Showing posts with label TM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TM. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Norilsk Nickel's Strategic Moves and Palladium Super Bull

Russia's Norilsk Nickel, the world's single largest nickel producer who is also responsible for 45% of the world's palladium mine production, made two big strategic moves, one of which escaped everyone's attention except for mine, and another one caused every one's attention but still caught me by a big surprise.

The surprise move is that Norilsk Nickel actually meant it when they said early in the year that they were going to sell their stake in Stillwater Mining (SWC), the only US based palladium and platinum mine, an extremely important strategic asset that Norilsk Nickel acquired in 2004, after going through the trouble of getting two superpower presidents involved in the negotiation, among other things. I could not believe Norilsk Nickel will sell their SWC stake, because Norilsk Nickel and SWC combined gives them the monopoly power of controling more than half of the world's palladium supply. But they did just sell their SWC stake. They acquired their SWC stake for US$100M cash and 877K ounces of palladium, valued at today's market value, their investment did not bring them much profit after all.

What made the Russians change their strategic mind regarding palladium, at a time when palladium price looks spiralling higher by the day? They no longer consider themselves a key palladium supplier to the world in the future?

The Russian riddle is solved when I noticed another less noticed, but much more significant strategic move made by Norilsk Nickel. The story goes back to 2007 when Norilsk Nickel outbid Xstrata to acquire LionOre in an all cash offer worth more than US$6.5B. At the time analysts could not understand why Norilsk Nickel paid such high price for a mining company of limited mineral reserves. The answer became clear only recently, long after the LionOre acquisition, in a Bloomberg news story:

Norilsk Nickel Plans $20 Billion Program to Boost Arctic Output


New Technology

“We’re considering switching from pyro-metallurgy to hydro-metallurgy based on Activox technology,” Muravyov said. Within a year, the company will test whether the technology, which Norilsk bought in 2007 as part of its $6.5 billion LionOre acquisition, will be suitable for Arctic ores. Activox uses chemicals to dissolve nickel from concentrate and then produce the pure metal.

“The cost of applying Activox in Norilsk still needs to be evaluated,” Muravyov said. Installing the technology at all of Norilsk Nickel’s facilities, at a cost of as much as $10 billion, would allow the company to “remove all ecological problems and cut electricity and gas consumption,” he said.

I suddenly had an eureka moment: The Activox Process, originally owned by LionOre, was the real reason for Norilsk acquisition. Norilsk Nickel mine, being one of the top ten most polluted places on earth due to sulphur dioxide and heavy metal emission from the smelters, and facing deteriorating nickel ore grade in coming years, desperately needs this new chemicals based metal producing technology that cuts pollution and production cost drastically.

Except for one catch. Platinum and palladium are very stable and extremely chemical inert metals. Therefore unlike nickel and copper which are easily dis-solved, these two precious metals are virtually impossible to be leached from the mineral ores, using any chemical solution. A demonstration chart of the Activox Process confirms my intuition. The lower left corner of the flow chart indicates that the leach residue, containing the precious metals, are either simply disposed, or be send to alternative precious metal recovery process.

After base metals are extracted, the leach residue would contain virtually all of the original material from the mineral ores: rocks, sands, dirts grinded into fine powder, and wet with all the nasty chemicals mixed in during leaching. It probably contains no more than a few part per million precious metal content. Once again those precious metals: palladium and platinum, are chemically inert and can not be extracted efficiently using any chemical solution. The only way to process them is to use high temperature smelters, which bring back all the air pollution problem and high energy cost, problems that Norilsk wanted to solve in the first place, moving away from smelter based pyrometallurgy towards Activox Process based hydrometallurgy.

The unescapable conclusion is that Norilsk Nickel will become just a low cost nickel and copper producer, and will cease to produce palladium and platinum as byproducts, once they adopt the Activox Process!!! This is true unless palladium and platinum prices are driven to such high levels that it makes economical sense to try to recover the trace amount of precious metals contained in the leach residue despite of the high processing cost!

A technical paper discussing the Activox Process running at the Norilsk Nickel owned Tati plant in Botzwana, written by experts of that plant, confirms my conclusion. The 16 pages technical paper contains not a single word mentioning of either palladium or platinum:

Solvent extraction design consideration for the Tati Activox® plant

This shocking development is very bullish for palladium and is a very good news to fellow palladium investors. We are talking about 45% of the world's supply of palladium removed when Norilsk ceases to produce byproduct PGM metals. Of course, I do not expect this paradigm shift to occur overnight. But shouldn't it be time that precious metal investors leverage the opportunity to hoard the palladium metal and ride the palladium super bull up to the moon, and mean while industry users like GM (GM), FORD (F) and TOYOTA (TM) need to start panic now and build their strategic palladium inventories before it is too late. If 4% of shortage was enough to drive rhodium price from $300-ish to $11000 per ounce, I don't know how high palladium price can go to if we have more than 50% shortage in the global supply!!!

Maybe, just maybe, the recent remarkable surge of palladium price indicates that some investors out there have already figured out what the Activox Process means to Norilsk Nickel and to global palladium supply, and are already quietly loading up while keeping their lips sealed.

Full disclosure: The author has studied global palladium market for a few years and is heavily invested in physical palladium metal, as well as in stocks of the world's only primary palladium mining companies: SWC and PAL. The author has no position in Norilsk Nickel (NILSY.PK).

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Eco Emissions - Great Innovation and Huge Demand Potential for Platinum Group Metals

There are eureka moments when you slap on your thighes and ask yourself: "Why haven't I thought about THAT!" The time when I first learned about Eco Emissions is one such moment.

But let me first remind people on the on-going and ever worsening Gulf Oil Spill caused by British Petroleum (BP). Many predicts that the disaster is so bad that a BP bankruptcy is a certainty. That includes Matthew Simmons, author of Twilight in the Desert, who calls for a BP demise in a month. I have high respect for Matthew Simmons but I believe he owe an appology to the world for getting his math wrong, by orders of magnitude. I believe that the fate of BP is now a political issue with Peak Oil implication which goes far beyond the mere fate of one big company. If death of BP means the death of the deep water oil drilling industry, there may be political will to save BP after all. But I will not touch BP either way at this moment as there are too many uncertainties. I will discuss when is best time to buy BP in another article.

The real story: Fossil fuels are bad pollutants, both BEFORE and AFTER they are burned. Before the oil is burned, they could pollute the ocean and kill birds. After the oil is burned, carbon dioxide and sulphur dioxide is emitted to pollute the air and destroy rain forests. But if oil is only partially burned, the pollution is way much worse: it results in emissions containing carbon monoxide, a toxic gas which is several hundred times worse than carbon dioxide in its greenhouse effect; and various nitrogen oxides which kills infants and senior citizens; and worse, particulate matters which are cancer agents which causes millions of deaths per year. The world collectively generates a thousand BP oil spill environmental disaster per year by producing and burning fossil fuels, accumulatively killed many times more people than was killed in WW II.

