NYSE • USD • UTILITIES • REGULATED ELECTRIC
Current price is 83.3% of 52-week range
Last updated about 1 month ago
WEC Energy Group is a high-quality, regulated utility franchise with electric and gas distribution operations across Wisconsin, Illinois and other states, plus transmission exposure and a smaller non-utility renewables/infrastructure footprint. Its moat is rooted in constructive regulation, essential-service demand, and the ability to invest in grid reliability and cleaner generation with earnings largely set by allowed returns. Over the next year, large-load growth (including data-center related demand) can be a tailwind, but it also raises execution and regulatory scrutiny risk around affordability and rate-case outcomes.
Profitability remains solid for a utility: 2025 GAAP net income was $1.6B ($4.81 EPS) versus $1.5B ($4.83) in 2024, reflecting modest growth but some noise from items and weather. Management reaffirmed 2026 EPS guidance of $5.51–$5.61, implying a step-up versus trailing diluted EPS around $5.28 (TTM) and supporting the dividend. Balance-sheet leverage is meaningful (debt/equity cited around 151% on a recent quarter), which is typical for regulated utilities but makes rate outcomes and capital-market access key valuation drivers.
At about $117.6/share (April 2, 2026 close), WEC screens as a “quality at a price” utility: investors are paying up for stability, dividend growth, and guided EPS growth. Catalysts/risk points for the next 12 months are execution against 2026 guidance, the pace and terms of regulatory recovery for capex (especially large-load and clean-energy investments), and financing needs (debt/equity issuance) that can pressure near-term total return. The dividend is a key support: the quarterly payout was raised 6.7% to $0.9525 (annualized $3.81), which helps anchor returns if the stock multiple holds.
Recommendation: HOLD. The main positives are reaffirmed 2026 earnings power and a growing, well-covered dividend, while the main offsets are elevated valuation for a rate-sensitive sector and ongoing regulatory/financing risk in a heavy-capex cycle.