Prev Close | 43.05 |
Open | 42.80 |
Day Low/High | 42.49 / 43.28 |
52 Wk Low/High | 29.28 / 50.54 |
Volume | 3.65M |
Prev Close | 43.05 |
Open | 42.80 |
Day Low/High | 42.49 / 43.28 |
52 Wk Low/High | 29.28 / 50.54 |
Volume | 3.65M |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 975.57B |
Market Cap | 41.77B |
P/E Ratio | 17.62 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
Prices are not, in fact, spiking for most Americans.
Numerous state laws mean built-in solar demand for the next decade
Investors would be wise to pay close attention to FERC.
Most new natural gas plants cannot compete in the marketplace.
Three reasons to buy the utility, not the turbine makers.
If these events transpire, three utilities would reap benefits.
The industry is exploding. Here's why.
The markets will become the deciding factor for most utilities.
This should help the economy but make it tough for power producers
This isn't a big deal -- and, in fact, it will create some winners
Capital investment rules seem flawed for deregulated generators.
Regulators balk at merger, hedge funds head for the door.
Behind Entergy press release, Pilgrim closure will follow Vermont Yankee without FERC changes.
Is the future bleak for generating facilities? Coal history? Nukes doomed?
They're gambling that other plants will exit so prices will rise.
The company's uncompetitive power plants are a dead weight.
If a utility's revenue is disconnected from sales, investors can benefit.
Some of the nuts and bolts as solar gets a fresh look in the U.S.
New England still relies on oil for electric power, and that raises rates for everybody.
The utility's new strategy is smart -- but not foolproof.
Whatever Obama says, change will come slowly and in small pieces.
Pollution-free wind and solar power beats stinking old plants.
Cover your shorts until August.
They need to reduce their excess pricing and popularity.
As prices rise, winners and losers switch places.
The Dow rose for the 20th straight Tuesday spurred by an upbeat housing report and better-than-expected consumer confidence data.
A recent auction foretells limp demand -- and disappointing prices -- in both.
In fact, it can actually represent a growth opportunity.