ED
$114.90
Consolidated Edison, Inc., through its subsidiaries, engages in the regulated electric, gas, and steam delivery businesses in the United States.
Historical Price
Peer Comparison
Whystock Valuation Model
Fundamentals
Consolidated Edison, Inc., through its subsidiaries, engages in the regulated electric, gas, and steam delivery businesses in the United States. The company offers electric services to approximately 3.7 million customers in New York City and Westches...
Recent News
Assessing Consolidated Edison (ED) Valuation After Q4 Beat And New US$3.5b Credit Facility
Why Consolidated Edison’s latest earnings and financing moves matter Consolidated Edison (ED) has attracted fresh attention after Q4 2025 earnings and revenue topped analyst expectations, followed by a new US$3.5b revolving credit facility that reshapes its liquidity and overall funding flexibility. See our latest analysis for Consolidated Edison. The latest credit facility and earnings beat come alongside a share price of US$114.88, with a 90 day share price return of 15.6% and a 5 year...
Utilities Are Wartime Havens. 4 Stocks With High Dividend Yields and Growth.
One reason for utilities’ success is investors appear to be gravitating toward defensive, hard-asset stocks.
Consolidated Edison (ED) Price Target Increased to $117
Consolidated Edison, Inc. (NYSE:ED) is included among the 11 Best Utility Stocks to Buy for Dividends in 2026. Consolidated Edison, Inc. (NYSE:ED) operates one of the largest energy delivery systems in the world, providing electric, gas, and steam service to the 10 million people living in New York City and Westchester County. On March 5, […]
How Is Consolidated Edison's Stock Performance Compared to Other Utility Stocks?
Consolidated Edison has underperformed other utility stocks over the past year, and analysts remain skeptical about the stock’s growth potential.
What Happens to Dividend Income When the Next Recession Hits
Recession fears have a way of making income investors second-guess everything, and if dividends are paid out of cash flow, and cash flow shrinks during economic downturns, it only seems logical that dividend income will fall right alongside stock prices. This concern is understandable, especially for retirees who depend on those payouts to cover real ... What Happens to Dividend Income When the Next Recession Hits