The Commodity Supercycle
Our partner Marc Friedrich presents a new video series “The Commodity Supercycle” on his Youtube channel.
The term supercycle means the longest period, or wave, in the growth of a financial market as described by the Elliott wave principle, originally conceived and formulated by Ralph Nelson Elliott.
Marc Friedrich believes that a new supercycle has already started and calls it “The Commodity Supercycle”.
In a series of video interviews, Marc will give deep insights to commodity trading, timing and “financial intelligence”:
As a result of the Corona crisis, central banks have pumped more money into the system than ever before. In parallel, governments have put together fiscal packages at historically unprecedented levels to buffer the recession and the effects of the crisis. All of this has caused prices for building materials, energy and raw materials to soar and for the first time in 40 years we are seeing strong inflation. Marc Friedrich believes that we are seeing a turning point and are at the beginning of a Commodity Supercycle that holds huge opportunities.
With his new series “The Commodity Supercycle” Marc Friedrich has once again gathered the brightest and most famous minds in the world of finance and commodities to recognize and seize the great opportunities now. A series, which looks for its equals in Germany, yes in Europe. Financial intelligence of the Champions League!
Marc Friedrich contact details
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Marcelo Lopez Invests 70 % in Uranium
The second interview in this new video series is with Marcelo Lopez:
Marcelo Lopez is one of the best known commodity hedge fund managers in the world. He has been active in the uranium market for several years and sees it as the biggest investment opportunity of his life. What attracts him to it and how he reacts to criticism, you will learn in this new episode of the Commodity Supercycle!
Marcelo Lopez on Twitter: https://twitter.com/malopez1975
Complete video transcript (auto-generated):
wow
welcome to a new episode of the
commodity
super cycle it’s 6 00 a.m in sydney and
10 p.m in germany marcelo got up
really early and i stayed up very late
i’m tired i can tell you that
so we do everything to bring you the
best content available on
commodities on earth actually so martin
lopez is a guy who bets his savings and
career
on uranium yes you heard it right
i think you even mentioned around 70
percent you are
invested in uranium aren’t you marcelo
yep
uh well it was 70 when i started today
is way more than that because of the
100 year price appreciation yeah so
additionally you stated that the market
cap of
all uranium equities amounts to roughly
20 billion dollars which is ridiculous
you know that an investor can buy all of
a
key power source for about 135th in the
valuation of tesla which is crazy
so yeah this is marcelo lopez from
brazil right now in australia so please
give us a little background about you
who is marcelo lopez
sure well first of all thanks mark for
for the invitations a pleasure to to be
talking to you
i am a mechanical engineer and i i did a
trainee program at lights bank
in brazil in the late 90s lloyds was an
investment bank at that time
and and i always like the stock market
so i went to a brokerage company close
by every lunch time to
to learn more about stocks so
when when the russian crisis happened
and in the long term capital management
collapsed uh brazilian stocks crashed
big time
yeah and i thought it was the best time
to start an investment fund focused on
brazilian equities
so i resigned from lights bank and
started my first investment fund at the
end of 1998.
uh well and i did really well with this
fund it was a huge success it returned
over 200
to investors in in just over a year year
and a half maybe
um and i tell people it wasn’t because
it was a genius but
the the opportunity was just too great
yeah
and uh and soon i believe we’re going to
talk about another great opportunity
uh just before our eyes but um anyway
at that time some brazilian equities
were trading for less than the cash they
had in the bank
and and i’m talking about profitable
companies that pay double digit
dividends and and all that so
um after after this fund i i thought the
market was
was a bit toppy and i needed more
knowledge so i
returned the money to investors and i
went to spain to do
my mba and after the mba i went to
finland to do a specialization in
finance and after finland
i moved to london and i worked for a big
hedge fund focused on emerging markets
called gartmore
until the end of 2006.
