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The Right Way to Speculate in Ethanol
By Jeff Clark
February 14, 2007

Imagine being able to fuel your cars with energy produced from yard waste. All the sticks and clippings from our lawns, parks, and schoolyards could be turned into a renewable source of ethanol.

It can happen. But not in the same way that corn-based ethanol is produced...

The two biggest expenses in the production of corn-based ethanol are the cost of the corn and the cost of the natural gas used in the production process.

But what if you could produce ethanol from widely available and essentially useless resources, like the aforementioned yard clippings and wood chips? And what if one of the byproducts of that process – lignin – could replace natural gas as the heat source in ethanol production? That eliminates the two largest expenses in the production process and creates an economically viable alternative fuel.

Therein lays the promise of cellulosic ethanol.

Cellulose is the main component of plant cell walls and the most common organic compound on earth. It's more difficult to break down cellulose to convert it into useable sugars for ethanol production.

Yet, making ethanol from cellulose dramatically expands the types and amount of available material for ethanol production. This includes many materials now regarded as waste requiring disposal, as well as corn stalks, rice straw, wood chips, and "energy crops" of fast-growing trees and grasses.

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Until 2005, companies had no financial motivation to aggressively pursue the production of cellulosic ethanol. But as I pointed out in yesterday's issue, that's all about to change. The increasing price of corn has rendered corn-based ethanol inefficient... and so large agricultural companies such as Archer Daniels Midland are pursuing cellulosic ethanol.

And why not? The government is right there to help with the funding...

The Energy Policy Act, signed into law in August 2005, contains several provisions designed to spur cellulosic ethanol production, including:

  • A credit-trading program wherein one gallon of cellulosic biomass ethanol or waste-derived ethanol is equal to 2.5 gallons of renewable fuel.
  • A cellulosic biomass program to produce 250 million gallons in 2013.
  • A loan-guarantee program that provides up to $250 million for the construction of a cellulosic ethanol facility.
  • Production incentives to deliver the first billion gallons of annual cellulosic ethanol production.

So here we have the potential for a renewable energy product that's made from otherwise useless resources. It's cheap, highly energy efficient, and funded by the government. And there are several terrific speculations on the future fuel...

More on Chris Weber

Why Housing Makes for Great Trading

It's Time to Buy Oil - Almost

A Government-Mandated Bull Market

Out of fairness to subscribers to The Big Trend Report, I can't name my favorite plays in the sector. However, I can tell you to the best cellulosic ethanol plays are in one of the great growth sectors of the next few years: Biotechnology.

One of the breakthrough companies in this area has studied the chemicals that make up the enzymes found in the intestinal tracts of termites. The most explosive growth should come from the companies like this one... that produce and market the enzymes used in cellulosic ethanol production.

It's still early in this ballgame... so cellulosic ethanol plays (like most biotech companies) trade on the potential for a breakthrough discovery, rather than on the basis of sound fundamental analysis.

But find the winners in this game, and you'll be profiting long after corn-based ethanol has gone the way of the mule and plow.

Best regards and good trading,

Jeff Clark

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THE STEALTH RALLY IN GOLD AND SILVER

Open any financial newspaper this week, and you'll find plenty of articles about crude oil's latest 50-cent move, the private-equity boom, and Bank of America's credit card offer to illegal aliens.

What you won't read about is the stealth rally in gold and silver. After bottoming last June, the precious metal complex is creeping higher almost daily. Silver is barely a dollar off its 2006 high. Gold has gained nearly $100 an ounce since October.

We've said it many times... in a world of fully priced assets, gold and silver are dirt-cheap stores of wealth... not to mention great insurance policies against war, terrorism, and government idiocy. We'll also guess this rally has room to run. Bullish hedge fund interest in gold and silver is still at ho-hum levels... and we haven't seen a single gold coin on the cover of BusinessWeek lately.

Taco Bell's parent, Yum Brands Inc., reported Monday that same-store sales at company-owned Taco Bell restaurants fell 5 percent for the three months ended Dec. 30, compared with a 7 percent gain a year earlier.

The company said China division sales grew 23 percent in local-currency terms due to expansion of KFC and Pizza Hut brands in mainland China.

-AP

In his State of the Union speech last month, President Bush pretty much repeated the energy proposals he made in his 2006 State of the Union speech.

At that time, he called for us to reduce our use of oil by 75 percent of the 25 or so percent we import from the Middle East. The only difference this time around: He wants to achieve the goal in 10 years instead of 20.

What will get us to that goal? The latest fad of energy policy: ethanol. Calls for expanded ethanol production won the president repeated bursts of applause at January's joint session of Congress. Since most of our ethanol is derived from corn, all members of Congress from corn-growing states such as Indiana, I'm sure, were up on their feet cheering.

Unfortunately, corn-derived ethanol simply cannot provide a significant substitute for oil. Last year we used 14 percent of our corn crop to produce about 3 percent of all transportation fuel. To get to President Bush's goal by 2017 with corn ethanol, we'd need to use more than 100 percent of our current corn crop just for fuel.

-Peter Grossman, Indy Star

When [NASA astronaut Lisa Nowak] was arrested, she was carrying a wig, a steel mallet, some duct tape, and a knife. Or as O.J. calls it, an overnight bag.

-Jay Leno
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