of  decreases  on the price of the
Common  Stock  until  CIBC  Oppenheimer  Corp.  replaces,  through  open  market
purchases or privately negotiated transactions, the shares sold to the Company.

         Future  financing  requirements  may be dependent,  to varying degrees,
upon numerous factors such as general  economic  conditions,  abnormal  weather,
load  growth,   acquisitions  of  other   businesses,   inflation,   changes  in
environmental  laws or  regulations,  rate  increases  or  decreases  allowed by
regulatory  agencies,  new  legislation  and market entry of competing  electric
power generators.

FUTURE SOURCES OF FINANCING

         Management  expects that  internally  generated  funds will be adequate
over the next three years to meet anticipated construction  expenditures,  while
maturities of long-term debt will require permanent  financing,  with the amount
and type dependent on market conditions at the time.  Short-term borrowings will
continue to be used to meet  temporary  cash  requirements.  The Company has the
necessary  regulatory  approvals  to  incur  up to $400  million  in  short-term
borrowings  at any one time.  At December 31,  1998,  the Company had in place a
line of credit for up to $160 million,  which was to expire December 6, 2000. In
January 1999, the Company's line of credit was increased to $200 million and the
Company entered into a $75 million credit agreement with CIBC Oppenheimer Corp.
to fund the share repurchase described above.

         The Company continues to evaluate  opportunities to enhance  shareowner
returns and achieve  long-term  financial  objectives  through  acquisitions  of
non-utility   businesses.   Permanent  financing  could  be  required  for  such
acquisitions.

THE YEAR 2000 ISSUE

         There has been a great deal of  publicity  about the Year 2000  ("Y2K")
and the possible  problems that information  technology  systems may suffer as a
result.  The Y2K problem  originated with the early  development of computerized
business  applications.   To  save  then-expensive  storage  space,  reduce  the
complexity of calculations and yield better system performance,  programmers and
developers  used a two-digit  date scheme to represent the year (i.e.,  "72" for
"1972").  This  two-digit  date scheme was used well into the 1980s and 1990s in
traditional  computer  hardware  such as  mainframe  systems,  desktop  personal
computers and network servers,  in customized  software  systems,  off-the-shelf
applications and operating systems,  as well as in embedded systems ("chips") in
everything from elevators to industrial plants to consumer products. As the Year
2000 approaches,  date-sensitive systems may recognize the Year 2000 as 1900, or
not at all.  This  inability to  recognize  or properly  treat the Year 2000 may
cause  systems,  including  those  of the  Company,  its  customers,  suppliers,
business  partners and neighboring  utilities to process critical  financial and
operational information incorrectly,  if they are not Year 2000 ready. A failure
to identify and correct any such  processing  problems  prior to January 1, 2000
could result in material operational and financial risks if the affected systems
either cease to function or produce  erroneous data. Such risks are described in
more detail below,  but could include an inability to operate OG&E's  generating
plants, disruptions in the operation of its transmission and distribution system
and an  inability  to access  interconnections  with the systems of  neighboring
utilities.


                                       41



         After the Company's  mainframe  conversion  in 1994,  some 300 programs
were  identified as having date sensitive code. All of these programs have since
been corrected or will be replaced by Y2K ready packaged applications.

         The  Company  continues  to  address  the Y2K  issues in an  aggressive
manner. This is reflected by the January 1, 1997  implementation  throughout the
Company  of SAP  Enterprise  Software,  which is Y2K  ready,  for the  financial
systems. The SAP installation  significantly  reduced the potential risks in our
older computer systems.  The Company is making significant  progress towards the
implementation of the  enterprise-wide  software system for customer systems. In
addition to  significantly  reducing the potential risks of its current customer
systems, the Company is set to streamline work processes in customer service and
power  delivery by integrating  separate  systems into a single system using the
enterprise-wide  software system. This new single system will also provide for a
more flexible  automated  billing system and  enhancements in handling  customer
service orders, energy outage incidents and customer services.

         In October of 1997, the Company formed a  multi-functional  Y2K Project
Team of experienced and knowledgeable  members from each business unit to review
and test its operational systems in an effort to further eliminate any potential
problems,  should they exist.  The team provides  regular monthly reports on its
progress to the Y2K Executive  Steering  Committee and senior management as well
as helping prepare presentations to the Board of Directors.

         The Company's Year 2000 effort generally follows a three-phase process:

            Phase I - Inventory and Assess Y2K Issues
            Phase II - Determine Y2K Readiness of Vendors, Suppliers & Customers
            Phase III - Correct,  Test,  Implement  Solutions  and   Contingency
                          Planning

STATE OF READINESS

         The Company has  substantially  completed  the internal  inventory  and
assessment  (Phase I) of the Year 2000 plan.  Follow-up vendor surveys are being
sent to vendors that have not responded to our original requests for information
(Phase II). Remediation efforts are ongoing and even though contingency planning
is a normal part of our business,  plans are being prepared to include  specific
activities with regard to Y2K issues (Phase III).

         In addition,  as a part of the Company's three-year lease agreement for
personal  computers,  all new personal computers are being issued with operating
systems  and  application  software  that is Y2K ready.  All  existing  personal
computers will be upgraded with Y2K ready  operating  systems before the turn of
the  century.  For  embedded  and plant  operational  systems,  the  Company has
generally  completed the evaluative process and is commencing  corrective plans.
In  particular,  the Company's  Energy  Management  System ("EMS") that monitors
transmission   interconnections  and  automatically  signals  generation  output
changes,  has been  contracted for  replacement in 1999.  Equipment is currently
being installed and software is being configured.

         The Company is also  participating  in an  "Electric  System  Readiness
Assessment" program,  which provides monthly reports to the Southwest Power Pool
("SPP")  and the North  American  Electric  Reliability  Council  ("NERC").  The
responses   from  all   participating   companies  are  being  compiled  for  an
industry-wide  status report to the Department of Energy  ("DOE").  In addition,
the Company is in the


                                       42



process of developing its  contingency  plans that will be submitted  shortly to
the SPP and NERC to assist  them in  assessing  Y2K  readiness  of the  regional
electric grid.

COSTS OF YEAR 2000 ISSUES

         As described  above,  with the  mainframe  conversion,  the  enterprise
software  installations  and the EMS  replacement,  a number of Y2K issues  were
addressed as part of the  Company's  normal course  upgrades to the  information
technology  systems.  These  upgrades  were  already  contemplated  and provided
additional  benefits or efficiencies beyond the Year 2000 aspect. In addition to
the $1 million spent to date for Y2K issues, since 1995 the Company has spent in
excess of $29  million on the  mainframe  conversion,  the  enterprise  software
installations  and the EMS  replacement.  The Company  expects to spend slightly
less than $5 million in 1999.  These costs  represent  estimates,  however,  and
there can be no assurance  that actual costs  associated  with the Company's Y2K
issues will not be higher.

RISKS OF YEAR 2000 ISSUES

         As described above,  the Company has made  significant  progress in the
implementation of its Year 2000 plan. Based upon the information currently known
regarding its internal  operations and assuming successful and timely completion
of its remediation  plan, the Company does not anticipate  significant  business
disruptions from its internal systems due to the Y2K issue. However, the Company
may possibly experience limited interruptions to some aspects of its activities,
whether information technology,  operational,  administrative or otherwise,  and
the Company is considering  such potential  occurrences in planning for its most
reasonably likely worst case scenarios.

         Additionally,  risk exists regarding the non-readiness of third parties
with key business or operational  importance to the Company.  Year 2000 problems
affecting  key   customers,   interconnected   utilities,   fuel  suppliers  and
transporters,  telecommunications  providers  or  financial  institutions  could
result  in  lost  power  or  gas  sales,   reductions  in  power  production  or
transmission or internal functional and administrative  difficulties on the part
of the  Company.  Although  the  Company  is not  presently  aware  of any  such
situations,  occurrences  of this type, if severe,  could have material  adverse
impacts  upon the  business,  operating  results or  financial  condition of the
Company. There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to identify and
correct all aspects of the Year 2000 problem that affect it in sufficient  time,
that it will develop adequate  contingency  plans or that the costs of achieving
Y2K readiness will not be material.

CONTINGENCIES

         The Company through its  subsidiaries  is defending  various claims and
legal  actions,  including  environmental  actions,  which  are  common  to  its
operations.  For a further  discussion  of these  actions,  including  a lawsuit
involving  Trigen-Oklahoma  City  Energy  Corporation,  see  Note 10 of Notes to
Consolidated  Financial Statements.  As to environmental  matters, OG&E has been
designated  as a  "potentially  responsible  party"  ("PRP") with respect to two
waste disposal sites to which OG&E sent  materials.  Remediation of one of these
sites has been completed and the required  monitoring is in place.  OG&E's total
waste  disposed at the remaining  site is minimal and on February 15, 1996,  the
Company  elected  to  participate  in the de minimis  settlement  offered by the
Environmental  Protection Agency ("EPA"), which is being contested by one party.
This limits the  Company's  financial  obligation  in  addition to removing  any
participation  in the site remedy.  While it is not  possible to  determine  the
precise outcome of these matters, in the opinion of management,  OG&E's ultimate
liability for these sites will not be material.


                                       43



         Beginning in 2000, OG&E will be limited in the amount of sulfur dioxide
it will be allowed to emit into the atmosphere.  In order to meet this limit the
Company has contracted  for lower sulfur coal.  OG&E believes this will allow it
to meet this limit  without  additional  capital  expenditures.  With respect to
nitrogen oxides, OG&E continues to meet the current emission standard.  However,
pending  regulations on regional  haze,  and Oklahoma's  potential for not being
able to meet the new ozone and  particulate  standards,  could  require  further
reductions in sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides.  If this happens,  significant
capital expenditures and increased operating and maintenance costs would occur.

         In 1997,  the United  States was a signatory  to the Kyoto  Protocol on
global  warming.  If ratified by the U.S.  Senate,  this  Protocol  could have a
tremendous  impact on the  Company's  operations,  by  requiring  the Company to
significantly  reduce the use of coal as a fuel source, since the Protocol would
require a seven  percent  reduction in greenhouse  gas emissions  below the 1990
level.

         The  Oklahoma  Department  of  Environmental  Quality's  CAAA  Title  V
permitting program was approved by the EPA in March 1996. By March of 1997, OG&E
had  submitted  all  required  permit  applications  and by January 1, 2000 OG&E
expects  to have new Title V  permits  for all of its  major  source  generating
stations.  Air permit  fees for  generating  stations  were  approximately  $0.3
million in 1998 and are estimated to be approximately $0.4 million in 1999.

REGULATION; COMPETITION

         As  previously  reported,  Oklahoma  enacted in April 1997 the Electric
Restructuring Act of 1997 (the "Act"). In June 1998,  various  amendments to the
Act were enacted. If implemented as proposed,  the Act will significantly affect
OG&E's future operations.

         The  purpose  of the  Act,  as  set  forth  therein,  is  generally  to
restructure the electric  utility  industry to provide for more competition and,
in particular,  to provide for the orderly restructuring of the electric utility
industry in the State of Oklahoma in order to allow  customers  to choose  their
electricity  suppliers  while  maintaining  the  safety and  reliability  of the
electric system in the state.

         The Act  directs the Joint  Electric  Utility  Task Force,  composed of
seven members from the Oklahoma Senate and seven members from the Oklahoma House
of  Representatives,  to  undertake a study of all relevant  issues  relating to
restructuring  the  electric  utility  industry  in  Oklahoma  and to  develop a
proposed electric utility framework for Oklahoma.  The Study was to be delivered
in several  parts.  As a result of the 1998  amendments,  the time frame for the
delivery of the remaining parts of the Study was accelerated to October 1, 1999.
This study is to address: (i) technical issues (including  reliability,  safety,
unbundling of generation,  transmission  and distribution  services,  transition
issues and market  power);  (ii) financial  issues  (including  rates,  charges,
access fees,  transition costs and stranded costs);  (iii) consumer issues (such
as the obligation to serve, service territories,  consumer choices,  competition
and consumer safeguards); and (iv) tax issues (including sales and use taxes, ad
valorem taxes and franchise fees).

         Neither the Oklahoma Tax  Commission nor the OCC is authorized to issue
any rules on such  matters  without the  approval of the  Oklahoma  Legislature.
Other  provisions of the Act (i) authorize the Joint Electric Utility Task Force
to  retain  consultants  to  study,  among  other  things,  the  creation  of an
independent  system operator,  (ii) prohibit customer switching prior to July 1,
2002, except by mutual consent, (iii) prohibit municipalities that do not become
subject to the Act, from selling power outside their  municipal  limits,  except
from  lines  owned on April 25,  1997,  (iv)  require a  uniform  tax  policy be
established  by  July  1,  2002  and  (v)  require  out-of-state   suppliers  of
electricity  and  their  affiliates  who


                                       44



make retail sales of electricity in Oklahoma through the use of transmission and
distribution  facilities of in-state  suppliers to provide equal access to their
transmission and distribution facilities outside of Oklahoma.

         A new bill was  introduced  in the State  Senate in January 1999 and if
enacted would clarify certain ambiguities by defining key terms in the Act.

         In December  1997,  the APSC  established  four generic  proceedings to
consider the implementation of a competitive retail electric market in the State
of Arkansas.  During 1998, the APSC held hearings to consider competitive retail
generation, market structure, market power, taxation, recovery and mitigation of
stranded costs,  service and  reliability,  low income  assistance,  independent
system operators and transition  issues.  The Company  participated  actively in
those  proceedings,  and in October  1998,  the APSC  issued its report on these
issues to the Arkansas General Assembly.

