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The
Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
Without billions of dollars invested in new
electricity resources right now, imagine brownouts, blackouts,
shutdowns, and worse on a scale 10 times greater than anything we’re
seeing today. That’s why, asserts Kevin Kerr, one of the best places
to have your money right now is – electricity. Read on…
Opportunities
abound for investors in the energy market right now, just looking at
what’s being set in motion globally. The end of the age of oil will
not be a disaster if we are prepared for it as investors and consumers.
Acceptance is the first step.
Aside
from water, the world is most thirsty for oil. Since the last major oil
crisis in the 1980s, there’s been tremendous population growth, with
no less than one-third of that population beginning to industrialize
their economies. Look at China, home to 1.3 billion people, and India,
with more than another billion. Both these economies are growing fast,
and they must have oil.
Then
add the United States’s oil addiction to the mix, with our everlarger
gas guzzlers and our seemingly insatiable desire for bigger and better,
whether it’s cars, boats, houses, amusement parks, shopping malls, or
whatever.
Combine
this demand with dwindling global supply, the ongoing threat of
terrorist attacks, the fact that there has not been a major oil find in
more than 36 years, natural disasters such as last year’s hurricanes
along the Gulf Coast, and continued geopolitical tensions, and don’t
be surprised if oil reaches $150 a barrel, or more. How can you
capitalize on this?
It’s
always important to have vision, to see beyond the short-term outlook
and predict what can and may happen in the future. It’s essential to
know which seasonal and geopolitical factors will drive demand. Do your
homework! Learn to decipher and understand industry reports such as the
Energy Information Agency weekly inventory report.
By
using spread trades and options in the energy markets, traders can
maximize profit potential while limiting downside risk. (Spread trades
are exactly what they sound like. The most common spreads are those
between the different trading months, such as December/January spreads
or, as we call them, DEC/JAN spreads. Basically, you are simply trying
to trade a price differential between the months. There are many
different types of spreads but this kind is the most common.)
Oil
is the lifeblood that moves things, that keeps the whole world
functioning and growing. In the last 100 years we have become very
spoiled - we’ve been used to easily obtained, easily moved, and easily
processed petroleum, crude oil, and natural gas. We have simply come to
expect that they will be there forever, or at least for our lifetime.
Oil, among other things, spurred the development of the
internalcombustion engine, which does the work of a thousand people. Oil
essentially constitutes a major workforce throughout the world.
This
virtually invisible workforce has allowed the world’s population to
grow to over 6 billion. Not only that, it has allowed us to plow
millions of acres of land, to produce fertilizers, to transport people
and goods, even to wage global wars and to set up global communication
systems. Our dependence on oil, and energy as we know it, is similar to
an addict’s powerful affliction. The world’s craving for oil is just
as debilitating.
At
this moment the United States doesn’t have an energy source that would
be as easy to produce and transport as oil. Nuclear power can produce
electricity, but the remaining rich uranium ore will last for decades,
not for centuries. Renewable energy can probably never cover the current
levels of global energy consumption or even U.S. consumption.
So
what is a practical solution right now?
Recovery
from oil addiction is possible, and the long-term, easy-to-reach answer
may be in a fuel source that is right under our feet - coal. Coal is
cheap and reliable and much cleaner-burning than it use to be. As the
world goes through painful withdrawal from oil dependence, coal may
help. It seems that the market feels this way, too: Coal prices have
been soaring over the past year.
Clean
coal technology (CCT) is employed when coal arriving at a power plant
contains other by-products that need to be taken out before it can be
used. A facility like this uses a number of processes to remove unwanted
minerals, which makes the coal burn cleaner and more efficiently.
Coal
has often been stereotyped as a dirty and less desirable product of the
energy industry, but not anymore. As the world searches for energy
solutions, coal is at the forefront, and new, clean-burning coal
technology means it’s highly likely that coal will be around for some
time to come.
It
turns our turbines and runs our assembly lines; . . . it powers the
Internet, our databases, and company networks. When we read in bed, turn
on the air-conditioning, look at the nighttime skyline, it’s there.
And
we take for granted that it will always be there, every time. But when
more and more people, in more and more countries, start making that
assumption, you have a situation. Right now, one in every three people
doesn’t even have electricity. And already, our electrical grids are
overtaxed and electricity demand is higher than it’s ever been.
What
happens when the rest of China and India hop onto the power grid?
In
China alone, electricity demand is 150 percent higher right now than it
was when China first started to boom, back in 1980. Worldwide
electricity demand is expected to explode by another 85 percent before
the year 2020, faster than demand for any other kind of energy.
What
happens when the world population hits 7 billion? How about 8 billion?
