In a June 20, 2026 Motley Fool column republished on Yahoo Finance, Reuben Gregg Brewer names Brookfield Renewable (NYSE: BEP/BEPC) as his preferred way to access AI-driven power demand growth. Brewer describes Oklo (NYSE: OKLO) and NuScale Power (NYSE: SMR) as start-ups with "very exciting technology and money-losing businesses" - attractive to growth investors but unsuited to his conservative, income-focused approach. Brookfield Renewable offers a broader asset base - hydroelectric, solar, wind, storage, plus a 50% stake in Westinghouse, which is itself developing SMR technology. The company holds power supply agreements with Microsoft and Google, providing diversified AI-demand exposure beyond nuclear alone. Brewer notes BEP (partnership units) currently yields about 4.5% and BEPC (corporate shares) about 4.3%.
What happened
In a June 20, 2026 column published by The Motley Fool and republished on Yahoo Finance, Reuben Gregg Brewer names Brookfield Renewable (NYSE: BEP)(NYSE: BEPC) as his preferred way to gain exposure to power demand from AI datacenters.
The case against pure-play SMRs
Brewer describes Oklo (NYSE: OKLO) and NuScale Power (NYSE: SMR) as start-ups with "very exciting technology and money-losing businesses." He acknowledges the long-term appeal of small modular reactors but rules both companies out for his conservative, income-oriented portfolio given their pre-revenue status and single-platform commercialization risk.
Why Brookfield Renewable
Brookfield Renewable operates a global portfolio of clean energy assets - hydroelectric, solar, wind, and storage. It also owns 50% of Westinghouse, which has a long history in nuclear power services and is independently developing SMR technology. The author argues this structure provides nuclear sector exposure without binary risk of a single untested platform. Brookfield also holds power supply agreements with Microsoft and Google, covering AI datacenter demand broadly rather than only through nuclear.
Share structure and yield
Brookfield Renewable is available in two forms representing the same business: Brookfield Renewable Partners (BEP), a limited partnership that trades at a modest discount, currently yielding approximately 4.5%; and Brookfield Renewable Corporation (BEPC), a corporate structure that trades at a slight premium, yielding approximately 4.3%, per Brewer's column. Both carry the same dividend.
Editorial note
All preference statements, financial characterizations, and yield figures come from Reuben Gregg Brewer's column for The Motley Fool (June 20, 2026). This is investment opinion, not financial research. The Motley Fool discloses that Brewer holds BEP and that the firm recommends BEPC, BEP, and NuScale Power.
Scoring Rationale #
Single-author investment opinion column recommending Brookfield Renewable as an indirect play on AI power demand. AI is a demand context rather than the subject, and no new technical results or industry-changing announcements are presented. Appropriate for the minor/opinion tier; yield and Westinghouse details are verified from the primary source.
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