         On February  11,  1997,  the OCC issued an Order,  among other  things,
directing OG&E to transition to competitive  bidding for its gas  transportation
requirements,  currently met by Enogex, no later than April 30, 2000. This Order
also set annual compensation for the transportation  services provided by Enogex
to OG&E at $41.3 million until  competitively-bid gas transportation  begins. In
1998,  approximately  $41.6  million or 8.2  percent of Enogex's  revenues  were
attributable to transporting  gas for OG&E.  Other pipelines  seeking to compete
with  Enogex for OG&E's  business  will  likely  have to pay a fee to Enogex for
transporting gas on Enogex's system or incur capital expenditures to develop the
necessary  infrastructure to connect with OG&E's gas-fired  generating stations.
Nevertheless, a potential outcome of the competitive bidding process is that the
revenues of Enogex derived from  transporting  gas for OG&E may be significantly
less after April 30, 2000.

         The OCC has  adopted  rules that are  designed  to make the gas utility
business in Oklahoma  more  competitive.  These rules do not impact the electric
industry.  Yet,  if  implemented,  the rules  are  expected  to offer  increased
opportunities to Enogex's pipeline and related businesses.

         In October 1992, the National  Energy Policy Act of 1992 ("Energy Act")
was enacted. Among many other provisions,  the Energy Act is designed to promote
competition  in the  development of wholesale  power  generation in the electric
utility  industry.  It exempts a new class of independent  power  producers from
regulation  under the Public Utility  Holding Company Act of 1935 and allows the
FERC to order  wholesale  "wheeling" by public  utilities to provide utility and
non-utility generators access to public utility transmission facilities.

         In April  1996,  the FERC issued two final  rules,  Orders 888 and 889,
which are having a  significant  impact on wholesale  markets.  Order 888,  sets
forth rules on  non-discriminatory  open access transmission  service to promote
wholesale competition.  Order 888, which was effective on July 9, 1996, requires
utilities and other transmission users to abide by comparable terms,  conditions
and pricing in  transmitting  power.  Order 889,  which had its  effective  date
extended to January 3, 1997, requires public utilities to implement Standards of
Conduct and an Open Access Same Time Information System ("OASIS", formerly known
as "Real-Time Information Networks"). These rules require transmission personnel
to  provide  the  same  information   about  the  transmission   system  to  all
transmission  customers  using the OASIS.  In 1997,  the FERC issued  clarifying
final orders in response to rehearing  requests by numerous market  participants
regarding  Orders No. 888 and 889.  During 1998,  OG&E submitted  filings to the
FERC to comply with these Orders, and those filings have been accepted.  As OG&E
continues to prepare for  restructuring at the retail level, it is expected that
additional  filings will be made in order to ensure  continuing  compliance with
the FERC's wholesale restructuring orders.


                                       45



         Another impact of complying with FERC's Order 888 is a requirement  for
utilities to offer a  transmission  tariff that  includes  network  transmission
service  ("NTS") to  transmission  customers.  NTS allows  transmission  service
customers to fully integrate load and resources on an instantaneous  basis, in a
manner similar to how OG&E has  historically  integrated its load and resources.
Under NTS, OG&E and participating  customers share the total annual transmission
cost for their combined joint-use systems, net of related transmission revenues,
based upon each  company's  share of the total system load.  Management  expects
minimal annual expenses as a result of Orders 888 and 889.

         As  discussed  previously,   Oklahoma  enacted  legislation  that  will
restructure  the electric  utility  industry in Oklahoma by July 2002,  assuming
that all the  conditions  in the  legislation  are met. This  legislation  would
deregulate OG&E's electric  generation assets and the continued use of Statement
of Financial  Accounting  Standards ("SFAS") No. 71, "Accounting for the Effects
of Certain Types of Regulation"  with respect to the related  regulatory  assets
may no longer  be  appropriate.  This may  result in  either  full  recovery  of
generation-related  regulatory assets (net of related regulatory liabilities) or
a non-cash,  pre-tax write-off as an extraordinary  charge of up to $31 million,
depending on the  transition  mechanisms  developed by the  legislature  for the
recovery of all or a portion of these net regulatory assets.

         The  enacted  Oklahoma  legislation  does not  affect  OG&E's  electric
transmission and distribution assets and the Company believes that the continued
use of SFAS No. 71 with respect to the related regulatory assets is appropriate.
However, if utility regulators in Oklahoma and Arkansas were to adopt regulatory
methodologies in the future that are not based on cost-of-service, the continued
use of SFAS No. 71 with respect to the regulatory assets related to the electric
transmission and distribution assets may no longer be appropriate.

         Based on a current  evaluation  of the various  factors and  conditions
that are expected to impact future cost recovery,  management  believes that its
regulatory assets, including those related to generation, are probable of future
recovery.

         On February  13,  1998,  the APSC Staff filed a motion for a show cause
order to review  OG&E's  electric  rates in the State of Arkansas.  The staff is
recommending a $3.1 million  annual rate  reduction  (based on a test year ended
December 31, 1996).  OG&E filed a cost of service study and has requested a $1.7
million  annual rate  increase.  A decision on this rate case is expected in the
next few months.

MARKET RISK

RISK MANAGEMENT

         The risk management  process  established by the Company is designed to
measure both quantitative and qualitative risks in its businesses. A senior risk
management  committee  has been  established  to review these risks on a regular
basis.  The  Company is exposed to market  risk,  including  changes in interest
rates and certain commodity prices.

         To manage the  volatility  relating  to these  exposures,  the  Company
enters into various derivative  transactions  pursuant to the Company's policies
on hedging practices.  Derivative  positions are monitored using techniques such
as market value and sensitivity analysis.


                                       46



INTEREST RATE RISK

         The Company's  exposure to changes in interest rates relates  primarily
to long-term debt  obligations  and commercial  paper.  The Company  manages its
interest  rate  exposure  by  limiting  its  variable-rate  debt  to  a  certain
percentage  of total  capitalization  and by  monitoring  the  effects of market
changes in  interest  rates.  The  Company  does not  currently  participate  in
interest  rate-related  derivative  financial  instruments.  The  fair  value of
long-term  debt is  estimated  based on quoted  market  prices and  management's
estimate of current rates  available  for similar  issues.  The following  table
itemizes  the  Company's  long-term  debt  maturities  and the  weighted-average
interest rates by maturity date.


=============================================================================================================
                                                                          
                                                                                                     1998
                                                                                                   Year-end
(DOLLARS IN MILLIONS)      1999       2000      2001      2002      2003    Thereafter   Total    Fair Value
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed rate debt
  Principal amount......  $  2.0    $169.0    $  2.0    $ 65.0    $  2.0      $564.7     $804.7      $844.8
  Weighted-average
    interest rate.......   7.15%      6.41%     7.15%     7.05%     7.15%       6.79%      6.95%        ---
Variable-rate debt
  Principal amount......    ---        ---       ---       ---       ---      $135.4     $135.4      $135.4
  Weighted-average
    interest rate.......    ---        ---       ---       ---       ---        3.77%      3.77%        ---
=============================================================================================================


COMMODITY PRICE EXPOSURE

         The market risk inherent in our market risk sensitive  instruments  and
positions is the  potential  loss arising from adverse  changes in our commodity
prices.

         The prices of natural gas and  electricity  are subject to fluctuations
resulting  from  changes in supply and demand.  To  partially  reduce price risk
caused by these market  fluctuations,  the Company's policy is to hedge (through
the  utilization of  derivatives) a portion of the Company's  supply and related
purchase and sale contracts, as well as any anticipated  transactions (purchases
and  sales).   Because  the  commodities   covered  by  these   derivatives  are
substantially  the same  commodities  that  the  Company  buys and  sells in the
physical  market,  no  special  studies  other  than  monitoring  the  degree of
correlation between the derivative and cash markets, are deemed necessary.

         A sensitivity analysis has been prepared to estimate the price exposure
to the  market  risk of the  Company's  natural  gas and  electricity  commodity
positions.  The Company's daily net commodity  position  consists of natural gas
inventories,   purchased  electric   capacity,   commodity  purchase  and  sales
contracts, and derivative financial and commodity instruments. The fair value of
such position is a summation of the fair values calculated for each commodity by
valuing each net position at quoted futures prices.  Market risk is estimated as
the  potential  loss in fair  value  resulting  from a  hypothetical  10 percent
adverse  change in such  prices  over the next 12  months.  The  results of this
analysis, which may differ from actual results, are as follows for fiscal 1999:


                                                          
(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                 Wholesale                Non-Trading
================================================================================

Commodity market risk, net........       $ 823                     $ 877
================================================================================



                                       47


         Besides the various existing contingencies herein described,  and those
described  in  Note  10 of  Notes  to  Consolidated  Financial  Statements,  the
Company's  ability  to fund its  future  operational  needs and to  finance  its
construction  program  is  dependent  upon  numerous  other  factors  beyond its
control,  such as general economic  conditions,  abnormal weather,  load growth,
inflation, new environmental laws or regulations,  and the cost and availability
of external financing.

ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------

         See  Management's  Discussion  and Analysis of Financial  Condition and
Results of Operations, Market Risk.


                                       48



ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA.
- ---------------------------------------------------

                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS



December 31 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                                    1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                        
ASSETS

PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT:

  In service...................................................    $4,391,232     $4,125,858     $4,005,532

  Construction work in progress................................        50,039         25,799         27,968
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total property, plant and equipment........................     4,441,271      4,151,657      4,033,500

      Less accumulated depreciation............................     1,914,721      1,797,806      1,687,423
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Net property, plant and equipment............................     2,526,550      2,353,851      2,346,077
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OTHER PROPERTY AND INVESTMENTS, at cost........................        31,682         37,898         24,802
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


CURRENT ASSETS:

  Cash and cash equivalents....................................           378          4,257          2,523

  Accounts receivable - customers, less reserve of $3,342,

    $4,507 and $4,626, respectively............................       141,235        117,842        128,974

  Accrued unbilled revenues....................................        22,500         36,900         34,900

  Accounts receivable - other..................................        12,902         11,470         11,748

  Fuel inventories, at LIFO cost...............................        57,288         49,369         62,725

  Materials and supplies, at average cost......................        29,734         28,430         24,827

  Prepayments and other........................................        31,551          4,489          4,300

  Accumulated deferred tax assets..............................         7,811          6,925         10,067
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total current assets.......................................       303,399        259,682        280,064
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


DEFERRED CHARGES:

  Advance payments for gas.....................................        15,000         10,500          9,500

  Income taxes recoverable through future rates................        40,731         42,549         44,368

  Other........................................................        66,567         61,385         57,544
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total deferred charges.....................................       122,298        114,434        111,412
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL ASSETS...................................................    $2,983,929     $2,765,865     $2,762,355
============================================================================================================





THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ARE AN INTEGRAL PART
HEREOF.


                                       49



                     CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (Continued)



December 31 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                                    1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                        
CAPITALIZATION AND LIABILITIES


CAPITALIZATION (see statements):

  Common stock and retained earnings...........................    $1,043,382     $  984,960     $  961,603

  Cumulative preferred stock...................................           ---         49,266         49,379

  Long-term debt...............................................       935,583        841,924        829,281
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total capitalization.......................................     1,978,965      1,876,150      1,840,263
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


CURRENT LIABILITIES:

  Short-term debt..............................................       119,100          1,000         41,400

  Accounts payable.............................................        96,936         77,733         86,856

  Dividends payable............................................        26,865         27,428         27,421

  Customers' deposits..........................................        23,985         23,847         23,257

  Accrued taxes................................................        30,500         21,677         26,761

  Accrued interest.............................................        21,081         20,041         19,832

  Long-term debt due within one year...........................         2,000         25,000         15,000

  Other........................................................        50,266         38,518         39,188
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total current liabilities..................................       370,733        235,244        279,715
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


DEFERRED CREDITS AND OTHER LIABILITIES:

  Accrued pension and benefit obligation.......................        17,952         62,023         61,335

  Accumulated deferred income taxes............................       531,940        503,952        488,016

  Accumulated deferred investment tax credits..................        67,728         72,878         78,028

  Other........................................................        16,611         15,618         14,998
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total deferred credits and other liabilities...............       634,231        654,471        642,377
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (Notes 10, 11 and 13)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL CAPITALIZATION AND LIABILITIES...........................    $2,983,929     $2,765,865     $2,762,355
============================================================================================================





THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ARE AN INTEGRAL PART
HEREOF.


