Fermi Inc (FRMI) Stock News Today: Why Shares Are Swinging, Latest SEC Filing, and Analyst Price Targets (Dec. 17, 2025)

Fermi Inc (FRMI) Stock News Today: Why Shares Are Swinging, Latest SEC Filing, and Analyst Price Targets (Dec. 17, 2025)

Fermi Inc. (NASDAQ: FRMI; LSE: FRMI) stock is back in the spotlight on Wednesday, December 17, 2025, after another volatile session that followed last week’s sharp selloff and Tuesday’s strong rebound. In early afternoon trading, FRMI was changing hands around $8.85, down about 9% on the day after opening near $10.00 and sliding as low as $8.75, with volume approaching 4.25 million shares.

The latest move comes as investors digest a key development disclosed in a recent SEC filing: a prospective “first tenant” for Fermi’s flagship Project Matador in Texas terminated an agreement that could have advanced up to $150 million toward construction costs—while lease negotiations continue. [1]

Below is what’s driving FRMI today (Dec. 17), what the company has formally disclosed, and how Wall Street’s forecasts currently stack up after a fast-changing week.


What’s happening with FRMI stock on Dec. 17, 2025

FRMI’s Wednesday action looks like a tug-of-war between two narratives:

  • “AI infrastructure is still the long game” — investors buying dips after an abrupt drawdown.
  • “Execution risk is real right now” — investors re-pricing near-term uncertainty around tenants and funding.

MarketBeat reported that FRMI shares were down 5.9% intraday to about $9.17, hitting $9.08 at the low at the time of its update, with trading volume cited at roughly 995,325 shares—well below its stated average daily volume. [2]

Meanwhile, broader tape data around early afternoon indicated FRMI nearer $8.85 with a wider intraday range, underscoring how quickly the stock has been moving hour to hour.

Tuesday’s bounce set the stage

Part of today’s volatility is simply the “aftershock” of Tuesday’s sharp move higher. One market recap published today noted FRMI surged 13.39% on Tuesday to close at $9.74, framing the rally as bargain-hunting and a return of risk appetite toward AI and high-performance computing plays after the prior downdraft. [3]


The SEC filing investors are focused on: the $150M construction-funding agreement ended

The most concrete, market-moving information in the past week remains the company’s Form 8‑K dated December 12, 2025, which lays out the timeline around a potential anchor tenant at Project Matador. [4]

Here are the key points from the filing:

  • Fermi said it signed a non-binding letter of intent (LOI) dated September 19, 2025 with an investment grade-rated tenant (referred to as the “First Tenant”) to lease a portion of the Project Matador site, subject to finalizing a definitive lease. [5]
  • Fermi later entered an Advance in Aid of Construction Agreement (AICA) dated November 3, 2025, under which the First Tenant agreed—subject to conditions—to advance up to $150 million to fund construction costs. The company stated no funds were drawn under the AICA. [6]
  • The LOI exclusivity period expired at midnight on December 9, 2025. [7]
  • On December 11, 2025, the First Tenant notified Fermi it was terminating the AICA, though the parties continue to negotiate the terms of a lease agreement under the LOI. [8]
  • Fermi said it had started discussions with other potential tenants for power delivery at the site in 2026 and reiterated confidence in its expected power delivery schedule given demand for behind-the-meter AI power. [9]

That combination—funding agreement scrapped, lease talks still alive—has been the core driver of FRMI’s unusually sharp two-way trading.

Reuters described the situation as an early challenge for a newly public, pre-revenue company, noting the tenant could have provided up to $150 million to help finance construction and that the stock’s plunge reflected heightened concern when a key prospective customer steps back. [10]


Why this matters: Fermi’s “Project Matador” is the whole story right now

Fermi’s investment case is tightly linked to its ambition to build what it describes as a massive, power-dense AI campus in the Texas Panhandle.

Reuters has previously reported that Fermi is aiming to develop a large energy-and-data complex near Amarillo, describing plans that could eventually deliver up to 11 gigawatts of power, with 1 GW targeted by late 2026, and emphasizing that the company has been early-stage and not yet generating revenue. [11]

That context helps explain why headlines about an early tenant (and early funding) have had an outsized impact on the stock: for markets, the near-term question is less “Is there demand for AI power?” and more “How quickly can Fermi convert demand into signed, financeable contracts?”


Today’s news roundup on FRMI: lawsuits, “investor alerts,” and what they do (and don’t) mean

In addition to trading updates and analyst recaps, another category of headlines hitting FRMI today is shareholder litigation “investigation” announcements—a common occurrence after sharp stock moves.

  • The Schall Law Firm announced on Dec. 17, 2025 that it is investigating claims on behalf of investors in Fermi Inc. for potential securities law violations. [12]
  • The DJS Law Group published a similar announcement (dated Dec. 16, distributed broadly into today’s news feeds) describing an investigation into potential misleading statements or omissions. [13]

Important nuance for readers: these are announcements of investigations, not court findings, and they do not by themselves establish wrongdoing. Still, they can add to headline risk and can keep a volatile stock in the news cycle.


A “good news” counterbalance: Fermi’s 200 MW power service agreement (starting Jan. 2026)

While the tenant funding story has dominated, Fermi has also pointed to operational progress on power procurement—crucial for any AI data-center platform.

