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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Uranium Soars After Sprott Massively Upsizes Buying Program By $1BN To $1.3BN

Courtesy of ZeroHedge View original post here.

Yesterday, when looking at the record inflows into the uranium ETF URNM, pointing out that Japan's (most likely) next prime minister is now actively considering restarting the country's mothballed nuclear power plants, and recapping the Sprott physical uranium trust thesis, we said that "It has arrived" predicting that "after years of being left for dead, the uranium sector is not only vastly outperforming the broader market but its upside from here could be dramatic."

Well, 24 hours later, and a 10% move higher across the uranium sector…

it appears we are on to something. Because while inflows into the URNM ETF continue at a record, torrid pace, there was a fundamental driver behind today's latest ramp in the uranium sector.

The primary driver behind today's surge appears to be the upsizing of the Sprott Physical Uranium Trust, which as discussed here last week, has sharply moved prices higher by buying uranium on the spot market, and which amended its at-the-market program to be able to raise up to $1.3 billion.  

As explained here, the recent spike in prices started due to Sprott Physical Uranium Trust buying uranium in the spot market after they started its previous at-the-market equity program to raise $300 million on Aug 17.

Not even three weeks later, the Trust has already issued 24.7 million units for gross proceeds of approximately US$244.7 million. So with demand rising, and supply about to run out, and also seeing the profound impact this modest ATM buying has had on the sector, Sprott decided to upsize the buying program dramatically and on Friday the trust filed an amended and restated base shelf prospectus, which allows it to issue up to $1.3 billion of units of the Trust in Canada, more than 4x more than the original proposed amount.

“Our ‘at-the-market’ equity program has been very well received by investors. Since its launch on August 17, 2021, the Trust has issued 24.7 million units for gross proceeds of approximately US$244.7 million,” said John Ciampaglia, CEO of Sprott Asset Management.

“The amount available under our Amended and Restated Shelf Prospectus is expected to allow the Trust to continue to meet investor demand by issuing new units and actively accumulate physical uranium.”

Translation: similar to the Hunts cornering silver in 1980, Sprott is trying to do the same in uranium right now. And once there is sufficient investor demand to fill the $1.3 billion offering, we expect another upsizing, and then another.

Finally, for those who missed the original uranium thesis, here are the highlights (full discussion here).

Sprott Physical Uranium Trust commonly known as SPUT (SRUUF– Canada), is the entity that has upended the uranium market. Since launching its ATM 13 days ago, it has acquired 2.7 million pounds of uranium. This is an average daily rate in excess of 200,000 pounds or roughly a third of global production on an annual basis. If GBTC is the roadmap to follow, as the price of uranium begins to appreciate, the inflows into the trust should accelerate. Interestingly, there are plenty of other entities also purchasing physical uranium, uranium that utilities were counting on for their future needs. The squeeze is on.

As expected, the utilities are blissfully unaware. Surprised?? I’m not. Utilities are quasi-governmental agencies, managed by the types of fukwits who’d work at your local DMV, except they enjoy stock options. The fact that they’ve ignored the coming squeeze shouldn’t be surprising. Inevitably, they’ll demand rate increases to buy back this uranium–it’s not their money anyway. This is your bid at some point in the future.

Commodities are determined by supply and demand. Uranium is a small market at roughly $6.3 billion in annual consumption (180 million pounds at $35/lb). SPUT has raised approximately $85 million in the 13 days since the ATM went live. It’s hoovering up supply and is already struggling to procure pounds, as shown by their increasing cash balance—cash that they’re legally forced to spend. Something is going to give here, and I suspect it’s the price of uranium.

One week later, the price of uranium has indeed given, and the sector is some 20% higher.

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