NextEra Energy (NEE) stock trades at a premium, and Wall Street largely agrees the business earns it — the debate is just whether the price is right.
NextEra Energy, Inc., NEE
The company runs two engines: Florida Power & Light (FPL), its regulated utility base, and NextEra Energy Resources, its clean-energy development arm. Both delivered in Q1 2026.
FPL grew regulatory capital employed by 8.8% year-over-year. For a regulated utility, that’s the main way value is created — expand the rate base, earn the allowed return, repeat.
Energy Resources had an even bigger quarter. Management reported a record for new renewables and storage origination, adding roughly 4.0 gigawatts to backlog. Total backlog now sits at about 28 gigawatts.
That’s a lot of future revenue visibility for a utility.
For the full year 2025, NextEra reported adjusted EPS of $3.71, up about 8.2% from the prior year and above the top end of its own guidance range. Most utility investors don’t expect that kind of growth from large regulated names.
Power demand is climbing, and NextEra is positioning itself to meet it from multiple angles.
Reuters reported in April that the company expects to finalize agreements for large gas-fired power projects linked to data-center demand. In March, Reuters reported approval for up to 10 gigawatts of gas generation in Texas and Pennsylvania.
More recently, solar-plus-storage development is being pulled forward as gas turbine lead times remain long. That gives NextEra another lane to capture the next wave of U.S. electricity infrastructure spending.
The company’s scale across both regulated and clean-energy businesses helps here — it gives NextEra an edge in procurement, project financing, and permitting that smaller developers don’t have.
Twenty-one analysts currently cover NEE. The breakdown: 1 strong buy, 16 buys, 4 holds, and zero sells, giving it a Moderate Buy consensus on MarketBeat.
The average 12-month price target is $99.20. That implies upside from current levels, but not the kind that makes the stock look cheap.
That’s the tension for investors right now. The business is strong. The growth story is intact. But the market has already priced in a lot of that quality.
NextEra still carries real risks. It’s capital-intensive and depends on continued access to low-cost financing. If interest rates stay elevated, project returns can narrow. Policy shifts or permitting delays could slow the Energy Resources pipeline.
None of these risks are unique to NextEra, but they matter more when the stock is priced at a premium.
The 28 GW backlog and continued FPL rate base expansion remain the two most closely watched metrics heading into the rest of 2026.
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