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schminkie » Comments » BTU

  • Looking for Opportunities in an Irrational Market Place [View article]
    dryship has a substantial investment in ocean oil drilling rigs.
    Jan 11 12:21 pm |Rating: +3 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Coal Generates Global Strength [View article]
    gasification and liquifaction are a ways off profitabilitywise.
    Sep 04 10:22 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Don't Burn That Coal Just Yet [View article]
    about btu - peabody. you forgot to say that they have substantial digs in australia, thermal - heating coal - and particularly for 'steel mill coal.' they has produced disproportionate profits what with the desperate need for all coal in china etc. and the extraordinary shortage/price of the coking -steel - coal.

    i keep reading about the fall of the shares of these companies. i'm just waiting for the wheel of fortuna to circle back because it is vastly a sellers market.

    long btu rio sid.
    Aug 13 09:23 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Peabody Energy: Stellar Results, If Anyone Cares [View article]
    i think the writer of this piece understates the demand. on the other hand i am skeptical about all the prb coal btu has.
    Jul 29 14:08 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • The Brightest Stars in the Commodities Boom, Part Two [View article]
    cool stuff esp the facts on chinese weddings. these are the things that one needs to know.

    wouldn't it be a better idea to buy miners who dig up cobalt than corps that use it? and don't certain major iron and coal miners come up with it almost as a by product or coincidental product 'find' in the course of work?

    i still like met coal. for the time being steel has no broadly used alternative. buy dips. sells spikes. make money. don't be bitter.

    per dry bulk. i keep asking appropriate parties why loading, unloading and transporting - land, sea - coal is so stuck in the past technologically. no answers yet. however the price 'warnings' mentioned by m.a. are appropriate. companies bid and are frequently happy to take what they can get as opposed to what the wall st journal says they should get. do you ever pick up the phone and talk to these guys? time is money.

    ps. congrats on your grammies, m.a.

    Jul 10 10:17 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Recent World Events Are Bullish for Metals [View article]
    i think your coal analysis is not really on the mark. first of all different types of coal have different functions in industry / economy and have different rates of scarcity. everything i see says that as long as steel demand persists the demand for metallurgical coal will exist and that is the scarcest coal and/or the hardest to mine, transport, etc. as long as power generation climbs coal use will climb. notice that several coal producing nations are trying to stop exports with extreme tariffs.

    the quality of coal varies a lot. it seems that some of the largest unmined sources are in the powder river area. this coal is not of high quality and is costly to move, esp abroad.

    i admit some things driving coal up will abate; i refer to the weather damage in australia which was severe. however the demand for coal per steel and per good quality coal for electricity, steam will maintain. demand is in fact a great deal more than supply vis a vis specific as above. large numbers of coal users including in the u.s.a. are scrambling.

    i think a more interesting question is that of an agenda to unify dry bulk shipping, coal, iron ore and steel production within the same company [see SID of braqzil} this begs many interesting angles to study.

    finally eskom. i have never been to s.a. reading several s.a. papers however i get the distinct impression that eskom is the victim of bureaucracy and stone-dense stupidity, shortsightedness and dismal failures in planning. to me it looks as though the chiefs of eskom did not buy coal for the future generation of power fearing looking bad given that high cost of coal would be beyond estimates and would cause a deficit and no doubt criticism from the government, threatening job security at eskom upper management. looks like while coal was rocketing into record costs these guys were in their hot tubs. just a surmise on my part but i feel like i am thinking in the right direction.

    don't be surprised if the government cedes new consessions to foreign mining investors in particular. these are branches of huge multinational corps. perhaps such firms would even spend money to prop up eskom just to be able to function.


    Jun 15 15:13 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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