Uranium-focused investors in North America are rapidly investing in uranium mining companies after the world’s largest producer, Kazatomprom, released production guidance that fell short of market expectations. Shares in North American uranium miners are experiencing a significant rise in premarket trading after Kazakhstan’s state-owned uranium company announced it would produce between 25,000 tons to 26,500 tons of uranium next year. Although this is an increase compared to 2024 levels, analysts note that it falls short of the company’s subsoil use agreements in Kazakhstan.
Adam Rodman, founder of Segra Capital Management, commented on Friday that this revised outlook brings the entire production curve down for several years, describing it as a “miss.” Rodman indicated that as a result, he would be increasing investments in North American uranium miners, including companies like NexGen Energy Ltd., where Segra Capital already holds shares.
US-listed uranium stocks have already begun to soar in response. Cameco Corp. shares rose by as much as 7.2% in premarket trading, NexGen Energy’s US shares surged by nearly 13%, and Uranium Energy Corp. approached a 10% increase.
Rodman also pointed out that Kazatomprom’s low production guidance might require the company to seek regulatory approval to downgrade its production targets for the year at several key sites. Despite Kazatomprom’s guidance suggesting a 7.1 million pound “ramp-up,” BMO Capital Markets analyst Alexander Pearce noted that the uranium market is expected to remain in a deficit.