Energy & Commodities

Uranium’s Rock Bottom Prices & Companies Positioned To Capitalize

Japan Moves To Fire Up Japan’s Nuclear Facilities

Japan has 50 operable nuclear reactors. Before the tsunami in 2011 that ripped apart the Fukushima complex, those 50 reactors provided about 26 percent of Japan’s electrical power generation capability. Regardless the Japanese government of the time idled those nuclear reactors. 

Now much to the chagrin of Japan’s embattled anti-nuclear activists, the current government of Prime Minister Shinzuo Abe is moving to restart those reactors, doubtless because they simply need the power. Even more agressively he is also going to open a Plutonium Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing Plant with an annual capacity of 800 tons of uranium or 8 tons of plutonium, enough to build as many as 2,000 bombs. Who knows what the threat of nuclear war will do for the demand of uranium, but I doubt it will be negative. Especially when you see how far uranium has fallen from it’s last top.

 

Screen Shot 2014-04-13 at 9.08.19 AM

Ed Note: The last price April 7th was $33.75 USD/lb. To follow up to date pricing go HERE

With uranium at rock-bottom prices, its more likely you’d be following Baron Rothchild’s advice to “Buy When there’s blood in the streets” if you bought in this area than not. 

Here are some of the world’s largest uranium companies by deposits:

1. Cameco is one of the world’s largest uranium producers. The company’s uranium products are used to generate electricity in nuclear energy plants around the world, providing one of the cleanest sources of energy available today.

sc

2. Paladin Energy is a uranium production company with projects currently in Australia and two operating mines in Africa with a strategy to become a major uranium mining house.

sc-1

3. Rio Tinto is one of the world’s largest uranium producers. A leading international mining group headquartered in the U.K., combining Rio Tinto plc, a London and New York Stock Exchange listed company, and Rio Tinto Limited, which is listed on the Australian Securities Exchange.

Rio Tinto’s business is finding, mining, and processing mineral resources. Major products are aluminium, copper, diamonds, thermal and metallurgical coal, uranium, gold, industrial minerals (borax, titanium dioxide and salt) and iron ore. Activities span the world and are strongly represented in Australia and North America with significant businesses in Asia, Europe, Africa and South America.

sc-2

3. AngloGold Ashanti 

On March 2 AngloGold Ashanti agreed to acquire First Uranium‘s (OTC:FURAF), the owner of Mine Waste Solutions, a recently commissioned tailings retreatment operation located in South Africa’s Vaal River region and in the immediate proximity of AngloGold Ashanti’s own tailings facilities, for an aggregate cash consideration of $335 million.

Following the transaction, combined with AngloGold Ashanti’s Vaal River tailings (491Mt, containing 4.9Moz of gold and 92.3Mlbs of uranium), AngloGold Ashanti will own tailings facilities in the Vaal River region containing a combined mineral resource of 7.7Moz of gold and 154.4Mlbs of uranium.

AngloGold Ashanti has 20 operations in 10 countries on four continents, employed 61,242 people, including contractors and produced 4.33Moz of gold (2010: 4.52Moz), generating $6.6bn in gold income, excluding joint ventures.

sc

4. Uranium Energy Corp is a U.S. based uranium production & exploration company operating North America’s newest uranium mine. 

Their operations also include the Hobson Processing Plant, the producing Palangana Mine, the fuly permitted for production Goliad ISR Project plus 21 other exploration projects. 

sc-1

 

5. Energy Fuels Inc. is the largest U.S. conventional uranium producer

sc-2

…3 exploration companies:

6. Denison is a uranium exploration and development company with interests in exploration and development projects in Canada, Zambia, Namibia, and Mongolia. Including the high grade Phoenix deposits, located on its 60% owned Wheeler project, Denison’s exploration project portfolio includes 45 projects and totals approximately 584,000 hectares in the Eastern Athabasca Basin region of Saskatchewan.

DML

7.  Uranerz Energy Corp. (URZ:TSX; URZ:NYSE.MKT) and Laramide Resources Ltd. Right now, you can get in at eight-year lows on the top uranium assets that are in the control of the juniors. Uranerz Energy has some of the top assets in the Powder River Basin that are coming into production, and Laramide has one of the top resources with over 50 million pounds (50 Mlb) near surface in Australia, which has now overturned a ban on uranium mining in the district. Now Laramide can go ahead with that Westmoreland project.

sc-3

Laramide Resources Ltd. has one of the top advanced resources that provides huge leverage for an investor for the uranium price. For investors who are looking for leverage and for advanced assets, Laramide is a good candidate. There are very few candidates in the junior sector that have 100% control of such a large asset. Investors must realize that there are so few high-quality junior uranium miners. When investors and funds return, the move could be dramatic—like an elephant trying to get through the eye of a needle.

sc-4

 

 

Lunch With T. Boone Pickens

pickens largeLooking forward today means focusing on America’s energy boom that, in the past five years, has sent domestic oil production surging 57% to the highest level in a decade. Pickens and his team still think opportunities in American energy abound.

