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Duke Energy DUK Net debt / EBITDA

Net debt / EBITDA at other companies

Xcel Energy logo
Xcel EnergyXEL
6.6×+0.6×
Dominion Energy logo
Dominion EnergyD
0.5×+0.1×
Nextra Energy logo
Nextra EnergyNEE
6.3×0.0×
Entergy logo
EntergyETR
4.9×-1.0×
CMS
CMS EnergyCMS
6.2×+0.4×
PG&E logo
PG&EPCG
6.3×+0.2×

Other financials

Income statement

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Revenue$7.4B+3.1%
Operating income$1.8B+7.2%
Net income$984.0M+9.3%
EPS (diluted)$1.25+10.6%

Balance sheet

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Cash & equivalents$442.0M-8.5%
Total debt$82.4B+2.8%
Total equity$50.9B+2.4%
Total assets$189.71B+4.5%

Cash flow

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Operating cash flow$2.9B-3.1%
CapEx$3.3B+9.5%
Free cash flow-$417.0M-870%

Valuation

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Market cap$96.46B+17.5%
Enterprise value$178.4B+10.1%
P/E19.9×+0.7×
P/S3.1×+0.4×

Profitability

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Gross margin74%
Operating margin27.2%+1.6pp
Net margin15.7%+1.3pp

Returns & leverage

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Return on equity9.6%+0.9pp
Debt / equity1.6×0.0×
Current ratio0.7×-0.2×

Where this comes from

Calculated from Duke Energy’s reported figures.

Based on the most recent quarter.

The official record: Duke Energy’s 10-Q, filed August 5, 2025, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

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Questions, answered.

What is Duke Energy's net debt / EBITDA?
Duke Energy (DUK) reported net debt / EBITDA of 5.3× in Q2 2025.
How has Duke Energy's net debt / EBITDA changed year-over-year?
Duke Energy's net debt / EBITDA decreased by 7.1% year-over-year, from 5.7× to 5.3×.
What is the long-term trend for Duke Energy's net debt / EBITDA?
Over 3 years (2021 to 2024), Duke Energy's net debt / EBITDA has grown at a 0.0% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from 23.4× to 23.4×.
What does net debt / EBITDA mean?
How many years of operating earnings it would take to pay off the company's net debt.
How do you interpret net debt / EBITDA?
Lower is safer; lenders often covenant around 3–4×. A negative value means net cash (more cash than debt), a position of strength. Spikes can reflect a temporary EBITDA dip rather than new borrowing.
How does net debt / EBITDA compare across companies?
A standard leverage yardstick across non-financial sectors; covenant thresholds vary by industry cash-flow stability.