and my job at garthmore was to to look
for opportunities in emerging markets to
invest in
and at the end of 2006 i believe i’d
have found another
a miscible investment opportunity which
was real estate in brazil
so again i left my job and decided to
invest in real estate in brazil and i
co-founded a company that meant to grow
into one of the biggest
real estate firms in brazil today this
company is owned by julius bayer and
and as i said it’s it’s one of the
biggest real estate
asset management companies in the
country and uh
in 2013 i decided to go back to the
financial markets and i founded l2
capital
an asset management company so the idea
was to look for opportunities but
instead of focusing on emerging markets
we would look for opportunities
and asymmetric asymmetric investment
themes
uh globally and well i believe we’re
going to talk about nuclear energy and
obviously the
the metal that powers those reactors
which is to me
the best investment opportunity i’ve
seen in my life
yeah and you mentioned also the most
symmetric trait you’ve ever seen in your
life but
before we um get to uranium so how did
you end up in australia actually um
how is this situation there right now
with covet and everything
so tell us something oh i think well
i mean sydney new south wales and and uh
well it looks like kofi didn’t show up
here at all life of go
goes on as normal people are uh going to
the shopping malls going to the
restaurants
uh kids are at school i think school was
suspended last year for a couple of
weeks if that but
um life is normal i can tell you that
yeah it’s a blessed country and you you
ended up in australia because
of the yellow cake this was this was
personal reasons we
we ended up moving here a few years ago
and uh
we we stay here personal reasons all
right okay perfect so
yeah let’s um dip into the uranium
sector
so um um remember we’re talking to
german audience
and and we shut down all no we will shut
down all nuclear plants so
this is something totally totally crazy
so give us an elevator pitch
um why are you so excited about uranium
and nuclear power
sure um well let me talk about the
benefits of nuclear
energy because as you mentioned germany
has decided to shut down all its nuclear
power plants
and i think it’s important for people to
know
what the benefits are so they can at
least weigh the situation right
so nuclear energy is it’s
clean energy and it provides reliable
abundant and safe energy unlike most
people
would think nuclear energy is just the
best and most advanced form of energy
ever invented so if the world is really
serious about the environment
nuclear must be a part of the solution
the idea is very simple though the
execution is complex
but you basically um split an atom and
it generates energy to hit water that
powers a turbine that will generate
electricity
so um if if you compare
uh nuclear to other other sources of
energy
uh you know nuclear energy just
killed all of them uh it’s it’s
it in any way shape or form you look at
it it’s uh it’s
better than the other forms of energy it
has more energy density
so and i have even these noted here
just to just to to to mention to you
because i knew we’re going to talk about
it
but uh firewood when you when you
burn firewood you generate 16 mega jaws
per kilo
yeah when you burn coal you generate 23
mega jaws per kilogram
diesel it’s a big improvement it’s 44
mega jaws per kilogram
and uranium is 3 900
giga jaws per kilo so
it’s almost 100 000 times better
than the others in in terms of safety
which is an item that mo
most people would like to discuss yeah
nuclear gain comes way ahead
now i i actually use this data in my
presentation to investors and i got it
from the u.s
energy information administration um
you you have an in on one extreme code
with a hundred thousand
deaths per trillion kilowatt hour
and on the other one you have a nuclear
with with less than a hundred
so the the comparison is cruel and uh
i’m sure we we we we end up going to
talk about the two major accidents
fukushima and
uh but let me just talk about the other
things before
uh if if the subject is reliability uh
surprise surprise
nuclear also comes ahead nuclear
reactors work
most of the time with planned shutdowns
for refueling and maintenance
which which is now happening every 18
months in a few reactors
so a nuclear reactor can provide clean
energy with a capacitive factor
of over 93 percent
natural gas is less than 60 percent co
is less than 50
wind is just over 30 percent and solar
energy has a capacity factor of
25 percent yeah it’s that
people think that the so-called
renewables
uh wind and solar will be able to save
the planets but
they’re highly unreliable they need a
backup
and you know as the sun does not shine
all the time the wind does not
blow all the time and you would be
surprised
monk to know that the big oil companies
like
total bp chevron and all that
they spend billions of dollars in
supporting solar and wind
and you might ask why is that aren’t
they
shooting themselves in the foot but
the reality is that they know the
so-called renewables
are not reliable and they need a backup
in this case a dirty backup
being natural gas or or oil or or even
coal
so the more money people spend on these
so-called renewables
more power they will give to fossil fuel
producers