On Dec. 5, 2025, Fermi announced a definitive Electric Service Agreement with Southwestern Public Service Company (SPS), a subsidiary of Xcel Energy, to provide up to 200 megawatts (MW) of electrical capacity for Project Matador. The company said delivery is expected to begin with 86 MW in January 2026, ramping over time. [14]

In practical terms: this does not “solve” the tenant question, but it supports the argument that the company is moving from concept toward infrastructure execution—one of the key checkboxes investors want to see.


Analyst forecasts and price targets: what Wall Street is modeling right now

FRMI’s volatility has not eliminated bullish forecasts, but it has clearly pressured how analysts frame near-term risk.

Consensus view (as of Dec. 17)

MarketBeat’s analyst consensus page (refreshed Wednesday afternoon) shows:

  • Consensus rating: Buy
  • Average 12-month price target:$31.56
  • Range:$27 (low) to $37 (high)
  • Coverage count:10 analysts, with ratings skewing heavily toward Buy/Strong Buy and one Hold [15]

MarketScreener’s consensus snapshot shows a similarly bullish tilt but with different coverage counts and averages (a reminder that forecast aggregators use different universes/methodologies):

  • Mean consensus: Buy
  • Number of analysts: 8
  • Average target price: $29.00 (based on the last close shown on that page) [16]

Recent notable change: Evercore ISI cuts target to $20 (but keeps Outperform)

One of the more prominent post-headline adjustments came from Evercore ISI, which lowered its price target to $20 from $37 while maintaining an Outperform stance after the construction funding agreement was terminated. [17]

Stifel’s read: negotiation friction, not necessarily a dead deal

A Stifel-focused recap described the situation as an “unexpected complication” in negotiations, suggesting the tenant attempted last-minute LOI changes that Fermi resisted, resulting in delays. It also reported Stifel’s view that the LOI remained active and that Fermi’s land lease situation (including with Texas Tech University) was not viewed as at risk from this specific complication. [18]

Other bullish initiations still shape the consensus

Several firms initiated coverage in late October and November with Buy/Outperform-style ratings and targets often clustered in the high-$20s to mid-$30s, contributing to the elevated consensus targets seen on aggregator pages. [19]

How to read these targets today: price targets are typically long-duration models; FRMI’s current tape is being driven by near-term contract certainty. That disconnect is why you can see a stock trading in single digits while some targets remain multiples higher.


The key risks the market is pricing into FRMI stock

Based on the week’s filings and coverage, investors appear to be focused on a short list of fundamental risks:

  1. Tenant conversion risk (and customer concentration early on): When a key early prospective tenant pulls back from funding, the market quickly re-prices “how real” the demand pipeline is. [20]
  2. Financing and execution risk: Fermi’s buildout ambition is enormous, and markets tend to penalize uncertainty around the sequence of financing, construction milestones, and contract signings—especially for a development-stage company. [21]
  3. Headline and litigation overhang: Investor-law-firm investigation announcements can amplify volatility and keep negative narratives in circulation even when there’s no new operational disclosure. [22]
  4. Technical damage from the drawdown: FRMI trading well below key moving averages was highlighted in today’s MarketBeat note, reflecting how momentum-driven traders may treat the stock until a stabilizing catalyst appears. [23]

What could move Fermi (FRMI) stock next

For short-term traders and longer-term investors alike, the next major moves in FRMI are likely to be driven less by broad “AI hype” and more by discrete updates tied to Project Matador.

Watchpoints include:

  • Any definitive lease signing (either with the First Tenant or another tenant) following the ongoing negotiations described in the 8‑K. [24]
  • Additional “power secured” milestones that reduce project uncertainty—especially as the January 2026 initial delivery window for the 86 MW tranche approaches. [25]
  • Further analyst revisions—particularly if more firms follow Evercore in resetting targets to reflect near-term contract timing. [26]
  • Company appearances at investor conferences, which can be catalysts for clarification on timelines and customer pipeline (MarketScreener’s calendar section references an early-January event listing). [27]

Bottom line on Dec. 17: FRMI is trading on “proof points,” not promises

Fermi Inc. stock is behaving like a classic early-stage infrastructure story: big addressable market, big ambition, and a market that wants execution evidence—signed tenants, firm power schedules, and financing clarity—before it assigns a premium valuation.

Today’s mix of (1) a sharp intraday pullback, (2) still-bullish sell-side targets, and (3) lawsuit/investigation headlines illustrates why FRMI may remain a high-volatility ticker until the next hard catalyst lands.

References

1. www.sec.gov, 2. www.marketbeat.com, 3. www.insidermonkey.com, 4. www.sec.gov, 5. www.sec.gov, 6. www.sec.gov, 7. www.sec.gov, 8. www.sec.gov, 9. www.sec.gov, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.globenewswire.com, 13. www.prnewswire.com, 14. www.prnewswire.com, 15. www.marketbeat.com, 16. www.marketscreener.com, 17. www.investing.com, 18. www.investing.com, 19. www.marketbeat.com, 20. www.sec.gov, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.globenewswire.com, 23. www.marketbeat.com, 24. www.sec.gov, 25. www.prnewswire.com, 26. www.investing.com, 27. www.marketscreener.com

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