This Energy Stock Is Obliterating the S&P 500 in 2025 - And the Rally Isn’t Slowing Down
While traditional energy plays sputter, one stock is leaving the entire market in its dust.
The Unstoppable Performer
Forget the boring 7% annual returns Wall Street promises—this energy contender is delivering a masterclass in growth. It's not just beating the benchmark; it's redefining what's possible in a sector many had written off.
Momentum That Defies Gravity
The charts tell a brutal story of dominance. While the S&P 500 chugs along with predictable gains, this stock's trajectory looks more like a crypto breakout than a traditional equity. It's the kind of performance that makes index fund managers sweat.
Why the Rally Has Legs
This isn't a flash in the pan. The underlying fundamentals—the kind most analysts ignore until it's too late—suggest the momentum is built to last. We're seeing structural shifts that favor aggressive players, not the dinosaurs clinging to old models.
So while the financial establishment debates rate cuts and inflation prints, smart money is already positioned for the next leg up. Sometimes the most obvious trade is the one everyone overlooks—until it's already left the station.
Nuclear: The fuel everyone can agree on
In 1979, Reactor No. 2 at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania suffered a partial meltdown in the worst U.S. nuclear disaster in history. In the wake of the disaster, "No Nukes!" became a national rallying cry that spurred the country into investigating safer forms of clean power generation. Indeed, the country hasn't opened a new nuclear facility since 1996.
Today, however, nuclear power is in vogue. Environmentalists aren't necessarily happy about it, but they generally prefer it to greenhouse gas-emitting fossil fuel power plants, and conservatives generally prefer it to newer green technologies like solar and wind power. Although the majority (54%) of the electricity Vistra generates comes from natural gas, 26% comes from its four nuclear power plants. That may not sound like a large portfolio, but it's the second-largest competitive nuclear power fleet in the U.S.
Nuclear power is not only relatively cheap to produce once a reactor is up and running, but also qualifies for federal tax credits that seem unlikely to be phased out by the nuclear-friendly TRUMP administration. The tax credit it received gave Vistra a $545 million boost to its adjusted EBITDA in 2024, and gives the company a leg up on competitors with no nuclear assets.

Image source: Getty Images.
Rising rates
As a competitive electricity provider -- as opposed to a regulated utility -- Vistra sells the electricity it generates on the open market. It can sell it directly to retail customers, or wholesale to utilities, or even to other competitive electricity providers to augment their generation portfolios. Under most circumstances, that WOULD make Vistra a pretty unexciting company. But not right now.
Right now, we're in the midst of a sudden uptrend in U.S. electricity demand, caused by a number of factors, including the boom in power-hungry data centers and artificial intelligence (AI) computing. Because electricity supply is limited, and new capacity takes years to bring online, electricity rates are already surging and are projected to continue to do so over the NEAR term. Recent cancellations of major solar and wind projects could make things worse by keeping supply growth lower than previously anticipated.
That adds up to more demand for Vistra's electricity at potentially higher rates, which is why the company's shares have surged this year.
Room to grow
Of course, more electricity demand doesn't help a power generator if it's already operating at maximum capacity. Luckily, Vistra has plenty of room to increase its output.
Vistra's nuclear plants were the only part of its generation portfolio operating at or near peak capacity in its most recent quarter. Its natural gas and coal-fired power plants were operating at 63% or less of their capacity overall. If market electricity prices continue to rise, Vistra is likely to be able to increase its output to take advantage. That should help power ongoing share price gains.