um now let’s let’s talk about land
requirements
uh solar panel solar panels in general
need an
area of up to 400 times bigger
to produce the same amount of
electricity as nuclear
they demand 18 times more steel and
produced
300 times more hazardous waste
imagine the impact of this kind of
construction in the natural landscape
the human footprint is is devastating
and not only steel you spend way more on
concrete on
rare earth and in other materials uh
making it not only a pollutant but also
expensive
and uh and and i’m not even gonna
mention that wind and solar uh
rely heavily on government subsidies uh
the
they are still uh pollutants um
and uh you know the wind can can can
also
kill rare birds bats uh they can be
noisy
the their productivity decays very
rapidly with the passage of time
and they have to be disposed somewhere
creating more toxic
rubbish as far as i know there’s not a
proper place for this for these items to
be disposed
um another thing people think that they
will use batteries and that will solve
all the problems
but but the issue here is base load it
doesn’t matter if your car runs on
batteries
if you recharge those batteries using
the electricity that was produced
using coal you are actually polluting
more
way more i should say you you’d better
off of owning a a diesel car
yeah um now i i said to people that the
the so-called renewables wind and solar
are unreliable and
what what many people do not realize is
that it
increases the cost of electricity and
increases the risks to the grid
so bear with me let me try to explain
this a little further
just to to to make it easy so sorry
about the oversimplification
but electricity produced
now is being consumed now it can be
consumed tomorrow next week or next
month it has to be consumed now
so imagine a couple of scenarios the
first one we need electricity now
but the wind is not blowing the sun is
not shining
so what are we going to do well we have
to turn on the backup
which is normally gas or co so the idea
that you’re not polluting
just go through the window uh but
there’s a different scenario which is
not good either and no one talks about
and that’s when you don’t need
electricity now but the wind is blowing
and the sun is shining
so now you have to dispose this
electricity somehow and
you you first you have to shut down
whatever source of energy is feeding the
grids
and you have to do it in a haste so
imagine you have a coal plant or gas or
even nuclear
they have to shut down so the grid can
use electricity provided by the
so-called renewables
in california and i’m pretty sure it has
happened in germany too
a few times but you might be able to
to check this and you know uh
but they they um they needed
electrician at a certain period
of time and the sun was not shining and
the wind was not blowing
so they have to buy expensive
electricity from nearby states
france even worse when they can produce
electricity from
from these so-called renewables and they
don’t need electricity
they have to sell it to someone else or
what is going on
i have to interrupt you in in in the
southern part of germany we even
paid other countries that they would
take our electricity
because we didn’t want to danger the
grid you know
it’s crazy that’s exactly what i was
going to say it’s a complete nonsense in
california it happens over and over
again
and people don’t understand why the
electricity bills are so high and
you know it’s and and the pollution goes
up too because the backup has to be
turned on
and and you increase the risk to the
grid
so that anyway mark whichever way you
look at nuclear energy it comes
way ahead of the others now the feud
that
nuclear really loses is the information
battle
there’s a lot of misinformation out
there and people just don’t
they just don’t want to see it and
that’s the problem and
um i believe people have to educate
themselves and and
that’s what we’re doing here right we’re
bringing new information so people can
think about those issues
uh independently and stop accepting
being spoon-fed misleading information
yeah that’s why i was so keen talking to
you know to give the people financial
intelligence to have an insider who is
really deep in the
in the topic and we talk about some some
points
somebody else never mentioned you know
the media or the politicians
sure listen i i for once i was against
nuclear energy i thought those
nuclear reactors could explode and kill
everyone around but i’m here
but they they only explode on tv series
yeah yeah so yeah but you know that the
critics always come with
channel bill they come with fukushima so
what do you reply to them if they say
hey but they can blow off they can
explode and can waste all the country
and
all the people yeah yeah well
they do say that actually but you know
people talk about fukushima and and i
say that fukushima is the best
reason why we need to have more nuclear
reactors
almost 20 000 people died because of the
tsunami
around 1 000 people died because of the
evacuation process
and no one zero had any injuries
because of the nuclear accident and it
somehow acts uh
you know it’s interesting to see because
fukushima just entered the map because
of the nuclear accident
but the nuclear accident didn’t hurt
anyone
actually nuclear reactors are so safe in
japan that
and and they are so well built that when
