Euro Traded Flat amid Germany’s Upbeat Services PMI

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The euro was flat versus the US dollar during European session on Wednesday, after a report released showed that Germany’s services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose higher than forecasted in November.

The 17-bloc euro dropped 0.02% lower to $1.3585 against the greenback as of 8:55am GMT; before rising after the release of Germany’s final services PMI rose 55.7 points higher in November, up from the previous reading of 52.9 points seen in October.

The macroeconomic figure of the day will be the second forecast for eurozone’s gross domestic product (GDP). GDP growth is expected to remain unchanged at 0.1%. The report is expected to be released by the Statistical office of the European Union (Eurostat).

Eurozone services PMI

In Spain, the final services PMI increased to 51.5 points in November, rising from the previous reading of 49.6 points seen in October and above analysts forecast of 49.7.

The Italian services Purchasing Managers’ Index dropped to 47.2 points in November from the previously recorded 50.5 in October and lower than analysts forecast of 50.4 points.

In France, the final PMI in services stood at 48.0 in November, dropping from 50.9 seen in the previous month.

Manufacturing PMI

Factory activity in the eurozone’s largest economy showed ongoing improvement in November, rising above the 50-mark threshold for the fifth month in a row, reports from Markit Economics confirmed.

November’s final PMI Index for Germany’s manufacturing sector advanced 52.7 higher, rising above 51.7 points seen in October final reading.

Italy’s manufacturing PMI increased to 51.4 points in November, rising from 50.7 recorded in October and above analysts forecast of 50.8 points.

The French final PMI in the manufacturing sector came in at 48.4 in November and lower than the 49.1 registered in October.

ECB

The European Central Banks (ECB) is expected to announce its benchmark interest rates on Thursday, with predictions of borrowing costs to remain at its current rate of 0.25%, according to analysts.

The preliminary report released by Eurostat on November 29, showed that inflation in the eurozone rose 0.9% higher in November, up from the 0.7% seen in the previous month; marking its lowest rise in 47 months.

 

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The post Euro Traded Flat amid Germany’s Upbeat Services PMI appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

New Zealand Dollar Declines on Weak Australian GDP

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The New Zealand dollar declined during the early Asian trading session on Wednesday, mirroring its Australian counterpart which was dragged lower by the weak Australian gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the third quarter.

The New Zealand kiwi edged 0.61% lower at $0.8191 against the greenback at the time of writing, while the Australian dollar dropped 0.84% against the US dollar to $0.9059 at the same time.

The Australian dollar dropped to its lowest level since October 2008 against the kiwi, trading at $1.104 per New Zealand dollar. Building activity increased 1.4% on a quarter-to-quarter basis due to a strong rise of 8.1% in residential building activity, the Statistics New Zealand data confirmed.

Statistics New Zealand also stated that the trend for all building increased in the third quarter; however the growth rate was seen to be at a slow pace.

Australian GDP

Australia’s economy grew at a steady pace but remained at a slow rate in the last quarter as the fall in the private sector investment offset higher exports and consumption.

Australia’s gross domestic product (GDP) advanced 0.6% higher in the three months to September, reports from the Australian Bureau of Statistics confirmed, dropped from the revised second quarter growth of 0.7% and below a forecast of 0.7%.

RBA

The Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, Glenn Stevens maintained the bank’s 2.5% interest rate, according to an official statement released on Tuesday.

According to the statement the private demand out of the mining sector was at a positive condition, but there was still a considerable uncertainty with the outlook.

“The easing in monetary policy that has already occurred since late 2011 has supported interest-sensitive spending and asset values,” Stevens said “The full effects of these decisions are still coming through, and will be for a while yet,” he added.

 

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Bill Williams’ Indicators Analysis 04.12.2013 (USD/CAD, NZD/USD)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for December 4th, 2013

USD/CAD

At H4 chart of USD/CAD, Alligator is moving northwards. Price is forming bullish fractal; AO is in green zone; there might be Squat bar on the MFI. I expect slight breakout of fractals to the upside.

At H1 chart of USD/CAD, Alligator continues moving upwards. Indicators are in green zone; there is Squat bar on the MFI. I expect breakout of fractals to the upside.

NZD/USD

At H4 chart of NZD/USD, Alligator is reversing upwards. Price is forming bullish fractal; indicators are in green zone; there might be Squat bar on the MFI. I expect breakout of fractals to the upside.

At H1 chart of NZD/USD, Alligator is moving northwards. Angulation is open; AO and AC are in grey zone; there is Green bar on the MFI and might be Squat one too. Bearish fractal may reach Alligator’s teeth (red line) and then I expect slight breakout of fractals to the upside.

RoboForex Analytical Department

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

 

 

 

No surprises should be expected from EuCB

Eur/Usd:

Current week is very interesting and eventful. On Monday and Wednesday all participants of Eur/Usd trades will receive report from the Institute for Supply Management with manufacture figures and the report on the US service sector. Data on the US labor market will be published on the last trading day of the week. It is worth mentioning that over the last time,positive news prevails over negative and releases can be just above expectations. FRS will carefully study Friday’s report on labor market in the view of making decisions regarding future cut of the QE3 program.

