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Standard Nuclear Files To IPO With $594K In Quarterly Revenue

Published Jun 19, 2026
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Summary:
  • Standard Nuclear filed to go public with $593,802 in Q1 revenue and a $7.71 million net loss, against a last private valuation of $838 million.
  • The company makes TRISO fuel using HALEU, a rare advanced reactor fuel that Russia previously dominated, giving a domestic U.S. supplier strategic value after the 2024 Russian uranium import ban.
  • Recent deals with Oklo and the Department of Energy, plus Bank of America and Goldman Sachs leading the offering, signal the company is positioning for its first major commercial contracts.

A nuclear fuel startup with $593,802 in quarterly revenue just filed to go public. Its last private valuation was $838 million.

That is the bet Standard Nuclear is asking Wall Street to take.

Why The Valuation Gap Is So Wide

Standard Nuclear is based in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and makes fuel for advanced nuclear reactors.

Its target customers are next-generation designs, including small modular reactors (SMRs) and microreactors. Big Tech wants these reactors to power AI data centers.

Why? Data centers need huge, steady power that solar and wind cannot deliver.

The income statement is thin, with Q1 revenue coming in under $600,000 against a $7.71 million net loss.

A year earlier, revenue was around $378,000 against a $8.29 million loss. The business is growing, but still tiny.

So investors aren't paying for what Standard Nuclear sells today. They're paying for what gets loaded into reactors over the next decade.

The company makes TRISO fuel - tri-structural isotropic particle fuel - using HALEU (high-assay low-enriched uranium) as feedstock, the type of advanced fuel most new reactor designs need.

Russia has historically been the only commercial supplier of HALEU, and the U.S. is racing to build a domestic supply chain after banning Russian uranium imports in 2024, which makes a domestic producer rare and strategic.

Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what filings like this actually mean for your portfolio in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

The Deals Behind The Filing

Two recent moves help explain the timing.

On Tuesday, Standard Nuclear signed a fuel recycling deal with Oklo, building on advanced talks earlier this month with the Department of Energy to turn surplus plutonium into reactor fuel.

The Oklo deal matters because Oklo is backed by Sam Altman and ranks as one of the most-watched SMR builders in the country.

A fuel partnership puts Standard Nuclear inside its supply chain.

The DOE deal matters too, because surplus plutonium gives Standard Nuclear a fuel source most rivals cannot touch.

Both deals push the company closer to customers paying real money.

Nuclear is also having its biggest moment in decades, with Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta all signing nuclear power deals in the past year to feed their data centers.

The AI power story has mostly been about the reactors so far, and fuel is the layer underneath.

Bank of America and Goldman Sachs are leading the offering, with the stock set to trade on the NYSE under the ticker STDN.

What To Watch

The X-Energy precedent. X-Energy raised $1 billion in April, and its shares now trade below the offering price.

That tells investors the public market can sour fast on early-stage nuclear stories.

The control structure. Executive Chairman Thomas Hendrix will keep majority voting power after the listing, meaning public shareholders own a piece but cannot vote out management or push for changes.

The first real contract. A nuclear fuel deal is usually multi-year and large, so the first commercial supply contract will reset how the market values the stock.

Now public investors get to decide what that future is worth.

If you want this kind of read on the market every day, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs. You also get a 45-minute investing course thrown in as a bonus.

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