Incomplete burning of fuel is a big problem, it reduces fuel efficiency and creates air pollution. Scientists have worked relentlessly to solve the problem. The biggest progress of ourse is the global adaption of catalytic converters on automobiles. Using PGM metals, platinum, palladium and rhodium, as catalyst metals in catalytic converters, auto makers like FORD (F), GM (GMGMQ.PK), and TOYOTA (TM) are the largest industry users of PGM. What occurs in catalytic converters is basically after-burning: the incompletely burned fuel is once more burned more thoroughly in the catalytic converters, hence it cuts the pollutant emissions.

But catalytic converters do not solved all problems: They do not improve the fuel burning within the combustion chamber and hence do not improve fuel efficiency. More over, ocean traveling ships are currently not required to be equipped with catalytic converters, although there are pending new regulations which may finally impose such requirements on ships and also on gasoline-operated lawn machines.

This is going to change big time, thanks to a startup company called Eco Emissions Systems, founded only in 2008. The idea is simple: just directly introduce the catalyst in the combustion chambers of diesel engines! Doing so makes the fuel burn more thorough and hence improves engine efficiency. It also means less pollutants are emitted into the air. The technology is already there: platinum metal can be use to make nano-solutions containing tiny particles of the metal. The liquid can be turned into moist and injected into the diesel engine combustion chamber through the air intake. The catalyst contained in the moist then meets the fuel and promote the thorough burning, resulting in great savings of fuel cost. A simple idea worth billions of dollars.

At roughly 10% or more fuel savings, a typical dry bulk ship could save $1M per year just in fuel cost. For a shipping company like DRYS, EXM or EGLE, applying the technology on a fleet of 40 ships means a saving of $40M per year. That is a huge boost of their financial bottom line.

Too bad I did not come up with the idea early enough: Eco Emissions Systems already patented the idea globally and they stand to rip huge profit from the patent. Their stock symbol is ECMZ.PK or ECMB.OB. They are already well into business as their systems are being tested on a Holland America cruise ship, before being expanded to the whole fleet. I can see Royal Caribbean Cruises (RCL) and Carnival Corp (CCL) expressing interest soon. According to their web site, the company already has more than $132M documented product demands and that was in 2009, a mere one year after the founding of the company. I can see they grow much bigger! Who would not like the idea of saving cost?!

I would like to come up another novel idea which might be worth billions of dollars as well, but instead of patenting it I would give it out for free to big oil companies like BP, XOM and CVX: Why not simply add the platinum containing nano-solution to the diesel fuel itself, and hence achieve the same fuel efficiency improvements, without the need to retro-fit existing diesel engines to modify the air intake system? This way, their diesel fuel products will be more competitive. But then I guess the big oil may not like the idea: they want consumers to pay higher prices for oil and burn more fuels, not less. But if an idea can save consumers money, it will catch on like wild fire, regardless whether big oil like it or not.

Where is the investment opportunity here? The Eco Emissions technology, and similar technologies that put PGM catalysts directly into fuel combustion chambers can create huge demand for the PGM metals! Even though only a small amount of platinum is consumed, consider the fact that the world consumes one cubic miles of oil per year while producing no more than a cube of 8 feet worth of platinum annually, this new demand on PGM metals could mean paradigm shift in the global supply/demand picture, sending the prices skyrocketing.

How do you invest in this opportunity? Venture capitalists might want to talk to Eco Emissions Systems and get a good gauge what their growth potential is. For average investors, it's time to hoard physical platinum and palladium, and invest in two physical metal backed ETFs: PPLT and PALL. More leveraged play would be investing in stocks of platinum and palladium mining companies, like South Africa's Anglo Platinum (AGPPY.PK) and Impala Platinum (IMPUY.PK). Some one keeps refering Norilsk Nickel (NILSY.PK) as a palladium play. But even though I keep mentioning Norilsk Nickel as the world's largest palladium producer, they are a nickel play, not a palladium play, as palladium is only their by-product.

Of course, my most favorite PGM play remains Stillwater Mining (SWC) and North American Palladium (PAL). They are closer to home in North America, and they are the world's only primary palladium producers. SWC recently published a market study, A Case For Palladium, which documents how various factors, like the termination of the decades long Russian government palladium stockpile sales, and ongoing South African electricity crisis, could create a ten year bull market in palladium.

More than 95% of my 401K retirement account is invested in SWC and PAL, mostly SWC. I keep hearing people calling me crazy on that. One day they will know it's crazy not to have a big chunk of that stock in your portfoio, knowing the huge potential in palladium. Cold Fusion which uses palladium was considered a crazy idea to begin with, but it's now getting more and more acceptance in the mainstream. Peak Oil is still considered a crazy idea by most, but it is a looming reality right now right this moment. All great investors were called crazy at certain point of their investment career. Warren Buffett was called crazy putting all his eggs in just one busket, purchasing that bankrupt textile mill no one heard about. He was crazy. But the company by the original name which is now known globally is totally out of the textile business and into quite something else. You know the rest of the history of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-A and BRK-B).

Full Disclosure: The author is heavily invested in SWC and PAL and own palladium metal bullion coins. The author also owns shipping stocks mentioned: EXM and EGLE. The author currently has no position in BP or other stocks mentioned and has no connection to Eco Emissions Systems other than learning it from the news.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Unwinding of Currency Swap = Looming US Dollar Crisis!

The Daily Gold blogger Harvey Organ reports that ECB and other Central Banks are terminating the currency swap with the US Federal Reserve Bank as of Feb. 1, 2010. How they are going to unwind the currency swap is something very interesting to watch. It could finally trigger the long expected US dollar crisis: Collapse of the US treasury market and the US dollar itself.

In a currency swap, two central banks print their own currency out of thin air and swap them in a zero interest loan according to the exchange rate. Then after a period of time, they return the loaned currency to each other. For example the FED will loan US dollars to Bank of England (BOE) while BOE loans British Pounds to the FED. Upon the end of currency swap agreement, they unwind the trade by the BOE returning the US dollar, and the FED returning the British Pounds.

The question is how they are going to be able to unwind? The total swap is believed to be as high as US$500B. Some say as high as US$2T. If the central banks merely locked up the cash in a vault, they could easily return the money. But that would defeat the whole purpose of currency swap. Instead of being locked up in a vault, the swapped currency must have been SPENT in some way. Then the question is how do they get the money back if it is already spent, sold out or otherwise given away?

For example I long suspected where did the British get the money to buy US treasuries over recent times? According to latest official data, UK's holdings of US treasuries was up $145.1B in 12 months, while China's holdings went up only $76.4B.

Where did the UK get the money to buy US treasuries? Unlike China which earns US dollar from its trade surplus against the USA, The UK has a huge trade deficit against the USA. It spend US$2 buying US goods for each US$1 it earns selling products to the USA. Where did they get the US dollars to purchase US treasuries? If it was not from trade balance, it must be from the give out by the FED, in the name of currency swap. It cost UK nothing to print British pounds and then exchange for the dollar, just like it costs the FED nothing to print the dollars.

