Uranium Rises to 17-Month High

2026-01-19 11:08 By Andre Joaquim 1 min. read

Uranium futures rose past $85 per pound in January, the highest in 17 months, as signs of stronger demand in the longer term spurred fresh buying from physical funds.

The US cut regulations on the construction and permits for uranium converters and enrichers and announced deals for the construction of new power plants.

These include a partnership with Cameco, which approved the development of Westinghouse reactors, and a fresh $2.7 billion in contracts to Centrus and two other reactors and enrichers to offset the shun of supply from Russia following sanctions on their nuclear fuel.

Bets of higher investment in the sector due to governments aiming to increase energy security and pledges of expenditure on power-hungry datacenters supported buying from physical uranium funds.

Most recently, Sprott's physical uranium fund, the world's largest, increased its holdings by of yellowcake 100,000 pounds.



News Stream
Uranium Rises to 20-Month High
Uranium futures in the US rose to $100 per pound in January, the highest since February 2024, on bets of high demand in the long term. The US cut regulations on the construction and permits for uranium converters and enrichers and announced deals for the construction of new power plants. These include a partnership with Cameco, which approved the development of Westinghouse reactors, and a fresh $2.7 billion in contracts to Centrus and two other reactors and enrichers to offset the shun of supply from Russia following sanctions on their nuclear fuel. In the meantime, US utilities secured contracts over enriched uranium from Western producers and drove European counterparts to maintain Russian supply chains, despite the EU's call for lower dependency on Russian energy. Bets of higher investment in the sector due to governments aiming to increase energy security and pledges of expenditure on power-hungry datacenters supported buying from physical uranium funds.
2026-01-27
Uranium Rises to 17-Month High
Uranium futures rose past $85 per pound in January, the highest in 17 months, as signs of stronger demand in the longer term spurred fresh buying from physical funds. The US cut regulations on the construction and permits for uranium converters and enrichers and announced deals for the construction of new power plants. These include a partnership with Cameco, which approved the development of Westinghouse reactors, and a fresh $2.7 billion in contracts to Centrus and two other reactors and enrichers to offset the shun of supply from Russia following sanctions on their nuclear fuel. Bets of higher investment in the sector due to governments aiming to increase energy security and pledges of expenditure on power-hungry datacenters supported buying from physical uranium funds. Most recently, Sprott's physical uranium fund, the world's largest, increased its holdings by of yellowcake 100,000 pounds.
2026-01-19
Uranium Extends Upswing
Uranium futures rose to above $83 per pound, testing the highest level since mid 2024 amid signs of stronger demand from datacenters and fresh buying from physical funds. The US cut regulations on the construction and permits for uranium converters and enrichers and announced deals for the construction of new power plants. These include a partnership with Cameco, which approved the development of Westinghouse reactors, and a fresh $2.7 billion in contracts to Centrus and two other reactors and enrichers to offset the shun of supply from Russia following sanctions on their nuclear fuel. Bets of higher investment in the sector due to governments aiming to increase energy security and pledges of expenditure on power-hungry datacenters supported buying from physical uranium funds. Most recently, Sprott's physical uranium fund, the world's largest, increased its holdings by of yellowcake 100,000 pounds.
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