Previous close | 57.08 |
Open | 57.67 |
Bid | 57.27 x 1300 |
Ask | 57.35 x 800 |
Day's range | 56.98 - 58.76 |
52-week range | 56.98 - 88.61 |
Volume | |
Avg. volume | 9,075,490 |
Market cap | 115.938B |
Beta (5Y monthly) | 0.47 |
PE ratio (TTM) | 14.15 |
EPS (TTM) | 4.05 |
Earnings date | 26 Oct 2023 - 30 Oct 2023 |
Forward dividend & yield | 1.87 (3.28%) |
Ex-dividend date | 29 Aug 2023 |
1y target est | 84.32 |
NextEra Energy (NEE) closed at $57.29 in the latest trading session, marking a +0.37% move from the prior day.
Shares of NextEra Energy (NYSE: NEE) crashed this week to three-year lows and were trading 15% lower through 1:30 p.m. ET Friday, according to data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence. The utility giant reaffirmed its long-term earnings and dividend growth guidance through 2026, but the markets and analysts are spooked after NextEra Energy's subsidiary gave investors a nasty shock this week. NextEra Energy Partners (NYSE: NEP), a wholly owned subsidiary of NextEra Energy, slashed its annual dividend growth outlook to 5% to 8% through at least 2026, with a target growth rate of 6%.
NextEra Energy Partners (NYSE: NEP) had bold plans to grow its already high-yielding dividend (currently over 8%) by 12% to 15% annually through 2026. It assumed the company could continue to raise capital at attractive rates. NextEra Energy Partners is revising its dividend growth forecast to 5% to 8% annually through at least 2026, with a target growth rate of 6% annually.