In a sense, FED is secretly buying our own debts through foreign hands, via the currency swap agreements!!!! Now, how is the currency swap going to be unwinded? What magic are they going to pull this time, asn the BOE has already SPEND out the US dollar in buying US treasuries. It does NOT have the money to return to the FED.

Likewise, probably the FED does not have the money to return to BOE either. They must have spent out the British Pounds as well as other foreign currencies, in repeated attempts to sell foreign currency and buy US dollars, to support the dollar, in recent times.

It's going to be fun to watch how the unwinding can be done. If my speculation is right, BOE must sell its holding of US treasuries to raise US dollar to unwind the loan, and the FED must also need to sell dollar and buy British Pounds to unwind its loan as well. Both would be fatal blow to the value of US treasury and US dollar.

Time to run to precious metals as your financial safe haven. Don't run to euro, as the eurozone is crumbling down. Don't run to Japanese yen. Japan has an even worse debt problem. When Japan collases under its debt it must sell US treasuries to salvage its own currency, which will trigger a domino effect leading to the fall of the dollar. The only thing safe are precious metals and commodities.

But unlike most other precious metal bugs I will not tell you to run to gold, or silver. Every one talks about gold as if it is the only safe haven. When every one talks about one thing, be careful. The world is not in shortage of gold. The world has plenty of gold that could easily lasts a couple thousand years if we do not produce gold any more. Warren Buffet famously critized gold by saying that you dig out the metal from the ground, and then dig another hole to hold up, and have to pay armed guards to watch it, what for?

I am also questioning the wisdom of silver investment. Silver bugs have been calling for silver shortage for years. But I never see any solid data to back up the claim of shortage. If there is no shortage, if a precious metal's price is only supported by investment demand, then there is a problem because anything that is purely supported by investment demand, is by definition a bubble, the investment demand could easily turn into investment supply in an instance.

The only good precious metal investment, must be one which is based on REAL industrial shortage, not by the hypothetical investment demand. If there is an industrial shortage, the price MUST go up regardless what investors believe. And price movement due to real shortage, on the other hand, can create solid and reliable investment demand. Such precious metals will provide the best performance way much better than gold.

The only two precious metals I see solid data to support a supply shortage case, are platinum and palladium. Of course my favorite is PALLADIUM. My most favorite mining stocks are Stllwater Mining (SWC) and North American Palladium (PAL), the only primary palladium producers. Russia's Norilsk Nickel (NILSY.PK) is world's largest palladium but they are mainly a nickel producer. South Africa's Anglo Platinum (AGPPY.PK) and Impala Platinum (IMPUY.PK) produces by-product palladium. Watching Platinum Today on related PGM metals news, and KITCO for price movements.


The parabolic price rally of palladium in the past one year, a performance that is far better than gold, silver and platinum, has vindicated my conviction on a palladium bull case.

Why palladium? FOUR things make palladium extremely bullish:

  • 1. Termination of Russian government palladium stockpile sale, due to stockpile depletion.

  • 2. Looming South African electricity crisis could strike again any time, just like two years ago.

  • 3. Launch of ETF Securities physical palladium fund (PALL) in the US market.

  • 4. Long term potential of palladium used in Cold Fusion, make it a must have strategic metal.


  • I have discussed these points in many of my past articles which I will not repeat. I merely needs to point out that Impala Platinum's PGM Supply Demand data confirms dramatic reduction in Russian palladium supply, as the stockpile sale has ended. There is now a big strictural deficit. Read more detailed discussions on GIM forums.

    I do not have to cover the recent launch of ETFS platinum and palladium funds, either.You can see the powerful price surge of palladium recently, and read what fellow SA contributors have to say:

    Why Gold ETFs Should Be Afraid of Platinum Cousins
    Platinum and Palladium ETFs: Dare They Outshine Gold?
    Platinum, Palladium ETFs Are a Home Run
    Pent-Up Demand Is Behind Platinum Fund's Success
    New ETFs Off to Roaring Start
    Don’t Blame Platinum, Palladium ETFs

      Sadly, even though people have caught attention to platinum and palladium. There has been absolutely NO mentioning of the end of the Russian palladium stockpile sale, and how palladium rallied from $300 to $1100 in 2000 merely because of a FALSE rumor related to the stockpile sale. Nobody mentioned the South African electricity crisis either, even it triggered quite a rally in PGM prices in early 2008, and another South African electricity crisis is looming again in the near future. Please read the background discussions.

      And yet most people don't even know about platinum and palladium. All they know is gold gold gold, silver silver silver.

      Let them have gold. I want to have palladium. And I can not own enough stocks of SWC and PAL. I have been predicting and advocating for a super bullish palladium rally for almost two years. No one paid attention until it really happens.

      But this is just the start! The real fun will begin when auto makers realize what's going on in Russia and South Africa, and start to panic hoard. If it were not for the foolishness of major industrial user like TOYOTA(TM), GM and FORD (F), rhodium would never see gigantic price swings from $300 to $11000. Shouldn't industrial users acquire and keep a plentifully large stockpile when rhodium was at $300, so they do not need to pay $11000 an ounce a few years later? They never learn.


      Full Disclosure: The author is heavily invested in palladium mining stocks SWC and PAL, and own PALL. The author owns silver mining stocks like CDE, SSRI, PAAS but have no interest in ETF funds GLD and SLV, as I do not trust their gold and silver holdings.

      Tuesday, April 14, 2009

      The Russian Checkmate on Platinum and Palladium Is Looming!

      The palladium bull case is getting better by the day, as the Russians are finally going to make their checkmate move, tomorrow:

      Russia to launch platinum, palladium futures trade
      MOSCOW, April 14 (Reuters) - Russia's RTS exchange will launch trading in
      platinum and palladium futures contracts from April 15, adding to existing
      contracts on gold <0#gdrts:> and silver <0#svrts:>, the exchange said on Tuesday.

      The contracts are initially for three and six months and will be settled in cash based on the morning fixing on the London Platinum and Palladium Market, RTS said in a statement.

      This is an interesting move, in light of recent news that ETF Securities physical platinum and palladium funds will be traded in the US market, which I believe is very bullish. A new Russian platinum and palladium futures market is the ultimate Russian Checkmate, and the best thing I can hope for, on top of all bullish factors in palladium. Norilsk Nickel (NILSY.PK) must have played a key role in pushing for the new PGM futures market, as they are the world's largest palladium producer. Let me explain why.

      Granted, the Russian PGM futures contracts will be cash settled so there is no physical metals demand. But precisely because it is a paper market with no physical limit, it can send the metal prices to unimaginable high levels. The Dutch Tulip Mania happened precisely because cash settled paper derivative contracts, instead of physical flowers, were traded.

