Topic: How To Invest

Q: Hello, Pat. I wonder if you would comment on the impact of the California wildfires on PG&E? News articles are questioning the company’s ability to survive if it’s found liable for the fires. I do not own PG&E and I do not recall that you ever recommended investing in the company. However, I am interested in how such liabilities could affect other utilities that I do own such as TransCanada. I have always considered Canadian utilities to be a “safer” part of my portfolio, but that may be misguided if a random event, such as wildfires, could bankrupt them. Regards.

Article Excerpt

A: PG&E Corp., $26.53, symbol PCG on New York (Shares outstanding: 517.2 million; Market cap: $14.1 billion; www.pge.com), is a holding company for Pacific Gas and Electric Company, among other nonutility subsidiaries. The company supplies electricity and gas to most of Northern and Central California (population 16 million). It has about 5.4 million electricity and 4.5 million gas customers. PG&E stock took a big price hit last month amid investor concerns that the utility could face significant costs related to the big Camp Fire in Northern California. That fire was the deadliest in state history, killing more than 50 people. The company is already facing huge potential liability costs from 2017’s wildfires. In fact, more than 800 civil lawsuits related to last year’s fires have been filed against PG&E. State investigators have concluded the company’s equipment helped spark at least 16 of the 2017 fires. This year, PG&E disclosed that a problem occurred on one of its high-voltage power lines in Northern California,…