Marketdash

Oracle's Data Center Troubles Send Nuclear Energy Stocks Tumbling

MarketDash Editorial Team
15 hours ago
Nuclear power stocks are getting hammered as Oracle's AI infrastructure delays expose the gap between Wall Street's urgency premium and the reality of construction timelines.

The nuclear energy rally just ran into a hard wall called reality. Shares of Oklo Inc. (OKLO), NuScale Power Corp. (SMR), and Nano Nuclear Energy (NNE) tumbled as investors processed some decidedly unglamorous news about Oracle's ambitious AI infrastructure plans.

Turns out building massive data centers isn't quite as simple as pushing code to production. Who knew?

The damage spread beyond the small-cap nuclear plays. Constellation Energy Corp. (CEG) and Bloom Energy Corp. (BE) also traded lower, caught in the broader energy sector malaise.

The Oracle Problem

Here's what happened: Last week, reports emerged that Oracle had pushed back delivery timelines for some critical data centers. The culprit? Shortages in skilled labor and essential materials. You know, the kind of mundane logistics problems that don't make for exciting investor presentations but absolutely matter in the real world.

Then came Wednesday's gut punch. The Financial Times reported that Blue Owl Capital decided to walk away from a $10 billion financing deal for Oracle's next planned data center for OpenAI's "Stargate" supercomputer project. According to people familiar with the situation, Oracle hasn't found anyone to replace Blue Owl's funding commitment yet.

This matters because Oracle is already facing mounting concerns about its debt load and massive AI spending spree. When your financial backers start getting cold feet, that's not exactly a vote of confidence.

The Narrative Unravels

For months, the "AI energy trade" ran on premium-grade hopium. The story went something like this: Hyperscalers like Oracle and Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) were racing to build gigawatt-scale data centers, and they desperately needed advanced nuclear reactors to power them. Money was no object, urgency was everything, and deals were just around the corner.

The long-term vision hasn't changed. AI still needs enormous amounts of power, and nuclear energy remains a compelling solution. But the timeline just got stretched out, and in the world of pre-revenue companies burning through cash, a one-year delay might as well be a lifetime.

Companies like Oklo and Nano Nuclear had been trading on what you might call an "urgency premium." Their valuations assumed that signed power purchase agreements were imminent, that construction would start soon, and that revenue would follow shortly after.

Reality Catches Up

Now investors are doing the math, and it's sobering. If the data centers aren't being built yet, the micro-reactors meant to power them won't be ordered yet either. No data centers means no urgent need for new power sources. No urgent need means no near-term contracts. No contracts means these companies keep burning cash without revenue visibility.

Hence the rapid unplugging from the speculative nuclear sector.

The nuclear renaissance may still be coming. The logic behind pairing AI infrastructure with clean, reliable nuclear power remains sound. But as Oracle's delays just demonstrated in painful detail, this transformation will arrive on a construction schedule, not a software update timeline. And construction schedules, as anyone who's ever renovated a kitchen knows, have a funny way of taking longer than expected.

Oracle's Data Center Troubles Send Nuclear Energy Stocks Tumbling

MarketDash Editorial Team
15 hours ago
Nuclear power stocks are getting hammered as Oracle's AI infrastructure delays expose the gap between Wall Street's urgency premium and the reality of construction timelines.

The nuclear energy rally just ran into a hard wall called reality. Shares of Oklo Inc. (OKLO), NuScale Power Corp. (SMR), and Nano Nuclear Energy (NNE) tumbled as investors processed some decidedly unglamorous news about Oracle's ambitious AI infrastructure plans.

Turns out building massive data centers isn't quite as simple as pushing code to production. Who knew?

The damage spread beyond the small-cap nuclear plays. Constellation Energy Corp. (CEG) and Bloom Energy Corp. (BE) also traded lower, caught in the broader energy sector malaise.

The Oracle Problem

Here's what happened: Last week, reports emerged that Oracle had pushed back delivery timelines for some critical data centers. The culprit? Shortages in skilled labor and essential materials. You know, the kind of mundane logistics problems that don't make for exciting investor presentations but absolutely matter in the real world.

Then came Wednesday's gut punch. The Financial Times reported that Blue Owl Capital decided to walk away from a $10 billion financing deal for Oracle's next planned data center for OpenAI's "Stargate" supercomputer project. According to people familiar with the situation, Oracle hasn't found anyone to replace Blue Owl's funding commitment yet.

This matters because Oracle is already facing mounting concerns about its debt load and massive AI spending spree. When your financial backers start getting cold feet, that's not exactly a vote of confidence.

The Narrative Unravels

For months, the "AI energy trade" ran on premium-grade hopium. The story went something like this: Hyperscalers like Oracle and Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) were racing to build gigawatt-scale data centers, and they desperately needed advanced nuclear reactors to power them. Money was no object, urgency was everything, and deals were just around the corner.

The long-term vision hasn't changed. AI still needs enormous amounts of power, and nuclear energy remains a compelling solution. But the timeline just got stretched out, and in the world of pre-revenue companies burning through cash, a one-year delay might as well be a lifetime.

Companies like Oklo and Nano Nuclear had been trading on what you might call an "urgency premium." Their valuations assumed that signed power purchase agreements were imminent, that construction would start soon, and that revenue would follow shortly after.

Reality Catches Up

Now investors are doing the math, and it's sobering. If the data centers aren't being built yet, the micro-reactors meant to power them won't be ordered yet either. No data centers means no urgent need for new power sources. No urgent need means no near-term contracts. No contracts means these companies keep burning cash without revenue visibility.

Hence the rapid unplugging from the speculative nuclear sector.

The nuclear renaissance may still be coming. The logic behind pairing AI infrastructure with clean, reliable nuclear power remains sound. But as Oracle's delays just demonstrated in painful detail, this transformation will arrive on a construction schedule, not a software update timeline. And construction schedules, as anyone who's ever renovated a kitchen knows, have a funny way of taking longer than expected.