In This Article:
Shares of PG&E Corporation (NYSE: PCG) tumbled last week on the company’s equity issuance at $9.50 per share to fund its exit from bankruptcy.
Management is unlikely to announce another equity issuance, unless the stock appreciates meaningfully from the current lows, according to BofA Securities.
The PG&E Analyst
Julien Dumoulin-Smith maintained a Buy rating for PG&E, while raising the price target from $10.70 to $11.
The PG&E Thesis
Following last week’s announcement, the Street has been debating about whether PG&E will need another equity issuance in 2021, Dumoulin-Smith said in the note.
Due to “conservatism,” the BofA estimates assume that the company raises another $1 billion at $11 per share in 2021.
There is “a clear trade-off between issuing incremental equity at depressed prices and slowing down the pace of HoldCo debt paydown,” and management is unlikely to issue new equity at the current depressed levels, the analyst wrote.
PG&E’s projections also do not indicate equity needs in 2021, implying that the company will accelerate its pace of debt paydown, which adds 2 cents per share to the earnings estimates for the company, Dumoulin-Smith said, revising the estimate for 2022 from $1.14 per share to 1.16 per share.
Price Action
Shares of PG&E slipped 2.2% to $8.87 on Tuesday.
A PG&E yard in San Francisco. Photo by Peter Merholz via Wikimedia.
See more from Benzinga
-
Cantor Raises Trulieve Cannabis Price Target On Latest Florida Numbers
-
Amazon's Zoox Acquisition Can Boost Logistics, Lower Long-Term Costs, Says Bullish BofA
© 2020 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.