NEW YORK, July 11, 2026, 11:10 EDT
NextEra Energy NYSE:NEE finished Friday up 1% at $87.96. The company set July 24 for its first earnings report since its deal to buy Dominion Energy NYSE:D. Based on Friday’s close, the offer’s share portion was worth $71.58 per Dominion share. That put the stock-only deal spread at 2.14%, lower than the 3.07% seen the week before.
The figure might look minor, but the structure makes it matter. The merger sets the exchange at 0.8138 of a NextEra share per Dominion share, so with Friday’s price, each 1% change in NEE moves the stock part by around 72 cents a Dominion share. The July 24 release can change prices for both stocks at the same time.
NextEra lost 0.43% over the five sessions to Friday, while Dominion was up 0.47%. NEE outperformed the Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEARCA:XLU), Duke Energy NYSE:DUK and Southern Company NYSE:SO, but lagged the S&P 500, which climbed 1.2%.
| Security | July 10 close | Weekly change* |
|---|---|---|
| NextEra Energy | $87.96 | off 0.43% |
| Dominion Energy | $70.08 | up 0.47% |
| Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund | $45.41 | down 0.76% |
| Duke Energy | $125.48 | dropped 3.18% |
| Southern Company | $95.61 | fell 2.42% |
| S&P 500 | 7,575.39 | gained 1.2% |
Moves shown cover July 2, which was the last session before the July 3 Independence Day holiday, up to July 10.
Utilities held up even as the 10-year Treasury yield climbed seven basis points to 4.56%. Higher yields usually pressure utility shares since bonds look more attractive and power companies’ finance costs go up. “Current market pricing of Fed policy … is excessive,” said Joseph Purtell, portfolio manager at Neuberger Berman. Meghan Swiber, U.S. rates strategy director at Bank of America NYSE:BAC, said, “The side of the mandate the Fed is worried about right now is inflation.” U.S. Department of the Treasury
The merger math shifted as follows:
| Closing date | NEE price | Value of 0.8138 NEE share | Dominion price | Stock-only spread |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| July 2 | $88.34 | $71.89 | $69.75 | 3.07% |
| July 10 | $87.96 | $71.58 | $70.08 | 2.14% |
Cash and dividends aren’t included in the calculation. The spread is the implied stock value divided by Dominion’s market price, minus one.
The spread isn’t a straight read on whether the merger will go through. Dominion holders are set to get a $360 million cash pool, split across shares outstanding at closing, plus regular Dominion dividends until the deal finishes. The companies see the deal taking 12 to 18 months. They still need approvals from shareholders, antitrust officials, federal energy regulators, nuclear regulators, and three state utility commissions. The discount bakes in all the waiting, financing costs, and risks of extra conditions.
NextEra heads into its July 24 report with 2026 adjusted EPS guidance set at $3.92 to $4.02, profit per share minus certain items. First quarter adjusted EPS came in at $1.09, beating the 96 cents analysts polled by LSEG were looking for. CEO John Ketchum and CFO Mike Dunne will speak at 9 a.m. EDT after the company releases results before the bell.
The date also lines up with a previous operating update. On April 23, Ketchum told analysts NextEra was eyeing agreements within about three months for two Japan-backed gas power projects in Pennsylvania and Texas. The projects would provide nearly 10 gigawatts for data centers, though no customers were announced. This call happens one day after that three-month mark—not an official cut-off, but it stands as an obvious checkpoint—following Ketchum’s May comment that “electricity demand is rising faster than it has in decades.” Reuters
Next up for markets are reports at 8:30 a.m. EDT: Consumer Price Index for June hits Tuesday, Producer Price Index follows Wednesday, and retail sales land Thursday. A big inflation surprise in any of these could shift Treasury yields and utility stocks ahead of NextEra’s results.
The trade can go the other way too. If inflation comes in hot, yields could move up. A 5% drop in NextEra shares would pull the Dominion stock component down to about $68, under Dominion’s $70.08 close on Friday before adding in cash and dividends. Delays on approval, harder regulator demands or any setback in gas project deals mean investors could be holding the spread longer than expected.