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Recording date: 16th February 2026 The uranium market has undergone a fundamental transformation that challenges decades of conventional investment wisdom, according to analyst Chris Frostad's recent white paper "Why Uranium Supply Can't Repair Itself." Unlike previous boom-bust cycles where higher prices eventually stimulated sufficient production to rebalance markets, today's supply constraints cannot be resolved through price mechanisms alone. Current global uranium production operates 20-30% below consumption levels, creating an ongoing deficit historically filled by inventory drawdowns. However, these buffers—accumulated largely after Fukushima when Japan shut down reactors while continuing uranium purchases—have been substantially depleted. Remaining inventories consist primarily of working capital in fuel supply pipelines that cannot be further reduced without operational disruption. The challenge extends beyond depleting existing mines. Frostad's analysis reveals that even if all current development projects achieve full funding and reach their stated nameplate capacity, cumulative production will still fail to match existing demand over the next 10-15 years. This calculation excludes any demand growth from new reactor construction or small modular reactor deployment. A critical insight involves the gap between reported capacity and actual production. Industry forecasts from organizations like UxC represent theoretical nameplate capacity rather than realistic output, with actual production typically running 30% below these figures due to operational constraints, water management limitations in ISR operations, and the conservative requirements inherent to uranium production. Geopolitical factors compound these physical constraints. Only approximately one-third of global uranium production remains reliably accessible to western utilities, with substantial supply committed to China and other non-western markets. This bifurcation creates effectively separate markets where western consumers face tighter conditions than global statistics suggest. For investors, this represents a paradigm shift from short-term trading strategies to what Frostad terms a "duration regime"—longer-term positions based on company fundamentals rather than cyclical timing. The investment thesis rests on recognizing that structural supply inadequacy cannot be remedied within relevant investment horizons, potentially driving uranium prices substantially higher while creating sustained valuation growth for quality producers, credible developers, and well-positioned explorers. Sign up for Crux Investor: https://cruxinvestor.com