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Featured Story from MarketBeat.com Up 135% in the Past Year, Can Cameco Continue Its Run?By Jordan Chussler. Publication Date: 2/17/2026. 
Key Points- As investors continue to rotate out of tech, energy continues to dominate in early 2026 with a 21% YTD gain.
- While fossil fuels have recovered, nuclear energy is also fueling the rally as demand is forecast to double by 2040.
- After gaining 135% over the past year, analysts remain bullish on Cameco, with the stock receiving a consensus Buy rating.
- Special Report: This could blow up America worse than 2008 (From Weiss Ratings)

Since leading the market in 2021 and 2022, energy has become one of the S&P 500's most overlooked sectors. After stocks recovered from 2022's bear market, technology and communication services—home to five of the Magnificent Seven—have driven returns each year. In the three years since 2022, the energy sector recorded a 1.3% loss and modest gains of 5.7% and 8.7%, trailing the broader market and ranking near the bottom among the 11 S&P sectors. Much of that underperformance reflected weakening global oil demand amid a multiyear supply surplus. But after the Nasdaq hit an all-time high on Oct. 29, 2025, investors began rotating out of higher-risk, higher-volatility tech names into lower-risk, lower-volatility defensive sectors. That ongoing flight to safety—fueled by concerns of a broader correction in AI and software stocks—has coincided with surging natural gas prices, benefiting the energy sector. As a result, the sector is up about 21% year-to-date (YTD) in 2026. While much of the rebound has been attributed to fossil fuels, one overlooked pillar helped energy outpace the market and the other S&P sectors: nuclear energy stocks. The Nuclear Revival Propelling CamecoMuch of the recent excitement around a nuclear revival centered on pre-revenue companies in the small modular reactor (SMR) and nuclear fuel-technology spaces. Names like NuScale (NYSE: SMR) and Oklo (NYSE: OKLO), SMR manufacturers, and Lightbridge (NASDAQ: LTBR), a nuclear fuel-tech firm, grabbed headlines as the push to power AI data centers gained attention. During that period several of those stocks ran sharply higher—Oklo, for example, rose more than 521% between May and October 2025. When many of those names later sold off as investors took profits, it was the nuclear sector's established players that continued a steadier ascent. Cameco (NYSE: CCJ), the world's largest publicly traded uranium producer, is a prime example. The stock is up nearly 15% YTD and climbed roughly 136% over the past year as rising global uranium demand rewarded companies with established operations, resilient supply chains and dependable customers. Founded in 1988 through a merger of the Saskatchewan Mining Development Corporation and Eldorado Nuclear Limited, Cameco's market capitalization has grown to about $49.25 billion. With global uranium demand forecast to rise roughly 28% by 2030 and more than double by 2040 from current levels, the company remains a leading player in the nuclear industry. That strength was on full display when Cameco reported full-year and Q4 2025 results on Feb. 13. Cameco's Q4 Double Beat Is Indicative of the Path ForwardLast week, Cameco announced earnings and revenue that beat analyst expectations on both the top and bottom lines. Quarterly earnings per share (EPS) of $0.36 exceeded estimates of $0.29, while revenue of nearly $875 million—up 1.5% year-over-year—surpassed forecasts of about $782 million. It was the company's second EPS beat in three quarters after missing expectations in seven of the prior eight quarters. The results suggest Cameco may have turned a corner, which could point to larger gains ahead amid growing uranium demand. Bullish takeaways from Cameco's most recent earnings call highlighted a disciplined contracting strategy: at year-end 2025 the company had roughly 230 million pounds of long-term commitments, including about 28 million pounds per year for the next five years. The strategy also intentionally preserves uncontracted supply to capture higher prices as demand increases. Additionally, Cameco's partnership with Westinghouse and involvement in a U.S. government initiative—backed by at least $80 billion—continue to advance deployments. Cameco expects its share of Westinghouse's adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) to be roughly $370 million to $430 million in 2026. Those factors are part of the reason many investors are bullish on the stock. What Wall Street Thinks of Cameco Among 16 analysts covering Cameco, the stock carries a consensus Buy rating with an average 12-month price target above $131, implying about 16% potential upside. Institutional ownership exceeds 70%, with 733 institutional buyers outnumbering 464 sellers over the past year. Buying in Q2, Q3 and Q4 2025 was the strongest in three years. At the same time, Wall Street's bears appear to be keeping their distance from CCJ. Current short interest is 1.62% of the float—down about 17.3% from the prior month—equating to fewer than 7 million shares of roughly 435.5 million outstanding. According to TradeSmith, Cameco's financial health is in the Green Zone, where it has remained for over two months.
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