The Yellowcake Road: Fuelling the Future
A nuclear renaissance, naturally, needs fuel. This brings us to uranium. After the Fukushima disaster, the price of uranium plummeted, and mines were shuttered. Now, with dozens of new reactors planned worldwide, we’re facing a classic supply squeeze. There simply might not be enough uranium being mined to meet this resurgent demand.
This has put companies like Canada’s Cameco, a giant in the uranium world, in a rather enviable position. The market for uranium is also a peculiar beast. It doesn’t trade like oil or gold. Most of it is sold via long-term contracts between miners and utility companies. As old, low-priced contracts expire and new ones are negotiated in a tighter market, prices could steadily climb. It’s a slow burn, but one that investors are watching very closely. It’s a complex picture, one that requires a careful look at a whole host of companies, from the miners to the tech innovators, much like the collection found in the Nuclear Revival basket. This isn't about one single stock, but an entire ecosystem waking from a long slumber.
Investing here requires a healthy dose of patience and a stomach for risk. These are not get-rich-quick stocks. Timelines are long, regulatory hurdles are immense, and public opinion can be fickle. A project delay or a policy shift could easily derail the best-laid plans. Still, for those with a long-term view, the tectonic shifts in energy, technology, and geopolitics are making nuclear power an investment story that is, once again, too big to ignore.