                                       50



                    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CAPITALIZATION



December 31 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                                           1998           1997           1996
==================================================================================================================
                                                                                              
COMMON STOCK AND RETAINED EARNINGS:
  Common stock, par value $0.01 per share, authorized
    125,000,000 shares; and outstanding 80,797,539,
    80,771,834, and 92,941,232 shares, respectively..................    $      808     $      808     $      929
  Premium on capital stock...........................................       512,806        512,089        936,108
  Retained earnings..................................................       529,768        472,063        449,198
  Treasury stock, zero, zero, and 12,183,742 shares,
    respectively.....................................................           ---            ---       (424,632)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total common stock and retained earnings.......................     1,043,382        984,960        961,603
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CUMULATIVE PREFERRED STOCK:
  Par value $20, authorized 675,000 shares - 4%;
    zero, 418,963, and 421,963 shares, respectively..................           ---          8,379          8,439
  Par value $100, authorized 1,865,000 shares-
    SERIES    SHARES OUTSTANDING
    4.20%     zero, 49,750, and 49,950 shares, respectively..........           ---          4,975          4,995
    4.24%     zero, 74,990, and 75,000 shares, respectively..........           ---          7,499          7,500
    4.44%     zero, 63,200, and 63,500 shares, respectively..........           ---          6,320          6,350
    4.80%     zero, 70,925, and 70,950 shares, respectively..........           ---          7,093          7,095
    5.34%     zero, 150,000, and 150,000 shares, respectively........           ---         15,000         15,000
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total cumulative preferred stock...............................           ---         49,266         49,379
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LONG-TERM DEBT:
  First mortgage bonds-
    SERIES    DATE DUE
    5.125%    January 1, 1997........................................           ---            ---         15,000
    6.375%    January 1, 1998........................................           ---         25,000         25,000
    7.125%    January 1, 1999........................................           ---         12,500         12,500
    6.250%    Senior Notes Series B, October 15, 2000................       110,000        110,000        110,000
    7.125%    January 1, 2002........................................           ---         40,000         40,000
    8.375%    January 1, 2007........................................           ---            ---         75,000
    8.625%    November 1, 2007.......................................           ---         35,000         35,000
    8.250%    August 15, 2016........................................           ---            ---        100,000
    7.000%    Pollution Control Series C, March 1, 2017..............           ---            ---         56,000
    6.500%    Senior Notes Series D, July 15, 2017...................       125,000        125,000            ---
    8.875%    December 1, 2020.......................................           ---            ---         75,000
    7.300%    Senior Notes Series A, October 15, 2025................       110,000        110,000        110,000
    6.650%    Senior Notes Series C, July 15, 2027...................       125,000        125,000            ---
    6.500%    Senior Notes Series E, April 15, 2028..................       100,000            ---            ---
  Other bonds-
    Var. %    Garfield Industrial Authority, January 1, 2025.........        47,000         47,000         47,000
    Var. %    Muskogee Industrial Authority, January 1, 2025.........        32,400         32,400         32,400
    Var. %    Muskogee Industrial Authority, June 1, 2027............        56,000         56,000            ---
  Unamortized premium and discount, net..............................        (2,488)          (976)        (8,619)
  Enogex Inc. notes (Note 6).........................................       234,671        150,000        120,000
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total long-term debt...........................................       937,583        866,924        844,281
        Less long-term debt due within one year......................         2,000         25,000         15,000
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total long-term debt (excluding long-term
        debt due within one year)....................................       935,583        841,924        829,281
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Capitalization.................................................    $1,978,965     $1,876,150     $1,840,263
==================================================================================================================





THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ARE AN INTEGRAL PART
HEREOF.


                                       51



                        CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME



Year ended December 31 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)       1998           1997           1996
================================================================================================================
                                                                                            
OPERATING REVENUES.................................................    $1,617,737     $1,443,610     $1,387,435
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATING EXPENSES:

  Fuel.............................................................       315,194        277,806        279,083

  Purchased power..................................................       240,542        222,464        222,070

  Gas and electricity purchased for resale.........................       216,432        172,764        117,343

  Other operation and maintenance..................................       305,106        311,337        307,154

  Depreciation and amortization....................................       149,818        142,632        136,140

  Current income taxes.............................................        84,722         57,347         81,227

  Deferred income taxes, net.......................................        29,072         22,255          2,150

  Deferred investment tax credits, net.............................        (5,150)        (5,150)        (5,150)

  Taxes other than income..........................................        51,188         48,157         46,199
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total operating expenses.......................................     1,386,924      1,249,612      1,186,216
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATING INCOME...................................................       230,813        193,998        201,219
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OTHER INCOME AND DEDUCTIONS:

  Interest income..................................................         3,561          3,873          2,198

  Other............................................................         2,197          1,174         (2,101)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Net other income and deductions................................         5,758          5,047             97
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INTEREST CHARGES:

  Interest on long-term debt.......................................        60,856         62,572         62,412

  Allowance for borrowed funds used during construction............        (1,071)          (599)          (709)

  Other............................................................        10,914          4,522          6,281
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total interest charges, net....................................        70,699         66,495         67,984
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET INCOME.........................................................       165,872        132,550        133,332

PREFERRED DIVIDEND REQUIREMENTS....................................           733          2,285          2,302
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EARNINGS AVAILABLE FOR COMMON STOCK................................    $  165,139     $  130,265     $  131,030
================================================================================================================
AVERAGE COMMON SHARES OUTSTANDING (thousands)......................        80,772         80,745         80,734

EARNINGS PER AVERAGE COMMON SHARE..................................    $     2.04     $     1.61     $     1.62

AVERAGE COMMON SHARES OUTSTANDING
  ASSUMING DILUTION (thousands)....................................        80,787         80,745         80,734

EARNINGS PER AVERAGE COMMON SHARE
  ASSUMING DILUTION................................................    $     2.04     $     1.61     $     1.62
================================================================================================================





THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ARE AN INTEGRAL PART
HEREOF.


                                       52



                  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF RETAINED EARNINGS



Year ended December 31 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                         1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                        
BALANCE AT BEGINNING OF PERIOD.................................    $  472,063     $  449,198     $  425,545

ADD - net income...............................................       165,872        132,550        133,332

    Total......................................................       637,935        581,748        558,877

DEDUCT:

  Cash dividends declared on preferred stock...................           733          2,285          2,302

  Cash dividends declared on common stock......................       107,434        107,400        107,377
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total......................................................       108,167        109,685        109,679
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BALANCE AT END OF PERIOD.......................................    $  529,768     $  472,063     $  449,198
============================================================================================================




































THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ARE AN INTEGRAL PART
HEREOF.


                                       53



                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS



Year ended December 31 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                         1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                        
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
  Net Income...................................................    $  165,872     $  132,550     $  133,332
  Adjustments to Reconcile Net Income to Net Cash Provided
    from Operating Activities:
    Depreciation and amortization..............................       149,818        142,632        136,140
    Deferred income taxes and investment tax credits, net......        23,922         17,105         (3,000)
    Gain on sale of assets.....................................           ---         (2,511)           ---
    Provision for rate refund..................................           ---            ---          1,804
    Change in Certain Current Assets and Liabilities:
        Accounts receivable - customers........................       (23,393)        11,132        (16,533)
        Accrued unbilled revenues..............................        14,400         (2,000)         8,650
        Fuel, materials and supplies inventories...............        (9,223)         9,753         (4,200)
        Accumulated deferred tax assets........................          (886)         3,142            692
        Other current assets...................................       (25,627)            89         (2,361)
        Accounts payable.......................................        19,203         (9,123)        13,401
        Accrued taxes..........................................         8,823         (5,084)        (1,176)
        Accrued interest.......................................         1,040            209            688
        Accumulated provision for rate refund..................           ---            ---         (2,650)
        Other current liabilities..............................        11,323            (73)         7,131
    Other operating activities.................................       (43,003)        (2,503)        22,753
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Net cash provided from operating activities............       292,269        295,318        294,671
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
    Capital expenditures.......................................      (235,231)      (163,571)      (161,129)
    Other investing activities.................................        (8,084)         4,900            ---
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Net cash used in investing activities..................      (243,315)      (158,671)      (161,129)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
    Retirement of long-term debt...............................      (113,500)      (321,000)           ---
    Proceeds from long-term debt...............................       100,000        336,000            ---
    Short-term debt, net.......................................       118,100        (40,400)       (26,200)
    Redemption of preferred stock..............................       (49,266)          (113)          (560)
    Retirement of treasury stock...............................           ---            285            ---
    Cash dividends declared on preferred stock.................          (733)        (2,285)        (2,302)
    Cash dividends declared on common stock....................      (107,434)      (107,400)      (107,377)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Net cash used in financing activities..................       (52,833)      (134,913)      (136,439)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH AND CASH
  EQUIVALENTS..................................................        (3,879)         1,734         (2,897)
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AT BEGINNING OF
  PERIOD.......................................................         4,257          2,523          5,420
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AT END OF PERIOD.....................    $      378     $    4,257     $    2,523
============================================================================================================
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW
  INFORMATION
    Cash Paid During the Period for:
        Interest (net of amount capitalized)...................    $   59,792     $   64,081     $   64,882
        Income taxes ..........................................    $   77,150     $   64,705     $   82,970
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NON-CASH INVESTING AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES
    Debt assumed in acquisition of subsidiary..................    $   80,000            ---            ---
    Capital lease financing....................................    $    9,818            ---            ---
    Other investing and financing activities...................    $   (3,000)    $    5,185            ---
============================================================================================================





THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ARE AN INTEGRAL PART
HEREOF.


                                       54



NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1.       SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES


REORGANIZATION AND PRINCIPALS OF CONSOLIDATION

         OGE Energy Corp. (the "Company")  became the parent company of Oklahoma
Gas and Electric  Company  ("OG&E") and OG&E's  former  subsidiary,  Enogex Inc.
("Enogex") on December 31, 1996. On that date, all outstanding OG&E common stock
was  exchanged on a  share-for-share  basis for common stock of OGE Energy Corp.
and the common  stock of Enogex was  distributed  to the Company.  In 1997,  the
Company  also  became the parent  company of Origen  Inc.  and its  subsidiaries
("Origen"), the newly formed non-regulated businesses. The financial information
presented  through  December 31, 1996,  represents the  consolidated  results of
OG&E.  All  significant  intercompany   transactions  have  been  eliminated  in
consolidation.

ACCOUNTING RECORDS

         The accounting  records of OG&E are  maintained in accordance  with the
Uniform  System  of  Accounts   prescribed  by  the  Federal  Energy  Regulatory
Commission ("FERC") and adopted by the Oklahoma  Corporation  Commission ("OCC")
and the Arkansas Public Service Commission  ("APSC").  Additionally,  OG&E, as a
regulated  utility,  is subject to the accounting  principles  prescribed by the
Financial  Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards  ("SFAS")  No. 71,  "Accounting  for the  Effects of Certain  Types of
Regulation."  SFAS No. 71 provides  that certain  costs that would  otherwise be
charged to expense  can be  deferred  as  regulatory  assets,  based on expected
recovery from customers in future rates.  Likewise,  certain  credits that would
otherwise  reduce  expense  are  deferred  as  regulatory  liabilities  based on
expected flowback to customers in future rates.  Management's  expected recovery
of deferred  costs and  flowback  of deferred  credits  generally  results  from
specific decisions by regulators granting such ratemaking treatment. At December
31, 1998,  regulatory  assets and regulatory  liabilities are being reflected in
rates charged to customers over periods ranging from one to 20 years.

         The components of deferred charges - other,  and regulatory  assets and
liabilities on the  Consolidated  Balance Sheets  included the following,  as of
December 31:


                                       55




DEFERRED CHARGES - OTHER

(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                                                1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                        
Regulated Deferred Charges:

  Workforce reduction..........................................    $      ---      $     ---      $   3,759

  Unamortized debt expense.....................................         8,566          6,776         10,291

  Unamortized loss on reacquired debt..........................        29,072         28,660         10,253

  Miscellaneous................................................         2,217            403            435
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total regulated deferred charges...........................        39,855         35,839         24,738
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-Regulated Deferred Charges:

  Enogex gas sales contracts...................................        12,389         13,925         14,949

  Insurance claims - property damage...........................           ---            ---          6,231

  Miscellaneous................................................        14,323         11,621         11,626
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total non-regulated deferred charges.......................        26,712         25,546         32,806
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Deferred Charges.........................................    $   66,567     $   61,385     $   57,544
============================================================================================================

REGULATORY ASSETS AND LIABILITIES

(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                                                1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
Regulatory Assets:

  Income taxes recoverable from customers......................    $  104,160     $  115,989     $  127,819

  Unamortized loss on reacquired debt..........................        29,072         28,660         10,253

  Workforce reduction..........................................           ---            ---          3,759

  Miscellaneous................................................         2,217            403            435
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total Regulatory Assets....................................       135,449        145,052        142,266

Regulatory Liabilities:

  Income taxes refundable to customers.........................       (63,429)       (73,440)       (83,451)

  Gain on disposition of allowances............................           ---            ---           (329)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net Regulatory Assets..........................................    $   72,020     $   71,612     $   58,486
============================================================================================================


         Management   continuously   monitors  the  future   recoverability   of
regulatory  assets.  When, in management's  judgment,  future  recovery  becomes
impaired;  the amount of the  regulatory  asset is reduced  or  written-off,  as
appropriate.

         If the Company were required to discontinue the application of SFAS No.
71 for some or all of its operations, it would result in writing off the related
regulatory assets; the financial effects of which could be significant.


                                       56



ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

         In June 1997, the FASB issued SFAS No. 131, "Disclosures About Segments
of an Enterprise and Related Information".  Adoption of SFAS No. 131 is required
for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1997. The Company adopted this new
standard effective December 31, 1998.  Adoption of this new standard changed the
presentation  of certain  disclosure  information  of the  Company,  but did not
affect reported earnings.

         In February 1998, the FASB issued SFAS No. 132, "Employers' Disclosures
about Pensions and Other Postretirement  Benefits".  Adoption of SFAS No. 132 is
required for financial statements for periods beginning after December 15, 1997.
The Company adopted this new standard effective  December 31, 1998.  Adoption of
this new standard changed the presentation of certain disclosure  information of
the Company, but did not affect reported earnings.

         In March 1998, the American  Institute of Certified Public  Accountants
("AICPA") issued  Statement of Position ("SOP") 98-1,  "Accounting for the Costs
of Computer  Software  Developed or Obtained for Internal Use".  Adoption of SOP
98-1 is required for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1998. The Company
will adopt this new standard effective January 1, 1999, and management  believes
the  adoption  of this  new  standard  will not have a  material  impact  on its
consolidated financial position or results of operations.

         In June 1998, the FASB issued SFAS No. 133,  "Accounting for Derivative
Instruments  and for Hedging  Activities".  Adoption of SFAS No. 133 is required
for financial  statements for periods beginning after June 15, 1999. The Company
will adopt this new standard effective January 1, 2000, and management  believes
the  adoption  of this  new  standard  will not have a  material  impact  on its
consolidated financial position or results of operations.

