Dundee Capital Markets, V.P. and Senior Mining Analyst David Talbot
worked for nine years as a geologist in the gold exploration industry
in Northern Ontario. David joined Dundee's research department in May
2003, and in the summer of 2007 he took over the role of analyzing the
fast-growing uranium sector. David is a member of the Prospectors &
Developers Association of Canada, the Society of Economic Geologists and
graduated with distinction from the University of Western Ontario, with
an Honors Bachelor of Science degree in geology.
The Energy Report: David, welcome. Let's start with the big picture: What is the general outlook for uranium in 2014?
David Talbot: Thank
you, Tom. The long-term outlook on the uranium market remains the same
at US$65/pound ($65/lb) U3O8. I think a new reality in the near term has
set in. The uranium price has dropped significantly and now appears
stable at levels not seen for almost eight years. We believe much of
this has to do with the lagging Japanese restarts, cash-strapped sellers
impacting the market and probably most important, near-term demand is
lacking. We do expect uranium prices to rise, and relatively quickly
when they do, but for right now, uranium prices will remain leveraged to
the news of the Japanese reactor restarts and a return to term
contracting by utilities.
This thesis underpins our $42/lb price estimate for the year, with
prices to about $48/lb by Q4/14. When restarts might occur remains the
million-dollar question, perhaps starting mid-2014, but the indicators
out of Japan are that the government is committed to bringing its
nuclear fleet back online now as the 17th and 18th reactors have applied
for their restarts. We've had ongoing reviews. They were expected to
take about three to six months, and now we're in month eight. So when
they start isn't quite certain, but they are moving in the right
direction. Their return should actually coincide with the return in
contracting, almost completely absent last year as massive uranium
requirements loom. We're seeing about 180 million pounds (180 Mlb) due,
expected by the 2016–2018 period.
TER: What are the major influences in the uranium market today?
DT:
Supply remains a wild card and probably the most important factor,
hence the focus of our recent comprehensive sector report. Mines are
currently being taken offline, deferred or cancelled altogether. But
long-term fundamentals underpin our belief that a uranium supply deficit
starting in 2016 will likely increase by 2020, at which time we think
we'll see a deficit of about 16 Mlb. So we remain adamant that uranium
supply is threatened by current uranium prices, regardless of the
difficulties of the mining industry and challenges in permitting. This
continues to set the stage for the supply crisis, particularly in light
of dwindling secondary supplies as the Highly-Enriched Uranium (HEU)
Purchase Agreement has come to a close, taking 24 Mlb/year with it.
The
other part of the story is timing. We anticipate Japanese restarts to
be the catalyst to kick-start uranium buying and contracting, but the
lack of deals in 2013 resulted in the elevated uranium requirements that
utilities have mentioned. This means that once the pendulum shifts
back, it will shift quickly, and prices will probably rise at quite a
torrid pace.
TER: Do you expect that 16-Mlb
deficit in 2020 to draw more explorers and producers to the industry, or
just to create more opportunity for the current players?
DT:
Once the 16-Mlb deficit comes closer, we would expect development for
some projects to perhaps expedite on the back of stronger uranium
prices. But most of the new supply we see over the next few years is
from existing producers, mainly expansion of existing projects, Ranger 3
Deeps, for example, or Cigar Lake. We do model some marginal players
coming on-line, like Toro Resources Corp.'s (TRK:TSX.V) Wiluna project, or perhaps with some of Energy Fuels Inc.'s (EFR:TSX; EFRFF:OTCQX; UUUU:NYSE.MKT)
conventional assets in the U.S. But that's a relatively small amount of
production and certainly not enough to close the gap. We do think that
uranium prices are going to be what's required to incentivize investors.
Certainly, there will be a new set of explorers set up as exploration
funding comes in. Just look at the explosion of junior exploration
companies around the Patterson Lake South discovery. So should uranium
prices rise, we would expect investment in the sector and exploration
spending to increase.
TER: What was the mood at the NEI Nuclear Fuel Supply Forum in Washington, D.C., in January?
DT:
Remember that the Nuclear Energy Institute is an American association
that promotes nuclear power to Congress, the White House, state policy
forums and the general public. So its message is typically well scripted
and relatively even-keeled, and delivered nonpromotionally. I think
that feelings were mixed. There were a few uranium-sector participants.
In late January, the sector was flying high, so sentiment was generally
positive. This was also after the Uranium Participation Corp. (U:TSX)
financing, which more than suggests that investors will be coming into
the sector shortly as Uranium Participation is mandated to spend about
85% of its raise on purchasing uranium. So at that time, the stocks were
doing quite well, and the fundamentals of supply and demand are
generally unquestioned by that group of people.
