Toby Neugebauer is an American billionaire entrepreneur and investor specializing in energy infrastructure and private equity, best known as the co-founder and CEO of Fermi America, a Nasdaq-listed real estate investment trust developing large-scale data centers powered by advanced energy sources.[1] Born to former U.S. Congressman Randy Neugebauer, he earned a Bachelor of Business Administration in finance from New York University in 1993 and resides in Texas with his wife and two children.[1] Neugebauer previously co-founded Quantum Energy Partners, a Texas-based energy investment firm, and manages a family office focused on private equity, real estate, and venture capital across the U.S. and Puerto Rico.[2]Under Neugebauer's leadership, Fermi America launched in January 2025 alongside former U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry and achieved a $12.5 billion valuation upon its Nasdaq debut later that year, with plans for an 11-gigawatt energy and data center campus on over 5,000 acres in Amarillo, Texas, emphasizing nuclear power to meet AI-driven demand.[1] His family holds a 29% stake in the company, contributing to their $1.8 billion net worth as of December 2025.[1] Neugebauer has also engaged in sports ownership, including as an owner of Major League Soccer's Austin FC, and supports philanthropy via the family-run Matthew 6:20 Foundation, which funds global initiatives and has shaped family educational trips to foster perspectives on wealth and giving.[3][2]Neugebauer's career includes notable setbacks, particularly as CEO of GloriFi, a fintech startup launched in 2021 to offer banking services aligned with conservative values as an alternative to mainstream financial institutions perceived as ideologically biased; the firm raised over $50 million from high-profile investors before filing for bankruptcy in 2023 amid operational turmoil and disputes.[4] He resigned as CEO shortly before the collapse and has since pursued lawsuits against backers including Vivek Ramaswamy, Ken Griffin, and Peter Thiel, alleging racketeering and sabotage, while facing counter-claims of self-dealing from the bankruptcy estate.[4][5]
Early Life and Education
Family Background and Upbringing
Toby Neugebauer was raised in West Texas as the son of Randy Neugebauer, a businessman who later served as a Republican U.S. Representative for Texas's 19th congressional district from 2003 to 2017.[1][6] His father's pre-political career involved real estate development and construction, including serving as president of Lubbock Land Company, contributing to the family's financial stability during Toby's formative years.[7] The Neugebauer household emphasized entrepreneurial values, shaped by Randy's transition from local business ventures to national politics, though specific details on Toby's early childhood experiences, such as schooling or family dynamics beyond this context, remain limited in public records.Neugebauer's upbringing occurred amid his father's rising prominence in Texas Republican circles, with the family residing in the Lubbock area, a hub for agriculture and energy interests that later influenced Toby's professional path.[6] Randy Neugebauer, originally from Lubbock after early years in Missouri, built a reputation in real estate and communications industries, providing a backdrop of Midwestern pragmatism blended with Texas conservatism.[2] This environment likely fostered Toby's early exposure to business networks, though no primary accounts detail personal anecdotes or challenges from his youth. Public profiles highlight the family's later emphasis on philanthropy and global travel, suggesting a stable, opportunity-rich foundation rather than adversity-driven narratives common in some biographical accounts.[2]
Academic Achievements
Toby Neugebauer earned a Bachelor of Business Administration degree with a concentration in finance from New York University, completing his studies in 1993.[1][6][3] No records indicate additional advanced degrees or notable academic honors such as scholarships, dean’s list recognition, or research contributions during his undergraduate tenure.[1][8]
Business Ventures
Early Finance and Energy Roles
Neugebauer entered the finance sector shortly after earning a Bachelor of Business Administration in finance from New York University in 1993. He worked as an analyst at Kidder, Peabody & Co., an investment bank, focusing on natural resources.[8][3]In 1994, after his time at Kidder Peabody, Neugebauer co-founded Windrock Capital Ltd., an energy investment banking firm that specialized in raising private equity capital and offering merger, acquisition, and advisory services for energy sector clients.[9][10] The firm later developed energy assets, including through Windrock Energy, which was sold to Macquarie Group.[3][11]Transitioning deeper into energy investments, Neugebauer co-founded Quantum Energy Partners in 1998 with S. Wil VanLoh Jr., establishing it as a Houston-based private equity firm targeting upstream oil and gas opportunities.[10][8] As co-managing partner, he directed early fund deployments, including investments in the Barnett Shale play and the creation of Linn Energy LLC and Meritage Energy Partners, which focused on natural gas exploration and production.[12] These roles positioned Quantum as a key player in midstream and upstream energy financing during the late 1990s and 2000s commodity boom.[13]
Quantum Energy Partners Leadership
