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Atlas Energy Stock Jumps 39% YTD, but One Fund Cut Exposure by $15 Million Last Quarter
On February 17, 2026, Meridian Wealth Advisors disclosed a reduction in its Atlas Energy Solutions (AESI 1.61%) position, selling 1,458,193 shares for an estimated $14.74 million based on average quarterly pricing.
What happened
According to a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing dated February 17, 2026, Meridian Wealth Advisors reduced its position in Atlas Energy Solutions by 1,458,193 shares. The estimated transaction value was $14.74 million, calculated using the average unadjusted closing price over the fourth quarter of 2025. The value of the AESI stake declined by $18.51 million between filings, reflecting both the share sale and stock price movement.
What else to know
Company overview
Company snapshot
Atlas Energy Solutions is a leading provider of proppant and logistics services to the oil and gas sector, with a particular focus on the Permian Basin. The company leverages integrated logistics and supply chain solutions to support efficient hydrocarbon extraction for major energy producers.
What this transaction means for investors
This is a clean example of how quickly the narrative can flip in cyclical energy names. At year-end, Atlas looked like a laggard. This company then posted $1.1 billion in annual revenue while swinging to a net loss, with fourth-quarter EBITDA of just $36.7 million as pricing pressure and cost inflation weighed on margins. Against that backdrop, trimming exposure made sense, especially in a portfolio anchored by broad-market ETFs, gold, and mega-cap names like Exxon, Apple, and Microsoft.
But the story didn’t stop there. After the quarter closed, shares surged 39% year to date, helped by improving sentiment around Permian activity and a more compelling long-term angle. The company is now leaning into power infrastructure, locking in an agreement with Caterpillar tied to roughly 1.4 gigawatts of future capacity and positioning itself for a multi-year demand cycle tied to AI and industrial electrification.
Ultimately, for long-term investors, it’s important to remember that selling into weakness can protect capital, but it also reduces exposure to inflection points.