Richard Myers discussed the U.S. nuclear program. He's vice president
of policy development at NEI. His message was similar to the one he
provided last year at the World Nuclear Association Symposium in London.
He started by saying U.S. nuclear power plants are operating well at
about 90% of their capacity factor.
Right now in the U.S., they
are currently shutting five reactors. These are typically older,
smaller, single units that are mostly at risk but, also, larger,
multi-unit sites are struggling under current regulations. Essentially,
electricity prices are being suppressed by state mandates and federal
subsidies. So price signals right now are inadequate to support existing
power plants and investment in new capacity. He suggested that all
electricity should not be treated the same. Nuclear has some very
important attributes that are not being monetized. It's baseload; it
provides grid stability, price stability, clean-air compliance,
technical and fuel diversity and a huge tax base. So failure to address
the importance of nuclear as baseload electricity will compromise
reliability, introduce price volatility and frustrate efforts to
decrease carbon emissions. This, of course, could have a negative impact
on the U.S. uranium requirements, currently in the 45–50-Mlb range.
TER:
Dundee Capital Markets was expecting 87 Mlb new production from 22
uranium operations between 2007 and 2013, but only 17.8 Mlb
materialized. What happened there?
DT: I think
this is the trend in the industry. You'll see these plans to develop
uranium projects and, ultimately, a fraction of that effort ever
materializes. Many of those mines that we expected to come on-line in
2007 never started. In one or two instances, there were technical
issues. The timing of that report also coincided with the global
financial crisis in 2008, so that was certainly one of the main factors.
Capital dried up. But in general, development is becoming much more
expensive, with timelines for projects ranging up to 15 years or more
between discovery and production. That's because of several challenges
that face the uranium space. You have increasing environmental and
regulatory constraints. Public perception has darkened post-Fukushima.
Significant community consultation is now required, and stringent
radiological and groundwater controls are being put in place. Detailed
tailings management plans are required, and comprehensive
decommissioning strategies with upfront financial commitments are now
commonplace.
TER: You mentioned the high costs of development. What role does the Canadian Non-Resident Ownership Policy play in that?
DT:
That policy states that a foreign company cannot own 50% of a uranium
project. This hasn't concerned me too much in the past. It is just a
policy. We have seen some companies get around that policy, not
necessarily grandfathered but just moving toward the expectation that
that policy will not be there when they need to go and get their
licenses. For example, you have AREVA (AREVA:EPA) moving forward its
Kiggavik development project in Nunavut Territory. You have Paladin
Energy Ltd. (PDN:TSX; PDN:ASX) moving forward its big project in
Labrador called Michelin, formerly an asset of Aurora Energy Resources
Inc. More recently, we've seen Rio Tinto Plc (RIO:NYSE; RIO:ASX;
RIO:LSE; RTPPF:OTCPK) come in and take out Hathor Exploration Ltd. for
its Roughrider deposit. So there are foreign companies that are acting
in Canada. They're acting as if this policy will be overturned and,
certainly, the Saskatchewan government would like to have it overturned.
TER:
Is the uranium market heading for a wave of mergers and acquisitions
(M&A) to achieve efficiencies of scale and maybe increase production
capability in a low-price market?
DT: We do
expect further consolidation. Financing is more difficult than ever.
Project timelines are lengthy and costly. With some companies unable to
secure supplies to advance projects, we expect further delays and/or
corporate insolvencies. What often happens is the predator comes in and
takes out its prey at pennies on the dollar relative to its underlying
net asset value (NAV).
Many certainly look at Cameco (CCO:TSX;
CCJ:NYSE) as the top predator. With about 1 billion pounds (1 Blb) in
resources and reserves, it says it doesn't need more pounds in the
ground, but bolting on production makes a lot of sense to us. Cameco has
long said it seeks more production growth in the U.S., and while some
of that's happening through organic growth, newer companies like Uranerz Energy Corp. (URZ:TSX; URZ:NYSE.MKT) and Ur-Energy Inc. (URE:TSX; URG:NYSE.MKT) look exciting to us. You also can't count out Denison Mines Corp.'s (DML:TSX; DNN:NYSE.MKT)
Phoenix project in the Athabasca Basin. Cameco is a partner there, but
that's the world's third highest-grade project at 16% U3O8. There are
about 60 Mlb there right now. Plus, Denison has interest in the McClean
Lake mill, and I know Cameco would probably be interested in having a
feed at the mill that is processing its own Cigar Lake ore.
TER: Energy Fuels is trading around CA$9.50 now, but your target is CA$17. Why is this company so undervalued?
DT:
I think part of it has to do with the general downdraft in equities,
but Energy Fuels, in particular, did have a few events leading into 2014
that put some pressure on the stock. That included a selloff after a
four-month hold on its June 2013 private placement. Strathmore
shareholders were selling post-deal, post-acquisition of Strathmore.
