“We have reached a bottom," said Jonathan Hinze, president of the nuclear industry research firm UxC. Speaking to Bloomberg, Hinze highlighted uranium’s enduring fundamentals, underpinned by increased demand and a supply that is yet to catch up.
While current futures trade at $88.50 per pound in New York, a decrease from February’s 16-year high, they still exceed last year’s average price, reflecting ongoing market resilience. The bullish sentiment towards uranium stems from a growing supply-demand gap and escalating global interest in nuclear power as a solution to combat climate change.
According to the Nuclear Energy Agency, 60,000 tons of uranium are necessary to fuel the world's 436 operating nuclear reactors annually.
Now read: Uranium Surge Revives Old Mines, Sparks Mergers Across Sector
Geopolitical factors further complicate the supply outlook, with the U.S. proposing a bill to ban imports of enriched Russian uranium, which the Senate has received.
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