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Published: April 23, 2010
Two things happened Thursday that 99.9% of
investors don't know about.
The fortunate few who do -- and who have acted on their
knowledge -- are poised to reap serious profits. Today I'll tell
you what these investors know, what happened Thursday, and, most
important, how you can profit from what's going to happen next.
We begin with five brief background notes.
(1) The United States uses 382 million gallons of gasoline every
day. Not only is gasoline "dirty," it's also derived from oil.
And though there's plenty of oil for the foreseeable future,
it's ultimately a finite resource that the world is going to
exhaust.
(2) After considering America's utter dependency on foreign
trading partners to meet its energy needs, and with
environmental concerns in mind, Congress surveyed the
technological landscape in search of an alternative, a new,
green energy solution that could help wean the country from oil.
It came up with biofuel.
(3) The 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act, passed and
signed in the Bush era but supported by President Obama,
establishes a federally mandated timetable for the production of
biofuel. This contains three components. The first is
"Renewable" fuel, which is traditional corn-based ethanol.
Current production is about 12 billion gallons a year, and the
timetable pushes ethanol to a ceiling of 15 billion gallons in
2015, where the target remains until 2022. The second biofuel in
the timetable is biodiesel, which, at this point, is not
significant. But the third is: It's an "Advanced" biofuel called
cellulosic ethanol.
(4) Cellulosic ethanol is made by converting the sugar in all
plant life, called cellulose, into alcohol. (You do this
backward, incidentally, every time you have a drink.) This
process can be accomplished several ways but the most promising
is using enzymes to push the process along. Cellulosic ethanol
can be blended with traditional motor fuels like gasoline. The
current Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standard allows
for up to 10% ethanol, though that's slated to rise to 15% and
some in Congress have sought to push it higher. So-called
"flex-fuel" vehicles can burn up to 85% ethanol, or "E85," which
you may have seen advertised.
(5) While the federal timetable limits corn-based ethanol to
+25% growth, the output from 2010 levels will rise from 6.5
million gallons this year to 16 billion gallons in 2022, an
increase of an astonishing +246,053%. I should note, however,
that this was not Congress' intent. The original law called for
100 million gallons a year but the timetable was amended by the
EPA. The growth rate from 100 million gallons to 16 billion
gallons is still +15,900%.
Now I want to tell you the two things that happened Thursday.
Item No. 1: Wall Street endorses the inevitable future of
cellulosic ethanol.
Thursday morning shares of a company called Codexis (Nasdaq:
CDXS) went on sale through an initial public offering.
Codexis, an enzyme maker, is a joint venture of Royal Dutch
Shell and some other investors, notably a little pharma company
called Maxygen (Nasdaq: MAXY).
Codexis is a serious biofuel player because of its connection to
Shell and because of a recent $12 billion deal between Shell and
Brazil's Cosan (NYSE: CZZ), one of the largest ethanol
makers in the world.
There's a lot of inside baseball with these
deals, but the bottom line is this: Big Oil is behind cellulosic
ethanol because it sees it as the next chapter in energy.
Thursday's
IPO was further evidence that Wall Street is taking
notice of the huge profit potential. The IPO rose modestly its
first day and was up again this morning.
Item No. 2: A major producer makes a projection.
Poet, a privately held ethanol producer, one of the country's
largest, made a big projection. It said it would produce 3.5
billion gallons of cellulosic ethanol by 2022. That was a year
familiar to followers of the biofuel story: It's the last year
in the federal government's timetable. Poet is claiming it will
produce 22% of the country's cellulosic ethanol. It will derive
its cellulosic ethanol from biomass like wheat straw,
switchgrass and municipal waste.
CEO Jeff Broin said Congress has set "a lofty goal." He's right.
But this nation is in the business achieving lofty things. We
have smart people who figure things out. And though the road of
discovery has been long, there is no reason that Congress' goal
can't be reached. There is no reason it can't be exceeded.
The takeaway for investors is not about Poet and it's not even
about Codexis. The takeaway is that cellulosic ethanol
technology is ready. This technology can be profitably used. The
science has been worked out. It's no longer an experiment talked
about in college labs. Using enzymes to create biofuel on a
massive commercial scale is no longer a utopian dream. It's a
reality. It's coming. Big oil is betting on it. Wall Street is
on board with financing. Uncle Sam has written the demand into
law and is funding some plants itself. All of these factors will
converge in the coming years to deliver Gold Rush-size profits.
The question is who is going to strike it rich and who is going
to go bust.
One of the leaders in cellulosic ethanol is a company called
Dyadic International (OTC: DYAI). This company has already
delivered a +200% gain to readers of my
Government-Driven
Investing newsletter. Dyadic is an enzyme maker whose technology
is vital to the production process. Codexis, in a regulatory
filing, said that losing its relationship with Dyadic would
materially affect its ability to do business. Through
non-exclusive licensing, Dyadic will receive a royalty on
billions of gallons of celluslosic ethanol a year -- without
building expensive refineries or pipelines. All it has to do is
deliver its enzymes and collect a check. As it does, this tiny
company could well see price appreciation to match the +15,900%
growth that cellulosic ethanol will see. I don't think I've ever
seen a company with more potential.
The two things that happened Thursday are a trend. More
cellulosic ethanol news will go unnoticed by investors. By the
time it's on the evening news, the investment opportunity will
be gone and the lion's share of the gains will have been earned
by someone else. The time is now. Dyadic looks like a strong
buy.
-- Andy Obermueller
Chief Investment Strategist
Government-Driven Investing
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