Exelon Could Reach $58 by End of 2026 as AI Data Center Demand Fuels 26% Load Growth in Illinois

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By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • Exelon (EXC) has a 19 GW load pipeline with 45% secured through Transmission Security Agreements, supported by 26% CAGR data center load growth in northern Illinois, while Citi initiated coverage with a $58 price target implying 22% upside. The company targets $2.81 to $2.91 in 2026 operating EPS with transmission rate base growing at approximately 15% CAGR and $12-$17 billion in identified transmission opportunities beyond its $41.3 billion capital plan.

  • A favorable Pennsylvania rate case outcome combined with execution on Exelon’s data center pipeline and achievement of 2026 EPS guidance would drive the stock toward Citi’s $58 target.

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Exelon Could Reach $58 by End of 2026 as AI Data Center Demand Fuels 26% Load Growth in Illinois

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Exelon Corporation (NASDAQ:EXC | EXC Price Prediction) has gained 9.90% year-to-date and 9.65% over the past year, with shares currently trading at $48.27. The stock hit a 52-week high of $50.65 earlier in March, still well below where one major Wall Street firm now sees it heading.

The Street’s average price target sits at $50.88, with 11 of 20 analysts rating shares a Hold. Citi broke from the pack this week, initiating coverage with a Buy rating and a $58 price target, implying roughly 22% upside from current levels. Here is what it would take for EXC to reach $58 by the end of 2026.

Citi’s $58 EXC Prediction

Citi’s thesis centers on two catalysts converging at the right time. Data center spending and a constructive Pennsylvania rate case are seen driving accelerating earnings growth through 2026 and beyond. Exelon’s northern Illinois territory is experiencing approximately 26% CAGR in data center load, and the company has assembled a large load pipeline of approximately 19 GW, with roughly 45% secured through Transmission Security Agreements. Management has signaled active engagement on Pennsylvania rate case timing, with CFO Jeanne Jones noting that “the 8% rate base growth, the earned ROEs, and the manageable amount of equity delivers that five to seven years at the top end.”

Key Drivers of EXC Stock Performance

  1. Data Center Load Growth: Exelon’s grid sits at the center of surging AI infrastructure demand. Total load growth of approximately 3% is projected over the plan period, directly supporting rate base expansion and long-term earnings compounding.
  2. Pennsylvania Rate Case: PECO, Exelon’s Pennsylvania subsidiary, generated $1.172 billion in Q4 2025 revenue. A constructive rate case outcome in 2027 would unlock incremental distribution earnings, reinforcing the 5-7% EPS CAGR target through 2029.
  3. Transmission Investment Pipeline: Exelon has identified $12-$17 billion in transmission opportunities beyond its current $41.3 billion capital plan, with transmission rate base growing at approximately 15% CAGR. That optionality supports both dividend growth and capital appreciation for long-horizon investors.

What Will It Take for EXC to Reach $58?

At 1.023 billion shares outstanding and a $58 target, Exelon would carry an implied market cap of approximately $59.3 billion, compared to today’s $48.77 billion. Getting there requires three things: a favorable Pennsylvania rate case outcome, continued execution on the data center pipeline, and delivery at or above the 2026 EPS guidance midpoint of $2.86. CEO Calvin Butler set the tone plainly: “We anticipate delivering operating earnings of $2.81 to $2.91 per share with the goal of being at midpoint or better.”

The primary risk is regulatory: unfavorable outcomes in Pennsylvania or other jurisdictions could delay the earnings inflection Citi is counting on. With an unbroken record of beating guidance since becoming a standalone utility and institutional investors including CalPERS and Nordea both adding to positions in recent quarters, Citi’s $58 target reflects a credible, data-backed conviction supported by Exelon’s load growth pipeline and institutional investor positioning.

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About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

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