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President-elect Donald Trump ran on a promise to “drill, baby, drill” in his second term in office, reflecting his continued support of the fossil fuel industry. His stance on nuclear energy, however, is murky.
What Happened: Following his 2016 election win, Trump called for efforts to strengthen U.S. nuclear energy. During his first term, his administration advanced several nuclear microreactor projects, according to the Department of Energy.
However, he may have flip-flopped on the issue. In an interview with podcaster Joe Rogan ahead of the Nov. 5 election, Trump seemingly highlighted the dangers of pushing nuclear energy, according to the Huffington Post.
"They get too big and too complex and too expensive," Trump said. "There's a little danger to nuclear—you know, we had some really bad nuclear."
He then named several nuclear projects that have stalled in recent years.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an ally of Trump and a possible Trump appointee, has an anti-nuclear track record, according to Utility Dive.
See Also: Expert Finds Trump’s Tax Proposal Drains Money From 95% Of Households And Funnels It To The Top 5%
Why it Matters: A future widespread adoption of nuclear energy necessitates significant investments in data centers. In turn, data centers require substantially higher amounts of electricity.
Artificial intelligence is projected to use between 8% and 25% of all U.S. electricity by 2030.
Facts show that President Joe Biden‘s administration produced more oil than Trump’s previous administration. He also prioritized nuclear as a clean energy source. The one-term president positioned it as a bridge energy source that provides reliable, carbon-free electricity.
The Market Reacts: Regardless of whether he centers nuclear energy as a key part of his domestic agenda, Trump’s support of deregulation would likely serve as a tailwind.
Shares of Vistra Corp have traded up over 13% since Trump’s election win. Constellation Energy Corp has fared worse, trading down nearly 3%.
Small reactor companies have seen even more pronounced gains. Shares of Nuscale Power Corp are up over 20%. Meanwhile, Nano Nuclear Energy Inc has shot up over 26%.
The Trump-Nuclear trade has seemingly died down on Monday and Tuesday.
Also Read:
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Nuclear energy stocks have become a Wall Street darling this year as the artificial intelligence (AI) boom spreads, leading to Big Tech searching for ways to meet its growing power demand.
It should not come as a great shock then that AI helped power the S&P 500 Utilities index to all-time highs. This index is on track to outperform the S&P 500 equal-weighted index in 7 of the past 10 months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
In addition, Vistra , a nuclear power-related utility, recently surpassed Nvidia as the biggest gainer in the S&P 500 Index year to date.
Nuclear Decision
However, a Nov. 1 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) decision sent nuclear stocks reeling.
It rejected a deal that would have allowed an Amazon.com data center to use more power from an adjacent nuclear power plant - the Susquehanna nuclear facility owned by Talen Energy . FERC cited concerns about grid reliability and energy affordability.
Amazon paid Talen $650 million for a data center facility adjacent to the nuclear plant, aiming to take the reactor’s output directly. By doing this, Amazon would have avoided paying for transmission services.
If a data center is “behind the meter,” you aren’t relying on the grid and needn’t pay for it. Two grid operators, among others, didn’t like this special deal and brought the dispute before FERC. The ruling doesn’t prevent the initial 300 megawatt deal between Amazon and Talen from going ahead, but blocks its expansion.
And many copycat deals Big Tech had planned are dead.
What's Next for Nuclear?
However, once the shockwave passes, two realities will still be with us. First, Big Tech data center builders still want massive power supplies secured sooner rather than later. Second, they can afford to, and are willing to, pay a premium for power.
As long as the market’s main assumption is valid — that we are in the very early innings of an artificial intelligence-inspired data center boom — the companies that produce and deliver the power will still benefit quite a bit.
Instead of the type of power deal that Amazon sought, more deals will be structured similar to the pact between Microsoft and Constellation Energy . That’s the deal that is leading to the restarting of the Unit 1 reactor at Three Mile Island.
Microsoft’s data center will not be co-located with Three Mile Island. Instead, Microsoft will buy power from the grid at prevailing rates and pay the difference to Constellation — plus, Microsoft would have to pay the grid fees that Amazon hoped to avoid. Analysts estimated Microsoft will be paying Constellation about $100 per megawatt-hour, with transmission fees of about $30 on top of that.
In other words, Big Tech will pay up - a lot - for power. The apparent comfort with paying $100 or more in a $50 wholesale electricity market suggests generators could even offer a discount to cover transmission fees, etc. and still make large profits.
