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Industry News
July 22, 2007
By James Finch and Julie Ickes
Courtesy of StockInterview.com
Spot Uranium Price Holds Steady
Cameco Conversion Facility Closure Could Pressure U3O8 Price Higher
Contaminated soil, containing uranium and related chemicals, found beneath Cameco’s
Port Hope conversion facility – located about 60 miles east of Toronto
– could place ‘significant’ upward pressure on the spot uranium price.
Cameco Fuel Services, at 1 Eldorado Place in Port Hope, is about
one-quarter mile from the shores of Lake Ontario. Source: Cameco Corp.
When Cameco Corp (NYSE: CCJ) announces bad news, this generally becomes good news for the spot uranium price.
According to Friday’s edition of Nuclear Market Review
(NMR), “The spot price held steady this week, in large part, due to the
uncertainty created by Cameco’s announcement late Friday that its Port
Hope (Ontario) conversion facility will be shut down for a minimum of
two months.” The weekly industry trade magazine left the TradeTech spot
uranium price indicator unchanged at US$129/pound.
News announcing the facility’s closure for two months ‘is expected to
place significant upward pressure on the spot price,’ according to NMR editor Treva Klingbiel. She estimated a ‘minimum loss of 2,000 tU of UF6 production’ during the shutdown.
Although Cameco reported the company has adequate inventory to meet its
delivery commitments through the end of the year, Klingbiel pointed
out, “The psychological impact on the market of this event can not be
discounted, given historical experience with previous conversion
disruptions.”
During the previous three weeks, the spot uranium price slid because of
weak demand and ample spot supplies. Klingbiel explained, “Sharply
rising prices have led to budget constraints that have prohibited some
utilities from participating in the spot market.”
More supply is coming into the market, but not in the overpowering
quantity some feared, e.g. five million pounds from the U.S. government.
Nearly 200 metric tons of UF6 was offered earlier this week by the U.S. Department of Energy
for delivery by September 21st. This sale represents slightly more than
10 percent of the sizeable amount bandied about in the media a few
months ago.
And some buyers are still active. According to NMR, “One non-U.S. utility is expected to enter the market soon to secure approximately 200 thousand pounds U3O8.”
While the uranium market has been quiet, it is far from dead. A week
ago, Klingbiel wrote that the underlying fundamentals of the long-term
uranium market were instead very much alive.
And it’s no wonder considering the realistic length of time many of the
newer uranium projects will take to actually become uranium mines.
The Follies of Forecasting Future Uranium Supply
The Citi never sleeps, but maybe the group’s uranium analyst dozed, when offering his uranium price forecasting.
On Thursday, a local newspaper, Northumberland Today,
reported rumors of something significant possibly taking place at
Cameco Corp’s Port Hope conversion facility, and which could also
impact local residents. Cameco communications spokesman Doug
Prendergast told the reporter on July 18th, “There’s nothing major
that’s imminent.”
The story’s headline: Cameco Quashes Rumors.
Prendergast also said, “If there’s anything to announce, we get it out
immediately. Unless they (employees) know something I don’t.” Maybe
they did, because…
On Friday afternoon, Cameco issued its third piece of bad news for the
week, shutting down the Port Hope facility for at least two months.
Earlier in the week, Cameco had announced another delay at the
company’s Cigar Lake uranium project and lowered estimates on gold
production on another property. As has been the case with Cameco in the
recent past, at some future point we should be greeted with ‘further
developments.’
Although uranium is abundant in many regions around the world,
economically and expediently recovering uranium is not as easy as many
‘armchair quarterbacks’ suspect.
During this past week, we expanded our commentary about problematic
uranium projects, present and future, in the world of uranium mining.
Initially, we discussed several potentially ‘tainted’ major mining
projects in key uranium-producing regions in our Uranium Outlook 2007-2008.
Our intent was to help educate many analysts and investors who have
taken far too seriously the many forward-looking news releases and
overly optimistic power point presentations by uranium mining company
executives.
Take for example Citigroup’s Alan Heap. Our Australian colleagues at
FNArena.com often have a few laughs at Mr. Heap’s expense, reporting on
his seemingly misguided analysis of the uranium market. Out of pity, we
sent Mr. Heap a complimentary copy of Investing in the Great Uranium Bull Market, and hoped he would more accurately analyze the commodity which his firm has charged him to accurately report upon.
Although Mr. Heap recently capitulated and upgraded his uranium price
forecast – to US$100/pound for the next three years – in his early July
‘Mutation to Uranium Utopia’ commentary, his long-term analysis is lacking.
Hopefully, uranium miners will skip this next part to avoid uncontrollable chortling.
Mr. Heap wrote, “Barriers to entry for mine production are relatively
low. Exploration and mine development are not particularly complex.” As
a result of these deep thoughts, Mr. Heap forecast a long-term uranium
price of US$25/pound, sometime after 2010.
In an article this past week,
we warned, “Too much water, too little water, politics, greenies,
economics, indigenous tribes, desalination plants, NGOs, camel trails,
regulators and rebels are but a few of the land mines analysts face
when hoping to forecast long-term uranium price peaks.” We also
cautioned, “The safest bet is seemingly against future uranium
production.”
We wrote this because developing uranium
mines can be especially complex in today’s regulatory climate. Having
reviewed hundreds of presentations, filings, prefeasibility and more
advanced studies and other documents, it is a tribute to the
persistence of uranium miners that any uranium mining actually takes place.
Of the world’s large mines, where we anticipated problems this year and
next, we included Rio Tinto’s (NYSE: RTP) Rossing in Namibia. In
a news release this past week, the company announced Rossing’s
production fell about 400 metric tons U3O8 in the second quarter – down
by 29 percent compared to the same period a year ago.
In 2006, Rossing ranked third, behind Cameco’s McArthur River and ERA’s
Ranger, in terms of uranium producing mines. This quarterly production
shortfall represents about 13 percent of the Rossing mine’s production
last year and slightly less than one percent of the world’s total
uranium mined for the year.
Progress is taking place in moving uranium projects forward, but they
are not happening as fast as many analysts believe. Mr. Heap did
highlight in the summary of his report, “Mine supply is not responding
immediately.” No kidding, Mr. Heap.
In this past week’s coverage, we pointed out some of the reasons why
mine supply is not coming online as rapidly as some once believed.
There are more problems ahead, which have come across our radar, and we
are following up on these. Please stay tuned.
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