Toby Neugebauer co-founded Quantum Energy Partners in 1998 alongside S. Wil VanLoh Jr., building on their prior partnership at Windrock Capital Ltd., an energy investment firm they had established earlier.[14] The Houston-based firm initially focused on providing private equity to upstream oil and gas entrepreneurs, capitalizing on opportunities in the energy sector during a period of consolidation and technological advancement in exploration and production.[2]As co-managing partner, Neugebauer directed investments across the energy value chain, including global assets in oil, gas, infrastructure, and emerging technologies, helping establish Quantum as a pioneer in energy private equity with a track record of deploying capital into high-return opportunities.[3] Under his leadership, the firm successfully closed and managed five consecutive funds, amassing significant assets under management and supporting portfolio companies through operational expertise and strategic guidance.[3] These funds targeted responsibly sourced hydrocarbons and energy infrastructure, reflecting a disciplined approach amid volatile commodity cycles, with investments yielding substantial exits such as the sale of Windrock Energy to Macquarie Group prior to Quantum's expansion.[3]Neugebauer's tenure emphasized hands-on value creation, leveraging the firm's in-house capabilities in geology, engineering, and financial structuring to enhance portfolio performance, though specific fund returns and individual deal metrics remain proprietary.[14] Following the completion of the fifth fund, he departed Quantum around 2011–2013 to pursue political activities, including advisory roles and campaign involvement, while retaining influence through board positions in energy firms like Linn Energy, where he served as chairman.[10] His exit coincided with Quantum's evolution into a broader energy ecosystem investor under VanLoh's continued leadership, but Neugebauer's foundational contributions positioned the firm as a multi-billion-dollar player in private equity.[3]
Fermi America and AI Infrastructure
In 2025, Toby Neugebauer co-founded Fermi America, a Texas-based data center real estate investment trust (REIT) focused on developing energy infrastructure to support artificial intelligence (AI) workloads.[1] The company, co-founded with former U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry, aims to build an 11-gigawatt private grid and the world's largest AI data center campus in Amarillo, Texas, with an estimated total investment of $300 billion.[15] [16] Neugebauer serves as CEO, leveraging his prior experience in energy investments through Quantum Energy Partners to address the surging power demands of AI data centers, which he has described as requiring innovative, non-subsidized solutions to avoid burdening electricity consumers.[17] [18]Fermi America's strategy emphasizes co-locating data centers with on-site power generation, utilizing Texas's abundant natural gas resources and grid flexibility to deliver reliable, scalable energy for hyperscale AI operations.[19] The initiative includes plans for clean energy integration, water reuse technologies, and job creation in the region, positioning the project as a driver of economic growth amid national debates over AI's energy footprint.[16] In November 2025, the company secured a $150 million construction deal to advance its private grid development, targeting completion of initial phases to support gigawatt-scale AI computing.[20]By December 2025, Fermi America entered discussions with Amazon Web Services (AWS) to secure the tech giant as its first anchor tenant for the Texas facilities, highlighting the project's appeal to major cloud providers facing constraints in traditional grid expansions.[21] Neugebauer has publicly touted the venture as part of an "energy renaissance," aligning with policies favoring deregulation and private investment in power infrastructure to meet AI's projected demand growth, which could exceed 100 gigawatts nationally by 2030 according to industry estimates.[19] The company's public launch in October 2025, under the ticker $FRMI, marked the start of broader capital-raising efforts to fund the multi-phase rollout.[22]
Other Investments and Ownerships
Toby Neugebauer holds a minority ownership stake in Austin FC, the Major League Soccer expansion franchise based in Austin, Texas, as part of an investor group announced on August 23, 2019.[23][3] The investment reflects his diversification into sports ownership beyond energy sectors, with Neugebauer serving among principal owners alongside figures like Anthony Precourt.[3]In 2020, Neugebauer established Banzai Capital Group as his family office, which manages investments in private equity, real estate, and venture capital assets primarily in the United States and Puerto Rico.[24][8] This entity oversees wealth generated from prior energy ventures, focusing on opportunistic deployments rather than sector-specific concentration.[25]Neugebauer also maintains beneficial ownership interests through entities like Vicksburg Investments Management LLC, where he serves as a managing member, including stakes in public companies such as Fermi Infrastructure (FRMI) via trusts under his control.[26][27] These holdings, reported in SEC filings as of September 2025, underscore his role in directing investment decisions for family-related vehicles.[26]
Political Involvement
Major Campaign Donations
Neugebauer donated $10 million in July 2015 to Keep the Promise I, a super PAC supporting Senator Ted Cruz's 2016 presidential campaign.[28][29] This contribution represented a significant portion of the early funding for Cruz-affiliated super PACs, which collectively raised $37.8 million by mid-2015, with Neugebauer among six major donors accounting for roughly $36 million in support of Cruz.[30][31]In February 2016, Neugebauer contributed an additional $100,000 to Keep the Promise to Veterans, another entity in the network of super PACs backing Cruz, focused on veterans' issues within the presidential race.[32] These donations aligned with Neugebauer's support for Cruz, whom he had known through family political ties, as Cruz's super PACs relied heavily on a small number of large individual contributors rather than broad small-dollar fundraising.[33] No major campaign donations by Neugebauer have been publicly reported in subsequent election cycles, including 2020 and 2024.