For European currency, core event of the week will be EuCB meeting scheduled for Thursday, 5th of December. In the end of the recent week, Consumer Price Index was released and  showed growth in the rate of 0.2%. Now we can expect that European regulator will take a time-out in the task of cutting interest rates. In the terms of technical analysis, breakthrough of a strong resistance level 1.3645 will open a path to 1.37.

In general, a flat trend within the range of 1.3450-1.3700 can be expected for the European currency.
euro

Article by freshforex.com

A Telltale Sign of Economic Strength

By WallStreetDaily.com

Apparently, I threw one faithful reader for a loop yesterday when I agreed with Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Shiller’s assessment that the U.S. economy “is still weak and vulnerable.”

Here’s what Rick H. wrote in to say: “Is the always optimistic, super bullish and esteemed Louis Basenese suddenly becoming more pragmatic, perhaps even pessimistic? Say it ain’t so!”

Well, it ain’t so!

A bit of clarification is in order: I agree with Shiller that the U.S. economy is vulnerable, not that it’s weak.

I mean, with so much debt and money printing, there’s a lot that could go wrong with Bernanke’s grand monetary experiment.

Not to mention that politicians still don’t seem to care about holding the economy hostage (again and again) as they hash out their ideological differences.

Both conditions certainly make the economy vulnerable. However, that doesn’t mean we’re on the brink of another collapse or one step away from being put on life support.

To the contrary, there are several bastions of strength that suggest the U.S. economy is becoming less and less vulnerable.

Just ask Nomura’s strategist, Michael Kurtz. In his outlook for 2014, titled “The End of the End of the World,” he notes, “The Global Financial Crisis is over. Not that clocks have simply rewound to 2006, but: The U.S. property market has been recovering for no less than 20 months, the U.S. household balance sheet is largely repaired and the U.S.-China current account imbalance [is now] vastly reduced.”

Rick H., if that’s not enough to convince you, here’s an undeniably optimistic chart just for you…

Consumers Step on the Gas

With the holiday shopping season underway, everyone is laser-focused on consumer spending habits. After all, the consumer accounts for a sizeable 42% of U.S. GDP.

But holiday shopping is a one-off event. It’s dangerous to make sweeping assumptions about the health of the consumer – and, in turn, the economy – based on a brief spurt of activity.

It’s much more instructive to track trends over longer periods of time.

Like automobile and light truck sales, for instance. Why? The answer can be found on any local radio or television ad. As they all say, “If you’ve got a job, you can buy a car.” And if you don’t, well… you can’t.

So car and truck sales provide insights into the health of the labor market. I think we can all agree – a stronger labor market makes for a stronger economy.

As you can see in this chart, auto sales are actually a leading indicator. They keep climbing as more and more people get back to work.

Some will try to discount this connection, arguing that the official unemployment rate, known as U-3 unemployment, conveniently excludes three groups of people. I agree with the knock against U-3 and have said as much before.

Rest assured, though, that this long-term relationship between auto sales and unemployment still holds true if we use the broadest and most inclusive measure – U-6 employment. The reason I used U-3 in the graph is because the data goes back further.

With that being said, let’s get to the most important thing…

Throughout the day yesterday, automakers reported November monthly sales. There’s no way to interpret the data as anything but bullish…

  • Land Rover reported its best November ever.
  • Jaguar’s sales more than doubled year-over-year.
  • Mitsubishi reported 6,071 deliveries, up 62.3% from November 2012’s results.
  • South Korean automaker, Hyundai, reported record sales volume – delivering 56,005 cars.
  • And daily sales volumes in November at Chrysler, Ford and GM were up 7.4%, collectively.

All told, WardsAuto projects that total sales for November will check in at a seasonally adjusted rate close to 16.3 million units.

To put that into perspective, October light auto sales came in at a seasonally adjusted rate of only 15.17 million units. So we’re talking about a sharp acceleration in only one month’s time.

Come Friday morning, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its November jobs report, I suspect that we’ll see a steady improvement, too.

Bottom line: By no means am I predicting boom times ahead for the U.S. economy. But any talk about pervasive weakness is sorely misplaced. In fact, the latest auto sales data points to a strengthening economy, not a deteriorating one.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post A Telltale Sign of Economic Strength appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: A Telltale Sign of Economic Strength

Japanese Candlesticks Analysis 04.12.2013 (EUR/USD, USD/JPY)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for December 4th, 2013

EUR/USD

H4 chart of EUR/USD shows sideways correction, which continued after bearish patterns, Evening Star, Hanging Man, and Tweezers. Closest Window is support level. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

H1 chart of EUR/USD shows bullish tendency, which started after Tweezers pattern. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

USD/JPY

H4 chart of USD/JPY shows correction, which started after Engulfing Bearish pattern. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm descending movement.

H1 chart of USD/JPY shows correction, which is indicated by Harami and Three Black Crows patterns. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm descending movement.

RoboForex Analytical Department

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!

Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

 

 

 

USDCAD’s upward movement extends to 1.0672

USDCAD’s upward movement from 1.0414 extends to as high as 1.0672, the subsequent fall suggest that consolidation of the uptrend is underway. Support is located at the lower line of the rising price channel on 4-hour chart, as long as the channel support holds, the uptrend could be expected to resume, and another rise towards 1.0700 could be expected after consolidation. On the downside, a clear break below the channel support will indicate that the uptrend from 1.0414 had completed at 1.0672 already, then the following downward movement could bring price back to 1.0500 zone.

usdcad

Provided by ForexCycle.com

What Does Our Resources Expert Think About Gold Stocks?

By MoneyMorning.com.au

At what point does a crash stop being a crash and become an opportunity?

That’s the conversation your editor had with Diggers and Drillers resources analyst Jason Stevenson yesterday afternoon.

But we weren’t talking about any old crash.

We were talking about one of the biggest crashes of the past three years.

That’s right, gold and gold stocks.

We wanted to know Jason’s view on whether now was the right time to buy

Let’s look at the evidence.

First, the overall position of commodity prices. This week the Reserve Bank of Australia released the latest Index of Commodity prices. It’s not a pretty picture for mining companies.


Source: Reserve Bank of Australia
Click to enlarge

There’s no doubt the index of commodity prices looks remarkably like the price chart of most asset bubbles.

It has the initial surge, the sell-off, followed by the recovery as investors assume the worst is over, and finally the beginning of the real crash.

If most other asset bubbles are anything to go by, commodity prices could have much further to go. But what about gold and gold stocks? Well, if you think the above chart looks bad, just wait until you see these next charts…

The Big Bubble That Never Quite Happened

We’re sure you remember when the gold price hit US$1,921 in September 2011. It seemed that a rise to US$2,000 and above was inevitable.

We’ll admit that we thought it was inevitable. We thought it could be the big one…gold would soon trade at US$2,000 then US$3,000 and perhaps even US$5,000.

But that never happened. In fact, gold went the other way. This morning it’s trading at US$1,221. As we said at the start of this year, even though we’re still happy to buy gold, the great gold bull market is on hold for now.

How long it will stay on hold is anyone’s guess. All we know is that the worst won’t be over until even the biggest gold market bulls have finally given up. At that point the next phase of the gold bull market will begin.

That could take months, and more likely, years.

But it isn’t just the gold price that has taken a pounding. Below is a chart for the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF [NYSE: GDX] and the Market Vectors Gold Junior Miners ETF [NYSE: GDXJ]:


Source: Google Finance
Click to enlarge

These indices have fallen 66.5% and 78.5% respectively since September 2011.

Over the past year, just when it seemed they couldn’t fall any further, they’ve defied belief and…fallen further. As an optimist on the future and on stock prices, it’s tempting to think that this is the bottom for gold stocks.

But do we have 100% conviction on that? And more importantly, does our resources analyst?

Pit-Bull v the Sober Analyst

We put the question to Jason yesterday.

You’ve got to understand that your editor is like a pit-bull yanking at the leash eager to make the most of the collapse in resources stock prices.

So it’s fortunate that we’ve got a resources analyst like Jason who can take a sober and analytical approach to resource stocks. Like your editor, Jason likes the fundamentals for gold, and he likes the potential for big gains from gold stocks.

What he’s not so keen on is trying – as he put it – ‘to catch a falling knife‘ as some of these gold stocks continue to fall.

Now you may think that as contrarian investors we should plunge in to recommend these stocks. And it’s possible Jason will do that. He’s running the numbers on a bunch of resource stocks right now.

But remember what we’ve said before. Contrarian investing isn’t about doing the opposite of everyone else, it’s about getting into an opportunity just ahead of everyone else. In other words, just before or just as the market changes direction.

Of course, you’ll never get the timing perfectly right as a contrarian investor. Sometimes the market stops falling, but it can take months before it turns higher. That could mean locking up your money for some time while you wait.

Waiting for the ‘No-Brainer’ Day to Buy Gold Stocks

As it stands today gold stocks are super risky. But if you’re a speculator that may be just the kind of risk you’re happy to take. If you’re a more conservative investor, because Jason still sees some risks that gold stocks could fall further, you may want to wait a little longer before taking a punt on gold stocks.

Naturally, that view could change at any point over the days, weeks and months ahead.

One thing’s for sure: the combined value of all gold stocks won’t fall to zero. At some point there will be a clear no-brainer decision to buy gold stocks.

We’ve written in Money Morning previously that we see the resources sector as one of the best places to earn speculative gains in 2014. As the dedicated resources analyst for the investment newsletter Diggers and Drillers Jason Stevenson is excited about the potential as well.

The task now is to find the best stocks on the market, value them, and then make a decision on when to buy. That will be a tall order with over 1,000 resources stocks on the ASX…

But it’s a challenge Jason is prepared to take.

Cheers,
Kris+

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: The ‘Wonder Weld’ That Could Triple Your Money

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

The Federal Reserve Must Inflate

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The Federal Reserve is busy doing everything in its considerable power to get credit (that is, debt) growing again so that we can get back to what it considers to be ‘normal’.

