The broader market weakness isn't the only reason, and you might want to look beyond the headlines.
by Neha Chamaria
Key Points
The market sell-off is weighing on uranium stocks.
Morgan Stanley is cautious in the near term but has a strong uranium price outlook for 2024.
But the International Atomic Energy Agency believes the world will need a lot more nuclear energy in coming decades.
Shot up almost 60% in just the past four weeks.
As of Sept. 17, the Sprott fund had amassed 28.3 million pounds of uranium compound, adding more than 10 million pounds in just one month.
Prices have been pumped up by purchases from the Sprott Physical Uranium Trust fund and not meaningful changes in the supply/demand balance in the uranium market.
China has already constructed the reactor and expects to start a thorium trial run this month. Commercial production is unlikely to start before the end of the decade.
Nuclear generating capacity to more than double from 2020 to 792 gigawatts by 2050 in a high-growth scenario.
MS sees Uranium spot price of $49 per pound by 2024. For perspective, the spot price just crossed $50 as of this writing.
Source: TMF
https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/09/ ... gn=article