From wildfires in North America and Europe to floods in Asia, extreme weather is having meaningful and varied effects on the financial results and prospects of many companies and industries. Here, our investment professionals share some of their latest thinking as we put the spotlight on utilities, insurance, hospitality and logistics, and consider the outlook for supply chains.
Utilities: Facing a tinderbox of heat-related risks
“For US utilities, the investment risk associated with severe weather-related events is much more prominent than it was a decade or two ago,” says equity investment analyst Dominic Phillips. “Wildfire risk, in particular, is fundamentally changing the return profiles and credit spreads for certain firms.”
In California and other wildfire-prone states, the sector has contended with billions of dollars in legal liabilities in recent years. Dominic expects that utilities with meaningful exposures to wildfire risk may see their cost of equity capital rise further. “All else being equal, current legal standards and state regulations suggest equity investors might reasonably expect wildfire-exposed utilities to compensate for that additional risk,” he adds.
“Wildfire mitigation has become an important, positive differentiator for some of the US credits in my coverage,” says fixed income investment analyst Julian James. “When I see a firm use safety technology and progress toward undergrounding a significant portion of the distribution lines in high wildfire risk areas, that gets my attention.”
Wildfires are, of course, just one outcome of extreme heat. Soaring temperatures also contribute toward — and directly and indirectly exacerbate — other risks, often in complex ways. For example, at times of extreme heat, water supplies can be overtaxed, and electricity demand can skyrocket. Cognisant of how this kind of perfect storm can affect utilities, our environmental, social and governance (ESG) team recently investigated water stress exposure among a selection of European firms.
Electric utilities are among the largest corporate users of water. Historically, hydroelectric power — which is largely reliant on an adequate and free-flowing freshwater supply — accounts for more than 10% of the European sector’s overall earnings. Recent droughts had left hydroelectric power plants running below optimal capacity, with reservoirs well below historical levels for an extended period.
Reduced operating capacity, temporary shutdowns and workarounds to maintain supply have taken a toll on earnings. In the first six months of 2022, for example, Portugal-based electric utilities company EDP reported a halving of its hydropower generation amid severe drought conditions, resulting in a €184M decline in earnings. Fast-forward to mid-2023, and the firm reported reservoir levels had recovered to 80% (above the historical average) alongside a strong rebound in generation.
“We found significant exposure to water-stress risk across a selection of the larger European utilities,” says energy ESG analyst Tom Crocker. “It represents a vulnerability for future operations and earnings that it’s crucial to consider alongside other more traditional financial analysis.”
Treacherous waters: European utilities face significant water stress