Thanks to artificial intelligence, digitalization and massive data-storage needs, data center power demand will nearly triple (surging 160%) by 2030. Those massive processing operations currently consume 1% to 2% of all power — but could account for 3% to 4% of electricity production by the end of the decade, says Goldman Sachs Research. S&P Global says that share could rise as high as 9%. And consultant McKinsey & Co. says it could hit 11% to 12% of power demand!
Apollo Global Management chief economist Torsten Sløk recently put into context the amount of power the AI boom is going to require. His data shows that we would have to add three New York Cities' worth of power to the grid by 2030 to meet the demand that is going to come from artificial intelligence.
That’s a lot of power!
Overall, here in the U.S., data needs on top of electrification of transport and a manufacturing revival sparked by “reshoring” efforts are forecast to at least double electricity demand growth in the next decade compared with the prior one.
Even the International Energy Agency (IEA) recently declared that, after the age of coal, and the age of oil, the world is now entering the age of electricity.
Nuclear Power Investments
Big Tech companies see nuclear power as a way to meet the demand for the power they need.
A great way to play the renaissance in nuclear power is through an exchange-traded fund (ETF) - the Range Nuclear Renaissance Index ETF , with a portfolio of 38 stocks.
I like the fact that the fund is spread broadly across all the nuclear-related segments. Among its top portfolio positions are: Constellation Energy , the largest nuclear operator, with more than three times more megawatt capacity than the next competitor; and Cameco , which has controlling ownership of the world’s largest high-grade reserves and low-cost operations, as well as significant investments across the nuclear fuel cycle, including ownership interests in Westinghouse Electric Company and Global Laser Enrichment.
NUKZ also has a major position in GE Vernova , which is heavily involved in the electric grid. I wrote about GEV previously as the best stock to buy in the Age of Electricity.
The fund also includes a number of companies involved with SMRs (small modular nuclear reactors), such as Oklo , NuScale Power , and Rolls Royce .
Finally, the ETF holds a number of engineering firms with exposure to the nuclear industry.
NUKZ began trading in January at $25, and is now trading around $45 - a nearly 80% gain! There’s plenty more to come. Buy NUKZ anywhere below $50.
On the date of publication, Tony Daltorio had a position in: NUKZ . All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 44,000 for the first time Monday, while the S&P 500 topped 6,000 for its own closing milestone as markets awaited key inflation data and corporate earnings due later this week.
The Dow advanced 0.7% to 44,293.1, while the S&P 500 rose 0.1% to 6,001.4 and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.1% to 19,298.8. The trio of indexes extended rallies to records following Donald Trump's victory in the 2024 US presidential election last week.
Among sectors, consumer discretionary led the gainers, while technology posted the biggest drop.
Official data are expected to show Wednesday that US consumer inflation in October rose 0.2% sequentially and 2.4% annually, according to a Bloomberg-compiled consensus.
Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy components, is seen accelerating 0.3%, Morgan Stanley said. "However, we think the strength is in large part just short-run noise (amid a) temporary acceleration in cars due to the recent hurricanes and short-lived payback in shelter after the weak print in September," the report said.
Official producer prices data for last month are scheduled to be released Thursday.
Home Depot , Cisco , Walt Disney and AstraZeneca are among the companies scheduled to quarterly financial results later in the week.
In company news Monday, Tesla shares jumped 9%, the biggest gain on the Nasdaq and among the largest on the S&P. The electric vehicle maker's artificial intelligence opportunity will likely get fast-tracked under the Trump administration, Wedbush Securities said.
Cigna Group shares increased 7.3%, among the top S&P 500 gainers, after the health insurer said it is not pursuing a combination with Humana and is on track to meet its full-year earnings target. Humana shares fell 2%.
Salesforce shares rose 6.2%, the biggest gain on the Dow, as Jefferies adjusted its price target on the stock to $400 from $350 while maintaining its buy rating.
AbbVie said its two phase 2 trials assessing emraclidine in adult patients with schizophrenia and acute exacerbation of psychotic symptoms didn't meet their primary goals. The company's shares slumped 13%, the second-steepest decline on the S&P.
Celanese shares fell 7.3%, among the biggest declines on the S&P, after rating downgrades at UBS and BMO Capital.
West Texas Intermediate crude oil fell 3.1% to $68.22 a barrel Monday. Prices dropped as the threat of a supply disruption from storm Rafael in the US Gulf of Mexico eased, while China's recent stimulus plan disappointed investors, Reuters reported.
US bond markets were closed Monday for Veterans Day.
Gold dropped 2.4% to $2,629.80 per troy ounce, while silver lost 2.1% to $30.8 an ounce.
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