Fermi Inc. invoked the Manhattan Project in a shareholder letter, arguing that building artificial intelligence and the nuclear-energy capacity to power it is a national priority on par with World War II’s most consequential R&D effort. The newly public power-plant developer laid out plans for a Texas data center campus anchored by future nuclear generation, even as it reported no revenue and a sizable annual loss in its first post-IPO results.
Key Points
“Make no mistake, America is at war,” the company wrote Monday, casting the race to develop AI and the clean baseload to run it as a strategic contest with China. Fermi Inc’s rhetoric—and its Texas “Matador” project—underline how quickly data-center power demand is reshaping energy investment and policy debates in the U.S.
Shares recently traded around $25.31, up 3.94% on the day, giving Fermi Inc a market value near $15 billion. The company posted a net loss of $353.2 million for the year through Sept. 30 and ended the period with $183 million in cash and equivalents.
Inside Fermi Inc’s Matador Project in Texas
Fermi Inc. plans to build a massive data center campus in the Texas Panhandle, ultimately supplied by four large nuclear reactors slated for completion in the 2030s. In the near term, the company is moving ahead with natural gas turbines at the site to begin supplying power sooner, positioning the project as a bridge from fossil-fired capacity to long-lived, zero-carbon baseload.
- Location: Texas Panhandle, within the ERCOT market
- Long-term plan: Four large nuclear reactors targeted for the 2030s
- Near-term plan: Installation of natural gas turbines to begin operations
- End users: AI-oriented data centers requiring 24/7 reliable power
The sequencing reflects the reality of nuclear timelines. Even with supportive policies, U.S. nuclear projects must clear extensive licensing, safety, and financing milestones before shovels hit the ground. Gas generation provides dispatchable capacity while permitting and procurement proceed.
What Fermi Inc. Told Shareholders
In its letter, Fermi Inc. framed AI infrastructure as a strategic race, asserting that the U.S. is lagging behind China on nuclear construction. “We are humbled to partner with you on the Manhattan Project of our generation,” the company wrote, adding that it aims to “defend our country and Western Civilization against the national security threat of our time.”
The company said China is developing 33 nuclear reactors and claimed the U.S. currently has no commercial atomic projects under construction. Against that backdrop, Fermi Inc argues that pairing AI and nuclear is both an industrial strategy and an energy strategy: AI demand is swelling at the same time grid planners are seeking firm, carbon-free power to meet decarbonization goals.
Context: AI’s Power Hunger Meets a Grid Crunch
The surge in AI training and inference has turbocharged demand for dense, around-the-clock electricity. Hyperscale data centers seek multi-gigawatt interconnections with high reliability and predictable costs—conditions that favor firm resources.
- Baseload need: AI data centers prefer 24/7 power, making nuclear attractive alongside storage and flexible gas.
- ERCOT dynamics: Texas’s growth in wind and solar has been significant, but intermittency and congestion challenge 24/7 supply without additional firm capacity.
- Policy overlay: Federal incentives for advanced energy and the pursuit of 24/7 carbon-free electricity (CFE) contracts could support long-dated nuclear offtake.
Fermi Inc’s pitch sits at this intersection: secure, long-lived baseload for a class of customers whose power needs are growing faster than the interconnection queue can absorb.
Financing and the IPO Snapshot
Fermi Inc. completed its initial public offering six weeks ago and is now navigating public markets with a capital-intensive roadmap. The company’s financials underscore the scale of the task:
- Revenue: None reported to date
- Net loss: $353.2 million for the year through Sept. 30
- Liquidity: $183 million in cash and equivalents
- Market capitalization: About $15 billion
Developing nuclear assets will require large equity commitments, project finance, vendor partnerships, and likely long-term contracts with creditworthy buyers. Fermi Inc has not detailed final reactor technology, vendors, or a definitive financing package for Matador, but early steps—site development and gas turbine installation—allow progress while longer-dated nuclear milestones line up.
Regulatory Path: Years, Not Months
Any large U.S. nuclear facility must secure approvals from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), a process that includes:
- Site permitting and environmental reviews
- Reactor design approvals or certifications
- Combined construction and operating licenses (COLs)
- Robust safety, cybersecurity, and emergency preparedness plans
For Fermi Inc., synchronized regulatory and commercial timelines are crucial. Long-lead equipment, supply-chain constraints, and workforce requirements will shape when nuclear construction can realistically start—and how smoothly gas-to-nuclear transition plans can unfold at Matador.
China, the U.S., and the Nuclear Gap
Fermi Inc.’s letter highlights a geopolitical narrative: China’s pace of new builds versus slower U.S. deployment. Advocates argue that modern nuclear can provide the round-the-clock power profile that intermittent resources cannot, helping the U.S. meet AI-driven demand without intensifying emissions.
Skeptics counter that cost overruns and schedule delays have dogged recent U.S. nuclear projects, urging caution and diversification into grid-scale storage, transmission, and demand flexibility alongside new generation. The reality for developers like Fermi Inc is that diversified portfolios—gas bridge capacity, targeted nuclear, and potentially complementary renewables—may be necessary to meet both reliability and climate goals.