Or 9 billion, as the United Nations is predicting? Hospitals without
life-support machines. Grocery stores without refrigerators. Shopping
malls, office towers, and neon gone dark. Printers and fax machines that
don’t hum. Trains that don’t run, phones that don’t ring,
computers that don’t blip or announce new e-mail. . . . because there
is no e-mail; there is no Internet. The global grid is down. And where
it’s still up and running, it’s pockmarked with dead zones that have
made the whole network slow to a crawl. Even the electronic stock
tickers on Wall Street have flickered out.
Without
billions of dollars invested in new electricity resources right now,
imagine brownouts, blackouts, shutdowns, and worse on a scale 10 times
greater than anything we’re seeing today.
This
all sounds scary and not quite real. It doesn’t have to be real if the
biggest and most ambitious economies in the world kick in right now with
several hundred billion dollars to jump-start a whole new era of
electricity investing.
The
good news is that the total $16 trillion headed for all the energy
markets - including the $10 trillion that will go into electricity - is
still just a fraction of the total global gross domestic product (GDP) -
only about 1 percent. So making the investment is not only very
possible, it’s nearly certain.
The
electricity markets are still in their infancy in the commodities world.
As with so many other up-and-coming opportunities, you just have to be
ready to seize those chances when they come. Speaking of opportunities,
alternative energy is another area investors are focusing on, and one of
the biggest is solar power.
The
idea of using the sun to solve the earth’s energy needs is hardly new;
it’s been used since the dawn of time. What is new is the technology
and research money that are breathing life into the industry. The
rallying cry for quick and easy solutions to our nation’s oil
addiction spurred immediate interest in alternative energy, from nuclear
to ethanol. Solar power faces some challenges, to be sure, but there are
some solid players who certainly bloom in this sector. Just add sunshine
and a little ingenuity, and watch the profits grow.
Since
the 1970s, the solar power industry has come a long way. We’ve reached
a point where solar power is no longer a gimmicky, peculiar energy
source; it’s now more of a necessity.
The
solar energy industry has made enormous progress in the past 20 years,
finding new solutions to the ongoing problems of high costs and massive
regulatory barriers - but there are still roadblocks. Solar technology
has become more affordable, due mainly to higher demand and the goal of
eliminating dependence on foreign oil.
Manufacturing
processes have been streamlined and continue to become more
cost-efficient with the help of government subsidies, consumer rebates,
and tax credits. As oil prices continue to increase exponentially, it
seems inevitable that a convergence of the cost of conventional and
alternative energy costs will occur. Many companies in the solar sector
seem to be focused on the development of improved solar efficiency
through broadbased applications that can be put to practical, immediate
use.
Now,
one thing that is very important to investors in any sector is the fact
that every trade has flaws. In the case of solar power, there are
several.
Although
there is so much good news for solar power, there are challenges, too.
For example, there’s the lack of silicon, which is needed for making
solar panels. A silicon shortage has limited the supply of the panels
and frustrated potential buyers. Orders take several months to complete,
and prices, after years of floundering, have increased by as much as 15
percent.
The
real winners are those companies that benefit from the lack of silicon,
primarily producers of less efficient, yet available, thin-film solar
panels. Of course, other beneficiaries include companies that have
emerging technologies, such as plastic solar cells.
Worldwide,
the solar market has exploded, growing by 40 percent annually in just
the last five years. Germany and Japan alone use 39 percent and 30
percent, respectively, of the global solar panel stockpile. The United
States is a distant third, at only 9 percent of the global solar panel
supply, according to various energy information sites. California is
likely to drive that stat much higher as demand grows exponentially in
that state and others, too.
Regards,
Kevin
Kerr
for The Daily Reckoning

© 2007 Kevin Kerr
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Editor’s
Note: The above was taken from Kevin’s soon-to-be-released book, A
Maniac Commodity Trader’s Guide to Making a Fortune. In the book,
Kevin dispels the common myths and misconceptions about these markets,
offering an insider’s view of what he calls “the last bastion of
pure capitalism on Earth.” Whether you’re a novice or an experienced
trader, Kevin’s down-to-earth, clear-cut guidance will make you more
savvy, more confident, and more able to jump right in and grab those
profit opportunities that are waiting for you. The book is available for
pre-sale here: A
Maniac Commodity Trader’s Guide to Making a Fortune
Kevin
Kerr is the editor of two highly successful and acclaimed financial
advisory newsletters, Resource Trader Alert and Outstanding Investments.
A veteran commodities trader, Kevin uses his irreplaceable experience to
advise his readers on a variety of commodities investments on a daily
basis. Widely considered one of the nation’s top commodities gurus,
Kevin’s expert opinions are routinely featured in the country’s
premier media outlets.
To
learn more about Kevin’s commodities trading service, click here: Resource
Trader Alert
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