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The one big plus that the Aussie export coal miners are looking for is to set the prices for benchmark thermal for 2008 at US$90 per tonne and then the $Aussie to sink back to A$1.35 to the greenback.
Felix are aiming for after tax profits of around A$100 million for Y/E 2008 which should be achievable at the present exchange rate of around A$1.13 to US$. The Half Yearly result to 31st December 2007 should show that is being achieved.
noirua
I have been following this thread keenly and enjoy the discussion and views of those who keenly follow this stock, which i currently don't hold.
If i may just get slightly off topic here are you suggesting that the AU$ will retreat next year or are you saying that you think the miners are thinking it will slip back next year?
If so, and you agree with this view, could you elaborate please, as i think the opposite is a very real chance.
Cheers
Hi Real1ty, Interest rates are one of the key factors here and this is versus the low rating of the Greenback. Interest rates may not fall that much further in the States, due to inflation pressures and the Government there introducing other measures to solve the sub-prime disaster.
Australia may well have more sub-prime problems than are realised at present and the prices of many commodities may well fall back further. The need for interest rate increases may well subside.
Miners will obviously hope the Aussie will weaken, but as I mentioned, it is more likely to average around A$1.13 to the Greenback.
"Korean consortium joins Moolarben": http://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20080102/pdf/316rnjn7mn0hcq.pdf
Korean consortium pays $90 million plus 10% of development costs for 10% stake in Moolarben: Agrees to take 2.8 million tonnes of 17% ash coal, each year, at market price for the life of the mine.
Not much negative news coming out of the Felix camp at the minute Noirua!
Just need to get the bl**dy court case behind us and I think we will see a real appreciation in the share price. Looking forward to the half yearly accounts which should give us a good spurt.
It is a strange stock at times though, and extremely volatile which is probably a reflection of the tightness of the register. I feel your $10 to $12 takeover price may look undervalued before too long.
China coal shortage to continue
Wednesday Jan 16 08:17 AEDT
China, the world's largest coal consuming nation, used more coal than it produced in 2007 and will stay short through at least 2010, a coal industry official said on Tuesday.
China's demand for coal is expected to rise to 2.76 billion tonnes in 2008, from 2.62 billion tonnes in 2007, said Wu Chenghou, executive director of the Coal Sale and Transportation Association of China.
Wu estimated China produced 2.58 billion tonnes of coal in 2007, slightly above an estimate of 2.52 billion tonnes issued by the State Administration of Work Safety.
He did not comment on whether the country had drawn down coal stocks in 2007 to remain a net exporter, despite producing less than it consumed. China has not yet issued official output data for 2007, and often revises that figure several times.
Customs data released Tuesday showed the country's net exports of coal fell sharply to 2 million tonnes in 2007, compared with net exports of 25.1 million tonnes in 2006 .
By 2010, China's coal consumption will reach 3.06 billion in 2010, up 10 per cent compared with last year, more than will be satisfied by domestic production of between 2.9 billion and 3 billion tonnes, Wu told reporters at an industry conference.
Coal output in 2008 could be reduced by a number of factors, including a crackdown on mines that are unsafe, polluting or wasteful of energy, Wu said.
Some mines could also be closed during the Olympic Games in Beijing in August.
That could cause regional shortages in 2008, Wu said without further specifying. He did not give an output estimate for 2008.
During last year's meeting of the ruling Communist Party, some mines were shut and local media attributed the decision to an effort to avoid embarrassing fatalities from mine accidents, which caused an average of 10 deaths a day in 2007.
©AAP 2008
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