This Restructured Energy Monopoly Is a No-Brainer Buy

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • Sticky macro volatility is punishing speculative AI-energy bets as capital rotates toward companies generating real revenue and free cash flow today.

  • GEV delivered $9 billion in Q1 revenue and a record $150 billion backlog, while OKLO carries zero revenue and no power online until 2027.

  • GE Vernova's electrification segment booked $2.4 billion in data center orders in Q1 alone, exceeding all of 2025 with a book-to-bill near 2.5.

  • Don't wait: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list FREE now.

This Restructured Energy Monopoly Is a No-Brainer Buy

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Oklo Inc. (NYSE:OKLO | OKLO Price Prediction) is the ticker every AI-energy headline keeps shoving in your face, propped up by a 1.2 GW Meta power agreement and a 300% rally in 2025 tied to small modular reactor hype. But here’s what you should actually be watching.

The Oklo Story Is a Pre-Revenue Wager Dressed as a Thesis

Strip the narrative away and the numbers are unsentimental. Oklo carries a multibillion-dollar market cap against trailing revenue of $0, with TTM EPS of -$0.84 and EBITDA of -$172.1 million. The first Aurora powerhouse is not scheduled to come online until late 2027 to early 2028, and the marquee Meta campus does not hit full 1.2 GW capacity until 2034. That is a long runway to fund with a balance sheet that depends on equity issuance.

The market is already voting. Shares are down 21.42% over the past month and 19.37% year to date, sitting well below the 200-day moving average of $85.63. Jim Cramer put it bluntly, saying Oklo has “very little prospects for making any money any time in the future” and advising holders to sell every nuclear name except one. That one is the redirect.

A Restructured Energy Platform With Real Cash Flow

GE Vernova (NYSE:GEV) is the post-spin power, electrification, and wind platform sitting on a roughly $243.67 billion market cap, and it is monetizing the exact AI data center demand Oklo only promises. Shares are up 87.97% over the past year and 38.93% year to date, and analysts carry an average target of $1,216.13 with 29 Buy or Strong Buy ratings versus zero Sells. Three reasons retirement-focused capital belongs here.

1. Real revenue, real backlog, real returns. Q1 2026 delivered revenue of $9.30 billion (+15.8% YoY), orders of $18.30 billion (+71% organic), and free cash flow of $4.80 billion. The Q4 2025 backlog hit a record $150 billion, the quarterly dividend doubled to $0.50, and the buyback authorization was raised to $10 billion.

2. The AI tailwind is already in the P&L. Electrification booked $2.4 billion in data center equipment orders in Q1 2026 alone, exceeding all of 2025, with a book-to-bill near 2.5. The just-completed $5.30 billion acquisition of the remaining 50% of Prolec GE consolidates a grid equipment leader, and gas turbine reservations are targeting 110-plus GW by year-end 2026.

3. Compounding economics that show up in the financials. Management raised 2026 guidance to revenue of $44.5 billion to $45.5 billion, adjusted EBITDA margin of 12% to 14%, and free cash flow of $6.5 billion to $7.5 billion, with a 2028 target of $56 billion revenue, 20% adjusted EBITDA margin, and $24 billion-plus cumulative FCF. CEO Scott Strazik framed it directly: “Demand is accelerating for our Power and Electrification solutions from a diverse set of customers, with our backlog growing by more than $13 billion quarter-over-quarter.” Trailing P/E is a digestible 25 against return on equity of 75.7%.

The Action

Story stocks lose when macro volatility turns sticky and capital demands proof of cash. For investors weighing exposure to the AI-power theme, GEV offers measurable revenue, backlog, and cash flow today, while OKLO remains a pre-revenue bet on a 2027-2028 timeline.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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