Duke Energy Corp

NYSE: DUK
$99.84
+$0.03 (+0.0%)
Closing Price on July 3, 2024

DUK Articles

With just six trading weeks remaining in 2015, and a dip in the market providing better purchase points, the volume of insider buying was about the highest we have seen this fall.
Duke Energy reported disappointing third-quarter financial results before the markets opened on Thursday.
Duke Energy is set to report its third-quarter financial results before the markets open on Thursday.
For the most part, and in conjunction with the Fed deferring to raise rates, the overall market sentiment this earnings season has been fairly positive, with most companies meeting or beating their...
Argus reiterated a Buy rating on Duke, but lowered its target price, based on a lower 2015 earnings per share forecast.
These five defensive stocks should be able to avoid any serious market carnage, for the most part.
Some investors are looking at value stocks, and others are going defensive. The stocks that have limited business cycles are a great focus for investors in a time of worry.
Looking at the share price data for the past 12 months, an investor could be forgiven for thinking that the solar energy business is in a downward spiral that still has a ways to drop.
Duke Energy reported disappointing second-quarter financial results Thursday before the markets opened.
Source: Frank Golhen, via Wikimedia Commons24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of some of the major companies reporting their quarterly results this week. We have included the consensus earnings...
Merrill Lynch believes the Federal Reserve rate hike could potentially act as the removal of an overhang on utilities rather than as a negative catalyst.
Since the start of July, there have been five key U.S. dividend hikes that were simply too large or too important to ignore.
Duke Energy has announced that it will increase its dividend 3.8% to a quarterly payout of $0.825.
A new research note from Deutsche Bank says that utilities are cheap, and all of the quality companies yielding 4% or more make very good sense for the last half of 2015.
It is clear that investors have been exiting the utilities sector for a solid part of the 2015 year in order to be out ahead of the coming Federal Reserve interest rate hikes.