Endorsements and Policy Advocacy
Neugebauer publicly endorsed U.S. Senator Ted Cruz during the 2016 Republican presidential primaries, praising Cruz's track record in promoting conservative causes such as limited government and fiscal restraint.[34] This support aligned with Neugebauer's earlier backing of other Republican figures, including former Texas Governor Rick Perry.[31]After Cruz suspended his campaign on May 3, 2016, Neugebauer shifted his endorsement to Donald Trump, declaring his support for the businessman's candidacy as the Republican nominee.[35] [36] This endorsement reflected Neugebauer's pragmatic alignment with the emerging frontrunner, culminating in his consideration for the U.S. ambassadorship to Mexico in late 2016 under a potential Trump administration.[37]Neugebauer's policy advocacy has centered on market-driven approaches to energy and infrastructure development, as evidenced by his statements opposing public subsidies that burden electricity consumers for private-sector projects like data center expansions.[18] He has advocated for self-funded buildouts in AI-related power infrastructure, emphasizing efficiency and private investment over government intervention.[18]
Controversies and Criticisms
GloriFi Bankruptcy and Related Lawsuits
GloriFi, a fintech startup aimed at providing banking services free from what its backers described as "woke capitalism," abruptly ceased operations on November 21, 2022, after a critical funding commitment from investor Ken Griffin evaporated amid internal disputes.[4] The company filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas on February 16, 2023, reporting liabilities exceeding $40 million against assets valued at under $500,000.[4] [38] Toby Neugebauer, who served as CEO and manager, signed the involuntary petition, which was initiated by creditors including early investors.[38]Scott M. Seidel, appointed as Chapter 7 trustee, filed an adversary proceeding against Neugebauer in February 2025, accusing him of breaching fiduciary duties to GloriFi and its investors through self-dealing, including unauthorized transfers of millions in company funds to entities he controlled.[39] [40] The complaint further alleged securities fraud and gross negligence, claiming Neugebauer's actions diverted resources from a potential $1.7 billion acquisition deal with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC), prioritizing his personal interests.[41] Neugebauer responded by denying the charges, stating he had "nothing to hide" and filing motions to dismiss, while arguing the trustee's pursuit was an overreach aimed at converting the case to Chapter 11 to wrest control from creditors.[39] [42]The trustee's efforts extended to lawsuits against GloriFi's former counsel. In September 2025, Seidel sued Winston & Strawn, alleging the firm breached its duties by shielding Neugebauer—whom it viewed as a lucrative client—from accountability, including failing to disclose conflicts during key negotiations.[43] A separate March 2025 complaint targeted Chapman and Cutler, claiming the firm facilitated Neugebauer's sabotage of the SPAC merger by advising on maneuvers that enriched him at the expense of a $1.7 billion payout for shareholders.[41] These actions, per the trustee, contributed to GloriFi's insolvency despite backing from high-profile investors like Peter Thiel and initial pledges totaling over $100 million.[43]Neugebauer has countered with claims of sabotage by investors, including a June 2024 lawsuit against figures such as Vivek Ramaswamy, Ken Griffin, and others, alleging they orchestrated a campaign to undermine GloriFi through leaked stories and withdrawn support to seize control of its assets.[4] Court proceedings have featured contentious battles over asset liquidation and case conversion, with Neugebauer attempting to reinstall himself as manager in a proposed Chapter 11 reorganization, which the trustee opposed as self-serving.[42] [38] As of late 2025, the disputes remain unresolved, highlighting tensions between Neugebauer, the trustee, and GloriFi's creditor base.[44]
Personal Life
Family and Residences
Toby Neugebauer is married to Melissa Neugebauer, his college sweetheart; the couple wed in the mid-1990s and marked 24 years of marriage by 2018.[45] They have two sons, Nate and Noah, both now adults.[46][25]Neugebauer maintains residences in Dallas, Texas, and Aspen, Colorado.[3] In Dallas, his primary home is a nearly 18,000-square-foot mansion designed as a replica of the White House, which served as the former headquarters for GloriFi Bank and was listed for $40 million in June 2024.[46][47] The family has undertaken extended travels together, including a 110-day global trip around 2010 focused on educational and philanthropic experiences for their children.[2]
