6 days ago 7

Should You Buy NuScale Power While It's Trading Below $31?

Reuben Gregg Brewer, The Motley Fool

Tue, Jun 3, 2025, 1:40 AM 5 min read

  • NuScale Power is building a business around small-scale modular nuclear power plants.

  • The company's shares took off like a rocket following support from Washington for nuclear power.

  • Trading near all-time highs, is NuScale Power a buy today?

  • 10 stocks we like better than NuScale Power ›

Share prices of NuScale Power (NYSE: SMR) recently hit all-time highs around $36 per share. Up more than 250% over the past year, is the stock a buy at what are historically lofty price levels?

Here are a few things to consider before you buy shares in this nuclear power start-up.

NuScale Power has big plans for its business, but right now it doesn't really have that much of a business. That's because it only brought in revenue of $13 million in the first quarter of 2025. That came with roughly $6 million in costs, leading to a gross profit of about $7 million.

With research and development costs of $9 million and selling, general, and administrative costs of $23 million, the company is nowhere near turning a profit.

A person wearing a safety helmet and vest holds a laptop computer and stands in front of power plant equipment and towers

Image source: Getty Images.

That's not surprising, however, given what it is trying to do. It has developed plans for a small-scale modular nuclear reactor.

Basically, it has taken current nuclear reactor technology and scaled it down. The result is a reactor that can be partially pre-built in a factory and transported to a site, which should reduce costs and complexity, and save huge amounts of time relative to the building of a large nuclear reactor on site. Its modular reactors also incorporate the latest technology, which should increase the safety of the reactors as well.

NuScale's small modular reactors could represent a sea change in the way the world thinks about and uses nuclear power. Indeed, the modular units can be transported to where they are needed, used in closer proximity to large populations, and linked together to create a larger power source. It is an exciting concept. But right now, that's all it is: a concept.

The current administration in Washington appears to be very supportive of nuclear power as a source of carbon-free energy. Some executive orders from the Trump administration in May led to a swift increase in the stock price. It is now back near 52-week highs. But that's not the only reason to be optimistic here, given that it has a tentative deal to sell six of its reactors to RoPower, a Romanian power company.

It is currently working on feasibility studies to help RoPower make a final investment decision later this year. If this capital investment project gets the green light, NuScale Power will have its first official customer. That should help it land more. The company is, in fact, already preparing for additional customers, with orders for enough long-lead-time parts to build 12 of its reactors.


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