Key Takeaways
- Oklo shares advanced 11.9% to reach $72.70 Thursday, accompanied by trading volume approximately 26% higher than typical daily levels.
- Wall Street analysts maintain a Moderate Buy consensus rating, targeting an average price of $87.68 — following multiple recent target reductions from major firms.
- The company’s Q1 results showed a loss of $0.27 per share, falling short of the anticipated loss of $0.17 per share.
- Company insiders have divested more than 818,000 shares totaling approximately $50.9 million during the past 90-day period, with CEO Jacob DeWitte among the sellers.
- While Oklo currently operates without revenue streams, functioning reactors, or commercial licensing, the firm maintains a 14 gigawatt project pipeline.
Oklo stock delivered impressive gains Thursday, advancing 11.9% to settle near $72.70. During intraday trading, shares peaked at $72.84, while more than 14.5 million shares changed hands — representing approximately 26% above typical volume levels. The stock entered Thursday’s session at $64.98.
The rally unfolded alongside a complicated fundamental picture for the emerging nuclear technology company. The firm’s Q1 financial results revealed earnings per share of -$0.27, underperforming against Wall Street’s projected loss of -$0.17. Full-year projections from analysts point toward a loss of $0.75 per share.
Oklo presently generates zero revenue, maintains zero operational reactors, and awaits commercial authorization to distribute power. The company completed its public market debut in May 2024 and continues collaborating with the U.S. Department of Energy on constructing its initial reactor facility at Idaho National Laboratory.
What attracts investor attention? Oklo positions itself at the intersection of two significant market trends: escalating power requirements driven by AI data infrastructure and growing momentum behind nuclear energy solutions.
The enterprise develops compact fast-fission reactor systems — factory-manufactured units capable of operating on both virgin and recycled nuclear fuel sources. Partnership agreements exist with Equinix and Meta Platforms, while OpenAI’s Sam Altman provides financial backing.
Oklo reports a project backlog representing approximately 14 gigawatts of potential capacity. Based on electricity pricing outlined in the company’s 2024 investor materials — ranging from $40 to $90 per megawatt-hour — this pipeline theoretically translates to annual revenue between $5 billion and $11 billion. These figures remain projections.
Pipeline Ambitions Versus Execution Challenges
Achieving 14 GW represents a substantial undertaking. Utilizing Oklo’s largest Aurora reactor design rated at 75 megawatts, delivering that capacity would require approximately 187 individual units. Current operational count stands at zero.
A BloombergNEF analyst’s assessment places the construction cost for a single 75 MW unit between $350 million and $400 million. Meta’s proposed 1.2 GW facility in Ohio would necessitate 16 reactors, translating to expenditures ranging from $5.6 billion to $6.4 billion — with investment recovery spanning six to seven years at $90 per MWh pricing.
The company commands a market capitalization near $12.64 billion. Technical indicators show the 50-day moving average at $59.61, while the 200-day moving average rests at $84.70.
Wall Street Perspectives and Insider Transactions
Analyst perspectives vary considerably. Canaccord Genuity reduced its price objective from $175 to $125 while maintaining a Buy recommendation. Barclays adjusted its target downward from $146 to $82 with an Overweight rating. UBS decreased its target from $95 to $60, assigning a Neutral stance. Weiss Ratings shifted to a Sell recommendation.
Overall analyst consensus remains at Moderate Buy, with the average price objective landing at $87.68.
Regarding insider transactions, CEO Jacob DeWitte divested 60,000 shares at $50.25 on April 1st, generating $3 million in proceeds. Collective insider sales reached 818,766 shares valued at approximately $50.9 million throughout the preceding 90 days. Insider ownership currently represents roughly 18.9% of outstanding shares.
Institutional investment accounts for 85% of the shareholder base. Multiple funds have expanded their positions recently, with GAMMA Investing increasing its holdings by 356%.
The stock’s 52-week trading range spans from $24.53 to $193.84, illustrating substantial price volatility.