         In December 1998, the FASB Emerging Issues Task Force reached consensus
on Issue No. 98-10, Accounting for Contracts Involved in Energy Trading and Risk
Management  Activities  ("EITF Issue 98-10").  EITF Issue 98-10 is effective for
fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1998. EITF Issue 98-10 requires energy
trading  contracts  to be  recorded  at fair value on the  balance  sheet,  with
changes in fair value included in earnings. The effect of initial application of
EITF  Issue  98-10  will be  reported  as a  cumulative  effect  of a change  in
accounting principle. The Company will adopt this new Issue effective January 1,
1999,  and  management  believes  the  adoption of the new Issue will not have a
material impact on its consolidated financial position or results of operations.

         DERIVATIVES

         Enogex,  in the normal  course of  business,  enters  into fixed  price
contracts  for either the  purchase  or sale of natural gas and  electricity  at
future dates.  Due to fluctuations  in the natural gas and electricity  markets,
the Company buys or sells natural gas and electricity  futures contracts,  swaps
or options to hedge the price and basis risk  associated  with the  specifically
identified purchase or sales contracts. Additionally, the Company will use these
contracts as an enhancement or speculative  trade.  For qualifying  hedges,  the
Company  accounts  for  changes in the market  value of futures  contracts  as a
deferred gain or loss until the  production  month for hedged  transactions,  at
which time the gain or loss on the natural gas or electricity  futures contract,
swap  or  option  is  recognized  in the  results  of  operations.  The  Company
recognizes the gain or loss on  enhancement  or speculative  contracts as market
values change in the results of operations.


                                       57



USE OF ESTIMATES

         In preparing  the  consolidated  financial  statements,  management  is
required to make estimates and assumptions  that affect the reported  amounts of
assets and  liabilities  and disclosure of contingent  assets and liabilities at
the date of the financial  statements  and the reported  amounts of revenues and
expenses  during the reporting  period.  Actual  results could differ from those
estimates.

PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT

         All property, plant and equipment is recorded at cost. Electric utility
plant is recorded at its  original  cost.  Newly  constructed  plant is added to
plant  balances  at costs  which  include  contracted  services,  direct  labor,
materials,   overhead  and  allowance   for  funds  used  during   construction.
Replacement of major units of property are  capitalized  as plant.  The replaced
plant is removed from plant balances and the cost of such property together with
the cost of removal less salvage is charged to accumulated depreciation.  Repair
and  replacement  of minor items of property  are  included in the  Consolidated
Statements of Income as other operation and maintenance expense.

DEPRECIATION

         The provision for depreciation,  which was approximately 3.2 percent of
the average  depreciable  utility  plant,  for each of the years 1998,  1997 and
1996, is provided on a straight-line  method over the estimated  service life of
the property.  Depreciation  is provided at the unit level for production  plant
and at the account or sub-account level for all other plant, and is based on the
average life group procedure.

         Enogex's  gas  pipeline,   gathering   systems,   compressors  and  gas
processing plants are depreciated on a straight-line method over periods ranging
from 10 to 48 years.

ALLOWANCE FOR FUNDS USED DURING CONSTRUCTION

         Allowance  for funds used during  construction  ("AFUDC") is calculated
according  to FERC  pronouncements  for the imputed  cost of equity and borrowed
funds.  AFUDC,  a non-cash  item,  is reflected as a credit on the  Consolidated
Statements of Income and a charge to construction work in progress.

         AFUDC rates, compounded semi-annually, were 5.75, 5.94 and 5.63 percent
for the years 1998, 1997 and 1996, respectively.

         FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

         The carrying  value of the financial  instruments  on the  Consolidated
Balance Sheets not otherwise discussed in these notes approximate fair value.

CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS

         For  purposes of these  statements,  the Company  considers  all highly
liquid debt instruments  purchased with a maturity of three months or less to be
cash  equivalents.  These  investments are carried at cost,  which  approximates
market.


                                       58



         The Company's cash management program utilizes controlled  disbursement
banking  arrangements.  Outstanding  checks in excess of cash  balances  totaled
$27.8  million,  $18.5 million and $24.0 million at December 31, 1998,  1997 and
1996,  respectively,  and are classified as accounts payable in the accompanying
Consolidated  Balance  Sheets.  Sufficient  funds were  available  to fund these
outstanding checks when they were presented for payment.

HEAT PUMP LOANS

         OG&E has a heat pump loan program,  whereby,  qualifying  customers may
obtain a loan from OG&E to purchase a heat pump.  Customer  loans are  available
from a minimum of $1,500 to a maximum  of $13,000  with a term of 6 months to 72
months. The finance rate is based upon short-term loan rates and is reviewed and
updated  periodically.  The interest  rates were 8.25,  8.25 and 9.75 percent at
December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996, respectively.

         The current  portion of these loans totaled $1.0 million,  $4.9 million
and $4.0  million at December  31, 1998,  1997 and 1996,  respectively,  and are
classified as accounts  receivable - customers in the accompanying  Consolidated
Balance  Sheets.  The  noncurrent  portion of these loans  totaled $4.0 million,
$19.1  million  and  $15.3  million  at  December  31,  1998,   1997  and  1996,
respectively,  and are  classified  as other  property  and  investments  in the
accompanying  Consolidated Balance Sheets. In 1998 OG&E sold approximately $25.0
million of its heat pump loans.

UNBILLED REVENUE

         OG&E  accrues  estimated  revenues  for  services  provided but not yet
billed. The cost of providing service is recognized as incurred.

AUTOMATIC FUEL ADJUSTMENT CLAUSES

         Variances  in the actual cost of fuel used in electric  generation  and
certain purchased power costs, as compared to that component in  cost-of-service
for ratemaking,  are charged to substantially  all of OG&E's electric  customers
through automatic fuel adjustment clauses,  which are subject to periodic review
by the OCC, the APSC and the FERC.

FUEL INVENTORIES

         Fuel  inventories  for the generation of electricity  consists of coal,
oil and natural gas.  These  inventories  are  accounted  for under the last-in,
first-out  ("LIFO")  cost  method.  The  estimated   replacement  cost  of  fuel
inventories  was lower than the stated LIFO cost by  approximately  $4.4 million
for 1998 and $1.1  million  for  1997,  and  exceeded  the  stated  LIFO cost by
approximately $4.6 million for 1996, based on the average cost of fuel purchased
late in the respective years. Natural gas products inventories are held for sale
and accounted for based on the weighted average cost of production.

ACCRUED VACATION

         The Company  accrues  vacation  pay by  establishing  a  liability  for
vacation  earned during the current year, but is not payable until the following
year.  The accrued  vacation  totaled  $13.4  million,  $13.2  million and $11.4
million at December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996, respectively,  and is classified as
other current liabilities in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets.


                                       59



ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS

         Accruals for  environmental  costs are  recognized  when it is probable
that a  liability  has been  incurred  and the  amount of the  liability  can be
reasonably  estimated.  When a  single  estimate  of  the  liability  cannot  be
determined, the low end of the estimated range is recorded. Costs are charged to
expense or  deferred as a  regulatory  asset  based on  expected  recovery  from
customers  in future  rates,  if they relate to the  remediation  of  conditions
caused by past  operations  or if they are not  expected  to mitigate or prevent
contamination from future operations. Where environmental expenditures relate to
facilities currently in use, such as pollution control equipment,  the costs may
be  capitalized  and  depreciated  over the future  service  periods.  Estimated
remediation  costs are  recorded at  undiscounted  amounts,  independent  of any
insurance or rate recovery,  based on prior experience,  assessments and current
technology.   Accrued   obligations  are  regularly  adjusted  as  environmental
assessments and estimates are revised,  and  remediation  efforts  proceed.  For
sites where OG&E has been designated as one of several  potentially  responsible
parties, the amount accrued represents OG&E's estimated share of the cost.

RECLASSIFICATIONS AND STOCK SPLIT

         Certain amounts have been  reclassified on the  consolidated  financial
statements to conform with the 1998  presentation.  Effective June 15, 1998, the
outstanding  shares of the  Company's  common stock were split on a  two-for-one
basis.  The new shares  were  issued to  shareowners  of record on June 1, 1998.
Prior period shares,  dividends and earnings per share of common stock have been
restated to reflect the stock split.


                                       60



2.       INCOME TAXES

         The items comprising tax expense are as follows:



Year ended December 31 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                             1998           1997           1996
================================================================================================================
                                                                                            
Provision For Current Income Taxes:

  Federal..........................................................    $   72,084     $   47,676     $   72,633

  State............................................................        12,638          9,671          8,594
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total Provision For Current Income Taxes.....................        84,722         57,347         81,227
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Provisions (Benefit) For Deferred Income Taxes, net:

  Federal

    Depreciation...................................................         1,490         11,344          2,671

    Repair allowance...............................................         1,200            794          2,100

    Removal costs..................................................          (220)           774            630

    Provision for rate refund......................................           ---            ---            928

    Software implementation costs..................................           ---          4,840         (1,727)

    Company restructuring..........................................            22           (494)        (8,250)

    Pension expense................................................        14,806            ---            ---

    Bond Redemption-unamortized costs..............................         8,458            ---            ---

    Other..........................................................            20          2,093          1,433

  State............................................................         3,296          2,904          4,365
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total Provision  (Benefit) For Deferred Income Taxes, net....        29,072         22,255          2,150
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deferred Investment Tax Credits, net...............................        (5,150)        (5,150)        (5,150)

Income Taxes Relating to Other Income and Deductions...............           ---          2,114           (515)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total Income Tax Expense.....................................    $  108,644     $   76,566     $   77,712
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pretax Income......................................................      $274,516     $  209,116     $  211,044
================================================================================================================

The  following  schedule  reconciles  the  statutory  federal  tax  rate  to the
effective income tax rate:

 Year ended December 31                                                      1998           1997           1996
================================================================================================================
Statutory federal tax rate.........................................          35.0%          35.0%          35.0%

State income taxes, net of federal income tax benefit..............           3.8            3.9            4.0

Tax credits, net...................................................          (3.0)          (4.0)          (4.1)

Other, net.........................................................           3.8            1.7            1.9
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Effective income tax rate as reported............................          39.6%          36.6%          36.8%
================================================================================================================


         The Company  files  consolidated  income tax returns.  Income taxes are
allocated to each company based on its separate taxable income or loss.


                                       61



         Investment tax credits on electric  utility property have been deferred
and are being amortized to income over the life of the related property.

         The Company  follows the  provisions of SFAS No. 109,  "Accounting  for
Income  Taxes",  which uses an asset and liability  approach to  accounting  for
income  taxes.  Under  SFAS No.  109,  deferred  tax assets or  liabilities  are
computed based on the difference between the financial  statement and income tax
bases of assets and  liabilities  ("temporary  differences")  using the  enacted
marginal  tax rate.  Deferred  income tax  expenses or benefits are based on the
changes in the asset or liability from period to period.

         The deferred tax provisions,  set forth above,  are recognized as costs
in the ratemaking process by the commissions having  jurisdiction over the rates
charged by OG&E. The components of Accumulated Deferred Income Taxes at December
31, 1998, 1997 and 1996 are as follows:




(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                                                1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                        
Current Deferred Tax Assets:

  Accrued vacation.............................................    $    5,088     $    4,221     $    4,171

  Uncollectible accounts.......................................         1,242          1,898          1,748

  Capitalization of indirect costs.............................           172            106          2,583

  RAR interest.................................................           774            ---            ---

  Provision for Worker's Compensation claims...................           462            595          1,207

  Other........................................................            73            105            358
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Accumulated deferred tax assets..........................    $    7,811     $    6,925     $   10,067
============================================================================================================
Deferred Tax Liabilities:

  Accelerated depreciation and other property-related
    differences................................................    $  491,943     $  489,739     $  469,949

  Allowance for funds used during construction.................        38,575         43,327         46,429

  Income taxes recoverable through future rates................        40,310         44,888         49,466
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................       570,828        577,954        565,844
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deferred Tax Assets:

  Deferred investment tax credits..............................       (21,875)       (23,623)       (25,372)

  Income taxes refundable through future rates.................       (24,547)       (28,421)       (32,296)

  Postemployment medical and life insurance benefits...........        (3,100)        (4,174)        (2,301)

  Company pension plan.........................................          (682)       (16,242)       (16,465)

  Bond redemption-unamortized costs............................         9,353            ---            ---

  Other........................................................         1,963         (1,542)        (1,394)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................       (38,888)       (74,002)       (77,828)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accumulated Deferred Income Tax Liabilities....................    $  531,940     $  503,952     $  488,016
============================================================================================================


                                       62



3.       COMMON STOCK AND RETAINED EARNINGS

         In May 1998,  the Company's  Board of Directors  approved a two-for-one
stock split of its common stock, par value $0.01 per share (the "Common Stock"),
by declaring a 100 percent stock  dividend  payable June 15, 1998.  Accordingly,
each  shareowner of record of the Common Stock received one additional  share of
Common Stock for each share of Common Stock held on June 1, 1998.

         There were 25,705,  28,896 and zero shares of new stock issued pursuant
to the Restricted Stock Plan during 1998, 1997 and 1996, respectively.  The $0.7
million  increase  in 1998 in  premium  on  capital  stock as  presented  on the
Consolidated Statements of Capitalization,  represents a gain on the issuance of
common stock pursuant to the Restricted  Stock Plan. The $424.0 million decrease
in 1997 in premium on capital stock  represents the gains and losses  associated
with the  issuance  of common  stock  pursuant  to the  Restricted  Stock  Plan,
repurchased preferred stock and the retirement of treasury stock.

         There were 10,110,846  shares of unissued common stock reserved for the
various  employee  and  Company  stock  plans at  December  31,  1998.  With the
exception of the Stock Incentive Plan, the common stock  requirements,  pursuant
to those plans,  are currently  being satisfied with stock purchased on the open
market.

