Centrus Energy Stock:
LEU, UEC, or URG — Which Uranium Play?
Three domestic uranium companies sit at the center of the U.S. nuclear fuel cycle reshoring mandate — Centrus Energy (LEU), Uranium Energy Corp (UEC), and Ur-Energy (URG). Each occupies a different position in the supply chain, carries a different risk profile, and responds differently to the same macro catalysts. The question is not whether the sovereign capital wave is real — it is which company captures the most of it.
Three Companies, Three Supply Chain Positions, One Macro Thesis
The sovereign capital framework driving the nuclear fuel cycle thesis creates differentiated outcomes across the supply chain. Centrus Energy occupies the enrichment layer — the only U.S.-owned entity licensed to produce HALEU, the high-assay fuel required for advanced small modular reactors. Uranium Energy Corp occupies the mining and conversion layer — the largest pure-play domestic uranium producer by licensed capacity, with a vertical integration strategy targeting the critical conversion bottleneck. Ur-Energy occupies the low-cost disciplined production layer — the highest-margin operator per pound produced among all domestic ISR miners, with a structured contract portfolio that protects cash flows through the cycle.
Understanding which layer benefits most from which catalyst is the analytical foundation. The enrichment layer benefits from HALEU demand driven by SMR deployments and the DOE task order pipeline. The mining layer benefits from the utility procurement surge ahead of the January 2028 waiver termination. The conversion layer benefits from the Western chokepoint in uranium hexafluoride production. All three catalysts are real — but they operate on different timelines and carry different execution risks.
Absolute monopoly on domestic HALEU production. $3.8B total backlog extending to 2040. $900M DOE task order for Piketon expansion. Risk: still dependent on Russian LEU imports via waiver through 2027.
12.1M lbs/yr licensed capacity across three platforms. 100% unhedged — maximum spot price exposure. UR&C conversion subsidiary directly targets Western fuel cycle bottleneck. Risk: near-term EPS losses during ramp.
31.2% produced profit margin in Q1 2026. Hybrid contract portfolio — 45% capacity hedged for downside protection, 55% open for spot upside. Shirley Basin startup April 2026. Risk: underperforms in parabolic price spike versus unhedged peers.
This report is a fundamental sector analysis for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. The Sovereign Support Likelihood scoring model presented herein reflects how institutional allocators screen companies against government capitalization criteria — not personalized investment recommendations. Readers should conduct their own due diligence and consult a qualified financial professional before making any investment decision.
Centrus Energy Stock: The National Champion With a Russian Dependency Problem
Centrus Energy (NYSE American: LEU) is the only American-designed technology licensed to enrich uranium up to HALEU levels — making it a single-source national champion with no domestic competitor for this specific capability. Its proprietary AC-100M advanced gas centrifuge technology is the foundation of this monopoly. The company generates revenue through two segments: Low-Enriched Uranium sales and a Technical Solutions contract segment executing government programmes.
The financial profile is robust for a company at this stage of industrial ramp. For full year 2025, Centrus reported total revenue of $448.7 million and gross profit of $117.5 million. Full-year net income reached $77.8 million at $3.90 diluted EPS. The company systematically strengthened its balance sheet, increasing its unrestricted cash balance to $2.0 billion by end of 2025 — equivalent to nearly two-thirds of its total market capitalisation — through the strategic issuance of $1.2 billion in aggregate private convertible notes and the launch of a $1.0 billion at-the-market equity offering.
The $900 Million DOE Task Order
On January 5, 2026, the DOE announced that American Centrifuge Operating — a Centrus subsidiary — was selected for a competitively awarded, ten-year, $900 million task order to expand its Piketon, Ohio plant to commercial-scale HALEU production, with construction commencing in early 2026. The contract includes options for up to $170 million to produce and deliver HALEU to the DOE, bringing total potential contract value to $1.07 billion. To execute this expansion, Centrus expects capital deployment of $350 million to $500 million in 2026.
The Critical Risk: Russian LEU Dependency
Centrus faces a severe near-term transition risk that is frequently underweighted in bullish analysis. The company remains highly dependent on low-cost Russian LEU imports to satisfy its committed utility deliveries. Although the DOE granted Centrus a critical waiver permitting importation of Russian LEU for all currently committed deliveries through 2027, in November 2024 Russia’s TENEX notified Centrus that the Russian government had suspended its export licence to the United States through December 31, 2025. Any unilateral retaliatory supply cut from Russia before Centrus’s planned commercial capacity comes online in 2029 could severely compromise its revenue stream. This is not a tail risk — it is an active operational dependency that must be monitored quarterly.
Furthermore, because its stock has surged significantly, Centrus trades at approximately 59 times forward earnings — a valuation that reflects the HALEU monopoly premium and the $3.8 billion backlog but leaves virtually no room for execution delays at the Piketon facility.