there’s an earthquake
people move move closer to to to nuclear
reactors
now if we talk about chernobyl which was
the only nuclear accident in
history with victims and we look at the
facts
we are also going to come to the same
conclusion
um you know now a couple of years ago i
interviewed dr
jerry thomas who is a phd and post
doctor in pathology
and she works for the imperial college
in london and it was a great
conversation the the
the podcast is actually available in in
our website to
whoever is interested and i really like
to talk to dr thomas because
she knows a lot about cancer molecular
pathology
and the health effects of radiation so
she told me that uh like many of her
friends
back then she she she was left wing and
uh she was leaning towards
well she was actually she has a lot of
prejudice
against nuclear energy so she decided to
write about the horbones that
was nuclear energy and after her
research
she fell in love with it uh now she
travels around the world to talk to
everyone about the benefits of nuclear
energy
so here are the facts um 134 people
died because of the fire so um
these were people who were there at the
time of the accident
or or people who arrived soon after or
you know
in in these people who suffered acute
radiation exposure or got
burned um the
the who the the world health
organization
estimates that the increase in
thyroid cancer will be around 16
000 people by 2006
so the accident happened more than 30
years ago and they’re projecting another
the 44 40 44 years ahead
uh if we take these numbers as as
reality
and and there is dispute around them but
we know that thyroid cancer is the
easiest curable form of cancer
on average only one percent of the
patients die because of feds
so the the total death count will get to
160 people
overall over all this period of time
and curiously enough thyroid cancer
treatment is based on doses of radiation
so there’s a story of what happened and
what happened
and the story is obviously way more
interesting i i’ve heard this this
phrase a while ago
and i love it and it it goes like that
don’t you
hate when the facts get in the way of a
great story
now people claim that nuclear energy has
uh has it is bad but it actually has
saved
millions of life by preventing the
burning of fossil fuels
uh you you probably heard me saying that
before but
i like to compare it to sharks and
insects
insects kill more than six hundred
thousand people every year on
average around the world being made from
uh transmission of diseases
allergies or poison whatever
um but in in if we if we talk about
sharks now
guess how many people on average around
the world
die every year because of a shark attack
i think it’s five or fifteen ten
yeah look hey i was good yeah you were
very good
very good but you know when when it
happens oh it’s a big thing people
closely
come up with all sorts of proposals and
new regulations
put nets on the sea to protect swimmers
and all that
but they are quite tranquil around
insects that kill 60
000 people 60 000 times more people
yeah it’s their reality versus the the
perception right
and uh in in and also i think there’s a
high association between
nuclear reactors and nuclear bombs which
are complete
different things but but people get
scared and
i believe the first step is to educate
people
yeah i think germany uh suffers uh
with this way more than other countries
for historical reasons
and and and obviously this waited a lot
on on german sentiment
and uh well please correct me if i’m
wrong uh but it’s just my opinion
yeah but no not yep
you’re not wrong you’re not wrong it’s
it’s it’s it’s insanity what happened
here because of fukushima
and i hope we step back from this
idiotic
um plan to switch off all the nuclear
plants and get in more dependency
from other countries and by expensive
electricity from
czech republic or france and uh they
they create this electricity from coal
or oil or gas
or nuclear power you know that’s the
thing and
yeah which i just hope we will um step
back so
which which countries are the most
focused ones on nuclear energy
well i think the growth is coming from
uh
china mostly but asia asia is
where the action is happening people
tend to look at
the western world and and think that
nuclear is a dying industry
yeah but it’s actually a growth industry
and it’s it’s
booming in asia china is building
a fleet of nuclear reactors if um uh
you know the they are building on on
average
uh six nuclear reactors every year and
they’re going to
keep up this growth until 2025 and then
they
they will scale it up yeah
according to the sinchwa university
uh china has to build uh has to grow its
nuclear fleet
by 382 percent uh by
2060 to achieve the goals that they want
to achieve to be carbon neutral
so it’s an impressive growth and uh same
thing with india russia
uh you know uh turkey saudi arabia
brazil argentina
egypt many of these countries are
building nuclear reactors
but people tend to focus on on on on
europe and
in the u.s and think it’s a dying
industry it’s not it’s a growth industry
yeah yeah definitely is so um and it’s
necessary for the
green revolution we have now to to um
reach the goals of the paris treaty we
need actually
um nuclear energy so i think i hope
germany will see this as well soon so
um i’ve got two big concerns we already
