Investors Flock to NuScale as E-commerce Giant Pours Half a Billion Dollars into Compact Nuclear Technology

Table of Contents Shares of NuScale Power (SMR) climbed more than 10% on April 30, 2026, propelled by widespread optimism throughout the nuclear energy industry after Amazon revealed three strategic partnerships supporting small modular reactor development — highlighted by a $500 million commitment to competitor X-energy. NuScale Power Corporation, SMR Amazon’s announcement didn’t include NuScale among its chosen partners. Yet the stock rallied regardless. This reaction reveals much about investor sentiment within the SMR market. When a technology giant commits hundreds of millions toward clean energy infrastructure, every company in that ecosystem benefits. Market participants rushed into nuclear-related equities en masse. A short squeeze magnified the gains. NuScale has attracted significant short interest, and as share prices rose, pessimistic traders scrambled to exit their bearish bets. This forced buying created additional upward momentum. Trading at approximately $3.88 billion in market capitalization, NuScale occupies a compelling position. Competitor Oklo — another dedicated SMR developer — commands a valuation nearly triple that size. Before Wednesday’s surge, NuScale shares had declined more than 20% since the year began. What distinguishes NuScale from competitors: it stands alone as the only American enterprise possessing Nuclear Regulatory Commission certification for its SMR technology. Securing this regulatory approval required years of effort and cannot be quickly duplicated. In an industry still establishing credibility, this achievement carries significant weight. However, Bank of America research suggests substantial SMR deployment won’t materialize until 2030 or later, potentially extending to 2035. While the underlying technology exists, commercial markets remain undeveloped. NuScale’s business model emphasizes utility-scale installations. This differentiates the company from Oklo, which pursues smaller, customized deployments — such as dedicated power systems for individual data center facilities. Both approaches have merit. Neither has achieved large-scale validation. Bank of America estimates the broader nuclear sector opportunity could reach approximately $10 trillion over three decades. Within that landscape, research indicates the SMR segment specifically may represent $1.5 trillion. Even capturing a modest portion would generate substantial returns relative to NuScale’s present valuation. One market observer noted: a 2,000% appreciation from current levels would still leave NuScale’s market cap below $100 billion. Yet such extraordinary gains would demand perfect execution across multiple fronts — sustained expansion in AI data center requirements, nuclear energy capturing meaningful market share of that demand, SMR technology achieving real-world commercial success, and NuScale’s utility-focused design emerging as an industry standard. This represents a considerable series of contingencies. Daily trading activity for SMR averages approximately 27 million shares, demonstrating intense market attention on this equity. Technical indicators entering the week suggested bearish momentum, making Wednesday’s spike particularly noteworthy. Despite the recent pop, NuScale’s year-to-date performance remained negative, with shares still down roughly 20% through April’s closing session.