Today: 26 April 2026
Constellation Energy Stock Faces New Spotlight After Trump Bond Disclosure and AI Power Push
26 April 2026
2 mins read

Constellation Energy Stock Faces New Spotlight After Trump Bond Disclosure and AI Power Push

NEW YORK, April 26, 2026, 13:04 EDT

  • Constellation Energy showed up among the corporate bonds Donald Trump picked up in March, according to his latest financial disclosure. The filings only provide value ranges, not precise dollar figures.
  • Constellation is turning to its nuclear, gas, and geothermal fleet to meet surging data-center power needs following the close of its Calpine acquisition, according to the latest disclosure.
  • CEG finished Friday at $313.53, gaining around 7.1%. Market cap hovered close to $98 billion.

Constellation Energy landed back in focus after U.S. President Donald Trump’s newest financial disclosure listed the Baltimore-based power producer among the corporate bond issuers he snapped up in March. Investors are tracking the company closely these days, with its AI-fueled electricity business under the microscope.

Documents from the U.S. Office of Government Ethics listed 175 transactions, but details only specified value ranges rather than exact figures. Reuters’ math puts Trump’s bond purchases in March at no less than $51 million, with the total stretching to a possible $161 million when tallying every asset class.

This has suddenly become significant: Constellation now ranks among the most closely tracked U.S. power companies. The Calpine deal wrapped up in January, vaulting the company—by its own account—into the top spot nationwide for electricity generation. Capacity stands at 55 gigawatts, spanning nuclear, gas, geothermal, hydro, wind, solar and batteries.

The company keeps its message simple: data centers can’t afford to wait for new lines or plants—steady power is non-negotiable. When the Calpine acquisition wrapped, Constellation CEO Joe Dominguez declared the company was “stepping up to power America’s growth” as energy demand takes off. Constellation

Constellation finished Friday at $313.53, climbing roughly 7.1% for the session. After the close, a weekend disclosure brought its debt load back into focus. It’s worth noting the listing concerned corporate bonds rather than common stock—so it doesn’t offer a direct signal about appetite for CEG shares.

Policy winds appear to be shifting in Constellation’s direction. The U.S. Department of Energy has launched UPRISE, a program targeting 5 gigawatts of new nuclear capacity by 2029. That includes “uprates,” the industry’s own label for squeezing out more output from reactors already online. According to Reuters Events, Constellation stands to gain, along with rivals Vistra and Duke Energy. Reuters

“Uprates are the most cost effective and immediate way to boost nuclear capacity,” said Rian Bahran, deputy assistant secretary for nuclear reactors at the DOE, speaking to Reuters Events. James Richards at the Nuclear Innovation Alliance described the 5-gigawatt goal as ambitious—though not out of reach. Reuters

Crane Clean Energy Center—formerly Three Mile Island—is still Constellation’s main showcase. The company aims to have a reactor back online at the Pennsylvania site by late 2027, supplying power to Microsoft’s data centers. “We continue to expect to start this unit in 2027,” Dominguez reiterated to investors in March. Reuters

The outlook is anything but straightforward. PJM Interconnection, which runs the regional grid, says the location might not hook up to the power system before 2031. Constellation has also flagged in a regulatory filing that lagging transmission upgrades could jeopardize Crane’s capacity right up through late 2030. No U.S. nuclear plant that’s been completely shut down has ever started up again.

Rivalry in the sector is ratcheting up. Vistra is stepping in to provide Meta with nuclear energy, and other big power firms are hustling to lock in data-center deals by repurposing plants and leveraging grid rights. Constellation, for its part, picked up flexible gas-fired assets with the Calpine deal—faster to ramp than nuclear—but the acquisition also meant regulatory divestitures and extra complications.

Constellation’s first-quarter results are set for May 11, giving investors their next real look under the hood. For now? Just a slim update and a bigger question hanging out there: Can Constellation actually lock in deals quickly enough—leveraging nuclear tightness, government backing, and surging demand from Big Tech—to back up the stock’s surge?

Stock Market Today

  • Hillman Solutions (HLMN) Valuation Examined After Share Price Rebound
    April 26, 2026, 1:22 PM EDT. Hillman Solutions (HLMN) shares climbed 7.8% in the past month, rebounding from a 3-month decline of 8.3%. The stock closed at $8.81, below analyst-implied fair value of $14.00, suggesting potential undervaluation. The company's partnerships with major home improvement retailers position it to benefit from a long-term home repair cycle driven by aging U.S. housing stock. However, Hillman trades at a high price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of about 43x, well above industry and peer averages, implying valuation risk if growth expectations falter. Investors weigh strong margin growth assumptions against reliance on key retailers and demand risks in traditional hardware markets. The mixed multi-year shareholder returns and premium valuation highlight the uncertainty clouding Hillman's market outlook.

Latest article

Constellation Energy Stock Faces New Spotlight After Trump Bond Disclosure and AI Power Push

Constellation Energy Stock Faces New Spotlight After Trump Bond Disclosure and AI Power Push

26 April 2026
Donald Trump’s latest financial disclosure showed purchases of Constellation Energy corporate bonds in March, according to forms released Friday. Constellation shares closed at $313.53, up 7.1%, valuing the company near $98 billion. The company recently completed its Calpine acquisition, expanding its power capacity to 55 gigawatts. The disclosure did not specify exact bond purchase amounts.
Plug Power Stock Slips Again: Why PLUG’s May Earnings Test Now Matters

Plug Power Stock Slips Again: Why PLUG’s May Earnings Test Now Matters

26 April 2026
Plug Power Inc. shares fell 1.26% to $3.14 on Friday, extending a two-day slide and leaving the stock 31% below its 52-week high. The company reported $5.5 million in positive gross profit for the fourth quarter and a 12.9% rise in 2025 revenue. Plug recently won a contract for a 275-megawatt electrolyzer system in Quebec and agreed to sell its Project Gateway site for at least $132.5 million.
Lumentum Stock Faces a Crucial AI Test After BlackRock Filing and 4% Friday Gain
Previous Story

Lumentum Stock Faces a Crucial AI Test After BlackRock Filing and 4% Friday Gain

Go toTop