      A cash-settled PGM futures market has no physical limit and allows more participants, both on the long and short side. Once the longs and shorts established their positions, each side will do their best to move the settlement price to their benefits. As the settlement price is decided by the platinum and palladium spot price, there is huge incentive to manipulate the narrowly traded platinum and palladium spot market for profit.

      When a thinly traded physical metal market is manipulated, more often than not, the long side will win, by cornering the market. The short side has limited quantity of physical metal available to sell to depress the price, while the long side can bid for as many ounces as their cash allows them! It is almost a sure thing the longs will win and the shorts will lose. The longs could only lose if they are too greedy and killed by margin, or if they do not have enough capital to bid and drive up the thinly traded physical metal spot market, or if their counter-parties, the shorts, could not perform and could not pay up on the terms of the contracts.

      How thin is the spot market of platinum and palladium? The annual supply and demand of each of the metals is roughly 7 million ounces, the bulk of which are contracted out between suppliers and users, leaving no more than one million ounces of each metal available to be sold in the spot market in a year, or roughly $1.2B in platinum and $0.23B in palladium, at current prices. Those are pocket changes in today's financial markets where trillion dollars of trades are conducted every day. Any hedge fund could easily corner this market for profits.

      I believe this could be the start of a Russian Checkmate in palladium and platinum. Investors should now position themselves by acquiring any physical platinum and palladium they can find in the market, and by loading up shares of two primary palladium producers, Stillwater Mining (SWC) and North American Palladium (PAL), and maybe some South African PGM producers as well: Anglo Platinum (AAUK), Impala Platinum (IMPUY.PK), Platinum Group Metals (PLG), and Anooraq Resources (ANO).

      I have been watching Colossus Minerals (CSIMF.PK) since it was first pitched by Mr. James West, publisher of Midas Letter. I wasn't totally convinced by James West's pitch so I never bought. But I encourage the readers to do their own DD to decide if it is good.

      Are industry users of PGM metals aware of the looming Russian Checkmate? Auto makers like General Motors (GM), Ford (F) and Toyota (TM) must immediately prepare themselves for the extreme PGM price volatility and possible supply disruption as the Russian PGM futures start trading on April 15, 09. They must purchase and accumulate a strategic stockpile to safeguard their supply, or they will lose, as investors who act promptly will become winners.

      Full Disclosure: The author is heavily invested in SWC and PAL, and own positions in AAUK and ANO. I do not own positions of other stocks mentioned. I own other positions unrelated to discussion in this article, like shipping stocks EXM, EGLE, DRYS, TBSI and GNK; precious metals stocks SSRI, PAAS; and ETFs like USO, UNG and SLV.

      Sunday, January 11, 2009

      Precious Metal Fundamentals - Recent Developments

      We live at a time where information, as well as ENTROPY, spreads at light speed. We must be able to use our own intelligence to discriminate and filter out the noise from the internet, otherwise the internet is nothing but a giant trash can. In this world with little trust left in the system, we can no longer trust the authority of any information source. Mr. Bernard Madoff has proven that higher authorities CAN tell much bigger lies for much longer time. Everything we hear must be scrutinized using facts, logic and reasoning. I spotted an internet fraud and developments so far proved me completely right.

      Recently Mazda repeated its claim of their single-nano catalyst technology which cuts usage of PGM metals in vehicle catalytic converters by up to 70%. Their technology uses smaller PGM particles and a proprietary agglomeration prohibition material. As a PGM metal investor I always pay close attention to such news that may bring change to the PGM supply/demand fundamentals. So how much can we believe in Mazda's claim and how soon do we expect an impact on the PGM metals demand?

      History is the best teacher! In 2002, Daihatsu, announced that they invented a perovskite based Self-Regenerating "Intelligent Catalyst", which dramatically cut PGM metal usage while making the catalytic converters more durable. The idea was pretty good. Frankly the 2002 Daihatsu claim was much more credible than today's Mazda claim. There were independent researches on the perovskite based self-regenerating catalyst at the time. Now six years later, where is Daihatsu's "smart catalyst" today? Has it leads to any reduction in autocatalyst consumption of PGM metal? Not a zilch! If Mazda's idea of reducing metal particle size could work, it would have been tried long ago. My physics background allows me to conclude confidently that the so called single-nano technology CAN NOT work reliably and durably. I do not believe it until they get an EPA approval.

      I am not saying that Daihatsu or Mazda made false claims. But scientific researches and commercial applications are two different worlds. In reality, 99% of research advances never make it into commercial products. Those few that do make it into the commercial world, take a long time to get there, and could still be ultimately rejected by the market, for non-technical reasons. Inventor Thomas Edison got cold water poured over himself when he tried to patent one of his first inventions, a voting machine that can precisely tally up voting results. Why we struggled with hanging chads in 2000? Politicians would rather prefer Diebold.

      Why recent PGM thrifting news only came from small Japanese auto makers like Daihatsu and Mazda, but never from bigger names like Toyota Motor (TM), or Johnson Matthey, who is responsible for 1/3 of the world's autocatalytic converters? Mazda is NOT setting its priorities right. Each catalytic converter contains about 4 to 5 grams of palladium, worth about $24 at today's price. How can they cut corners and sell vehicles with sub-quality parts to customers? There were so many complaints about defective catalytic converters that even EPA had paid attention. You think consumers will let you get away with it?

      Auto makers should boost the palladium content in catalytic converters and make them reliable and durable. Green cars with reliable emission control should then be exempted from the costly ($60+) annual SMOG tests in California and other states. Consumers will welcome the saving of money and hassle as it is worth far more than the extra cost of PGM metals.

      I am convinced that the bullish fundamentals of palladium are even better in 2009. Recently Impala Platinum (IMPUY.PK) updated their estimate of platinum and palladium supply/demand data for 2008. Notice the significant drop of Russian supply? The annual sale of Russian Strategic stockpile palladium, about 1.5M to 2M ounces a year, finally ENDED! Back on June 11, 08, the palladium market knee-jerked when Norilsk Nickel (NILSY.PK) merely suggested the termination of the stockpile palladium sale. Now it really ENDS, how will people react when it becomes widely known? Russia maintains a Defense Strategic Stockpile for its own war time needs, not for selling PGM metals below cost to the world.

      In Impala's estimates, recycling accounts for 1.1M ounces of palladium supply in 2008. CPM Group estimated the recycling as high as 1.6M ounces a year. The good news is this supply will also be removed in 2009. A new catalytic converter contains about 4 grams of palladium. An old one has about 2 grams left. Recycling recovers about 75%, or 1.5 grams each, worth about $9 in palladium at today's price. The PGM recycling is a long complicated and costly process. At today's low price there is simply no incentive for recycling. Stillwater Mining (SWC) is better off dropping the PGM recycling business now and concentrate on mining. This can boost the metal's market price as well as unlock large working capital that was locked up in the recycling materials inventory, and hence enhance the company's balance sheet.