Uranium Energy Corp: Maximum Spot Exposure and the Conversion Wildcard
Uranium Energy Corp (NYSE American: UEC) is the largest pure-play domestic uranium producer by licensed annual capacity, operating a highly scalable low-cost hub-and-spoke in-situ recovery platform. Its domestic footprint is anchored by three central processing plants with a combined licensed capacity of 12.1 million pounds per year of U3O8 — the Irigaray CPP in Wyoming (4.0M lbs/yr), the Hobson CPP in Texas (4.0M lbs/yr), and the Sweetwater conventional mill acquired from Rio Tinto in late 2024 (4.1M lbs/yr).
In April 2026, UEC officially commenced commercial uranium extraction at its Burke Hollow project in South Texas — marking the first new uranium mine to open in the United States in more than a decade. The company’s commercial strategy is uniquely characterised by a 100% unhedged marketing posture, providing investors with pure exposure to rising uranium prices. In early 2026, UEC sold 200,000 pounds of warehoused inventory at $101.00 per pound, generating over $20 million in revenue and $10 million in gross profit.
The UR&C Conversion Subsidiary — The Zeroed-Out Wildcard
The most underappreciated element of the UEC thesis is its conversion subsidiary, the United States Uranium Refining & Conversion Corp (UR&C), launched in September 2025. Working with Fluor Corporation under an engineering agreement, UR&C completed an AACE Class 5 conceptual study for a new domestic conversion facility designed for approximately 10,000 metric tonnes of uranium per year as UF6 — representing more than half of total annual U.S. demand. On March 18, 2026, UR&C received a formal NRC Docket Number, initiating the official licensing review process. The market currently values this subsidiary at zero — upon receipt of a formal NRC construction licence, this asset will command a substantial strategic premium as the only modern high-capacity conversion development in the Western hemisphere.
Combined U3O8 across three hub-and-spoke platforms — Irigaray (WY), Hobson (TX), and Sweetwater conventional mill. Largest licensed domestic footprint of any pure-play producer.
Cash, warehoused inventory, and liquid equity investments as of October 31, 2025. Zero debt. Provides substantial capital buffer for UR&C conversion development without external financing.
Zero long-term utility contracts. Maximum exposure to spot uranium price movements in both directions — the highest-beta vehicle in the domestic uranium producer universe.
“The market is valuing UR&C at zero. A company that has received an NRC docket number for the only high-capacity uranium conversion facility development in the Western hemisphere is not a zero — it is an option the market has not yet priced.”
Ur-Energy: The Disciplined Low-Cost Operator With Shirley Basin Upside
Ur-Energy (NYSE American: URG) represents the low-cost, highly disciplined operational standard for domestic ISR uranium mining. Headquartered in Casper, Wyoming, the company’s dual-hub production footprint is centred in the Great Divide Basin and the historic Shirley Basin district. Its Lost Creek ISR Facility holds a licensed annual capacity of 2.2 million pounds of U3O8. Throughout 2025, Lost Creek increased its drummed uranium production by 65% year-over-year to 410,440 pounds, driven by a 69% expansion in average wellfield flow rates.
On April 23, 2026, Ur-Energy officially commenced mining operations at its second ISR project, Shirley Basin — reviving a historically productive uranium district in Carbon County, Wyoming. Fully permitted with a licensed annual capacity of 2.0 million pounds of U3O8 equivalent, Shirley Basin holds a measured and indicated resource of 9.1 million pounds at an average grade of 0.22%. Solid uranium is captured on ion exchange resin columns on-site, with the uranium-loaded resin shipped via truck to the centralised Lost Creek plant for final processing — a low-capital-intensity satellite model that expands combined operational capacity to 4.2 million pounds per year.
The Hybrid Contract Model — Downside Protection With Spot Upside
In direct contrast to UEC’s unhedged model, Ur-Energy employs a disciplined hybrid contract portfolio. The company maintains eight long-term uranium sales agreements with major domestic utilities, covering 5.7 million pounds of U3O8 deliveries through 2033. These contracts combine fixed base-escalated pricing for downside protection with market-based pricing mechanisms to capture spot upside. Contracted commitments represent approximately 45% of total constructed operating capacity, leaving over 55% open for spot market or future high-price contract commitments.
The financial strength of this model was demonstrated in Q1 2026. URG sold 55,000 pounds of produced uranium at an average realized price of $70.98 per pound, against a cash cost of $37.51 per pound, delivering a 31.2% produced profit margin. As of March 31, 2026, the company maintained $122.8 million in unrestricted cash — up 64% year-over-year — alongside 417,231 pounds of finished conversion inventory valued at $28.0 million.