Reaction From Analysts and Industry Voices
Fermi Inc.’s tone drew immediate attention. Timm Schneider of The Schneider Capital Group wrote that the shareholder letter “reads more like a Francis Ford Coppola script … than a mid-cap earnings update,” a nod to the dramatic framing and references to “Apocalypse Now.” His critique captures the tension between bold mission statements and the painstaking, technical execution required to build nuclear capacity.
Supporters of the nuclear-plus-AI thesis say firms like Fermi Inc. are meeting the market where it’s going: A decade of data center growth compressed into a few years. Critics say emotive language can overpromise timelines and gloss over cost, supply-chain, and permitting realities.
What Sets Fermi Inc.’s Strategy Apart
- Direct alignment with end demand: Targeting AI-focused data centers as anchor customers
- Phased approach: Gas turbines first for near-term power, then nuclear for long-term 24/7 CFE
- Narrative as strategy: Framing the buildout as a national priority to court policymakers, investors, and customers
If Fermi Inc secures long-term power purchase agreements (PPAs) from hyperscalers and AI leaders, it could de-risk financing and help justify nuclear’s upfront capital through decades-long contracts.
Market Reaction and Share Dynamics
Fermi Inc shares rose 3.94% to $25.31, reflecting investor interest in the company’s narrative and asset plan. For a pre-revenue developer, valuation hinges on execution and contract visibility. Announcements about site permits, turbine installation milestones, vendor selections, and offtake agreements may drive the stock more than quarterly financials at this stage.
What’s Next for Fermi Inc
- Technology selection: Reactor type, supplier partnerships, and construction plan for the 2030s buildout
- Permitting cadence: NRC milestones and state-level siting and environmental steps
- Bridge capacity: Timelines and specifications for natural gas turbines at Matador
- Commercial traction: PPAs or framework agreements with data center customers
- Capital structure: Project finance, JV options, and potential use of federal loan guarantees or tax incentives
Each of these steps will test whether Fermi Inc. can convert a compelling narrative into bankable projects under real-world regulatory and market constraints.
Risk Factors to Watch
- Schedule certainty: Nuclear projects are measured in years; slippage affects costs and credibility
- Supply chain: Specialized components, skilled labor, and vendor capacity
- Policy stability: Changes in federal or state incentives, market rules in ERCOT, or tax treatment
- Demand elasticity: AI power demand looks strong, but customer procurement preferences (hedging, location, green attributes) will shape contract terms
- Financing conditions: Rate levels and risk appetite influence the cost of capital for long-duration assets
Successful nuclear development for AI customers will likely require multilayered risk-sharing between developers, offtakers, equipment suppliers, lenders, and potentially public-sector entities.
The Bigger Picture: AI, Energy, and Industrial Strategy
Fermi Inc.’s pitch taps into a broader U.S. industrial conversation: rebuilding domestic energy capacity to support a wave of digital infrastructure. Whether through advanced nuclear, expanded transmission, or a portfolio approach to firm power, the aim is the same—meeting accelerating demand while advancing reliability and climate goals.
That’s why the Manhattan Project analogy resonates, even as the operational realities are different. AI may not be a wartime mobilization, but its infrastructure needs are forcing decisions about what kind of power system the U.S. wants to build—and how fast.
Conclusion: Vision Meets Execution
Fermi Inc has staked out an audacious vision: use nuclear to power AI at scale, with a Texas campus that starts on gas and ends on gigawatts of carbon-free baseload. The company’s first earnings update shows ample work ahead—no revenue, a significant loss, and finite cash—but also a clear roadmap for milestones that investors and customers can track.
The next year will test whether Fermi Inc can turn a bold narrative into tangible progress: permits in hand, turbines installed, and partnerships inked. If it delivers, the Matador project could become a case study in how to align AI-era demand with firm, clean power. If it stumbles, the episode will reinforce how hard it is to compress nuclear timelines—even with compelling customers waiting on the other side.
FAQ’s
What is Fermi Inc.’s Matador project in Texas?
It’s a planned data‑center campus in the Texas Panhandle, ultimately backed by four large nuclear reactors in the 2030s. Near term, Fermi plans natural‑gas turbines to supply power sooner.
Why did Fermi Inc. reference the Manhattan Project?
To frame AI infrastructure and firm clean power as a national priority effort. Fermi says China is building 30+ reactors while the U.S. has no commercial projects under construction.
Does Fermi Inc. have revenue, and what are its finances?
Fermi reported no revenue and a $353.2 million net loss for the year through Sept. 30, with $183 million in cash. Its market cap is about $15 billion after its recent IPO.
When could Fermi Inc.’s reactors come online?
Fermi targets the 2030s, pending NRC licensing, permits, vendor selection, and financing. Gas turbines are planned as a bridge capacity until nuclear units are operational.
Article Source: Bloomberg
Image Source: ajay_suresh, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