But the problem is that the recent past was not normal. You may have already seen this next chart. It shows total debt in the US as a percent of GDP:


Source: Hoisington Investment Management Company
Click to enlarge

Somewhere right around 1980, things really changed, and debt began climbing far faster than GDP. And that, right there, is the long and the short of why any attempt to continue the behaviour that got us to this point is certain to fail.

It is simply not possible to grow your debts faster than your income forever. However, that’s been the practice since 1980, and current politicians and Federal Reserve officials developed their opinions about ‘how the world works’ during the 33-year period between 1980 and 2013.

Put bluntly, they want to get us back on that same track, and as soon as possible. The reason? Because every major power centre, be that in DC or on Wall Street, tuned their thinking, systems, and sense of entitlement, during that period.

And, frankly, a huge number of financial firms and political careers will melt away if and when that credit expansion finally stops. And stop it will; that’s just a mathematical certainty.

Total Credit Market Debt (TCMD) is a measure of all the various forms of debt in the US. That includes corporate, state, federal, and household borrowing. So student loans are in there, as are auto loans, mortgages, and municipal and federal debt.

It’s pretty much everything debt-related. What it does not include, though, are any unfunded obligations, entitlements, or other types of liabilities. So the Social Security shortfalls are not in there, nor are the underfunded pensions at the state or corporate levels. TCMD is just debt, plain and simple.

As you can see in this next chart, since 1970, TCMD has been growing almost exponentially.


Source: Mises.org
Click to enlarge

That tiny little wiggle happened in 2008–2009, and it apparently nearly brought down the entire global financial system. That little deviation was practically too much all on its own for the markets to handle.

Now debts are climbing again at a quite nice pace. That’s mainly due to the Federal Reserve monetizing US federal debt just to keep things patched together. As an aside, based on this chart, we’d expect the Fed to not end their QE efforts until and unless households and corporations once more engage in robust borrowing. The system apparently needs borrowing to keep growing exponentially, or it risks collapse.

One could ask why credit can’t just keep growing. But there are many reasons to believe that the future will not resemble the past. Let’s start in 1980, when credit growth really took off. This period also happens to be the happy time that the Fed is trying (desperately) to recreate.

Between 1980 and 2013, total credit grew by an astonishing 8 percent per year, compounded. I say ‘astonishing’ because anything growing by 8 percent per year will fully double every 9 years.

So let’s run the math experiment and ask what will happen if the Federal Reserve is successful and total credit grows for the next 30 years at exactly the same rate it did over the prior 30. That’s all. This is nothing fancy, and it is simply the same rate of growth that everybody got accustomed to while they were figuring out ‘how the world works’.

What happens to the current $57 trillion in TCMD as it advances by 8 percent per year for 30 years? It mushrooms into a silly number: $573 trillion. That is, an 8 percent growth paradigm gives us a 10-fold increase in total credit in just 30 years:


Source: Mises.org
Click to enlarge

For perspective, the GDP of the entire globe was just $85 trillion in 2012. Even if we advance global GDP by some hefty number, like 4 percent per year for the next 30 years, under an 8 percent growth regime, US credit would be twice as large as global GDP in 2043.

If that comparison didn’t do it for you, then just ask yourself: Why, exactly, would US corporations, households, and government borrow more than $500 trillion over the next 30 years?

The total mortgage market is currently $10 trillion, so might the plan include developing an additional 50 more US residential real estate markets?

So perhaps the situation moderates a bit, and instead of growing at 8 percent, credit market debt grows at just half that rate. So what happens if credit just grows by 4 percent per year? That gets us to $185 trillion, or another $128 trillion higher than today – a more than 3x increase. Again: for what will we borrow (only) $128 trillion for, over the next 30 years?

When I run these numbers, I am entirely confident that the rate of growth in debt between 1980 and 2013 will not be recreated between 2013 and 2043. But, I’ve been assuming that dollars remain valuable.

If dollars were to lose 90 percent or more of their value (say, perhaps due to our central bank creating too many of them), then it’s entirely possible to achieve any sorts of fantastical numbers one wishes to see.

For the Fed to achieve anything even close to the historical rate of credit growth, the dollar will have to lose a lot of value. This may in fact be the Fed’s grand plan, and it’s entirely about keeping the financial system primed with sufficient new credit to prevent it from imploding.

Chris Martenson
Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Note: This originally appeared at Mises.org

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Why Uranium and Coal Rank High for Energy Return on Energy Invested: Thomas Drolet

Source: Tom Armistead of The Mining Report (12/3/13)

http://www.theenergyreport.com/pub/na/why-uranium-and-coal-rank-high-for-energy-return-on-energy-invested-thomas-drolet

Not all energy options are equally good, says Thomas Drolet, principal of Drolet & Associates Energy Services Inc. Using an “Energy Return on Energy Invested (EROEI)” calculation to decide which energy sources yield the most for the least energy investment, Drolet sees hydroelectricity, natural gas, uranium and coal at the top of the list. Drolet adds that the need for reliable power will keep baseload power fueled by uranium and coal at the center of the world’s electricity systems for many years, but he tips The Mining Report to some technologies looking for investment that can help make coal a more environment-friendly fuel.

