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Dominion Energy Shares Move After NextEra’s $67 Billion Plan Seen as AI Power Play
19 May 2026
2 mins read

Dominion Energy Shares Move After NextEra’s $67 Billion Plan Seen as AI Power Play

NEW YORK, May 18, 2026, 6:04 PM EDT

  • Dominion Energy jumped 9.4% to $67.56 after NextEra Energy said it would buy the utility in an all-stock deal valued at $66.8 billion. NextEra Energy shares dropped 4.6%.
  • Dominion investors are set to get 0.8138 NextEra share for every Dominion share owned, with a one-off $360 million cash payout at close.
  • The deal still needs sign-off from shareholders, antitrust regulators, federal energy, nuclear, and state utility authorities.

Dominion Energy stock rallied Monday. NextEra Energy said it would acquire the Virginia utility in an all-stock transaction valued at $66.8 billion, one of the largest U.S. utility deals. NextEra is wagering AI data centers will boost power demand and strain the electric grid.

Timing is key here. Dominion supplies power to Northern Virginia’s “Data Center Alley,” where it had about 51 gigawatts of contracted data-center capacity in March. One gigawatt is enough for 750,000 homes. Reuters

NextEra would also expand its presence in PJM Interconnection, the largest U.S. grid operator covering 13 states. That means the Florida-based utility would get more exposure to the area with the highest growth in electricity demand from server farms.

Dominion climbed $5.83 to $67.56 in late trade, hitting $71.40 at the top. NextEra slipped to $89.04. The deal is all stock, so what Dominion gets will change as NextEra’s shares move.

Dominion shareholders are set to get about 25.5% of the new company, with NextEra holders taking the remaining 74.5%, the companies said. The merged group will operate as NextEra, use ticker NEE, and serve 10 million utility customers. The combined firm will have 110 gigawatts of generation.

NextEra CEO John Ketchum said “electricity demand is rising faster than it has in decades” and called out the importance of scale. Dominion CEO Robert Blue said the deal was “built around our customers.” Dominion Energy Newsroom

Utilities traded steady with less action. Southern Co. added 1.3%. Duke Energy gained 1.6%. The Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF was up just 0.1%. Traders seemed to view Dominion’s move as a single deal rather than something driving the whole group.

The companies put forward a plan for $2.25 billion in bill credits for Dominion customers in Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. The credits would roll out over two years after the closing. These kinds of credits are common in utility deals, where bills often drive regulatory and political pushback.

Dominion’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project was in focus. NextEra’s Ketchum told investors the company felt “very good” about the asset and called completing the project the “right thing to do.” The project cut its projected cost by $100 million to $11.4 billion and started delivering power to the grid. Reuters

The deal still faces a string of hurdles. According to a filing, the transaction will require votes from shareholders, antitrust signoff, and approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission as well as the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Utility regulators in Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina also have to sign off. If the required regulatory conditions aren’t met, NextEra could be on the hook for a $4.83 billion breakup fee to Dominion.

Dominion already had some momentum before the deal. Earlier this month, the company beat Wall Street’s first-quarter profit view, citing increased power demand in Virginia, and kept its 2026 operating earnings target of $3.45 to $3.69 per share.

Right now, the stock isn’t just moving on Dominion’s rate plans, earnings or dividend. NextEra’s share price, what regulators will allow for utility size, and how much AI drives power demand are in the mix too.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors. Follow Khadija Saeed on Google News.

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