Centrus Energy Corp reported Q1 2024 total revenue of $43.7 million, gross profit of $3.2 million, and a net loss of $6.1 million. The company reiterates the earnings cadence for this industry: quarterly revenue is heavily lumpy due to multiyear contracts, with deliveries booked when customers take delivery rather than when contracts are signed. Despite a weak quarter on a GAAP basis, management underscored meaningful progress across HALEU and LEU initiatives and highlighted several catalysts that could drive a multi-year expansion in enrichment capacity and U.S. self-reliance in nuclear fuel. Notably, Centrus announced HALEU milestones (135 kg cumulative production) and detailed a robust funding pipeline, including roughly $900 million in conditional LEU sales commitments and a potential $2.7 billion in federal support for domestic HALEU/LEU production. The company projects that a public-private partnership will be essential to scale operations, aided by recent policy developments (Russia uranium ban effective 90 days after signature with a waiver process through 2028) and a broad government push to triple nuclear energy by 2050. Liquidity remains strong with $209.3 million in cash and $32.6 million in restricted cash, totaling $241.9 million. However, management cautions that Q1 patterns tend to normalize later in the year as deliveries accelerate, and near-term profitability will continue to depend on contract mix, margin resilience, and the pace of policy-driven investments.
Key takeaways for investors include: (1) a tangible pathway to expanded LEU/HALEU production through public-private partnerships and DOE funding; (2) improving profitability signals in Technical Solutions, offsetting LEU softness; (3) notable liquidity that funds ongoing capex and working capital during an investment cycle; and (4) meaningful geopolitical and policy tailwinds that could transform Centrus from a niche US enrichment supplier to a leading domestic producer of HALEU and LEU. Investors should monitor the waiver process timing, cylinder supply stabilization for HALEU production, DOE funding allocations, and the pace at which private sector commitments translate into definitive contracts and capacity expansion.