Philanthropic Efforts
Toby Neugebauer chairs and serves as president of the Matthew 6:20 Foundation, a Colorado-based nonprofit established in 2008 that supports religious and spiritual development initiatives through grants to aligned organizations.[48] The foundation's annual expenses, largely comprising grants, have included $346,627 in 2024, $542,939 in 2023, and $431,333 in 2022, funded primarily by contributions such as $278,000 in 2024.[48] His wife, Melissa Neugebauer, has led the foundation's operations over the past decade, emphasizing international outreach to identify and support charitable partners.[45]Neugebauer's philanthropic philosophy centers on family involvement and long-term impact, viewing giving as a lifelong "family project" to instill responsibility in heirs amid substantial wealth.[2] Around 2010, he and his family undertook a 110-day global trip to slums in Mumbai, orphanages in China, and rural villages in Tanzania, combining education for their young sons with visits to foundation-funded entities to highlight contrasts between privilege and poverty.[2] Domestically, efforts prioritize family formation and preservation in U.S. inner cities; internationally, they extend to orphanage support in China and broader aid in developing regions.[3]In recent years, Neugebauer has leveraged his 180-foot yacht Purpose—refitted for dual commercial and humanitarian use—for a five-year global expedition launched in early 2024, aiming to "leave each destination better than we found it."[49] Partnering with YachtAid Global, a nonprofit facilitating yacht-based aid since 2006, the vessel supports disaster recovery (e.g., post-hurricane relief and solar infrastructure for children's homes in Mexico), female empowerment programs in developing nations, and family-strengthening initiatives, including vocational support for orphanage residents.[49] Neugebauer plans personal participation for eight weeks, prioritizing outcomes over publicity.
Fermi America, legally known as Fermi Inc. (NASDAQ: FRMI), is a publicly traded real estate investment trust (REIT) specializing in the development of gigawatt-scale private power infrastructure designed to support the energy demands of next-generation artificial intelligence (AI) data centers. The company is notable for its Project Matador, a massive 11-gigawatt HyperGrid campus located in the Texas Panhandle, which integrates multiple power sources including clean natural gas generation, solar photovoltaic arrays, battery energy storage systems, and advanced nuclear technologies to deliver reliable, low-carbon electricity. This project aims to provide scalable, on-site power solutions independent of traditional grid constraints, with initial operations expected to commence in 2026. Fermi America's approach emphasizes hybrid energy systems to address the surging power requirements of AI computing, positioning it as a key player in the intersection of energy innovation and hyperscale data center growth.
History
Founding
Fermi America (Fermi Inc. d/b/a Fermi America, NASDAQ: FRMI) was co-founded by former U.S. Energy Secretary and Texas Governor Rick Perry, CEO Toby Neugebauer, and Griffin Perry on January 10, 2025, as a startup dedicated to developing gigawatt-scale private power solutions for next-generation AI infrastructure.[1][2] The company's origins stem from the recognition that AI data centers require reliable, high-capacity power independent of strained public utility grids, prompting a focus on pioneering next-generation electric grids capable of delivering redundant gigawatt-scale electricity.[3] Early organizational setup emphasized scalable, privately controlled power systems to meet surging AI computational needs without relying on traditional infrastructure limitations.[4]
Key Milestones
Fermi America emerged with its initial public announcement in June 2025, unveiling ambitious plans for a massive energy campus tailored to power AI data centers, marking the company's entry into hyper-scale private power solutions.[1] This followed closely with a partnership announcement alongside Texas Tech University on June 26, 2025, to collaborate on developing an advanced energy and AI infrastructure complex in Amarillo, Texas, signaling early strategic alliances for expansion.[5]In September 2025, the company filed for and completed its initial public offering on September 30, 2025, offering 32,500,000 shares at $21 per share, raising approximately $682.5 million, which enabled broader access to capital for scaling operations.
