From Morning Watchlist <[email protected]>
Subject 3 Reasons Uranium Stocks Could Surge Again
Date December 18, 2025 2:05 PM
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Nuclear momentum is building, and the fuel cycle is tightening. ͏
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Dear Fellow Investor,

THIS IS WHY EVERY INVESTOR SHOULD OWN URANIUM STOCKS TODAY
_Uranium stocks could have another explosive few years ahead._

Uranium has quietly re-entered the center of the global energy
conversation, and investors are finally starting to notice. After a
long period where nuclear power was treated as a “legacy”
solution, the narrative has shifted to something much more practical:
energy security, grid reliability, and the need for massive new
electricity supply. When you combine those realities with a uranium
supply picture that looks increasingly tight, it creates a setup
that’s difficult for investors to ignore.

Put simply: nuclear power is gaining momentum again, and uranium is
the essential fuel behind it. While the uranium market can be volatile
(and uranium equities even more so), the medium- to long-term
fundamentals are improving in ways we haven’t seen in years.

Here are three major reasons uranium and uranium stocks may be
entering a powerful multi-year runway.

-------------------------

1) DEMAND IS RISING... AND NOT JUST BECAUSE OF DECARBONIZATION

Global uranium demand is expected to rise meaningfully over the coming
years, with industry groups pointing to strong growth through 2030 as
more nuclear capacity is built, life extensions are approved, and idle
reactors return to operation. This isn’t only about carbon reduction
goals, although nuclear’s low-emissions profile is an obvious
advantage. It’s increasingly about KEEPING THE LIGHTS ON.

Many power grids are facing the same challenge at once: electricity
demand is rising, while traditional baseload generation is being
retired, and intermittent generation requires backup and grid
investment. Nuclear sits in a unique position as a proven, scalable
source of steady power. In an era where reliability is becoming a
strategic priority, that matters.

But there’s another major demand driver that’s accelerating the
conversation: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE.

As AI adoption grows data centers are expanding rapidly, and those
facilities consume enormous amounts of electricity, around the clock.
Tech giants are now exploring ways to secure long-term power supplies
that are dependable, scalable, and politically resilient. That’s why
we’re seeing high-profile interest in nuclear-powered solutions for
energy-intensive data center infrastructure.

For example, Microsoft has signed a power purchase agreement with
Constellation Energy, tied to the need for additional power capacity
to support servers and growth at Azure. Alphabet and Amazon have also
been looking toward nuclear as part of the long-term energy toolkit
for data centers. Alphabet has partnered with Kairos Power focused on
small modular nuclear reactor (SMR) development, an area that could
become increasingly relevant if SMRs move from promise to widespread
deployment.

The important point for investors is not whether every one of these
initiatives hits its most ambitious timeline. The point is that THE
LARGEST, MOST WELL-CAPITALIZED COMPANIES IN THE WORLD ARE SIGNALING
THAT NUCLEAR IS BACK ON THE TABLE, because their growth increasingly
depends on reliable, large-scale electricity.

That shift in sentiment can ripple through the uranium fuel cycle:
utilities contracting, suppliers planning, miners investing, and
capital markets re-pricing the sector.

-------------------------

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-------------------------

2) SUPPLY MAY TIGHTEN SHARPLY AFTER 2030... AND NEW SUPPLY TAKES A
LONG TIME

The second catalyst is the one commodity investors tend to watch most
closely: supply.

According to commentary cited by Mining.com from the World Nuclear
Association’s outlook, OUTPUT FROM EXISTING MINES IS FORECAST TO
DECLINE SIGNIFICANTLY AFTER 2030, creating a pressing need for new
mines and the restart of idle operations. The issue is not merely
whether there is uranium “in the ground.” The issue is whether
there is investable, permitted, financeable production capacity that
can come online in time to meet demand.

And that’s where uranium is structurally challenging: IT CAN TAKE 10
TO 20 YEARS TO DEVELOP NEW URANIUM PROJECTS, depending on
jurisdiction, permitting pathways, community engagement, financing
conditions, and engineering complexity. If demand is rising now, but
meaningful new supply has long lead times, the market can tighten
faster than many investors expect.

