Stock of the week: Duke Energy

12:19 PM 29 August 2019

Summary

- Duke Energy (DUK.US) surged to fresh all-time high
- Electric utility remains key segment for the company
- Company increases investment into renewables
- 93 consecutive years of dividend payouts
- Full-year outlook upheld following Q2 earnings beat

Concerns over the condition of the global economy has drawn investors’ attention to sectors that often outperform broad market at times of an economic downturn. Duke Energy is such a stock and increased interest from traders pushed its price back to the all-time high. In this short analysis we will take a look at the company's investment plans, dividend policy and full-year forecasts.

Start investing today or test a free demo

Open real account TRY DEMO Download mobile app Download mobile app

Large-cap utility company

Duke Energy (DUK.US) is the second biggest utilities company in the S&P 500 index in terms of market capitalization. The company is divided into 3 different segments - Electric Utilities & Infrastructure, Gas Utilities & Infrastructure and Commercial Renewables. Electric Utilities & Infrastructure segment is by far the most important one for the company as it accounted for almost 90% of earnings in the second quarter of 2019. The segment operates in six states of the Southeast and Midwest regions, where it serves around a third of the population. Gas Utilities & Infrastructure segment distributes natural gas to over 1.6 million customers and is focused mostly on North and South Carolinas as well as Tennessee state. Last but not least, Commercial Renewables segment focuses on acquisition and development of wind and solar power units. The company owns 21 wind power facilities and around 100 solar power facilities in 19 states. Commercial Renewables accounted for less than 6% of income in the second quarter of 2019.

Margins of Duke Energy (DUK.US) were quite volatile this decade. However, a key point to note is that they are higher now than they were at the beginning of the decade and that they rose in the past two quarters. Source: Bloomberg, XTB Research

Major investment plan underway

However, the importance of renewables is likely to grow for the Duke Energy. The company is undertaking a major investment plan that will require a layout of around $10 billion each year until 2023. The company plans to increase renewables energy generation capacity, what can be seen as a positive development given the building regulatory trend. Namely, more and more states adopt Renewable Portfolio Standards that require utility companies to generate a certain percentage of power from renewable sources. Failure to comply with Standards is a basis to imposing a fine and some states hike penalties with each subsequent failure. The company is also investing into EV recharging infrastructure. While this is not a major investment at the moment, adoption of electric vehicles is expected to grow and recharging stations may prove to be decent and supportive revenue stream in case Duke continues to expand it. Among investments that Duke Energy has already made or plans to make over the next few years, one may also find “traditional” utility investments like improvements to electric grid or gas infrastructure.

For the major part of this millenia, Duke Energy had quite stable capital expenditures in the range of 20-30% of revenue. However, investments accelerated over the past few years and the ratio almost reach 39% in 2018. Source: Bloomberg, XTB Research

Long track record of dividend payouts

Just like other utility companies, Duke Energy has to a huge extent stable and predictable cash flows. Thanks to this, the company was able to pay a dividend for 93 consecutive years. Moreover, the dividend was raised each year for the past 13 years. The company plans to continue to hike the dividend but scale of increases is likely to be smaller due to taking on significant amounts of debt in order to finance investments mentioned earlier in the analysis. Another factor that hints at smaller dividend hikes is the payout ratio. The company targets long-term payout ratio of 65-75% and it has been exceeded in recent years therefore the company may not be eager to deliver major hikes. Quarterly dividend was raised to $0.9450 recently and it translates to a 12-month trailing dividend yield of 4%.

While a major cut to Duke Energy’s dividend coincides with the start of the global financial crisis, it was in fact due to the spin-off of the natural gas business. Following 2007 cut, dividend per share increased each year. Moreover, pace of dividend hikes exceed US price growth hinting that dividends are also growing in real terms. Source: Bloomberg, XTB Research

Full-year forecasts upheld after Q2 earnings release

Duke’s earnings report for the second quarter of 2019 surprised investors to the upside as the company showed better-than-expected results. Earnings per share for the April-June period reached $1.12 against $0.98 expected and $1.12 in the Q2 2018. Net income stood at $820 million marking a 3.8% YoY pick-up (median estimate pointed to a drop to $706.4 million). Improvement was also spotted in terms of revenue - sales increased from $5.634 billion in Q2 2018 to $5.873 billion now (+4.2% YoY). A key fact is that the company decided to uphold its full-year forecast of EPS falling into $4.80-5.20. Achieving the mid-point of the range (EPS of $5.00) would translate into EPS growth of over 6.1% YoY, the highest pace of earnings growth since 2014.

Duke Energy (DUK.US) stock caught a bid recently as concerns over the condition of the global economy mounted. In turn, a medium-term resistance zone ranging $90.50-91.20, marked by peaks from late-2017, late-2018 and the first half of this year, was broken. In turn, the price painted a fresh all-time high and the stock is now trading in an uncharted territory. Source: xStation5

Share:
Back

Join over 1 000 000 XTB Group Clients from around the world

The financial instruments we offer, especially CFDs, can be highly risky. Fractional Shares (FS) is an acquired from XTB fiduciary right to fractional parts of stocks and ETFs. FS are not a separate financial instrument. The limited corporate rights are associated with FS.
This page was not created for investors residing in Brazil. This brokerage is not authorized by the Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM) or the Brazilian Central Bank (BCB). The content of this page should not be characterized as an investment offer in Brazil or for investors residing in that country.
Losses can exceed deposits

We use cookies

By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts.

