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Why Shares of Nano Nuclear Energy Stock Sank This Week
Why Shares of Nano Nuclear Energy Stock Sank This Week

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Why Shares of Nano Nuclear Energy Stock Sank This Week

Nano Nuclear Energy filed six patents for its microreactor technology. The company raised more funds in a private placement offering. Nano is far from generating revenue and is a company investors should stay away from right now. 10 stocks we like better than Nano Nuclear Energy › Shares of Nano Nuclear Energy (NASDAQ: NNE) sank 16% this week, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. The nuclear energy start-up closed a private placement offering of common stock that will dilute shareholders, leading the stock to fall. Shares of the pre-revenue company are up 26% this year and up 500% since going public around one year ago. Here's why Nano Nuclear Energy stock was sinking this week, and whether the stock is a buy now. Nano Nuclear Energy wants to build -- as the name implies -- tiny and portable micro nuclear reactors. It filed six patents this week related to its proposed Zeus Microreactor, which is still in development from its engineering team. While patents may indicate a positive move for the stock, Nano Nuclear sank this week because of the pricing of its private placement stock offering to professional investors. Nano Nuclear sold shares of its common stock at a price of $27, which is below its current price of $30 and likely built some selling pressure on shares this week. Indeed, $105 million was raised in the offering, which covers many years of its current cash burn of $10.5 million a year. The company needs the cash, because it does not have a working product yet. It is working on a micro reactor that has never been built before, and it is unclear if the technology will work. Shares outstanding have consistently climbed as Nano Nuclear has been in the public markets because of its capital needs, which will dilute long-term shareholder returns. It is easy to decide whether an investor should buy Nano Nuclear stock. The company does not think it will have a product until 2030 or later -- and that is if it can even get the technology to work. It generates zero revenue today and will burn money for many years into the future. These are not good stocks to invest in. An individual can hope that Nano Nuclear does well and invents a new way of electricity generation to better society. But hope is not an investment strategy. Smart investors will keep Nano Nuclear stock out of their portfolios because of how high risk this investment is. Don't look at the 500% returns and expect the future to look like the past -- this is a science project with a stock price attached to it. Before you buy stock in Nano Nuclear Energy, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Nano Nuclear Energy wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $638,985!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $853,108!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 978% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 171% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of May 19, 2025 Brett Schafer has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Why Shares of Nano Nuclear Energy Stock Sank This Week was originally published by The Motley Fool

Cuomo didn't disclose millions in nuclear stock options
Cuomo didn't disclose millions in nuclear stock options

Politico

time02-05-2025

  • Business
  • Politico

Cuomo didn't disclose millions in nuclear stock options

ALBANY, New York — Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo holds stock options in an advanced nuclear technology company worth more than $2.6 million, but did not disclose those assets in filings with the New York City Conflicts of Interest Board. Nano Nuclear Energy awarded Cuomo the stock options as compensation for his position on the company's advisory board, which the company disclosed in an annual securities filing. Cuomo, the leading candidate in the Democratic primary for New York City mayor, did not make a similar disclosure, and, according to experts, political candidates should disclose such holdings. 'Stock options would need to be reported in response to the question 'Securities Held,'' said Carolyn Miller, executive director of the city's Conflicts of Interest Board, in response to a question about whether stock options should be disclosed to the oversight body. A Cuomo campaign official familiar with the filing said the options do not have to be disclosed because they're held by the candidate's limited liability company, Innovation Strategies. There are no questions on the required forms about an LLC's holdings, just the candidate's personal securities and other holdings. But Miller said options would still have to be disclosed even if they're held by an LLC. The Cuomo official, who was granted anonymity to discuss a legal issue, said the campaign would reach out to the conflicts board. 'If there's any legal complexity, it's ethically clear that this is a type of security, and there's good reason to include it on this form for public disclosure,' said Rachael Fauss, senior policy adviser for Reinvent Albany. The nuclear company, which is in the early stages of developing a viable product, also paid cash to Cuomo through his LLC for being on its advisory board. He reported making more than $500,000 in income from the LLC in 2024. The former governor has refused to release a complete list of his clients, though, raising conflicts of interest concerns from good government groups. Other clients of his firm included a cryptocurrency exchange. The governor joined Nano Nuclear's advisory board in March 2024 and congratulated the company when it went public last May. It awarded the governor 125,000 in stock options for $3 a share. Those options, as of Friday when Nano Nuclear shares traded above $24, are now worth more than $2.6 million. Cuomo campaign spokesperson Rich Azzopardi noted that the stock option Cuomo's LLC received 'has not been exercised.' 'While the disclosures were made in good faith and based on our reading of the law, we will work with the Conflict of Interest Board and make any amendment deemed appropriate,' he said. 'If elected, Governor Cuomo wouldn't have any other position other than to serve as Mayor of New York City, and would work with the COIB to navigate any perceived issues that may arise, and disclose the remedies.' A spokesperson for Nano Nuclear declined to respond to questions about Cuomo's compensation and role with the company. The company and its CEO recently deleted several social media posts on LinkedIn and X congratulating Cuomo when he announced his mayoral run two months ago. Cuomo's history with nuclear energy is complex. He successfully campaigned for more than a decade to shut down Indian Point, New York City's largest source of carbon-free electricity. The former governor's concern about the plant was primarily driven by safety issues he scrutinized at the decades-old plant on the Hudson River. Its proximity to New York City and the impossibility of evacuating the region if a disaster happened were fears many public officials and advocates shared. Cuomo also orchestrated subsidies for upstate nuclear plant's on the basis of their environmental benefits. Those subsidies have cost ratepayers more than $4 billion since 2017 , with four years of payments to go. (State officials working under Cuomo insisted at the time the 12-year subsidy would only cost $2.6 billion as energy prices were forecast to rise.) The last Indian Point reactor shut down in 2021. Since then, gas plants have ramped up to fill the gaps, and the region's electricity has become more carbon dependent. Electricity costs spiked, and New York City's grid now faces reliability issues as the state tries to shut down the region's most polluting power plants. Nano Nuclear has made some New York moves since Cuomo joined the advisory board, although their largest physical offices are near Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. The company responded to the state's request for information from the nuclear industry and stakeholders. It has committed to building a demonstration facility for some non-nuclear components of its in-development 'microreactors' in Westchester County. Nano Nuclear also announced agreements with two upstate New York cryptocurrency miners last year to explore using their microreactors.

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