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The Alternative Fuel Industry You've Never Heard Of
By Tom Dyson
November 16, 2007

Merritt must be one of the ugliest towns I've ever visited.

Beautiful forests and snowy mountains surround it, but the town itself looks like a sprawling trailer park in a dust bowl. Tumble weeds blew down the streets. It would have been a good setting for a spaghetti western.

In the center of town there is a sawmill the size of three city blocks. A huge pile of logs occupied more than half the space. "Excess supply," I thought to myself...

 
Merritt is in British Columbia, about 200 miles east of Vancouver. Last weekend, I went to Merritt to see the dead forests and the Mountain Pine beetles that kill them, but I also had an appointment with the owners of a small sawmill.

Business in the Canadian sawmill industry is tough right now. The slump in the U.S. housing market and the huge oversupply of logs has reduced prices for lumber products to 15-year lows. Now the strong Canadian dollar is putting the Canadian lumber industry into receivership.

The couple that runs the sawmill had to lay off nine workers recently. That's half its workforce. Now this couple is excited about another business... and that's why they were so eager to meet me...
 
They need $1 million to build a pellet mill.

"A friend from high school is a big cheese at Tolko," one of the sawmill owners told me. Tolko is one of the largest lumber companies in Canada.

"I called him up," she went on, "and I said look, 'Give me an honest answer. I don't care what the answer is, I just need the truth: Would a pellet mill be a good investment?' He told me a pellet mill would make 19%-22% returns."

Pellets are a form of bio fuel. They're made from sawdust and waste wood. You can dry and compress your waste wood into these little pellets and use them as fuel. Demand is growing for these pellets every day.

The sawmill owner told me Merritt has five large mills that produce lots of waste chips and sawdust. Right now, it all goes on the burn pile. She could take that waste and turn it into $200 per ton with a pellet mill. Then there's all the wood killed by the beetle. As I explained in my last column, beetle-kill is perfect raw material for pellets, too.
 
The pellet business makes sense to me. You help people save money on their power bills, you help governments make clean electricity, and you use waste materials to do it.

I asked her, if the pellet mill would be such a good investment, why wouldn't Tolko build it?

Tolko is in the lumber business, the mill owner told me. It doesn't want the distraction. Besides, a 20% return on $1 million just isn't a meaningful investment for Tolko.
 
To give you another example how lucrative the pellet business could be, look at the pellet mill going up in Kremmling, Colorado, right now. This will be the biggest pellet mill west of the Mississippi, says the owner.

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Like Merritt, Kremmling is also in the middle of a large pine beetle infestation. To ease the forest fire risk, the local Colorado Housing and Finance authority helped with the financing, chipping in $6 million. The mill costs $8 million to build.

The mills owners – Confluence Energy – will buy the trees from the U.S. Forestry Service for $18 a ton, process them into pellets and sell them for $200 a ton on the other side. All said and done, this operation will make 40 new jobs, dispose of the dead beetle wood, and generate excellent annual returns for its investors.

I think the wood pellet business could be a big growth industry if energy prices remain where they are and the environment stays in the news. The sawmill owner's enthusiasm just confirms it.

If you're an entrepreneur looking for opportunity, you should learn more about pellet mills.

Good investing,

Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

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THE GREATEST PREDICTION MACHINE ON EARTH

Three months ago we featured a chart of mega-retailer J.C. Penney and predicted a raft of bad news was headed for the shopkeepers of America.

That raft is arriving. Yesterday, Penney's announced a horrid third quarter and predicted more of the same in the fourth. It blamed the housing market for the weakness.

Penney's isn't alone in the bad news club: Martha Stewart, Home Depot, Bed Bath & Beyond, Macy's, Pier One, Target, Dollar Tree, and a host of other retailers are recording weak numbers and sinking share prices.

We post today's chart of J.C. Penney to show how bad the retailing business is right now... and to illustrate how the stock market really works. Prices lead, the news follows. It's why trading after news is a sucker's game... and why the market's label of "discounting mechanism" has become cliché. Now let's all go shopping.

JC Penney Co, Inc.

- Brian Hunt

African countries urged U.S. companies to invest more in the continent, particularly in non-oil industries, to avoid missing out on opportunities as China and India increase their pace of investment.

U.S. companies are failing to take advantage of faster economic growth in Africa, Wiseman Nkuhlu, an adviser to South African President Thabo Mbeki, said at the U.S.'s Corporate Council on Africa conference in Cape Town today.

China's trade with Africa may exceed $70 billion this year on increased investment in the continent, China Securities Journal reported yesterday, citing Vice Commerce Minister Wei Jianguo. Annual trade may top $100 billion before 2010, compared with $55.5 billion in 2006, the newspaper said.

With China's economy expected to double in size by 2020, African countries need to find ways to "maximize the benefit" of strong demand growth for commodities, South African Trade Minister Mandisi Mpahlwa said at the conference.

"The aspirations of China are no different to the U.S., Europe and others," he said.

– Bloomberg

High energy prices and mortgage and credit problems are tripping up U.S. consumers and keeping them out of department stores. Stores like J.C. Penney.

J.C. Penney said Thursday that its third-quarter profits fell 9.1% to $261 million, or $1.17 per share, from $287 million, or $1.26 per share, a year ago.

The Penney's earnings release follows a similarly disappointing one from fellow department store Macy's. Shares of Macy's plummeted 7.1% on Wednesday after the company released its third-quarter results.

The double whammy of disappointing Macy's and Penney's earnings suggests that department stores are feeling particularly acute pain from a consumer slowdown. That could be bad news for other department stores with their third-quarter earnings releases still looming.
– Forbes

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