Stock & Company Details
AES Corp. $AES
Price:
46,691,331
713M
$10B
52 Week High:
$66.15
10 Day Average Volume:
42,760,466
23.49
50 Day Moving Average:
$156.49
52 Week Low:
$43.74
30 Day Average Volume:
49,506,373
$4.94
2021-02-05
0.95
30 Day Change:
13%
3 Month Change:
-0.32%
Utilities
AES technical indicators
Latest AES Corp. (AES) technical indicators as of 2026-06-30: RSI, MACD, moving averages (SMA & EMA), Bollinger Bands, Stochastic, ADX, ATR, CCI, OBV and ROC.
RSI 14:
53.08 7.1%
MACD:
0.02 6.4%
SMA 50:
$14.56 0.0%
SMA 200:
$14.40 0.1%
EMA 20:
$14.65 0.0%
Bollinger Bands:
14.73 / 14.61
Stochastic:
56.98 4.9%
ADX 14:
19.35 5.9%
ATR 14:
0.06 1.6%
CCI 20:
-54.36 50.9%
OBV:
-157.70M 3.6%
ROC 12:
-0.07%
Select a strategy to see its performance
Backtested on this stock over recent history.
| Strategy | Trend | Return | Win rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| MACD Momentum Momentum Buy when MACD turns positive (crosses above zero) and RSI confirms momentum above 50; sell when MACD falls back below zero. | – | – | |
| RSI Reversal Mean reversion Buy when RSI falls below 30 (oversold), sell when it climbs above 70 (overbought). | – | – | |
| Volatility Breakout Volatility Buy when price closes above the upper Bollinger Band, sell on reversion to the 20-day average. | – | – | |
| Strong-Trend Pullback Trend + timing In strongly trending stocks (ADX above 25), buy short-term dips (Stochastic below 30) and sell into overbought (above 80). | – | – |
Overview
The AES Corporation is a Fortune 500 company that generates and distributes electrical power. AES is headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, and is one of the world's leading power companies, generating and distributing electric power in 15 countries and employing 10,500 people worldwide. The company was founded on January 28, 1981, as Applied Energy Services by Roger Sant and Dennis Bakke, two appointees of the Federal Energy Administration under president Richard Nixon. The company was initially a consulting firm; it became AES Corporation, which went public in 1991. Sant was chairman, CEO, and president and Bakke was executive vice president until assuming the position of president in 1987. Bakke would later become the company's CEO in 1994, serving for 8 years until his resignation in 2002, in the midst of a liquidity crisis that followed the collapse of the energy giant Enron. Sant remained as executive chairman until 2003 and as a member of the board until 2006. Paul Hanrahan was appointed President and CEO and served for 10 years, overseeing the stabilization of the company. Until the early 2000’s the company followed self management delegating much responsibility to ordinary employees. In 2012, Hanrahan resigned, his position as President and CEO of the company succeeded by Andres Gluski. As CEO, Gluski has implemented a strategy of reducing the number of countries in which AES does business, from 28 to 16, for the purpose of consolidating operations and reducing costs. Additionally, he also began a program of reducing the company's total carbon emission intensity.
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