Australian (ASX) Stock Market Forum

Uranium

Market Matters on Uranium this morning

Not Held

Uranium U308 Futures ($US/lb)

"Uranium- and nuclear-themed ETFs spiked sharply higher on Friday after President Donald Trump signed an executive order that will overhaul the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, an independent agency that regulates the nation’s fleet of nuclear reactors. Policy-driven optimism sent nuclear-themed ETFs, from reactor developers to uranium miners, soaring with market heavyweight Cameco Corp (CCJ US), which MM holds in its International Equities Portfolio, up 11%. Trump said on Friday that the orders focus on small, advanced reactors that many in the industry view as the future. However, the president also said his administration supports the building of large plants – in typical dramatic fashion: “We’re also talking about the big plants, the very, very big, the biggest,” Trump said.

Regulatory delay is one of the most significant problems in the nuclear industry; the new president looks set to significantly reduce these problems. Also, Trump’s orders create a regulatory framework for the departments of Energy and Defence to build atomic reactors on federal land as the administration takes huge steps in the country’s nuclear adoption – a very bullish backdrop for the industry as a whole.

While Australia may never use nuclear power, many global powerhouses are adopting the clean energy source at an increasing pace.
MM remains bullish toward the uranium stocks"
 

What caused the increased interest in uranium-focused companies last week?

Written By Hans Lee

What’s happened?​

Last week, President Trump signed four new executive orders, aimed at rapidly expanding America’s nuclear energy capabilities. The long-term ambition? To quadruple the country’s nuclear capacity by 2050.

According to Flash Update research notes from both Citi Research and Canaccord Genuity[1], achieving that goal would require the US’ amount of annual uranium demand to double from current levels[2].

The four executive orders are aimed at kick-starting the following initiatives:

  • Federal funding and loan guarantees to help construct 10 new large reactors by 2030 and the upgrade of existing nuclear reactors[3]
  • Developing and deploying Small Modular Reactors (SMRs)[4]
  • Removing regulatory barriers, especially the time taken to review an application to build a new nuclear plant[5]
  • Boosting US uranium production and enrichment capabilities as well as expanding the nuclear energy workforce[6].
These orders seek to slash red tape and accelerate the approval process for new nuclear reactors and power plants. It also marks a significant shift in how quickly nuclear projects can get off the ground[7].

The executive orders follow the passing of Trump’s so-called “Big Beautiful Bill”, which eliminates tax credits for most clean energy projects. Nuclear, however, is the exception, with companies in the sector still eligible for production tax credits on projects that start construction by 2031.

Not just a pipe dream anymore​

What sets these new orders apart is that they go beyond lofty long-term goals – they include concrete near-term actions. Citi’s Flash Update research note says these will range from upgrades to the existing nuclear fleet and major reforms to fast-track government approvals to plans for 10 new reactors to break ground by 2030[8].

From a political point of view, China and India have long planned a significant build out of their nuclear power fleet. With the US taking concrete steps to join them, the structurally constrained market for uranium is set to get tighter.

From an investment point of view, the prospect of further construction of nuclear power stations in the US has helped to boost uranium stocks and related ETFs.

It’s been a volatile time to be a uranium investor​

Calling uranium a volatile investment might be an understatement.

As demand for AI – and the energy-hungry data centres that power it – surged, so too did initial expectations for the uranium needed to fuel it. That optimism pushed uranium demand forecasts, and the share prices of uranium-focused companies, higher.

But when DeepSeek’s AI model emerged earlier this year, reportedly using far less electricity, those expectations were quickly revised. Uranium mining stocks, which had been seen as key to powering the AI boom, came under pressure.

Some of this pressure can be seen in the chart below. Locally, Boss Energy (ASX: BOE), Paladin Energy (ASX: PDN), and Deep Yellow (ASX: DYL) have ranked among the most heavily shorted stocks on the ASX for most of the last 18 months (to 3 June 2025)[9].

Stock prices of global companies in the uranium industry (27 May 2020 – 28 May 2025)

word-image-73440-1.png

Source: Indxx, as at 27 May 2025. Graph shows performance of the Indxx North Shore Uranium Mining Index, which Betashares Global Uranium ETF (ASX: URNM) seeks to track. Does not take into account ETF fees and costs. You cannot invest directly in an index. Past performance is not indicative of future performance of any index or ETF.

Nonetheless, a significant build out of nuclear power stations in emerging market countries like China and India, as well as structurally constrained supply, may still provide a long-term tailwind for the uranium sector.

President Trump’s rollback of green energy subsidies associated with the Inflation Reduction Act, and the pivot to nuclear, has jolted the uranium market back into gear. The announcements also created a scramble of short sellers trying to unwind their positions in these uranium miners – which has helped cause the renewed interest in uranium equities and uranium-related ETFs.

Nuclear is no longer a nice-to-have​

The demand surge is primarily driven by data centres that require massive energy to power the AI boom, and nuclear energy is an attractive option for big tech firms given its reliability and near-zero carbon footprint.

But long before AI was part of our daily lexicon, the demand-supply imbalance for uranium was already clear.

According to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), uranium production volumes have been significantly below world uranium requirements for some time. In fact, in 2022, OECD member countries only produced around 30% of the uranium they required. And, as of 2023, only one country (Canada) produced enough uranium to meet its nuclear generating capacity[10].

OECD and World Uranium Production vs Requirements​

a-graph-of-different-types-of-growth-ai-generated.png

Source: Nuclear Energy Agency and International Atomic Energy Agency, as published on 23 April 2025.

Further, in the executive order entitled Deploying advanced nuclear reactor technologies for national security, Trump explicitly characterised AI data centres as “critical defence facilities” four times in the press release. In other words, nuclear may no longer be a ‘nice to have’. It could now be a necessity for the world and a national security priority for the US.

 
West africa taking over western gold mjners AND uranium..
France, a serious uranium consumer sources a lot from this area.
I have no doubt nationalisation of uranium mining there will lead to collapses.
Good for uranium price
 
Lot of energy, lump not reducing. Imagine if the whole lump was released as energy at once! Might make a bomb!

 
Top