Entergy Corporation: 10-K Risk Factor Changes

2024 vs 2023  ·  SEC EDGAR  ·  2026-05-22
Other years: 2026 vs 2025 · 2025 vs 2024
⚠ AI-Generated

The summary below was generated by an AI language model and may contain errors or omissions. All other content on this page is deterministically extracted from the original SEC EDGAR filing.

Entergy replaced its specific COVID-19 pandemic risk with a broader catastrophic events disclosure covering public health crises, natural disasters, and geopolitical tensions, reflecting a shift toward more generalized systemic risks. The company added a new hazard-specific risk focused on power generation activities while substantively enhancing disclosures on climate change physical impacts, storm cost recovery mechanisms, and securitization constraints. Among 42 total risk factors, six underwent material revisions addressing evolving regulatory, operational, and climate-related exposures, while 33 risks remained substantively unchanged.

✓ Deterministic extraction — no AI-generated data

Classification is based on semantic text similarity scoring and may include approximations. “No match” means no high-confidence textual match was found — not necessarily that a section was removed.

2
New Risks
1
Removed
6
Modified
33
Unchanged
🟢 New in Current Filing Entergy’s and the Utility operating companies’ business, results of operations, and financial condition could be adversely affected by events beyond their control, such as public health crises, natural disasters, geopolitical tensions, or other catastrophic events. 🔒
🟢 New in Current Filing The hazardous activities associated with power generation could adversely impact our results of operations and financial condition. 🔒
🔴 No Match in Current Filing The continued impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and responsive measures taken on Entergy’s and its Utility operating companies’ business, results of operations, and financial condition are highly uncertain and cannot be predicted. 🔒
🟡 Modified A delay or failure in recovering amounts for storm restoration costs incurred as a result of severe weather, the impact on customer bills of permitted storm cost recovery, or the inability to securitize future storm restoration costs could have material effects on Entergy and its Utility operating companies. 🔒
🟡 Modified The physical effects of climate change could materially affect the financial condition, results of operations, and liquidity of Entergy and its subsidiaries. 🔒
🟡 Modified Entergy’s non-utility operations are subject to substantial governmental regulation and may be adversely affected by legislative, regulatory, or market design changes, as well as liability under, or any future inability to comply with, existing or future regulations or requirements. 🔒
🟡 Modified Terrorist attacks and sabotage, physical attacks, cyber attacks, system failures, data breaches or other disruptions of Entergy’s and its subsidiaries’ or their suppliers’ infrastructure or technology systems, including disruptions affecting other third parties ultimately connected to Entergy and its subsidiaries or their suppliers through the transmission grid, may adversely affect Entergy’s business and results of operations. 🔒
🟡 Modified System Energy owns and, through an affiliate, operates a single nuclear generating facility, and it is dependent on sales to affiliated companies for all of its revenues. Certain contractual arrangements relating to 🔒
🟡 Modified The Utility operating companies and Entergy’s non-utility business are exposed to the risk that counterparties may not meet their obligations, which may materially affect the Utility operating companies and Entergy’s non-utility business. 🔒
9 changes in this historical filing

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