Koffiekamer « Terug naar discussie overzicht

Uranium

409 Posts, Pagina: « 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 | Laatste
[verwijderd]
0
Fraai artikel van Scott Wright:

Uranium Bull 3

Nuclear power has been a hot topic of recent. And as a result, the price action of its input commodity has been quite schizophrenic. Investors and speculators are in a state of great wonderment over what to expect from this intriguing mineral that is mined for energy.

LEES VERDER:
www.zealllc.com/2011/uranium3.htm
[verwijderd]
0
Er zijn wel trackers voor de uraniumsector, ik geef de voorkeur op dit moment aan individuele aandelen.

Trackers (o.a.)

Market Vectors Uranium+Nuclear Enrgy ETF (NYSE: NLR)
iShares S&P Global Nuclear Ener (NYSE: NUCL)

Aandelen die mij op dit moment bevallen:

UR-Energy Inc. (NYSE: URG)
Crosshair Exploration & Mining Corp. (TSX: CXX.TO)
Denison Mines Corporation (TSX: DML.TO)
[verwijderd]
0
Bayer dreigt productie uit Duitsland te halen

ANP VANDAAG 16:54

Het Duitse chemieconcern Bayer, bekend van de aspirine, dreigt zijn chemische productie uit Duitsland weg te halen en elders onder te brengen omdat de stroomrekening te hoog oploopt. Dat heeft alles te maken met het Duitse besluit om kerncentrales af te schaffen.

,,Het is belangrijk dat we concurrerend blijven ten opzichte van andere landen. Anders zou een wereldwijd opererend bedrijf als Bayer kunnen overwegen zijn productie naar een land te verplaatsen waar de energiekosten lager zijn'', zei topman Marijn Dekkers in een zaterdag gepubliceerd interview met WirschaftsWoche.

Energiebedrijf E.on zou om dezelfde reden 10.000 mensen de laan uitsturen.
©ANP

www.rtl.nl/components/financien/rtlz/...
[verwijderd]
0
Uranium Companies Poised for a Comeback

This year has brought uncertainty for the uranium sector. Since the tsunami and subsequent radiation leaks in Japan, developers and investors are questioning the best steps moving forward. In this exclusive interview with The Energy Report, Edward Sterck, an analyst with BMO Capital Markets in London, updates us on the sector's status and offers advice on the best companies to support in the coming months and years.

Lees verder: 321energy.com/editorials/energyreport...
Sebas30
0
Uranium kan wel eens de belegging van 2013 gaan worden.

Hoe denken jullie hierover?
[verwijderd]
0
UUU
www.miningfeeds.com/stock/uranium-one...

Met vriende- \|/ lijke groet,
.................. (@ @)
..[=-=-oOO-(_)-OOo-=-=_=]]
..[............................................]]
..[...........(.. B E A R..)............]]
..[_______Oooo._______]]
.......oooO....(.......)
......(.....).........\...../
.......\...(............(_/
.........\_)

Met vriende- \|/ lijke groet,
............... (@ @)
..[=-=-oOO-(_)-OOo-=-=_=]]
..[............................................]]
..[...........(.. B E A R..)............]]
..[_____________Oooo._.]]
.......oooO.................(.....)
......(.....)......................).../
.......\...(........................(_/
haas
0
quote:

Sebas30 schreef op 18 september 2012 22:16:

Uranium kan wel eens de belegging van 2013 gaan worden.

Hoe denken jullie hierover?
dat is 'n hele mooie:)
agapim
0
Wat ook heel mooi (nog steeds) interessant is, is de exponentiële stijging van de uraniumprijs voorafgaande aan de "Fukushima"-tsunami.

.
DeZwarteRidder
1
Uranium price hits new post-Fukushima high
Colin McClelland | January 3, 2024 | 1:18 pm Energy Markets Canada China Russia and Central Asia USA Uranium

Uranium’s spot price continues to rise as more countries back nuclear power. Credit: Adobe Stock

The spot price of uranium continues to rise, boosted by pledges to triple nuclear power by mid-century, supply hiccups from producers such as Cameco (TSX: CCO; NYSE: CCJ) and the looming threat of a ban on Russian exports to the West.

Uranium hit $91 per lb. this week, another record since triple-digit prices in 2007 and the fallout after the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan that saw several countries curb nuclear energy plans. The price has increased from about $50 per lb. at mid-year.
Sign Up for the Energy Digest

“Some call it a nuclear renaissance but I like to think of it as a resurgence given the growing momentum,” John Ciampaglia, CEO of Sprott Asset Management, which runs the Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (TSX: U.U for USD; U.UN for CAD), said in a blog post on Wednesday. “Who would have thought that in just two years, public sentiment and government support would have shifted this strongly?”

The price could now be near a level that can sustain new mining projects as the globe increasingly looks to atomic power to help combat global warming. The increase comes as 24 nations including the United States, Japan, Canada, Britain and France pledged last month in Dubai at the 28th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, known as COP28, to triple nuclear power capacity by 2050.

