Uranium Prices: The Drama Queen of Commodities Tames Her Tantrum at $86?

Uranium prices have been throwing a tantrum in recent months, swinging like a toddler on a sugar high with spot prices and futures doing the cha-cha of chaos. This paper will give you a step-by-step breakdown of the charts (because who needs sleep when you can overanalyze Bollinger Bands?) and how they help us decode this radioactive rollercoaster.

Uranium Spot Price Movement: A Year of Volatility

Behold the uranium spot price chart-a masterpiece of drama! It started in May 2025 at $70 per pound, then gradually inflated like a hot-air balloon on helium to $100 by February 2026. But let’s be real, the only thing overinflated was the market’s ego.

Then, in February 2026, the price spiked like a caffeinated squirrel on a espresso binge, hitting $100 before crashing back down to Earth (or $85.65, to be precise). This spike? A full-blown nuclear soap opera of speculation, supply-demand squabbles, and geopolitical drama. But now, the market has cooled down like a teenager after a TikTok dance fad. Stability, thy name is boredom.

Uranium Futures: Key Performance Indicators

Uranium futures? Oh, they’re just as fun as the spot price. The Investing.com chart shows a similar upward trend, but with more wiggles. In late 2025, prices shot up like a rocket fueled by glitter and dreams, peaking in February 2026. Now they’re hovering at $85.65-a 0.06% dip that’s basically a hiccup in the cosmic dance of nuclear energy.

And let’s not forget the past six months: a 13.14% gain? That’s more than my dating app success rate. But hold your horses-the last month’s -4.30% dip is just the market taking a breather. Long-term, though, uranium’s future is brighter than a Geiger counter at a rave.

Technical Indicators: Bollinger Bands and CMF Analysis

The Global X Uranium ETF on TradingView is like the class clown of the market. Right now, it’s trading at $49.29, down 2.92%-probably because it’s too busy clowning around to take itself seriously.

Bollinger Bands? They’ve been a wild ride, bouncing off the upper band like a radioactive pinball. Now the price has retreated to the lower band, which means it’s time for a “pullback” (code for “panic”). But don’t worry-CMF (Chaikin Money Flow) is still positive at 0.27, like a bubbly party animal who hasn’t had enough wine yet. Buyers are still in charge, so the long-term outlook is as bright as a nuclear reactor’s glow-up.

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2026-03-15 03:16