So to keep life simple we are reducing positions and due to the fact this is a traders market and not an investors market we are simply going to use James River Coal for our "coal" stock, or in reality our natural gas/iron ore/oil/corn/coffee/steel stock. It's all the same to the hedgies.
Again, I think coal is being vastly underestimated by this market - unlike oil and natural gas, the prices have held steady during these past few months of commodity correction. That was my thesis for overweighting coal and fertilizer as opposed to oil and natural gas. I thought the market would discern among the groups and reward stocks of companies whose underlying commodity had held up. But the market lacks logic and anything within 6 degrees of oil is considered either "bad" or "good" - depending on which way the wind is blowing that day. Despite each individual subsector's pros and cons. It makes little sense to me but that is the current logic of the market where people pile in and out of broad sectors as opposed to more detailed analysis of individual companies or slivers of the sector. Until that changes we are going to do the same and use 1 stock for our proxy.
I've been waiting for Massey Energy (MEE) and Walter Industries (WLT) to lift so I can sell and we can go to a more streamlined approach. My one worry is any and all of these companies are potential buyout candidates and in a moment's notice could be taken out at a 30-40% premium.
Massey Energy (MEE) was started on Nov 15, 2007 and we have a $5K gain in the name, we are selling today as the stock has put a 44% move on in the past 3 sessions. I am aghast at the low valuation in this name and others in the sector but this is a market of forced liquidations. Again this highlights how tough this market is - if you bought 1 week too early you are getting a 0% return. If you nailed the bottom you made nearly 50% in a few sessions. If you bought 3 weeks too early you are down 30%. The odds are simply not in your favor in this market as an "investor". Today we sold the 1.5% stake in the mid $45s. I could see upside to potentially $50 but won't get greedy.

Walter Industries (WLT) has held up better than the other coal stocks because it is not a 100% pure play on coal - it also has a housing arm. Sadly, that has probably helped keep the stock standing on a relative basis versus peers. We started this position on Jul 2, 2008 and after having a very nice unrealized gain to begin with leave with a $11K loss in the name. The stock has retraced from $55 to $67 where it now faces resistance of the 200 day moving average. If this is a new bull market (rotation from hedge funds) into commodities we should see it move over and above this level shortly. I will have my doubts until proven otherwise. Today we sold the 1.4% stake near $67.

Again for now James River Coal will be our "one position" that represents the 4 stock basket we used to own. This will make the "trading" necessary to survive in this market easier than trying to trade 4 positions. Another option is of course simply buying the coal ETF (KOL) [New Coal ETF (KOL) Introduced from Van Eck Global]
One day I hope to purchase stocks based on fundamentals again instead of hedge fund movements.
Long James River Coal in fund; no personal position








5 comments:
*It's all the same to the hedgies.*
Oil is up 4%, KOL is down -4%, how is it all the same?
The stocks
not the commodity itself, some days oil is up $0.50 and these stocks have taken 10-12% hits across the board
I'm not talking 1 day
I'm talking the past 3 months
weeeeeeee
this is fun.
/sarcasm
NEW YORK, Sept 22 (Reuters) - The price of coal will rise sharply if a U.S. appeals court upholds a ruling restricting surface mining in the Appalachian mountains, analysts and industry observers say.
The battle over surface, or mountaintop, mining resumes in a Virginia court on Tuesday, and one expert said there could even be power shortages and brownouts if the judge sides with environmentalists over the miners.
At the least, several mining companies -- Massey Energy Co (MEE.N), International Coal Group (ICO.N), Alpha Natural Resources (ANR.N) and Patriot Coal Corp (PCX.N) -- will lose production, said analyst Jeremy Sussman of Natixis Bleichroeder. Those companies have a large number of surface mines in the central Appalachian coal fields.
"If the ruling is upheld, we believe that Appalachian prices could spike," he said. "Producers with a significant amount of surface exposure in Appalachia could get hurt."
Conversely, producers with significantly more underground than surface production, such as Consol Energy (CNX.N), should benefit, Sussman said in a research note.
Yes, is that good or bad?
prices go up but production drops?
The answer = whatever hedge funds decide. :)
Post a Comment