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Boss Energy

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Copmany Overview

About Boss Energy

Boss Energy operates as a dual-jurisdiction uranium producer, owning 100% of the Honeymoon Uranium Project in South Australia and holding a 30% stake in the Alta Mesa in-situ recovery (ISR) project in Texas, USA. Honeymoon is strategically located on approximately 2,595 km² with existing infrastructure and has a JORC-compliant resource of around 71.6 million pounds of U₃O₈.

Boss Energy's Company History

Boss acquired the Honeymoon site from Uranium One in 2015, a mine that had previously ceased operations in 2013 due to weak uranium prices. Facing initial market challenges, Boss paused operations to reassess its strategy, eventually launching the pivotal Enhanced Feasibility Study in mid‑2021. This study confirmed the economic viability of a restart, reinforcing confidence among investors and lenders. It endorsed an ion-exchange process over solvent extraction (vs traditional hard rock extraction methods), targeting low all‑in sustaining costs of approximately US$25.62/lb. The study paved the way for steady production of about 2.45 Mlb per year over more than a decade. Boss is also systematically scaling up its technical capabilities while maintaining responsible environmental practices, which sets it apart in the uranium sector. Fast forward to early 2025, and Boss had not only restored Honeymoon to production but also secured binding offtake agreements and made meaningful progress at its Alta Mesa in Texas. The company was nonetheless hit by lower than expected mineralisation continuity, higher costs, and smaller wellfields. The bottom line is that the uranium would be lower grade, was less contiguous and would be harder to extract. And so the company is undertaking a new feasibility study.

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Forward View

Future Outlook of Boss Energy (ASX: BOE)

Boss is in a peculiar position, awaiting the results of the new feasibility study and it is stockpiling uranium more than it is selling it. Nonetheless, it has guided to 1.6m pounds for FY26. The company’s fate hinges on what the new fasibility study will find with a redesigned wellfield approach intended to increase residence time, reduce the cost structure, unlock lower-grade mineralisation, and extend the life of mine. In the shorter-term, rainfall is expected to impact production with 240-270,000 pounds called for.

Our Assessment

Is BOE a Good Stock to Buy?

Boss Energy is a materially different proposition today than it was at its peak above A$5 per share in 2024. The stock has de-rated sharply – currently trading around A$1.70 – and that de-rating reflects a genuine operational reset, not merely market sentiment. After twelve months of operations at Honeymoon, Boss identified that mineralisation continuity and leachability were less favourable than the assumptions underlying the 2021 Enhanced Feasibility Study, casting doubt over the original nameplate capacity of 2.45 million pounds per annum. That was the central blow to investor confidence, and it was compounded by the simultaneous resignation of founding CEO Duncan Craib. The bear case is straightforward: the asset doesn’t work as advertised, costs are structurally higher than modelled, and the new feasibility study could deliver further downward revisions to long-term production capacity. The uranium spot price, hovering in the mid-US$60s per pound, provides tighter margins than the heady days of US$100 forecasts. The bull case, however, is not without merit. The Honeymoon Review has produced a credible remediation pathway. The redesigned wellfield approach addresses the core leachability problem directly, and management is constructive on the ability to unlock lower-grade resources and extend mine life under the new design. The balance sheet is strong, providing runway to execute on the new study without dilutive capital raises. The structural uranium supply deficit underpinning the long-run price thesis has not changed. And at current prices, much of the bad news looks priced in. Boss Energy is best understood today as a turnaround story within a broadly supportive commodity cycle – higher risk than it appeared two years ago, but carrying asymmetric upside if the new feasibility study delivers a credible, derisked production profile.

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Faq

Frequently Asked Questions

What drives Boss Energy’s profitability?
Boss’s profitability depends on production ramp-up at Honeymoon, maintaining low unit costs, strong realised uranium prices (above A$37–41/lb), and the successful execution of exploration and processing expansions.
Very. Profit margins narrow below the A$37–41/lb cost threshold, so any erosion in spot prices can affect growth, cash flows, and financing plans, especially for capital expenditure and drilling.
Alta Mesa is expected to contribute from mid‑2026, with production ramping to approximately 0.7 Mlb per annum, providing diversification and additional revenue streams.
Not at this stage. Boss is directing surplus cash into expanding processing capability, drilling projects, and satellite exploration to extend mine life and scale operations.
Key risks include uranium price volatility, production ramp-up execution at the Honeymoon Project in South Australia, operational challenges at the Alta Mesa project in the US, regulatory and geopolitical exposure across both jurisdictions, and the potential for further capital raisings should expansion plans require additional funding.

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