Oklo Inc. stock rose 3.1% today. The company has secured a 1.2-gigawatt advanced nuclear campus agreement with Meta Platforms to power Meta's data centers in Ohio. Oklo and Argonne National Laboratory completed the second phase of thermal-hydraulic testing for Oklo's fast fission technology, with funding support from a Department of Energy Gateway for Accelerated Innovation in Nuclear voucher. Analysts have assigned Oklo a consensus "Moderate Buy" rating with an average 12-month price target of $103.20 across nineteen firms covering the stock. Recent analyst actions include Bank of America raising its rating to buy with a $127.00 price target. The stock's Relative Strength Rating increased from 68 to 73, indicating improved market leadership relative to other stocks.
Read full analysisOklo Inc. stock rose 3.1% today. The company has secured a 1.2-gigawatt advanced nuclear campus agreement with Meta Platforms to power Meta's data centers in Ohio. Oklo and Argonne National Laboratory completed the second phase of thermal-hydraulic testing for Oklo's fast fission technology, with funding support from a Department of Energy Gateway for Accelerated Innovation in Nuclear voucher. Analysts have assigned Oklo a consensus "Moderate Buy" rating with an average 12-month price target of $103.20 across nineteen firms covering the stock. Recent analyst actions include Bank of America raising its rating to buy with a $127.00 price target. The stock's Relative Strength Rating increased from 68 to 73, indicating improved market leadership relative to other stocks.
Oklo is a pre-revenue nuclear energy startup developing advanced fission microreactors, anchored by a landmark 1.2 GW partnership with Meta Platforms to power AI data centers in Ohio and a planned fuel recycling facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The company holds roughly $1.2 billion in cash but reported a $36.3 million operating loss in Q3 2025, with meaningful commercial revenue not expected until late 2027 or 2028. Today's gain followed progress on its reactor testing program with Argonne National Laboratory, a technical milestone for its Aurora powerhouse design.