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TSE:NXE

NexGen Energy (NXE.TO)

14.84
+1.08 (7.85%)
as of Jun 15, 2026, 4:08:14 pm Market Open.
79 watching
0
Investor Insights
star iconJun 15, 2026, 12:00 am

This summary was created by AI, based on 6 opinions in the last 12 months.

NexGen Energy (NXE) is highlighted by various experts for its significant potential in the uranium sector, given that it holds the largest undeveloped uranium deposit globally. Although there are concerns regarding the pressure on materials and potential market weakness in the short term, many believe this presents a buying opportunity for long-term investors. The company's relationships with First Nations and Metis groups are commended, contributing to its positive standing. While some experts express caution due to current valuations and geopolitical risks associated with uranium sourcing, overall optimism for the nuclear sector persists. The development opportunity in Saskatchewan, a geopolitically stable region, adds to NXE's appeal, despite the inherent risks associated with being a development-stage company.

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Consensus
Positive
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Valuation
Fair Value
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Similar
CCO
WEAK BUY

Alternative energy companies haven't done well. Whole uranium sector's been doing well. With the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Canadian uranium's at a premium. A secondary play, may end up doing well. He prefers CCO.

RISKY

More of a a uranium developer with many large, undeveloped uranium deposits. They just got a permit in Saskatchewan to develop a mine there. The uranium market is growing tight; is a big uptick in electrical utility contracting for uranium to shore up supply. This mine will get built. Things look good, but the company is a little speculative and beyond his risk tolerance.

DON'T BUY

Uranium has done well but the fast pace may slow down. Wage, materials and interest costs are up so you need to look ahead several years. Wait for a better entry level.

COMMENT

Uranium is hot now and he likes commodities. Nuclear is the history of power. NXE looks overbought now after recently breaking out of its trading range. A high chance it will pull back to its neckline. That's fine as long as it doesn't keep falling.

DON'T BUY

Is no cash flow, but they're sitting on two monster uranium deposits in Saskatchewan. He likes uranium. The Fukushima disaster is behind us and mindsets are embracing nuclear energy again. This is likely a take-out target given their deposits. It's too speculative for him. They aren't producing and lack cash flow. That said, you can study this to see if there is value, given those deposits.

WAIT

He likes the uranium space a lot and feels it will do well.  He has sold some uranium stocks at a good profit. NexGen has not yet broken the lid so be neutral on the stock at this time. There are different levels of resistance.

RISKY
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research.

NXE is a $2.7B company that is pre-revenue that operates in the exploration and development of uranium properties in Canada. It has a decent cash balance of $141.3M and an equity position of $481.9M. It does not generate free cash flow, and mostly issues shares and debt to fund its operations. It has performed well over the years, supported by a growing interest in nuclear energy. We like NXE as part of a play on nuclear energy, but would be mindful of its smaller size, that it is pre-revenue, and higher risks from the nuclear energy industry. 
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RISKY
NXE vs. CCO

Two very different beasts in the same industry. NXE will probably have the next project built in Canada. CCO is the granddaddy of traditional mining. Buy NXE if you're looking for the rerate, but with it comes risk. Doesn't see an issue getting fully financed, but then comes execution. Track record for things going according to plan is not great for mining. 

CCO is your best way to get exposure to uranium, which is undergoing a renaissance. Predictability, bit of a dividend, real upside from today's uranium price.

BUY

Uranium is part of the materials sector. Seeing signs of improvement, though weakening broadly for a short-term pullback. Longer term, charts look great. With Ukraine-Russia conflict, one of the big suppliers has been taken out of the picture. Series of higher highs and higher lows, a new uptrend. Stocks globally have sold off, and jobs numbers tomorrow will be a big factor if selloff continues or if stocks hold in and start rallying.

DON'T BUY
NXE vs. CCO He'd prefer CCO, as it's more mature. Outlook for uranium is quite positive, given war in Ukraine and energy bottlenecks. CCO is high quality, well run, efficient, pays a dividend.
RISKY
NXE vs. CCO Uranium looks good, one of the sectors that's up on the year. Demand is strong, supply is getting tighter. CCO is institutional quality, anyone can invest in it. Good cycle in front of us. Whereas NXE is a much-earlier-stage company, so risks are higher. He owns both.
DON'T BUY
NXE vs. CCO He'd lean towards CCO, go-to name, largest producer in the world. The large players attract more international interest. NXE is a small cap, it may not get as much interest, and so the valuation may not get as high. CCO valuation is a bit extended. Outlook for uranium is positive. He'd look at the Sprott U.UN, which is a direct play on uranium prices, rather than the producers.
BUY
NexGen vs. Fission He owns both Fission and NexGen. They're far from infrastructure in the Athabasca Basin and would be challenged if it wasn't for their deposits being large and of quality (and next to each other). They could get built as a pair. The Fission deposit is borderline-tier one deposit, whole Nexgen's is. The quality is so high is that if they're not built in the next cycle, they will get taken over.
COMMENT

There's a big debate over nuclear energy, which can go either way. But what do you do with the uranium after it's used? We overweight the risks of nuclear--it's not as bad as environmentalists think, though what to do with the uranium after use is a real concern. The price of green energy and storage--batteries--will become cheaper than nuclear in the future. That lower cost is the tipping point that will green energy more affordable than nuclear--but we're not there yet.

WATCH

Uranium has been quite a volatile play. It has marched down to about $2.40 and then broke down further. This is an interesting area on the chart. You should look at CCO-T to get the direction in the area.

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