Table of Contents :
• Stock Rating & Target Price
• Investment Thesis
• Fundamental Models Used
• Company Description
• Corporate Timeline
• Key Metrics (KPI ) and Recently Reported Earnings Review
• Business Highlights, Strategic Announcements & Outlook
• Quarter-over-Quarter (Q-o-Q) and Year-over-Year (Y-o-Y) Growth Analysis
• Key Catalysts Driving Growth
• Historical Financial Statement Analysis & CAGR Trends
• Quarterly Key Financial Ratios and Performance Metrics
• Annual Financial Performance Analysis: Horizontal and Vertical Financial Analysis, Trends
• Financial Forecasts
• Annual Forecasts: Income Statement
• Annual Forecasts: Cash Flow Statements
• Net Debt Levels
• A Closer Look at DCF: Our Assumptions and Methodology
• Terminal Value Calculation
• Target Price Analysis
• Valuation Multiples
• Supplementary Valuation Analysis: Multiples Approach
• Scenario/Sensitivity Analysis – Base Case , Bull Case ,Bear Case
• Holistic Peer Review & Trading Comps: Financial Data, Operational Metrics, and Valuation Multiples
• Implied Price Per Share
• Ownership Activity/ Insider Trades
• Ownership Summary
• An analysis of ESG Risk Rating
• Key Professionals
• Key Board Members
• Key Risks Considerations
• Analyst Ratings
• Analyst Industry Views
• Disclosures
Exelon Corporation (EXC): Rate Case Impact on Earnings, Outlook & Its 5 Key catalysts!
Exelon Corporation (EXC) reported a strong Q3 2024 performance, with adjusted EPS of $0.71 beating estimates by $0.04 and revenue of $6.15 billion exceeding projections by $76.47 million, supported by higher distribution and transmission rates, robust operational metrics, and progress across regulatory agendas. Management reaffirmed full-year EPS guidance of $2.40–$2.50 and long-term 5–7% EPS growth through 2027, underscoring confidence in its regulated utility model and $34.5 billion capital investment plan through 2027, focused on grid modernization and electrification. Key catalysts include the approval of ComEd’s $3.9 billion grid plan in Illinois, ongoing PECO settlements, and Pepco’s climate-ready grid proposal in D.C., all of which align with decarbonization and infrastructure resiliency goals. However, challenges such as regulatory uncertainties in Maryland, rising interest expenses, and evolving PJM capacity market dynamics pose risks to capital deployment and cost recovery. Exelon’s disciplined execution and strong positioning in T&D utilities provide a solid growth foundation, but current valuation reflects much of its operational strengths. As regulatory clarity and PJM reforms unfold, the strategic question is: Can Exelon effectively balance regulatory, macroeconomic, and market challenges to sustain growth while delivering on its ambitious capital and electrification goals?