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Published: February 25, 2010
In the most recent issue of my Special
Situations advisory, I showed my readers the most compelling
resource investment around. I've spent the past month digging
into this story and looking for the best opportunities. Here's
what I've found.
The most compelling thing about uranium is probably best
expressed in the chart below...
The uranium market has been in deficit for
several years, living off the stockpiles of the Cold War. Put
simply, we use more than we make.
Looking out to 2018, we're about 400 million pounds short. To
get some perspective on that number, here is a look at the top
10 producers of uranium in 2009 and the percentage each makes up
of the total market.
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The top producers, which make up nearly 90%
of the market, produced about 110 million pounds of uranium last
year. So essentially, the industry needs to produce almost four
times that to meet the estimated new demand through 2018. On an
annual basis, the industry will need to about double in size.
A sidelight to this is the fact that 63% of all uranium comes
from just 10 mines. This means that the global supply of uranium
is susceptible to supply shocks. If one big mine floods or goes
down for whatever reason, it'll make a big wave in the uranium
market.
It gets even more interesting...
Most of the best mines are already in production. As with
everything else in the resource world these days, the
low-hanging fruit is all gone. Future grades will be lower,
meaning we'll have to mine a lot more ore to get a given amount
of uranium. New mines are in more geologically challenging
places. New supply is also coming from riskier places, such as
Africa and Kazakhstan. All of this means that costs will go up.
These facts are reflected in the industry's cost curve, as you
can see in the chart below.
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This tells you that at current production
-- about 130 million pounds -- those last million pounds are a
lot more expensive to produce than the first million pounds. It
also means that as the industry ramps up beyond 130 million
pounds to meet demand, costs will rise sharply.
This is not a perfect predictor, of course. There are new mines
that will come online and produce uranium at low costs. But it
bodes well for a higher uranium price in the future. The current
spot price is around $45 a pound. Only around 10%–30% of the
uranium traded in any year is sold on the spot market. Most
uranium is sold to utilities via long-term contracts. The
longer-term price of uranium is north of $60.
For some perspective on uranium pricing, consider that when
uranium got hot in the summer of 2007, the spot price hit $136 a
pound. It's done nothing but go down since then. If you are a
contrarian thinker, which is to say a good investor, that fact
will attract you. I can tell you with great certainty that the
uranium price won't go to zero. That downward trend will
reverse, and based on all the data I presented above, it looks
like a higher uranium price over the next few years is a sure
thing -- or about as close to a sure thing as you can get in
markets.
That's why the uranium price has to go up. If it doesn't, there
is no incentive for producers to make more, and hence a lot of
reactors are going to go without fuel. More importantly, it can
go up. Simply put, the uranium price could double and it
wouldn't affect the economics of a nuclear reactor much. This is
not true with a lot of commodities. If the price of oil doubled,
the global economy would double over in great pain and probably
grind to a halt. Not so with uranium.
The biggest potential negative I see is the risk of some nuclear
accident that derails this whole thesis as people abandon
nuclear. But the industry has a clean safety record going back
more than two decades now.
There are 436 reactors in the world that provide about 15% of
the world's electricity. The new reactors have fewer moving
parts and are much better than the old ones. And most of the
world seems to be coming around to the green benefits of nuclear
power; even President Obama's administration promises loan
guarantees and other goodies for the builders of nuclear
reactors. In our carbon-worried world, nuclear is a relatively
clean source of energy.
For all these reasons, we see a massive buildup in reactors
under construction, planned or proposed. The World Nuclear
Association (WNA) says there are 52 reactors under construction,
135 reactors planned and 295 reactors proposed. This is what
underpins that demand we talked about up top. Where are all
those reactors going to be? Mostly, from China, India, Japan,
and the U.S.
Once again, we have a resource story driven by China and India.
Neither country produces much uranium. China produces less than
2% of the world's uranium. If you believe "buy what China
needs," as I do, then uranium fits well with that worldview. In
conclusion, I want to own uranium.
-- Chris Mayer
Editor
Capital & Crisis
Note: This article originally appeared on
Daily Wealth.
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