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Uranium miners surged throughout the last week as spot prices of U3O8 rebounded back to $40/lb. Uranium has seen an uptick in interest from hedge funds over the last few months, while Sprott’s Uranium Trust continues to acquire ever-more physical supplies.

Sentiment toward uranium and nuclear energy is also shifting among European governments – partly due to a burgeoning energy crisis across the continent. 10 EU member states, led by France, recently submitted a letter to the European Commission, urging them to designate zero-emission nuclear power as a “green energy”. In the UK, plans for the construction of a major nuclear plant in Wales, capable of supplying 6 million homes with electricity, are already being discussed with reactor manufacturers.

Related ETF: North Shore Global Uranium Mining ETF (URNM)

Hedge Funds, Sprott Continue to Stock Up

Uranium prices have resumed their climb over the last week, as spot prices have regained the $40 per pound mark; that’s up more than 50% versus the start of the year. Long-term contract prices, the primary driver of uranium miners’ valuations, remain even higher than spot prices.

Hedge funds have been taking notice, initiating their own purchases of uranium supplies. The Financial Times reports that funds including Tribeca Investment Partners and Ben Melkman’s New York-based Light Sky Macro have started piling into the trade. Melkman has gone so far as to say the focus on green energy now makes uranium “one of the most asymmetric trades for the coming years”.

Hedge fund buying of uranium was largely kicked off by hedge fund Anchorage Capital Group. MRP noted last June that Anchorage had amassed a huge bet on uranium, a rare occurrence for a firm that typically invests in corporate debt. Per the Wall Street Journal, the fund purchased ‘a few million’ pounds of uranium, illustrating the fact the hedge fund is betting on a price trend reversal in the upcoming years.

As MRP highlighted last month, the most consistent spot purchases have been coming from the Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SRUUF). In September, the Toronto-listed trust, which begun purchasing uranium in July, expanded its purchases – amassing over 28 million pounds of U3O8 – equivalent to an NAV of more than $1.3 billion. Sprott’s holdings represent more than a quarter of the annual spot volume from 2020, which Yellowcake pegs around 92 million pounds. On Tuesday, updated fund data indicated SRUFF raised another $90 million – part of which was used to acquire another 400,000 lbs of uranium.

European Sentiment Shifts on Nuclear Power

The growing energy crisis that threatens to grip Europe this winter, combined with aggressive decarbonization goals across the continent, has caused several key economies to reverse course on nuclear energy.

Earlier this week, a group of ten European Union (EU) countries, led by France, asked the European Commission to recognize nuclear power as a low-carbon energy source that should be part of the bloc’s decades-long transition towards climate neutrality. Per Reuters, the EU is expected to finish the climate portion of its sustainable finance taxonomy – a first-of-its-kind regulation that aims to steer private capital out of polluting economic activities – within the next few months. The European Commission categorizing nuclear energy as a “green” investment would be an extremely bullish prospect for the uranium market.

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday that, along with generating utility-scale electricity, France’s nuclear plants would also be a major asset for producing green hydrogen via electrolysis. MRP has highlighted the huge potential of hydrogen to revolutionize the renewable energy mix as well, with total investment into projects amounting to an estimated $500 billion through 2030.

Euronews notes that nuclear plants already generate over 26% of the electricity produced in the EU, but the energy source had largely fallen out of favor over the last decade. Per the Financial Times, Macron had previously announced the intention to shut 14 reactors and cut nuclear’s contribution to France’s energy mix from 75% to 50% by 2035. The President’s rapid U-turn comes not only in response to…

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