The Power Grid Is Cracking Under the Weight of AI. One Stock Is the Cleanest Way to Play It.

Hey there, bargain hunter. Let’s talk about the most boring-sounding trade that is quietly becoming one of the most important stories in the market right now.

It’s not a chip. It’s not software. It’s electricity.

Here’s where I’m at on this: the AI infrastructure buildout — $725 billion in combined hyperscaler capex planned for 2026 alone — runs on power. Specifically, it runs on enormous, uninterrupted, baseload electricity that data centers require 24 hours a day, every day of the year. Solar doesn’t cut it. Wind doesn’t cut it. Natural gas helps at the margins. The only thing that actually solves the equation at industrial scale is nuclear.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has reported that U.S. data center electricity demand is expected to climb from 19 gigawatts in 2023 to 35 gigawatts by 2030. Some estimates put that number higher. Every AI query you run uses roughly 10 times more electricity than a traditional Google search — multiply that across billions of queries a day and you start to understand why every hyperscaler is scrambling to lock in power supply contracts years in advance.

The investment case here isn’t theoretical. It’s already playing out in deal flow.

Constellation Energy (CEG): The Only One Already Printing Profit

Microsoft signed a 20-year agreement to restart the Three Mile Island reactor in Pennsylvania — a $1.6 billion investment — specifically to power its expanding data centers. Meta signed a 20-year, 1.1 gigawatt deal with Constellation Energy starting in 2027. Amazon signed an MOU with Dominion Energy to explore small modular reactor development in Virginia.

But among the names in this trade, Constellation Energy (CEG) is the one already generating real earnings. Not a startup. Not a pre-revenue SMR developer burning cash. CEG operates 21 nuclear reactors across 12 sites, achieved a 98.8% operating rate in peak periods, and reported Q1 2026 revenue of $11.1 billion — crushing the $8.71 billion consensus — aided by the recently completed Calpine acquisition.

Full-year 2026 guidance stands at $11 to $12 EPS, with strong free cash flow growth projected through 2029. Revenue and earnings growth is expected at roughly 29% and 30%, respectively, for the current year. Twenty-one analysts carry a Buy rating, with a 12-month average price target around $366 — representing meaningful upside from recent trading levels near $294.

What’s interesting is the valuation setup right now. The stock is down roughly 27% year-to-date, dragged by a major analyst trimming its price target slightly and broader sector rotation. At a normalized P/E around 29x and a market cap near $106 billion, it’s not dirt cheap — but you’re buying nuclear-baseload power under long-term contracts with the largest tech companies in the world. That’s a very different earnings quality than a typical utility.

The bear case is real, though. The Calpine acquisition added complexity and leverage. Regulatory risk on nuclear license extensions and the Crane facility introduces timing uncertainty. And if interest rates stay elevated, the income-seeking capital that loves utilities may not rotate back in.

Slight tangent worth noting: the nuclear renaissance is not just a U.S. story. The current administration issued four executive orders aimed at expanding domestic nuclear capacity from roughly 100 GW in 2024 to 400 GW by 2050. That’s a multi-decade policy tailwind that few utility investments have ever enjoyed.

The speculative SMR names — Oklo, NuScale — get the headlines. They’re also pre-revenue, burning cash, and trading 57% to 78% off their highs. CEG is the one actually doing the work, today, at scale. Sometimes the cleanest trade isn’t the one that’s easiest to romanticize.

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