When
the fundamentals of uranium first caught my eye back in 1998, it was a
contrarian’s dream. At the time it was, to my thinking at least, the
proverbial manna, an ultra-clean, ultra-safe, ultra-efficient and
virtually unlimited source of mass energy, yet due to environmental
hysteria was viscerally and universally despised. Its price had fallen
to only about $9.00 on its way even lower, a price that made it
uneconomic to produce, let alone explore for. As a result, there was a
huge and growing short-fall in new mine production to meet demand.
That short-fall was largely covered by reprocessing nuclear weapons,
mostly from the former Soviet Union, but it was clear to me that that
supply was finite, whereas demand was not.
A
lot has happened since my first recommendation of uranium, or, more
specifically, uranium stocks, back in 1998. Including, I am happy to
say, my subscribers and I have made a lot of money. That is the reward
for being early into a trend. But the trend has now been in motion for
some time, and so it is worth revisiting. Is the big up-move in
uranium prices over? Can you still find good value in uranium stocks?
Marin Katusa, a uranium analyst here at Casey Research recently took
on the task of answering those questions, the results of which follow.
If you are invested in uranium stocks at the moment, or are thinking
about it, you owe it to yourself to read on.
Doug
Casey
With
the spot price of uranium appreciating by 927% over the last 6 years,
there’s little question the easy money in the sector has been made.
If, however, you pick your investments closely, there is a lot of
upside remaining in the uranium bull market.
The
uranium bull has come about due to the simple fundamentals of supply and
demand, exacerbated by a global resurgence of interest in nuclear power
as a mass energy solution. A resurgence helped by widespread concerns
over global warming: unlike carbon-based fuels, nuclear emits no
greenhouse gas.
In
fast growing economies such as India and China, debate over the role of
nuclear energy in providing mass power is effectively over: there are no
other realistic alternatives to provide desperately needed baseload
power. That explains why, in Asia alone, 57 new nuclear power plants are
projected by 2015, a feverish pace. For
these countries, nuclear is not just an option, but an imperative.
A
corresponding growth in demand for uranium fuel is inevitable, but that
demand only makes a bad situation worse, with new mine supplies already
running about 40% behind demand. That deficit largely explains why
uranium has skyrocketed in recent years, moving from just over $7 in
January of 2001, to over $72 today.
Until
relatively recently, there has been only one way to profit from this
opportunity; by investing in companies involved in uranium production,
processing or exploration. If you were in on the trend early, it was
like the proverbial shooting fish in a barrel. Big fish.
Before
the recent mania, back in October of 1998, Doug Casey was a lone voice
in the woods when he issued a 16-page special report for subscribers
detailing the reasons uranium was a screaming buy. At that time, you
could count the number of junior uranium explorers on two hands.
Many of his readers literally made fortunes from the small
universe of stocks he brought to their attention (to provide just one
example, his lead recommendation, Paladin, subsequently appreciated by
over 3,000%, turning $10,000 into $300,000).
But
that was then, and this is now. Today, interest in uranium has exploded
and, as you would imagine, the market has become flooded with
freshly-minted “uranium explorers”… close to 400 companies at last
count. Make no mistake, the vast majority are nothing more than
overpriced, over-hyped shells with little more in the way of assets than
mildly radioactive moose pasture and aggressive corporate promoters who
know how to spin a good story.
Put
another way, the initial, “easy money” phase of this play is over.
If you’re looking to profit from rising uranium prices going forward
– and we are convinced they will continue to rise – you’ll have to
pay a lot more attention to your securities selection. We’ll discuss
some of the key criteria to consider on that front momentarily, but
first a quick look at the uranium spot price.
Where
is the Spot Price Going?
To
understand where the spot price is headed you first have to understand
the purchasers and their roles. The
primary purchasers of uranium are nuclear power utilities.
Historically, they have contracted for fuel for a set period of
time, stockpiling when they grew convinced that prices would be rising.
There
is, however, a relatively new secondary market that has developed,
devoted to buying and holding the metal itself.
