Regulated electric utilities typically anchor retirement portfolios with steady income. Right now, three large-cap names are trading with unusual volatility: Edison International (NYSE: EIX | EIX Price Prediction), Eversource Energy (NYSE: ES), and PG&E (NYSE: PCG) all sit well below 52-week highs, trail the S&P 500 over the past month, and carry visible overhangs that have pushed valuations to single-digit or low-teens earnings multiples.
For income-focused investors, the question is which stock offers the best risk-adjusted dip-buy. We rank them on five tests: how much the dip reflects known risks, valuation relative to the regulated utility group, dividend yield and coverage, balance-sheet flexibility, and embedded growth from rate base and load. We count down from worst to best.
3. Eversource Energy: Slow Turnaround, Still Diluting
Eversource is the cleanest regulated story after exiting offshore wind and selling Aquarion, improving its funds from operations (FFO)-to-debt ratio by over 400 basis points at Moody’s and 300 basis points at S&P over the prior 12 months. The market has yet to reward that work. Shares trade around $67.02, down 2.4% over the past month and essentially flat year-to-date, against a 52-week high of $72.08.
Q4 2025 GAAP EPS came in at $1.12 versus $1.14 estimates, and full-year 2025 non-GAAP EPS of $4.76 compared with the $4.74 estimate. Storm costs are still under prudency review, and management plans an $800 million to $1.1 billion equity raise through 2030 to fund a $26.5 billion five-year capital plan.
Valuation is fair at a 14x trailing P/E and 14x forward, with dividend yield near 4.7% and the quarterly payout lifted to $0.7875 in Q1 2026. Guidance for 2026 EPS of $4.80 to $4.95 and 5% to 7% long-term growth is solid, but dilution ahead and unresolved storm costs limit upside.
2. Edison International: Wildfire Reset With a 22-Year Dividend Streak
Edison trades at $69.39, off 1.9% over the past month, with a 52-week range of $47.73 to $76.22. The overhang is the Eaton Fire, where Southern California Edison has extended roughly 1,500 settlement offers totaling more than $500 million and acknowledged its equipment was likely associated with ignition.
Against that sits a strong operating story. Q1 2026 core EPS of $1.42 beat the $1.33 estimate on revenue of $4.10 billion, up 7.7% year over year. Management guides 5% to 7% core EPS CAGR through 2030, backed by a $38 to $41 billion capital plan, around 7% rate base growth and no new equity through 2030.
Valuation is striking: a trailing P/E of 8 and forward P/E of 11, with a 5.1% dividend yield and a 22nd consecutive year of dividend growth at a $0.8775 quarterly rate. Analyst consensus target is $75.61. The setup looks attractive for investors who can tolerate headline risk on Eaton settlement disclosures.
1. PG&E: Cheapest Stock, Biggest Growth Algorithm
PG&E is the deepest dip and the best risk-adjusted setup. Shares trade near $16.20, down 6.2% over the past month and 9.4% over the past year. This weakness comes despite strong Q1 2026: core EPS of $0.43 versus $0.33 a year earlier on revenue of $6.88 billion, with wildfire-related non-core charges shrinking to $3 million after tax.
The growth algorithm is the highest in the group. Management guides 2026 non-GAAP core EPS of $1.64 to $1.66 and 9%+ annual EPS growth from 2027 through 2030, supported by a $73 billion five-year capital plan, roughly 9% rate base CAGR reaching about $106 billion by 2030, and no common equity issuance through 2030. The data center pipeline in final engineering expanded to about 1.6 GW, with a total 10 GW pipeline, and Diablo Canyon’s NRC license was renewed on April 2, 2026, for 20 more years.
Valuation is the differentiator: a forward P/E of 10, price-to-book of 1.1, and analyst consensus target of $22.72 against 14 buy or strong-buy ratings versus 4 holds. For income investors, the dividend is just 0.89% yield today, though the quarterly payout doubled to $0.05 in Q4 2025 and management targets a 20% payout ratio by 2028.
The Verdict
PG&E wins on growth and price-to-earnings, with wildfire framework materially improved under SB 254’s $18 billion Continuation Account and clean equity outlook. Edison offers the highest yield for investors willing to underwrite Eaton Fire headlines in exchange for single-digit P/E and a 22-year dividend streak. Eversource is the safest operating story but already priced for slow growth, with dilution ahead. For retirement-focused income investors, PG&E offers the steepest discount relative to forward earnings power, Edison offers the most yield per unit of valuation, and Eversource is the most defensive but least asymmetric.