talked about security because all the
critics bring always the security
um point and of course the waste the the
radio
tech active waste so and please give me
your thoughts on this
sure uh no that’s a that’s a that’s a
good point it’s worth mentioning and and
talking about
nuclear waste i i think this is one of
the
sale points for nuclear honestly and and
by a mile first of all let’s clarify
this we shouldn’t call it
waste because the vast majority of the
spent fuel can be
recycle and enter the the fuel cycle
again
so let’s call it spent fuel now if you
put together
uh the the the dispensed view
producing the world since the 60s until
today
you won’t be able to fill two soccer
fields
because uranium has a very high energy
density
the spent fuel is minuscule compared to
other sources
another very important thing uh you tell
me what other source of energy produces
waste that is contained where’s the
waste from from the coal plants or or
the gas glands
it’s in our lungs and and seven million
people die
every year because of pollution more
people dying in japan uh of pollution
uh caused by the closure of the nuclear
reactors than because of the accident
itself
and and they are continuing to die
thanks to fossil fuels
now um you know so to to to have a
waste that is minimal secured and
contained
to me is one of the selling points of
nuclear energy
yeah so what about the the progress in
technology there are new
forms of of um what’s it called i think
mini reactors so can you tell us
something about that
pardon me small modular reactors yeah
exactly
exactly yeah a small modular reactors
are
a type of reactor that is uh smaller and
manufactured somewhere and assembled uh
on site
uh so this one has a few
advantages over the normal nuclear
reactor
so first of all you need less capital to
assemble one
uh that’s that’s pretty good
secondly they are considered way safer
than normal designs
and thirdly they can be put in places
that cannot accommodate
big nuclear reactors and and i think
people will accept them more
they they they are scalable too meaning
that you can build more than one of
these
smrs in in the same place increasing the
power generation capacity
uh oh in in in in the time you spent in
construction is also much less
says let’s say you call let’s say you
you previewed uh a few parts of uh
of of the nuclear reactor and you just
assembled them on site
now uh uh with smrs i believe we’re
going to achieve a much bigger
proportion of
nuclear energy producing the world this
is because
people’s acceptance to small nuclear
reactors
will be greater than the acceptance of
acceptance of of the of the big ones
okay uh
besides for for entrepreneurs the cost
will go down and it makes it
and makes the returns more more enticing
um you know it’s it’s uh it it should be
commercial viable uh
from you know 2027 onwards so we’re
talking about the second half of this
decade
okay cool what about thorium people talk
about
thorium yeah there hasn’t been any
commercial
viable reactor the powered light that i
know of so i
you know thorium has been um talked
about for many years
but you know that again it’s uh
okay it’s a technology that’s years
ahead years
if it ever comes to to to to be
developed
what about the reactors who can use
and the radio active waste again
to create energy yeah well that that
that would be great for for for it
because the
the spent fuel will be recycled and it
happens already in
certain parts of the world france and
and uh russia japan as well
they they they can’t uh they can’t the
the spent fuel
and then put it back onto the nuclear
fuel cycle and and
and reuse that um and and
i think uh the bill gates is trying to
develop this technology a few other
other companies are doing the same that
that would be awesome for for the world
can you imagine that
yeah sure it would be like a perpetua
mobile so it would be like never ending
that would be great
so okay let’s talk about the price why
is it so damn low the iranian price
dropped
60 80 90 percent even over the last
decade
so how is it possible yeah well
uh market was uh it was a perfect storm
for miners
everything that could go wrong for them
went wrong
um fukushima was obviously the most
impactful event
so um after the accident japan shut down
all its nuclear reactors
so the world lost a big buyer of uranium
and gained a seller
uh you know because japan started
selling part of its uh
inventory yes it was taking delivery of
some of the contracts but it was also
active in the spot market
and uh because japan has a lot of
inventories it didn’t help us
at all and and miners didn’t stop mining
at that time they they thought japan
would be back online very quickly and
they
kept on producing shooting themselves in
the foot and
obviously didn’t help the prices at all
uh besides the sentiment was very
negative at that time
uh you know as as as i mentioned japan
shut down all its nuclear reactors
spain said they were going to shut down
all its nuclear reactors to by 2020
germany 2022
belgium in 2025 and
and on top of that uh there were a lot
of pressure from environmental groups
for politicians to either shut down
existing reactors or at least not not
let any more be built
um in addition kazakhstan was ramping up
its production
in the beginning of the century
kazakhstan was responsible for less than
