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Recording date: 19th January 2025 The uranium market's long-anticipated supply crisis has moved from theoretical projection to measurable reality, according to uranium analyst Chris Frostad. Multiple converging indicators suggest the structural shortage is actively unfolding, creating what may be a decade-long investment opportunity for patient capital positioned in quality assets. The most compelling evidence appears in market behavior that defies typical commodity patterns. Uranium producers have doubled in value over the past six to eight months while spot prices remained relatively flat - a reversal of normal dynamics where equity prices follow commodity movements. This divergence indicates institutional investors are positioning ahead of price increases rather than waiting for spot market confirmation, recognizing uranium's unique contract-driven structure where long-term pricing operates independently from spot markets. Beyond equity performance, utility procurement behavior confirms tightening conditions. Long-term uranium contract prices have climbed from $80 to $86 after 18 months of stagnation, demonstrating that reactor operators acknowledge supply constraints in their multi-year fuel planning. Japan's first uranium delivery in 11 years further signals depleting inventory buffers that historically absorbed supply-demand imbalances. The fundamental problem centers on supply replacement. Global production of approximately 140 million pounds annually falls short of consumption, with no credible near-term additions expected for five to seven years minimum. Forward supply projections rely on existing mines (experiencing gradual depletion), potential restarts, and conceptual projects—none providing certainty. Development timelines extend far beyond sponsor projections due to permitting requirements, capital constraints, and regulatory processes. Frostad's investment framework prioritizes "durability" across three tiers. Producers offer foundational exposure to scarce operating assets despite concentrated capital flows. Developers with advanced permitting, secured financing, experienced management, and realistic timelines represent the next opportunity tier, having avoided the appreciation already captured by producers. Select exploration companies utilizing partner capital, acquiring former producing assets, or operating in favorable jurisdictions provide higher-risk exposure - though investors must avoid promotional companies spending heavily on marketing rather than technical advancement. This represents a structural play requiring years to unfold, not a short-term trade. The backward nature of uranium markets means waiting for spot price confirmation risks missing equity repricing that occurs ahead of commodity movements. Learn more: https://cruxinvestor.com