How much has Exelon raised?
Exelon is not best understood through startup funding rounds. As of June 2026, its capital profile is Nasdaq: EXC public-market status, operating cash flow, debt/equity access, and regulated transmission and distribution capital programs across six utilities.
- Public status
- Nasdaq: EXC
- Venture funding
- Not applicable
- Scale signal
- 2025 regulated utility results across ComEd, PECO, BGE, and PHI
- Capital plan
- regulated transmission and distribution capital programs across six utilities
- Capital model
- Public markets + cash flow
- Seller signal
- Enterprise procurement with operating ROI
Exelon's capital history
Exelon's funding story is public-company capital allocation rather than venture rounds.
- 2000Exelon formedPECO Energy and Unicom combine to form Exelon.
- 2012Constellation mergerExelon adds generation and retail scale.
- 2016Pepco Holdings acquisitionExelon adds Atlantic City Electric, Delmarva Power, and Pepco.
- 2022Constellation spin-offExelon becomes a pure-play regulated utility platform.
- 202525th anniversary yearExelon reports 2025 results across its regulated utilities.
- 2026Q1 2026 reportedExelon maintains its regulated utility outlook and capital program.
How much has Exelon raised in total?
Exelon does not have a meaningful startup funding total. Its capital base is public equity, debt-market access, operating cash flow, retained earnings, approved capital recovery or asset economics, and continuing reinvestment in Electric distribution, Electric transmission, Natural gas distribution, ComEd.
What is Exelon's market status?
Exelon is a public company trading as Nasdaq: EXC. Budget capacity should be evaluated through filings, earnings releases, investor presentations, credit metrics, capital plans, and management commentary rather than private-funding databases.
Why does Exelon's valuation move?
Valuation moves with interest rates, regulatory decisions, allowed returns or pricing power, load or volume growth, storm and safety exposure, commodity costs, operating reliability, capital spending, customer affordability, and confidence that management can turn investment into durable cash flow.
Is Exelon profitable, and will it IPO?
Exelon is already public, so the IPO question is historical. Profitability should be read from GAAP and adjusted public filings, including one-time items, regulatory timing, acquisition effects, storm or wildfire costs, and segment-specific disclosures.
What does Exelon's funding mean if you sell into them?
The seller signal is mature buying power with mature controls. Vendors should lead with quantified impact on reliability, safety, service cost, compliance, customer outcomes, field productivity, infrastructure delivery, cybersecurity, or financial planning, and be ready for procurement and security review.
As of June 2026.Sources:Exelon investor relationsExelon 2025 resultsExelon leadership
Exelon — frequently asked questions
