Vistra Is Near a 52-Week Low. August 7 Could Change That.

The chip stocks have been getting all the attention. Meanwhile, one of the most straightforward AI infrastructure plays in the market is sitting near its 52-week low, mostly ignored.

That stock is Vistra Corp. (VST).

Here is the thing about power stocks and AI. Most investors went straight to the nuclear pure-plays when the data center electricity story broke. Constellation Energy got the headlines. Talen got the Amazon deal. But a quieter thesis has been building around Vistra, and it may be more interesting than what is already priced into its better-known peers.

What the Q1 Numbers Said

Vistra reported Q1 2026 revenue of $5.64 billion, a 43% increase year-over-year, and reported GAAP net income of $1.029 billion. Ongoing Operations Adjusted EBITDA came in at $1.494 billion for the quarter. Management reaffirmed full-year 2026 Ongoing Operations Adjusted EBITDA guidance of $6.8 billion to $7.6 billion and Ongoing Operations Adjusted free cash flow before growth of $3.925 billion to $4.725 billion.

Now here is what makes that guidance range actually interesting: it excludes any contribution from the pending Cogentrix acquisition expected to close in the second half of 2026. And it excludes the long-term power purchase agreements with Meta tied to more than 2,600 megawatts from Vistra’s PJM nuclear plants.

Two potential EBITDA contributors. Neither one is in the guidance range yet.

Why This Is an AI Trade

Hyperscalers have already signed long-duration power purchase agreements with Constellation, Talen, and Vistra, locking in supply from existing reactor operators. That is not speculative. It is contracted revenue.

What is starting to matter more is something the market has been slow to absorb. AI infrastructure increasingly depends on firm, dispatchable, grid-connected power capable of operating continuously at hyperscale loads. Intermittent renewables cannot do that job around the clock.

Vistra has a large, diversified generation portfolio. The company has described its current fleet at approximately 44,000 megawatts of capacity, and has said that combined with the Cogentrix acquisition its generation portfolio would be approximately 50,000 MW.

Slight tangent, but it matters: the semiconductor selloff that has dominated July headlines pulled investors away from anything AI-adjacent that is not a chip stock. When a sector gets punished hard, stocks sharing the same broad theme but with completely different fundamentals often get caught in the same rotation out. That may be part of what is happening with VST right now.

The Valuation Picture

Wall Street coverage and price targets move constantly, but recent consensus snapshots have shown roughly 20 analysts covering VST, with a median target in the low-to-mid $200s. With the stock trading around $143 on July 17, that still implies substantial upside versus consensus targets.

Fitch upgraded Vistra to investment-grade BBB- in March 2026. That upgrade reduces borrowing costs and expands the institutional buyer pool. Those effects take time to show up in price action.

What August 7 Brings

The next earnings date is August 7, 2026 (Vistra has said it plans to report second-quarter 2026 results that day). Investors will be watching summer power demand trends in Texas and the mid-Atlantic closely. More importantly, any new commercial agreements with data center customers announced between now and then could move the stock before the report even lands.

The Risk Side

Energy price volatility in ERCOT and PJM can swing quarterly results meaningfully. The Cogentrix acquisition still needs to close. Regulatory or policy changes affecting nuclear power credits would directly impact the fleet’s earnings trajectory. And depending on the data source and date used, Vistra’s P/E ratio has recently been reported in the mid-20s or higher, which can look elevated versus some utility peers even after the pullback.

Those risks are real and visible. But a Meta nuclear PPA outside the guidance range, an August earnings catalyst, an investment-grade credit upgrade, and a stock near a 52-week low is an unusual combination to find in the same name at the same time.

The AI power trade did not end when chip stocks sold off. It just moved somewhere most investors stopped looking.