There was also pressure after its 50:1 rollback, as expected. Another
part of this could be just the general unfamiliarity with this name.
This is a company that has a number of small-scale operations with
different incentive price levels, all feeding into the White Mesa mill.
So production is often not year-round, but happens in runs or batches.
This combines with alternate feed material runs.
TER: What are Energy Fuels' strengths and its weaknesses?
DT:
I think Energy Fuels has several strengths that make it one of our top
picks. It is one of our favorite stocks in a low uranium price
environment, as the company is effectively 100% hedged at around $60/lb
uranium. But we also like it for its significant leverage to rising
uranium prices, given its ability to easily turn on its brownfield
projects at minimal cost. Primary standby mines—Pandora, Beaver,
Daneros—all have potential to produce between 200–500 thousand pounds
(200–500 Klb)/year. Canyon could add another 500 Klb/year once it's
developed. So its White Mesa mill has a license capacity of 2,000 tons
per day and can produce about 8 Mlb/year. Costs have also come down
about 18% quarter over quarter to $32/lb.
But there are some
risks, of course, with small, higher-cost conventional mines. The
production profile hinges on milling and trucking costs. So with about
50% of our valuation dedicated to these projects and then 50% delegated
to greenfield projects, development risks must also be taken into
account. Those include permitting, financing, economics, timelines and
so on.
TER: What is the significance of the Patterson Lake South discovery for Fission Uranium Corp. (FCU:TSX.V)?
DT:
We believe the Patterson Lake South discovery is very significant,
probably the largest since Hathor's Roughrider discovery, and we all
know what happened with that one. It sold for $680 million ($680 M) to
Rio Tinto. At that time, it wasn't much bigger than where we think
Patterson Lake South is now. So we do have a Buy on Fission as a result
of its Patterson Lake South project. It's shallow, high grade, thick; it
has all the hallmarks of a great project. Not only that, but it's also
located in the Athabasca Basin, which hosts a supportive government,
excellent infrastructure, capacity at existing mills and a solid
permitting framework.
At Patterson Lake South right now, all six zones lie at or near the
surface, and they are only drill limited at this point; they're not cut
off. We anticipate that several of these zones will probably tie
together, creating a much larger, single deposit. It's still in the
early stages of delineation. Aggressive drilling is underway in
preparation for an initial resource. We speculate we might see that
early next year. Right now, we estimate about 43 Mlb grading 2% uranium.
The grade goes up significantly if we use a higher cutoff grade, but
the pounds in the ground aren't impacted that much. So right now, it's
looking like a great, high-grade uranium deposit.
TER: Does that make Fission Uranium a likely takeout target?
DT:
We've always felt that Fission is a potential takeover target. Given
its grades and shallow depth, Patterson Lake South has potential to
become an economic deposit, capable of supporting not only construction
of a mill. But, also, perhaps even more attractive is that this
near-surface deposit may require relatively smaller upfront capital and
could provide feed to an existing mill and be run at irregular
intervals, essentially delivering high-value material over great
distances when it's necessary. So we believe that Patterson Lake South
and Fission, for that matter, make sense as a target for anybody that
wants to set up shop in what is the underexplored western side of the
Athabasca Basin.
TER: You changed your rating on UEX Corp. (UEX:TSX) very quickly. Why?
DT: We did an about-face on UEX not long after
reducing our target and recommending it as a Neutral due to unexpected
news of a slowdown and competition from fresh discoveries, like
Patterson Lake South. But we now rate UEX as a Buy with an $8 target
price. While we didn't change our discounted cash flow model, the new
CEO, Roger Lemaitre, brings depth to this company that it hasn't seen
before. With his vast industry experience as Cameco's exploration
director and the fact that UEX has almost $9M in cash, I think he's
going to turn the company's attention to new discoveries and potential
M&A activity. His familiarity with Cameco is certainly an asset. But
I think we still need to see some execution here by UEX to leverage its
attributable 85 Mlb in resource plus its past exploration success into
something new and accretive for shareholders. Meanwhile, Shea Creek is
open in multiple directions. It does have a current resource of about 96
Mlb. As UEX decides to take its direction, I think it will remain
focused on the Athabasca Basin. I think it will likely seek synergistic
projects.
TER: Are you excited about any other uranium companies?
DT:
There are two others. Ur-Energy—we have a Buy on this one. It has a
$2.20 target price. Ur-Energy is our top pick in the sector right now.
This is a U.S.-based, Wyoming-based, in-situ recovery producer. It
officially entered production last year. Early indications are the well
fields are performing exceptionally well. It produced 135 Klb last year.
