
Boss Energy Ltd (ASX: BOE) shares have yet to recover from the massive selloff incurred on 28 July.
Shares in the S&P/ASX 300 Index (ASX: XKO) uranium stock closed down a very painful 43.8% on the day. That rout came after the miner increased its full year FY 2026 cost guidance and cut its production guidance to 1.6 million pounds of uranium, citing issues with the quality of its feedstock.
Boss Energy had previously been aiming to produce 2.45 million pounds of uranium a year longer term.
Most recently, on Monday, Boss Energy shares closed down 1.9%, trading for $1.58 each.
So, is the ASX 300 uranium stock finally trading for a bargain?
Boss Energy shares: Buy, hold or sell?
Late last week, MPC Markets’ Jonathan Tacadena analysed the outlook for the Aussie uranium miner (courtesy of The Bull).
“Boss is a multi-mine uranium producer,” Tacadena said.
Addressing the miner’s latest FY 2026 production guidance cut, reported at its quarterly results (Q3 FY 2026) release on 15 April, he noted:
Boss has cut production guidance at its Honeymoon operation in South Australia from 1.6 million pounds drummed to between 1.4 million and 1.45 million pounds drummed. Heavy rain had impacted third quarter production in 2026 by restricting site access and limiting the delivery of goods required for production.
But with Boss Energy shares having taken another tumble on the guidance cut, and showing some signs of recovery since, Tacadena believes stockholders would do well to hold onto their shares.
Summarising his hold recommendation, Tacadena said:
The share price fell on the news, but bounced in the following days, indicating the lows may be in for BOE and downside risk is lower for now. Any good news moving forward should reward patient investors.
What’s else happened with ASX 200 uranium stock in Q3?
Amid the inclement weather conditions Tacadena mentioned above, Boss Energy produced 203,000 pounds of uranium in Q3. That was significantly below its prior quarterly guidance of 240,000 pounds to 270,000 pounds.
“We recognise this downgrade is disappointing, particularly after maintaining guidance as recently as March,” Boss Energy managing director Matthew Dusci said of the miner’s reduced full year production guidance.
Dusci added:
At that time, our expectation was that site access and reagent deliveries would normalise during the month. Subsequent unexpected rainfall, combined with the degraded baseline condition of access roads, extended disruption materially beyond that assumption.
This has impacted both production and the timing of commissioning critical infrastructure during ramp-up.
Boss Energy shares closed down 9.3% on 15 April, the day of the quarterly update release.
The post Down 42% in a year, are Boss Energy shares now a bargain buy? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Bernd Struben has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.