SHAREOWNERS RIGHTS PLAN

         In December  1990,  OG&E adopted a Shareowners  Rights Plan designed to
protect  shareowners'  interests in the event that OG&E was ever confronted with
an unfair or inadequate  acquisition  proposal. In connection with the corporate
restructuring,  the Company adopted a substantially identical Shareowners Rights
Plan in August  1995.  Pursuant  to the plan,  the  Company  declared a dividend
distribution  of one "right" for each share of Company common stock. As a result
of the June 1998  two-for-one  stock  split,  each share of common  stock is now
entitled to one-half of a right. Each right entitles the holder to purchase from
the Company one  one-hundredth  of a share of new preferred stock of the Company
under  certain  circumstances.  The rights may be exercised if a person or group
announces its intention to acquire,  or does acquire,  20 percent or more of the
Company's common stock. Under certain  circumstances,  the holders of the rights
will be  entitled to purchase  either  shares of common  stock of the Company or
common stock of the acquirer at a reduced percentage of market value. The rights
are scheduled to expire on December 11, 2000.

4.       STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN

         On January 21, 1998, the Company adopted a Stock Incentive Plan.  Under
this plan,  restricted  stock,  stock  options,  stock  appreciation  rights and
performance units may be granted to officers, directors and other key employees.
The Company has  authorized  the  issuance of up to  4,000,000  shares under the
plan.

         RESTRICTED STOCK

         The Company  had a  Restricted  Stock Plan  whereby  certain  employees
periodically  received shares of the Company's common stock at the discretion of
the Board of Directors.  The Stock Incentive Plan replaced the Restricted  Stock
Plan. The Company distributed  25,705,  28,896 and 32,048 shares of common stock
during 1998, 1997 and 1996,  respectively.  The Company also reacquired  13,195,
14,552  and  21,076  shares in 1998,  1997 and 1996,  respectively.  The  shares
distributed in 1996 and the shares  reacquired in 1997 and 1996 were recorded as
treasury  stock.  The restricted  stock  distributed in 1998


                                       63



vests at the end of three years.  The restricted  stock  distributed in 1997 and
1996 vests over four years at (20  percent in each of the first  three years and
40 percent in the final year).

         Changes in common stock were:



(THOUSANDS)                                                           1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                          
Shares outstanding January 1...................................      80,772         80,758         80,747

Issued/reacquired under the Restricted Stock Plan, net.........          26             14             11
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shares outstanding December 31.................................      80,798         80,772         80,758
============================================================================================================


STOCK OPTIONS

         In January  1998,  the  Company  awarded  approximately  443,800  stock
options,  with an exercise price of $25.9375  (adjusted for stock split).  These
options vest in one-third annual  installments  beginning one year from the date
of grant and have a  contractual  life of 10 years.  During  1998,  19,200 stock
options  were  forfeited.  At December  31,  1998,  424,600  stock  options were
outstanding.  The remaining  contractual  life of these options is approximately
nine years.

         During 1996, the Company adopted SFAS 123 and pursuant to its provision
elected  to  continue  using  the  intrinsic  value  method  of  accounting  for
stock-based awards granted to employees in accordance with APB 25.  Accordingly,
the Company has not recognized  compensation  expense for its stock-based awards
to employees. Using the Black-Scholes pricing model, the estimated fair value of
each option granted was $2.34.

         The following table shows  assumptions  used to estimate the fair value
of options granted on January 21, 1998:


                                                               

         Expected life of options...............................   7 years
         Risk-free interest rate................................   5.57%
         Expected volatility....................................  15.59%
         Expected dividend yield................................   6.47%


         The following  table reflects pro forma  earnings  available for common
stock had the Company elected to adopt the fair value approach to SFAS 123:


                                                                       1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                        
Earnings available for common stock:

  As Reported..................................................    $  165,139     $  130,265     $  131,030

  Pro Forma....................................................       164,933        130,002        130,971
============================================================================================================


         Reported and pro forma  earnings per share amounts are  equivalent  for
1996 through 1998.

5.       CUMULATIVE PREFERRED STOCK OF SUBSIDIARY

         On January 15, 1998,  all  outstanding  shares of OG&E's 4%  Cumulative
Preferred  Stock were  redeemed  at the par value of $20 per share plus  accrued
dividends.  On January 20, 1998,  all  outstanding


                                       64



shares of OG&E's  Cumulative  Preferred  Stock,  par value $100 per share,  were
redeemed  at the  following  amounts  per share plus  accrued  dividends:  4.20%
series-$102;  4.24% series-$102.875;  4.44% series-$102;  4.80% series-$102; and
5.34% series-$101.

         In February  1997,  OG&E filed a  registration  statement for up to $50
million of grantor trust preferred securities.

         OG&E's Restated  Certificate of  Incorporation  permits the issuance of
new series of preferred stock with dividends payable other than quarterly.

6.       LONG-TERM DEBT

         On January 2, 1998, OG&E retired $25 million  principal amount of 6.375
percent First Mortgage Bonds due January 1, 1998.

         On April 15, 1998,  OG&E issued $100.0  million in Senior Notes at 6.50
percent due April 15,  2028.  The  proceeds  from the sale of this new debt were
applied to the redemption on April 21, 1998 of $12.5 million principal amount of
OG&E's 7.125 percent  First  Mortgage  Bonds due January 1, 1999,  $40.0 million
principal  amount of OG&E's 7.125  percent First  Mortgage  Bonds due January 1,
2002 and $35.0 million  principal  amount of OG&E's 8.625 percent First Mortgage
Bonds due November 1, 2007 and for general corporate purposes.

         The $112.5  million  principal  amount of OG&E's First  Mortgage  Bonds
retired  in 1998  was the  last  subject  to the  lien of the  Trust  Indenture.
Therefore,  no electric plant is now subject to the lien of the Trust  Indenture
and the lien has been discharged.

         In January 1998, EAPC issued a $5.7 million Note at 7 percent, due July
1,  2020.  The  proceeds  from  the  Note  were  utilized  by EAPC in the  NOARK
acquisition.  Annual payments of approximately $0.8 million (including principal
and accrued interest) begin July 1, 2004.

         In June  1998,  NOARK  Pipeline  Finance,  L.L.C.,  a  finance  company
subsidiary of NOARK,  issued $80.0 million  principal  amount of unsecured  7.15
percent  Notes due July 18, 2018.  These Notes are entitled to the benefits of a
guaranty  issued by Enogex  pursuant to which Enogex has  guaranteed  40 percent
(subject to certain adjustments) of the principal,  interest and premium on such
Notes.  The remaining 60 percent of the principal,  interest and premium on such
notes are  guaranteed by  Southwestern  Energy  Company,  the parent  company of
Southwestern  Energy Pipeline  Company.  The proceeds from the sale of the Notes
were loaned by NOARK Pipeline Finance, L.L.C. to NOARK and utilized by NOARK (i)
to repay a bank revolving line of credit (approximately $29.75 million), (ii) to
repay an outstanding term loan from Enogex  (approximately  $48.825 million) and
(iii) for general corporate  purposes.  Principal  payments of $1.0 million plus
accrued interest are due semi-annually.

         As of December 31, 1998, Enogex long-term debt consisted of $79 million
principal  amount of 7.15 percent  Senior Notes due July 19, 2018,  $5.7 million
principal  amount of 7.00  percent  Notes due July 1, 2020 and $150  million  of
medium term notes at a  composite  rate of 6.97  percent.  The  following  table
itemizes the Enogex long-term debt at December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996:


                                       65






December 31 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                                     1998         1997         1996
=======================================================================================================
                                                                                     
Series Due August 7, 2000 -- 6.76% - 6.77%.....................     $ 27,000     $ 27,000     $ 27,000

Series Due August 31, 2000 -- 6.68%............................       20,000       20,000       20,000

Series Due September 1, 2000 -- 6.70%..........................       10,000       10,000       10,000

Series Due August 7, 2002 -- 7.02% - 7.05%.....................       63,000       63,000       63,000

Series Due July 23, 2004 -- 6.79%..............................       30,000       30,000          ---

Series Due July 18, 2018 -- 7.15%..............................       79,000          ---          ---

Series Due July 1, 2020 -- 7.00%...............................        5,671          ---          ---
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................     $234,671     $150,000     $120,000
=======================================================================================================


         Maturities of the Company's  long-term  debt during the next five years
consist of $2 million in 1999;  $169  million in 2000;  $2 million in 2001;  $65
million in 2002 and $2 million in 2003.

         The Company has previously incurred costs related to debt refinancings.
Unamortized   debt  expense  and  unamortized   loss  on  reacquired  debt,  and
unamortized  premium and discount on long-term debt are being amortized over the
life of the respective debt and are classified as deferred  charges -- other and
long-term debt, respectively, in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets.

7.       SHORT-TERM DEBT

         The  Company  borrows  on a  short-term  basis,  as  necessary,  by the
issuance of commercial paper and by obtaining short-term bank loans. The maximum
and average amounts of short-term borrowings during 1998 were $183.5 million and
$114.6 million,  respectively, at a weighted average interest rate of 5.75%. The
weighted  average  interest  rates  for 1997  and 1996  were  5.94%  and  5.63%,
respectively. Short-term debt in the amount of $119.1 million was outstanding at
December 31, 1998. The Company has the necessary  regulatory  approvals to incur
up to $400 million in  short-term  borrowings  at any one time.  At December 31,
1998,  the Company had in place a line of credit for up to $160  million,  which
was to expire  December 6, 2000. In January 1999,  the Company's  line of credit
was increased to $200 million and the Company  entered into a $75 million credit
agreement with CIBC Oppenheimer Corp. to fund the share repurchase program.  See
Note 13 of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for related discussion.

8.       PENSION AND POSTRETIREMENT BENEFIT PLANS

         During 1994,  the Company  restructured  its  operations,  reducing its
workforce by approximately 24 percent. This was accomplished through a Voluntary
Early Retirement Package ("VERP") and an enhanced  severance  package.  The VERP
included  enhanced pension benefits as well as  postemployment  medical and life
insurance benefits.

         As a result of the postemployment  benefits provided in connection with
this  workforce  reduction,  the Company  incurred  severance  costs and certain
one-time costs computed in accordance with SFAS No. 88,  "Employers'  Accounting
for  Settlements  and  Curtailments  of Defined  Benefit  Pension  Plans and for
Termination   Benefits"   and  SFAS  No.   106,   "Employers'   Accounting   for
Postretirement  Benefits  Other Than  Pensions."  In response to an  application
filed by the Company,  the OCC directed the Company to defer the one-time costs,
which had not been  offset by labor  savings  through  December  31,  1994.  The


                                       66



remaining  balance of approximately  $48.9 million was amortized over 26 months,
commencing January 1, 1995.

         The  amortization  of the  deferred  regulatory  asset was  zero,  $3.7
million and $22.6 million at December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996, respectively.

         All eligible employees of the Company are covered by a non-contributory
defined benefit pension plan. Under the plan,  retirement benefits are primarily
a  function  of both the  years  of  service  and the  highest  average  monthly
compensation for 60 consecutive months out of the last 120 months of service.

         It is the  Company's  policy  to fund  the plan on a  current  basis to
comply with the minimum required  contributions  under existing tax regulations.
The Company  made  contributions  of $51.6  million  during 1998 to increase the
Plan's funded status.  Such  contributions  are intended to provide not only for
benefits attributed to service to date, but also for those expected to be earned
in the future.

         The plan's  assets  consist  primarily of U.S.  Government  securities,
listed common stock and corporate debt.

         In addition to providing pension benefits, the Company provides certain
medical  and  life  insurance  benefits  for  retired  members  ("postretirement
benefits"). Employees retiring from the Company on or after attaining age 55 who
have met certain length of service  requirements are entitled to these benefits.
The  benefits  are  subject  to  deductibles,  co-payment  provisions  and other
limitations.  OG&E  charges to expense  the SFAS No. 106 costs and  includes  an
annual  amount  as  a  component  of   cost-of-service   in  future   ratemaking
proceedings.

