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$CCJ

Weak Day For Me

BAS has imploded 15% in a week. I always pare back that position opportunistically when I can, precisely because I cannot trust it. Sadly, I added on to quick, down 10%, and now have some losses to show for it. The stock is owned by cowards of the lowest caliber.

HCLP is also disappointing me, down off a resurgence from the backs of the frack sand article that made rounds last week.

I was getting excited about TSLA’s selloff, but that has shored up, and is pushing higher. My expectation is the first round of put options expire worthless. I have high hopes for the longer expiration dates.

CCJ though is looking promising. Silver is also pressing higher – I would love a precious metals price recovery for Christmas.

My portfolio is flat on the day. December is young, but time is short, and it appears that I will merely perform with the market this year. A grand opportunity to broadly defeat the indices, rallied from my huge RGR trade in the beginning of the year, was wasted, sadly.

But, maybe Santa Clause will deliver a holiday special for Cain. He has plenty of times before.

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Japan vs China Feud Will Secure Nuclear

Long ago, when I first purchased CCJ, in the midst of a nuclear reactor melting down on a coastline in the Pacific, I told you that there was more to this than the panic being cultivated by professional fire-alarm pullers.

And there were two primary reasons at that time which I gave. The first, and most obvious, of course, was that one does not just restructure the load production of a country’s power grid over night. Watching Japan struggle with prices as they import the coal needed to replace that energy has been an exercise in this concept.

Across the planet, other nations that declared their intentions to wean off nuclear energy are also realizing how difficult this task will actually be.

But the other main reason I gave why Japan, specifically, would not be divesting itself of nuclear assets was not economical. It was military.

Japan’s hardship is that it is an island nation with weak natural resources. And Her ancestral rival is a massive half a continent, sporting more than one billion people and rich natural resources just a short ship ride away.

In a peace time environment, Japan may have taken her sweet time (and much wasted money and hardship) restarting the nuclear energy program. The Japanese are a notoriously conservative culture, and if you have ever worked with a Japanese company, you know just what I mean by that.

But even Japan, with her slow, careful processions, has limits of patience.

Japan’s greatest threat is a blockade of supply routes. A steady flow of resources into the country is necessary to maintain it. These supply routes, not unlike the UK’s in World War 2, would prove a great headache and cause of domestic problems in a military conflict.

It’s bad enough importing food, goods, raw materials, munitions, etcetera. And having your nations power grid at the mercy of getting boats past enemy naval fleets is just one extra pitfall that Japanese military leadership will not want to deal with.

This was one of the main reasons Japan decided on the nuclear path years ago to begin with. A nuclear reactor carries enough fuel both active and in storage to supply full power for around 3 years.

Compare that to a coal plant, which under full load can require a delivery of about 15,000 tons of fuel a day. This approach requires a constant flow of fuel and also very large holding sites, both of which become attractive and hard to defend targets in wartime.

I bring this up because just recently, Japan’s leadership has reaffirmed the country’s commitment to safe nuclear power. A recent report from Cameco management issued guidance of a sizable fraction of Japan’s total nuclear assets beginning to come back online. This same report detailed that Cameco has observed Japan to be net buyers of nuclear fuel at this point in time.

This should be seen as reducing the uncertainty surrounding Japan’s fuel assets. One of the many worries supplying downward pressure on nuclear spot price has been that Japanese utilities may begin selling off unused fuel. This does not seem to be the case.

In the same presentation, Cameco also reassured audience members that Cameco will not be entering into any long term fuel contracts at these prices, which Cameco considers unreasonable. They are waiting for the market to set rates higher, and have instead dedicated themselves to shoring up the balance sheet and controlling costs to bide the time.

For the moment, the uranium market remains cold. But Cameco is committed to outlasting the cold spell. I remain very excited in the prospects of CCJ, and it remains my largest position at this time.

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BAS Breaks My Good Time

BAS swung around today, down more than 8%. I just adore 10% price swings up and down, like a buzz saw for the knees of the weak. It’s insanity, there is no reason for this sort of price action. Even when it’s making me rich, I kind of hate it.

The positions I had that were offsetting the losses softened into the close, with HCLP and CCJ coming in neutral. My biggest gainer today isn’t a full position, by a long shot, and is thus not much worth talking about. UEC was up 10% today, but it’s just a few percent – an ancillary position to CCJ.

The biggest real gain I had today was probably silver. You can understand why I’m not leaping around for joy.

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Good morning, Sirs & Ma’ams

The 9th floor welcomes you, friend. I hope I find you well on this cold, Fall morning.

The weekend was a nice respite for me; my family gathered in the North where we drank chilled German beer and ate sausage and sauerkraut. There is something tranquil to sitting around a fire, in ones nicest holiday sweaters and scarfs, enjoying the company of loved ones to quality food and drink.

My positions are splitting two directions here. The downdraft is being pulled by BAS, which has denied the breakout. Thankfully, I unloaded a good chunk of shares in the mid $16 range, and can claim a mild victory in the event, despite the losses.

On the other side, you have CCJ breaking out. I have watched CCJ for more than long enough to dare declare this a pivotal moment. The company is ranged bound with a $3-5 standard deviation, creating >20% displacements. Every other quarter is a crash or bull run, depending on if you’re disciplined enough to withstand the onslaught.

Beyond that, preparations are being made for the feast. The Thaler clan is being hailed from the four fingers of Michigan – we will gorge ourselves in the ancestral home of a distant cousin this year. Scotch will be plentiful and wine will flow freely.

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Reinforced CCJ Position With Shares Of UEC – Read

I bought some shares of UEC for $1.71. This is not a full position. It is just a couple percent of my account.

I consider this a leveraged addition to my CCJ position. That CCJ position is quite large, banking on a recovery in uranium. I wanted to add some more, but diversify a little, with the potential for a big payoff.

UEC recently secured a finance deal and have done very well bringing operations on line. They’re exceptionally small, and I cannot condone buying them in size. Small fluctuations could snuff them out.

However, I am a believer in uranium. Forces around the globe are converging. My main play is CCJ, but if pricing recovers, UEC will skyrocket in ways CCJ could only dream of.

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Update: here’s UEC’s capital spending on projects. Look at all the projects they’ve brought online in just a few years. There are good things coming down the pipeline.

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Pared Down BAS

I had purchased additional shares of BAS in late July through early August, between $11.55 and $12.40. Those shares were up 30-40%, so I sold off half of them. The remainder is added to my permanent position.

I love the name, but having followed it for quite some time, it’s normal deviations are in the 20-30% range. I’m happy to see it breaking out to new highs, as that jives well with my own expectations. While buying the initial stake in BAS, I called for a price target of $18 at the time, and feel this company is well positioned to experience above average growth for the next 5-10 years.

However, back to the wild price swings, I don’t trust this stock at all. So taking a bit of money off the table makes sense. If I can’t buy back in lower, I still make a fat spread on a major position. But in all likelihood, the stock craters back to $14, and I load up all over again.

My current positions are CCJ, BAS, HCLP, AEC, MAA, NRP, RMCF, TSLA puts, and physical silver.

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