Funds such as the Uranium Participation Corporation (www.uraniumparticipation.com)
effectively stockpile uranium, with the full intent of selling it later
to the nuclear industry at substantially higher prices. These
organizations have served to provide a baseline of support for the spot
price of uranium between buying cycles. It’s an important role,
because higher prices provide the incentive for companies to navigate
the many geological, engineering and, most importantly, political
challenges required to bring a new deposit to market, a process
conservatively estimated to take between 10 and 20 years.
One
important point to understand about uranium is that, unlike oil and gas,
higher spot prices trigger no consumer protests, or Washington hearing
complete with grandstanding politicos trying to “protect” their
constituents from the greedy price-gougers, a nearly monthly affair for
oil and gas executives. The reason is that the amount of uranium used in
creating nuclear power makes it a relatively minor component in the
overall cost. A double in oil’s spot price would result in energy cost
increases of 40% or more for oil-based power generation plants and send
the cost of gasoline at the pump soaring.
A double in the spot price of uranium, however, would result in a
mere 5% increase in the cost of electricity from a nuclear power plant.
That’s why you haven’t heard anyone complain about the 927% price
increase in uranium since 2001. Indeed, uranium could trade at $200 per
pound and the utilities would hardly blink.
In
sum, uranium is still cheap by any measure, including: what the market
is willing (and able) to pay, prior highs and supply/demand ratios.
Speaking of prior highs, in inflation adjusted terms, the price of
uranium has been as much as 70% higher than it is today, a price level
we see being taken out in this cycle.
Profiting
from the Second Phase of the Uranium Bull Market
If
you’re looking strictly to ride the rising tide, stick with a fund
such as the Uranium Participation Corporation, as that will appreciate
pretty much 1:1 with the spot price, less holding and management fees,
of course.
If,
however, you are looking at getting (much) more bang for your uranium
buck, then you’ll want to look to get positioned in a portfolio of
carefully selected junior uranium stocks.
As
the Casey Uranium Index (CUI) below shows, juniors can widely outperform
the spot price of uranium alone.

(The
Casey Uranium Index is made up of the stocks meeting the criteria
required for recommendation in the Casey
Energy Speculator newsletter from Casey Research)
The
secret to finding winning uranium stocks? Start by aligning yourself
with high-quality management teams with proven
uranium expertise. A surprising number of companies now claiming uranium
expertise have little to no on-staff experience with this specialized
metal. While it is hard to find one that has not already had extreme
appreciation, look for “early mover” companies -- those which were
actively acquiring projects before uranium became the flavor-of-the-day.
They are most likely to be sitting on the most prospective concessions,
in the best geological and political settings.
Finally,
look for companies that are actually doing the hard work necessary to
prove-up their resources, because verified pounds in the ground will be,
for most of these companies, the trigger that gets them taken over –
at much higher prices -- by a larger company with the specific skill
sets to move the project into production.
And
make no mistake, finding an economic uranium deposit, then bringing it
to market is a Herculean task – far harder and more complex than, say,
a gold or silver deposit, and even those are challenging in the extreme.
Consequently, it is hard to overly stress the importance of investing
with a proven management team; of the nearly 400 uranium companies
fighting over your investment dollars, only a handful actually are
worthy. Caution is the keyword.
Conclusion
During
this second phase of the cycle, the uranium price is headed to $100,
then $200. As the market matures and investors become more informed
about uranium, the pretenders will be exposed and the contenders, those
working hard to prove-up economic deposits, will be rewarded.
Getting positioned today will still get you in ahead of the
crowd, but don’t be in a rush, and don’t make the mistake of jumping
into a pretender that has already had a big run up on nothing more than
hype.
Marin
Katusa is a researcher and writer for Casey Research, publishers of the Casey
Energy Speculator, one of the world’s leading monthly
newsletters dedicated to uncovering junior oil, gas and uranium
companies poised for significant increases in production and share
appreciation. Formerly an advanced calculus instructor, Marin has
applied his skills in advanced mathematics to build diagnostic
resource market tools that analyze and compare hundreds of
investment variables, focusing in on those that indicate investment
potential and profitability.
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© 2007 Marin Katusa
Editor, International Speculator
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