Nuclear energy stocks surged this week after the Trump administration opened the federal checkbook in a big way. The Department of Energy announced $2.7 billion in funding on Monday, and investors responded by bidding up anything remotely connected to uranium enrichment and next-generation reactors.
This isn't random industrial policy. The money targets a real problem: America doesn't produce nearly enough enriched uranium to fuel its nuclear ambitions, and the country has been uncomfortably reliant on Russian supplies. The funding aims to rebuild the domestic uranium enrichment pipeline, specifically addressing shortages of low-enriched uranium (LEU) and high-assay low-enriched uranium (HALEU), which next-generation reactors need to operate.
Breaking Down the Funding
The DOE split most of the cash three ways, awarding $900 million task orders to contractors focused on weaning America off Russian nuclear fuel:
American Centrifuge Operating, a subsidiary of Centrus Energy Corp. (LEU), received funding to build out domestic HALEU production capacity. This is the advanced fuel that new reactor designs require.
Orano Federal Services got a matching award to expand LEU enrichment for the existing fleet of commercial reactors currently operating across the country.
General Matter, a venture-backed private company, also secured $900 million to develop HALEU capabilities for next-generation reactor technology.
Meanwhile, Global Laser Enrichment, a joint venture that includes Cameco Corp. (CCJ), picked up $28 million to advance experimental laser enrichment technologies that could reshape how uranium gets processed in the future.
The Stock Market Reaction
Investors didn't waste time. Nuclear stocks rallied hard on Monday, with gains continuing into Tuesday morning. The enthusiasm makes sense when you consider what guaranteed domestic fuel supply means for companies trying to commercialize new reactor designs.
Centrus Energy (LEU) led the charge as the primary domestic enrichment player directly benefiting from federal contracts.
Small modular reactor developers saw massive gains. Oklo Inc. (OKLO), NuScale Power Corp. (SMR), and Nano Nuclear Energy, Inc. (NNE) all surged on expectations that a reliable HALEU supply chain will finally allow them to accelerate commercial deployments. These companies have been promising next-generation reactors for years, but fuel availability has been a genuine bottleneck.
The uranium mining side also caught a bid. Uranium Energy Corp. (UUUU) and the Sprott Uranium Miners ETF (URNM) climbed as the administration's "American-made" energy push increases the strategic value of domestic mining and processing operations.
The Bigger Picture
This funding represents more than just another infrastructure grant. President Donald Trump's administration is betting that nuclear power will provide the reliable baseload energy needed to support the explosion in AI-driven data centers. Tech companies are racing to build massive computing facilities, and they need consistent, carbon-free power that solar and wind can't always deliver.
The Trump administration has branded this effort a "nuclear renaissance," and the continued federal support suggests they're serious about restructuring America's energy grid with nuclear as a cornerstone. Whether that vision materializes depends on execution, but investors are clearly willing to bet on the sector's momentum right now.




