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Standard Nuclear, a nuclear fuel company, is valued at $2.17 Billion as its shares slide in the NYSE debut

Standard Nuclear, a nuclear fuel company, is valued at $2.17 Billion as its shares slide in the NYSE debut
Standard Nuclear, a nuclear fuel company, is valued at $2.17 Billion as its shares slide in the NYSE debut

Standard Nuclear's shares dropped 10% in their New York Stock Exchange debut on Thursday after the company reduced its?offering?size, as investors remain cautious about valuations.

The Oak Ridge, Tennessee-based company opened its shares at $13.50 each, below the $15 offered price. This gives the nuclear fuel firm a value of $2.17 Billion.

The market debut shows that investors are still cautious despite a renewed interest in nuclear power. This is fueled by the surge in electricity demand for artificial intelligence data centres and U.S. policies supporting it.

Nuclear energy is gaining in popularity as technology giants and utilities seek carbon-free electricity that can be used 24/7 to support the rapid expansion of AI infrastructure.

Investors have been wary of high-risk companies, even though they are linked to the nuclear supply chain.

Standard Nuclear raised $150 million after selling 10,000,000 shares at $15 per share.

Companies in the sector will still benefit from the executive orders issued by the Trump Administration in May 2025. These are designed to speed up reactor approvals and to support the nuclear fuel chain.

Donald Trump wants to quadruple the country's nuclear energy capacity by 2050 in order to meet the rising demand for electricity from data centers, electric cars and cryptocurrency.

Standard Nuclear follows the debuts of reactor developers X Energy and?Deep Fission whose shares also trade below their IPO prices.

As of the last close, shares in Oklo have fallen more than 36% since May 2024.

Standard Nuclear?processes enriched Uranium feedstock to advanced nuclear fuels for reactors including small modular reactors or microreactors. Aditi Tiwari in Bengaluru and Prakhar Shrivastava, editor Joyjeet Das.

(source: Reuters)