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Standard Nuclear Eyes Up to $3.55B US IPO Valuation

July 7 (Reuters) - Standard Nuclear is targeting a valuation of up to $3.55 billion in its ​U.S. initial public offering, as investors increasingly favor energy companies ‌on expectations of rising power demand from the rapid expansion of AI.

The Oak Ridge, Tennessee-based nuclear fuel company said on Tuesday it aims to raise ​up to $383.25 million in the IPO by offering 18.25 million ​shares priced between $18 and $21 each.

The IPO market is regaining momentum ⁠as easing geopolitical tensions, resilient equity markets and strong investor ​demand encourage companies to proceed with their listing plans.

Energy-related IPOs are also ​benefiting as the Trump administration pushes to quadruple U.S. nuclear power capacity by 2050 to meet growing electricity demand from AI-driven data centers.

Nuclear reactor developer X-Energy  made ​a stellar debut in April after raising $1.02 billion in its IPO. ​Deep Fission also went public last month.

Standard Nuclear produces advanced nuclear fuel for advanced ‌nuclear ⁠reactors, including small modular reactors and microreactors, with a focus on scaling up domestic capacity to bolster U.S. energy security.

The company reported a 57% increase in revenue to $593,802 for the quarter ended March 31, ​it disclosed in ​its IPO filing.

Founder ⁠Thomas Hendrix will control about 59.5% of the company's voting power through his class B shares, after ​the offering.

Standard Nuclear plans to use the IPO ​proceeds to ⁠meet working capital requirements, general corporate purposes and potential acquisitions or investments in complementary businesses, technologies or assets.

The company intends to list on ⁠the ​New York Stock Exchange under the ticker ​symbol "STDN". BofA Securities, Goldman Sachs, Barclays and UBS Investment Bank are among the underwriters ​for the offering.

Reporting by Prakhar Srivastava in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar

Source: Reuters


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