The post “Yellow Cake Debut” published on July 10,
2018, described the capital raising effort of one of the newest players in the uranium
supply chain. Yellow Cake leadership
brought the aspiring intermediary to the capital market at a critical time for
uranium producers. The uranium market
has been in an extended trough period since the industry peak in 2007. At that time considerable development had been
undertaken and capacity was beginning to generate sufficient supply to create
stockpiled inventories. As this bloated
condition persisted, in 2011 the nuclear power and its uranium supply chain
were shocked by a Pacific Ocean tsunami that led to a nuclear spill at the
Fukushima Power Plant in Japan.
The world view
of nuclear power shifted seemingly overnight, causing Japan as well Germany and
others to take nuclear power plants offline.
Demand for uranium dried up. These
many years later, the industry is still working through excess inventories. Selling prices for U308 were gutted after the
Fukushima incident and have remained at historic low levels.
As a consequence
company valuations have remained stubbornly stuck near historic lows. As shown in the table below, the average of
the group is a value of 2.03 times book value.
RECENT
|
PRICE/
|
PRICE/
|
PRICE/
|
|||
COMPANY
|
SYM
|
PRICE*
|
SALES
|
CSH FL
|
BK VAL
|
|
Altius
Minerals
|
ALS:
TO
|
$9.82
|
12.36
|
29.84
|
1.71
|
|
Azincourt
Energy Corp.
|
AAZ:
V
|
$0.07
|
na
|
neg
|
1.41
|
|
Berkeley
Energia Ltd.
|
BKY:
L
|
$54.47
|
nm
|
neg
|
nm
|
|
Cameco
Corp.
|
CCJ:
NYSE
|
$10.86
|
2.63
|
6.58
|
1.16
|
|
Energy
Fuels, Inc.
|
UUUU: NYSE
|
$2.32
|
6.41
|
neg
|
1.52
|
|
NexGen
Energy Ltd.
|
NXE:
NYSE
|
$1.93
|
na
|
neg
|
5.16
|
|
Paladin
Energy Ltd.
|
PDN:
ASX
|
$0.13
|
3.85
|
neg
|
na
|
|
Peninsula
Energy Ltd.
|
PEN:
ASX
|
$0.19
|
2.97
|
46.38
|
0.76
|
|
Uranium
Energy Corp.
|
UEC:
NYSE
|
$1.62
|
na
|
neg
|
4.06
|
|
UR-Energy,
Inc.
|
URG:
NYSE
|
$0.68
|
2.32
|
18.26
|
2.19
|
|
Westwater
Resources
|
WWR:
Nasdaq
|
$0.40
|
na
|
neg
|
0.29
|
|
Sector
Average
|
5.09
|
25.27
|
2.03
|
|||
*Price and revenue converted to USD
|
||||||
It may well be
an opportune time for investors to look at the uranium sector. Multiples are near historic lows, providing
investors with good bargains. More
importantly there is some evidence that undervaluation might be near an end,
providing investors with the prospect of near-term price appreciation. Our signal for a shift in the industry cycle
off the trough, is in the production decisions of uranium suppliers. In December 2017, JSC National Atomic Company Kazatomprom,
considered to be among the lowest-cost uranium producers in the world, announced
plans to cut production by 20% or about 11,000 tons over three years beginning
in 2018. Kazatomprom’s announcement was
followed a month later by a similar decision from Cameco (CCJ: NYSE,
CCO: TSX) to suspend
production at its McArthur River mine beginning January 2018.
These are two of
the largest uranium producers in the world.
It is widely expected that with this production taken off-line, the last
of uranium inventories will be burned off by existing demand. Prices are expected to rebound and could even
appreciate to the point where production capacity will be taken back out of
mothballs. It is expected that
production will drive the sector going forward and the days of inventory influence
are coming to an end.
In this new age which uranium producer is better than
the next? Historic profitability could be one way to sort out the best uranium
company. This would give an investor a
company with a known track record for delivering profits when in
production. Alternatively, investors
could choose the companies with a ready production capacity rather than companies
with development projects focused on new deposits. Those companies that had shuttered
established operations will find it easier to jump back into production and
begin delivering profits to the bottom line.
More importantly
the recovery could dramatic, taking the uranium sector to record levels. Global nuclear power reactor requirements are
increasing in the long-term. There are
currently 465 nuclear power reactors in operation around the world. Since Fukushima there has been a shift in the
use of nuclear power from developed countries
- U.S., France, Germany and
Japan -
to Asian countries - China, India.
There are currently 58 nuclear power reactors under construction around
the world, representing a 16% increase in nuclear capacity. There are another 157 reactors in the
planning stages in China, India, South Korea and Russia that are expected to be
operational by 2030. This would add another
42% increase in production capacity.
With global
warming and carbon emissions continuing to make the headlines, nuclear power is
likely to become a larger portion of future energy. Nonetheless, investors may have some time for
due diligence. There are signs the uranium sector is poised
for a recovery, but so far there has been a limited response from investors. Early birds still have a chance to find that special uranium worm.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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