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Sprott Physical Uranium Trust reaches $1 BILLION in assets today!#uranium #SPUT $U.UN $U.U
For more information and disclosures, please visit:https://t.co/75QBzzz6MR pic.twitter.com/TZIdfmuQG6
— Sprott Asset Management (@Sprott) September 8, 2021
Sprott has amassed over 24 million pounds of uranium, sometimes buying more than 500,000 pounds in a single day, according to its website and social media account.
For comparison, total spot volume for 2020 was 92.2 million pounds, according to uranium investor Yellow Cake Plc.
The buying is in addition to already bullish fundamentals.
Uranium prices must rise further to spur the restart of production to meet uncovered utility demand after 2023, according to analysts at Raymond James Financial Inc.
Earlier this year, NAC Kazatomprom JSC, the world’s top miner of uranium, said it would keep its output at reduced levels through 2023, removing supply from the market.
Energy costs are rising around the world as the recovery in demand from the worst of the Covid-19 lockdowns collides with supply constraints. Power plant fuels — including natural gas and coal — are surging to new heights, making it more expensive to operate factories and keep the lights on at home, compounding the inflationary pressure already resulting from strained supply chains.
Uranium futures on Nymex surged by 15% last week, making it the best weekly gain in more than a decade and before the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster crashed demand for the commodity.
The spot price for U3O8 moved above $30 per pound for the first time this year at the end of March.
Reports by BMO Capital Markets and Morgan Stanley predict a rally in prices over the next few years to the ~$50 level by 2024.
RELATED: Stars are aligning for a rally on uranium markets
(With files from Bloomberg)