10
of the global uranium supply and now
it’s around 40 percent
uh moreover there was a program in place
called megatones to megawatts in which
russia was dismantling part of its
nuclear arsenal
uh they were down blending the the
highly enriched uranium and selling it
to
to the us um and it was good for russia
because they made some money
and it was great for the u.s because
they not only avoided that this highly
enriched uranium fell into the hands of
a
rogue government or a terrorist
organization but they also had plenty of
you of
you know cheap uranium to power uh their
their nuclear reactors
it was just bad for the miners uh and
and
last but not least secondary supply and
under feeding were increasing
uh now do you want me to explain what
underfeeding is or
yes please just short introduction yeah
okay so
um uranium is found in different
isotopes
and um the the most common is the 238
which corresponds to around 99.3 percent
uh uranium-235 corresponds to 0.7
and that’s the one we want because it’s
unstable you can bombard the nucleus it
can explode and generate all the energy
so when people say that they’re going to
win rich uranium
enrich uranium is just to increase the
content of the isotope two three five in
the mix
from 0.7 to three four five percent
whatever the nuclear reactor needs yeah
and and if you want to to build a
nuclear bomb you can
you can enrich uranium to 90 plus
but the the way you do it today is using
centrifuges
uh this centrifuges spin at high speeds
and they cannot stop
so these enrichers have an incentive to
do what’s called
under feeding and underfeeding occurs
when you feed less uranium into the
centrifuges
hence the name underfeeding yeah but
these centrifuges spin for longer
and they produce the same amount of
enriched uranium using
less uranium and that uranium that they
didn’t use
is theirs so they can go to the mark and
sell this uranium
as long as it makes commercial and
financial sense to them
so it is as if they create a whole new
mind out of the blue
um now i i have to to use this method
for because it it
it it helped me a lot to to understand
underfeeding when i started uh
imagine a miner has been a producer of
oranges
yeah the enriques will be the guy who’s
going to squeeze the oranges
and the nuclear reactors are the ones
who are going to drink the orange juice
so the thing works like that uh the
miners uh
give them richards four oranges the
richards
squeeze these oranges and give the
nuclear reactor one glass of orange
juice
now uh imagine suddenly that these
enrichers have a lot of
of unused capacity uh it was a mixture
of new technology with the centrifuges
and and less demands
uh remember japan was offline and many
other projects got suspended
so now they can take their time to
squeeze the oranges
and they realize they don’t need to
squeeze four oranges they can ski
squeeze really well three oranges
and they can produce the same amount of
orange juice
and that one orange that’s left is
theirs so they can
just go to the market and and sell this
extra orange and this extra orange
represents underfeeding
um so as i mentioned it was the perfect
star
uh storm for miners um i mentioned
japan which was obviously the biggest
event uh the narrative kazakhstan under
feeding
uh uh the the miners lack of discipline
in in the megatons to megawatts program
so where are we now well
now we are in a whole new world uh japan
is back online there are nine reactors
that have restarted
three more should restart this year and
14 more are waiting for approval to get
started
the program megatons to megawatts is
over it ended in 2013 and i
doubt we are going to see anything like
it over the next few years
so this is the reason why you think this
is the biggest investing
opportunity of our lifetime so you
expect the price will
go up it is it is um
i it’s it’s the
biggest opportunity i’ve ever seen in my
life in terms of risk return
it’s it’s it’s what do you think where
will the price go
in the next five years in the next
decade
well listen i i don’t know where the
price is going to go but i know it has
where it has to go and we mapped every
single mine on the planet
and the pot the price has to go to at
least
60 dollars a pound it’s double
right now we’re at 30 32
i’m sorry we are at 30 or 32 i think
but double at least there you go at
least
double from here to to give miners
incentives to
to to start producing again um
you know it’s it in and what what’s the
incentive for a miner to
to produce something for 45 50 or even
60
if they can only be sold for for you
know 30 35
no one’s going to start a mining uh or
or even keep in mind in producing
under those circumstances yeah
so the usual investment and pitch goes
as follow actually
the demand for uranium is so high and
most iranian miners
need a price over 60 bucks so in order
to produce profitable
surprises have to go up actually so
otherwise
most of them will go out of business so
but
is this really the case right now two of
the largest uranium mines
run by carmeko are shut down cigar lake
and make other river what have happens
if they come back online will prices
stay low
yeah uh well cigar lake is actually back
online
that’s cool but uh the prices listen the
the the let’s put this into perspective
so last year uh the world consumed
