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Nuclear fuel company Standard Nuclear raises 150 million dollars in US IPO

Standard Nuclear announced on Wednesday that it has raised $150m in its U.S. initial public offering, after cutting its offer size by more than half. Investors remained cautious over 'valuations.

The Oak Ridge, Tennessee nuclear fuel company, which sold 10,000,000 shares at $15 per share, valued it at about $2.41 Billion. The shares will begin trading at the New York Stock Exchange under "STDN" on July 16.

Originally, the company had planned to sell 18.25 million shares between $18 and $21 per share.

The IPO market is gaining momentum despite the geopolitical uncertainties, as the resilient equity markets are encouraging companies to go ahead with their listing plans. Investors continue to examine valuations.

Nuclear-sector 'companies listed recently' have struggled to hold onto their debut gains. X-Energy, Deep Fission and other reactor developers are trading below their IPO price.

Companies in this sector will benefit from the U.S. Government's push to expand the nuclear power industry. The goal is to quadruple the country's capacity of nuclear power by 2050 to meet the rising demand for electricity from AI-driven data centres, electric vehicles, and cryptocurrency.

Standard Nuclear is a producer of nuclear fuels for advanced 'nuclear reactors. This includes small modular reactors as well as microreactors. The company focuses on scaling up domestic capacity.

After the offering, Thomas Hendrix's?Class B shares will give him 60.8% of voting power in the company.

Standard Nuclear intends to use the IPO proceeds for working capital, corporate purposes, and possible acquisitions - or investments in complementary businesses, technologie, or assets.

Underwriters of the offering include Goldman Sachs, Barclays, and UBS Investment Bank.

(source: Reuters)