“It’s growing because innovation in the oil and gas industry is blossoming at a rate Pickens hasn’t seen in decades. “When I got out of school, that year, American geologists and geophysicists had probably been responsible for 90% of all the oil found in the world,” Pickens explains. “Today, I think we’re kind of back at the same point again. I think that we have been that good, the industry has been that good, in this country.”

….continue reading more HERE

Investment Alert: Farmland

WHY: Despite some temporary declines, wealthy farmers and non-farming investors continue to plunk down money on crops, Reuters says. That’s because there remains healthy demand for what comes out of America’s breadbasket, especially from China. Check out this chart from the USDA showing forecasts for Chinese imports of soybeans and corn, both of which the U.S. is the largest exporter of. Insane:

screen shot 2014-04-09 at 11-1.23.13 am

This is just one of the charts in  25 Huge Trends That Will Make People Billions Of Dollars – Editor Money Talks

 

10 Rare Earths Stocks You Can Buy Cheap

As China’s rare earth production winds down, other sources worldwide could shape up to reward early investors. But there are different ways to play this (slowly) growing market. Zachary Schumacher, international market analyst with Asian Metals, tells The Mining Report how investors can go medium or long on rare earths, and why joint venture and offtake partnerships are the biggest factors in creating value. 

Agressive investors will love those selling at fractions of their prices 2-3 years ago -Editor Money Talks 

The Mining Report: Zachary, it’s good to have you with us. Many rare earth element (REE) projects are uneconomic at current REE prices. Please give us your “state of the sector” address.

Zachary Schumacher: There are a lot of challenges in the market. There’s a good portion of projects that are uneconomic. Current REE prices make it difficult to justify projects. On top of that, there are some environmental issues with processing. Until we see a real change in the market, very few projects stand out.

TMR: Prices for heavy rare earths (HREEs), at least, have shown some signs of price recovery. What’s most likely to create shareholder value in REE equities: higher REE prices, joint venture(JV) offtake agreements, vertical integration or perhaps other factors that you deem to be relevant?

ZS: That’s a difficult question. There’s a timeframe for a lot of things. Long-term investors would be more interested in higher REE prices. If you’re looking for a project to go into production, JV and offtake agreements are important.

TMR: Interesting. Is that because there’s just not a lot of easy access to capital to develop these projects and JV partners provide that, or is it simply about confidence that a given name is on board?

ZS: JVs give access to more capital, which eliminates a huge barrier. Processing costs are a huge capital expenditure for REEs. It also provides somebody who arguably is going to be consuming or utilizing the material in some other aspect in the production chain. It provides a level of technical expertise that reassures investors.

Take Avalon Rare Metals Inc.’s (AVL:TSX; AVL:NYSE; AVARF:OTCQX) partnership with Solvay. Solvay offers technical experience with processing. You have an opportunity to be outside of China. This partnership is a good way for Avalon to show that it recognizes the cost of doing it alone may be unfeasible. So you have a political, technical and economic benefits.

avalon

TMR: Avalon is hoping that this agreement with Solvay will ultimately result in a JV or offtake agreement with a much larger suitor. Does this deal get Avalon closer to a cash-rich partner?

ZS: It definitely improves its position. It shows that it has an option for processing. It’s got to put it high on the list of potential partners looking at sources outside of China.

TMR: The capex for Nechalacho means that a partner will have to be a big-time player. Avalon likes to tout that it’s the only REE company that has a bankable feasibility study. Does that increase the chances?

ZS: The feasibility study helps. It shows its willingness and the realism of the project. Yes, the partner would have to be a company with deep pockets. The thing is that a lot of these companies need reliable sources of the material.

TMR: Are there any companies outside of China that you consider vertically integrated?

ZS: Molycorp Inc. (MCP:NYSE) is close, but its processing is in China. Rhodia Inc., which is part of Solvay, would probably be the closest. It does some of its processing out of La Rochelle in France. There is some internal consumption, and some is sold downstream. There are a few projects styled to be vertically integrated that aren’t active right now.

mcp

TMR: What about Great Western Minerals Group Ltd. (GWG:TSX.V; GWMGF:OTCQX)?

gwg

ZS: Great Western is selling the less-than-common alloys, which is driving its REE project. But it’s not in production for its rare earth oxide yet.

TMR: Which companies have shareholder-friendly offtake or JV partnerships?

