Is Duke Energy’s Recent Slowdown Creating a Long Term Opportunity for Investors in 2025?

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Is Duke Energy’s Recent Slowdown Creating a Long Term Opportunity for Investors in 2025?

Duke Energy shares have delivered a solid 11.7% return over the past year and are up 57.8% over five years, showing that steady utility stocks can still quietly compound. Even with a flat 7 day move and a 3.8% pullback over the last month, the stock is still up 9.0% year to date. This raises the question of whether the recent cooling is a pause or a warning.

Some of this price action has been tied to shifting expectations around interest rates and income focused stocks. Utilities like Duke often trade in and out of favor as bond yields move. In addition, ongoing infrastructure investments and regulatory developments in its core service regions have helped frame the market narrative around Duke as a stable, long term cash generator rather than a high growth story.

On our valuation framework, Duke Energy currently scores 3 out of 6 on our undervaluation checks. This suggests the market may be roughly in the right ballpark but not screamingly cheap or wildly overpriced. Next, we will walk through what those checks actually look at and how traditional valuation methods stack up, before finishing with a more holistic way to think about Duke Energy’s long term value.

Find out why Duke Energy’s 11.7% return over the last year is lagging behind its peers.

The Dividend Discount Model estimates what a stock is worth by projecting all future dividend payments and discounting them back into today’s dollars. For Duke Energy, the model starts with an annual dividend per share of about $4.49 and an estimated return on equity of roughly 8.8%. However, the payout ratio is already about 101.9%, meaning Duke is paying out essentially all, and slightly more than, its earnings as dividends.

Using the standard DDM formula, the implied long term dividend growth rate comes out slightly negative at about minus 0.2%, based on the calculation of (1 minus payout ratio) multiplied by ROE. That leads to an intrinsic value estimate of roughly $63.07 per share. Compared with the current market price, this DDM output implies the stock is about 86.3% overvalued. In other words, investors appear to be paying a significant premium for Duke’s perceived stability and income profile.

Result: OVERVALUED

Our Dividend Discount Model (DDM) analysis suggests Duke Energy may be overvalued by 86.3%. Discover 901 undervalued stocks or create your own screener to find better value opportunities.

DUK Discounted Cash Flow as at Dec 2025
DUK Discounted Cash Flow as at Dec 2025

Head to the Valuation section of our Company Report for more details on how we arrive at this Fair Value for Duke Energy.

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