State Street SPDR S&P Kensho Clean Power ETF

CNRG
$100.59 +0.42 (0.42%)
Dividend Yield 1.29%
Payout Frequency Quarterly

Dividend History

Pay DateAmountEx-DateRecord Date
December 24, 2025$0.692025-12-222025-12-22
September 24, 2025$0.312025-09-222025-09-22
June 25, 2025$0.182025-06-232025-06-23
March 26, 2025$0.122025-03-242025-03-24
December 26, 2024$0.092024-12-232024-12-23

Dividends Summary

Company News

Plug Power Stock Falls Tuesday As Trump Tariff Threatens EU-Sensitive Supply Chain
Benzinga • Henry Khederian • January 20, 2026

Plug Power shares fell 2.12% on Tuesday following President Trump's announcement of 10% tariffs on European imports starting February 1. The tariffs threaten Plug's supply chain for specialized components and could impact its European expansion plans. Geopolitical uncertainty around Greenland and potential EU retaliation on U.S. clean-tech export...

Goldman Sachs Analyst Optimistic On SolarEdge's Strong Domestic Manufacturing, European Expansion
Benzinga • Lekha Gupta • February 25, 2025

Goldman Sachs maintains a Buy rating on SolarEdge, citing the company's domestic content driving market share gains and its plans for European expansion by 2026. The analyst expects above-normal seasonal growth in 2025 due to factors like normalizing channel inventories and domestic content.

Clean Energy ETFs Soar on Global Investment Surge
Zacks Investment Research • Yashwardhan Jain • June 17, 2024

The increasing focus on finding alternative energy sources and diminishing global reliability on fossil fuels has resulted in clean energy investments surging $2 trillion. Capitalize on the growing commitment of global economies to combat climate change with clean energy ETFs.

What Does COP 28 Mean for Renewable Energy ETFs?
Zacks Investment Research • Sanghamitra Saha • December 18, 2023

COP28 in 2023 was a critical meeting for advancing and accelerating global climate action efforts. The meeting puts these ETFs in focus.

The Fourth Quarter Started Slow, But It May Finish Strong
Seeking Alpha • Louis Navellier • December 5, 2023

October’s numbers did not look good, but November picked up momentum and December may be better, so fourth-quarter GDP may come in better than first feared.

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