The Mining Report: Tom, thanks for joining us today. I’d like to start out with the concept of an “Energy Return on Energy Invested cliff,” which is being debated widely these days.” What is it and what does it mean for the future of mining energy resources?

Thomas Drolet: When you invest money in a new energy system, say, hydroelectric, you may spend $2 billion building a hydroelectric dam, but the device works for hundreds of years. Energy planners and thinkers have created a ratio, an index of the energy return divided by the energy invested in putting that energy system in place. For a hydroelectric plant, the water (the fuel, if you will) is basically free and it flows for literally centuries, yielding a very high ratio. Let’s call it 100 for now. But in generating coal-fired power, there are losses at the station, in the transmission from the coal plant, the distribution transformers and finally, when you use it in your light bulb at home, where there are further losses by heat radiation. All those losses yield a ratio number of somewhere in the area of 20 to 30. At the bottom of the scale is corn-based ethanol, perhaps the worst example that we have today. It takes a lot of energy to grow corn—tractor fuel, fertilizer, shipping of the corn to the ethanol production distilleries and distribution of that ethanol in tanker trucks. Then there’s the loss of energy in the engines in our normal cars and trucks. That ratio may be down below 6.
Source: Thomas Drolet

The more we use of these soft energy forms that don’t return as much energy for the energy invested in the facility, the weaker the energy returns to overall society will be. My fervent plea is for society to continue to look at a wide portfolio of energy fuels and energy-generating techniques that keep from going too far over that cliff edge toward the low return end. We need the hydroelectrics. We need the nuclear power that is up in the 20–30 range. We need the natural gas in the 20–25 range. Yes, we should add the solars and the winds, which are in the 10–20 index range. But, let’s not go too far down. We’re sitting today somewhere around 15–20 as an average ratio return for the energy invested, and society’s working at that level. Let’s not go down below 6. Societal regression and recession inevitably follow once you go over that cliff edge.

TMR: How do you weight coal versus uranium?

TD: Some people say there’s a war on coal in the U.S. and to some degree in Canada and much of our world. Overall, 40% of the world’s electricity is generated by coal. If that war were to start to shut down that 40% of our electricity capacity in a fast-paced, “blitzkrieg-like” fashion, the world would have trouble keeping the lights on, keeping our motors running, keeping our factories going, keeping our steel mills going. I believe coal is still a good investment because it’s a necessary investment to keep our world growth rate positive. We can’t have the world’s power-generating sources, like coal, go down too suddenly, because we have nothing but natural gas to quickly fill the void. Like our own investment portfolios, we should never put all our eggs in one basket.

Uranium and hydroelectricity are baseload power fuels, and these energy sources are the floor that electricity supply sits on. I believe in continuing to generate by both coal and uranium, in addition to a basket of many other fuel sources.

I know that much of society and many of our political leaders have already decided that climate change is real and is totally caused by humankind. I believe that CO2 emissions have an effect, but climate change is not completely caused by humankind. There are several causes, and I believe that the real scientific underpinnings of climate change should remain a worldwide debate until we are sure of all causes and effects. We should not close down our coal stations as quickly as some would have us believe we should. There are so many improvements that can be made to the existing fleet.

TMR: Germany and Japan seem to be cutting back on further development of their nuclear energy grids, and France, South Korea and China are moving ahead. What is the reason for the differential?

TD: It’s a case-by-case answer. In Japan, there’s a tug of war between industry, the government and the general populace—the government and industry desperately want to bring back some or all of the nuclear power stations—and the general populace is pretty much dead set against it. That tug of war will, in my opinion, end up bringing back approximately half of those units over the next five years, but it will be a slow and agonizing process.

In Germany, the political leadership just made a decision to shut down all 17 reactors; they’ve shut down 10 already, and the other seven will be shuttered over the next nine years. I’ve just returned from Germany. I’ve been talking to German business leaders and investors who don’t share the belief that all those stations should be shut down. Germany is by far the leading nation in the world when it comes to renewables, but I see a fear that the grid in Germany is starting to see minor effects on frequency and voltage, which affect some of their major manufacturing businesses. I continue to wonder whether all those stations will actually be shut down in the event of a future change in the German government.

The difference with other countries, like the U.K., France, China, India, the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia, stems from a belief among the political leadership that there is a need for energy diversification. As the fight over coal and fracking comes and goes, some of these other nations are led by political leaders who are looking further ahead and are electing to stay with nuclear power, and in fact building on it.

TMR: The European Union is pushing away from coal, but Poland is clinging to it. Is that going to have a meaningful effect on European energy markets?

TD: Yes. Germany, the leading nation in the world in renewable power, is actually pushing back into coal out of necessity because of its decision on nuclear power. Poland has massive coalfields and is building new coal-fired stations. Other nations in Europe are continuing with coal. The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria are all continuing with coal and building some new stations. It’s a real mixed message out of greater Europe. They do not all speak with one central “EU voice” when it comes to real, on-the-ground decisions.

TMR: Will that mean a bigger market for coal exports from North America?

