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If You Invested in Firstenergy Corp (FE)

Electric Services · Utilities - Regulated Electric · NYSE
Looking for the live price? See the FE quote & overview
$1,000 invested 1 Year Ago
$1,218
+21.8% total 22.2% CAGR
Bought on Jul 7, 2025 at $39.84
$1,000 invested 5 Years Ago
$1,288
+28.8% total 5.2% CAGR
Bought on Jul 6, 2021 at $37.67

What $1,000 or $10,000 in FE Would Be Worth Today

Real historical value by amount invested and how long ago
If you invested 1 year ago 5 years ago 10 years ago Since Jul 7, 2015
$1,000 $1,218 +22% $1,288 +29% $1,362 +36% $1,425 +42%
$10,000 $12,181 +22% $12,883 +29% $13,624 +36% $14,248 +42%

Based on real historical closing prices through the latest market close. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

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$1,000 Investment Over Time

FE vs S&P 500

Year-by-Year Returns

FE annual performance
Year Start Price End Price Annual Return Cumulative
2017 $30.95 $30.62 -1.1% -1.1%
2018 $30.82 $37.55 +21.8% +21.3%
2019 $36.72 $48.60 +32.4% +57.0%
2020 $47.53 $30.61 -35.6% -1.1%
2021 $29.51 $41.59 +40.9% +34.4%
2022 $41.24 $41.94 +1.7% +35.5%
2023 $42.03 $36.66 -12.8% +18.4%
2024 $37.40 $39.78 +6.4% +28.5%
2025 $39.91 $44.77 +12.2% +44.7%
2026 $45.26 $48.53 +7.2% +56.8%

About Firstenergy Corp

Electric Services · NYSE

FirstEnergy Corp. (NYSE: FE) is an investor-owned utility holding company in the U.S. electric power sector. According to company disclosures, its electric distribution companies form one of the nation's largest investor-owned electric systems, serving more than six million customers across Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia, Maryland and New York. FirstEnergy and its subsidiaries are involved in nuclear electric power generation and operate within the broader utilities sector.

The company’s structure includes electric distribution companies and transmission subsidiaries. Its transmission subsidiaries operate approximately 24,000 miles of transmission lines that connect the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions. These high-voltage lines and related infrastructure are used to move electricity across state and regional boundaries and to support the local distribution networks that deliver power to homes and businesses in the states it serves.

Business focus and operations

FirstEnergy describes itself as dedicated to integrity, safety, reliability and operational excellence. Its electric distribution companies provide regulated electric service to residential, commercial and industrial customers in its service territories. The company’s transmission subsidiaries, including entities such as FirstEnergy Transmission, LLC and Mid-Atlantic Interstate Transmission (MAIT), focus on planning, building and operating transmission facilities that strengthen the regional grid and support system reliability.

Company communications highlight projects to rebuild and modernize sections of the power grid, including high-voltage line rebuilds and substation upgrades in areas of Pennsylvania and New Jersey. These projects are intended to enhance electric service, reduce the frequency and duration of outages and support growth in the communities served by FirstEnergy’s operating companies, such as Met-Ed in Pennsylvania and Jersey Central Power & Light (JCP&L) in New Jersey.

Geographic footprint

FirstEnergy’s electric distribution footprint spans multiple mid-Atlantic and Midwestern states. The company reports serving customers in:

  • Ohio
  • Pennsylvania
  • New Jersey
  • West Virginia
  • Maryland
  • New York

Within these states, service is provided through operating companies including Ohio Edison, The Illuminating Company, Toledo Edison, Met-Ed, JCP&L and other FirstEnergy-branded utilities. These operating companies manage local distribution networks and customer relationships within defined service territories.

Transmission and grid investment

FirstEnergy’s transmission subsidiaries operate an extensive network of approximately 24,000 miles of transmission lines. Company materials describe long-term investment programs to modernize the electric grid, such as the Energize365 plan. Projects under this umbrella include rebuilding existing lines with stronger poles and modern conductors, upgrading substations with higher-capacity equipment and adding technology designed to improve power flows and support faster restoration when outages occur.

Examples disclosed by the company include the Allentown-Lyons-South Hamburg 69-kilovolt line rebuild project in Pennsylvania, led by MAIT, and a new high-voltage line project in Monmouth County, New Jersey, undertaken by JCP&L. These projects are described as supporting reliability, accommodating regional growth and making the grid more flexible in handling demand and operating conditions.

