Uranium Energy’s shares snapped a brutal month-long slide on Thursday, rebounding more than 6% to €8.65 as investors focused on the company’s production ramp rather than the deep red ink in its latest quarterly report. The advance offered a rare bright spot after the stock lost roughly a third of its value over the past 30 days and fell nearly 50% from the January high of €17.34.
Two operational achievements drove the optimism. Uranium Energy started production at Burke Hollow in South Texas on April 8 — the largest new in-situ recovery uranium project to come online in the United States in more than a decade. Meanwhile, operations continued at Christensen Ranch in Wyoming, where 32,200 pounds of uranium concentrate were produced during the third quarter. That site also received regulatory clearance to expand capacity, with three new header houses in Wellfield 11 coming into service late in the period. Output from both facilities is expected to combine fully in the current quarter, lifting total volumes sharply.
Yet the financial picture remains stark. For the quarter ending April 30, Uranium Energy posted a net loss of $52 million, or $0.11 per share. The company generated no revenue at all — a deliberate strategy of holding all produced uranium as inventory in hopes of later selling at higher prices. Production costs at Christensen Ranch came in at $54.61 per pound, with cash costs of $46.69. The elevated figure reflects lower volumes due to delayed permits and higher state levies.
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Underpinning that bet on rising uranium prices is a formidable balance sheet. Uranium Energy held $794 million in liquid assets, including $488 million in cash, and carries no debt. Its uranium stockpile stands at roughly 1.46 million pounds of U3O8, valued at approximately $127 million at current market prices. The company has no hedging contracts in place, leaving it fully exposed to spot-price moves.
The strategic logic extends beyond trading inventory. Uranium Energy is pursuing a fully integrated domestic fuel supply chain, from mining through conversion, via a subsidiary that is developing local US refineries. Exploration programs continue at projects in Wyoming, Saskatchewan, and Paraguay, including the Roughrider project and a titanium-vanadium venture. The ultimate payoff hinges on where the uranium market heads next.
Thursday’s rebound — while welcome after a 34% rout — still leaves the stock trading near the day’s lows. The next chart hurdle for the shares is the 50-day moving average at €11.90. For now, the company’s operational momentum at Burke Hollow and Christensen Ranch is providing a floor, but the path to sustained profitability remains tied to the price of the metal it is sitting on.
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