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Just some thoughts on the various major energy commodities - uranium, crude
oil, natural gas, coal, and sugar/corn. Long-term technical trendlines and
other long-term technical indicators for these commodities are still overall
bullish, and there are some additional fundamental supply and demand considerations
worthy of attention.
First of all, in the event that the US heads into a recession later this year
due to a slowing housing market correlated to slowing consumer spending, which
could likely translate into a slowing demand for energy commodities, the potential
exists for rising energy commodity prices if the decline rate in supply exceeds
the decline rate of slowing demand. This scenario of rising prices even in
the case of a recessionary environment happened during the 1970s. In today's
environment, this scenario could also be likely given the global decline rates
of peak oil and if Asia or other parts of the world continue to grow as non-US
consumer consumption and spending continues to develop worldwide. And this
scenario could likely be the case in today's environment for declining or tight
supply situations for uranium, crude oil, natural gas, and sugar - coal production
has been ramping up after prices doubled recently [1], and corn is not being
used as extensively as sugar in the production of ethanol as yet and has had
recent associated issues relating to bird flu concerns and large overproduction
yields.
Other specific considerations on the energy commodities include the following.
On uranium:
- demand requirements for uranium are not being met by current and projected
future production [2] (see this article for data on this growing imbalance)
- new nuclear fission reactors have been recently announced by many countries
including China - these reactors require uranium as fuel
- some environmentalists now recognize nuclear energy as a relatively cleaner
energy source than other forms of energy

The long-term trendline for uranium commodity prices continues to go higher
in an almost parabolic fashion since 2001, as shown below (courtesy of www.uxc.com);
note that the increase is steady with virtually no correction in price.
Ways of investing in uranium include but are not limited to:
- equities of mining companies having some component of uranium mining
- funds specializing in holding uranium supplies through forward purchase
agreements or other supply arrangements
On crude oil:
- 55 out of the top 65 top oil producing countries have now reached peak
oil production and are now in production decline [3]
- the US reached peak oil production in 1971 but continues to have growing
demand requirements and now imports over 50% of its total crude oil requirements
and up to 70% of its total hydrocarbon requirements [4]
- some of the so-called oil exporting OPEC countries have either peaked in
oil production and/or are now net importers (instead of net exporters) of
oil
- according to the CEO of a prominent oil services giant, the global crude
oil production decline rate is hard to estimate but an overall figure of
8% is not an unreasonable assumption - this translates to a decline in oil
production of about 50% within a decade...what could crude oil prices rise
to in such an environment if a 5% cut in production caused crude oil prices
to triple in the decade of the 1970s? [5]
- the above considerations are in an environment of massive increasing demand
in crude oil from billions of people in Asia and escalating geopolitical
tensions recently in oil producing regions of Nigeria, Venezuela, Iran, and
the Caspian region...
The long-term trendline continues to go higher as shown below (courtesy of www.freecotcharts.com):

On natural gas:
- natural gas continues to be characterized by many of the crude oil considerations
mentioned above; in addition, one big issue with natural gas remains its
difficulty in transport and given security concerns over the establishment
of liquefied natural gas terminals, the situation remains one of regional
supply and demand
The long-term trendline shows higher natural gas commodity prices going higher
since the fall of 2004, and the recent selloff in prices has now reached this
long-term trendline, suggesting a potential buy point

Ways of investing in crude oil and natural gas include but are not limited
to:
- equities of companies in production and exploration of crude oil and/or
gas
- equities of oil/gas servicing companies
- commodity futures or options in crude oil or natural gas
- index-funds focused on or having a component of oil and/or gas
On Coal:
- coal prices have recently doubled and leveled off a bit as production has
ramped up (per the referenced article)
The long-term trendline in coal prices still appears to be higher per below
(per courtesy of http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/coal/page/coalnews/coalmar.html)
since the summer of 2003.

Ways of investing in crude oil and natural gas include but are not limited
to:
- equities of companies in production and exploration of coal
- equities of coal servicing companies
- commodity futures in coal
- index-funds focused on or having a component of coal
On Sugar:
- sugar is increasingly being used by Brazil for making ethanol(used for
ethanol [6]); Brazil is now exporting sugar-based ethanol at about $25 per
barrel to countries in Latin America, Asia, and Europe
- worldwide sugar consumption continues to increase worldwide
Sugar prices have tripled in the last two years; the long-term price trend
appears higher as shown below (courtesy of www.freecotcharts.com ).
However the recent steep run up in sugar prices suggest a correction may be
warranted...this correction may bring prices back in line towards the long-term
trendline per the above...some partial profit taking may be considered.

Corn as mentioned has not risen in a similar sense to these other energy commodities
- however, given recent public discussions, initiatives, and increased awareness
of corn-based ethanol (used for ethanol [7]), the situation for corn could
present itself in a manner similar to sugar. North America currently focuses
on corn in the production of ethanol.
Ways to invest in sugar or corn, sugar-based ethanol, or corn-based ethanol
include but are not limited to:
- equities of companies specializing in sugar-based ethanol or corn-based
ethanol
- equities of agricultural servicing companies
- commodity futures or options in sugar or corn
- index-funds focused on or having a component of sugar, corn and/or ethanol
In addition to the above considerations, it is recommended to begin considering
investments in alternative energy technologies utilizing one or more of these
energy commodities or in their transformation. Some developments in this regard
include but are not limited to:
- coal liquefaction
- coal gasification
- various clean-coal technologies
- methane hydrate
- hybrid nuclear reactors or nuclear fusion energy
- other ethanol based forms - from palm oil, from rapeseed, from plant cellulose
stalks of various plants, from switchgrass
[1] http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,17959237%255E643,00.html
[2] http://www.stockinterview.com/stm-bambrough.html
[3] www.financialsense.com (Financial
Sense Newshour January 2006)
[4] http://www.financialsense.com/transcriptions/2006/0114blake.html
[5] http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net
[6] http://www.bonneuilreport.com/page6.html and
recently http://www.safehaven.com/showarticle.cfm?id=4502
[7] http://www.bonneuilreport.com/page6.html and
recently http://www.safehaven.com/showarticle.cfm?id=4502
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