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"If you want to succeed in the world you must make your own opportunities
as you go on. The man who waits for some seventh wave to toss him on dry
land will find that the seventh wave is a long time a-coming. You can commit
no greater folly than to sit by the road side until someone comes along and
invites you to ride with him to wealth or influence." - John B. Gough
1817-1886, British-born American Temperance Orator

http://www.uxc.com/review/uxc_g_price.html

http://www.uxc.com/review/uxc_g_2yr-price.html
The first chart is an 18 year chart of uranium and the second is a 2 year
chart; both reveal that Uranium is in a major up trend and it has been putting
in new multi year highs for quite some time now. One of the reasons for this
rapid move is fear.
The fear is based on the fact that approx 91 million kilos of Uranium will
be needed but mines only produce approx 45.5 million Kilos; so far this short
fall has been met with above the ground reserves. Most of this above the ground
uranium has come from the decommissioning of nuclear warheads (this accounts
for roughly 45% of the global supply); sooner then later these supplies are
going to run out and then we are going to have a problem.
Currently there are roughly 441 nuclear power plants operating around the
world producing approx 17% of the world's electricity. 24 new power plants
are under construction in about 9 countries (this number does not take into
account future projects only current ones). 103 of these plants are in the
US alone and they produce roughly 20% of our electricity; the only other source
that produces more energy is Coal. Nuclear power plants can run roughly 540
days before they need to be shut down for refuelling. The problem with nuclear
power plants is that unlike their fossil fuel operated counterparts, which
can run on coal, gas, or oil they can only run on Uranium and nothing else.
This means that we could face a serious problem in the future if supply cannot
meet demand. Currently the demand outstrips supply by approx 100% and when
all the new nuclear plants come online things could get even worse.
One can see how bad the situation is when sub par mines start opening up in
Colorado, the grade of the yellow cake here is far inferior to that found in
Australia and Canada; despite this 3 new mines have opened in Colorado. This
simply illustrates that the industry experts understand the gravity of the
situation and are even willing to invest in sub par mines because they expect
prices to trade at much loftier levels.
The worlds need for electricity is going to increase exponentially over the
next decade and there is simply not enough fossil fuel to meet these demands;
so nuclear energy appears to be the only viable option until some new energy
source is discovered. The decision to take nuclear Energy much more seriously
can be seen by the following
- Thirty reactors received 20-year license extensions, 18 reactors have filed
for license renewals and another 22 are likely to seek renewal in the next
six years, the NEI reports.
- India currently has 14 reactors and plans on building an additional 24
reactors. China has about 10 and plans on building another 18, and South
Korea plans on building another 8. Even the US is starting to seriously look
into the nuclear option; 13 plants out of the total of 103 are going to
be upgraded. In addition, three consortia are seeking licenses for new plants.
Russia has approx 31 nuclear power plants, 6 new plants are under construction
and roughly an additional 16 plants will be built over the next few years.
Russia's electricity needs are increasing at the rate of 3% per year and
Gazparon has cut back on gas supplies for the production of electricity by
approx 12% because it can make far more money by selling to the Europeans
on the open market. So the Russians had to come up with several alternative
plans and it appears that they have already begun to implement some of them.
Russia has cut back on Uranium sales because they know that they are going
to need these supplies sooner than later. They currently hold 4% of the world's
recoverable uranium and so they appear to be in a somewhat decent position
to deal with their future needs.
The huge plunge In Uranium prices was attributable to several factors, all
which resulted in virtually everyone wanting to shun away from this industry.
Here are list of some of the main reasons
- The meltdown at the Three Mile Island reactor in Middletown, PA in 1979.
Prior to this event plans were underway for 50 more nuclear plants in the
US. After the Incident all plans were scrapped.
- The 1986 explosion at Chernobyl.
- The end of the cold war that stopped the arms race all contributed to serious
drop in demand for uranium and thus for awhile the market was suddenly flooded
with too much uranium.
The end result was that production was severely cut back and many mines were
eventually shut down; that's why the nuclear industry is in the position it's
in today. Now demand is about to go ballistic and there is simply no way to
meet all this demand in time. Should the US actually join this race, which
it might have to then already constrained supplies are going to be stretched
even further? Since only uranium can power these plants we are eventually going
to have a bidding war on hands the likes that the world has never seen before.
There is actually no way to effectively predict how high uranium prices could
eventually go. It seems we have a confluence of disasters all aligning up waiting
to happen in the not to distant future. It's for this reason we are taking
key positions in certain stocks (one of which we sold for a 100% gain and are
looking to take new positions in now that it has pulled back) and will continue
to do so for the foreseeable future.
Now all the above info is based on the longer-term outlook. In the short to
intermediate time frames Uranium could pull back simply because it has experienced
a rather rapid move up. This pull back will be nothing but a mouth-watering
opportunity to take additional positions in this sector. Don't expect this
pull back to take place over night and neither can we expect all the stocks
to pull back to the same extent. Some stocks will pull back less while others
will pull back more; the key thing is to know when to add to or take new positions
in these stocks.
Conclusion
Since owning uranium is not an easy task the only option for regular individuals
is to buy uranium stocks. However as with any sector there are many worthless
stocks here so one has to know which ones to buy and which ones to avoid like
the plague.
Dozens of new plants are going to come online in the not too distant future
and the tragedy is that there is simply not enough uranium right now to power
them all. Opportunity comes knocking once in awhile while disaster comes
in kicking all the time.
"One can present people with opportunities. One cannot make them equal
to them." - Rosamond Lehmann 1901-1990, British Novelist
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