Uranium Investing in 2026: Money May Move Down the Curve Whilst African Supply Moves East Podcast Por  arte de portada

Uranium Investing in 2026: Money May Move Down the Curve Whilst African Supply Moves East

Uranium Investing in 2026: Money May Move Down the Curve Whilst African Supply Moves East

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Recording date: 23rd March 2026

Chris Frostad, CEO of Purepoint Uranium, recently provided critical insights into the uranium sector's current state, correcting market misconceptions and outlining investment opportunities amid evolving market dynamics.

The discussion began with an important clarification regarding physical uranium holdings. Contrary to earlier speculation, Cameco and Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SPUT) do not lend, borrow, or move uranium from their warehouses. Frostad emphasized that physical uranium remains in designated storage facilities, highlighting the challenges investors face when navigating the sector's opacity and information vacuum.

Frostad's equity performance analysis revealed significant divergence across uranium company categories. Since mid-2025, producers have substantially outperformed spot uranium price movements, suggesting markets have already priced in future price increases for companies with existing production capacity. This "rerating" reflects investor confidence that producers will benefit disproportionately from tightening market conditions. In contrast, developers and explorers have moved largely laterally, creating what Frostad views as potential opportunities for the next market phase.

Comparing the current cycle to the pre-Fukushima bull market, Frostad noted fundamental differences. Today's market appears driven by genuine supply tightness, evidenced by increased long-term contracting and strategic government-to-government deals, rather than the speculation that characterized the previous cycle.

Geopolitical concerns emerged as a significant theme, particularly regarding African uranium production flowing eastward to China. This trend creates strategic supply challenges for North American and European markets, potentially forcing Western nations to accelerate domestic development or reconsider policies on Russian enrichment services.

Despite recent market volatility, Frostad maintains a constructive outlook, viewing current conditions as buying opportunities for investors with conviction in the structural deficit thesis. However, he stressed the critical importance of individual company analysis, bluntly noting substantial quality dispersion among explorers and developers. Success requires careful due diligence rather than broad sector exposure, with uranium investment demanding thesis-based conviction over technical timing.

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