4 Reasons Not to Count Out Coal ETFs 2 comments
-
Font Size:
-
Print
- TweetThis
With the global demand for power on the decline, will coal and its related ETFs still continue to perform in the way they have in recent months?
Coal inventories are currently at an astonishing 194 million tons, possibly an all-time high. This massive surplus is being caused by weak demand from power plants, deflation in competitive fuel natural gas, and a decrease in electricity generation for the first half of the year, states Tom Stundza of Purchasing.com. This has caused coal spot prices to decline by more than 50% from the prior year and has kept coal prices depressed.
In addition to weak demand, major coal-producing companies have announced cuts in production by nearly 75 million tons of coal, resulting in an overall production decrease of 12.6%.
The good news:
- Coal is still in high demand in China and India, which will help drive global demand.
- The Waxman-Markey energy bill that the House is expected to vote on, has a cap-and-trade system that will not produce a carbon price high enough to spur deployment of clean-coal technology for a long time.
- If clean-coal can become more cost-effective, the know-how can be exported abroad.
- The bill guarantees that carbon capture and sequestration will play a huge role in America’s energy mix, reports The Washington Post. Companies that sequester their emissions will get 10 years of compensation.
- Market Vectors Coal ETF (KOL): up 49.8% year-to-date
- PowerShares Global Coal Portfolio (PKOL): up 45.8% year-to-date.
Kevin Grewal contributed to this article.
Related Articles
|























This article has 2 comments:
Only the China thesis makes sense.
Carbon capture doesn't work. And, by the way, "clean coal" is the same thing as carbon capture.
Ironically Nat Gas has not rallied, which is the only realistic alternative to coal.
All Pres. Obama has to do is one day make an off hand remark derogatory to coal, and there it goes, Flush, justified or not.
Falling knife indeed.