Investment banker Scott DeGhetto will be paid about $1.5 million for a 15-month gig.

A utility dealmaker with experience in mergers, restructuring and bankruptcy will become chief financial officer for Hawaiian Electric Industries next month as HEI and its subsidiaries address legal, financial and political issues related to the deadly Maui wildfires.

HEI plans to pay investment banker Scott DeGhetto more than $1.5 million for a 15-month gig as the company鈥檚 executive vice president, chief financial officer and treasurer. Compensation includes an annual base salary of $600,000, a $600,000 signing bonus and $250,000 in moving expenses, plus eligibility to receive other benefits,.

DeGhetto, who has been working as a managing director for Moelis & Co. in Houston, is scheduled to start Oct. 1, serve as CFO until Jan. 1, 2025 and stay 鈥渋n an advisory capacity鈥 until April 2025.

HECO trucks form a line under burned electric poles
Analysts have compared HEI鈥檚 situation to that of Pacific Gas & Electric Co., which was driven into bankruptcy after a series of California wildfires and ensuing lawsuits in 2017 and 2018. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2023)

DeGhetto will replace Paul Ito, who was promoted to HEI鈥檚 CFO position in January following what the company鈥檚 2023 proxy statement called 鈥渁 broad, national search conducted by the Board and HEI leadership team.鈥 

Just 10 months later, Ito is out. Instead of guiding the holding company, Ito will take over as CFO for HEI鈥檚 Hawaiian Electric Co. subsidiary, replacing retiring CFO Tayne Sekimura on Oct. 1. Ito will replace DeGhetto as HEI’s chief financial officer in January 2025, when DeGhetto’s temp job ends, the company said.

HEI鈥檚 chief executive, Scott Seu, praised DeGhetto鈥檚 experience.

鈥淪cott brings more than 30 years of experience in the power, utility and renewable energy sectors, and has a successful track record of helping to guide companies through diverse and challenging situations and economic cycles,鈥 Seu said in Monday’s news release. 鈥淲e look forward to benefiting from his valuable insights and broad experience over the next year.鈥 

cites 鈥30 years of experience in power, utility and renewable energy investment banking focusing on mergers, acquisitions, divestitures, capital structure, restructuring and bankruptcy work.鈥

Can Company “Rig-Fence” Maui Electric?

DeGhetto joins HEI at a critical time. Company shares are trading at around $13.30, compared to a 52-week high of $43.71 before the Aug. 8 Maui fires. Rating agencies have slashed the company鈥檚 bond to junk status, meaning it will cost HEI more to borrow money to replace its destroyed infrastructure. And the company faces a growing morass of lawsuits from fire victims and shareholders.

Analysts have compared HEI鈥檚 situation to that of Pacific Gas & Electric Co., which was driven into bankruptcy after a series of wildfires and ensuing lawsuits in 2017 and 2018 in California.

鈥淚n 2019, Pacific Gas & Electric Company’s (PG&E, Baa3 first mortgage bonds, positive) $30 billion of potential wildfire liabilities far exceeded its roughly $20 billion of book equity, and early indications are that Hawaiian Electric’s potential liabilities in a worst-case scenario may be larger than its $2.4 billion of book equity,鈥 Moody鈥檚 Investor Service wrote in a report dated Sept. 8.

Still, HEI鈥檚 corporate organizational structure has raised hopes that HEI could limit liability to its island subsidiary Maui Electric. Other subsidiaries include American Savings Bank and utilities serving Oahu and Hawaii island. In a list of frequently asked questions addressed to shareholders on Aug. 18, HEI didn’t rule out the possibility that Maui Electric could be 鈥渞ing-fenced from the rest of the utility.鈥

鈥淭his is a complex legal question that will take time to work through,鈥 the company said. 鈥淭he goal is not to restructure the company.鈥

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