      On recycling, more than 1M ounces of palladium supply are removed. Mining production also dropped significantly. Norilsk Nickel estimated the 2009 palladium production to drop to 2.6M ounces from 3.0M as they now mine the nickel rich and palladium poor minerals to reduce cost, as well as process third party nickel concentrates which contain no palladium. North America Palladium (PAL) shut the mine down earlier, removing another 0.280M ounces supply. South Africa also saw about 10% drop of palladium production, or 0.25M ounces. Stillwater Mining (SWC) also expects reduced production in 2009.

      When you add up all the supply disruptions and halt of Russian stockpile sale, despite of a 5.3% drop in auto catalyst demand, we are looking at an unprecedented palladium deficit in 2009, far bigger than in any other precious metals. And we haven't added in potential investor demands! Who wouldn't want to buy some palladium if you know what's going on!

      The collapse of PGM prices in recent months was NOT due to fundamentals; rather it was due to investment funds as well as big auto makers were forced to liquidate their precious metals holdings to raise cash. Especially General Motors (GM). Auto makers normally keep 6 months of PGM metals supply to weather any supply shocks. When GM struggled for its survival, it had to sell its PGM inventory at cheap prices. Now that GM says it can expect to survive without more government money. It's time for GM to rebuild the inventory in light of the looming shortage.

      Palladium has by far the strongest fundamentals and the best potential for an explosive rally, among all precious metals. I still believe that due to the huge above ground inventory of gold, and the current price above the intrinsic value of production cost, the yellow metal has little room to gain in real value. Gold is a liquid and stable currency, but has no investment value if you are looking for gains.

      I like silver better than gold. Silver is mostly a by-product metal so the supply is price-inelastic. As a safe haven investment, silver is more appealing to Joe-Six-Packs as it is more affordable, while gold is more appealing to rich people due to its high density of value. Most people on the GoldIsMoney forum believe silver is more bullish.

      But none of the silver bugs even presented specific and quantitative data on silver supply and demand so I want to have a closer look. Photography usage of silver, which traditionally accounts for 1/3 of the demand, is now diminished as digital cameras replace analog ones. Sterling silverwares like spoons and goblets are also going into history. Industrial demand saw some increase in recent year but is uncertain as the global economy goes into recession.

      The biggest uncertainty factor is silver jewelry. Silver jewelries are low end cheap jewelries. They are those cheap bling-blings you pick up in a mall or a grocery store when you happen to have a few extra dollars and you just like what you see. So in a sense silver jewelries are discretional spending items and are vulnerable in a slowing economy.

      The high end jewelries made of gold, especially platinum and palladium are different from silver. They are rarer, and are more likely purchased as some special gift rather than casual spending. No one would buy a silver earring or necklace as an engagement gift, for example. Your fiance(e) will expect a diamond ring made of platinum, palladium or white gold. People will not tender their platinum wedding bands to pawn shops for cash, but they are perfectly happy to toss out old silver jewelry pieces.

      Unlike PGM recycling, which is complicated and costly, recycling from scrap silver jewelries is simple and inexpensive as the materials contain high concentration of silver. Silver recycling remained at near constant high level over the past years, regardless of silver price. The PGM metals are different as low PGM prices discourage recycling and reduce the supply.

      I believe silver remains bullish due to investment demand. But due to uncertainties in industry demand, I recently reduced my silver mining stock holdings in SSRI, PAAS and HL, and concentrated more on palladium mining stocks, SWC and PAL. The continued strong rally in Baltic Dry Shipping Index (BDI) shows I made the right call on the shipping sector. So I continue to hold large positions in shipping stocks, like EXM, EGLE, GNK, OCNF and DRYS.

      Full Disclosure: The Author is heavily invested in palladium mining stock SWC and shipping stocks EXM, EGLE, GNK, OCNF and DRYS. I also hold positions in PAL, USO and OMG.

      Friday, November 7, 2008

      Last Chance to Save the United States of America From Collapse

      Congratulations to our President-elect, Mr. Obama. It's fitting that an African American shall take up America's top job to salvage this country from an imminent political, social and economic collapse. Closer ties with Africa, a land blessed with rich natural resources, might provide the best opportunity we desperately need to save America and continue our prosperity!

      Circuit City (CC) bankrupted. General Motors (GM) could be next and Ford (F) is not much better. Mean while we are bailing out AIG (AIG) for the second time (or maybe the third time) in just a few months as it seems to be just another growing black hole. And who will bail out the Federal Reserve Bank or the US Government itself?

      If you read my past articles, you know my favorite precious metals are palladium and platinum. PGM metals used in catalytic converters in vehicles account for half of global demand. Am I concerned about these two precious metal's future prospect?

      I am not concerned at all, not only because PGM metals are precious metals and hence are safe haven investments just like gold and silver, not only because PGM metals have strong demand in emerging new applications especially in alternative energy sectors like fuel cell, hydrogen economy, bio-fuel, and coal-to-liquid, but even within the auto sector, the global demand continue to remain strong fundamentally.

      Enron collapsed a few years ago. Did we stop using electricity at the time? No. Do you stop buying auto insurance if AIG goes out of business? No. More than ten years ago, the last American owned TV manufacturer went out of business or was acquired by a foreign entity. It did NOT stop Americans from watching too much TV today, either.

      The downfall of the US auto industry is a completely separate story from global auto demand, just like a sunset of US based TV manufacturers did not mean a sunset of consumer demand of TVs and other electronics. It simply means that the US auto industry is no longer competitive in the market place against foreign auto makers like Toyota (TM) and Honda (HMC). Businesses go bankrupt even during good economic times, if they can not compete. But I truly feel sad about the current status of the auto industry and other manufacturing infrastructure of this nation.

      From a fundamental point of view, the global auto demand is expanding even as the world enters a period of severe economic recession. IEA recently revised the projection of global oil demand in 2008 and 2009. The lowered projection is 86.5M barrels per day for 2008, which is still 0.5% higher than 2007, and the projection for 2009 is 87.2M barrels a day, yet higher than 2008. Higher oil consumption must mean higher vehicle demand.

      Let's do some simple calculation. One barrel of oil produces roughly 19.5 gallons of gasoline and 9.2 gallons of diesel, totalling about 28 gallons of road vehicle fuel. If global oil demand is 86M barrels a day, that's 880 billion gallons of fuel consumed per year. An average vehicle drives 150,000 miles during its lifespan and consumes fuel at a rate of roughly 20 MPG, so lifetime consumption of fuel is 7500 gallons. So 880 billion gallons per year means the world is wearing off vehicles at a rate of 117 million per year. That is the expectation of global new vehicle demand in the next few years, versus current 70M auto sales per year.

      China just announced a 4 trillion yuan ($586B) stimulus plan to transition her economy to one based on domestic consumption demand rather than on exportation. Chinese demand on commodities, goods and services will be insatiable even as her growth slows down, because China's population is just huge and the per capital consumption is still at a very low level comparing with global average, leaving plenty of room for growth.