almost 180 million pounds of uranium
yeah and it reduced via uh via the
miners
uh around 120 million pounds so there’s
a huge gap
between primary production and um
and and consumption so even if casaton
prom
ramp up production if chemical bring
back macarthur river and
and all that there’s still not enough
uranium and remember uh cigar lake which
is the biggest mining operation today
we will we’ll get to the end of its um
life in another seven years and well
where’s the replacement
and who’s gonna come up to to to fill up
the gap
yeah there’s not many projects that look
like they’re they’re gonna be ready by
then
wow okay but marcelo miners are right
now
seem a little bit overvalued because um
yeah especially a lot of the small
developers
have risen to a market cap of a couple
of hundred million dollars
so um even they are like 10 years away
from a production
so what what are your thoughts on this
um did people miss the boat for an
investment in the sector or were still
early yeah i i i still believe we are
very early in the cycle
share prices have gone up a lot as you
mentioned our fund is up by almost 450
percent over the last uh 12 months
but i still think it’s very early in the
cycle there’s going to be a lot of
volatility it’s not going to be like
that smooth ramp up
never is but but you listen you you
mentioned this in the
in the beginning of our conversation
if you you you can pretty much buy all
the listed companies for
for for around 25 billion dollars and
you know it it’s funny because i’ve been
saying that since i started the fund you
say well listen you can buy all
listed companies for uh eight billion
dollars oh yeah
the funny thing is you know when i i
wrote a whole chapter in my
new best-selling book about uranium and
when i started researching it
the whole market cap of the uranium
sector was 30 billion dollars
and at the end when i published a book
it was like 18 billion but still
super cheap if you look back in at the
last uranium bull market
we had a market um cap of i think over
100 billion
so we dropped 140 yeah even even more
yeah
so we dropped like 90 percent and
it’s still crazy so what is for you the
best way to invest into the sector
well there are a few ways that people
can get exposure to
to to the sector they’re they’re the
physical funds uh
they can buy uh yellow cake in london
they can buy uh
upc and and i can talk about upc a bit
more because there’s
some interesting developments happening
there sure please
um so if they don’t want to run the risk
of the miners uh the operational risk
and all that
they they can buy the physical the metal
they can have exposure to the physical
metal that yeah
via this these two funds they can buy
the etfs in the sector
which i caution people to look at them
before they are not as as
straightforward as most of us would hope
um there are they’re the miners
themselves so people can
can do a little bit of work and decide
which ones are the best ones and and buy
and again i would caution people because
most of the uranium
shares that are traded today will never
produce a nouns of uranium
there’s a lot of promotion going on so i
urge people to look carefully into
uh into this this uh shares
and there’s obviously the the the funds
like uh
like mine that look for the best
investment opportunities within that
sector
and let’s talk about your fund is it
possible to buy it in europe or in
germany
yeah yeah uh it is uh the fund is closed
now
uh we open every quarter so
it will be open towards the end of this
month
uh the the minimum investment is 250 000
u.s dollars
and everyone can can buy into the fund
but u.s investors unfortunately
[Music]
well so what are the costs what what are
the costs of the fund
like it’s one and a half percent per
annum and 20 percent of uh
of performance fee okay all right um
what’s your biggest holding right now
uh sorry mark we we don’t talk about uh
okay
about individual stocks or holdings or
anything okay
yeah okay i i can imagine but okay so
and um what about
would you recommend people to buy um um
yeah mining stocks directly like a major
or mid tier or junior or would you say
nah go better to a fund or buy your etf
sure um well
well i don’t recommend anyone to do
anything i’m not i’m i’m not in the
above making recommendations and and i
can’t make a recommendation
but for people who would like to to look
more into the sector
uh i i think the the biggest premium
are on the on the the biggest rewards i
should say
are uh in the miners uh the etfs i
you know uh they they have a few
positions that i wouldn’t
that i don’t agree with and uh some of
them have positions that shouldn’t be
there at all like barrick gold and
and macquarie group and and hyundai
engineering and
you know things that shouldn’t be there
so i i’ll caution people uh again
um in in in regards to the etfs and
the miners again if you have to spend
the time to get to know the sector to
get to know which ones
you use and which ones are not and and
look at the project
which ones you think can fly or not
and invest based on on that
okay so what about the u.s um do you
think they will protect and push
american uranium miners
they will well listen uh joe biden’s
first act as president
is to reintroduce the u.s to the
to the paris accord and uh it means that
the u.s
has to be carbon neutral by 2050.
