New York, May 30, 2026, 15:03 (EDT)
Constellation Energy shares enter next week on the back foot after a Friday bounce failed to repair a midweek break. CEG closed at $287.75 on May 29, up 0.50% on the day, but down about 2.1% from the May 22 close of $294.07; Wednesday’s 4.27% drop was the week’s hard turn.
There is no Saturday cash-session trade to change that picture. The Nasdaq market runs Monday through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern time, and U.S. markets were closed on Monday, May 25, for Memorial Day, leaving last week holiday-shortened.
The reason this matters now is that Constellation has become more than a conventional utility stock. Reuters reported this month that the company beat Wall Street’s first-quarter adjusted profit estimates, helped by rising power demand and the contribution from its newly acquired Calpine assets; it also described Constellation as the largest U.S. nuclear power operator.
The earnings base is still doing work for the bull case. Constellation said first-quarter GAAP net income rose to $4.49 a share, while adjusted operating earnings — a non-GAAP profit measure, meaning it is not calculated under standard accounting rules — rose to $2.74 a share from $2.14 a year earlier. The company affirmed 2026 adjusted operating earnings guidance of $11 to $12 a share; CEO Joe Dominguez said “America needs reliable, clean power,” and CFO Shane Smith cited “strong, visible cash flow.” Constellation
The cleaner near-term catalyst is regulatory. Constellation executives told Reuters they hoped U.S. regulators could decide in June or July on a request tied to restarting the former Three Mile Island nuclear plant, now called Crane Clean Energy Center, and Dominguez pushed back on the idea that “the plant won’t start sooner.” The restart is linked to a contract to serve Microsoft data centers in the region. Reuters
Grid rules are the other moving part. PJM Interconnection plans to move a backstop reliability auction to September from March to address data-center demand; a capacity auction is a market that pays power plants for being available when the grid needs them, not just for electricity actually sold. PJM’s board also warned that cost allocation remains unclear if states do not set rules for charging new data-center loads.
The competitive context is narrow: Vistra and NRG Energy are the most relevant peer read-throughs, not the whole regulated utility pack. MarketWatch reported last week that Constellation, Vistra and NRG rallied after PJM accelerated its data-center capacity process, tying the three power producers to the same AI-electricity trade.
Analysts still lean positive, though not blindly. MarketScreener listed a “Buy” mean consensus from 21 analysts, with an average target price — an analyst’s estimate of fair value — of $368.02, versus the last close of $287.75; the lowest target shown was $310. MarketScreener
But the downside case is not hard to find. If grid approvals drag, if PJM’s new rules shift costs in a way that cools data-center contracting, or if investors decide the AI-power trade moved too far ahead of cash flow, Constellation’s roughly $103.9 billion market value gives the stock little room for a soft story. Market capitalization means the total value of all outstanding shares.
For the week ahead, the stock’s first test is simple: whether Monday’s open treats Friday’s rise as a reset or only a pause. The bigger test sits beyond one session — FERC timing, PJM market design, and whether Constellation can turn demand from AI-linked power users into contracted earnings without inviting a sharper regulatory response.