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Boss Energy, Australia's largest energy company, has its best day in almost 3 years thanks to robust output growth

Boss Energy shares rose 16% Wednesday, and they were on track for their best day for nearly three years. The uranium mining company reported quarterly production that was well above analysts' expectations for its Honeymoon Project in South Australia.

If current gains hold, the stock could have its biggest single-day gain since March 2022. The S&P/ASX 200 benchmark was up 0.5%.

Analysts at Jefferies say that Honeymoon's ongoing production ramp-up helped it log uranium concentration (U308) of 215,319 lbs in the October-December quarter. This was almost twice as much as the previous quarter and beat the consensus estimate of 157,400 lbs.

Honeymoon's production of 850,000 pounds U3O8 is expected to reach its target of 850,000 pounds in fiscal 2025.

Boss Energy stock and other uranium shares rose sharply in the last week. This was a result of a $500 billion investment by the private sector to fund AI infrastructure, and U.S. president Donald Trump's plan for tariffs against Canada, a major uranium supplier.

Boss Energy's Managing Director Duncan Craib stated in a Wednesday statement that "security of supply is a key concern for nuclear utilities in the west, and Boss will benefit from this growing and changing market."

Honeymoon is expected to cost between A$37 and A$41 per pound U3O8 in the second half fiscal 2025.

Analysts at Jefferies stated that the costs show an element of inflation which is not surprising and given industry trends.

They said: "We expect these costs to drop slightly as production reaches a steady state over the course CY26." (Reporting by Aaditya Govind Rao in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

(source: Reuters)