      October auto sales in China increased 8.37% over last year. For the first ten months, auto sales were 5.67 million, which is 6.8M annually. There are only 40M passenger cars in China. These numbers are incredibly low considering China's 1.3 billion population. Global average ownership of cars is roughly one car per 6 persons. China has one car per 33 persons. China today consumes 8M barrels of oil a day, still less than half of global average. Using the rough numbers above that correlates to 11 million vehicles wear off per year in China. So China needs 11M new vehicles a year just for replacements, not to mention new ownerships. I will not be surprised if auto sales in China double or triple in the next 5 years.

      The global commodity bull cycle will continue if you understand the impact of China's demand growth. Global consumption of many raw materials can easily exceed available supply by a large margin, even if China's per capital consumption only reach where global averages are!

      No wonder we see ever increasing Chinese influence in Africa. Africa is blessed with some of the world's richest mineral resources, especially South Africa, owning over 90% of the world's PGM metal reserves and virtually every spieces of mineral resources, missing just a few. China is also blessed with mineral riches. China is rich in more than half of all known mineral spieces, especially in rare earth metals and tungsten, antimony, indium, etc. But China doesn't have much base metal reserves. China has zero reserve in PGM metals and very little in cobalt, metals of critical strategic importance. What China doesn't have, Africa has plenty. And what about USA? We are the world's capital of helium. We have plenty of coal. That's about it. America desperately needs to develope good relationships with Africa and South America, if we want to be prosperious in the 21st century.

      Upon his inauguration, President Obama needs to first pay visit to China, second to Africa, and third to Russia. America, now the world's top debt nation, needs to be bailed out by the world's emerging economic power houses. We can not afford to be a superpower any more as we are not self sufficient and can not survive on our own any more. We need a peaceful and co-operative world to help us. President Obama must prevent an Iranian War or World War Three from breaking out, during his term(s). Prosperity comes from peace, not from aggression.

      Now coming back to the US auto industry. Is there still hope in the Big Three, GM, Ford and Chrysler? I think the fundamental demand of autos from US consumers is still there. The current credit crunch means a consumer may not be able to get an auto loan. But it does NOT destroy the auto demand, merely postpones it. If I see a vehicle break down on the roadside, or a vehicle crashed on the highway, I am pretty sure that within less than 24 hours, a certain auto repair shop or a new car dealer will see a new customer come to their doors for business, regardless of how many credit cards the customer may have. The mobility needs can not be eliminated. The question is will the customer come to a Toyota (TM) dealer or a GM one.

      There might still be some hope if GM can adapt itself to meet customer's demand, but I don't think it can do it alone. It needs a government bail out. I am against using tax payer money to bail out private enterprises. But it is in our vital national interest to bail out the US auto industry to preserve jobs and our manufacturing basis. The current GM shareholders must be wiped out. GM must go bankrupt, then the government must immediately come in to help the bankruptcy re-organization and give the auto maker a second life.

      Full Disclosure: The Author is heavily invested in SWC and PAL, two palladium mining companies, as well as in OMG, a cobalt chemical company. The author does not have a position in GM or Ford, and does not intend to buy or short either.

      Tuesday, June 10, 2008

      Investing In a Resource Constrained World Part Five

      In a previous article I touched the topic of Peak Oil and even meantioned the Malthus Theory. The validity of both theories can not be disputed because both are extremely simply and perfectly logical derivatives of mathematics. In the case of Peak Oil, it's been validated by the peaking of individual giant oil fields, and we are just now experiencing the peaking of global oil supply. In the case of Malthus Theory, it has been validated by hundreds of historic events thoughout the human history.

      The purpose of my articles is to talk about investments. But it is necessary to divert away a little bit to talk about the paradigm shift of our society first, before I come back to talk about investment ideas.

      We are experiencing some gigantic paradigm shift as crisis unfold right in front of our eyes, due to natural resource depletion. It is important for individual investors to understand what are those crisis and how do we cope it, in order to survive and prosper in the looming crisis.

      Unlike most Peak Oil advocators who are extremely pessimistic, I am an optimist. I have been pessimistic the first time I learned the Peak Oil concept. But the knowledge about the Malthus Theory actually turned me into an optimist. Humanity have faced many many crises before, each could have wiped out humanity from the surface of the earth, but we survived for millions of years nevertheless. So the looming resource crisis is no different and probably no worse from any of the previous crises humanity has faced.

      Let me explain Malthusian in simple terms. A fish in the ocean, for example, can lay a few million eggs at a time. Each egg, given the proper opportunity, can grow into an adult fish and it can lay a few million eggs of its own. If you multiply a million by a million and keep multiplying, pretty soon you reach an astronomical number that total number of fish can easily fill the whole ocean, or fill up the whole galaxy. Of course that could never happen. Most eggs got eaten by other fish as food, before or after it is hatched. A pessimist would think that what if all one million eggs are eaten and not even one survives to grow up? Then the fish could go extinct pretty fast. That does not happen either. It just so happens that out of 1,000,000 eggs, 999,999 will not survive but in average exactly one will survive to lay eggs, no more and no less. The nature has a way of regulating fish population based on available natural resources like food and habitat. The Malthus Catastrophe happens on a daily basis for fish. But I do not see any fish being pessimistic. They have been living happily for millions of years and just keep laying as many eggs as they can. Life goes on. Shouldn't human society, with our collective intelligence, cope with our own Malthus Catastrophe better than fish?

      The unfolding energy and natural resource crises, in my opinion, is a population crisis. The global population simply exceed what the earth's natural resources can support. If we have one billion people instead of six billion, then we still have plenty of oil and other natural resources left for every one to consume. There are ways to cope with it, peaceful ways, through conscious population control (like the family planning policy in China), and conscious reduction of consumption. We must abandon our American lifestyle of materialism. China, with a population five times that of the USA, and consumes only one third of the oil, and it manages a much robust economy than the American one. So America should be able to survive with much less oil consumption.

      Skyrocketing oil price has already forced many American families to try to adopt and cope with over $4 a gallon gasoline prices. Abandoning driving altogether is impossible for most Americans. But abandoning SUVs and big pickup trucks in favor of smaller, more fuel efficient cars, is what people have been doing. The trend is very clear, sales of SUVs have stalled, but sales of cars are booming. The total auto sale in recent month have dropped some what, only because auto makers have not been able to respond to the demand change fast enough. My opinion is auto sales actually will see a few years of hyper boom, because people will retire SUVs and other inefficient vehicles, well before the useful lifespan of these vehicles. There will be a huge demand on new fuel efficient cars, to replace these SUVs on early retirement.

