Wall Street Unplugged
Episode: 569November 16, 2017

Jordan Trimble: Uranium is finally taking off…

For uranium investors, the long wait for a rebound may finally be over…

Welcome back to another episode of Wall Street Unplugged.

Since Japan’s Fukushima disaster in 2011, uranium producers have battled one of the worst bear markets in the commodity’s history.

Amid tough market conditions, uranium has been the only commodity where not a single mine can turn a significant profit.

But in a major development announced just last week, producers have finally responded in a BIG way – pushing prices higher for the first time in years.

On today’s episode, uranium expert and CEO of Skyharbour Resources, Jordan Trimble, breaks down the magnitude of this announcement – and what it means for the entire uranium market going forward…

He also catches listeners up to date on Skyharbour Resources – one of the few remaining uranium exploration companies in the world.

If you’re sitting on uranium stocks… or interested in what could be an enormous opportunity for gains in this sector… I suggest listening to this episode right away.

Good Investing,

Frank Curzio

What’s really moving these markets?
Get free daily updates
More Wall Street Unplugged
Donald Trump

Trump’s win will benefit these sectors

These sectors will surge under Trump… Time to sell solar stocks? … Financial stocks to buy and sell… Buy this crypto stock… Why Europe, China, and gold are selling off… Will oil stocks plummet? … And more interest rate cuts?

Starbucks Coffee

Is Starbucks uninvestable?

Election predictions: The betting markets vs. the media… Why is this billionaire avoiding fixed income? … Gold, Bitcoin, and bonds are all saying the same thing about inflation… Is Starbucks (SBUX) uninvestable? … And GM (GM) is poised to soar.

Healthcare

Buy this healthcare stock before December 4

The best election outcome for stocks… How Polymarket is different from other polls… Big tech's transition to nuclear power… What earnings are saying about a banking crisis… What ASML's (ASML) plunge means for semiconductors… And a screaming buy in healthcare.