Today: 10 June 2026
Uranium Energy Drops 17% After Reporting Q3 Loss
9 June 2026
2 mins read

Uranium Energy Drops 17% After Reporting Q3 Loss

New York, June 9, 2026, 15:10 (EDT)

  • Uranium Energy traded down 17% to $10.43 in the afternoon. More than 22 million shares changed hands.
  • Net loss for the fiscal third quarter increased to $52.3 million, or 11 cents per share. A year ago, the company posted a $30.2 million loss, or 7 cents a share.
  • Uranium Energy said it started production at Burke Hollow in Texas and finished the quarter holding $794 million in liquid assets with no debt.

Uranium Energy Corp shares dropped Tuesday as the miner posted a bigger fiscal third-quarter loss. The weak results weighed on news the company has kicked off production at its Burke Hollow project in South Texas.

The stock dropped roughly 17%, quoted lately at $10.43 after dipping to $10.305. Volume was strong. Selling outpaced moves in other uranium names.

TIMING IN FOCUS AS SECTOR BETS ON POLICY, DEMAND The timing is in play here. Investors have pushed up parts of the nuclear fuel chain this year, on bets that U.S. policy, data-center demand, and rising uranium prices lead to new mine supply and support cash flow. Back in April, the Energy Department rolled out its “Nuclear Dominance — 3 by 33” push to lock in domestic nuclear fuel supply from mining through enrichment. The Department of Energy’s Energy.gov

UEC’s quarterly report put numbers to that story. The company had zero sales from its purchased uranium inventory in the quarter through April 30. Net loss deepened to $52.3 million, compared to $30.2 million in the same period last year.

Sales of purchased uranium inventory dropped to $20.2 million in the first nine months of fiscal 2026, down from $66.8 million a year ago. Gross profit from the sales also fell, hitting $10.0 million after $24.5 million last year. UEC said these sales rely on its cash position, the prices in the market, and uranium market liquidity.

Update from UEC was seen as more constructive. The company reported 32,195 pounds of uranium concentrate produced in the quarter, with total cost at $54.61 per pound. UEC expects production to pick up in the fourth fiscal quarter. The reason: new header houses at both Christensen Ranch and Burke Hollow will operate for a full quarter.

Amir Adnani, Chief Executive, called Burke Hollow “a major step forward for UEC.” He said the company is still “exceptionally well positioned” financially. Adnani said there’s an “acute bottleneck in conversion,” the stage that turns uranium into a form that can be used for nuclear fuel. Uranium Energy Corporation Website

Burke Hollow relies on in-situ recovery, or ISR. The process dissolves uranium beneath the surface and then pumps the uranium-bearing solution up for processing. This avoids the typical open-pit or underground mining methods. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission describes ISR as chemically altering uranium ore in place before it’s brought up.

Commodity prices didn’t tell the whole story for the stock. Uranium held steady at $85.70 a pound on June 8, Trading Economics data showed. Cameco pointed out uranium isn’t traded on an open exchange like other commodities. Most uranium pricing still happens in private deals or through industry price assessments, not spot trades.

Peers lost ground as well, though moves were smaller. Cameco dropped 3.4%, NexGen Energy slid 4.4%, and Energy Fuels gave up 6.0%. UEC’s steeper fall stood out against the group.

Tech names slid, sending the S&P 500 and Nasdaq lower. Broader market weakness dragged on sentiment as geopolitical uncertainty weighed on risk. Michael O’Rourke, JonesTrading’s chief market strategist, said “the tape came for sale more broadly” and described the selloff as a “momentum unwind,” he told Reuters. Reuters

Execution is the big risk for UEC. Third-quarter cost per pound went up. The company blamed late approvals for new header houses and a rise in Wyoming state taxes. UEC said any more delays, more tax hikes, or softer uranium liquidity could hurt efforts to boost earnings as production increases.

Traders have two things on their minds for now. UEC is putting together a big uranium operation in the U.S., but after Tuesday’s move in the stock, investors still want to see clearer signs that these efforts are delivering results.

A technology and finance expert writing for TS2.tech. He analyzes developments in satellites, telecommunications, and artificial intelligence, with a focus on their impact on global markets. Author of industry reports and market commentary, often cited in tech and business media. Passionate about innovation and the digital economy.

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