I still don't understand if saying it in red is an issue or not?
It's not a serious issue, but it's informative. Some board manufacturers 'game' the Ryzen boosting algorithm by mis-reporting power the CPU is using to try and eek out a performance advantage. When they do then the power reporting metrics in HWinfo are not going to report with any meaningful accuracy. This reading helps to determine if your motherboard is one that's been 'gamed', but you have to use it correctly.
It's pretty much meaningless in normal workloads. To have it make sense you have to set your processor to full-on stock settings; voltage, clocks, PBO disabled. Then run an extremely heavy all-core workload but something realistic. So something like CineBench 20 or 23, not Prime95. Now check the power reporting deviation, it should be 100% +/- 10%.
If it is then you can basically believe the power reports in HWinfo are somewhat close to accurate. Do keep in mind this isn't instrumented readings, they're inferred readings from CPU performance telemetry. So they're not really accurate under any conditions but helpful to know something about what's going on if you're the curious sort.
There's a usfuel writeup on the HWINfo website forums explaining it, and more about how to use it correctly:
Ryzen CPUs for AM4 platform rely on external, motherboard sourced telemetry to determine their power consumption. The voltage, current and power telemetry is provided to the processor by the motherboard VRM controller through the AMD SVI2 interface. This information is consumed by the processors...
www.hwinfo.com