      My advise to people is SELL your SUVs now, while you can still fetch a decent price for it and use the proceedings to buy a new fuel efficient car. You wait longer and more of these oil guzzlers will show up to flood the used car market, and dent the resale value. You should also buy a Prius, the most fuel efficient car you can buy today. I do not own stocks of Toyota Motors (TM) and I do not think they make a terrible amount of money on Prius. But I am getting 66.6 miles per gallon so I can afford a much higher gasoline price than most people do. Toyota could not produce a lot of Prius due to battery shortage. It costs a lot of nickel metal to produce the hybrid batteries. So buy a Prius while you can still lay your hands on one.

      I can see there will be continued global nickel shortage due to auto makers rapidly ramp up hybrid vehicle production, but also due to ramped up effort to develop deep sea oil resources. You need gigantic oil platforms, called oil rigs, made of millions of tons of stainless steel, which needs nickel. There is a global shortage of oil rigs, so expect stainless steel and nickel demands ramp up just on this account. Check out the phenomenal raise of RIG and you know there is a severe rig shortage. Buy any producer of nickel while they are now cheap thanks to the recent nickel price correction, which now seems to have bottomed. That of course includes my favorite palladium stock, PAL, because nickel is the most important byproduct of PAL. I am also thinking about TGB, which I once owned in 2006. I still like it's low P/E ratio. Was its recent fall due to nickel? If then, it's good reason to buy on the dip, since I see nickel has bottomed in the current round of correction, especially in light of the big blow up in west Australia.

      The solar sector has been hot in recent months but have cooled down some what. Do I consider any solar stocks a good buy here? I have longed and shorted TSL and LDK in the past but I considered them merely trade stocks and I no longer own them. My opinion is Solar PV is NOT the solution of our energy crisis, not silicon based ones, and definitely not the CdTe solar panels that First Solar (FSLR) produces. I suggest that you read an article called Order of Magnitude Morality. The point to make is production of solar PV products are extremely energy intensive. Although it looks like the energy consumed in producing these solar panels will eventually be paid back, due to their long lifespan, it does take up to ten (10) years to payback the energy consumed, fifteen (15) years if you count in everything, including transportation, sales, installation and maintenance. Massive ramp up of solar PV production will consum a great portion of our existing limited energy supply, make the energy shortage that much worse, before the energy contributed by these solar panels can start to make a difference.

      Because of energy payback time as long as 15 years with everything counted, we could NEVER ramp up Solar PV fast enough to replace our energy supply. We don't have the time. For example, if we immediately dedicate 5% of today's global energy supply to solar PV manufacturing, which is a stretch because the world can hardly afford even 1% of spare energy supply now. But let's say 5% is available. By the end of the year, we will have produced enough solar panel to provide 5%/15 = 0.33% of the world's energy needs, reduce our reliance on fossil fuel to 99.67%. The next year we can dedicate 5%+0.33% = 5.33% of the energy to solar PV industry. And by the year end we have another 0.355% available. It would take 11 years for solar PV energy supply to reach 5% of the world's needs, and another 11 years to reach 15% of world's energy supply, and another 11 years to reach 35%. 33 years and we are still only at 35% of the world's energy needs.

      I do not like any of the solar players in the market today. They all rely on government subsidies in order to prosper. I am a believer of free market and I am against all government intervention in the marketplace. Let the free market speak if it is something beneficial for the society. I am disturbed by the fact that why my tax dollars should help to pay for 60% of the cost of solar installation for my neighbor 100 houses down the street? He may think he got a good deal from the tax break. But he will continue to pay tax to help the No. 99 neighbor to install solar panels, and then No. 98, 97 etc. At the end of day whatever tax break he initially enjoyed, he pays back in future taxes. The tax money doesn't come from no where but from our own pockets.

      One exception is ENER, which I meantioned before favorably, and still consider it a favorite long term play due to it's hybrid battery technology and other unique technologies. I consider inventor Standford Ovishinsky the Thomas Eddison of our time. The stock is very volatile so I would recommend buy it on the dips, not on the rallies.

      The solar sector is hyped up by the Wall Street. If you have learned a lesson from the 2000 IT bubble, the lesson is don't follow the hypes! That reminds me of another sector wall street hyped up two years ago, the ethanol sector. The most notable stock in this sector is PEIX. I noticed it in early 2006 and I told folks don't buy it at $40. You will lose your money. Turning the food, corn, into the fuel ethanol, is never a very profitable idea. It is never a solution to the energy crisis. Don't listen to the hype, even if Bush himself hyped ethanol. Today, unfortunately PEIX trades at merely $3 a share. Ethanol price has gone up, but corn price has gone up even more, making PEIX barely profitable. All of a sudden every one now denounces the ethanol industry of consuming all the corn in the world, causing global food crisis and famine and all that.

      I am a big believer of contrarian thinking. I did not buy JRCC and just watched it rally to $16 in early 2007 when there were all the drum beatings. But I rushed in and bought tons of it at $4 when no one wanted to touch it. Today JRCC is well above $46 and there are lots of drum beatings again. My advice to people is sell JRCC now. I am not saying it is the top. Don't try to catch the top, which no one can. There are much better opportunities else where than to squeeze the last few dollars out of JRCC.

      I am tempting to apply some contrarian thinking in PEIX at below $3 now that no one touches it. I do not view it as the savor of the world. My investment goal is not to save the world. The ethanol industry is not the solution to the world's energy crisis. But it has its reason to exist as a legitimate business, satisfying some legitimate needs. When we truly run into oil shortage, and we can turn corn into ethanol to supplement the gasoline supply, I don't see why not! Burning food as fuel for transportation needs is nothing new. The First Emperor of China practiced exactly that 2222 years ago, i.e., burning food as bio fuel for transportation needs in order to bring supplies to his powerful army thousands of miles away. The transportation vehicles he used were driven by machines called horses, they consume food as biofuel in order to obtain the energy to drive the carts. 90% of the food transported is consumed by the humen and horses on the trip, and only 10% reached the destination to supply the army. If the trucks have no diesel fuel, no food can be delivered to your local stores. I would rather prefer to allow part of my food converted to bio fuel to allow the trucks to bring the rest of food to my grocery store. So maybe we should give it some thought if this is the right time to buy some PEIX or other ethanol players. Could PEIX develop alternative feedstock than corn?

      I have a big dream that the success of Cold Fusion, now called low temperature nuclear reactions, may become a reality and we will have solved humanity's energy crisis for good, and saved civilization from catastrophic collapse. I know that from the fundamental point of view of quantum mechanics, which says that particles always have certain possibility to tunnel through energy barriers, cold fusion is NOT impossible. Think of all the hundreds of scientists who have resisted tremendous amount of peer pressures and continued the experimental research of cold fusion for 19 years of best of their times. Do you think they are all clueless crackpotists, or they are really up to something? Recent successful public demo by Yoshiaki Arata, a highly respected physicist in Japan, should bring people renewed hope that cold fusion could become a reality and could be the perfect solution for our energy crisis. Of course if that is the case, palladium price has got to go up a lot higher. Palladium is used to trigger cold fusion reactions. I recommend people to watch the video series War Against Cold Fusion to understand it. Instead of advocating for drilling the ANWR and depleting America's last bit of remaining oil as fast as possible, shouldn't America at least spend a few million dollars to check out the reality of cold fusion, when other countries like Russia, China, Japan, India and Isreal already beat us in the cold fusion research? Shame on the short-sighted politicians who only know ANWR!

