Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
Two big American power companies will become one. The deal was announced today, Monday, May 18, 2026.
The companies are NextEra Energy and Dominion Energy. NextEra is buying Dominion. The deal is worth about 67 billion dollars.
Together they will be the biggest electric power company in the world. They will sell electricity to homes, shops and big computer buildings called data centres.
Data centres in the state of Virginia use a lot of power. The new company will help to give them more electricity for artificial intelligence.
- company
- a business that makes or sells things, or provides a service
- power
- energy used to make machines and lights work, often electricity
- electricity
- a form of energy that flows through wires and powers lamps, computers and other machines
- billion
- a thousand million; the number 1,000,000,000
- deal
- an agreement, especially in business, to buy, sell or join together
- buy
- to get something by paying money for it
- Virginia
- a state on the east coast of the United States
- data centre
- a large building full of computers that store and process information from the internet
Level 2 — Elementary
On Monday morning, May 18, 2026, two of the biggest electric utilities in the United States announced that they will join together. NextEra Energy, based in Florida, will buy Dominion Energy, based in Virginia, in an all-stock deal worth almost 67 billion US dollars.
An 'all-stock' deal means that NextEra does not pay cash. Instead, Dominion shareholders receive new NextEra shares. After the deal closes, NextEra shareholders will own 74.5 per cent of the combined company and Dominion shareholders will own 25.5 per cent.
NextEra is the world's largest builder of wind, solar and battery projects. Dominion provides electricity to about seven million customers across Virginia, North Carolina and parts of South Carolina, including 'Data Centre Alley' in Northern Virginia, which already uses about a quarter of all the electricity used by data centres in the United States.
John Ketchum, the chief executive of NextEra, will lead the combined group. Robert Blue, the chief executive of Dominion, will run the regulated utility part of the new company and will sit on the board. The companies say the deal will help them build enough new power plants and grid lines to keep up with the huge new demand from artificial-intelligence computing.
- utility
- a company that provides an essential public service such as electricity, gas, water or telephones
- all-stock deal
- a business takeover in which the buyer pays only with its own shares, not cash
- shareholder
- a person or organisation that owns shares in a company and therefore part of the business
- Northern Virginia
- the part of the US state of Virginia that lies just across the river from Washington DC, home to the world's densest cluster of data centres
- Data Centre Alley
- the nickname for a corridor in Loudoun and Prince William counties, Virginia, where dozens of large internet data centres are concentrated
- grid
- the network of high-voltage wires that carries electricity from power stations to homes, factories and offices
- artificial intelligence
- computer systems that can perform tasks usually thought to require human intelligence, such as understanding language or images
- chief executive
- the top manager of a company, often called the CEO
Level 3 — Intermediate
NextEra Energy and Dominion Energy on Monday, May 18, 2026 announced a definitive merger agreement under which NextEra will acquire Dominion in an all-stock transaction valued, including assumed debt and pension obligations, at roughly 67 billion US dollars. The boards of both companies have unanimously approved the deal, which is the largest electric-utility transaction since the post-Enron consolidation of the early 2000s and the biggest US power-sector deal in absolute terms since the mainstreaming of generative AI.
Under the terms, Dominion shareholders will receive 0.9300 newly issued NextEra Class A shares for each Dominion share, implying a price of about 79.50 dollars based on Friday's NextEra close — a 22 per cent premium to Dominion's 30-day volume-weighted average. The exchange ratio leaves NextEra holders with 74.5 per cent of the post-deal company and Dominion holders with 25.5 per cent. The combined entity will retain the NextEra Energy name, trade under ticker NEE on the NYSE, and keep its headquarters at Juno Beach, Florida, while operating Dominion's Richmond campus as the regulated-utility hub.
The strategic logic is unusually concentrated on data-centre load growth. Dominion Virginia Power serves the 'Data Centre Alley' corridor in Loudoun and Prince William counties, which according to the State Corporation Commission already consumes about 25 per cent of all US data-centre electricity demand and is projected to roughly double its peak load by 2030 to satisfy hyperscale AI buildouts by Amazon, Microsoft and Meta. NextEra's renewables and battery development pipeline — currently the largest in the country — provides the merger candidate with a credible path to source that incremental megawatt-hours.
