DREDGECAP
DUK Overview
10-QNovember 7, 202511/7/25· Quarter Ended September 30, 2025· Q-End 9/30/25

DUK10-Q Filing

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DUK 10-Q Summary

For the quarter ended September 30, 2025, Duke Energy CORP reported revenue of $8.11B, up 4.3% versus the same quarter one year earlier and up 16.3% from $6.97B in the prior quarter. Operating income was $2.33B, up 8.9% year-over-year; net income was $1.45B, up 10.6% year-over-year.

DUK Financial Highlights

Metric
Q-End 09/25
Q-End 06/25
Q-End 09/24
Revenue
$8.11B
+16.3% QoQ
$6.97B
$7.78B
+4.3% YoY
Operating Income
$2.33B
+27.5% QoQ
$1.83B
$2.14B
+8.9% YoY
Net Income
$1.45B
-39.7% QoQ
$2.41B
$1.31B
+10.6% YoY

What's Driving the Change

Item
Q-End 09/25
Q-End 06/25
Q-End 09/24
Depreciation & Amortization
$1.63B
+2.7% QoQ
$1.58B
$1.52B
+7.3% YoY

DUK Legal Proceedings Disclosed

Other Proceeding
Extracted from DUK’s 10-Q filed November 7, 2025. The text below is the company’s own disclosure language; DredgeCap has not paraphrased, classified, or summarized it.
, including regulatory and environmental matters, see Note 4, "Regulatory Matters," and Note 5, "Commitments and Contingencies," to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements. For additional information, see Item 3, "Legal Proceedings," in Duke Energy's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024.For open litigation, unless otherwise noted, Duke Energy cannot predict the outcome or ultimate resolution of these matters.MTBE LitigationIn December 2017, the state of Maryland filed suit in Baltimore City Circuit Court against Duke Energy Merchants and other defendants alleging contamination of state waters by MTBE leaking from gasoline storage tanks and is seeking an unspecified amount of monetary damages. MTBE is a gasoline additive intended to increase the oxygen levels in gasoline and make it burn cleaner. The case was removed from Baltimore City Circuit Court to federal District Court. Initial motions to dismiss filed by the defendants were denied by the court in September 2019, and the matter is now in discovery. In December 2020, the plaintiff and defendants selected 50 focus sites, none of which have any ties to Duke Energy Merchants. Discovery will be specific to those sites. Duke Energy Merchants has reached an agreement in principle with the state of Maryland to resolve the litigation. The settlement agreement is being finalized and the amount is not material. The Town of Carrboro LitigationOn December 4, 2024, the town of Carrboro, North Carolina, filed a lawsuit against Duke Energy in the North Carolina Superior Court, Orange County, alleging that Duke Energy and its predecessor companies knew since the late 1960s that fossil fuel emissions could cause global climate changes and engaged in a campaign to conceal the dangers of fossil fuel emissions from the public, regulators, legislators, and others, resulting in a delayed transition away from fossil fuel emissions and worsening climate change. The lawsuit also alleges that Duke Energy misled the public regarding Duke Energy’s support for, and actions toward, transitioning its fossil fuel portfolio to renewable energy. The damages alleged range from road and stormwater system impacts to increased electricity costs and recurring invasions and interferences from extreme weather events. The lawsuit asserts state law claims for public nuisance, private nuisance, trespass, negligence, and gross negligence, and is seeking an unspecified amount of monetary damages. The case has been transferred to the North Carolina Business Court. Duke Energy filed a motion to dismiss the litigation based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction on March 17, 2025, and filed a motion to dismiss based on failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted on May 9, 2025. Oral argument regarding Duke Energy's motions to dismiss was held on September 25, 2025. As requested by the court, supplemental briefing addressing various aspects of causation, including traceability and proximate cause, was filed on October 25, 2025.
Disclosure:Legal proceedings described above may contain allegations that have not been proven. Filings often disclose claims that are later dismissed, settled, or resolved without admission of wrongdoing. DredgeCap surfaces the company’s own disclosure language for investor-risk research only. This is not legal advice or investment advice.
Current DredgeCap Risk Profile
2.8/10
LOW RISK
Dilution Risk
LOW2.5/10
Liquidity Risk
LOW2.5/10
Debt Toxicity
MODERATE3.5/10
Profitability Risk
LOW2.0/10
Going Concern✓ Not flagged
The risk profile above reflects the latest cached DredgeCap analysis for DUK. For the full filing-by-filing analyst report (red flags, primary risk driver, what moves the stock), open DUK's company page.

What is a 10-Q?

A quarterly report covering the three months just ended. Includes unaudited condensed financial statements (balance sheet, income statement, cash flow), Management Discussion and Analysis (MD&A), and disclosure of material changes since the last annual report. Required for the first three fiscal quarters; the fourth quarter is rolled into the 10-K.

More on DUK

Dilution Analysis
Debt Structure
Going Concern
Full Financials
Financial highlights are sourced directly from the 10-Q income statement (three months ended). YoY % compares to the same quarter one year earlier as reported by the issuer; QoQ % compares to the immediately prior quarter (ended June 30, 2025) from DredgeCap's filing cache. The plain-language summary above is composed mechanically from the filing's reported numbers — no analysis or opinion. Form-type explainers and 8-K item descriptions are derived from SEC documentation. This page does not constitute investment advice. Always consult the original filing on SEC EDGAR for authoritative content, and consult a licensed financial advisor for investment decisions.