Sovereign Support Likelihood Score: How Each Company Ranks
To evaluate which companies are most likely to receive future strategic federal capitalization, the following six-factor model scores each company against the criteria the government has historically applied when selecting sovereign capital recipients. Higher scores indicate stronger alignment with federal industrial policy objectives — which translates directly into a higher probability of receiving non-dilutive capital that does not appear in standard DCF or comparable company analysis.
| Evaluation Pillar | Weight | Centrus (LEU) | Uranium Energy (UEC) | Ur-Energy (URG) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geopolitical Moat | 20% | 10.0 — HALEU monopoly | 8.0 — largest domestic miner | 7.0 — disciplined low-cost ISR |
| Supply Chain Chokepoint | 20% | 10.0 — enrichment monopoly | 9.0 — UR&C targets conversion gap | 5.0 — ISR mining well represented |
| Existing Federal Contracts | 15% | 9.0 — $900M DOE task order | 5.0 — NRC docket, no active contract | 6.0 — utility contracts, no federal prime |
| Regulatory Lead-Time | 15% | 8.0 — NRC licensed, Piketon operational | 8.0 — three licensed CPPs, NRC docket | 9.0 — fully permitted Lost Creek & Shirley Basin |
| Scalability & Cost Profile | 15% | 6.0 — centrifuge scale capital intensive | 8.0 — hub-and-spoke ISR scalable | 9.0 — lowest cost per pound, satellite model |
| Balance Sheet Liquidity | 15% | 9.0 — $2.0B cash, zero near-term debt | 9.0 — $698M liquid assets, zero debt | 8.0 — $122.8M cash, $120M convertible notes |
| Weighted Sovereign Score | 100% | 8.85 | 7.80 | 7.20 |
What the Scores Actually Mean
Centrus scores highest primarily because of its geopolitical moat and supply chain chokepoint scores — both 10.0 — reflecting its absolute domestic monopoly on HALEU enrichment. No other company in any sector can score a perfect 10 on both of these pillars simultaneously. The $900 million DOE task order is the operational confirmation that the government has already chosen Centrus as its primary enrichment sovereign capital recipient for this cycle.
UEC’s strong score of 7.80 reflects the UR&C conversion subsidiary’s strategic importance — a 9.0 on the supply chain chokepoint pillar — combined with the largest domestic mining footprint. The gap between its score and Centrus reflects the absence of an active federal prime contract and the early stage of the UR&C licensing process. The NRC docket received in March 2026 is the trigger that could close this gap significantly over the next 12 to 18 months.
URG’s score of 7.20 reflects its exceptional operational execution — a 9.0 on both regulatory lead-time and scalability — but lower marks on federal contract depth and supply chain chokepoint criticality. ISR uranium mining is important but not scarce in the way that enrichment and conversion capacity are scarce. URG’s value proposition is cash flow quality and downside resilience rather than sovereign capital capture probability.
Centrus Energy’s Sovereign Support Likelihood Score — the highest in the domestic nuclear fuel cycle universe. The score reflects a HALEU enrichment monopoly, a $900 million active DOE task order, and a $2.0 billion cash balance that positions the company as the primary recipient of future state equity deployments in the enrichment layer of the fuel cycle.
Five Milestones to Monitor Over the Next 24 to 60 Months
- Summer 2026URG — Shirley Basin Resin Transport Sign-Off
Ur-Energy expects final regulatory inspection and approval to commence transporting uranium-loaded resins from Shirley Basin to Lost Creek for central processing. This milestone validates the satellite-and-hub operational model and triggers a rapid, low-cost doubling of URG’s production run-rate to a combined 4.2 million pounds per year.
- Late 2026UEC — Burke Hollow Disposal Well Permitting
UEC is awaiting state regulator approval on the Drilling and Completion Report for its waste disposal well at Burke Hollow. Approval is the final regulatory milestone required to scale commercial uranium extraction at the first new uranium mine to open in the United States in more than a decade.
- Mid-2027UEC — UR&C NRC Construction Licence Application
Following the March 2026 NRC docketing milestone, UEC must finalise site selection and submit a formal construction and operating licence application. A positive licensing decision clears the pathway for UR&C to secure substantial federal co-investment matching capital and re-rates the conversion subsidiary from zero to a significant strategic premium.
- Dec 2027ALL — Russian LEU Waiver System Expiry
Hard statutory deadline under the Prohibiting Russian Uranium Imports Act. In the 12 to 18 months leading up to January 2028, domestic utilities with unhedged reactor requirements are expected to engage in urgent procurement of remaining unobligated inventories — triggering the concentrated demand cycle that domestic producers are structurally positioned to capture.
- Early 2029LEU — Piketon Commercial Cascade Commissioning
Centrus is targeting first commercial-scale LEU production capacity to come online at Piketon in 2029. Successful commissioning marks the complete decoupling of the domestic nuclear fuel cycle from Russian state control — the definitive validation of the sovereign capital thesis for the enrichment layer.