Jefferies has adjusted its view on CMS Energy, moving the stock from Buy to Hold and lowering the 12-month price target to $74 from $88. The brokerage said the decision reflects mounting uncertainty tied to a surprise change in the company leadership team and questions about the growth trajectory of both data center-related opportunities and the NorthStar unregulated business.
The analyst action follows the unexpected retirement of Chief Financial Officer Rejji Hayes, who had been in the CFO role for roughly nine years. Hayes departure was immediate and came as a surprise to investors, prompting concerns that the company may change strategic priorities for NorthStar, its unregulated business arm.
Operational fundamentals remain, but valuation gets harder to defend
Jefferies emphasized that CMS Energy continues to forecast solid underlying performance. Management still projects annual earnings growth of 6% to 8% and is proceeding with a $24 billion capital investment program through 2030, underpinned by an expected 10.5% annual expansion in regulated utility assets. Those elements support the view that the regulated utility business retains visible rate-base growth and steady earnings expectations.
Despite those fundamentals, Jefferies said the premium valuation the market had applied to the stock is becoming more difficult to justify. A key element of the concern is CMS comparative lag in securing major data center contracts. Large hyperscale deals represent an important growth lever for utilities that can capture them, and Jefferies pointed to rival DTE Energy as an example of a utility that has already landed several major hyperscale data center projects in Michigan, strengthening DTE its growth outlook.
NorthStar is the primary overhang
Another significant source of investor hesitation is the future of NorthStar. Jefferies described NorthStar as the primary overhang on the stock, citing limited clarity from management on long-term plans for the business. Market participants are concerned that if the company sells renewable energy assets within NorthStar, proceeds might not be redeployed in a way that preserves current earnings levels, creating the risk of an earnings reset.
Jefferies reduced the valuation multiple applied to CMS Energy and lowered its price target, but the firm stopped short of a more bearish stance. Analysts noted that the shares could regain favor with investors if CMS secures a major data center contract or lays out a clear, earnings-neutral plan for NorthStar.
Where the firm stands
Even with the downgrade, Jefferies reiterated that CMS Energy regulated utility operations remain healthy. The brokerage highlighted ongoing infrastructure investments and stable earnings expectations, framing the change in recommendation as a reflection of unresolved near-term catalysts rather than deteriorating core fundamentals.
Context for investors
For investors weighing the stock, the immediate issues to monitor are management commentary on NorthStar and the company ability to win material hyperscale data center contracts. Those developments would directly affect how market participants price growth optionality tied to unregulated businesses and incremental rate-base expansion opportunities.
Until such catalysts are resolved, Jefferies views the stock as having a higher degree of event-driven risk despite intact regulated operations.