NEW YORK, March 1, 2026, 13:18 (EST) — Market closed.
- NextEra Energy shares bounced back Friday, gaining 2.6% and erasing much of Thursday’s decline.
- Investors wrestled with the company’s $2 billion equity-units financing, fueling a rare surge in trading volume.
- Attention now turns to the deal’s March 3 settlement date and Friday’s U.S. jobs report.
NextEra Energy, Inc. finished Friday at $93.77, up 2.63%, breaking a two-day slide as volume jumped past typical levels. Shares managed the advance despite a down session for the wider market. 1
The rebound is getting attention as investors digest a new equity-linked raise—relief for the balance sheet now, but a sign that more shares could hit the market down the road. U.S. markets are closed for the weekend, so traders will have to wait until Monday’s open to pick up the discussion. 2
NextEra has priced $2.00 billion in equity units, a hybrid that pairs debt and a forward stock purchase contract, with closing set for March 3. According to the company, proceeds are earmarked for energy and power investments, along with other corporate needs such as partial repayment of commercial paper. 2
NextEra said each $50 unit comes with a 7.375% yearly payout and represents interests in two debentures from a company subsidiary. Underwriters have been offered an option to pick up as much as $300 million more in units for over-allotments. 2
Friday’s action came on the heels of a steep decline in the previous session. NextEra shares slid 3.28% Thursday, settling at $91.99, MarketWatch data show. 3
Friday’s session coincided with the stock going ex-dividend, cutting off eligibility for the next payment to any fresh buyers. NextEra is set to pay its regular $0.6232 per share dividend on March 16, with Feb. 27 locked in as the ex-dividend date, according to its Investor Relations page.
NextEra posted stronger gains than major utility names like Southern Co., Dominion Energy, and American Electric Power in Friday’s session, according to MarketWatch data. 1
Turnover spiked, pointing to positioning moves rather than just a straightforward risk-on trade. Around 24.9 million NextEra shares changed hands—more than double the 50-day average of 9.4 million, according to MarketWatch. 1
But the downside looks obvious. Equity units end up as new shares, and once dilution risk starts to loom or interest rates tick higher—raising the cost of capital for utilities—investors may turn negative in a hurry.
After the offering wraps up on March 3, all eyes turn to Friday, when the U.S. Labor Department drops its February employment numbers at 8:30 a.m. ET on March 6. Rate-sensitive stocks could get their next real read from that report. 4