Regulatory approval is the principal execution risk. The transaction requires green lights from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for licence transfers at Dominion's North Anna and Surry nuclear stations as well as NextEra's Florida fleet, and from state utility commissions in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida and seven other states. The companies said in a Monday morning conference call that they expect to close in the first half of 2027 and target 1 billion dollars in annual run-rate cost synergies by year-three. NextEra shares were marked down 4 per cent in pre-market trading on dilution concerns; Dominion shares were marked up 18 per cent.
- definitive merger agreement
- the final binding contract between a buyer and a target setting out the precise terms of a business combination
- exchange ratio
- in an all-stock deal, the number of buyer shares issued for each target share
- volume-weighted average
- an average share price over a period, weighted by the number of shares traded, used as a benchmark for fair value
- ticker
- the short code under which a company's shares trade on a stock exchange — for example NEE for NextEra Energy
Level 4 — Advanced
NextEra Energy Inc. and Dominion Energy Inc. on the morning of Monday, May 18, 2026 unveiled a definitive merger agreement valued at approximately 67 billion US dollars on an enterprise-value basis, under which NextEra will acquire Dominion in an all-stock transaction at a fixed exchange ratio of 0.9300 newly issued NextEra Class A common shares for each share of Dominion common stock. The agreed exchange ratio implies, on Friday's NextEra closing price of 85.50 dollars, a Dominion offer price of 79.52 dollars per share and a roughly 22 per cent premium to Dominion's thirty-day volume-weighted average. The combined entity will retain the NextEra Energy parent name, list as NEE on the New York Stock Exchange, headquarter at Juno Beach, Florida, and continue to operate Dominion's Richmond campus as the East Coast regulated-utility hub.
The strategic centrepiece is concentrated, AI-driven load growth at Dominion Virginia Power's service territory in Loudoun and Prince William counties — the so-called Data Centre Alley — which according to the most recent State Corporation Commission filing already accounts for roughly 25 per cent of US data-centre electricity consumption and whose peak load is forecast in DVP's 2026 Integrated Resource Plan to climb from 9.8 GW today to between 18 and 22 GW by 2030, driven principally by hyperscale AI training and inference clusters announced by Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, Meta Platforms and OpenAI under its DeployCo subsidiary. NextEra brings the largest US renewables and battery development pipeline — 81 GW under management as of Q1 2026 reporting — and a sub-investment-grade levered finance vehicle (NEER) optimised for tax-equity monetisation under the post-IRA framework, which in management's pitch deck is meant to underwrite roughly 20 GW of incremental new build in Virginia and the PJM footprint over the next decade.
Regulatory pathway is the principal execution risk and is unusually broad. The merger requires FERC Section 203 approval; Nuclear Regulatory Commission licence-transfer orders for Dominion's North Anna 1 and 2 and Surry 1 and 2 plus NextEra's Turkey Point, Seabrook and Point Beach fleet; state-commission approvals in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Iowa, Texas, New Hampshire, Wisconsin, New Mexico, Maine and the District of Columbia; antitrust clearance from the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act review; and a Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) filing on the rump Saudi PIF stake in NextEra's renewables vehicle. Management guided to a first-half-2027 close with a 1 billion dollar annual run-rate cost synergy target by 2029 and a no-mandatory-divestiture posture, though analysts at Morgan Stanley and Guggenheim have already flagged probable forced divestitures in PJM-DOM auction zones and at the FERC merger-policy 'transmission-affiliate concentration' test.
Market reaction in pre-market trading was textbook. Dominion closed Friday at 64.75 dollars and was bid at 76.45 dollars on Cboe BZX before the cash open, a 18 per cent jump; NextEra was offered at 82.10 dollars, down about 4 per cent on dilution and synergy-realisation risk. The pair-trade arbitrage spread implied by the exchange ratio was being quoted at about 165 basis points to estimated close — narrower than the median 350 bp at deal announcement for utility mega-mergers since 2010, signalling that the merger-arb community is, for now, treating regulatory passage as more likely than not. The transaction is conditioned on customary shareholder votes at both companies, scheduled for September 2026, and includes reciprocal break fees of 2 billion dollars and a force-the-vote covenant. Bond-market reaction was sharper still: NextEra's 4.55 per cent 2055 sustainability-linked notes widened 22 basis points to 152 over Treasuries, while Dominion's 3.30 per cent 2030 senior notes tightened 12 basis points on the implied uplift to NEE's senior unsecured rating.