China, which wasn’t part of that promise, still leads global nuclear plant construction with plans to nearly double capacity to 100 gigawatts by the end of this decade. The Asian country has 22 of 58 plants being built worldwide.
China growth

“Uranium is one of the few commodities where China is not the largest consuming country, but we expect it to be so by 2028,” BMO Capital Markets commodities analyst Colin Hamilton said in a note on Wednesday. “However, having taken significant volumes of excess uranium from the market over the past decade, we see China as adequately supplied with raw material.”

Incremental utility buyers are more likely to be located in Europe and North America where reactor lives are being extended, Hamilton said.

However, meeting that demand is proving difficult for leading suppliers such as Cameco, Canada’s largest, which said it may buy as much as 8 million lb. in the recently ended quarter to meet contracts. When most utility contracts are longer-term, supply shortfalls exacerbate price hikes on the spot market. Investment bank Morgan Stanley forecasts the price may hit $95 per lb. by March. In November, Sprott predicted a triple-digit price within a year to 18 months.

The plan to triple nuclear power capacity by mid-century is “highly unrealistic” because it takes so long and billions of dollars to plan, approve and build reactors, according to the World Nuclear Industry Status Report released last month. The report is funded by Germany, which shut its last reactor in April and remains opposed to the power source, although it conducts research and processes fuel.

The US Congress is considering a ban on imports of Russian uranium. It has passed the House of Representatives and awaits debate in the Senate, though most utilities in the West have been shunning its supplies since the war in Ukraine began nearly two years ago. A ban could spark retaliatory measures and Russia has plants to process uranium into fuel, whereas the US is restarting one. However, the Biden administration is set to sign a $2 billion boost to the country’s nuclear industry into law within weeks.
Restarts planned

Numerous mothballed mines in Australia, the U.S. and Africa are planned for restarts this year including Paladin Energy’s (ASX: PDN) Langer Heinrich in Namibia and Boss Energy’s (ASX: BOE) Honeymoon operation in South Australia. EnCore Energy (TSXV: EU) is starting output from its Rosita and Alta Mesa plants in Texas, while Energy Fuels (TSX: EFR; NYSE: UUUU) has resumed output from its Pinyon Plain, La Sal and Pandora mines in the southwest US. In Canada, Cameco is ramping up production from McArthur River in Saskatchewan.

The industry needs new mines, but a lost decade of investment after the Fukushima disaster means the supply gap will grow in the short-term, according to the Sprott Physical Uranium Trust, which holds 63 million lb. of yellowcake uranium valued at $5.78 billion.

The trust purchased 3.8 million lb. last year, the lowest since the fund was established in 2021. It plans this year to purchase no more than 9 million lb. on the spot market. It’s a prudent measure from a regulatory perspective to prevent funds competing with consumers for material in a deficit market, BMO’s Hamilton said.

“While there is lots of chatter about the impact of financial players in the market, the price gains this year have clearly been driven by utilities which purchased the most uranium in 2023 since 2012,” Sprott’s Ciampaglia said.

“The industry will require significant capital investments to meet its ambitious expansion plans,” he said. “Thankfully, investor interest in the sector is growing globally as the opportunity becomes better understood and the legacy stigma fades. As the sector grows and recapitalizes, it will attract ever larger institutions, drawn by a compelling investment thesis and improving liquidity.”
409 Posts, Pagina: « 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 | Laatste
Aantal posts per pagina:  20 50 100 | Omhoog ↑

Meedoen aan de discussie?

Word nu gratis lid of log in met uw e-mailadres en wachtwoord.

Direct naar Forum

Markt vandaag

 AEX
882,63  +12,36  +1,42%  26 apr
 Germany40^ 18.177,90 +1,45%
 BEL 20 3.874,87 +0,44%
 Europe50^ 5.011,70 +0,10%
 US30^ 38.211,61 0,00%
 Nasd100^ 17.698,09 0,00%
 US500^ 5.095,29 0,00%
 Japan225^ 38.345,55 0,00%
 Gold spot 2.337,95 0,00%
 EUR/USD 1,0693 -0,34%
 WTI 83,64 0,00%
#/^ Index indications calculated real time, zie disclaimer

Stijgers

EBUSCO HOLDING +9,33%
NX FILTRATION +8,77%
ASMI +7,26%
Alfen N.V. +5,89%
PostNL +3,82%

Dalers

SIGNIFY NV -11,28%
Wereldhave -7,62%
AMG Critical ... -5,77%
IMCD -4,90%
ABN AMRO BANK... -4,19%

EU stocks, real time, by Cboe Europe Ltd.; Other, Euronext & US stocks by NYSE & Cboe BZX Exchange, 15 min. delayed
#/^ Index indications calculated real time, zie disclaimer, streaming powered by: Infront