NEW YORK, May 23, 2026, 17:05 (EDT)
- NextEra Energy shares finished Friday at $88.55, down 1.27%. The stock is off about 5.2% from its close on May 15.
- U.S. stock markets are closed for the weekend and the NYSE won’t open Monday because of Memorial Day.
- The next trade is set to test how investors feel about NextEra’s planned Dominion Energy deal, dividend backing, and its path through regulators.
NextEra Energy finished Friday at $88.55, ending a tough week with losses as investors continued to sell the stock over its planned $66.8 billion deal for Dominion Energy. U.S. exchanges are closed Monday for Memorial Day, so trading will resume Tuesday.
Week ahead sets up as a straight test. The Dominion deal has been out for a few sessions, giving investors time to weigh it. Next up: Can NextEra win over regulators and shareholders on building out a bigger utility to handle the jump in power demand from artificial intelligence data centers?
NextEra and Dominion announced Monday they will merge in an all-stock deal, with Dominion shareholders set to get 0.8138 NextEra shares for every Dominion share. Dominion holders would end up with roughly 25.5% of the combined company, and NextEra shareholders about 74.5%. Dominion investors will be paid in NextEra stock, not cash.
The companies say the deal would form the world’s biggest regulated electric utility by market value. Regulated utilities have their rates and profits set by public regulators. The merger would create a company with around 10 million utility customers and 110 gigawatts of generation, according to the firms.
NextEra CEO John Ketchum said in the deal statement that “scale matters more than ever,” and said having a bigger platform gives the company more room to finance and build power projects. Dominion CEO Robert Blue called the transaction “built around our customers,” mentioning bill credits and ongoing investment. NextEra Energy Investor Relations
NextEra shares didn’t get a warm reception after the deal news. The stock shed 4.63% Monday, when the announcement hit, climbed back a bit Tuesday, but dropped again on Wednesday and Friday. From last Friday’s close of $93.36, NextEra finished the week down a little more than $4.80 a share.
Dominion moved the other way Friday even as the S&P 500 added 0.4% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a new high, according to the AP. The Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF was up 0.78%. Southern Co. and American Electric Power advanced, but Dominion lost ground.
Dominion’s territory in Virginia and the Carolinas is the target, with Northern Virginia’s “Data Center Alley” in focus. Reuters said Dominion holds about 51 gigawatts in data-center contracts. The deal would boost NextEra’s presence in PJM Interconnection, a 13-state grid where demand is climbing. Reuters
Analysts and policy experts are already divided on how easy the deal will go. S&P Global Market Intelligence pointed to Melius Research analysts who said the deal answers a “structural inflection” in U.S. power demand. But Rob Rains, policy research director at Washington Analysis, said it could face “some fierce resistance” in Virginia. S&P Global
NextEra’s board declared a regular quarterly dividend of $0.6232 a share on Thursday. The payout goes to shareholders of record on June 5 and is set for June 15. Fresh income could give the stock some support.
NextEra’s earnings are holding up. In April, the company posted first-quarter adjusted earnings of $1.09 a share, compared with $0.99 a year ago. Adjusted earnings strip out certain items. NextEra stuck to its 2026 adjusted EPS forecast of $3.92 to $4.02 per share and said it is aiming for the top end of that range.
But the risk is out there: now the story is about regulation as much as growth. Paul Patterson, an energy analyst at Glenrock Associates, told Reuters it comes down to “keeping rates down, and keeping the growth affordable.” Dominion’s May 21 filing said the merger will need shareholder OKs, antitrust review and approvals from both federal and state energy regulators. The company also warned those requirements might not be met on time or at all. Reuters
Traders this week are focused on fresh filings, regulator statements, and the Dominion-NextEra spread. Dominion’s stock isn’t moving on earnings at this point. It’s about whether NextEra pulls off a big merger that delivers cheaper, faster power — and whether it can show regulators that benefits go to customers, not only to shareholders.