This Rare Commodity Looks Set to Go on a Major Run...

Sometimes it's best to wait for the dust to settle.

After the earthquake in Japan last March triggered a deep sell-off in all stocks related to nuclear power, a number of investors started to bottom-fish. Any buying turned out to be premature, as key industry stocks fell ever lower to levels not seen in several years.

That bottoming process appears to have ended, and with many shares far from their 52-week highs, these beaten-down names could offer material upside in 2012.

The Global X Uranium ETF (NYSE: URA), launched in November 2010, gives a clear snapshot of how uranium stocks have fared.

Why has the ETF made a 25% upward move in just a few weeks? Mostly due to the fact that the spot price for uranium has stopped falling. It was in the mid $60s (per pound) a year ago, fell to about $50 this past fall, and in recent sessions, has moved back up into the low $50s. (As a point of reference, uranium sold for $135 a pound back in 2007.)

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Emerging economies: still hungry for nuclear
To be sure, the Japanese nuclear crisis has surely led to a pause for this energy source. Major economies like Japan and Germany intend to wean themselves from nuclear power, while other economies like the United States and France have delayed plans to build new reactors. Yet demand for nuclear power -- and for uranium by extension -- remains unabated in some of the world's fastest-growing economies such as China, which is the most aggressive builder of new power plants.

It's not just China, either. Let's look at India as an example. Electricity generation in that country has tripled since 1990, but that's not enough to meet booming demand in this densely populated country. Moreover, oil imports are leading to chronic trade imbalances, a trend that will only worsen as oil prices rise. So India's leaders have committed to giving nuclear energy 25% of the nation's power generating capacity, up from 2.5% today.

To get there, India's uranium appetite is forecast to spike tenfold over the next decade. As it stands, operators are already having trouble finding enough fuel to keep plants running. In fact, only six of the country's 17 reactors are operating anywhere near full capacity.

Supply and demand
There are a couple of other factors to consider that could boost uranium prices. On the demand side, crude oil appears to be staying north of $100 a barrel (a price which Saudi Arabia has noted it now needs to meet ever-higher domestic spending needs.) Some think oil could go to $110, $120 or even higher once the U.S. and Europe rejoin the league of growing economies. Pricey oil has always renewed fresh talk of the need for nuclear power, which entails high upfront construction costs, but low eventual operating costs.