Key Takeaways
- Uranium spot prices reached $92.50/lb this week, the highest level since 2011 following the Fukushima disaster.
- Utilities in the U.S., France, South Korea, and Japan are all competing for the same finite supply of term contracts.
- Cameco and Kazatomprom the two largest producers cannot ramp output fast enough to meet accelerating demand.
- Analysts at RBC and Sprott predict spot uranium will breach $100/lb within 6-9 months.
- Canadian producers Cameco (CCO), Denison Mines (DML), and NexGen Energy (NXE) all trade at significant discounts to NAV.
Uranium spot prices broke through $92.50 per pound this week, reaching their highest level in 15 years and reigniting investor interest in an asset class that spent much of the past decade in the doldrums. The surge comes as a global wave of utility contracting collides with stubbornly constrained supply a dynamic that many analysts believe is structural, not cyclical.
The Contracting Wave Nobody Saw Coming
For most of the 2010s, utilities around the world ran down strategic uranium inventories accumulated before Fukushima. That drawdown is now complete. Utilities in the United States, France, South Korea, and Japan have entered the market simultaneously, competing for a finite pool of uncommitted pounds.
“We’ve never seen this level of concurrent contracting activity across multiple geographies,” said one uranium trader at a Toronto-based commodities desk. “Utilities are not negotiating hard on price. They’re negotiating on volume and delivery timing. That’s a very different market.”
The Sprott Physical Uranium Trust, which holds physical uranium and cannot lend it out, has added over 3 million pounds to its holdings this year directly removing supply from a market that has little margin for error.
Supply: The Structural Constraint
Cameco, the world’s largest publicly traded uranium company, has repeatedly stated that ramping McArthur River and Key Lake back to full capacity is taking longer than planned. Skilled labour shortages in Saskatchewan and equipment lead times have pushed the company’s 2026 production guidance toward the low end of its range.
Kazatomprom, the Kazakh state miner that accounts for roughly 45% of global output, is facing its own constraints. Sulfuric acid shortages a critical input for in-situ recovery mining have reduced output at several of its joint ventures. Western utility buyers are also seeking to diversify away from Kazakh supply given geopolitical risk, which is further tightening the supply picture for non-Russian origin pounds.
“The uranium market is not just tight it’s critically undersupplied for the next 5 years. No amount of price signal will bring enough new supply online in time to prevent further price appreciation.” Sprott Asset Management, June 2026
Analyst Price Targets
| Firm | 12-Month Target (USD/lb) | Catalyst |
|---|---|---|
| RBC Capital Markets | $105 | Utility contracting acceleration |
| Sprott Asset Management | $120 | Structural supply deficit |
| BMO Capital Markets | $95 | Incremental demand from new builds |
| TD Securities | $100 | Kazatomprom output shortfall |
| National Bank Financial | $110 | AI data centre nuclear demand |
Canadian Equity Implications
The spot price move is not yet fully reflected in uranium equities. Cameco (CCO) trades at roughly 0.85x NAV on current spot, compared to its historical average of 1.1-1.3x in prior bull markets. Junior developers including NexGen Energy and Denison Mines trade at even steeper discounts, with 12-month upside scenarios in excess of 40% at current consensus price targets.
For Canadian retail and institutional investors, the uranium trade has historically been best accessed through the equities rather than the physical commodity. ETFs like the Sprott Uranium Miners ETF (URNM) and the Global X Uranium ETF (URA) provide diversified exposure across producers, developers, and royalty companies.