         A  reconciliation  of the  funded  status of the plans and the  amounts
included in the Company's Consolidated Balance Sheets:

Projected benefit obligations are as follows:


====================================================================================================================
                                                                                           Postretirement
                                               Pension Plan                                Benefit Plans
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                1998         1997         1996               1998         1997         1996
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
Beginning obligations...........   $(320,842)   $(284,973)   $(295,573)         $ (94,199)   $ (94,272)   $(102,789)

Service cost....................      (8,272)      (6,529)      (6,493)            (2,030)      (2,144)      (2,317)

Interest cost...................     (21,766)     (20,803)     (20,909)            (5,748)      (6,365)      (6,824)

Participant contributions.......         ---          ---          ---             (1,077)        (902)      (1,157)

Plan changes....................      (3,561)         ---       (5,308)               ---          ---          ---

Actuarial gains (losses)........      (8,568)     (32,667)      20,588              6,029        3,198       11,174

Benefits paid...................      20,345       24,130       22,722              7,931        6,286        7,641

Expenses........................         231          ---          ---                ---          ---          ---
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ending obligations..............   $(342,433)   $(320,842)   $(284,973)         $ (89,094)   $ (94,199)   $ (94,272)
====================================================================================================================


                                       67



Fair value of plans' assets:


====================================================================================================================
                                                                                           Postretirement
                                               Pension Plan                                Benefit Plans
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                1998         1997         1996               1998         1997         1996
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
Beginning fair value............   $ 242,254    $ 222,912    $ 214,986          $  47,130    $  39,066    $  23,864

Actual return on plans' assets..      30,865       33,489       22,896              5,133        8,047        2,128

Employer contributions..........      51,626        9,983        7,752              5,474        5,271       19,459

Participants' contributions.....         ---          ---          ---                915          874        1,135

Benefits paid...................     (20,345)     (24,130)     (22,722)            (6,388)      (6,128)      (7,520)

Expenses........................        (231)         ---          ---                ---          ---          ---
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ending fair value...............   $ 304,169    $ 242,254    $ 222,912          $  52,264    $  47,130    $  39,066
====================================================================================================================

Funded status of plans:

====================================================================================================================
                                                                                           Postretirement
                                               Pension Plan                                Benefit Plans
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                1998         1997         1996               1998         1997         1996
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Funded status of the plans......   $ (38,264)   $ (78,588)   $ (62,061)         $ (36,830)   $ (47,069)   $ (55,206)

Unrecognized net gain (loss)....       1,435        2,295      (15,254)           (18,713)     (13,886)      (7,937)

Unrecognized prior service
  benefit (cost)................      40,448       40,047       42,986                ---          ---          ---

Unrecognized transition
  obligation....................      (3,790)      (5,053)      (6,316)            38,487       41,236       43,985
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net balance sheet asset
  (liability)...................   $    (171)   $ (41,299)   $ (40,645)         $ (17,056)   $ (19,719)   $ (19,158)
====================================================================================================================


                                       68



Net Periodic Benefit Cost:



====================================================================================================================
                                                                                           Postretirement
                                               Pension Plan                                Benefit Plans
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                1998         1997         1996               1998         1997         1996
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
Service cost....................   $   8,272    $   6,529    $   6,493          $   2,030    $   2,144    $   2,317

Interest cost...................      21,766       20,803       20,909              5,748        6,365        6,824

Return on plan assets...........     (21,443)     (19,142)     (18,742)            (4,309)      (3,445)      (2,166)

Amortization of transition
  obligation....................      (1,263)      (1,263)      (1,263)             2,749        2,749        2,749

Amortization of net gain
  (loss)........................         ---          788          ---             (2,105)        (858)          (2)

Net amount capitalized or
  deferred......................         ---          ---          ---               (613)      (1,293)      (2,157)

Amortization of unrecognized
  prior service cost............       3,159        2,939        2,939                ---          ---          ---
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net periodic benefit costs......   $  10,491    $  10,654    $  10,336          $   3,500    $   5,662    $   7,565
====================================================================================================================

Rate Assumptions:

====================================================================================================================
                                                                                           Postretirement
                                               Pension Plan                                Benefit Plans
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                      1998         1997         1996               1998         1997         1996
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discount rate.....................    6.75%        7.00%        7.75%              6.75%        7.00%        7.75%

Rate of return on plans' assets...    9.00%        9.00%        9.00%              9.00%        9.00%        9.00%

Compensation increases............    4.50%        4.50%        4.50%              4.50%        4.50%        4.50%

Assumed health care cost trend:

  Initial trend...................      N/A          N/A          N/A              7.50%        8.25%        9.00%

  Ultimate trend rate.............      N/A          N/A          N/A              4.50%        4.50%        4.50%

  Ultimate trend year.............      N/A          N/A          N/A               2007         2007         2006
====================================================================================================================
N/A - not applicable


         Assumed  health care cost trend rates have a significant  effect on the
amounts reported for the postretirement medical benefit plans.

         The effects of a one-percentage  point increase on the aggregate of the
service and interest components of the net periodic  postretirement  health care
benefits would be approximately  $0.9 million,  $1.0 million and $1.1 million at
December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996, respectively.  The effects of a one-percentage
point  decrease on the  aggregate of the service and interest  components of the
net  periodic


                                       69



postretirement  health care benefits  would be decreases of  approximately  $0.7
million,  $1.0 million and $1.0  million at December  31,  1998,  1997 and 1996,
respectively.

         The effects of a  one-percentage  point  increase on the  aggregate  of
accumulated  postretirement benefit obligation for health care benefits would be
approximately $8.2 million, $11.4 million and $9.1 million at December 31, 1998,
1997 and 1996,  respectively.  The effects of a one-percentage point decrease on
the aggregate of accumulated  postretirement  benefit obligation for health care
benefits would be decreases of approximately $6.9 million, $9.4 million and $8.5
million at December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996, respectively.

9.       REPORT OF BUSINESS SEGMENTS

         The Company's  electric utility  operations are conducted through OG&E,
an  operating   public  utility   engaged  in  the   generation,   transmission,
distribution  and  sale of  electric  energy.  The  non-utility  operations  are
conducted  through  Enogex  and  Origen.  Enogex is  engaged  in  gathering  and
processing natural gas, producing natural gas liquids,  transporting natural gas
through its pipelines in Oklahoma and Arkansas for various customers  (including
OG&E), marketing electricity,  natural gas and natural gas liquids and investing
in the  drilling  for and  production  of crude oil and natural  gas.  Origen is
engaged in  geothermal  heat pump systems and the  development  of new products.
Origen's results to date have not been material to the Company.




(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                                                1998           1997           1996
============================================================================================================
                                                                                        
Operating Information:

  Operating Revenues

    Electric utility...........................................    $1,312,078     $1,191,691     $1,200,337

    Non-utility................................................       506,471        293,608        231,427

    Intersegment revenues (A)..................................      (200,812)       (41,689)       (44,329)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $1,617,737     $1,443,610     $1,387,435
============================================================================================================
  Pre-tax Operating Income

    Electric utility...........................................    $  315,798     $  246,038     $  247,527

    Non-utility................................................        23,659         22,412         31,919
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $  339,457     $  268,450     $  279,446
============================================================================================================
  Income Tax Expense

    Electric utility...........................................    $  105,574     $   71,321     $   70,177

    Non-utility................................................         3,070          3,131          8,050
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $  108,644     $   74,452     $   78,227
============================================================================================================
  Interest Income

    Electric utility...........................................    $    2,314     $    4,531     $    3,186

    Non-utility................................................         7,046          1,993            533

    Intersegment (B)...........................................        (5,799)        (2,651)        (1,521)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $    3,561     $    3,873     $    2,198
============================================================================================================


                                       70





                                                                                        
  Interest Expense

    Electric utility...........................................    $   49,941     $   56,546     $   60,276

    Non-utility................................................        27,628         13,199          9,939

    Intersegment (B)...........................................        (5,799)        (2,651)        (1,521)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $   71,770     $   67,094     $   68,694
============================================================================================================
  Net Income

    Electric utility...........................................    $  160,338     $  120,994     $  116,869

    Non-utility................................................         5,534         11,556         16,463
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $  165,872     $  132,550     $  133,332
============================================================================================================
Investment Information:

  Identifiable Assets as of December 31

    Electric utility...........................................    $2,320,097     $2,350,782     $2,388,012

    Non-utility................................................       663,832        415,083        374,343
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $2,983,929     $2,765,865     $2,762,355
============================================================================================================
Other Information:

  Depreciation and amortization

    Electric utility...........................................    $  116,213     $  114,760     $  112,232

    Non-utility................................................        33,605         27,872         23,908
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $   49,818     $  142,632     $  136,140
============================================================================================================
  Construction Expenditures

    Electric utility...........................................    $   96,678     $  100,079     $   94,019

    Non-utility................................................       138,553         63,492         56,155
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total....................................................    $  235,231     $  163,571     $  150,174
============================================================================================================

(A) Intersegment  revenues  are  recorded at prices  comparable  to those of
    unaffiliated customers and are affected by regulatory considerations.
(B) Intersegment  interest is calculated based upon short-term loan rates and is
    reviewed and updated periodically.

10.      COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

         OG&E has entered into purchase  commitments  in connection  with OG&E's
construction  program and the  purchase of necessary  fuel  supplies of coal and
natural gas for OG&E's generating units. The Company's construction expenditures
for 1999 are estimated at $137 million.

         OG&E  acquires   natural  gas  for  boiler  fuel  under  67  individual
contracts,  some of which  contain  provisions  allowing  the  owners to require
prepayments for gas if certain minimum quantities are not taken. At December 31,
1998,  1997 and 1996,  outstanding  prepayments  for gas,  including the amounts
classified as current  assets,  under these contracts were  approximately  $15.2
million, $10.7 million and $9.9 million,  respectively.  OG&E may be required to
make additional  prepayments in subsequent  years.


                                       71



OG&E expects to recover  these  prepayments  as fuel costs if unable to take the
gas prior to the expiration of the contracts.

         At  December  31,  1998,  OG&E  held  non-cancelable  operating  leases
covering 1,495 coal hopper railcars. Rental payments are charged to fuel expense
and recovered through OG&E's tariffs and automatic fuel adjustment clauses.  The
leases have purchase and renewal  options.  Future  minimum  lease  payments due
under the railcar  leases,  assuming  the leases are  renewed  under the renewal
option are as follows:



                                                                
         (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
         1999....................  $5,130      2002....................  $ 4,841
         2000....................   5,034      2003....................    4,745
         2001....................   4,938      2004 and beyond.........   49,412
                                                                       =========
           Total Minimum Lease Payments................................  $74,100
                                                                       =========


         Rental payments under operating leases were  approximately $5.3 million
in 1998, $5.4 million in 1997 and $5.4 million in 1996.

         OG&E is  required  to  maintain  the  railcars  it has  under  lease to
transport  coal from  Wyoming and has entered  into an  agreement  with  Railcar
Maintenance Company, a non-affiliated company, to furnish this maintenance.

         OG&E had entered  into an agreement  with Central  Oklahoma Oil and Gas
Corp.  ("COOG"),  an  unrelated  third  party,  to develop a natural gas storage
facility.  Operation of the gas storage  facility proved  beneficial by allowing
OG&E to lower fuel costs by base  loading  coal  generation,  a less costly fuel
supply.  During 1996, OG&E completed  negotiations  and contracted with COOG for
gas storage  service.  Pursuant to the contract,  COOG  reimbursed  OG&E for all
outstanding cash advances and interest amounting to approximately $46.8 million.
OG&E also entered into a bridge  financing  agreement as guarantor  for COOG. In
July 1997, COOG obtained permanent  financing and issued a note in the amount of
$49.5 million.  The proceeds from the permanent  financing were applied to repay
the outstanding  bridge financing.  In connection with the permanent  financing,
the Company entered into a note purchase  agreement,  where it has agreed,  upon
the  occurrence  of a monetary  default by COOG on its permanent  financing,  to
purchase COOG's note at a price equal to the unpaid principal and interest under
the COOG note. In July 1998, Enogex also agreed to lease underground gas storage
from COOG. As part of this lease transaction, the Company agreed to make up to a
$12 million secured loan to an affiliate of COOG. As part of this agreement, the
Company has an $8 million loan outstanding  repayable in 2003 and secured by the
assets  and  stock of COOG.  This  loan is  classified  as  other  property  and
investments in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets.

         OG&E has entered  into  agreements  with four  qualifying  cogeneration
facilities  having initial terms of 3 to 32 years.  These contracts were entered
into pursuant to the Public  Utility  Regulatory  Policy Act of 1978  ("PURPA").
Stated  generally,  PURPA and the  regulations  thereunder  promulgated  by FERC
require  OG&E to purchase  power  generated  in a  manufacturing  process from a
qualified  cogeneration  facility ("QF").  The rate for such power to be paid by
OG&E was approved by the OCC. The rate generally consists of two components: one
is a rate for actual  electricity  purchased from the QF by OG&E; the other is a
capacity  charge which OG&E must pay the QF for having the  capacity  available.
However,  if no electrical  power is made available to OG&E for a period of time
(generally  three  months),


                                       72



OG&E's  obligation to pay the capacity  charge is  suspended.  The total cost of
cogeneration payments is recoverable in rates from customers.

         In  January  1998,  OG&E  filed an  application  with  the OCC  seeking
approval to revise an existing  cogeneration  contract with Mid-Continent  Power
Company ("MCPC"),  a cogeneration  plant near Pryor,  Oklahoma.  As part of this
transaction,  the  Company  agreed  to  purchase  the  stock  of  Oklahoma  Loan
Acquisition  Corporation  ("OLAC"),  the company  that owns the MCPC plant,  for
approximately $25 million.  OG&E obtained the required regulatory approvals from
the OCC,  APSC and  FERC.  If the  transaction  was  completed,  the term of the
existing  cogeneration  contract  would have been  reduced by four and  one-half
years,  which would have reduced the amounts to be paid by OG&E,  and would have
provided savings for its Oklahoma  customers,  of  approximately  $46 million as
compared  to the  existing  cogeneration  contract.  Following  an  arbitrator's
decision that the owner of the stock of OLAC could not sell the stock of OLAC to
the Company  until it had offered  such stock to a third party on the same terms
as it was offered to the Company,  the third party  purchased  the stock of OLAC
and assumed  ownership of the cogeneration  plant in October 1998. The effect of
this transaction is that OG&E's original  contract with the  cogeneration  plant
remains in place.

         During 1998, 1997 and 1996, OG&E made total payments to cogenerators of
approximately $226.5 million, $212.2 million and $210.0 million, of which $185.5
million, $176.2 million and $175.2 million,  respectively,  represented capacity
payments. All payments for purchased power, including cogeneration, are included
in the Consolidated  Statements of Income as purchased power. The future minimum
capacity payments under the contracts for the next five years are approximately:
1999 - $189  million,  2000 - $190  million,  2001 - $191  million,  2002 - $192
million and 2003 - $163 million.

         Approximately $0.5 million of the Company's  construction  expenditures
budgeted for 1999 are to comply with environmental laws and regulations.

         The  Company's  management  believes  all  of  its  operations  are  in
substantial  compliance  with  present  federal,  state and local  environmental
standards.  It is estimated that the Company's total  expenditures  for capital,
operating,  maintenance  and other costs to preserve  and enhance  environmental
quality  will  be   approximately   $41.5  million  during  1999,   compared  to
approximately  $44.6  million in 1998.  The Company  continues  to evaluate  its
environmental management systems to ensure compliance with existing and proposed
environmental  legislation  and  regulations  and to better position itself in a
competitive market.

