Cameco: Why There's Lots Of 2022 Upside Potential For This Uranium Miner's Stock

 | Jan 04, 2022 13:47

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Substantial rise in CCJ in 2021
  • Uranium prices are rising for three reasons
  • CCJ’s trend is your friend, and it is higher
  • Targets for CCJ in 2022 and beyond
  • Analysts are bullish on one of the world’s leading uranium producers

Uranium is a silvery-grey metal in the actinide series of the periodic table. Its primary use is for fuel in nuclear power plants, making the metal an energy commodity. One kilogram of uranium can produce as much energy as 1,500 tons of coal.

Uranium also has military nuclear weapons applications and other industrial and medical applications. Though uranium is considered a commodity, it doesn't trade as actively as other energy products and metals.

While crude oil, natural gas and coal, as well as such base metals as copper have active futures markets where producers, consumers, and speculators establish prices, uranium trades primarily by appointment. In 2021, the commodity bull market took uranium prices along for the ride.

At the end of 2020, uranium’s price was around the $30.70 per pound level. On Dec. 31, 2021, it was trading $13 higher at the $43.70 level, an over 42% gain during 2021.

Cameco Corporation (NYSE:CCJ), headquartered in Saskatoon, is a Canadian uranium producer that sells the commodity to nuclear facilities in the Americas, Europe, and Asia. Canada is the second-leading uranium-producing country, behind Kazakhstan and ahead of Australia.

h2 Substantial rise in CCJ in 2021/h2

Kazakhstan’s Kazatomprom (KZ:KZAP) is the world’s leading uranium supplier, with an output of 13,291 tons in 2019 and 10,736 tons in 2020.

Orano, the French producer, mined 5,809 tons in 2019 and 4,453 tons in 2020. Cameco came in third during 2019 with 4,754 tons of production. In 2020, CCJ produced 3,021 tons.