Duke Energy Corp (DUK): Is This Company Ruling Over the Electric Utility Industry?

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Dividend Growth: Since implementing their dividend program in 1926, Duke has consistently raised their dividend payouts and is widely expected to do so into the future

Acquisitions: Duke has a long track record of aggressive acquisitions, especially in its international segment, and further acquisitions could drive sales and fuel growth

Increasing Revenue per MWh: In 2009, the company charged $82.60 per MWh; currently, Duke Energy Corp (NYSE:DUK) charges $91.20 per MWh, and with further growth expected the company is presented incredible opportunity to generate additional revenue

Expansion Project: The company is nearing the completion of a 618 MW gasified coal plant in Indiana, a 825 MW clean coal power plant and a 620 MW gas-fired combined cycle plant in the Carolinas, and also has various wind projects under construction totaling 770 MW in Kansas, Pennsylvania, and Texas, all of which should add to the company’s revenue generating power

Threats:

Tightening Environmental Regulation: Because of EPA regulations, Duke has said it is likely to retire 275 MW in the Carolinas and 860 MW in Ohio; with potential to retire an additional 1.08 GW in the Carolinas, 670 MW in Indiana, and 165 MW in Kentucky (totaling 3.05 GW); any further environmental regulation could lead to even further downsizing

Competitors:

Major publicly traded competitors of Duke Energy include The Southern Company (NYSE:SO), American Electric Power Company Inc (NYSE:AEP), Exelon Corporation (NYSE:EXC), and NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE).

The Southern Company (NYSE:SO) is valued at $38.21 billion, pays out a dividend yielding 4.62%, and carries a price to earnings ratio of 18.72. The company’s holdings include Alabama, Georgia, Gulf, and Mississippi Power Companies. The business model of the company is fundamentally sound, with a TTM profit margin of 12.64%.

American Electric Power Company Inc (NYSE:AEP) is valued at $22.27 billion, pays out a dividend yielding 4.28%, and carries a price to earnings ratio of 18.04. American Electric’s reach encompasses 11 states. American Electric Power Company Inc (NYSE:AEP) currently trades within $6-$7 from all time highs, and carries a TTM profit margin of 8.14%.

Exelon Corporation (NYSE:EXC) is valued at $26.82 billion, pays out a dividend yielding 3.96%, and carries a price to earnings ratio of 28.09. Exelon Corporation (NYSE:EXC) possesses a presence across 47 states, with a generating capacity of 35,000 megawatts. Recently, the company slashed quarterly dividend payouts from $0.525 to $0.31. Fundamentally, the company’s business model is weak with a TTM profit margin of only 3.84%.

NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE) is valued at $32.11 billion, pays out a dividend yielding 3.49%, and carries a price earnings ratio of 20.73. NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE)’s geographical reach spans across 26 states and 4 Canadian provinces, with 42,000 megawatts of generating capacity. The company’s business model is strong with a TTM profit margin of 12.16%.

The Foolish Bottom Line:

Financially, Duke Energy Corp (NYSE:DUK) is relatively solid with disregard to its massive debt load. The company possesses a historic track record of solid assets growth, a growing dividend, and a steady profit margin. The major weaknesses of the company include its historic revenue decay and massive debt load. Looking forward, the company is likely to experience mild growth stemming from market trends. All in all, Duke Energy is not a screaming buy or sell at its current levels, however is a solid addition into any portfolio focused on slow and stable growth and high yielding dividends.

The article Is This Company Ruling Over the Electric Utility Industry? originally appeared on Fool.com and is written by Ryan Guenette.

Ryan Guenette has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Exelon and Southern Company. Ryan is a member of The Motley Fool Blog Network — entries represent the personal opinion of the blogger and are not formally edited.

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