Goldman Sach's Upgrade Makes Coal Burn Brighter [View article]
Agree. Coal stocks are good places to be in the foreseeable future. Here's some excerpt of an analysis on Alpha Natural Resources (ANR) that I thought was interesting. Can't find the link.
************* begin excerpt on ANR ************** 28 total tons is my total est 2009 based on q4 07 production of 7.5 mil tons
We know for sure that 5 mil steam coal and 3.5 of met are priced at $70 and $100 for 2009 My calculations assume that the remaining 2/3 of production will be priced at: $100 for steam coal $175 for met coal
From ANR company presentation on their website.. cost of sales have been consistently just under $50 a ton for several years... my calcs assume a 10% rise in costs to $54 a ton
5 x 70 + 3.5 x 100 + 11 x 90 + 8.5 x 175 = 350 + 350 + 990 + 1500 = 3.2 billion
3.2 bill / 28 mil tons = $114 average sales price per ton..
Costs at roughly $54/ton.. $60 margin per ton (Im assuming a 10% increase in costs based on CEO expectations)
$60 profit per ton x 28 million tons = 1.68 billion in net income
1.68 billion over 65 million = $25.85 earnings per share minus 33% taxes yield $17.32 eps
$17.32 per share x PE 10 = $173 share price by mid 2009 or so
************* end of excerpt on ANR **************
Goldman Sach's Upgrade Makes Coal Burn Brighter [View article]
Agree. Coal stocks are good places to be in the foreseeable future. Here's some excerpt of an analysis on Alpha Natural Resources (ANR) that I thought was interesting. Can't find the link.
************* begin excerpt on ANR **************
28 total tons is my total est 2009 based on q4 07 production of 7.5 mil tons
We know for sure that 5 mil steam coal and 3.5 of met are priced at $70 and $100 for 2009
My calculations assume that the remaining 2/3 of production will be priced at:
$100 for steam coal
$175 for met coal
From ANR company presentation on their website.. cost of sales have been consistently just under $50 a ton for several years... my calcs assume a 10% rise in costs to $54 a ton
5 x 70 + 3.5 x 100 + 11 x 90 + 8.5 x 175 = 350 + 350 + 990 + 1500 = 3.2 billion
3.2 bill / 28 mil tons = $114 average sales price per ton..
Costs at roughly $54/ton.. $60 margin per ton (Im assuming a 10% increase in costs based on CEO expectations)
$60 profit per ton x 28 million tons = 1.68 billion in net income
1.68 billion over 65 million = $25.85 earnings per share minus 33% taxes yield $17.32 eps
$17.32 per share x PE 10 = $173 share price by mid 2009 or so
************* end of excerpt on ANR **************