Uranium Monthly Price - New Zealand Dollar per Pound

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: 75.707 (181.31%)
Chart

Description: Uranium, u3o8 restricted price, Nuexco exchange spot, New Zealand Dollar per Pound

Unit: New Zealand Dollar per Pound



Source: International Monetary Fund

See also: Mineral production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Uranium is a dense radioactive metal used primarily as fuel for nuclear power generation. In commodity markets, it is typically priced as uranium oxide concentrate, U3O8, quoted in US dollars per pound. The most widely followed reference is the Nuexco/TradeTech spot assessment, which reflects broker and dealer transactions in the specialized uranium market rather than exchange trading. Physical uranium is converted and enriched before fabrication into reactor fuel, so the quoted concentrate price is only one part of the nuclear fuel cycle.

The market is structurally different from most industrial metals because demand is driven mainly by utility fuel procurement, long-term contracting, and reactor operating requirements rather than by broad manufacturing activity. Uranium is also used in military applications and in research, but these uses are small relative to power generation. Because the material is radioactive and subject to extensive regulation, transport, storage, and processing are tightly controlled, which shapes both pricing and trade flows.

Supply Drivers

Uranium supply is shaped by geology, permitting, and the long lead times required to develop mines and processing facilities. Production is concentrated in a limited number of countries with favorable ore bodies and established nuclear-fuel infrastructure, including Kazakhstan, Canada, Australia, Namibia, Niger, and parts of Central Asia and North America. The economics of supply depend on ore grade, mining method, recovery rates, and the cost of conversion and transport to downstream facilities.

Unlike many metals, uranium supply is not determined only by mine output. Secondary sources such as government inventories, utility stockpiles, re-enrichment of tails, and material released from the nuclear weapons complex can materially affect available supply. These sources are finite and often policy-dependent, so they tend to supplement rather than replace primary mining over long periods.

Supply is also sensitive to regulatory and technical constraints. Uranium mining and milling require licensing, environmental review, and waste management systems. In-situ recovery, open-pit, and underground mining each have distinct cost structures and geological requirements. Because new projects take years to permit and build, supply responds slowly to price signals. Transport bottlenecks, conversion capacity, and geopolitical restrictions can further limit the flow of material from mine to market.

Demand Drivers

Uranium demand is dominated by nuclear electricity generation. Utilities purchase uranium as part of a multi-stage fuel cycle that includes conversion, enrichment, and fabrication into fuel assemblies. Because reactor fuel is purchased infrequently relative to daily power output, demand is driven by reactor operating schedules, refueling cycles, and long-term procurement strategies rather than by short-term spot consumption.

The main structural demand centers are countries with large nuclear fleets, including the United States, France, China, Russia, South Korea, Japan, and parts of Eastern Europe. Demand is relatively inelastic in the short run because operating reactors require fuel regardless of near-term price changes. Over longer periods, demand depends on reactor retirements, life extensions, and the pace of new reactor construction.

Uranium also competes with other energy sources in the power sector. Natural gas, coal, hydroelectricity, wind, and solar affect the economics of nuclear generation, but uranium itself is a small share of total nuclear power costs, so fuel price changes usually have limited effect on reactor dispatch. Substitution is more relevant at the level of electricity generation than within the fuel cycle. Seasonal electricity demand can influence utility procurement timing, but the underlying consumption pattern is governed by baseload reactor operation and refueling outages.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Uranium prices are influenced by the US dollar because the commodity is quoted in dollars while production and utility revenues occur in multiple currencies. A stronger dollar can make dollar-denominated uranium more expensive for non-US buyers, while a weaker dollar can ease purchasing costs. Interest rates matter because uranium is often held in inventory, and storage, financing, and carry costs affect the economics of holding physical material.

The market also reflects the balance between spot and term contracting. Because utilities prefer supply security, long-term contracts are central to price formation, while the spot market is thin and can move sharply when marginal buying or selling appears. Inventory levels, conversion availability, and the willingness of intermediaries to release material into the market can therefore have outsized effects on quoted prices. Uranium does not function as a broad inflation hedge in the same way as some precious metals; its pricing is more closely tied to fuel-cycle procurement and nuclear-sector fundamentals.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 202141.76-
May 202141.930.42%
Jun 202145.197.77%
Jul 202146.322.50%
Aug 202146.17-0.33%
Sep 202163.9738.57%
Oct 202154.63-14.60%
Nov 202144.17-19.14%
Dec 202153.3220.71%
Jan 202254.712.60%
Feb 202253.74-1.76%
Mar 202266.3523.46%
Apr 202271.838.26%
May 202263.94-10.99%
Jun 202263.39-0.86%
Jul 202262.78-0.96%
Aug 202263.551.22%
Sep 202268.938.47%
Oct 202272.685.45%
Nov 202267.96-6.49%
Dec 202261.62-9.33%
Jan 202362.581.56%
Feb 202365.574.77%
Mar 202365.700.21%
Apr 202367.222.31%
May 202369.843.89%
Jun 202374.566.77%
Jul 202372.64-2.58%
Aug 202377.316.43%
Sep 202389.8016.17%
Oct 202397.638.72%
Nov 2023104.266.78%
Dec 2023113.158.53%
Jan 2024130.2615.13%
Feb 2024132.721.89%
Mar 2024117.95-11.13%
Apr 2024120.151.87%
May 2024122.121.64%
Jun 2024112.66-7.75%
Jul 2024113.290.56%
Aug 2024107.42-5.18%
Sep 2024103.94-3.24%
Oct 2024109.134.99%
Nov 2024106.81-2.12%
Dec 2024104.04-2.60%
Jan 2025104.650.58%
Feb 202595.70-8.55%
Mar 202590.56-5.37%
Apr 202590.820.29%
May 202596.626.39%
Jun 202598.832.28%
Jul 202598.26-0.57%
Aug 202599.931.70%
Sep 2025106.766.84%
Oct 2025110.923.90%
Nov 2025110.26-0.60%
Dec 2025109.91-0.31%
Jan 2026120.879.97%
Feb 2026118.58-1.90%
Mar 2026117.46-0.94%

Top Companies

Cameco Corporation
Website: http://www.cameco.com/
Location: Saskatoon, Canada
Estimated Production: 22 million pounds per year

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