         Beginning in 2000, OG&E will be limited in the amount of sulfur dioxide
it will be allowed to emit into the atmosphere.  In order to meet this limit the
Company has contracted  for lower sulfur coal.  OG&E believes this will allow it
to meet this limit  without  additional  capital  expenditures.  With respect to
nitrogen oxides, OG&E continues to meet the current emission standard.  However,
pending  regulations on regional  haze,  and Oklahoma's  potential for not being
able to meet the new ozone and  particulate  standards,  could  require  further
reductions in sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides.  If this happens,  significant
capital expenditures and increased operating and maintenance costs would occur.

         In 1997,  the United  States was a signatory  to the Kyoto  Protocol on
global  warming.  If ratified by the U.S.  Senate,  this  Protocol  could have a
tremendous  impact on the  Company's  operations,  by  requiring  the Company to
significantly  reduce the use of coal as a fuel source, since the Protocol would
require a seven  percent  reduction in greenhouse  gas emissions  below the 1990
level.


                                       73



         OG&E is a party to two separate  actions  brought by the EPA concerning
cleanup  of  disposal  sites  for  hazardous  waste.  OG&E was not the  owner or
operator of those sites, rather OG&E, along with many others,  shipped materials
to the owners or operators  of the sites who failed to dispose of the  materials
in an appropriate manner.  Remediation at one of these sites has been completed.
OG&E's total waste disposed at the remaining site is minimal and on February 15,
1996, OG&E elected to participate in the de minimis  settlement  offered by EPA.
One of the other potentially  responsible parties is currently contesting OG&E's
participation  as a de minimis  party.  Regardless of the outcome of this issue,
OG&E believes its ultimate liability for this site is minimal.

         On October 22,  1998,  Enogex  entered  into an option  agreement  with
certain  cancellation  provisions to purchase two gas turbine generators for use
in normal operations for approximately $26.3 million.  Absent cancellation,  the
balance is due upon receipt of the generators in 1999.

         Trigen-Oklahoma  City Energy Corp.  ("Trigen")  sued OG&E in the United
States District Court, Western District of Oklahoma, alleging numerous causes of
action, including monopolization of cooling services in violation of the Sherman
Act. On December 21, 1998,  the jury awarded  Trigen in excess of $30 million in
actual and  punitive  damages.  On February 19,  1999,  the trial court  entered
judgement in favor of Trigen as follows: (i) $6.8 million for various anti-trust
violations, (ii) $4 million for tortious interference with an existing contract,
(iii) $7 million for tortious interference with a prospective economic advantage
and (iv) $10 million in punitive damages. The trial judge, in a companion order,
acknowledged  that the portions of the judgement could be duplicative,  that the
antitrust  amounts could be tripled and that parties should address these issues
in their post-trial motions. While the outcome of an appeal is uncertain,  legal
counsel and  management  believe it is not probable that Trigen will  ultimately
succeed in preserving the verdicts. Accordingly, the Company has not accrued any
loss associated with the damages awarded. The Company believes that the ultimate
resolution of this case will not have a material adverse effect on the Company's
consolidated financial position or results of operations.

         In the normal course of business, other lawsuits, claims, environmental
actions and other  governmental  proceedings  arise  against the Company and its
subsidiaries.  Management,  after  consultation  with  legal  counsel,  does not
anticipate that liabilities arising out of other currently pending or threatened
lawsuits  and  claims  will have a  material  adverse  effect  on the  Company's
consolidated financial position or results of operations.

11.      RATE MATTERS AND REGULATION

         On February 11, 1997, the OCC issued an order that, among other things,
effectively lowered OG&E's rates to its Oklahoma retail customers by $50 million
annually  (based on a test year ended  December  31,  1995).  The OCC order also
directed  OG&E to transition to  competitive  bidding of its gas  transportation
requirements  currently  met by Enogex no later than April 30,  2000.  The order
also set annual compensation for the transportation  services provided by Enogex
at $41.3 million until competitively bid gas transportation begins.

         As discussed in Note 8 of Notes to Consolidated  Financial  Statements,
during the third quarter of 1994,  the Company  incurred  $63.4 million of costs
related to the VERP and enhanced severance  package.  Pending an OCC order, OG&E
deferred  these costs;  however,  between  August 1, and December 31, 1994,  the
amount deferred was reduced by  approximately  $14.5 million.  In response to an
application  filed by OG&E on August 9, 1994, the OCC issued an order on October
26,  1994,  that  permitted  the  Company to amortize  the  December  31,  1994,
regulatory  asset of $48.9  million over 26 months and reduced  OG&E's  electric
rates  during  such period by  approximately  $15  million  annually,


                                       74


effective  January 1995.  The labor savings from the VERP and severance  package
substantially  offset the  amortization of the regulatory  asset and annual rate
reduction of $15 million.

         On June 18,  1996,  the APSC staff and OG&E  filed a Joint  Stipulation
recommending  settlement of certain issues resulting from the APSC review of the
amounts  that OG&E pays  Enogex and  recovers  through  its fuel clause or other
tariffs for transporting natural gas to OG&E's gas-fired generating stations. On
July 11, 1996, the APSC issued an order that, among other things,  required OG&E
to refund  approximately  $4.5 million in 1996 to its Arkansas  retail  electric
customers.  The $4.5 million refund related to the  disallowance of a portion of
the  fees  paid by OG&E to  Enogex  for  such  transportation  services  and was
recorded as a provision for a potential refund prior to August 1996.

         On February  13,  1998,  the APSC Staff filed a motion for a show cause
order to review  OG&E's  electric  rates in the State of Arkansas.  The staff is
recommending a $3.1 million  annual rate  reduction  (based on a test year ended
December 31, 1996).  OG&E filed a cost of service study and has requested a $1.7
million  annual rate  increase.  A decision on this rate case is expected in the
next few months.

12.      DISCLOSURES ABOUT FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

         The fair value of Long-Term Debt and Preferred Stock is estimated based
on quoted market prices and management's estimate of current rates available for
similar  issues.  The fair  value of the Enogex  Notes is based on  management's
estimate of current rates  available for similar  issues with the same remaining
maturities.

         Indicated  below are the carrying  amounts and estimated fair values of
the Company's financial instruments as of December 31:



                                                 1998                        1997                        1996
                                         -------------------         -------------------         ------------------
                                         CARRYING      FAIR          Carrying      Fair          Carrying     Fair
(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)                    AMOUNT       VALUE          Amount       Value          Amount      Value
======================================================================================================================
                                                                                           
Long-Term Debt and Preferred Stock:

  Senior Notes........................   $567,512    $593,313        $581,524    $594,357        $644,881    $656,362

  Industrial Authority Bonds..........    135,400     135,400         135,400     135,400          79,400      79,400

  Enogex Inc. Notes...................    232,671     251,505         150,000     152,915         120,000     120,379

  Preferred Stock:
    4% - 5.34% Series - zero,
    827,828 and 831,363 shares,
    respectively......................        ---         ---          49,266      49,997          49,379      35,829
======================================================================================================================


13.      SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

         On January 15, 1999,  the Company  repurchased  3 million of its common
shares under an Advanced Share Repurchase  Agreement with CIBC Oppenheimer Corp.
The Company acquired the 3 million shares from CIBC Oppenheimer Corp. in a $80.4
million  transaction,  or $26.8125 per share,  the closing  price on January 15,
1999. The Company  immediately retired the 3 million shares in accordance with a
plan  announced in 1998 to repurchase  up to 6 million  shares over the next two
years.  The


                                       75



buyback,  when completed,  will reduce the Company's total shares outstanding by
approximately 7.4 percent,  to 74.7 million shares from 80.7 million shares. All
repurchased shares will be retired.

         Under the terms of the Advanced Share Repurchase  Program,  the Company
will bear the risk of increases and the benefit of decreases in the price of the
common shares until CIBC  Oppenheimer  Corp. has replaced the shares sold to the
Company.  CIBC Oppenheimer Corp. may replace the shares through purchases on the
open market or through privately negotiated transactions.  The Company may elect
to settle its obligations  under this  arrangement with either cash or shares of
its common stock.

         In January  1999,  the Company  increased  its  agreement for a line of
credit from $160 million to $200 million.


                                       76



Report of Independent Public Accountants
- ----------------------------------------


TO THE SHAREOWNERS OF
OGE ENERGY CORP.:

         We have  audited  the  accompanying  consolidated  balance  sheets  and
statements  of  capitalization  of OGE Energy Corp.  (an Oklahoma  corporation),
formerly  Oklahoma Gas & Electric  Company,  and its subsidiaries as of December
31, 1998,  1997 and 1996,  and the related  consolidated  statements  of income,
retained  earnings  and cash flows for the years  then  ended.  These  financial
statements   are  the   responsibility   of  the   Company's   management.   Our
responsibility  is to express an opinion on these financial  statements based on
our audits.

         We conducted our audits in accordance with generally  accepted auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

         In our opinion,  the  financial  statements  referred to above  present
fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of OGE Energy Corp. and
its  subsidiaries  as of December  31, 1998,  1997 and 1996,  and the results of
their  operations  and their cash  flows for the years then ended in  conformity
with generally accepted accounting principles.




                                    /s/ Arthur Andersen LLP
                                    Arthur Andersen LLP

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
January 21, 1999


                                       77



Report of Management
- --------------------


TO OUR SHAREOWNERS:

         The management of OGE Energy Corp. and its  subsidiaries  has prepared,
and is  responsible  for the  integrity  and  objectivity  of the  financial and
operating   information  contained  in  this  Annual  Report.  The  consolidated
financial  statements have been prepared in accordance  with generally  accepted
accounting  principles  and include  certain  amounts that are based on the best
estimates and judgments of management.

         To meet its  responsibility  for the  reliability  of the  consolidated
financial  statements and related  financial data, the Company's  management has
established and maintains an internal control structure. This structure provides
management  with reasonable  assurance in a  cost-effective  manner that,  among
other things,  assets are properly safeguarded and transactions are executed and
recorded in accordance with its  authorizations  so as to permit  preparation of
financial   statements  in  accordance   with  generally   accepted   accounting
principles.  The Company's  internal  auditors assess the  effectiveness of this
internal control  structure and recommend  possible  improvements  thereto on an
ongoing basis.

         The  Company  maintains  high  standards  in  selecting,  training  and
developing its members.  This,  combined with Company  policies and  procedures,
provides  reasonable  assurance that operations are conducted in conformity with
applicable  laws and with its  commitment  to the highest  standards of business
conduct.





         /s/ Steven E. Moore                   /s/ James R. Hatfield
         Steven E. Moore                       James R. Hatfield
         Chairman of the Board, President      Vice President and Treasurer
           and Chief Executive Officer


                                       78



Supplementary Data
- ------------------

Interim Consolidated Financial Information  (Unaudited)

         In the opinion of the  Company,  the  following  quarterly  information
includes all adjustments,  consisting of normal recurring adjustments, necessary
for a fair statement of the results of operations for such periods:




Quarter ended (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT                      Dec 31      Sep 30       Jun 30       Mar 31
PER SHARE DATA)
=============================================================================================================
                                                                                    
Operating revenues.............................    1998      $ 361,750   $ 555,999    $ 412,621    $ 287,367
                                                   1997        344,580     474,587      333,228      291,215
                                                   1996        311,515     449,224      348,644      278,052
=============================================================================================================

Operating income...............................    1998      $  25,147   $ 126,602    $  64,660    $  14,404
                                                   1997         26,680     103,268       48,049       16,001
                                                   1996         23,227     107,152       53,623       17,217
=============================================================================================================

Net income (loss)..............................    1998      $  10,230   $ 108,117    $  47,865    $    (340)
                                                   1997         12,205      89,520       31,085         (260)
                                                   1996          7,301      90,165       35,328          538
=============================================================================================================

Earnings (loss) available for common...........    1998      $  10,230   $ 108,117    $  47,865    $  (1,073)
                                                   1997         11,634      88,949       30,513         (831)
                                                   1996          6,729      89,593       34,749          (41)
=============================================================================================================

Earnings (loss) per average common share.......    1998      $    0.13   $    1.34    $    0.59    $   (0.01)
                                                   1997           0.14        1.10         0.38        (0.01)
                                                   1996           0.08        1.11         0.43         0.00
=============================================================================================================


                                       79




ITEM 9.  CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
         AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE.
         ------------------------

         Not Applicable.


                                    PART III

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT.
- -----------------------------------------------------------

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION.
- -------------------------------

ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL 
- -------------------------------------------------
         OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT.
         ---------------------

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS.
- -------------------------------------------------------

         Items 10, 11, 12 and 13 are omitted  pursuant to General  Instruction G
of Form 10-K,  since the Company  filed copies of a definitive  proxy  statement
with the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission on or about March 29, 1999.  Such
proxy  statement  is  incorporated  herein  by  reference.  In  accordance  with
Instruction  G of Form 10-K,  the  information  required  by Item 10 relating to
Executive Officers has been included in Part I, Item 4, of this Form 10-K.


                                     PART IV

ITEM 14. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES AND
- ----------------------------------------------------
         Reports on Form 8-K.
         -------------------

(A) 1. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
- ---------------------------

         The following  consolidated financial statements and supplementary data
are included in Part II, Item 8 of this Report:

o        Consolidated Balance Sheets at December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996

o        Consolidated Statements of Income for the years ended December 31,1998,
         1997 and 1996

o        Consolidated  Statements  of  Retained  Earnings  for  the years  ended
         December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996

o        Consolidated  Statements of  Capitalization at  December 31, 1998, 1997
         and 1996

o        Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended  December 31,
         1998, 1997 and 1996

o        Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

o        Report of Independent Public Accountants

o        Report of Management


                                       80



              Supplementary Data
              ------------------

o        Interim Consolidated Financial Information

2. FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULE (INCLUDED IN PART IV)                    PAGE
- -----------------------------------------------------                    ----

   Schedule II - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts                         85

   Report of Independent Public Accountants                                86

   Financial Data Schedule                                                120

         All other schedules have been omitted since the required information is
not  applicable  or is not  material,  or because  the  information  required is
included in the respective financial statements or notes thereto.

