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Inside NextEra Energy: A Financial Snapshot of Florida's Power Giant

Wind turbines and transmission towers standing in a sunlit Florida field, representing utility-scale power generation.

A plain-English look at NextEra Energy's revenue, profit, assets, and market value, based solely on public filings and market data.

A Utility Rooted in Florida

NextEra Energy has been publicly traded since its IPO in June 1972, and it now runs one of the largest electric utility operations in the country from its headquarters in Juno Beach, Florida. The company employs approximately 17,400 people and operates in the Utilities industry, a sector known for steady demand and heavy infrastructure investment.

What the Company Actually Does

NextEra's business splits into two main pieces. Florida Power & Light, its regulated utility, is the largest rate-regulated utility in Florida, distributing power to more than 6 million customer accounts and owning 36 gigawatts of generation capacity. FP&L alone contributes roughly 70% of NextEra's consolidated operating earnings, making it the financial backbone of the whole enterprise.

The Renewable Energy Side

The other half, NextEra Energy Resources, generates and sells power across the United States and Canada. It runs nearly 40 gigawatts of generation from a mix of natural gas, nuclear, wind, and solar sources, giving the company exposure to both traditional and clean energy markets.

Revenue and Profit, By the Numbers

In fiscal year 2012, NextEra reported revenue of $14.3 billion and net income of $6.8 billion. That net income figure, relative to revenue, points to a business with substantial profit margins even after accounting for the capital-intensive nature of running power plants and transmission lines.

High-voltage transmission lines and steel towers stretching across a clear sky at golden hour.

Sizing Up the Balance Sheet

NextEra's total assets stand at $212.7 billion, a figure that reflects decades of investment in power plants, transmission infrastructure, and renewable energy projects. Utilities typically carry large asset bases because building and maintaining generation and delivery systems requires enormous upfront capital, and NextEra is no exception.

Growth Over Recent Years

Looking at the more recent trend, NextEra's revenue grew 52% from fiscal year 2020 to fiscal year 2025. That kind of expansion over a five-year window suggests a company that has been scaling its operations, likely tied to continued build-out of both its regulated utility base and its renewable generation fleet.

Where the Market Values the Company

NextEra currently carries a market capitalization of $179.0 billion, with shares recently trading at $87.44 on a 15-minute delayed basis. The stock is trading 11% below its 52-week high, a gap that simply describes where the current price sits relative to its own recent trading range.

Valuation and Dividend

The company's price-to-earnings ratio sits at 26.5, a measure of how the market is pricing its shares relative to reported earnings. NextEra also pays a dividend yielding about 2.85% annually, a detail relevant to investors who track income distributions alongside share price.

The Bottom Line

Put together, the numbers describe a large, profitable regulated utility with a growing renewable energy arm, a sizable asset base, and a market valuation in the hundreds of billions of dollars. This is factual reporting drawn from public filings and market data, not investment advice.

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