Fermi (FRMI) Registration Filing summary
Event summary combining transcript, slides, and related documents.
Registration Filing summary
29 Nov, 2025Company overview and business model
Focuses on developing Project Matador, a 5,236-acre, multi-gigawatt energy and data center campus in Amarillo, Texas, targeting up to 11 GW of low-carbon, on-demand power for AI and hyperscale data center tenants by 2038.
Project Matador is designed to deliver a mix of natural gas, nuclear, solar, and battery storage, with 1.1 GW of power projected online by end of 2026 and up to 15 million sq. ft. of AI-ready compute space.
The business model is based on long-term, triple-net leases for powered shells and private power grid access, with revenue from capacity-based rents and power purchase agreements.
The company intends to operate as a REIT, offering tax-efficient exposure to AI infrastructure and energy development.
The site is secured by a 99-year ground lease with Texas Tech University System, providing long-term development rights and public-sector partnership benefits.
Financial performance and metrics
As of June 30, 2025, reported a net loss of $6.4 million, with no revenue generated to date; expenses primarily related to formation, project development, and share-based compensation.
Cash and cash equivalents stood at $40.3 million as of June 30, 2025, with $42.6 million in construction in progress and $85.7 million in convertible debt outstanding.
Pro forma net tangible book value after the IPO is estimated at $1.53 per share, with immediate dilution of $18.47 per share to new investors at a $20.00 offering price.
Capital expenditures for Phase 0 and Phase 1 are expected to exceed $2 billion, with total project capital needs across all phases estimated at $70–90 billion.
Use of proceeds and capital allocation
IPO expected to raise approximately $603.3 million in net proceeds (assuming $20.00 per share), to be used for procurement and installation of long lead-time equipment, construction of powered shells, and general corporate purposes.
Capital deployment will prioritize securing power generation assets, site infrastructure, and supporting tenant delivery timelines.
Additional funding sources include tenant prepayments, project-level debt, federal tax credits, strategic equity, government grants, and property tax abatements.
Latest events from Fermi
- Board urges shareholders to reject a disruptive Special Meeting and support ongoing strategic growth.FRMI
Proxy filing15 Jun 2026 - Shareholders are urged to reject Neugebauer's proposals and support current board leadership.FRMI
Proxy filing12 Jun 2026 - Shareholders are urged to support a Special Meeting to overhaul the Board and restore voting rights.FRMI
Proxy filing10 Jun 2026 - Board urges shareholders to reject Neugebauer’s proposals and support Fermi 2.0’s strategic direction.FRMI
Proxy filing3 Jun 2026 - Shareholders are urged to vote on a new board to pursue all options for maximizing value.FRMI
Investor update21 May 2026 - $189M net loss, $441M invested, and no revenue as AI power campus advances.FRMI
Q1 202620 May 2026 - Board strengthens governance to block former CEO's takeover bid and protect shareholder value.FRMI
Proxy filing18 May 2026 - Board urges shareholders to reject Neugebauer's proposals and support Fermi 2.0's strategic plan.FRMI
Proxy filing15 May 2026 - Board rebuffs ex-CEO's control bid, affirming leadership and strategic direction.FRMI
Proxy filing6 May 2026 - Shareholders are urged to support a special meeting to reshape the board and pursue strategic alternatives.FRMI
Proxy filing5 May 2026