3. EXHIBITS
- -----------


EXHIBIT NO.               DESCRIPTION
- ----------                -----------
      
3.01     Copy of Restated Certificate of Incorporation.  (Filed as Exhibit
              3.01 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year ended
              December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and
              incorporated by reference herein)

3.02     By-laws.  (Filed as Exhibit 3.02 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for
              the year  ended  December  31,  1996  (File No.  1-12579) and
              incorporated by reference herein)

4.01     Copy of Trust Indenture dated October 1, 1995, from OG&E to
              Boatmen's First National Bank of Oklahoma, Trustee.
              (Filed as Exhibit 4.29 to Registration Statement No. 33-61821
              and incorporated by reference herein)

4.02     Copy of  Supplemental  Trust Indenture No. 1 dated October 16,
              1995, being a supplemental  instrument to Exhibit 4.01 hereto.
              (Filed as Exhibit 4.01 to OG&E's Form 8-K Report dated October
              23,  1995,  File No.  1-1097,  and  incorporated  by reference
              herein)

4.03     Supplemental Indenture No. 2, dated as of July 1, 1997,
              being a supplemental instrument to Exhibit
              4.01 hereto.  (Filed as Exhibit 4.01 to OG&E's Form 8-K
              filed on July 17, 1997, (File No. 1-1097) and incorporated
              by reference herein)



                                       81



      
4.04     Supplemental Indenture No. 3, dated as of April 1, 1998,
              being a supplemental instrument to Exhibit 4.01 hereto.
              (Filed as Exhibit 4.01 to OG&E's Form 8-K filed on
              April 16, 1998 (File No. 1-1097) and incorporated
              by reference herein)


10.01    Coal Supply  Agreement  dated March 1, 1973,  between OG&E and
              Atlantic  Richfield   Company.   (Filed  as  Exhibit  5.19  to
              Registration   Statement  No.  2-59887  and   incorporated  by
              reference herein)

10.02    Amendment dated April 1, 1976, to Coal Supply  Agreement dated
              March 1, 1973,  between OG&E and Atlantic  Richfield  Company,
              together with related  correspondence.  (Filed as Exhibit 5.21
              to  Registration  Statement No.  2-59887 and  incorporated  by
              reference herein)

10.03    Second Amendment dated March 1, 1978, to Coal Supply Agreement
              dated  March 1,  1973,  between  OG&E and  Atlantic  Richfield
              Company.  (Filed as Exhibit 5.28 to Registration Statement No.
              2-62208 and incorporated by reference herein)

10.04    Amendment dated June 27, 1990, between OG&E and Thunder
              Basin Coal Company, to Coal Supply Agreement
              dated March 1, 1973, between OG&E and Atlantic
              Richfield Company.  (Filed as Exhibit 10.04 to
              OG&E's Form 10-K Report for the year ended
              December 31, 1994, File No. 1-1097, and incorporated
              by reference herein) [Confidential Treatment has been
              requested for certain portions of this exhibit.]

10.05    Form of  Change  of  Control  Agreement  for  Officers  of the
              Company and OG&E. (Filed as Exhibit 10.07 to OGE Energy's Form
              10-K for the year ended  December 31, 1996 (File No.  1-12579)
              and incorporated by reference herein)

10.06    Amended   and   Restated   Stock   Equivalent   and   Deferred
              Compensation Plan for Directors, as amended. (Filed as Exhibit
              10.08 to OGE  Energy's  Form 10-K for the year ended  December
              31, 1996 (File No.  1-12579)  and  incorporated  by  reference
              herein)

10.07    Company's Stock Incentive Plan.



                                       82



      
10.08    Agreement  and Plan of  Reorganization,  dated  May 14,  1986,
              between  OG&E  and  Mustang  Fuel  Corporation.  (Attached  as
              Appendix  A  to   Registration   Statement  No.   33-7472  and
              incorporated by reference herein)

10.09    OG&E's  Restoration  of  Retirement  Income Plan,  as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.12 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.10    Company's  Restoration of Retirement Savings Plan, as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.13 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.11    OG&E's  Supplemental  Executive  Retirement  Plan, as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.15 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.12    Company's Annual Incentive Compensation Plan.

21.01    Subsidiaries of the Registrant.

23.01    Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP.

24.01    Power of Attorney.

27.01    Financial Data Schedule.

99.01    Cautionary Statement for Purposes of the "Safe Harbor"
              Provisions of the Private Securities Litigation
              Reform Act of 1995.

99.02    Description of Common Stock.



                                       83



              Executive Compensation Plans and Arrangements
              ---------------------------------------------
      
10.05    Form of  Change  of  Control  Agreement  for  Officers  of the
              Company and OG&E. (Filed as Exhibit 10.07 to OGE Energy's Form
              10-K for the year ended  December 31, 1996 (File No.  1-12579)
              and incorporated by reference herein)

10.06    Amended   and   Restated   Stock   Equivalent   and   Deferred
              Compensation Plan for Directors, as amended. (Filed as Exhibit
              10.08 to OGE  Energy's  Form 10-K for the year ended  December
              31, 1996 (File No.  1-12579)  and  incorporated  by  reference
              herein)

10.07    Company's Stock Incentive Plan.

10.09    OG&E's  Restoration  of  Retirement  Income Plan,  as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.12 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.10    Company's  Restoration of Retirement Savings Plan, as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.13 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.11    OG&E's  Supplemental  Executive  Retirement  Plan, as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.15 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.12    Company's Annual Incentive Compensation Plan.

(B)  REPORTS ON FORM 8-K
- ------------------------

         Item 5. Other Events, dated January 6, 1998.
         Item 5. Other Events, dated May 21, 1998.
         Item 7. Exhibits, dated May 21, 1998.
         Item 5. Other Events, dated June 12, 1998.
         Item 5. Other Events, dated November 20, 1998.
         Item 7. Exhibits, dated November 20, 1998.
         Item 5. Other Events, dated December 28, 1998.
         Item 7. Exhibits, dated December 28, 1998.



                                       84



                                OGE ENERGY CORP.

                 SCHEDULE II - VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS




               COLUMN A                   COLUMN B                  COLUMN C                   COLUMN D        COLUMN E
                                           BALANCE         CHARGED TO       CHARGED TO                          BALANCE
                                          BEGINNING        COSTS AND          OTHER                             END OF
DESCRIPTION                                OF YEAR          EXPENSES         ACCOUNTS         DEDUCTIONS         YEAR
- -----------                               ---------        ---------------------------        ----------       --------
                                                                                                    

  1998                                                                     (THOUSANDS)


Reserve for Uncollectible Accounts         $ 4,507          $11,507             -               $12,672         $ 3,342


  1997


Reserve for Uncollectible Accounts         $ 4,626          $ 7,334             -               $ 7,453         $ 4,507


  1996


Reserve for Uncollectible Accounts         $ 4,205          $ 7,720             -               $ 7,299         $ 4,626



                                       85



                    REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS


To OGE Energy Corp.:

         We  have  audited  in  accordance  with  generally   accepted  auditing
standards,  the  consolidated  financial  statements  of OGE  Energy  Corp.  (an
Oklahoma  Corporation),  formerly  Oklahoma  Gas &  Electric  Company,  and  its
subsidiaries  included  in this Form 10-K,  and have  issued our report  thereon
dated  January  21,  1999.  Our audits  were made for the  purpose of forming an
opinion on those  statements  taken as a whole.  The schedule  listed on Page 81
Item  14 (a) 2.  is  the  responsibility  of  the  Company's  management  and is
presented  for  purposes  of  complying   with  the   Securities   and  Exchange
Commission's  rules  and is not part of the  basic  financial  statements.  This
schedule has been subjected to the auditing  procedures applied in the audits of
the  basic  financial  statements  and,  in our  opinion,  fairly  states in all
material  respects  the  financial  data  required  to be set forth  therein  in
relation to the basic financial statements taken as a whole.




                            / s / Arthur Andersen LLP
                                  Arthur Andersen LLP

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
January 21, 1999


                                       86



                                   SIGNATURES

         Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended,  the  Registrant has duly caused this Report to be signed on its behalf
by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Oklahoma City, and
State of Oklahoma on the 26th day of March, 1999.

                                OGE ENERGY CORP.
                                  (REGISTRANT)

                               /s/ Steven E. Moore
                               By Steven E. Moore
                               Chairman of the Board
                               and Chief Executive Officer

         Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended,  this  Report has been  signed  below by the  following  persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.



         Signature                         Title                       Date
- -----------------------------     -----------------------         --------------
                                                            
/ s / Steven E. Moore
Steven E. Moore                   Principal Executive
                                    Officer and Director;         March 26, 1999

/ s / James R. Hatfield
James R. Hatfield                 Principal Financial
                                    Officer.                      March 26, 1999
/ s / Donald R. Rowlett
Donald R. Rowlett                 Principal Accounting
                                    Officer.                      March 26, 1999

         Herbert H. Champlin          Director;

         Luke R. Corbett              Director;

         William E. Durrett           Director;

         Martha W. Griffin            Director;

         Hugh L. Hembree, III         Director;

         Robert Kelley                Director;

         Bill Swisher                 Director; and

         Ronald H. White, M.D.        Director.


/ s /  Steven E. Moore
By Steven E. Moore (attorney-in-fact)                             March 26, 1999



                                       87



                                  EXHIBIT INDEX



EXHIBIT NO.        DESCRIPTION
- -----------        -----------
      
3.01     Copy of Restated Certificate of Incorporation.  (Filed as Exhibit
              3.01 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year ended
              December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and
              incorporated by reference herein)

3.02     By-laws.  (Filed as Exhibit 3.02 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for
              the year  ended  December  31,  1996  (File No.  1-12579)  and
              incorporated by reference herein)

4.01     Copy of Trust Indenture, dated October 1, 1995, from OG&E to
              Boatmen's First National Bank of Oklahoma, Trustee.
              (Filed as Exhibit 4.29 to Registration Statement No. 33-61821
              and incorporated by reference herein)

4.02     Copy of Supplemental  Trust Indenture No. 1, dated October 16,
              1995, being a supplemental  instrument to Exhibit 4.01 hereto.
              (Filed as Exhibit 4.01 to OG&E's Form 8-K Report dated October
              23,  1995,  File No.  1-1097,  and  incorporated  by reference
              herein)

4.03     Supplemental Indenture No. 2, dated as of July 1, 1997,
              being a supplemental instrument to Exhibit
              4.01 hereto.  (Filed as Exhibit 4.01 to OG&E's Form 8-K
              filed on July 17, 1997, (File No. 1-1097) and incorporated
              by reference herein)

4.04     Supplemental Indenture No. 3, dated as of April 1, 1998,
              being a supplemental instrument to Exhibit 4.01 hereto.
              (Filed as Exhibit 4.01 to OG&E's Form 8-K filed on
              April 16, 1998 (File No. 1-1097) and incorporated
              By reference herein)

10.01    Coal Supply  Agreement  dated March 1, 1973,  between OG&E and
              Atlantic  Richfield   Company.   (Filed  as  Exhibit  5.19  to
              Registration   Statement  No.  2-59887  and   incorporated  by
              reference herein)

10.02    Amendment dated April 1, 1976, to Coal Supply  Agreement dated
              March 1, 1973,  between OG&E and Atlantic  Richfield  Company,
              together with related  correspondence.  (Filed as Exhibit 5.21
              to  Registration  Statement No.  2-59887 and  incorporated  by
              reference herein)



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10.03    Second Amendment dated March 1, 1978, to Coal Supply Agreement
              dated  March 1,  1973,  between  OG&E and  Atlantic  Richfield
              Company.  (Filed as Exhibit 5.28 to Registration Statement No.
              2-62208 and incorporated by reference herein)

10.04    Amendment dated June 27, 1990, between OG&E and Thunder
              Basin Coal Company, to Coal Supply Agreement
              dated March 1, 1973, between OG&E and Atlantic
              Richfield Company.  (Filed as Exhibit 10.04 to
              OG&E's Form 10-K Report for the year ended
              December 31, 1994, File No. 1-1097, and incorporated
              by reference herein) [Confidential Treatment has been
              requested for certain portions of this exhibit.]

10.05    Form of  Change  of  Control  Agreement  for  Officers  of the
              Company and OG&E. (Filed as Exhibit 10.07 to OGE Energy's Form
              10-K for the year ended  December 31, 1996 (File No.  1-12579)
              and incorporated by reference herein)

10.06    Amended   and   Restated   Stock   Equivalent   and   Deferred
              Compensation Plan for Directors, as amended. (Filed as Exhibit
              10.08 to OGE  Energy's  Form 10-K for the year ended  December
              31, 1996 (File No.  1-12579)  and  incorporated  by  reference
              herein)

10.07    Company's Stock Incentive Plan.

10.09    OG&E's  Restoration  of  Retirement  Income Plan,  as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.12 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.10    Company's  Restoration of Retirement Savings Plan, as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.13 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.11    OG&E's  Supplemental  Executive  Retirement  Plan, as amended.
              (Filed as Exhibit 10.15 to OGE Energy's Form 10-K for the year
              ended December 31, 1996 (File No. 1-12579) and incorporated by
              reference herein)

10.12    Company's Annual Incentive Compensation Plan.

21.01    Subsidiaries of the Registrant.



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23.01    Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP.

24.01    Power of Attorney.

27.01    Financial Data Schedule.

99.01    Cautionary Statement for Purposes of the "Safe Harbor"
              Provisions of the Private Securities Litigation
              Reform Act of 1995

99.02    Description of Common Stock.



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