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If you invested in

A $1,000 investment in Expand Energy Corporation (EXE) in February 2021 would be worth $2,492 as of June 2026 with dividends reinvested18.8% a year. Use the dropdowns above to try any amount, ticker, or starting month back to February 2021.

Over the same period, the same $1,000 would be worth $2,167 in the S&P 500 (SPY) and $2,429 in the Nasdaq-100 (QQQ). EXE beat both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq-100 over that period.

See the live EXE chart & fundamentals

Worth today
$2,492
Multiple
2.5×
Annualized
18.8%/yr
Max drawdown
-27.9%
11/28/2025 – 6/18/2026
Same $ in SPY
$2,108

Growth of $1,000 in EXE since February 2021#

monthly
EXE$2,492SPY$2,108
202120232026

Expand Energy Corporation (EXE). Total return approximated via dividend- and split-adjusted closes (no taxes or fees). Not investment advice.

Growth of $1,000 in EXE by starting month#

$647$1.3K$1.9K$2.6K
'21'22'23'24'25'26

$1,000 invested in EXE, by starting year#

Invested inWorth todaySame in QQQMultipleAnnualized
2021$2,492$2,4292.5×18.8%
2022$1,583$2,0951.6×11.1%
2023$1,124$2,5621.1×3.5%
2024$1,210$1,7981.2×8.3%
2025$892$1,4270.9×-7.9%

Methodology#

Investments are assumed made at the first trading day's close of the chosen year. "Dividends reinvested" uses split- and dividend-adjusted closes (a standard total-return approximation; taxes and fees excluded). "Price-only" uses split-adjusted closes. EXE data begins February 2021; values as of June 2026 and refresh daily. Past performance does not predict future returns; not investment advice.

See the live EXE chart and fundamentals on the EXE quote page or compare with the same investment in SPY.

FAQ

How much would $1,000 invested in EXE be worth today?
A $1,000 investment in Expand Energy Corporation (EXE) in February 2021 would be worth about $2,492 as of June 2026, with dividends reinvested. That works out to about 18.8% a year.
How far back does the EXE calculation go?
EXE data begins February 2021. You can pick any starting month from then to the present and see what your investment would be worth today.
Does this include dividends?
Yes. The default "dividends reinvested" view uses split- and dividend-adjusted closing prices — a standard total-return approximation that excludes taxes and fees. A price-only view (split-adjusted, no dividends) is also available.

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