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Larry Reaugh: The Three M’s Of Specialty Metals
Written by Lara Crigger   
August 21, 2009 11:29 AM EST

 

In the last few months, metals prices have skyrocketed from their 2008 lows, fueled in particular by Chinese demand. And the rise isn't limited to just the usual suspects, like copper and iron. Across the board, so-called prices of "specialty metals" have also climbed spectacularly, showing little signs of slowing down.

This is good news for investors, says Larry Reaugh, CEO of the Reaugh Group of Companies, a British Columbia-based trio of precious and base metals miners. With 44 years' experience in the mining industry, Reaugh knows his specialty metals. He's been directly involved in the mineral exploration, discovery and production of junior resource companies for more than two decades.

HAI Associate Editor Lara Crigger recently sat down with Reaugh to talk specifics about specialty metals, including growing Chinese consumption, how to play "the Three M's" and why the next big correction is still several years away.

 

Lara Crigger, associate editor, HardAssetsInvestor.com (Crigger): You recently wrote that "specialty metals will become the investment of choice in late 2009, early 2010." So what exactly are specialty metals, and why are they such a promising asset?

Larry Reaugh, CEO of Reaugh Group (Reaugh): Specialty metals might include cobalt, tungsten, molybdenum, magnesium, manganese and so on. I call those last three the Three M's. In particular, molybdenum is the leader of the specialty metal group. It's certainly on a spectacular rise right now, back up to around $18/lb. I figure this will spill over specifically into manganese and magnesium, because the markets are much broader.

For example, they're both used in lithium batteries. Certainly magnesium is big time in the automobile industry; it's strong, it's lightweight - it can even replace some plastics. And it's comparable in pricing. To make a longer-life, stronger vehicle with less weight, it just makes a lot of sense. And it's not just for the automobile industry; specialty metals move into things like pipelines - you can reduce the amount of steel needed by adding more molybdenum.

Manganese is pretty critical. About 90% of its use is in the steel industry. You can talk about the other 10%, its niche applications, but you just don't have steel unless you add manganese. There's no substitution. So it's a huge market; you're close to 30 billion pounds a year, not too far behind copper.

Another reason I think these two are critical is because of China. China's involved in the manufacture of most of the manganese and magnesium metals; on the electrolytic side on manganese, they're 95% of the supply. That leaves the rest of the world, especially in the battery industry, hanging as regards to where supply is going to come from.

Crigger: Especially since China's domestic consumption is growing, too.

Reaugh: Right. Soon a time will come when China won't export any electrolytic manganese, or magnesium, or so on. They'll just put on bigger export duties and quotas, because they want to consume it domestically.

In all my studies on commodities, the real central focus is China. China's the only one out there doing anything. If you look at the prices of commodities out there, they've made a staggering comeback, and that's going to continue. China's like a big snowball: Every time it rolls over, it grows that much bigger.

Crigger: Is that just because China has more supply than anyone else?

Reaugh: When it comes to specialty metals, China is 60-95% of the supply. Certainly other countries have metals, but I focus on China because they also consume the most. To me, that will just continue. Forget about India or the other BRIC countries - China's the real focal point.

I think in the West, we tend to underestimate what's happening in China, because let's face it - the U.S. has been the largest consumer of metals (or anything) for decades. And it's now losing that position, because China's there.

 



 

 
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Comments (1)

 Saturday, 22 August 2009 23:49 EST - Posted by Sparty

 
Great article and I totally agree that China has a long term plan and is capable of thinking out over 100 years. Here in Australia we are seeing a great deal of activity in our resource sector with quite a bit of activity being currently directed at our Rare Earth Elements, Uranium and Lithium deposits. Let alone the multi-billion deals we are seeing in our LNG/Gas sectors.

We have assembled a series of websites that are actively looking at these issues form an investor viewpoint... they include www.australian-gas.com , www.australian-lithium.com , www.AustralianRareEarths.com, www.AustralianUranium.com.au and www.australian-phosphate.com.

The links below relate to specialised/targeted search's for the companies that have deposits of minerals that you have mentioned above.

Manganese
www.australian-shares.com/company-database.php?search=manganese&type=what&go=Search+the+Database

Magnesium
www.australian-shares.com/company-database.php?search=magnesium&type=what&go=Search+the+Database

Molybdenum
www.australian-shares.com/company-database.php?search=molybdenum&type=what&go=Search+the+Database

Australia possibly represents the cheapest entry into most of the metals as our companies, other than BHP and RIO tend to have very large deposits and very small market caps.

Consequently we are prime targets or sitting ducks and we are seeing a host of companies with strategic metals being sucked up. Our investment community has cried out for a flow through share relief plan to bolster our prospects of keeping some of them but our Govt. just doesn't get it. So come on down... we can provide you with the best of the world's deposits at a fraction of what you would pay anywhere else, in a politically stable country with a strong banking system and a very strong legal framework.



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