In commodity markets, this is often where the “reflexive” part
begins: rising prices encourage investment, but the investment takes
years to become supply, so prices can overshoot in both directions.
Uranium has historically been prone to this kind of cycle, and the
current setup, stronger demand narrative plus constrained development
timelines, supports the thesis that the next few years could remain
constructive for the sector.

In practical terms, that means utilities may move earlier to lock in
long-term supply contracts. Miners with existing production or
near-term restarts may receive disproportionate investor attention.
Developers with advanced projects can also benefit, but they often
come with higher execution and financing risk.

3) POLICY IS TURNING INTO A TAILWIND, NOT A HEADWIND

The third catalyst is political. Energy has become a strategic asset
again, and uranium sits directly at the intersection of energy
security and national security.

Recent reporting and industry commentary have pointed to the U.S.
expanding focus on domestic critical mineral supply chains, including
uranium, to reduce reliance on foreign sources. As Investing News has
noted, uranium’s strategic importance extends beyond powering
commercial reactors, it also has defense and naval applications. The
same reporting highlighted the scale of U.S. import dependence (often
cited as above 95%), which policymakers increasingly frame as a
national security concern.

Whether you view this through the lens of industrial policy, strategic
stockpiling, domestic mining support, or fuel-cycle investment, the
direction is clear: GOVERNMENTS WANT MORE CONTROL OVER ENERGY INPUTS,
and uranium is one of those inputs.

For investors, this matters because policy support can change the
investability of an entire sector. It can affect permitting timelines,
financing conditions, domestic contracting, and the appetite for
long-term supply agreements.

-------------------------

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-------------------------

WHAT THIS COULD MEAN FOR URANIUM STOCKS

When these three forces converge, rising demand, long-lead supply
constraints, and policy support, uranium equities can move quickly.
Not always smoothly, but quickly.

That’s why uranium stocks such as CAMECO (SYM: CCJ), DENISON MINES
(SYM: DNN), and OKLO (SYM: OKLO) are frequently cited by investors
watching the space. Each represents a different slice of the broader
nuclear theme, and each will respond differently depending on where we
are in the uranium price cycle, how financing conditions evolve, and
how nuclear buildout progresses.

However, individual names also come with company-specific risk:
operational execution, jurisdictional issues, dilution, project
timelines, and general equity market volatility. If you want broader
exposure, often with less single-stock risk, ETFs can be a practical
way to express the theme.

TWO ETF OPTIONS TO CONSIDER FOR BROADER EXPOSURE

ETF: GLOBAL X URANIUM ETF (SYM: URA)
With an expense ratio of 0.69%, URA is designed to provide exposure
to a broad range of uranium-related companies, including firms
involved in mining, exploration, refining, and nuclear components. It
holds a diversified basket (often around 50 holdings) and has included
names such as Cameco, NexGen Energy, Uranium Energy, Paladin Energy,
Denison Mines, and NuScale Power among its larger positions.

In the current setup, URA may appeal to investors who want a _broad
“nuclear/uranium ecosystem” approach_ rather than a pure-play
miners-only bet. The ETF has recently traded around $44.25 and, from
here, some investors would look for a rebound toward the MID-TO-HIGH
$50S over the near term, though outcomes will depend on commodity
prices and market sentiment.

ETF: SPROTT URANIUM MINERS ETF (SYM: URNM)
With an expense ratio of 0.75%, URNM focuses more directly on uranium
miners and—based on the fund’s approach as commonly
described—can also include exposure linked to physical uranium. It
has featured top holdings such as Cameco, Paladin Energy, Denison
Mines, Uranium Energy, Deep Yellow, Yellow Cake, and Ur-Energy.

URNM may be a better fit for investors who want _more concentrated
miner sensitivity_ to uranium price moves. Recently near $55.08, some
would look for an initial rebound toward the MID-$60S if the sector
regains momentum.

A QUICK REMINDER ABOUT RISKS

Uranium investing can be rewarding, but it is not “set and
forget.” Key risks include:

*
COMMODITY CYCLE RISK: uranium prices can swing sharply.

*
EQUITY VOLATILITY: miners and developers can move far more than the
commodity itself.

*
REGULATORY AND PERMITTING RISK: timelines can extend unexpectedly.

*
FINANCING AND DILUTION RISK: especially for pre-production companies.

*
NARRATIVE RISK: nuclear sentiment can shift with politics or major
events.

-------------------------

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-------------------------

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