AES Corp
F:AES
Decide at what price you'd be comfortable buying and we'll help you stay ready.
|
A
|
AES Corp
F:AES
|
US |
|
C
|
China Merchants Port Holdings Co Ltd
XBER:CPM
|
HK |
|
A
|
Allegion PLC
F:60A
|
IE |
|
Stem Inc
F:5QQ0
|
US |
|
I
|
Insmed Inc
LSE:0JAV
|
US |
|
Americold Realty Trust
NYSE:COLD
|
US |
|
Invitation Homes Inc
F:4IV
|
US |
|
Mesoblast Ltd
ASX:MSB
|
AU |
|
Aflac Inc
NYSE:AFL
|
US |
|
O
|
Okinawa Cellular Telephone Co
XMUN:OCU
|
JP |
|
G
|
Gilead Sciences Inc
XMUN:GIS
|
US |
|
Reinsurance Group of America Inc
NYSE:RGA
|
US |
|
Smith & Nephew PLC
LSE:SN
|
UK |
|
LSI Industries Inc
NASDAQ:LYTS
|
US |
|
Sg Company SpA
MIL:SGC
|
IT |
|
Payoneer Global Inc
NASDAQ:PAYO
|
US |
|
Haitong Securities Co Ltd
OTC:HTNGF
|
CN |
|
B
|
Basf Se
SWB:BAS
|
DE |
|
Chemung Financial Corp
NASDAQ:CHMG
|
US |
AES Corp
AES Corp is a global power company that builds, owns, and runs electricity generation assets and power delivery systems. It sells electricity to utilities, large companies, and other grid customers, and it also works in some markets as a partner in long-term energy projects. Its business is tied to the basic need for reliable power, especially from renewable energy, natural gas, and other lower-carbon sources. AES makes money mainly by owning power plants and selling the electricity they produce, often through long-term contracts that give customers predictable supply and give AES steady cash flow. In some places it also earns fees from developing, constructing, and managing energy projects. That means AES sits in the middle of the electricity value chain: it is not just a fuel supplier or a local utility, but a builder and operator of generation assets. What makes AES different is its mix of traditional power and cleaner energy projects spread across several countries. It serves a broad set of customers, from utilities that need bulk power to companies that want direct clean-energy supply. For beginner investors, the key idea is that AES is a power infrastructure business built around owning assets, signing contracts, and delivering electricity over many years.
AES Corp is a global power company that builds, owns, and runs electricity generation assets and power delivery systems. It sells electricity to utilities, large companies, and other grid customers, and it also works in some markets as a partner in long-term energy projects. Its business is tied to the basic need for reliable power, especially from renewable energy, natural gas, and other lower-carbon sources.
AES makes money mainly by owning power plants and selling the electricity they produce, often through long-term contracts that give customers predictable supply and give AES steady cash flow. In some places it also earns fees from developing, constructing, and managing energy projects. That means AES sits in the middle of the electricity value chain: it is not just a fuel supplier or a local utility, but a builder and operator of generation assets.
What makes AES different is its mix of traditional power and cleaner energy projects spread across several countries. It serves a broad set of customers, from utilities that need bulk power to companies that want direct clean-energy supply. For beginner investors, the key idea is that AES is a power infrastructure business built around owning assets, signing contracts, and delivering electricity over many years.
Guidance Reaffirmed: AES reaffirmed its full-year 2025 guidance for adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EPS, and parent free cash flow, and also kept its long-term 5%–7% adjusted EBITDA growth target through 2027.
Strong Renewables Growth: Renewables EBITDA grew 46% year-to-date, driven by 3 GW of new capacity and larger, higher-return projects; renewables capacity is nearly 60% higher than two years ago.
Data Center Demand: AES is seeing strong demand from data center customers, with 2.2 GW of new PPAs signed year-to-date and a minimum of 4 GW expected for the full year.
Cost Savings Progress: AES has realized most of its $150M 2025 cost savings goal and is on track for a $300M annual run rate by 2026.
No Equity Issuance Planned: Management stated the company is self-funded through 2027 with no plans to issue new equity, and remains focused on maintaining investment-grade credit ratings.
Utility Rate Cases: Progress continues on Indiana and Ohio regulatory filings; in Indiana, a partial settlement was filed and AES expects rates to remain below state averages.
Capital Allocation: Over $500M will be returned to shareholders in dividends in 2025, with $1.8B earmarked for growth investments and $400M in subsidiary debt repaid.
Management