Today: 12 July 2026
Constellation Energy Stock Up 5%, Tuesday Seen as Test

Constellation Energy Stock Up 5%, Tuesday Seen as Test

NEW YORK, July 11, 2026, 18:05 (EDT)

Constellation Energy Corporation closed Friday at $251.38, up 5.1% on the week. Shares traded in line with peers Vistra Corp. , which added 5.2%, and Talen Energy Corporation , up 5.8%. The moves suggest traders bought the sector as a whole instead of making a big shift just on Constellation.

The distinction is key before Tuesday’s PJM capacity-auction numbers. Constellation is still down 39.1% from its October 2025 peak. Trading volume averaged 2.87 million last week, about 21% under its 65-day average of 3.61 million. Price bounced back. Investor activity lagged.

SecurityJuly 10 closeWeekly change
Constellation Energy$251.38up 5.1%
Vistra$158.86gained 5.2%
Talen Energy$385.80added 5.8%
S&P 5007,575.39rose 1.2%

The three generators traded within one point of each other and all outperformed the S&P 500. That suggests a broad sector bounce, rather than investors revaluing Constellation specifically. The S&P 500 added 1.2% as markets watched inflation news and the kickoff to earnings season.

The next signal hits after 4 p.m. EDT on July 14, when PJM Interconnection is set to release results from its auction covering the June 2028–May 2029 delivery year. The capacity market pays both power plants and some big customers ready to cut usage to commit resources ahead of time. PJM has set the price floor at $175 per megawatt-day, with a cap near $325. Adam Keech, senior vice president for market services, said, “electricity demand is growing faster than new generation can be built.” In the last auction, PJM locked in 6.6 gigawatts less than it said it needed for reliability. PJM Inside Lines

Real demand is showing the strain. PJM reported electricity use hit roughly 162,700 MW on July 2, just 2,900 MW shy of the grid’s 2006 peak. The operator said demand response, where users are paid to use less power during crunch times, likely kept usage from setting a new record.

Constellation won’t see a big boost to earnings from the auction price. The company struck a deal to sell 4.4 GW of mostly gas-fired PJM plants in Delaware and Pennsylvania to LS Power for $5 billion before adjustments. The sale is part of Constellation’s regulatory settlement over its Calpine acquisition. CEO Joe Dominguez said the deal is “an important step in satisfying the DOJ’s requirements,” and expects it to close later this year. Constellation

Another capital-markets event closed on Friday, with the deadline for Constellation noteholders to swap three series of unregistered notes for registered ones in the same principal. The move is administrative, not a repayment of debt. According to the most recent count on June 24, investors tendered $2.286 billion, or 99.86%, out of a total $2.290 billion.

Note seriesOutstanding ($mln)Tendered by June 24 ($mln)Tendered
4.625% due 2029646.822646.12299.89%
5.000% due 2031847.655847.42499.97%
3.750% due 2031795.179792.84999.71%
Total2,289.6562,286.39599.86%

The investment case is still about data centers and Constellation’s bigger generation mix after the $16.4 billion Calpine deal. Melius Research’s James West said back in February the company is “well-positioned to supply rapidly growing data center demand in 2026,” calling out its gas generation and ERCOT, the Texas power grid. Reuters

The downside seems clear. PJM’s auction collar caps how much prices could jump, and with Constellation’s asset sale coming up, some of that regional scarcity premium will exit its holdings. The latest U.S. CPI data on Tuesday is another worry. Anthony Saglimbene, Ameriprise’s chief market strategist, said sticky inflation “could push odds of a rate increase higher by year end,” which would mean higher financing costs and could weigh on stocks. Reuters

Investors are watching Tuesday’s auction, but the number on its own won’t tell the whole story. If Constellation trades up on heavy volume, outpacing Vistra and Talen, it could mean buyers are targeting the company. But if the stocks all move together on low volume again, last week’s rally could just be a sector play.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

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