TD: Yes it will, but given that most of Canada’s coal is in Alberta, B.C. and Saskatchewan, I think the preferential export markets for our coal will be in the Far East. While Japan debates its future nuclear restart schedule, it’s importing liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the Middle East, Indonesia and Australia as fast as it can. It’s also building new coal stations. Europe still has massive coal quantities in Ukraine and Poland, and much more of it in Eastern Europe, so I don’t see exports of Canadian coal going to Europe.

TMR: What do these trends mean for the business of uranium mining globally?

TD: When you subtract the approximately 70 nuclear power reactors either shut down or in the process of being shut down, mostly in Japan and Europe, there are actually about 370 power-producing nuclear reactors in the world today, consuming approximately 160 million pounds/year (160 Mlb/year) of uranium as U3O8. Another 65 reactors are actually being built today in China, in Russia, the U.A.E., Turkey, Finland, the UK and India. Now add what they say they’re planning behind that, and in 40 years there will be another approximately 370 reactors operating worldwide, the same number of reactors as is operating today.

Where is that other 160 Mlb of U3O8 going to come from over the next 40 years? It has to come substantially from new mines in the Athabasca Basin in Canada, from Australia, from parts of Africa and from Utah, Colorado, Nevada and Wyoming in the U.S. It’s going to come from Mongolia and it’s going to come from other mines here and there in the Far East and in Slovakia.

Uranium prices right now are definitely in a bottoming process, but as a result, the uranium mining industry has a chance to get its act together and invest in new exploration and production (E&P). We’ve got time on our side because these new uranium mines, especially in Athabasca, are long-lead items. They’re 10 years from concept and exploration through to production. The in-situ recovery (ISR) projects don’t take as long to get going, so they have a real advantage in filling any early voids in supply that may arise. However, they’re working on much lower concentrations. Overall, I see a very good future for uranium, but we’ve got to use the time to get our act together.

TMR: What are some of the technological advances in nuclear energy that will address the future need?

TD: Standard nuclear reactors being built today are gigantic units. Over the next decade, in my opinion, we’re going to see a shift to smaller units—small modular reactors (SMR)—for good and valid reasons of schedule and because the utilities want them as supply sources that fit their load growth profile better. A few examples are Babcock & Wilcox Co. (BWC:NYSE) and NuScale Power LLC (private) in the United States, which are being funded or potentially funded by the U.S. Department of Energy to bring on these smaller reactors in the early 2020s.
Source: Thomas Drolet

TMR: What about the advanced light water reactors, the third- and fourth-generation reactors? Are they going to be an equally important factor or are the SMRs going to crowd them out?

TD: The newer large reactors are better in so many respects than the earlier generation reactors that we have in the world’s nuclear fleet today. What with thermal siphoning capability, better fuel storage techniques, better cooling backup systems and passive safety features, they are a quantum step forward in safety and reliability. However, as I said before, I think they will be very gradually superseded by the SMRs over the next several decades. Some think that someday the ultimate nuclear reactor system is going to be based on a molten salt reactor (MSR) concept. MSRs are proliferation resistant, have much higher cycle efficiency and can produce copious quantities of heat for various industrial uses. It’s absolutely safe and lets you just dump the mixed coolant and dissolved fuel, in the event of any emergency. It can be built in small, medium or large sizes, but is better made into the small or medium sizes. China, France, India, Norway, Russia and even one company in Canada are working on the very early stages of development for various MSR configurations.

TMR: What will the U.K. reactor agreement do to the U.K.’s energy future, and does it contain features like a price multiplier?

TD: The U.K. thought through a long-term energy plan a couple years ago. The North Sea gas and oil that the country was relying on was starting to diminish, and the U.K. had to consider other options. It looked around at the 19 nuclear plants it already has in use, and considered whether it should continue with nuclear power. For a variety of reasons, it decided it had to go back to some level of nuclear power. I think it was a good decision. It appears, on the surface, to be a very expensive decision in terms of the rate that has been guaranteed by the providers. The French and the Chinese are going to fund most of the investment for the first couple units. But, the rate guarantee spans the lifetime of the reactors. Think what average electricity rates may be in place for other systems in 20 years!

TMR: What about the Canadian agreement not to require European uranium firms to partner with Canadian companies? Is that going to affect the uranium prices?

TD: Yes. I’m glad it happened. I think we’re going to have more investment in Canada, more mines being developed, especially in the Athabasca area. That investment will inevitably lead to quicker production from Athabasca and other Canadian uranium sources that are dotted across the country. I think it will eventually lead to lower prices and more Canadian uranium on the world markets. It’s a long-overdue step.
Source: Thomas Drolet

TMR: What companies do you like in the uranium industry?

TD: In Canada, we’ve got a series of majors working here. We’ve got, of course, Cameco Corp. (CCO:TSX; CCJ:NYSE) and Denison Mines Corp. (DML:TSX; DNN:NYSE.MKT)—good, well managed companies. We’ve got Rio Tinto Plc (RIO:NYSE; RIO:ASX; RIO:LSE; RTPPF:OTCPK), which has come into the Athabasca Basin through the acquisition of Hathor Exploration Ltd. Finally, among the majors we have AREVA SA (AREVA:EPA). I would assume these companies will all continue to expand their positions there as investors and eventual producers and operators of new Canadian mines.