Post-IPO Developments and Challenges
Following its IPO on September 30, 2025, which raised $682.5 million by offering 32,500,000 shares at $21 per share, the company experienced significant volatility. On December 12, 2025, the company announced that its prospective first tenant had terminated the $150 million Advance in Aid of Construction Agreement (AICA) for Project Matador after the exclusivity period expired. This disclosure led to a sharp decline in the stock price, falling approximately 33.8% that day from $15.25 to $10.09.The termination prompted multiple securities class action lawsuits alleging that the company's IPO materials overstated tenant demand for Project Matador and misrepresented the stability of funding commitments. Lawsuits claim investors were misled about the project's viability and the reliance on a single anchor tenant. As of early 2026, litigation was ongoing, with lead plaintiff deadlines noted in February-March 2026.Stock performance remained pressured, with shares trading near multi-month lows around $7-8 in March 2026, down over 60% from the IPO price. Factors contributing to ongoing weakness included litigation overhang, execution risks for the pre-revenue company, and the approaching expiration of the IPO lock-up period on March 30, 2026, which covers the 32,500,000 shares issued in the public offering (plus potentially additional insider-held shares), potentially unlocking a meaningful portion of the float for sale. Total shares outstanding are approximately 614 million as of early 2026.Amid challenges, the company reported positive developments, including securing clean air permits from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for up to 11 GW and announcements in March 2026 of plans to file for an additional 5 GW, potentially upsizing Project Matador to 17 GW. Initial draws on equipment financing facilities were also made to accelerate construction of the first phases.
Projects
Project Matador
Project Matador represents Fermi America's flagship endeavor, structured as an 11-gigawatt (with potential expansion to 17 GW) HyperGrid campus engineered to address the escalating energy requirements of next-generation AI data centers. Located in the Texas Panhandle (5,236-acre site near Amarillo and the Pantex plant), this private integrated energy hub is positioned to deliver scalable, on-demand power at unprecedented volumes, enabling AI operators to scale operations without the constraints or vulnerabilities of public grid reliance.The power generation mix includes 11 GW from low-carbon natural gas (combined-cycle facilities), 4.4 GW from advanced nuclear (four Westinghouse AP1000 reactors, with construction proposed to begin in 2031 and phased commissioning through 2036), and the remainder from solar photovoltaic arrays and battery energy storage systems.In March 2026, the company announced plans to file an additional 5 GW Clean Air Permit with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), upsizing campus projections to approximately 17 GW total. This follows the earlier securing of a 6 GW Clean Air permit in February 2026. Additional progress includes the delivery of six large-scale Siemens Energy SGT-800 natural gas turbines to the site, advancing vertical construction pending final approvals. On the nuclear front, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) released a notice of intent in March 2026 to conduct scoping and prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) under an accelerated NEPA pilot program for the combined license application (submitted June 2025) covering four AP1000 reactors (PMN Units 1-4).These milestones support the company's timeline for initial operations in 2026 (gas components) and longer-term nuclear integration. The project is developed in partnership with the Texas Tech University System and emphasizes job creation in the Texas Panhandle.
Infrastructure Development
Fermi America's development of the HyperGrid campus for Project Matador spans 7,570 acres in the Texas Panhandle, selected to enable expansive site preparation and construction of gigawatt-scale facilities tailored for high-demand infrastructure.[6]The processes encompass securing preliminary state approvals for initial capacity phases and arranging equipment financing to procure and transport large-scale assets to the site.[7][8]Logistical challenges in executing the gigawatt-scale build-out include coordinating the securement and shipping of power generation components to meet the reliability requirements of AI workloads.[6]These are mitigated through dedicated financing facilities that expedite asset delivery and phased installation, with the initial construction phase reaching completion.[8][6]Campus-level integration of energy sources relies on physical infrastructure featuring a fully redundant behind-the-meter private grid, designed for scalability to accommodate progressive capacity additions up to 11 gigawatts.[6]
Technology
Power Generation Mix
Fermi America's power generation strategy emphasizes a hybrid mix designed for reliable, scalable output to support AI data centers. Clean natural gas serves as the primary baseload source, providing consistent and dispatchable power to meet continuous demand while minimizing emissions through advanced combined-cycle technologies.Solar power integrates as a renewable component, harnessing intermittent but abundant Texas sunlight to contribute to the overall capacity during peak daytime hours, enhancing the system's sustainability profile.Advanced nuclear power forms a cornerstone for long-term, high-capacity generation with low emissions, leveraging small modular reactors or similar innovations to deliver firm, carbon-free energy that complements the variability of solar and the operational flexibility of natural gas. This diversified approach mitigates risks associated with single-source dependency, ensuring gigawatt-scale stability critical for energy-intensive AI workloads.
