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Hedge Funds Go Nuclear
Source Michael Perelman
Date 07/03/07/20:32

I FOUND THIS ARTICLE fascinating on a number of grounds. First of all, it bears out
Keynes's views on commodity speculation. Second, it suggests that some of the
excitement about the economic viability of nuclear power may be unwarranted.
Finally, it suggests that hedge funds can be disruptive. Here, they're only making
life miserable for some nuclear power companies, but on a larger stage their
unquenchable thirst for profits will put enormous pressure on workers, communities,
and society in general.

Davis, Ann. 2007. "New Exotic Focus For Hedge Funds: Uranium Market Speculators
Drive Up Price, Irking Utilities." Wall Street Journal (5 March): p. A 1.

"In a new type of nuclear-arms race, hedge funds and other institutional investors
in search of higher returns are competing with energy companies to amass scarce
fuel-grade uranium, hoping to profit from revived interest in nuclear power. The
intense quest for uranium by speculators has sparked a debate over private investors
driving up the price and increasing the scarcity of the world's most sensitive
natural resource."

"Since investors first delved into the market two years ago, the price of processed
uranium yellowcake powder -- the most commonly traded form of processed uranium --
has skyrocketed more than fourfold, from about $21 a pound, traders say. They say
uranium prices climbed to $85 from $75 in February due to bidding for supplies
offered by a tiny mining company in Corpus Christi, Texas, Mesteņa Uranium LLC. The
privately held company regularly includes hedge funds and other speculators in
sales."

"Uranium isn't traded on any exchanges. The somewhat infrequent sales of the
commodity in the open market are private, so the price depends on the terms of any
given transaction."

"Financial investors aren't licensed to possess the radioactive mineral, which is
subject to tight government controls aimed at keeping it out of the hands of
terrorists and rogue states. Instead, several of those investors have secured
access to ownership rights of material stored at licensed repositories in North
America and Europe, exploiting legal channels previously used only by utilities and
suppliers."

"But even with only paper rights to the material, hedge funds are exacerbating what
was already the biggest nuclear-fuel supply crunch in decades, according to
utilities, miners and large traders. The market represents the latest corner in
which hedge funds -- private partnerships that cater to wealthy investors and large
institutions -- are seeking outsize returns, an increasingly challenging task as the
number of funds multiplies."
Many funds say they are holding their uranium off the market because they expect the
price to climb. "They sweep the market clean. Every pound they can find," said
nuclear-fuel broker Kevin Smith, who connects buyers and sellers of uranium for
White Plains, N.Y., commodities-brokerage Evolution Markets."

"Adit Capital, a small hedge fund in Portland, Ore., was an early uranium investor,
buying millions of pounds for as little as $20 a pound beginning in December 2004,
said Bob Mitchell, its founder. It jumped into the uranium market after Mr.
Mitchell noticed nuclear utilities allowing inventories to dwindle when the material
was cheap, to avoid the cost of storing it. Meanwhile, some mining companies had
been selling more future production than Mr. Mitchell figured they would be able to
produce, and mines were closed when prices were depressed in the 1990s -- all
evidence of a coming shortage."
"Unlike other fuels and metals, there is no futures market for uranium, but the
mined supply is so scarce that some utilities now are striking deals to buy it on
future dates at whatever the prevailing market price is on delivery, said Mr. Smith.
It's a perilous bargain: The uranium market hasn't had a down week since June 2003,
according to Ux Consulting Co., a Roswell, Ga., price-reporting service."

"Production shortfalls at uranium mines around the world are helping drive up the
price, says Jim Cornell, president of Connecticut nuclear-fuel trading firm NUKEM
Inc. Production fell last year, in part because a flood this past October collapsed
the underground infrastructure of Cameco Corp.'s Cigar Lake project, a major mine in
Canada, soon before it was to begin production."

"The investors' arrival has spurred questions about the economic viability of
nuclear energy as an alternative to fossil fuels, including coal, that produce
global-warming greenhouse gases. About a quarter of the cost of producing nuclear
power goes toward uranium fuel, and prices are skyrocketing just as safety concerns
over reactors are ebbing. Although uranium is abundant in the earth's crust, bulls
see prices climbing to $200 a pound before supply can catch up to push them back
down."

"Currently, some of the fuel used in reactors comes from U.S. Department of Energy
stockpiles and a program run for the U.S. government by USEC Inc., a publicly traded
Bethesda, Md., energy company originally formed as a government corporation, to
convert old Soviet warheads back into fuel. The rest comes from private mining
companies and other suppliers."

"When selling uranium, the Energy Department makes no distinction between financial
investors and end users, so long as it's held in authorized storage facilities.
Bidders must disclose their identity and the nature of their business."

"The Nuclear Energy Institute in Washington, which represents utilities and fuel
processors and producers, asked the Energy Department on Feb. 5 to exclude anyone
but end users from federal auctions. In a letter, the institute asked the
government to "protect utilities that cannot procure sufficient uranium in the open
market." Marvin Fertel, senior vice president of the NEI, said in an interview that
investor stockpiling isn't in the industry's best interest: "All it does is take
what's somewhat scarce and make it a little bit scarcer," he said."

"Ux says financial funds have purchased about 20 million pounds of yellowcake since
entering the market in late 2004. That is roughly a fifth of the supply being mined
each year. Such funds bought about 25% of the uranium sold on the spot market in
2005 and 2006. They are husbanding most of their supplies, having sold only two
million pounds so far, Ux officials say."

"Today, while the value of some funds' uranium has quadrupled, Cameco and other
large miners are stuck with commitments to sell future production for a small
fraction of today's prices. In the last three months of 2006, Cameco got an average
of just $22.35 a pound for its uranium."

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