Consolidated Edison Inc
XMUN:EDC
Decide at what price you'd be comfortable buying and we'll help you stay ready.
|
C
|
Consolidated Edison Inc
XMUN:EDC
|
US |
|
Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc
F:0QL
|
US |
|
V
|
voestalpine AG
DUS:VAS
|
AT |
|
M
|
MS&AD Insurance Group Holdings Inc
DUS:59M
|
JP |
Consolidated Edison Inc
Consolidated Edison is a regulated utility company that delivers electricity, gas, and steam to homes and businesses in New York City and nearby areas. It also helps keep the local power grid and gas network running through transmission, distribution, and system maintenance work. Its customers are mostly households, small businesses, large commercial buildings, and other organizations that rely on steady utility service. The company makes most of its money by charging customers for energy delivery under rates approved by regulators. That means it does not mainly compete by selling a physical product in a normal open market; instead, it earns fees for owning and operating the pipes, wires, substations, and related infrastructure that move power and gas to end users. This makes the business steadier than many energy companies, because demand comes from essential services rather than optional spending. Con Edison also plays a key role in the utility value chain as the local middle layer between power generators and end customers. Its job is to transport electricity and gas safely and reliably, restore service after outages, and invest in the network needed to support a dense urban area. That regulated infrastructure role is what defines the company more than any single product it sells.
Consolidated Edison is a regulated utility company that delivers electricity, gas, and steam to homes and businesses in New York City and nearby areas. It also helps keep the local power grid and gas network running through transmission, distribution, and system maintenance work. Its customers are mostly households, small businesses, large commercial buildings, and other organizations that rely on steady utility service.
The company makes most of its money by charging customers for energy delivery under rates approved by regulators. That means it does not mainly compete by selling a physical product in a normal open market; instead, it earns fees for owning and operating the pipes, wires, substations, and related infrastructure that move power and gas to end users. This makes the business steadier than many energy companies, because demand comes from essential services rather than optional spending.
Con Edison also plays a key role in the utility value chain as the local middle layer between power generators and end customers. Its job is to transport electricity and gas safely and reliably, restore service after outages, and invest in the network needed to support a dense urban area. That regulated infrastructure role is what defines the company more than any single product it sells.