      Metals are my favorites. Base metals and precious metals. My all time favorite metal is tellurium, which I discovered when I studied the prospectus of FSLR. I talked about tellurium here and here. On a side note, I can not believe how stupid the street is, I talked about FSLR's RoHS risk back on Nov. 27, 2007. It's been so long since my article was published and no one paid any attention. And now they suddenly discovered the toxicity of cadmium, and speculate that CdTe solar panels could be banned in Europe. I think it is irresponsible market manipulation. Any competent analyst should have read FSLR's prospectus from day one and know about cadmium and RoHS. On this I want to come to FSLR's defence. They have documented the RoHS risk in the prospectus and in annual filings so they have not hidden anything. Recent news fuss made it sounds like FSLR just made an announcement and that a EU ban on CdTe solar panel is suddenly imminent. I think it remains just as speculative today as last year whether Europe will take actions to ban CdTe solar panel or not. I so far have heard nothing that indicates a move to ban is imminent, so it remains just a speculation of a possible event so far. Was it an attempt of the street to lure in some unsuspective fresh shorts, and then run another round of short squeeze? I remain skeptical because I know how this market could be rigged in either directions, with analysts often selectively distribute information they see fit.

      The real risk of FSLR remains how it is going to resolve it's tellurium supply. I talked about it quite a lot and I tried to dig out information. But the FSLR management do insist that they have adequate tellurium supply. Since they have never revealed the actual data on their tellurium supply, we the outsiders can only speculate and discuss opinions, and the fact remains something only FSLR knows, until such time they are willing to come to the public and discuss it. Maybe they need more time for insiders to sell? One thing that I think I am sure is one day my stash of tellurium hoard might be worth its value in gold. I wish there is a tellurium mining stock to buy.

      But really palladium and platinum are the next best thing. They are way much better than gold and silver. I could never bring myself to like gold. I did once buy gold stocks like NG and NXG. Now NG is less than half where I last sold it at $16+. I now frankly think gold is the worst of commodity investment, and gold mining could be worse. Of course as fiat currency depreciate, gold's nominal value in fiat money looks higher. But you still have nothing to gain. Go to Zimbabwe. You can exchange a gold coin for one trillion Zimbabwe Dollars. You feel good being a trillionaire but you are not getting rich.

      Gold is money since ancient time and is still money today. I have a problem with that fact! Money, as an exchange media, must be something that people are willing to take in and equally willing to let go. If people want to hoard it but do not want to let it go, or people are rather happy to give it out and hate to take it in, then it can not be exchanged freely as a trade media. So by the virtue of gold being the money, it is something perceived to have near constant value in real term, people have a neutral sentiment in owning it or dishoarding it. and that is exactly the reality. There are more than 160,000 tons of gold being hoarded by different people and organizations. Any trade of gold, is largely between some hoarders of gold and some other hoarders of gold. The mine supply and jewelry industry demand, in this case, is relatively small in comparison, and does not have a material impact on gold's price. There could never any shortage nor any surplus of gold. I would rather buy silver than gold on the Friedman Theory. On silver have a look at SIL and CDE. Could be good bottom fishing target. While PAAS is now more expensive than silver itself. If you want leveraged gain on silver then buy some SLV. Similarly use USO and UNG to play on the oil and natural gas commodity prices.

      I would like to look at things from the point of view of basic supply and demand relationship. If I want to invest in a commodity, I need to know that it's price must go up. I need to know that it is in demand and that there is a supply shortage. I also need to know how elastic or inelastic that the price change may affect the supply and demand, and bring back the balance. Something that is price elastic, that higher price could easily boost supply or cause people to reduce usage or seek alternatives, will have less room for price gain. On the other hand, if it is something price inelastic, that higher price will neither boost supply, nor persuade industry users to stop using it, or there is simply no alternative or replacement, then it is a commodity that has a lot more room for price to appreciate.

      Palladium and platinum fits such description of commodity that is in short supply, that is in ever increasing demand that is rigid and non-negotiable. The supply is in shortage because the ongoing electricity crisis in South Africa, which greatly impacts production in this main PGM metal supplier of the world. The electricity crisis sees no solution until at least 2012, according to ESKOM and other reports from South Africa. The PGM production disruption is well documented for any one willing to dig out first hand information, instead of relying on second hand guesses. On page 9, table 3, you see the March, 2008 PGM production is down 28% from last March. SA supplies 85% of the world's platinum and 35% of palladium so that's a lot of global supply reduction.

      Curiously, the trade of platinum and palladium so far has not followed the way the fundamentals of supply shortage dictates. Instead they follow gold and silver. Gold up and PGM up. Gold down and PGM down. What does PGM's own industry supply/demand has anything to do with gold or inflation hedge? I guess the metal traders are just slow in digging out useful information. If it takes the street almost two years to dig out something well documented in FSLR's IPO prospectus, it doesn't surprise me at all that the reality of South Africa's electricity crisis hasn't even sink in yet even in the minds of some of the most well known metals analysts, let alone the average investors. But soon the PGM fundamentals have to kick in. Industry users must buy for their consumption. The price movement will wake up investors.

      I know one hedge fund manager, a physics graduate and very successful in his career, manages billion dollars of assets and claims to be a good friend of a briliant trader, Brian Hunter, whose one single mistake killed Amaranth Hedge Fund. I tried to talk to him about palladium and he told me right away he knew palladium, and there were lots of palladium mines in Canada, and he knew many funds who bought the physical metal. He totally believed he knew it but he really didn't. If a bright guy with such a good background could be so clueless, the average wall street investors must be in total darkness, and of course the computers they use to trade is even more clueless about fundamentals of the markets.

      So be patient, spend your time do your own DD. Dig out first hand information and do your own analysis. If you have done so you have beaten the street already. If you further have the determination of sticking to fundamentals and not be swayed by the mindless computer trading of the big funds, then you will win big time at the end of the day. I am sticking to my investment in PAL and SWC since I have done my homework, and checked them many times and could not find any thing wrong with my analysis. And I will patiently wait for the market to wake up to the reality I have discovered long ago. Meanwhile I am taking pride in my legacy of the first individual tellurium investor in the whole world. I made the correct call at the lows of JRCC and ENER, so I know I have the sharp vision. I am not envy about the recent astonishing rally of JRCC and ENER, because I know in time, PAL and SWC will do much better.

      P.S. The author is heavily invested in the stocks of PAL and SWC. I have hoarded physical to speculate on tellurium price appreciation.