Uranium and Copper Are the Two Commodities Every Serious Energy Transition Trader Is Watching in 2026

Commodities rarely generate equity-style momentum. Uranium and copper are currently generating both. As of May 30, 2026, spot uranium (U3O8) is trading near $97 per pound, up from $86 at the start of the year, while copper futures on the COMEX crossed $5.40 per pound in mid-May – a level not sustained since the post-pandemic spike of 2021. The difference this time is that the demand driver is structural, not cyclical.

Cameco (CCJ), the most liquid uranium equity in North American markets, has gained 44% over the trailing twelve months. Its Q1 2026 earnings showed revenue of $844 million against consensus of $791 million – an 8% beat driven entirely by contract repricing as utilities scramble to lock in long-term supply. The company raised full-year production guidance to 36 million pounds, still well below contracted delivery obligations, which management has cited as a multi-year pricing tailwind.

Copper’s Deficit Is Not a Forecast – It’s a Current Condition

The copper story is less about one company and more about a systemic supply gap that no single project can close quickly. The International Copper Study Group estimated a 2025 refined copper deficit of 289,000 metric tons – the largest in over a decade. New mine permitting timelines average 16 years in the United States. Against that backdrop, Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) and Southern Copper (SCCO) are generating free cash flow at current prices that implies single-digit forward P/E multiples, a valuation profile that is difficult to find elsewhere in materials.

Trending Tickers in the Commodity-Equity Crossover Space

  • CCJ – Cameco, primary uranium exposure, institutional-grade liquidity
  • UEC – Uranium Energy Corp, higher beta domestic U.S. producer
  • FCX – Freeport-McMoRan, largest pure-play copper producer globally
  • SCCO – Southern Copper, highest margin copper operation in the world by most metrics
  • COPX – Global X Copper Miners ETF, for diversified exposure with lower single-name risk

Markets do not reward thesis alignment. They reward earnings delivery against a backdrop where supply cannot respond to price signals quickly. Both uranium and copper currently fit that description. For traders positioning ahead of Q2 2026 earnings, the setup in commodity equities warrants close attention – not because of what prices might do, but because of what the physical markets are already confirming.