Constellation Energy runs the largest U.S. nuclear fleet at a 94.7% capacity factor, and no new reactor has come online in the country for most of the past decade — a supply gap that gives the company pricing power over the next 20 years as AI data center demand surges.
Constellation Energy Corp. (NASDAQ:CEG) is a stock worth owning for decades because it operates the largest fleet of irreplaceable baseload nuclear assets in a country that has barely built any new nuclear capacity in a generation, and the customers paying to lock in that power for the next 20 years are the most cash-rich companies on earth.
"America needs reliable, clean power and Constellation is built to meet this demand with the strength of our fleet," Chief Executive Officer Joe Dominguez said.
The company runs 21 nuclear reactors across 14 stations, with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission granting 20-year license extensions for Clinton through 2047 and Dresden through 2049 and 2051. After closing its Calpine acquisition on Jan. 7, 2026, Constellation controls 55 gigawatts of combined capacity. The nuclear production tax credit provides a legislated revenue floor of as much as $15.00 per megawatt-hour with inflation adjustment. These plants throw off near-zero marginal-cost electricity from assets that cannot be replicated for at least a decade — between 2016 and 2023, no new American reactor came online, and only Vogtle Units 3 and 4 have since.
The scarcity of domestic nuclear construction is the company's structural moat. You cannot will a reactor into existence on a 12-month timeline, which means the fleet Constellation already owns functions more like a toll bridge than a commodity generator. Twenty-year power purchase agreements with Microsoft Corp., Meta Platforms Inc., and CyrusOne Inc. insulate revenue from commodity price swings. Hyperscaler capital spending for 2026 is tracking nearly 75% higher than last year, with the five largest cloud and AI infrastructure providers committing between $660 billion and $690 billion in combined spending. Amazon.com Inc.'s projected $200 billion outlay alone is expected to push the company into negative free cash flow for the year.
Dividend Growth and Capital Returns Back the Long Thesis
The quarterly dividend sits at $0.4265, up from $0.141 in 2022 — a tripling in four years. Management raised the dividend 10% in 2025 and targets 10% annual dividend growth over the long term. Behind that sits $8.4 billion of free cash flow expected in 2026 and 2027, rising to $11.5 billion to $13 billion in 2028 and 2029, plus $4.7 billion remaining on the $5.0 billion buyback authorization.
Constellation reported first-quarter 2026 adjusted earnings of $2.74 per share, beating the $2.53 consensus, on revenue of $11.1 billion against estimates of $8.6 billion. The stock trades at roughly 22 times forward earnings with 20% or more base earnings-per-share growth projected through 2029.
The Bear Case and Why It May Not Matter
If natural gas stays cheap, AI data center capital spending rolls over, and PJM Interconnection dilutes its capacity market reforms, Constellation's premium pricing thesis weakens. The $17.5 billion in long-term debt after the Calpine deal looks heavier in that scenario. The stock is already down roughly 24% year to date through June 16, which tells you the market is wrestling with exactly that risk.
Yet the production tax credit floor, the 20-year contracts with investment-grade counterparties, and the simple absence of replacement reactors mean the forever thesis stays intact even in a slow-demand decade. Public support is durable too: 72% of U.S. adults favor nuclear energy and 87% support license renewals, according to recent polling.
For investors, Constellation offers a rare combination: the income stability of a regulated utility with the growth profile of an AI infrastructure supplier. At 22 times forward earnings with double-digit EPS growth and a rising dividend, the long-duration setup looks intact for patient owners. The analyst who called Nvidia Corp. in 2010 recently named his top 10 AI stocks — and Constellation Energy did not make the cut, suggesting the market has not fully priced in the nuclear scarcity premium.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.