Markets

PG&E reportedly nears a deal to overhaul its executive board and replace the CEO

Key Points
  • The embattled utility provider is nearing a deal with hedge funds to overhaul its board and replace the CEO, Bloomberg reports.
  • PG&E reportedly agreed to hire the outgoing CEO of power agency Tennessee Valley Authority, Bill Johnson, as its new head.
  • The California company declared bankruptcy January and faces at least $30 billion in potential liabilities from multiple wild fires in the state.
PG&E crews remove power lines damaged by fire off Bille Road in Paradise, Calif., on Saturday, Nov. 10, 2018.
Jane Tyska | Digital First Media | Getty Images

Embattled PG&E is reportedly nearing a deal to overhaul its executive team.

The California-based utility company has agreed with a group of hedge funds to replace its CEO and board of directors, Bloomberg News reported Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter. PG&E will reportedly hire Bill Johnson, the outgoing CEO of Tennessee Valley Authority, as its new chief executive.

Knighthead Capital Management, Redwood Capital Management and Abrams Capital Management are among the hedge funds negotiating the PG&E executive overhaul, which Bloomberg said could be announced as soon as Wednesday.

PG&E is the state's biggest investor-owned utility, with 16 million customers across a 70,000-square-mile service area in Central and Northern California. It faces at least $30 billion in potential liabilities from California wildfires in 2017 and 2018. Many of those were allegedly started by the company's equipment, which caught the attention of state officials who question the safety of PG&E's electric system.

The company's share price plunged after announcing plans to pursue Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January. The stock closed about 2 percent lower on Tuesday. Shares are down more than 59 percent year over year.

According to a February Wall Street Journal report, PG&E delayed safety work on a century-old high-voltage transmission line that is suspected to have caused the deadliest wildfire in California's history. Earlier this week, Bloomberg reported that the stakeholders are proposing a $35 billion plan for the company to emerge from bankruptcy within a year.

— Read the entire Bloomberg report here.

— CNBC's Thomas Franck contributed reporting.