Denison Mines stock pops again as new price-target data lands and Phoenix permit clock ticks
15 January 2026
2 mins read

Denison Mines stock pops again as new price-target data lands and Phoenix permit clock ticks

New York, Jan 15, 2026, 09:16 ET — Premarket

  • Denison Mines shares climbed roughly 4% in premarket action, building on a strong January rally for uranium-related stocks.
  • New figures on Nasdaq.com revealed the average one-year price target for Denison has ticked up. 1
  • Investors remain fixated on federal approvals needed to greenlight construction at Denison’s Phoenix in-situ recovery uranium project. 2

Shares of Denison Mines Corp climbed roughly 4% in U.S. premarket action Thursday, trading at $3.49 following a $3.35 close.

This move is critical as Denison sits in a tight spot where regulatory approval — not drilling outcomes — will dictate the stock’s next step. The company has indicated it’s poised to make a final investment decision and kick off construction once it clears the federal environmental assessment and secures a construction licence. 2

Uranium stocks have been moving in sync, with early scans revealing some standout gains. Cameco edged up around 1.7%, Uranium Energy jumped close to 10%, while NexGen climbed about 3%.

A report on Nasdaq.com, referencing Fintel data, showed Denison’s average one-year price target climbing to $3.69 per share from $3.35. 1

Canada-listed explorer Cosa Resources announced it has issued 1.96 million shares to Denison as deferred payment under an acquisition deal. This raises Denison’s holding to roughly 18.26% of Cosa’s total shares, according to Cosa’s latest data. The company said Denison intends to file an “early warning” report, a Canadian disclosure triggered when ownership crosses certain thresholds. 3

Foremost Clean Energy, an explorer, announced Thursday it has an option from Denison to earn up to 70% in 10 uranium properties across Saskatchewan. “We are entering a highly important phase of development,” said Foremost CEO Jason Barnard. 4

Denison, a Canadian company, zeroes in on the Athabasca Basin in northern Saskatchewan. It owns 95% of the Wheeler River project, home to the Phoenix and Gryphon deposits. The company also holds interests linked to the McClean Lake joint venture and other nearby assets, per Reuters data. 5

Denison’s stock jump in January stems from its recent update. The company said post-FID initial capital costs for Phoenix should hit around $600 million. On Sept. 30, 2025, it reported more than $700 million in cash, physical uranium, and investments. CEO David Cates stated the firm “stands ready to make a final investment decision and commence construction.” 2

Phoenix is set up as an ISR mine — that’s in-situ recovery — where a solution is circulated through the ore body to dissolve uranium, then pumped back out for processing. This avoids the need for a large open pit or underground operations. 2

But the situation works both ways. Should the federal decision be delayed, or costs rise again before production kicks off—slated for mid-2028 if construction begins by the end of Q1 2026—the market might tighten its grip on timelines and financing. 2

Traders are focused on the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission’s ruling on the environmental assessment and construction licence. Denison has flagged this as the critical trigger for its final investment decision. They’ll also keep an eye on Denison’s early-warning filing related to its stake in Cosa. 2

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