This group contains cookies that are necessary for our websites to work. They take part in functionalities like language preferences, traffic distribution or keeping user session. They cannot be disabled.

Cookie name
Description
SERVERID
userBranchSymbol Expiration date 25 October 2024
test_cookie Expiration date 24 October 2024
adobe_unique_id Expiration date 24 October 2025
__hssc Expiration date 24 October 2024
SESSID Expiration date 2 March 2024
__cf_bm Expiration date 24 October 2024
intercom-id-iojaybix Expiration date 21 July 2025
intercom-session-iojaybix Expiration date 31 October 2024
xtbCookiesSettings Expiration date 24 October 2025
TS5b68a4e1027
countryIsoCode
xtbLanguageSettings Expiration date 24 October 2025
userPreviousBranchSymbol Expiration date 24 October 2025
TS5b68a4e1027
intercom-device-id-iojaybix Expiration date 21 July 2025
__cf_bm Expiration date 24 October 2024
__cfruid
__cfruid
__cf_bm Expiration date 24 October 2024
__cf_bm Expiration date 24 October 2024
_cfuvid
adobe_unique_id Expiration date 24 October 2025
_cfuvid
TS5b68a4e1027
xtbCookiesSettings Expiration date 24 October 2025
SERVERID
TS5b68a4e1027
__hssc Expiration date 24 October 2024
test_cookie Expiration date 1 March 2024
__cf_bm Expiration date 24 October 2024
_cfuvid
_cfuvid
__cf_bm Expiration date 24 October 2024
__cf_bm Expiration date 24 October 2024

We use tools that let us analyze the usage of our page. Such data lets us improve the user experience of our web service.

Cookie name
Description
_gid Expiration date 9 September 2022
_gat_UA-98728395-1 Expiration date 8 September 2022
_gat_UA-121192761-1 Expiration date 8 September 2022
_gcl_au Expiration date 22 January 2025
_ga_CBPL72L2EC Expiration date 24 October 2026
_ga Expiration date 24 October 2026
__hstc Expiration date 22 April 2025
__hssrc
_vwo_uuid_v2 Expiration date 25 October 2025
_ga_TC79BEJ20L Expiration date 24 October 2026
_vwo_uuid Expiration date 16 October 2025
_vwo_ds Expiration date 15 November 2024
_vwo_sn Expiration date 16 October 2024
_vis_opt_s Expiration date 24 January 2025
_vis_opt_test_cookie
af_id Expiration date 23 February 2025
afUserId Expiration date 25 January 2026
af_id Expiration date 24 January 2026
AF_SYNC Expiration date 1 February 2024
_ga Expiration date 24 October 2026
_gid Expiration date 25 October 2024
_ga_CBPL72L2EC Expiration date 24 October 2026
__hstc Expiration date 22 April 2025
__hssrc
_ga_TC79BEJ20L Expiration date 24 October 2026
_gcl_au Expiration date 22 January 2025
AnalyticsSyncHistory Expiration date 31 March 2024

This group of cookies is used to show you ads of topics that you are interested in. It also lets us monitor our marketing activities, it helps to measure the performance of our ads.

Cookie name
Description
MUID Expiration date 18 November 2025
_omappvp Expiration date 6 October 2035
_omappvs Expiration date 24 October 2024
_uetsid Expiration date 25 October 2024
_uetvid Expiration date 18 November 2025
_fbp Expiration date 22 January 2025
fr Expiration date 7 December 2022
_ttp Expiration date 22 January 2025
_tt_enable_cookie Expiration date 22 January 2025
_ttp Expiration date 22 January 2025
hubspotutk Expiration date 22 April 2025
IDE Expiration date 10 November 2025
YSC
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE Expiration date 22 April 2025
hubspotutk Expiration date 22 April 2025
_omappvp Expiration date 11 February 2035
_omappvs Expiration date 1 March 2024
_uetsid Expiration date 25 October 2024
_uetvid Expiration date 18 November 2025
_ttp Expiration date 22 January 2025
MUID Expiration date 18 November 2025
_fbp Expiration date 22 January 2025
_tt_enable_cookie Expiration date 22 January 2025
_ttp Expiration date 22 January 2025
li_sugr Expiration date 30 May 2024
guest_id_marketing Expiration date 24 October 2026
guest_id_ads Expiration date 24 October 2026
guest_id Expiration date 24 October 2026
muc_ads Expiration date 24 October 2026
VISITOR_PRIVACY_METADATA Expiration date 22 April 2025
MSPTC Expiration date 18 November 2025
IDE Expiration date 18 November 2025
MSPTC Expiration date 18 November 2025

Cookies from this group store your preferences you gave while using the site, so that they will already be here when you visit the page after some time.

Cookie name
Description
bcookie Expiration date 24 October 2025
lidc Expiration date 25 October 2024
UserMatchHistory Expiration date 31 March 2024
bscookie Expiration date 1 March 2025
li_gc Expiration date 22 April 2025
bcookie Expiration date 24 October 2025
li_gc Expiration date 22 April 2025
lidc Expiration date 25 October 2024
personalization_id Expiration date 24 October 2026

This page uses cookies. Cookies are files stored in your browser and are used by most websites to help personalise your web experience. For more information see our Privacy Policy You can manage cookies by clicking "Settings". If you agree to our use of cookies, click "Accept all".

Change region and language
Country of residence
Language