PEG

Public Service Enterprise Group / PSEG Price

Closed
PEG
$79.51
+$1.03(+1.31%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-23 00:07 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-23 00:07, Public Service Enterprise Group / PSEG (PEG) is priced at $79.51, with a total market cap of $39.62B, a P/E ratio of 18.98, and a dividend yield of 3.21%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $78.51 and $79.79. The current price is 1.27% above the day's low and 0.35% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 1.45M. Over the past 52 weeks, PEG has traded between $76.04 to $84.44, and the current price is -5.83% away from the 52-week high.

PEG Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$78.48
Market Cap$39.62B
Volume1.45M
P/E Ratio18.98
Dividend Yield (TTM)3.21%
Dividend Amount$0.67
Diluted EPS (TTM)4.53
Net Income (FY)$2.11B
Revenue (FY)$12.16B
Earnings Date2026-08-04
EPS Estimate0.80
Revenue Estimate$2.73B
Shares Outstanding504.86M
Beta (1Y)0.55
Ex-Dividend Date2026-06-09
Dividend Payment Date2026-06-30

About PEG

Public Service Enterprise Group Incorporated, through its subsidiaries, operates as an energy company primarily in the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic United States. It operates through two segments, PSE&G and PSEG Power. The PSE&G segment transmits electricity; distributes electricity and gas to residential, commercial, and industrial customers, as well as invests in solar generation projects, and energy efficiency and related programs; and offers appliance services and repairs. As of December 31, 2021, it had electric transmission and distribution system of 25,000 circuit miles and 862,000 poles; 56 switching stations with an installed capacity of 39,353 megavolt-amperes (MVA), and 235 substations with an installed capacity of 9,285 MVA; four electric distribution headquarters and five electric sub-headquarters; and 18,000 miles of gas mains, 12 gas distribution headquarters, two sub-headquarters, and one meter shop, as well as 58 natural gas metering and regulating stations. Public Service Enterprise Group Incorporated was incorporated in 1985 and is based in Newark, New Jersey.
SectorUtilities
IndustryRegulated Electric
CEORalph A. LaRossa
HeadquartersNewark,NJ,US

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Public Service Enterprise Group / PSEG (PEG) is currently trading at $79.51, with a 24h change of +1.31%. The 52-week trading range is $76.04–$84.44.

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Public Service Enterprise Group / PSEG (PEG) Latest News

2026-05-21 00:52Jane Street Allegedly Profited $134M Shorting UST Using Terraform Insider InformationAccording to recently unsealed court documents, Jane Street obtained Terraform Labs insider information through a private Telegram group called "Bryce's Secret," then shorted UST during the TerraUSD collapse. Court filings allege the firm sold approximately $192 million worth of UST near its peg and profited roughly $134 million from the short positions as Terra's ecosystem shed around $40 billion in value.2026-05-20 08:12Ripple's RLUSD Hits All-Time High Supply of $1.609 Billion on May 20According to on-chain data, Ripple's RLUSD stablecoin reached an all-time high supply of $1.609 billion on May 20, slightly surpassing its late-April peak of $1.603 billion. The stablecoin maintains a near-perfect $1 peg with circulating supply around 1.64 billion RLUSD tokens.2026-04-13 07:22USDD pulled 109 million USDT back from Spark and replenished it into the PSM stable poolGate News announcement: On April 13, according to monitoring by Yu Jin, USDD retrieved 109 million USDT from the lending platform Spark about 1 hour ago, and then replenished its PSM pool (Peg Stability Module, peg stability module) into USDD. At present, the available liquidity for USDD to exchange for USDT is $42 million.2026-02-24 05:30AC's new project, called "Flying Tulip," which claims to "never break below the offering price," has already fallen below the price.Odaily Planet Daily reports that Uniswap liquidity pool data shows that the new AC project, a derivative protocol featuring a "100% principal redemption mechanism to ensure never breaking the peg," Flying Tulip Token (FT) is currently priced at $0.0989 USDC, below the $0.10 public offering price. Earlier reports indicated that the Flying Tulip Token sale for the new AC project has concluded.2026-02-10 14:28Strategy: STRC paid an 11% annualized dividend in cash last monthOdaily Planet Daily reports that Strategy posted on the X platform that even though Bitcoin's price has fallen 24% over the past month, Strategy's perpetual preferred stock STRC has rebounded and is close to the $100 peg. Additionally, dividends are paid in cash at an annualized dividend rate of 11%.

Hot Posts About Public Service Enterprise Group / PSEG (PEG)

defi_detective

defi_detective

1 hours ago
Ever wonder what happened to Do Kwon? The guy's story is wild—from a Stanford-educated engineer at Apple and Microsoft to founding one of crypto's biggest implosions. His net worth? Was over $3 billion at the peak. Now that's a different story. Back in 2018, Do Kwon started Terraform Labs and raised serious capital from major players in the industry—we're talking tens of millions. The vision seemed solid: create an algorithmic stablecoin called UST that could hold its dollar peg through a burn-and-mint mechanism backed by the LUNA token. Sounds elegant in theory, right? But here's where things get murky. Kwon was playing a different game. Internal communications revealed they were artificially inflating transaction volumes on their network, basically creating fake activity to make the ecosystem look more legitimate than it was. And when people started asking questions, Kwon made big bets—$1M that Luna wouldn't crash, confident UST would hold its peg. That confidence wasn't backed by fundamentals. Then May 2022 hit. Anchor Protocol started cutting deposit rates, and suddenly lenders panicked and started withdrawing UST. The mechanism designed to maintain the peg—swapping UST for LUNA—was too slow and had technical issues. Exchanges were pausing withdrawals, which made everything worse. As UST depegged further, the automated system at Curve created more discounts, encouraging arbitrage traders to dump LUNA even harder. The math didn't work. The supply dilution crushed LUNA's price. UST lost its peg completely. Within a week, $45 billion in value evaporated. Do Kwon's net worth collapsed along with it. The whole thing exposed what happens when innovation meets overconfidence and a flawed mechanism meets market reality. It's a reminder that even brilliant engineers can build systems that look perfect on paper but fail catastrophically under pressure. The Terra collapse wasn't just about bad luck—it was about fundamental design flaws and, frankly, misleading the community about how robust the system actually was.
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