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Skyharbour Resources Ltd V.SYH

Alternate Symbol(s):  SYHBF

Skyharbour Resources Ltd. is a uranium exploration company. The Company holds a portfolio of uranium exploration projects in Canada's Athabasca Basin. Its projects include Moore Lake-Core Project, Russell Lake-Core Project, South Falcon, South Falcon East, Preston, East Preston, Hook Lake, and others. The Moore Uranium Project consists of 12 contiguous claims totaling 35,705 hectares located 42 kilometers (km) northeast of the Key Lake mill, over 15 km east of Denison’s Wheeler River project. The Russell Lake Project is an advanced-stage uranium exploration property totaling 73,294 hectares strategically located between Cameco’s Key Lake and McArthur River Projects. Its South Falcon Point Uranium Project covers 32,235 hectares covering nine claims over 50 km east of the Key Lake mine. The Hook Lake area is located near the northern end of the property. The Company also owns Foster property. The Company also holds seven claims totaling 23,822 hectares in and around the Athabasca basin.


TSXV:SYH - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by HBird7on Dec 07, 2016 9:33am
128 Views
Post# 25564907

TRUMP & URANIUM.

TRUMP & URANIUM.

Trump Could Fuel A Nuclear Energy Boom In 2017

Nuclear power plant

With Trump at the helm, sentiment gives way to practicality in the energy industry. For the vast untapped potential of the nuclear energy industry and the uranium that feeds it, this could contribute to a market-disrupting revival that no longer bows to fear and the politics of economy.

While there have been some oversupply issues keeping uranium prices down, the bigger problem has been negative sentiment rather than real fundamentals, but the Trump presidency will see through that.

Trump’s take on nuclear energy is quite simple. As he notedafter the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan: “If a plane goes down, people keep flying. If you get into an auto crash, people keep driving.”

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Now more than ever, demand for uranium appears to be assured. But more than that, it’s about to truly explode as a number of situations combine to form the new era of nuclear power.

“If you are going to acquire uranium assets, now is the right time,” IsoEnergy Ltd. CEO and President Craig Parry told Oilprice.com. “If it’s not the bottom yet, you can certainly see it. And on that front we see the market at the early stage of what will become a roaring bull market.”

Parry might be onto something, and IsoEnergy is indeed in high acquisition mode, targeting the discovery and development of high-grade uranium deposits in and around the Athabasca Basin in Saskatchewan—home to some of the world’s biggest high-grade deposits.

Getting Ready for Uranium to Become an Irresistibly Hot Commodity

While Trump might inject a major boost of energy into the U.S. nuclear industry and the uranium market through deregulation, there are other factors coalescing around the world to make this a stellar new beginning for uranium and nuclear energy.

We’re already seeing the biggest uranium producers stocks reacting, including Cameco Corporation (NYSE:CCJ), AREVA (EPA:AREVA), BHP Billiton (NYSE:BHP), and Uranium One (TSE:UUU). Canadian Cameco’s stock was up 25 percent in November, and while the spot prices are low and set to rise, Parry points out that spot prices are all but irrelevant in this market, as almost all uranium is sold at long-term contract prices, which are presently coming in upwards of US$40 per pound, significantly higher than the current spot prices.

The outlook for uranium looks even more bullish when you consider that these contracts are now coming to a close, and uranium is poised to become a very hot commodity once again. Major American and European nuclear reactors are coming off supply in 2017 and 2018, and will be looking for long-term contracts once again.

The biggest uranium producer in the world, Canadian Cameco, said earlier this month that some 500 million pounds of uranium will be needed for nuclear reactors in the next ten years, and it hasn’t been contracted out yet. Buyers of this uranium will have to hit the market sooner rather than later.

Analysts at Cantor Fitzgerald recently predicted that there would be a “violent increase” in uranium prices at some point, theorizing that as much as 80 percent of the uranium market might be uncovered in terms of supply by 2025, and that demand would by then outstrip supply.

By James Stafford - Dec 06, 2016, 5:10 PM CST

Bullboard Posts