ZS: Matamec Explorations Inc. (MAT:TSX.V; MRHEF:OTCQX) and Toyota Motor Group have a good one from Matamec’s point of view. Toyota is not asking that much of Matamec. It provides a good avenue for offloading the material and a background of technical experience similar to Solvay and Avalon.

mat

Frontier Rare Earths Ltd. (FRO:TSX) and Korea Resource Corp., or KORES, have some people questioning what role a government organization like KORES will have. At the moment, it’s a confidence booster that provides a level of structural government political support. The offtake agreement is a 10% stake in the company and KORES is obligated to offtake 10% as well. If there’s an increase in the interest, it would up KORES’s control to about 50% and up the offtake of the material to about 50%. That may worry some investors that a government organization could control about 50% of a company, but it’s an economic deal. KORES wants the company to do well. It recognizes, being right next door to China, the need to have alternative sources outside of China. I’m less worried about political ramifications.

fro

TMR: What should an investor who is looking to gain exposure to this sector look for?

ZS: A lot of projects are suffering from being uneconomic at current prices and demand. There are two big issues: where you do processing and how you do processing. Also, how cost effective is your processing and how much material can you process—what volumes are you looking at?

TMR: What’s a suitable capex range?

ZS: Projects can range from $300–400 million ($300–400M) or higher. Anything below $300M is more plausible.

TMR: Greenland Minerals & Energy Ltd. (GGG:ASX) has an agreement with China Non-Ferrous Metal Industry’s Foreign Engineering and Construction Co. Ltd., or NFC. The deal states that Greenland will use NFC’s separation plant to process its concentrate from Greenland’s Kvanefjeld project in Greenland. As an investor, would you prefer projects that produce oxides or is a simple concentrate the better option because of the lower capex and thus lower risk?

ZS: I’m inclined to say oxides, but producing an REE concentrate is much more feasible. It may be more attractive for investors to say, “Hey, I know this company may not be getting into the downstream industries, but I can rely on the overall market to improve demand for HREEs in the long term.”

TMR: Let’s get into another aspect of this business. Some companies, like Namibia Rare Earths Inc. (NRE:TSX, NMREF:OTCQX) in Namibia, are in jurisdictions where it’s easier to get a REE mine permitted. How much of an advantage is that?

NRE

Namibia Rare Earths Inc. has a good project. It’s definitely smart for the company to be where it is.

ZS: Namibia as a jurisdiction is desirable, with the environmental regulations, distance to ports and the political support that a company like Namibia Rare Earths can gather for a project. Investors want to look at a place that where they can rely on a readiness, a history and a legal framework.

Namibia Rare Earths has a good project. It’s definitely smart for the company to be where it is. It’s an area where it’ll be easier to get started.

TMR: If you were handicapping this race, what is the next publically traded REEs company to have a JV?

ZS: A few have good projects that could warrant a partnership. Ucore Rare Metals Inc. (UCU:TSX.V; UURAF:OTCQX) is high on my list. It has a good base and understands the market very well. Many had concerns about the area’s infrastructure. Alaska obviously has good reserves of a number of materials, but it can be difficult to get them to port. However, the recent passing of SB 99 by the Alaska State Senate puts an additional $145M toward infrastructure development for this project alone. Investors should be pleased to find local political and economic support for a project, but more importantly, financial assistance at this level can offer real assurance to companies looking to partner, as well.

UCU

Texas Rare Earth Resources Corp. (TRER:OTCQX) has an interesting project as well. The company is new to the sphere, so investors may be a little standoffish, but I like the project.

TRER

TMR: I don’t think a lot of investors know the story with Texas Rare Earths. Can you tell us?

ZS: Texas Rare Earths has been around for several years. It’s one of the smaller projects. It is based in Texas, which the company likes to highlight as a positive. The regulatory environment for setting up a business can be friendlier there.

One of the things that may be holding it back is that it doesn’t really have a lot of its documentation up yet. It doesn’t have a feasibility study, and it’s going to update its existing preliminary economic assessment. It’s looking at a long-term mine that will be able to produce small volumes of 5,000 and 8,000 tons per year (5–8 ktpa) for 20 years.

TMR: Does management have experience?

ZS: I’ve talked to some of the management. They have a technical background. CEO Daniel Gorski has been in the mining industry a lot of years. I think he understands it. He doesn’t come from a background of REEs, but he worked with a uranium explorer previously. It goes a long way in REEs if you understand the difficulty of dealing with radioactive material or even have close ties with people who might offtake some of that material or store it.

TMR: What public company could be the next to bag an offtake agreement?

ZS: I like Quest Rare Minerals Ltd. (QRM:TSX; QRM:NYSE.MKT). Strange Lake is an interesting middle-sized project. Extraction is an issue. Companies are going to look at that and know it. Its location in Québec, an area of Canada that has history with mining, goes a long way.

