Prev Close | 38.92 |
Open | 39.05 |
Day Low/High | 38.57 / 39.48 |
52 Wk Low/High | 29.28 / 50.54 |
Volume | 8.76M |
Prev Close | 38.92 |
Open | 39.05 |
Day Low/High | 38.57 / 39.48 |
52 Wk Low/High | 29.28 / 50.54 |
Volume | 8.76M |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 976.34B |
Market Cap | 39.24B |
P/E Ratio | 17.51 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
To continue our discussion, here's the outlook for renewable energy and batteries.
We are slightly overbought, but not so much so as to give a strong sell signal.
Coal and nuclear powers bet big on rising prices that didn't.
There's turbulence ahead for the energy sector.
Bulls need to sustain a break above 1856 on the Es.
It's unnerving that almost every strong stock has a poorly performing company underneath it.
I can't bring myself to buy a ticket on the bull train.
But not everyone is celebrating.
Solar's the way to go, but not house by house.
The company manages its business to profit from nontraditional utility operations.
The utilities sector is a good place to hide right now, and Exelon looks particularly promising.
Power plant deregulation may spur massive impairments and write-downs.
Now cheaper than natural gas, it is the fuel of choice for utilities.
The lack of financing plus debt and equity ratios power established energy companies.
Higher fuel prices mean higher revenue for Exelon, Entergy and NRG.
The company is repositioning for stable and healthy earnings.
Combating three pressures that could weigh down a portfolio.
North American energy prices are at the mercy of the nation's infrastructure.
U.S. power vanished because grid managers failed to plan, or their plan failed.
FirstEnergy lost 16% in 2013, but big changes are ahead.
Headwinds could hurt shareholders in 2014 and beyond.
Three shifts are painting a brighter picture for its revenues.
The root cause for more regulation appears to be individual states.
A dearth of power plants could be good news for big-fleet generators.
Different utility types are engaged in completely different businesses.