The Federal Reserve has cut 75 basis points since September 2025, dragging the fed funds upper bound to 3.75%. That backdrop matters for Duke Energy (NYSE:DUK | DUK Price Prediction), a regulated electric and gas utility serving 10 million customers across the Carolinas, Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky. Lower rates ease refinancing costs on a $103 billion five-year capital plan and push income investors back toward the stock’s 3.41% yield. The question I want to answer: is that dividend bulletproof?
Dividend Snapshot
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Annual Dividend | $4.24 per share |
| Dividend Yield | 3.41% |
| Quarterly Rate | $1.065 |
| Most Recent Increase | +1.9% (Q1 2026) |
| Beta | 0.379 |
Payout Ratios Leave Comfortable Room on Earnings, Less on Reported FCF
TTM EPS of $6.50 against a $4.24 dividend pencils out to a 65% earnings payout ratio, squarely in the healthy zone for a regulated utility. Operating cash flow tells an even better story: $12.352 billion in 2025 covered $3.3 billion of common dividends 3.74x over.
| Metric | Value | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Earnings Payout Ratio | 65% | Healthy |
| OCF Dividend Coverage | 3.74x | Strong |
| FCF (post-CapEx) | -$1.67B | Capex-driven, financed |
Reported FCF is negative because CapEx ran $14.02 billion as Duke builds out generation and grid for AI load. That is the utility model: dividends are funded from cash flow while growth CapEx is funded by rate base recovery and debt.
Balance Sheet Built for the Build-Out
EBITDA of $16.48 billion and equity of $54.46 billion support the leverage. Cash jumped to $2.14B in Q1 2026, up 350% YoY, helped by $5.3 billion in strategic transactions that strengthened the credit profile.
A Streak That Keeps Climbing
| Year | Quarterly Dividend |
|---|---|
| 2026 | $1.065 |
| 2025 | $1.045 |
| 2024 | $1.045 / $1.025 |
| 2023 | $1.025 |
| 2022 | $1.005 |
The dividend has risen every year in the available record from $0.78 in 2013 to $1.065 in 2026. No cuts, no freezes.
Management Sounds Confident
CEO Harry Sideris told investors on the Q4 2025 call: “The fundamentals of our business have never been stronger… we are well-positioned to deliver 5% to 7% EPS growth through 2030.” With 2026 EPS guided to $6.55 to $6.80 and 7.6 GW of data center demand contracted, the earnings runway supports continued raises.
The Verdict: This Dividend Is Rock Solid
Dividend Safety Rating: Safe. A 65% earnings payout, 3.74x OCF coverage, a beta of 0.379, and an easing Fed that lowers Duke’s refinancing burden all line up for income investors. The setup looks attractive for income investors if rates keep drifting lower and rate cases continue clearing. The risks to monitor are regulators rejecting the 14% North Carolina rate request or data center demand underdelivers. On the numbers in front of me, this payout looks built to last.