Nuclear nanoenergy (NASDAQ: NNE) is an advanced nuclear company that is developing small, portable nuclear reactors. The names of these reactors sound epic (Kronos, Zeus, Loki) and they are small and modular enough to supply continuous power to data centers, industrial sites, research laboratories, remote communities and can even be used for space missions.
However, Nano Nuclear stock has seen whiplash recently. The stock had a strong run in 2025, rising more than 115% in early October, before a sell-off in nuclear energy stocks erased those gains and left them lagging the broader market at the end of the year. It ended 2025 about 3.5% in the red, underperforming both S&P 500 and the VanEck Uranium and Nuclear Energy ETF (NYSEMKT:NLR).
So far in 2026, nanonuclear has been increasing, currently up about 27% year-on-year. Could this be the year Nano Nuclear outperforms the market? Let’s take a look.
Nano Nuclear’s main ambition is to build small reactors that can be transported anywhere, especially where the grid cannot reliably meet demands. The company also plans to build a uranium fuel chain. If successful, it will become a one-stop shop for nuclear energy.
But here’s the trick: Yeah he gets it. Nano Nuclear is in its early stages of development. It generates no revenue and its reactor designs still need approval from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission before commercial deployment is possible. Even in the most optimistic scenario, in which it obtains commercial licenses without major setbacks, it could take several years before Nano Nuclear generates significant revenue.
That reality largely explains the stock’s volatility. The lack of revenue and a deployable reactor means Nano Nuclear stock is primarily driven by narrative: in this case, the increasing electricity demands of AI data centers. When investors agree with that narrative, the company’s technology appears well positioned. But when investors stop believing it, the company’s cash burn is much more palpable.
A clear example of this narrative-driven performance is its current dubious single-digit profit for the year. While the company has announced some smaller deals in recent weeks, such as the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with South Korea’s DS Dansuk Co, much of the stock’s momentum appears to be tied to good news from other nuclear startups, such as Metaplatforms‘ recent power purchase agreement with vistrathat were grouped into Oklo and TerraPower.