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Pundits
may have closed the book on the so-called nuclear renaissance, but the story
is far from over. In this exclusive interview with The Energy Report, Gold Stock Trades Editor
Jeb Handwerger names the "sleeping
beauties" quietly proving their worth. A new generation of nuclear
energy must be part of a diversified happy ending, Handwerger
says, but by that time, merger and acquisition activity may have already
rewarded the investors who believed in a brighter future. Read on.
The Energy
Report: Jeb, at the turn of 2012 you were bullish on junior
uranium mining stocks. It's halfway through the year and a lot of these
stocks have still underperformed. Is this the result of continued economic
fallout after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, or perhaps a consequence of the
availability of cheap natural gas?
Jeb Handwerger: We had a really
difficult year for uranium equities in the aftermath of both Fukushima and
the end of QE2. The whole resource sector went, and uranium was hit extra
hard. Cameco Corp. (CCO:TSX;
CCJ:NYSE) and Uranium One Inc. (UUU:TSX)
declined more than 50%.
However, we are
beginning to see a notable improvement in the supply-and-demand fundamentals
with more institutional investor interest in uranium. Year-to-date, Cameco is up close to 21%, making a higher low than in
late 2011 and holding the 200-day moving average. It seems that the bottom we
predicted in uranium miners in late 2011 is still holding. Compare that to
the gold miners' ETF (GDX:NYSE), which is down 17% and to the rare earths ETF
(REMX), which is down about 12%. The uranium ETF is down only 10%. That shows
me that uranium miners are relatively strong in a weak, panic-driven natural
resource market where investors are hoarding cash and treasuries.
TER: So
what's breathing life into the uranium sector now?
JH: In
2011, nuclear energy had a lot of competitors from alternative energy sources
such as solar, wind and natural gas. Since then, the challenges for each of
these sources have become more apparent and the entire energy sector has
undergone an outright selloff. A lot of articles have talked about cheap
natural gas taking the place of nuclear. What the pundits don't say is that natural
gas has plenty of its own issues, ranging from the environmental downsides of
hydraulic fracturing to greenhouse gas emissions. Furthermore, service
stations and natural gas liquefaction plants must be set up along the chain
of supply from mine to consumer. Major costs are involved and there is no
assurance that the price of natural gas will remain at these low levels.
Plus, some parts of the world don't have abundant natural gas. The cost of
liquefying it and shipping it can be extravagant. Japan, for instance, tried
importing natural gas, but eventually gave up and recently reactivated
nuclear plants amid growing fears of power outages affecting industry.
The short
position in nuclear miners has increased even as money is being directed
toward construction of new nuclear power plants globally. The shorts use the
stories of cheap natural gas to depress the uranium sector. This means
uranium miners may even have additional upside because of the large short
position that may soon have to run for cover in the event of a turnaround. We
have seen short covering rallies before in the uranium miners. In the summer
of 2010, after QE2 was announced, the sector experienced major gains. The
same was true in 2007/2008 before the credit crisis. We saw a huge
exponential move. These moves came out of nowhere and were very powerful,
with miners moving up 10–20% a day.
We must not tar
nuclear energy with the broad brush of the entire resource sector malaise.
Construction of new nuclear plants proceeds steadily and the media is not
emphasizing that. The U.S., for the first time in three decades, announced
the approval of plans for nuclear reactors in Georgia and South Carolina.
Even Japan is reactivating nuclear reactors. India and China are moving full
speed ahead, and this alone will require an additional 40 million pounds (40 Mlb) of uranium annually by the end of this decade. We
must remember that the underperformance right now in junior uranium miners is
transient. Nuclear power is here to stay. All energy sources have their own
sets of cost and environmental issues. No one source can fulfill everyone's
needs for the next 30 years. Nuclear will always be part of the long-term
energy mix, and when the market turns, long-term uranium investors have the
potential to experience exponential profits.
TER:
Japan's Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission
published its report on the 2011 accident. It largely blamed the Tokyo
Electric Power Co. operators for administration and operational failures.
What did these findings mean for the future of nuclear power in Japan and
around the world?
JH:
Many countries are still stuck with the old, 40-year-old nuclear reactors,
which is what Fukushima was. A renaissance has since occurred in nuclear
engineering. The next generation of reactors has a fraction of the risks
involved with the old reactors. That is what is being built in China, India
and Russia. Even Saudi Arabia has 16 plants under serious consideration. Four
are in the works in the United States.
TER:
Given that more than 500 new reactors are in some phase of the building
pipeline right now, how attractive are investments in the engineering and contracting
firms that design and build reactors?
