The AI power trade had plenty of winners over the past two years, and Constellation Energy was one of the biggest.Â
However, that changed this month.Â
On July 1, 2026, Constellation Energy (CEG) fell nearly 5% to a fresh 52-week low of $228.63. That is the stock’s steepest single-day drop in about a month.
The nuclear operator has now shed roughly 35% of its market value in the first half of 2026. This is a major reversal for a stock previously valued as a top play for data-center power demand.
For investors eyeing CEG, the key question is whether the stock’s decline indicates a fundamental breakdown or a healthy market correction.
Why Citi’s price target cut sent Constellation Energy to a 52-week low
Citi cut its price target on Constellation to $297 from $348 while keeping a Neutral rating, stocktwits reported.Â
That is a cut of nearly 15%, and it landed on a stock already falling.Â
Analyst Ryan Levine said the firm updated its model after a major PJM Interconnectionreliability risk meeting.
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According to stocktwits, PJM runs the grid for 67 million people across 13 states, and Constellation is one of its largest power producers.Â
When PJM warns of reliability risk, it is normal for investors to immediately rethink Constellation’s future earnings.
A lower target does not change the business overnight. But, it changes what Citi thinks you should pay for it, and that shift alone can pull in sellers.
Jose A. Bernat Bacete / Getty Images
The three catalysts that stacked up against CEG stock
One downgrade rarely knocks 5% off a mega-cap utility on its own. However, three different things hit CEG at nearly the same time.
What pushed Constellation lower:
- Citi’s model revision. The target cut to $297 followed the PJM reliability meeting.
- Grid and policy friction. On June 30, the Trump administration declared a power emergency for the PJM grid as a heatwave drove peak demand toward record levels.
- A supply surplus. About 5.1 million lock-up shares tied to the Calpine deal became eligible for sale on June 30, adding fresh selling pressure.
PJM had warned of an imminent electric reliability emergency and urged the Energy Secretary to act. It projected peak demand near 162,860 MW on July 2.
Related: Apple’s gamble just exposed the AI bubble’s fatal flaw
The downgrade, grid emergency, and the lock-up expiration are mostly technical and short-term pressures, not signs of a weaker business.Â
That distinction matters when considering whether the drop reflects fundamentals or a sudden selloff.Â
The long-term deals the sell-off is overshadowing
Under the noise, Constellation’s strategic position actually strengthened in 2026.
In January, the company closed its $26.6 billion cash-and-stock acquisition of Calpine, Constellation confirmed.Â
The deal created one of the nation’s largest clean-energy platforms and added significant natural gas and geothermal capacity.
Then in June, Constellation signed a 15-year deal to supply about 176 megawatts of nuclear power to Walmart starting in 2029 and 2030, Reuters reported.
These are the same long-term, contracted revenue streams the bull case relied on. The market ignored them this month, a sign that sentiment, not fundamentals, drove the move
How Constellation stock fell out of favor in 2026
Constellation entered the year as a favorite. Then the decline came in stages.
The timeline to a 52-week low:
- January 7, 2026: Constellation completes the $26.6 billion Calpine acquisition.
- May 11, 2026: CEG beats estimates in the first quarter with EPS of $2.74.
- June 23, 2026: Constellation and Walmart announce the 15-year nuclear supply deal.
- June 30, 2026: The PJM emergency is declared and Calpine lock-up shares free up.
- July 1, 2026: Citi downgrades CEG price target and the stock hits $228.63 on double its average volume.
Strong earnings and marquee contracts could not offset a valuation reset.Â
Investors wanted clearer proof that AI demand would translate into faster profit growth, and they stopped paying a premium while they waited.
What the CEG pullback means for investors now
A falling price does not automatically make a stock cheap.Â
And although Wall Street’s reaction is genuinely mixed, not every desk turned cautious.Â
Morgan Stanley actually raised its target to $364 the week before Citi’s cut, Intellectia noted, leaving a wide gap between the bulls and the skeptics.
Retail traders leaned in. Sentiment on Stocktwits flipped from bearish to bullish as some moved to buy the dip.
Before you act on the dip, weigh a few things:
- The bear case is valuation and supply, not a broken business, so watch whether AI power contracts keep converting into earnings growth.
- The Calpine share surplus can keep pressuring the stock until that supply is absorbed.
- PJM’s grid and permitting delays are a real policy risk, and they won’t be fixed soon.
Contracted nuclear power feeding AI demand is still present. What changed is the price investors are willing to pay for it, and that change can run further before it steadies.
For long-term holders, the deals signed this year matter more than one brutal session.Â
For anyone buying the dip, patience and position sizing matter more than conviction, because the price might still get cheaper.
Related: Bloom Energy’s $25B partnership targets AI’s next bottleneck
