The Offering Details
Sometimes good news and bad news arrive on the same day. Oklo Inc. (OKLO) experienced exactly that Thursday, watching its shares drop 7.26% to $103.54 in extended trading after announcing a substantial equity offering—despite a banner day during regular trading hours.
According to an SEC filing, the nuclear technology company may offer up to $1.5 billion of its Class A common stock through an at-the-market transaction. This type of offering allows companies to sell shares gradually into the market rather than all at once, which can help minimize immediate price impact. Still, investors reacted swiftly to the dilution news after the closing bell.
A Tale of Two Sessions
The timing creates an interesting contrast. During Thursday's regular session, Oklo shares had climbed more than 15% following comments from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang about nuclear power's critical role in powering AI data centers. Huang specifically highlighted small modular reactors—exactly the technology Oklo specializes in—as key to the future of AI infrastructure.
So investors were clearly enthusiastic about the company's prospects in the morning, then significantly less enthusiastic about its financing plans in the evening.
What Analysts Are Saying
Wall Street remains generally optimistic about Oklo's trajectory. Analysts have set an average 12-month price target of $132.22, suggesting upside from current levels. The range spans from a street high of $175 down to a street low of $95, showing some divergence in opinions about valuation.
The analyst community breaks down as follows: five have positive ratings, four maintain neutral stances, and notably, no one currently rates the stock negatively. Four analysts have adjusted their price targets in the past month, reflecting active coverage as the nuclear power narrative gains momentum.
It's worth noting that Oklo has already delivered remarkable returns in 2025, up 410.98% year-to-date. That kind of performance tends to attract both believers and skeptics, which the wide analyst price target range seems to confirm.
The average stock market return hovers around 10% annually, making Oklo's gains this year particularly striking. Whether the company can maintain this momentum while digesting a significant equity offering remains the key question for investors.