QRM

TMR: Even with the poor performance of the REE sector during the past few years, new players, like Texas Rare Earth Resources, continue to enter the space. Does that mean there’s still money to be made?

ZS: Maybe it’s the other way around. It may be that mining companies recognize that there is still interest in the market from investors. Is there still money to be made on the investors’ behalf? Yes. There’s definitely a level of opportunity out there, should a company get far enough to get into production.

But is there still room? The market is flushed with JV companies that are not quite in production, and even new ones. The difficulty of getting one of these companies into production may be insurmountable even for great projects with good management, good background and low capex. There may be a bit of overconfidence among some people going into new projects.

It’s a two-sided coin. The REEs market is still suffering from the doldrums of the bubble popping. If prices were high, any of these projects would be plausible to come on-line. For the short term, it looks like a number of these projects have no chance.

There’s a timeframe where you can see that there’s growing demand for these products. Look at neo magnets: There’s very few ways to avoid using them. That market’s big in the U.S. The magnet market hasn’t shrunk. They haven’t had any incentive to leave now that prices are falling. It just makes their production cheaper. At a certain point you’re going to see a flattening out of price. Long-term demand for magnets in a hundred industries will likely continue to grow. There’s space for a company or two outside of China to produce, to do processing and to be a very promising investment opportunity for plenty of investors. It’s finding the right one. That’s been the game for the past two years.

TMR: If getting a mine into production was the only way to make money as a mining investor, there wouldn’t be a mining sector. There’s such a small percentage of any mined commodity that actually reaches production. If there was a sudden, dramatic swing again in REE prices, investors could make money on some of these names even if their chances of getting into production didn’t increase at all.

ZS: That’s definitely true. The perception that the market is not doing very well is driven by REE pricing. Consumption is still there. People who consume the material, they recognize that they need to use it. It’s in their cost analysis. They anticipate long-term projections for these materials. Not because the market’s going to flatten out and disappear, but because they need to use it and everybody else needs to use it. If you do see a turnaround in REE prices, there are a number of companies that could benefit investors—even without the project going into production. Investors can still tap into the growing market.

TMR: The message then to an investor is to be long REEs.

ZS: Yeah. Be long or find your moment. Wait for the moment when you see REE prices bottoming out. And we may be fast approaching that level. The future of REEs isn’t bad.

TMR: Thanks, Zachary.

Zack Schumacher joined AsianMetal Inc. as a rare earths and tech metals analyst in 2013. He covers fluctuations in the prices and consumption of these materials and manages several indices that list current market prices. Schumacher received his Bachelor’s degree from the University of Pittsburgh in international relations and Chinese and completed his Master’s of International Business from New York University.

Want to read more Mining Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit The Mining Report homepage.

Related Articles

 

DISCLOSURE: 
1) Brian Sylvester conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. 
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Namibia Rare Earths Ltd. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) Zach Schumacher: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview. 
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent. 
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.

 

A Bold Prediction For One Base Metal

I usually take forecasts with a big grain of salt.

Especially when it comes to commodity prices. With the experience being that accurately predicting movements in these markets for the short to medium term is nearly impossible.

But one forward-looking analysis this week deserves a mention. Both because of the experts who made the prediction–and the unusual angle these professionals took in examining one of the biggest metals markets globally.

The group is CRU. A leading specialist in tracking commodity prices and trends.

And the metal is zinc. Which this group sees as having a bright future ahead.

CRU analysts told the International Zinc conference in Dubai that this commodity may have some of the biggest upside going. With the group predicting that zinc prices could rise as high as $4,500 per tonne ($2.04 per pound) over the next five years.

That would be a big jump, considering zinc today is going for just over $2,000 per tonne.

More interesting than the scale of the predicted rise is the reason. Which has to do with growing demand in an unexpected part of the world: Asia, outside of China.

CRU professionals noted they expect ex-China zinc demand in Asia to grow significantly. To the point where the combined nations of this region will actually pass China as the largest consuming region in the world.

That prediction is a first, as far as I’m aware. And could have some important implications for this market.

Mainly in terms of sourcing supply. China is currently the only Asian nation that produces significant zinc output–almost all of which gets used domestically.

If Asian end users do start ramping up demand, they’re going to have to reach out to find supply. To places like Australia and perhaps even as far as Peru and the U.S.

This could be a big boost to mining projects in these regions (with Chinese consumers already becoming active in places like Peru). Perhaps more importantly, rising Asian demand could spur a wave of zinc exploration and development in the region itself. With focus shifting to nations like Myanmar and Mongolia.

We’ll see if the numbers pan out. The bull case for zinc seems to be growing stronger by the day.

Here’s to the other Asia,

Dave Forest
 
 
Screen Shot 2014-04-09 at 7.16.56 AM