JH:
Investors are looking into the companies that build the reactors. The Shaw Group Inc. (SHAW:NYSE) is building the South Carolina
reactors. Babcock & Wilcox Co. (BWC:NYSE) used to build nuclear submarines,
but has also moved into small modular nuclear reactors. Fluor Corp. (FLR:NYSE) and
General Electric Co. (GE:NYSE) are
other names with exposure to nuclear power. One can also look at utilities
like Exelon Corp. (EXC:NYSE) who are major players in nuclear
power generation in the United States.
TER: If
this is where the increased demand for uranium will come from, what about the
supply? The large producers will probably deliver, but will the explorers
eventually benefit as they find the fuel for the future? From an investment
point of view, what is the best way to capitalize on this coming trend? Is it
through the big companies or the juniors?
JH: To
answer that, I think we need to take a look at what happened in 2011. One of
the biggest deals was that Hathor Exploration,
which owned the Roughrider deposit up in the Athabasca Basin, was bought up
for multiples by the giant Rio Tinto Plc
(RIO:NYSE; RIO:ASX; RIO:LSE; RTPPF:OTCPK). Rio Tinto's
stock price did not move nearly as much as Hathor's
price. Hathor received over $11/lb
uranium. If you are looking to leverage the sector, a good way to play it
might be to find a suitable candidate for the major uranium miners, many of
which are trading at one-tenth of that value right now. Cameco
and Rio Tinto have expressed ongoing interest in further acquisitions of
juniors. That is why we are specifically looking at areas that are in
mining-friendly jurisdictions where the majors are going to be looking to
develop economic resources. The undervaluation of quality uranium miners is
creating a possible once-in-a-lifetime buying opportunity.
TER: Do
you see other buying opportunities in the Athabasca Basin?
JH:
Following the Hathor buyout, we expect even more
consolidation in the Athabasca Basin. When a company that large sinks $650
million into an area, we don't think that's the end. It is just the
beginning. Rio Tinto will want to build resources and consolidate its
position. We also think Cameco and possibly BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP:NYSE; BHPLF:OTCPK) is going to
try to build a larger position in the basin. Target candidates include Denison Mines Corp. (DML:TSX; DNN:NYSE.A). It has the
Wheeler River deposit, which is one of the best undeveloped projects in the
basin. UEX Corp. (UEX:TSX) has a large resource base in the basin and is already 22% owned by
Cameco. Fission
Energy Corp. (FIS:TSX.V; FSSIF:OTCQX) has
the J Zone, which is pretty much a continuation of the Roughrider deposit.
Athabasca Uranium Inc. (UAX:TSX.V; ATURF:OTCQX) is an
early-stage company in the area, but it has some great prospects at Keefe
Lake. Athabasca has an interesting team with Dr. Zoltan
Hajnal from the University of Saskatchewan, who is
an expert at using seismic data for uranium exploration. He did this
successfully for Hathor. He is a world-class
seismic expert and he has joined Athabasca's advisory board, along with Kim Goheen, who recently retired as CFO for Cameco. The company also came out with spring drilling
program results that showed some very promising early-stage success using
that seismic data. The second half of 2012/2013 may be interesting.
TER:
Could Athabasca Uranium or any of these be standalone projects, or are they
mainly acquisitions targets?
JH: In
time, there won't be many juniors in the Athabasca Basin. The high-quality
ones will be a part of Rio Tinto or Cameco. The
same thing will happen in the U.S., where we follow three juniors who are
currently very active. Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC:NYSE.A), Ur-Energy Inc. (URE:TSX;
URG:NYSE.A) and Uranerz Energy Corp. (URZ:TSX;
URZ:NYSE.A) are going to be U.S. producers who are part of the
solution to the U.S. supply crisis. Just under 20%
of U.S power comes from nuclear reactors, however more than 95% of the
uranium is imported. The U.S. used to be one of the largest uranium
exporters. Now it produces less than 4 Mlb of
uranium.
As part of a
plan to meet that demand, in the near term Uranerz,
could be a takeover target for Cameco or Uranium
One. It already has a processing agreement with Cameco
and an off-take agreement with Exelon Corp. Uranerz
has an incredible land package right between the two majors in the Powder
River Basin, which has been producing uranium for five decades. The company
employs in-situ mining, which also has many benefits over conventional mining
when it comes to environmental issues and costs.
TER: How
soon might a takeover happen? Is there some catalyst in the wings?
