Uranium Energy Corp has fired up its first new US in-situ recovery facility in over a decade, bringing the Burke Hollow project in Texas into commercial production. The move doubles the company’s active ISR platforms and marks a significant step in its ambition to build a fully domestic nuclear fuel supply chain.
The Burke Hollow site, described as the largest US uranium discovery of the past ten years, has so far only been explored across half of its roughly 20,000-hectare footprint. Measured and indicated resources stand at just over six million pounds of uranium oxide. With this addition, Uranium Energy now controls a licensed production capacity of approximately 12 million pounds per year across its Wyoming and South Texas operations.
The company’s next production target is already on the horizon: the Ludeman project is slated to begin output in 2027.
A deliberate strategy of going unhedged
Uranium Energy’s management has taken an unconventional approach in the current market, shunning all price hedging. That bet is paying off handsomely. In the most recent quarter, the company sold its uranium at a price more than 25 percent above the average quarterly spot rate.
The stock has responded in kind, surging nearly 183 percent over the past twelve months to trade at around €12.95. The shares have recently settled just above their 50-day moving average as investors take a breather.
On Wall Street, however, opinions are sharply divided. Eight of nine analysts tracked by StockAnalysis rate the stock a buy, but BMO Capital Markets maintains a hold rating — a stance it reaffirmed in April without dismissing the broader investment thesis. The consensus price target among six analysts sits at $17.83, though estimates range from $12.25 to $26.75. Roth MKM recently reiterated its buy recommendation following the Burke Hollow production announcement.
The stock traded between $14.37 and $15.34 on April 22, still well below its 52-week high of $20.34.
Uranium market volatility masks longer-term strength
The uranium market endured a turbulent first quarter of 2026. Spot U3O8 prices opened around $80 per pound, surged to $101.41 in late January, then retreated sharply amid geopolitical shocks. The current spot price of roughly $86.85 per pound sits about 4 percent above last month’s level and roughly 33 percent higher than a year ago.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Uranium Energy?
The forward market tells a more compelling story. Term prices have climbed to $90 per pound — the highest level in years — supported by a wave of contracts from technology companies investing in small modular reactors to power their data centers. That structural demand underpins the long-term outlook for nuclear fuel.
Building America’s first vertically integrated nuclear fuel supplier
Uranium Energy is pushing well beyond simple mining. The company plans to construct its own uranium conversion facility, a move that would make it the only vertically integrated nuclear fuel supplier in the United States.
In March, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission assigned a docket number to the project — an early but formal step in the licensing process. Engineering and planning work is underway with partner Fluor, while management evaluates potential sites across multiple states, weighing logistical advantages against local incentive packages.
The company’s balance sheet is well positioned for the expansion. Uranium Energy holds $818 million in cash and carries no bank debt.
Exploration and infrastructure development continue
A 200-hole drilling program has recently kicked off at the Sweetwater project, while core drilling is underway in Canada’s Athabasca Basin to support a pre-feasibility study for the Roughrider project. Uranium Energy is also negotiating a high-voltage power connection for the planned facility there.
The broader investment thesis rests on a stark reality: the US currently imports roughly 95 percent of its uranium needs, with a significant portion coming from Russia and Kazakhstan. Geopolitical risks, a projected supply deficit, and rising nuclear power demand through 2040 are all pushing policymakers to support domestic production.
Whether the bullish consensus on Wall Street proves correct or BMO’s more cautious view prevails will depend largely on how quickly Uranium Energy can scale its ISR platforms — and where uranium prices settle in a market that remains structurally tight. The next major test will come with second-quarter production figures.
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