Regulatory environment and settlements

As a regulated utility holding company, FirstEnergy and its operating companies are subject to oversight by state commissions and federal regulators. In Ohio, the company has reported involvement in multiple proceedings before the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO). Company news releases describe a comprehensive settlement agreement approved by PUCO that resolves several regulatory proceedings related to riders and audits, and provides restitution, refunds and credits to customers of Ohio Edison, The Illuminating Company and Toledo Edison.

The company has also disclosed, in SEC filings and news releases, that it faces risks and uncertainties associated with government investigations and audits regarding Ohio House Bill 6 and related matters, as well as litigation and regulatory proceedings. These disclosures appear in forward-looking statement sections of Form 8-K filings and investor communications, where FirstEnergy outlines potential impacts on rates, regulatory matters and costs.

Corporate governance and incentives

FirstEnergy files current reports on Form 8-K with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to describe material events. Recent filings detail changes to executive compensation structures, including amendments to the Executive Severance Benefits Plan and the Executive Change in Control Severance Plan, as well as new forms of time-based and performance-based restricted stock unit award agreements under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan.

The company has also reported modifications to key performance indicators used in its long-term incentive compensation program. Specifically, it has described a transition from using an operating earnings per share metric to a core earnings per share metric for certain long-term awards, aligning incentive measures with how management reports performance to investors.

Financial communication and guidance

Through its Form 8-K filings, FirstEnergy regularly furnishes earnings releases and strategic and financial highlights. These filings describe the use of both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures, including “Core” earnings, and explain that management uses non-GAAP metrics to evaluate performance, manage operations and compare results over time. The company has discussed core earnings guidance and a targeted compound annual core earnings growth rate over multi-year periods in its communications to the investment community.

FirstEnergy also announces quarterly earnings teleconferences and webcasts, inviting investors, customers and other interested parties to listen to management’s discussion of financial results and outlook. Presentation materials and investor letters are posted to the company’s investor information website and referenced in SEC filings as part of its communication practices.

Community and philanthropic activities

In addition to its utility operations, FirstEnergy highlights community involvement through the FirstEnergy Foundation. Company news releases describe the Foundation’s “Gifts of the Season” program, which provides grants to nonprofit organizations in states served by FirstEnergy’s electric companies. These grants support programs that address food and housing insecurity, youth development, workforce training and other essential services in local communities.

The Foundation reports providing support to tax-exempt nonprofits that serve critical needs in communities within FirstEnergy’s operational area. Company communications note that the program has distributed grants across multiple states and that the Foundation does not accept unsolicited grant applications, instead working with selected organizations and community involvement teams.

Risk factors and forward-looking considerations

FirstEnergy’s SEC filings and news releases include detailed forward-looking statement disclaimers. The company identifies a range of factors that could affect future results, such as government investigations and agreements, regulatory developments, economic conditions, weather and natural disasters, access to capital markets, cyber and physical security risks, environmental regulations, changes in customer demand for power and tax law changes. These disclosures are intended to caution readers about uncertainties associated with projections and guidance.

Stock information and investor relevance

FirstEnergy’s common stock trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol FE. As a utility holding company with electric distribution and transmission operations across several U.S. states, the FE stock is often followed by investors interested in the utilities sector, regulated electric distribution businesses and transmission infrastructure. The company’s regular earnings releases, regulatory developments, grid investment plans and executive compensation structures are among the topics that can be examined through its public disclosures and SEC filings.

Frequently asked questions (FAQ)

The following questions and answers summarize key aspects of FirstEnergy based on available information.

Market Cap
$28.1B
Current Price
$48.53
EPS
$1.76
Revenue
$15.1B
Net Margin
6.8%
View full FE overview

Frequently Asked Questions

Firstenergy Corp investment returns

How much would $1,000 invested in Firstenergy Corp be worth today?

If you invested $1,000 in Firstenergy Corp (FE) 10 years ago on 2016-07-06, your investment would be worth $1,362 today, representing a +36.2% total return, growing at a compounded rate of 3.1% per year (CAGR).

Has Firstenergy Corp outperformed the S&P 500?

Over the past 10 years, FE returned +36.2% compared to +255.2% for the S&P 500, underperforming the benchmark by 219.0 percentage points.

What is Firstenergy Corp's average annual return?

The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of FE over the past 10 years is 3.1%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — FE's best recent year was 2021 (+40.9%) and worst was 2020 (-35.6%).

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