NEENew publishable bundle created from the supplied May 25, 2026 S&P 500 top-75 queue manifest and refreshed with current company, financial, and open-energy ecosystem sources reviewed on 2026-05-26.

NextEra Energy

NextEra Energy is a U.S. electric utility and energy infrastructure company built around Florida Power & Light and large-scale clean-energy development through NextEra Energy Resources.

Metadata

Where this company sits

Ticker
NEE
Rank snapshot
≈ 62
Sector
Utilities
Industry
Electric Utilities
Region
United States
Index
S&P 500 · Top 75 by market cap

Metrics

Scoring view

Every metric is paired with a short rationale. The numbers are deliberate, not divine.

Moat

88.0/10

FPL's regulated utility territory, customer base, grid assets, rate-base economics, and NEER's development scale create a high barrier to displacement, although regulatory and distributed-energy pressure keep the score below a near-absolute monopoly rating.

Decentralizability

42.0/10

Retail electric service and utility-scale generation are physically and legally centralized, but demand response, distributed generation, storage orchestration, microgrids, and open energy-management layers create meaningful partial decentralization vectors.

Profitability

78.0/10

NextEra reports substantial recurring earnings from regulated utility operations and energy infrastructure, with profitability supported by FPL and large-scale development, though capital intensity and financing costs remain central constraints.

Price / Earnings

22.4x

CompaniesMarketCap reported NextEra Energy's trailing P/E ratio at about 22.4 as of May 2026.

Market cap

$184.7B

CompaniesMarketCap listed NextEra Energy's market capitalization at approximately $184.68 billion in May 2026.

Freed-up capital potential

$0.0

Derived from market cap, moat resistance, decentralizability, and profitability. It is a directional estimate of value capture that could come under pressure if open alternatives compound.

Narrative

Why the company matters

A short editorial overview plus the current thesis on moat strength and decentralization pressure.

Business Mix

NextEra Energy combines a regulated Florida electric utility with a large competitive energy-development platform. Florida Power & Light supplies electricity to more than six million customer accounts, while NextEra Energy Resources develops, owns, and operates renewable generation, storage, transmission, and related energy infrastructure.

The company sits at the intersection of classic utility regulation and the capital-intensive buildout of cleaner grid infrastructure. That gives it predictable regulated earnings, but also exposes it to rate-case politics, project execution risk, financing costs, and transmission interconnection constraints.

Registry Snapshot

For Free The World, NextEra is best understood as a centralized grid and generation incumbent whose business can be pressured by distributed energy, open grid-control software, interoperable demand response, and community-scale energy coordination.

The strongest decentralization wedge is not a like-for-like replacement for utility service. It is the gradual unbundling of generation, storage, load flexibility, metering, and dispatch into local systems that utilities must interoperate with rather than exclusively control.

Moat reading

NextEra's moat is strong because FPL operates inside a regulated monopoly service territory with massive grid assets, customer density, political/regulatory relationships, and long-lived capital infrastructure. NEER adds scale in renewable origination, procurement, construction, financing, and operations that smaller developers struggle to match.

The moat is not purely technological. It depends on capital access, utility regulation, transmission availability, land and interconnection pipelines, and operational execution. Those are durable advantages, but they can be pressured by policy shifts, distributed-energy economics, and open standards that reduce switching costs around grid-edge resources.

Decentralization reading

NextEra's core services are difficult to decentralize completely because high-voltage transmission, reliability obligations, storm hardening, nuclear and gas generation, and utility-scale renewable projects require coordinated planning and large balance sheets. A household or cooperative cannot simply replace the full FPL system.

The decentralization path is modular: community solar, behind-the-meter batteries, open energy management, automated demand response, virtual power plants, microgrids, and transparent local markets can move some control away from the incumbent utility. The practical question is whether these systems remain utility-administered programs or become interoperable networks where homes, businesses, municipalities, and cooperatives can coordinate directly.

Products

Where the moat actually touches users

These pages zoom into the products and services that matter most to each company, the alternatives already nibbling at them, and 4 structured disruption concepts across the current product set.

4 disruption concepts tracked0 documented exceptions
Florida Power & Light

regulated electric utility

2 concepts

Florida Power & Light is NextEra Energy's regulated Florida electric utility, serving more than six million customer accounts through generation, transmission, distribution, billing, and reliability programs.

Open analysis
NextEra Energy Resources

renewable energy and infrastructure developer

2 concepts

NextEra Energy Resources develops, owns, and operates large-scale renewable generation, storage, transmission, and energy infrastructure across North America.

Open analysis

Technology waves

Strategic lenses

These are the repo's explicit bias terms: the technologies expected to keep making incumbents less inevitable over time.

Printable solar, localized wind, and home energy stacks

Cheaper distributed generation and better local energy management create more openings for community-scale infrastructure and self-custodied resilience.

  • Energy-related products should be viewed through interoperability and open-control surfaces.
  • Battery, charging, and home automation layers are increasingly separable from single-vendor stacks.
  • Incumbents that depend on closed energy ecosystems may look less inevitable over time.

Paper trail

Visible evidence trail

These sources shaped the scoring and writing. The site is opinionated, but it should not behave like it is improvising facts in a dark room.

NextEra Energy 2024 Annual Report

NextEra Energy · annual report

Primary filing-style source for FPL, NEER, operating segments, regulated utility exposure, financial performance, risks, and customer scale.

Reviewed 2026-05-26

About NextEra Energy

NextEra Energy · product page

Company overview source describing NextEra Energy's positioning, customer value, and energy infrastructure focus.

Reviewed 2026-05-26

Who We Are | NextEra Energy Resources

NextEra Energy Resources · product page

Product and business-unit source for NEER's role as a large U.S. energy infrastructure developer.

Reviewed 2026-05-26

NextEra Energy Market Cap

CompaniesMarketCap · market data

Market-data source for current NextEra Energy market capitalization and ranking context.

Reviewed 2026-05-26

NextEra Energy P/E Ratio

CompaniesMarketCap · market data

Market-data source for current trailing P/E ratio used in input metrics.

Reviewed 2026-05-26

Free The World

Built as a research surface for tracking how AI, open source, Bitcoin rails, and distributed manufacturing steadily make legacy pricing models look like an elaborate historical accident.

Early-2026 public-source snapshot

Open source on GitHub

Commit 2970904 ·