Energy Storage and Integration
Fermi America's HyperGrid incorporates battery storage to address the intermittency of renewable sources, particularly solar, by capturing excess generation during peak daylight hours and dispatching it during periods of low production, thereby maintaining consistent power availability.[9] This storage mechanism ensures that solar contributions do not disrupt overall supply reliability within the multi-source framework.The system employs integration techniques such as behind-the-meter configurations, which bypass traditional grid interconnection delays and enable direct, controlled energy delivery from natural gas, solar, nuclear, and battery assets to end-users.[9] These methods facilitate seamless operation by leveraging natural gas for immediate redundancy, batteries for short-term buffering, and nuclear for baseload stability, creating a hybrid setup optimized for uninterrupted performance.At gigawatt scales, this integrated approach prioritizes grid stability tailored to AI data center requirements, delivering a fully redundant private power infrastructure that mitigates public grid constraints and supports high-demand loads without compromising uptime.[9]
Developments
Timeline and Expectations
Project Matador, Fermi America's flagship initiative, anticipates delivering first power online in 2026, marking the primary milestone for operationalizing its 11-gigawatt HyperGrid campus in the Texas Panhandle.[10] This timeline positions the project to provide behind-the-meter, gigawatt-scale electricity tailored for next-generation AI data centers, enabling rapid deployment without reliance on public grid interconnections.[10]Broader expectations include full operational readiness to support AI infrastructure demands, with approximately 6 gigawatts already permitted and around 2 gigawatts of generation assets secured and en route to the site, facilitating redundant and scalable power delivery from inception.[10] The private nature of the grid circumvents typical 3–7 year interconnection delays, accelerating timelines toward meeting projected U.S. shortfalls in AI power capacity.[10]Influencing factors encompass streamlined regulatory approvals, as much of the capacity is pre-permitted, alongside ongoing construction phases where the initial phase has concluded, bolstered by over $700 million in committed financing to expedite development.[10] These elements collectively underpin the anticipated outcomes of reliable, on-demand energy provision aligned with AI sector growth imperatives.[10]
Recent Announcements
Fermi America's most recent regulatory news service update was on February 26, 2026, announcing the securing of the final 6GW Clean Air Permit for its projects.[11] Prior announcements in February included the Q4 2025 earnings call scheduling on February 25, 2026, and an initial draw on a $200 million equipment facility on February 20, 2026.[11]As of early March 2026, no press releases, news items, or updates dated in March appear on fermiamerica.com or its investor relations site, with searches for content after March 1, 2026, yielding no results.[12][11]The company has announced upcoming investor engagements, including participation in the NRC Annual Conference from March 10 to 12, 2026, with Chief Nuclear Construction Officer Mesut Uzman speaking, and the Q4 2025 earnings call.[13] These follow the February announcements and reflect ongoing investor relations activities without constituting new March-issued updates.[13]
Analyst Coverage
As of March 25, 2026, Fermi America (NASDAQ: FRMI) holds a consensus "Buy" rating from Wall Street analysts. According to MarketBeat, based on ratings from 13 analysts over the past 12 months, the consensus is "Buy" (11 Buy, 1 Hold, 1 Sell variants including Strong Buy). The average 12-month price target is $31.44, with a high of $37.00 and low of $27.00, implying over 300% upside from recent share prices in the $7 range.Other aggregators report similar figures: average targets around $28.30–$31.44, with ratings predominantly Buy or Strong Buy from 8–13 analysts depending on the source. Notable recent actions include:
Berenberg: Maintained Buy/Outperform but lowered price target to $35 from $37 (February 24, 2026).
Citizens JMP: Initiated Market Outperform with $30 target (February 9, 2026).
Macquarie: Maintained Outperform at $25 (February 2026).
Evercore ISI: Reiterated Buy at $20 (lower end).
Analysts cite the strong long-term opportunity in AI-driven power demand and Project Matador's potential, while noting risks from pre-revenue status, execution challenges, litigation, and capital needs. Coverage includes firms such as Berenberg, Cantor Fitzgerald, Evercore ISI, Macquarie, Mizuho, and others. Sentiment has remained bullish despite stock declines, with the upcoming Q4 2025 earnings call on March 30, 2026, anticipated as a potential catalyst for updates.