JH: You
just never know when it's going to happen, although I do know it will be
sooner rather than later. I think as we get closer to 2013 there's going to
be more pressure. Over the next 6-18 months a huge amount of consolidation
could come to the industry.
TER: Has
the market already priced in these takeovers?
JH: No,
no, no. Uranerz is trading near three-year lows.
Investors have a chance to get into these companies on historic lows.
In South
America, a company I like is U3O8 Corp. (UWE:TSX.V;
OTCQX:UWEFF) in Colombia, Guyana and Argentina. The main project
is Berlin in Colombia. The company has shown incredible resource growth
during the past year. It has increased the Indicated and Inferred resource
sevenfold, from 7.1 Mlb to 47.6 Mlb,
and it has only documented the three southern kilometers (km) of a 10.5 km
mineralized trend. The Berlin deposit is also home to phosphate and vanadium
and has shown some very positive metallurgical recoveries. U3O8 is rapidly
growing and derisking its resources in South
American countries that are mining friendly. I understand the company will be
completing a PEA in the second half of 2012. The company thinks it can
potentially grow this asset in the near term to 40–50 Mlb uranium.
U308 already
has a strong cash position with institutional support. What is really
interesting is that the phosphate, vanadium and rare earths may pay the way
with the uranium as pure profit. That is what we are looking for in the
second half of the year from this company.
TER:
U308 Corp is trading at $0.33 right now. How much could it go up from there?
JH:
Right now, U3O8 is priced at about $0.77/lb
uranium; Hathor was bought out for $11/lb and Mantra for $10/lb. That is almost a potential
tenfold increase. As the project is derisked in the
second half of the year, the stock should get to at least a comparable value
to some of its current competitors, at over $1/lb.
TER: Are
you looking at any uranium companies in Europe?
JH:
Yes. We have one that we really like in Slovakia called European Uranium Resources Ltd.
(EUU:TSX.V; TGP:FSE).
First of all, it has a great management team. Plus, Europe is the largest
user of nuclear power per capita. There is only one operating uranium mine in
Slovakia at the moment and that is rapidly depleting. European Uranium
Resources is really Europe's next answer for uranium production. The deposit
may be one of the lowest-cost uranium mines in the world. The prefeasibility
study is very impressive from an environmental and economic perspective. The
real momentous catalyst is if the company can sign an off-take agreement with
the Slovakian government, with a surplus going to other EU nations.
AREVA (AREVA:EPA),
the third-largest uranium producer in the world, already took a 10% position
at approximately $0.35 a share and is on the European Uranium board giving
technical expertise. The company is now trading at three-year lows of $0.22
per share. This may be a real undervalued situation in Europe.
Overall, Europe
and the Americas are much better mining pictures than Africa and Australia
right now. Rising resource nationalism in Africa and rising costs in
Australia make these other stories much more attractive.
TER: So,
is the overarching story mergers and acquisitions?
JH: I
think so. There is going to be a dramatic change of landscape in the uranium
sector. As the high-quality juniors come closer to production, they'll be
taken over by the majors. We saw the beginnings of that in 2011 and we will
see it continue. One needs patience and fortitude and the ability to go
against the consensus.
TER:
Thank you for your time and your insights, Jeb.
JH:
Thank you.
Gold Stock
Trades Editor Jeb Handwerger is a stock
analyst and best-selling writer who's syndicated
internationally and known throughout the financial industry for accurate, in
depth and timely analysis of the general markets, particularly as they relate
to the rare earths, precious metals and, nuclear sectors. He studied
engineering and mathematics and received his undergraduate degree from
University of Buffalo and a masters
degree from Nova Southeastern the University in Fort Lauderdale. Teaching
technical analysis to professionals in South Florida for some seven years, Handwerger began a daily newsletter that grew to become
Gold Stock Trades: Mining for Winners in Any Market, with thousands of
readers from more than 40 nations who are interested in the North American
resource markets. Click Here to
subscribe to his free newsletter.
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DISCLOSURE:
1) Peter Byrne of The Energy
Report conducted this interview. He personally and/or his family
own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Energy Report: Fission
Energy Corp, Athabasca Uranium, Uranium Energy Corp., Ur-Energy, Uranerz and U308 Corp. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for services. Interviews
are edited for clarity.
3) Jeb Handwerger: I personally and/or my family
own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Uranerz Energy Corp., Ur-Energy, Denison Mines Inc.,
Athabasca Uranium Inc., European Uranium Resources Ltd. and U3O8 Corp. I
personally and/or my family am paid by the following
companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise for
participating in this interview.
The
Energy Report
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