We expect about 1 Mlb this year, 1.2 Mlb next. Flow rates and front end
are operating above expectations. The back end elution and
precipitation circuits are performing as designed. Notably, head grades
have been significantly above expectation, leading to less header houses
and volumes that are required, pointing to lower costs. Right now, the
company sells about 40% of its production forward at about $60/lb
between 2014 and 2016, so it makes Ur-Energy less sensitive to spot
price fluctuations than some of its peers. It's actually getting prices
much, much higher than spot. It was in the $63/lb range for last
quarter. Shirley Basin is another project it just purchased. That could
be up next. It could come online by 2017, ramping up to 1 Mlb/year
within a couple years there. Ur-Energy trades at a discount to its
producer peers.
Another company here: We recently initiated full coverage on NexGen Energy Ltd. (NXE:TSX.V).
We're recommending it as a Buy, no target price. The company has two
high-quality assets in the right locations. Rook I is adjacent to
Fission Uranium's Patterson Lake South discovery. NexGen could
potentially have the best claims in the area aside from Fission itself.
The second project is the Radio property. That's located on the
Roughrider Midwest trend on the eastern side of the Athabasca Basin.
That project is within 10 kilometers of 150 Mlb of uranium resources.
First drilling at Rook I tested three conductors that lie directly east
of Fission's Patterson Lake South discovery in the Athabasca. With 12
holes, it hit the right graphitic basement rocks, shallow structures and
modest alteration, and elevated uranium mineralization was confirmed in
three holes and somewhat significant in one of those. Follow-up
drilling has made a potential uranium discovery (pending assays) that is
not only a game-changer for NexGen, but for the western side of the
Athabasca Basin. What's more impressive is that it was the first hole
drilled into Target C, now called Arrow, that hit.
Further
drilling is required and NexGen has suggested that it will commit more
resources to follow up. The Radio project is essentially on hold with
earn-in commitments delayed, allowing the company to focus on the Rook
project. NexGen has experienced management and quite a deep technical
team, including ex-Hathor and Rio Tinto geologists who really know the
region.
TER: Do you have any parting thoughts to share on the uranium market generally?
DT:
I think it all hinges on supply. Demand is relatively consistent. It's
predictable, Japan restarts notwithstanding. But I believe it's the
strengthening fundamentals based on supply that really drive this. Mines
are closing. We've seen Zarechnoye close, La Sal, Beaver, Pandora,
Daneros. Projects are being deferred, big projects including Olympic
Dam, Trekkopje, Imouraren, Cameco's Double U, plus no more Kazakhstan
production. The HEU agreement is gone, and we're getting unexpected
disruptions, such as Ranger, Rossing, Cigar Lake and assets in Niger. So
I think investors should focus on that. When uranium prices come back, I
think they're going to come back quite quickly, not because Japan is
going to come back seeking supply but because the other 90% of the world
hasn't been buying like it should.
TER: Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Read what other experts are saying about:
Want to read more Energy Report interviews like this? Sign up
for our free e-newsletter, and you'll learn when new articles have been
published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts
and commentators, visit our Interviews page.
DISCLOSURE:
DISCLOSURE:
1) Tom Armistead conducted this interview for The Energy Report and provides services to The Energy Report as an independent contractor. He or his family owns shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Energy Report: Energy Fuels Inc., Fission Uranium Corp., UEX Corp., Uranerz Energy Corp. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.
3) David Talbot beneficially owns, has a financial interest in, or exercises investment discretion or control over, companies mentioned in this interview: Fission Uranium Corp. Dundee Capital Markets and its affiliates, in the aggregate, beneficially own 1% or more of a class of equity securities issued by, mentioned in this interview: Energy Fuels Inc. Dundee Capital Markets has provided investment banking services to companies mentioned in this interview in the past 12 months: Energy Fuels Inc., Uranerz Energy Corp., Denison Mines Corp. and Fission Uranium Corp. All disclosures and disclaimers are available on the Internet at www.dundeecapitalmarkets.com. Please refer to formal published research reports for all disclosures and disclaimers pertaining to companies under coverage and Dundee Capital Markets. The policy of Dundee Capital Markets with respect to Research reports is available on the Internet at www.dundeecapitalmarkets.com. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts' statements without their consent.
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports' terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.
(
Companies Mentioned: DML:TSX; DNN:NYSE.MKT, EFR:TSX; EFRFF:OTCQX;
UUUU:NYSE.MKT, FCU:TSX.V, NXE:TSX.V, TRK:TSX.V, UEX:TSX, URE:TSX;
URG:NYSE.MKT, URZ:TSX; URZ:NYSE.MKT, U:TSX, )
http://theenergycollective.com/streetwiser/343741/uranium-supply-disruptions-spell-opportunity-investors-david-talbot
No comments:
Post a Comment