In the junior category, we have a whole slew of new juniors up in the Athabasca Basin. I’m on the advisory boards of a few of these, but I’d like to highlight one of them. Lakeland Resources Inc. (LK:TSX.V) is a very well managed company backed by solid investor groups. The company has what looks like a series of very good properties up on the north rim of the basin that have been explored before. Lakeland may have a very good resource to operate. Of note is Skyharbour Resources Ltd. (SYH:TSX.V)—part of a Syndicate called the Western Athabasca Syndicate with properties in the Patterson Lake South area.

I do like a Canadian company that’s operating outside of Canada, U3O8 Corp. (UWE:TSX; UWEFF:OTCQX). U3O8 Corp. offers a very interesting proposition with potential near-term production from Argentina, backed up by a flagship project in Colombia. The Argentine project would involve the mining of uranium from soft gravels within a couple feet of surface in a supportive jurisdiction that is currently 100% dependent on imported fuel for its growing fleet of nuclear reactors. In addition, U3O8 is negotiating a definitive joint venture–type agreement over exploration concessions owned by the provincial government, on which U3O8 believes there is additional resource potential. This agreement would see U3O8 and the provincial government as equity partners. Development of the Argentine deposit would set the stage to advance the flagship project in Colombia, for which the preliminary economic assessment shows a zero cash cost for uranium, thanks to byproduct revenues.

In the States I do like companies that have been bought up now, like Strathmore. Ur-Energy Inc. (URE:TSX; URG:NYSE.MKT) looks like a pretty good company. Fairly high debt, but it’s now producing. It seems to have its debt issue taken care of better than it was a while ago.

TMR: Is the market stability of Lakeland Resources an issue for you?

TD: It’s down on the bottom these days. But surely the Lakelands of this world will come up as they make real progress. I believe value will be driven, as always, by real results.

TMR: Zimtu Capital Corp. (ZC:TSX.V) has a stake in Lakeland.

TD: Zimtu has an interesting business model in that it has a collection of companies that it has taken various positions in and nurtured, when required, with good people and marketing savvy. Zimtu scours various countries for investments and nurtures a stable of companies. I think the Zimtus of this world are a good thing for juniors to have backing them at early stages.

TMR: What is the role of the Western Athabasca Syndicate you mentioned above, and what’s the role of the companies within it?

TD: Collectivism is a good thing, driven by necessity in the markets of today. I do know syndicate member Skyharbour Resources reasonably well, and that’s a good way to survive in tough times. Not only does the Western Athabasca Syndicate bring different sources of treasury money together so you get more bang for your buck, but in this case, it also brings together different sources of expertise. One syndicate member has particularly good expertise in landholdings and ability to get land. Another is a good investment grabber. The other two are good drillers and explorers. I think each member brings something to the table that makes for a very strong, four-legged table. I like the idea.

TMR: Are there any other uranium companies you’d like to talk about?

TD: There’s one private company I’ll mention. Ualta Energy Ltd. is the best example I can think of in innovation in the uranium mining business today. It’s not publicly listed, but is looking for investment now. It has uranium deposits in southern Alberta in two gigantic swaths, 40 kilometers long, several meters thick, just below Lethbridge north of the U.S. border. The uranium is associated with shells from the former inland sea that used to cover Saskatchewan and Alberta.

Ualta has potentially discovered a source of hundreds of millions of pounds of uranium in these bone fragments through looking at old oil and gas cores that were drilled by earlier resource explorers. Ualta is drilling vertically, turning the bit and drilling horizontally, and then using ISR solutions to dissolve the uranium from the long strike lengths containing uranium-bearing bone fragments. ISR together with horizontal drilling is a very innovative combination of known technologies that can be brought together in a unique deposit like this. I think one of these days we’ll see Ualta coming up the pipe as a very viable new uranium entity in Canada.

TMR: I’d like to go back to coal for just a minute. You touched briefly on the EPA rulings. What about the new technology for combusting coal and restricting the emissions? Is there hope in the new technology for coal?

TD: Yes, and there’s a new company out there that is just getting going with its first project in Indonesia. It’s called MicroCoal Technologies Inc. (MTI:CNSX). The company has developed a method that partially dries coal using microwave energy in a vertical tube. You take the coal off the coal pile, which has a variable amount of moisture in it, and filter the coal through a tube that is surrounded by microwave antenna heads that remove some of the moisture from the coal.

That actually does three things for you: First, it means that the thermal-unit value of the coal that’s actually blown into the boiler for combustion is greater because you’ve removed some of the water, which would take up some of the energy in the boiler if it were still there to combust. Basically, it’s pretreating the coal to be a more efficient source of energy. Second, studies have shown that some of the sulfur and mercury is precipitated out in that process. Finally, the coal ash is less sticky, and adheres less to the baghouses that are the final particulate-removal step for the combusted gases coming out of the coal-fired stations. It’s therefore easier to clean the surfaces of the baghouse.
Source: MicroCoal Inc.

MicroCoal Technologies has its first project underway in Indonesia. Once that is up and running, I see a very good future for that technology at coal-fired stations everywhere that have a reasonable amount of moisture in the coal. MicroCoal’s technology has other potential applications with other utilities in Indonesia, once this small prototype is up and running. I think the company will likely get going on some projects in North America, both Canada and the States, I hope in the near future. It’s also working on projects in Poland.
Source: MicroCoal Inc.

TMR: You cover Coalspur Mines Ltd. (CPT:TSX; CPL:ASX), which has a large property in northern Alberta. Its share price dropped dramatically about a year and a half ago. Is there a good reason to buy it today?

TD: I like the company. Coalspur is a well managed company with a great property at Vista. Its market for thermal coal is the Far East. Japan, China and South Korea are begging for more supply. Coalspur is undergoing an ongoing series of hearings and will likely see a spike in December as it pursues mine permits. I have no doubt Coalspur will succeed. The company has a great technical team that will be augmented by a strong engineering, procurement and construction partner. The difficulties right now involve the down condition of the whole market, the need to bring in the financing and the large number of shares outstanding. I believe Coalspur will work through all the issues with the good people it has. The key is access to financing in a tough market.

TMR: Tapping into deep geo-pressurized reservoirs of hot natural gas-saturated brine that underlies many abandoned oil and gas wells may be a significant new energy source that could result in future baseload electricity production. What firms of interest are involved in this type of venture?

TD: Two or three companies in the United States are looking actively at this particular source of abandoned energy, and I am president and CEO of another, a private company in Canada called Greenwell Renewable Power Corp. (GRPC). There are about three million abandoned oil and gas wells in Canada and the States. About 3% are underlain at depth—12,000–14,000 feet—by gigantic fields of brine. These brines contain dissolved natural gas, and the brines are hot because of the depth—300 degrees Fahrenheit, 180 degrees Celsius.

As oil and gas companies sealed up their wells because they had no more production, a few companies, ours included, started to look at how they could tap into that abandoned, ready-to-use energy source. We found we can take this source of energy, the natural gas and the hot brine, and create electricity using the potential energy in the flowing brine and piping it up to the surface plant. About 20,000 barrels/day (20 Mbbl/d) of brine, at 300 degrees F, containing 75 standard cubic feet of natural gas/barrel of brine can be put through a series of three machines. The first machine is called a kinetic energy engine, which captures the kinetic energy in the flowing steam and produces electricity. It’s our GRPC proprietary new technology. Then we can capture the heat in the brine through a conventional Organic Rankine Cycle engine (ORC), a decades-old technology, and that also produces electricity. Finally, we can then reduce the pressure in this flowing brine stream that’s had the temperature taken way down, capture the dissolved natural gas and then burn it in a standard reciprocating or rotary engine to produce electricity.

We’re working on a project in the south central part of the U.S. that will produce 6-plus MW of electricity out of 20 Mbbl/d of flowing brine. I’m truly excited about the potential because the overall business enterprise is ultimately just putting together a series of small independent power plants dotted all over in these areas of abandoned oil and gas wells. Here we thought we were finished with those abandoned wells! No, we sure aren’t finished. There’s more energy to come.

We’re still doing our final homework. We do have a private placement out to complete the work, but we’re hopeful to have it packaged up and ready to go by the end of this year on our first project. It only takes about nine months to construct the surface power plant and prepare the abandoned wells. Once we get stable performance out of our first project, roughly by the end of next year, we can start our second project, and move on to other projects.

TMR: How would you advise investors in the mining stocks that you deal with? Should they go all out for uranium or for coal or for some other resource?

TD: Easy to say, but do a little bit of a lot of things that make sense, assuming growth in the world will ramp up again. Don’t concentrate all your dollars in one area. Spread it around into areas that you believe your due diligence shows have a good shot looking forward, because we are at a bottom in so many of these resource materials.

I believe coal has a future. I think some of the coal technologies—I’ve just mentioned one—is a particularly good place to look. I think that coal mining companies that operate in the Powder River Basin and the western part of Canada have the best shot. I think copper, tin and zinc will inevitably come back.

On the precious metals side, I will say that as the central banks of the world continue to print money, I have convinced myself that gold and silver and platinum/palladium have a real place in our future. Quantitative easing, as practiced by some many of the major Central Banks, is inevitable. If anything, we’re in a bit of a deflationary situation at the moment, but if the world is to survive, then we’re going to have to somehow inflate and grow out of this, probably by both growth and inflation. Therefore, the precious metals do have a place in your portfolio.

TMR: Thanks. You’ve given us a terrific amount to think about. I appreciate your time.

Thomas Drolet is the principal of Drolet & Associates Energy Services Inc. He has had a 43-year career in many phases of energy—nuclear fission and fusion, coal, natural gas, geothermal and distributed generation, with the attendant necessary expertise in commercial aspects, research and development, engineering, operations and consulting. He earned a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering from Royal Military College of Canada, a Master of Science in nuclear technology/chemical engineering and a DIC from Imperial College, University of London, England. He spent 26 years with North America’s largest nuclear utility, Ontario Hydro, in various nuclear engineering, research and operations functions.

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1) Tom Armistead conducted this interview for The Mining Report and provides services to The Mining Report as an independent contractor. He or his family owns shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.

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