| 
						Regulator 'stunned and terrified' after causing PG&E 
						stock surge
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [November 17, 2018]   
		By Nichola Groom and Noel Randewich 
 (Reuters) - The chief of California's top 
		utilities regulator said on Friday he was shocked to learn that 
		reassurances he made to investors about PG&E <PCG.N> caused the 
		embattled power utility's stock to surge over 40 percent in a matter of 
		minutes.
 
 PG&E's stock had slumped over 60 percent since the state's 
		deadliest-ever wildfire broke out last week on fears that without help 
		from California's government, the utility could go bankrupt should it 
		eventually be found responsible. The fire destroyed the town of Paradise 
		and has killed at least 63 people.
 
 California Public Utilities Commission President Michael Picker told 
		Reuters on Friday that utilities must be able to borrow money cheaply in 
		order to properly serve ratepayers. That echoed comments he made on an 
		investor conference call organized by Bank of America on Thursday, when 
		he said he could not imagine allowing the state's largest utility to go 
		into bankruptcy.
 
 Picker was surprised hours later on Thursday to learn that PG&E's stock 
		had surged over 40 percent in extended trading in reaction to his 
		comments.
 
 "I was stunned and terrified," Picker said. "I left the call yesterday 
		and I went back to a workshop I was in, so I didn't find out about it 
		until several hours later."
 
		
		 
		
 Picker's market-moving remarks to a private group were unusual, in part 
		because public companies and their executives must follow federal rules 
		aimed at avoiding selective disclosure of material news, but a 
		government official or other outside parties sharing an outlook on a 
		public company does not face the same obligations, experts say.
 
 PG&E shares on Friday closed up 37.54 percent at $24.40 on the New York 
		Stock Exchange. The stock is still down about 50 percent from before the 
		fire started, erasing nearly $13 billion in market capitalization.
 
 The cause of the Camp Fire that destroyed the town of Paradise remains 
		under investigation.
 
 With PG&E potentially facing mounting costs from wildfires, the 
		regulator would also consider potential options to restructure the 
		company, including separating its electricity and gas units, Picker told 
		Reuters.
 
 Keeping Wall Street interested in investing in PG&E and other California 
		utilities is key to reducing the state's carbon emissions and making the 
		power system more efficient, he said.
 
 "I don't think we over-reward people. ... But we want to make sure that 
		we can continue to keep the lights on, and be cleaner and cleaner, and 
		ideally more reliable."
 
 GRAPHIC: PG&E shares surge after Thursday's close on utility regulator's 
		comments - https://tmsnrt.rs/2QNMYF1
 
 California state Senator Bill Dodd told Reuters it was "too soon" to 
		speculate about future legislation that might provide relief to PG&E in 
		case it is found liable for the Camp Fire.
 
 Dodd sponsored legislation passed this year that lets utilities pass 
		some of the costs related to liability from wildfires on to ratepayers, 
		but the bill did not specifically provide for 2018.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
            
			Employees of Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) work in the aftermath of 
			the Camp Fire in Paradise, California, U.S., November 14, 2018. 
			REUTERS/Terray Sylvester 
            
			 
Citigroup on Friday upgraded PG&E's stock to "buy" from "neutral."
 "Given the reaction in the stock market, we think there was an appropriate level 
of urgency that something needed to be done," Citigroup analysts wrote, 
referring to the regulator's statement.
 
 The price for PG&E's more than $18 billion of bonds also rose. The price of the 
March 2034 <694308GE1=> bond was up about 5 points in afternoon trading after 
earlier trading as much as 11 points higher.
 
 PG&E's debt was pressured earlier this week after the utility borrowed $3.3 
billion under its credit lines and warned it could face liabilities in excess of 
its insurance coverage should its equipment be found to have caused the fire.
 
 The gains in bond prices came even after both Moody's Investors Service and 
Standard & Poor's cut their credit ratings on PG&E late Thursday to just one 
notch above junk bond territory and said the outlook remained negative.
 
 Fitch Ratings on Friday also downgraded the utility's long-term issuer default 
ratings.
 
 With the collapse in its bond prices this week, most of PG&E's bonds were 
trading as though they were already speculative-grade securities, although 
Friday's recovery brought many of them back in line with comparably 
low-investment-grade-rated corporate bonds.
 
 PG&E has about $500 million of floating rate notes maturing in two weeks and 
does not face another maturing security until October 2020.
 
 That October 2020 $800 million bond, with a 3.5 percent coupon <694308GT8=RRPS>, 
yielded more than 10 percent at one point in trading on Thursday, the first of 
PG&E's securities to have breached that threshold. On Friday, the October 2020 
note was up more than 4 points to 95.25 cents on the dollar, with the yield 
dropping to 6.24 percent.
 
 
 Shares of Edison International <EIX.N>, whose Southern California Edison 
subsidiary provides power in Southern California, jumped 15 percent. While 
investors view it as at less risk than PG&E to massive liabilities from 
wildfires, its stock has been volatile over the past week as a second fire 
burned in that region.
 
 The Woolsey Fire in Southern California also remains under investigation.
 
 The volatility in PG&E shares has drawn a rush of trading in options. Traders 
are betting the stock will remain prone to wild gyrations in the near term.
 
 (Reporting by Nichola Groom in Los Angeles and Noel Randewich in San Francisco; 
additional reporting by John Benny in Bengaluru and Dan Burns in New York; 
editing by Leslie Adler)
 
				 
			[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |