PG&E plunges 20% after disclosing an ‘electric incident’ just before fire

Shares of utility PG&E fell 14 percent on Wednesday after the company said that if its equipment is responsible for the “Camp Fire” burning in Northern California, the cost of the damage would exceed its insurance coverage and harm its financial health.

“While the cause of the Camp Fire is still under investigation, if the Utility’s equipment is determined to be the cause, the Utility could be subject to significant liability in excess of insurance coverage,” the company said in a document filed to the Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday. That would “have a material impact on PG&E Corporation’s and the Utility’s financial condition, results of operations, liquidity, and cash flows.”

PG&E, owner of Pacific Gas & Electric Company, said its subsidiary has drawn down $3 billion from its credit line in anticipation of a fire-related liability. At least 48 people have died in the fire and a record 7,600 homes and other structures have been destroyed, according to official estimates. Hundreds of people remain missing.

“With these borrowings, the entire credit facility has been drawn and PC&G now has $3.5 billion of cash on its balance sheet,” Citi analyst Praful Mehta wrote in a note Wednesday. “We think the primary driver could be a concern around a downgrade to a non-investment grade credit rating and the liquidity requirements as a result of the downgrade.”

Though the cause of the of Camp Fire — which has engulfed some 130,000 acres in California’s Butte County — remains under investigation, the utility company also said Tuesday that it submitted an “electric incident report” to the California Public Utilities Commission on Nov. 8, just before the wildfire.

The report indicated a power failure on a transmission line in Butte Country at 6:15 a.m. PST that day. The fire was reported at approximately 6:30 a.m. PST, according to state records. The fire was 35 percent contained by Tuesday evening, Mehta added, with the cost of the damage projected to be $15 billion or more.

The outlook for PC&G is worse than originally expected, according to calculations at Evercore ISI, another Wall Street brokerage. Analyst Greg Gordon cut his price forecast on the company by more than 10 percent to $49.

We’re “lowering our 12-month target price from $55 to $49 based a $3.5 billion exposure placeholder for the Camp fire. Every $1 billion of higher exposure to Camp fire liability would impact our target by a little over $1 per share,” Gordon wrote.

PG&E’s stock is down 28 percent since Monday, on pace for its worst week since April 2001. It is down 39 percent this month, on track for its worst month in at least 46 years.

“Given the fluid nature of the situation, the risk that our cost estimate could be low or the fire could cause further damage, and the regulatory uncertainty / long time horizon (a year or more) we have until we will get clarity on a cost recovery path through the potential socialization of these costs with ratepayers that share price decline doesn’t surprise us,” he added. “The stock could trade lower until the fire is fully contained.”

— CNBC’s
Gina Francolla
and
Michael Bloom
contributed reporting.

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