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Published: June 4, 2010
After expending a great deal of political
capital on health reform, many expected the Obama administration
to push off energy and climate legislation into next year. But
with the pool of oil growing in the Gulf of Mexico by the day,
President Obama has moved his energy legislation agenda back on
to the front burner, calling on Congress to work with him to
bolster America's consumption of alternative forms of energy.
Although wind and solar have garnered much of the attention, it
may now be time to start focusing on nuclear power
opportunities. Plans are afoot to green light a few new plants
this year, and during the next few years, we may see
applications for dozens more new plants. Internationally, the
nuclear renaissance has already begun.
Uranium: unfavorable economics
At first glance, it would seem logical to buy stocks of the
uranium mining companies. After all, the United States' existing
stock of 104 reactors burn through 55 million pounds of uranium
each year. But there is an ample supply out there in places like
Kazakhstan, and Latin America, as well as here in the United
States. It would take dozens of new reactors to come on line for
uranium demand to exceed supply. To be sure, uranium can be
swept up in a bubble: The radioactive material fetched $120 a
pound in 2007 as expectations grew that many new nuclear plants
would soon be authorized around the world. That never came to
pass, and uranium now trades for about $40 a pound.
The Obama administration has already offered $8 billion in loan
guarantees -- enough to backstop two new plants. And they'd like
Congress to authorize another $46 billion to get other nuclear
plants off the ground. (Some of that money might go to a new
breed of mini-reactors, which also use uranium, so the net
effect on demand is a wash). If Congress agrees to that plan,
then uranium prices could temporarily spike. That would be good
news for small processors such as Uranium Energy Corp. (AMEX:
UEC), which owns several mines in the Western U.S.
But most investors focus on Cameco (NYSE: CCJ), the
industry's largest player. Cameco, which has mines in Canada,
the U.S., Kazakhstan and Australia, also sports the lowest costs
in its industry.
Weak prices for uranium have been a real positive at times, as
they have flushed out smaller, less-efficient players, enabling
Cameco to boost
market share. Shares of Cameco have fallen about -25% this
year, and no longer trade at a premium to the value of the
unmined uranium it controls. Shares have likely found a floor
here, and would post a rebound if President Obama's legislative
plans are advanced, and uranium prices rise from current levels.
(The share price weakness mirrors a fall in uranium, which has
also steadily fallen since the start of the year).
A shortage of processors
If new plants get the green light, and demand for uranium rises,
then we'll soon see a bottleneck in efforts to convert mined
uranium into a usable fuel for power plants. That's why USEC,
Inc. (NYSE: USU) recently secured a $200 million investment
to boost its uranium processing capabilities. As
we noted here, USEC is not well-known on the Street, but is
highly profitable and poised for solid growth if new plant
construction begins.
What about the builders?
Nuclear power plants take billions of dollars to construct. All
that money that the Obama administration hopes to secure will go
right to the companies that can build these massive complexes.
Trouble is, most of these builders are privately-held, or trade
on foreign stock exchanges. Some investors see Shaw Group (Nasdaq:
SHAW) as a clear beneficiary, but know that Shaw also
constructs traditional power plants as well, so nuclear-related
revenue will never dominate Shaw's sales mix.
Safety First
As nuclear plants get built, we'll need engineers to operate
them. Many nuclear engineers are nearing retirement age, so
we'll need to train a whole new group of staffers to handle the
complex controls. That should be a boon for micro-cap GSE
Systems (AMEX: GVP), which builds training simulators for
power plant operators. In recent quarters, the company has seen
demand for nuclear simulators grow -- especially in China and
South Korea, where nuclear power is already on the upswing.
Sales are on track to rise at least +20% both this year and
next, thanks to a fast-rising
backlog.
Action to Take --> Cameco
is clearly the biggest and clearest way to play any rise in
demand for uranium, but uranium processors such as USEC or
nuclear training firms such as GSE Systems may be the real pure
play here.
-- David Sterman
Staff Writer
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