Is NextEra Energy a Buy?

In This Article:

With a roughly $100 billion market cap, NextEra Energy (NYSE: NEE) is one of the largest utilities in the United States. It's managed to grow so large by getting a lot of things right. But is this industry-leading electric utility worth buying today? Answering that question requires a look at both the company's execution and its valuation.

Winning ways

NextEra Energy owns the largest regulated electric utility in the United States, Florida Power & Light. This business serves over five million customers in the Sunshine State. It recently added Gulf Power to the mix as well, serving another 460,000 customers in northwestern Florida. The company's customers pay 30% less for energy than the national average in a state that's expected to grow its population by as much as 20% by 2030.

A man with blueprints and high voltage power lines behind him
A man with blueprints and high voltage power lines behind him

Image source: Getty Images

That combination should give NextEra plenty of room to live up to its projections of 6% to 8% earnings growth. New customers will require additional investment, and low costs should keep regulators happy, leading to easy rate case approvals. At this point NextEra expects capital spending to range between $12 billion and $14 billion a year through 2022.

Those numbers, however, are across its entire business -- in addition to its regulated operations in Florida, NextEra is also one of the largest clean energy providers in the world through its Energy Resources division. NextEra Energy Resources generates over 24 gigawatts of power, which it sells largely under long-term contracts to others. Roughly two thirds of that generation is wind, with solar pitching in another 10% or so (the rest is a mix of nuclear, natural gas, and oil). It has an additional 11 gigawatts' worth of power projects that it expects to build, further expanding its already impressive scale.

Taken together, the regulated and non-regulated businesses will not only provide impressive earnings growth, but also huge dividend growth, with near-term projections of 12% to 14% dividend growth through at least 2020. (Increasing the company's currently modest payout ratio will help to make up the difference between projected earnings growth and projected dividend growth.)

And, to top it all off, NextEra Energy has a rock-solid financial foundation. The company is investment-grade rated, with a debt to EBITDA ratio below that of most of its closest peers, and the utility's solid balance sheet suggests that it will have little trouble supporting its impressive growth plans. Although nobody can predict the future, it's a solid bet that NextEra grows earnings by its targeted 6% to 8%, and increases dividends as planned by 12% to 14%.