now when you put a date uh to something
it becomes serious so if you say oh yeah
let’s
chat let’s chat sometime in the future
yeah but it doesn’t mean we’re
ever gonna chat again but if we say
let’s chat next monday at
three o’clock in the afternoon boom then
there’s a there’s a
there’s a time yeah yeah and and now
it’s serious right
yeah so the us has to first of all
save the nuclear plants they’re
scheduled to be shut down this decade
and we are having uh we are seeing this
right now in illinois
there are a couple of plants from
axalone that
might be shut down might not um i i
hope they won’t be shut down i think
they’re going to be
saved but but let’s see yeah so i think
the first step
is to save the nuclear power plants and
then
to give incentives to the miners to
produce uranium again
so obviously the most important thing is
to save the jobs and to save the
the clean energy produced by nuclear
reactors yeah okay
cool so we talked about the bulk case
which is really
actually great but let’s talk about a
potential beer case so five years from
now
uranium price is still at 30
on the spot so what went wrong can you
think of any scenario
where there is no bull market in the
coming years
yeah well i i think uh
only if there’s a nuclear accident uh
and you know did
a nuclear accident would dampen
sentiment and
it would most likely delay the recovery
in the prices we expect
now again uh nuclear accidents are not
something that happened every day
there were three in history one with
victims and and and this one was a
series of errors uh one on top of the
other
so i don’t think we’re gonna see
something like it again
um another risk uh to to consider is
china not implementing its plan to build
more nuclear reactors and but again it’s
that’s not something that worries me too
much it’s unlikely
or maybe even a great deposit being
found and developed
uh but you know how how would you
develop the deposits at the moment
who who would look at something that
would cost the 60 or
plus to produce uh just to sell it for
thirty dollars
yeah again prices have to go up to give
miners incentives to produce
uh and and and look if even if we assume
that there’s
no more uranium uh no no more nuclear
reactors
uh being built there’s still more
demands today than supply
so this imbalance has to be sorted out
and i think the
only ways is when the prices go up yeah
definitely okay that’s good so marcelo i
have to
sum it up um you actually the most
bullish uranium investor
australia has ever seen i guess so final
question
um you mentioned 70 of your net worth is
invested in uranium
so what about the other 30 percent
well uh a big chunk of it is is in
in cash uh by you know
if you if you take that amount of risk
and again i don’t think it’s a big risk
when you have
those kinds of imbalances and today is
more than 70
when i started this uh late 2018
it was 70 percent but today the fund
went up by so much that it’s uh
this tomorrow okay again
and we reinvest the the the proceeds
from uh that we get from the fund into
the fund as well so we invest alongside
our investors
okay uh and the other 30 percent i have
to put in cash just to
you know just to to to be safe and
and but but i think that listen mark
it wouldn’t make sense for me to find
such a great investment opportunity
and put three percent of my money into
that because it wouldn’t it wouldn’t
make a difference
yeah and i had three calls in my life
that made a difference in my life
uh which was um the the stock market in
brazil in the late 90s
the real estate market in brazil and
345 and uh and now
uranium and you you don’t need to have
many good calls in your life
you with a few you get there but as long
as you understand then you understand
the risks you’re comfortable with that
and you you think they are really
disproportionately
good yes you can you can bet heavily
congratulations for this investment in
uranium
so you made it actually so thank you
very much for
for the interview for getting up so
early in australia
any closing uh closing thoughts
uh listen uh well first of all it’s not
uh it’s not early at all for for me i
normally wake up at 4 4 30. that’s one
of the benefits of
living in australia and i have three
young kids as well so i’ve been
accustomed to wake up
very early for for a while now okay
but uh mark listen i i hope this
conversation has been useful to to your
listeners i’m always happy to chat and
and i i think we covered briefly the
uranium sector
and again it’s one that i think
i believe investors should look at
definitely
uh the the funny thing about uranium is
that if you do a little work
it’s worse than doing no work at all
yeah you
probably arrive at the wrong conclusions
you you either focus on it and go deeper
or you just leave it aside uh because
everything in uranium
is different from the other commodities
the buyers
contracts pricing cycle everything
i i look at uranium in the beginning of
2017
and thought it was not worth it then i
really look into it towards the end of
2017 and
most of of 2018 and i fell in love with
the sector
so yeah that that would be my advice to
people in a gay mark
thank you so much for the invitation
it’s a great pleasure to to talk to you
definitely definitely was great talking
to you marcelo it’s it’s definitely an
honor and um i learned so much and i’m
i’m i’m sure
all the listeners the audience learned a
lot and you helped to
create um financial intelligence and i
hope we do this pretty soon
again there’s so much to talk and and
time just went by like nothing
so and where can people learn more about
you are you on on twitter or
just tell us your website yeah i’m on
twitter i’m on linkedin
and if people want to to to discuss the
uranium market i’m always keen to
to discuss further it’s it’s something i
i love is a passion now and
and um you know i i went from someone
who was against nuclear energy to
someone who loves it so
if if anyone wants to discuss that i
would be more than happy to do so
yeah and we definitely put all the links
um in the show notes
and my last and definitely final
question is what is the
meaning of life for you for marcelo
lopez
well it’s it’s to be happy to to find
something you like and and go
go deep into that and have some time off
to to enjoy with the ones you love
family and friends and that’s that’s
what we
we try to do too cool listen it was
great talking to you i learned a lot and
i definitely want to do this
again and thank you very much for your
time for getting up
late not early and take care have a nice
one
bye thank you you too bye-bye