In Part 1 of this article, we reviewed the rising demand, falling production, falling imports, and consequent shortages of coal in China.
This week, we'll consider the export side of China coal, prices, and some ways to invest in the China coal crisis.
China's Falling Coal Exports
As of June, with prices at stratospheric levels, China's coal exports had grown 84 percent over the previous year, to 6.99 million tons. (Bear in mind that this was happening even as blackouts enveloped the country.) But then as international prices fell in early July, exports fell by a third from June volumes.
Now, with thousands of factories temporarily shuttered for a lack of grid power, there is an enormous amount of pent-up demand for coal.
So much demand, apparently, that China is not only planning to increase both production and imports, but also to further curb coal exports deliberately.
China announced two weeks ago that it would impose an export tax of 10 percent on thermal coal, and raise the export tax on coke to 40 percent. It also raised taxes on coking coal.
"The move will greatly reduce exports on the spot market. Besides the term contracts, there will be very little exports," said Judy Zhu, an analyst at Standard Chartered Bank in Shanghai.
Since China exports over half of the world's coke, and since coke and coking coal are essential elements in making steel, we should expect higher prices worldwide for both the fuels and for steel.
Rising Prices
As international coal prices shot up this year, US coal prices tripled too, in a hockey-stick pattern that by now should be all too familiar. This chart from the EIA tells the story plainly:

Historical Average Weekly Coal Commodity Spot Prices (Dollars per Short Ton), Business Week Ended August 22, 2008. Source: Energy Information Administration
As Asian production and consumption of coal fell, its local suppliers suffered. The loss of Chinese coal exports indirectly translated to higher demand for US coal, driving its price skyward.
Flagging output from foreign producers and record prices have called more of Appalachia's coal to buyers on the continent and in Asia, as we shall see in a moment.
In turn, this created more demand for coal from Wyoming's coal-rich Powder River basin. Despite high transportation costs, even coal from the Powder River is now making its way to buyers in Europe and Asia.
I hasten to point out that since coal accounts for about 50 percent of US power generation, our grid prices are bound to follow coal upward. Dozens of utilities across the nation have recently announced price hikes of up to 30 percent, and I expect that many others will soon follow suit.
It could be a very expensive winter for those who rely on electricity for heating this year...
US: The Coal Exporter of Last Resort
With Chinese and Indian coal exports down sharply this year, one would normally expect major eastern exporters like Australia and Russia to fill the gap. But severe flooding in Australian mines and power shortages in South Africa have cut sharply into their exports. As of August 14, some 29 ships were reported to be waiting to load at Australia's biggest coal export harbor in Newcastle.
Russia cannot make up the export shortfall either. On August 7, Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov told Russian coal exporters to prioritize domestic needs over exports, because coal stocks at Russian power plants are extremely low, and hydropower reserves are lower than they have been for decades due to low rainfall. Nor are there sufficient rail cars to move coal for both domestic supply and exports. To avoid power outages, Russian state rail monopoly RZhD halved the number of rail cars used to export coal from the Kuzbass in Siberia.
Likewise, Reuters reported two weeks ago that coal exports from Vietnam, a key supplier to China, are likely to drop by a third this year due to cyclone damage to three out of four cargo-loading facilities at its largest coal hub in the northern Quang Ninh province. In addition, Vietnam is cutting back on fossil fuel exports in order to ensure sufficient supplies for its own industries.
The loss of Vietnamese coal exports caused the price of Australian steam coal, an Asian benchmark, to rise to $163.90/ton after five straight weeks of declines from a record $195/ton in early July.
Indonesian coal exports have also been reduced. On August 12, six coal miners were ordered to stop exporting because their prices were too low, and police stopped output from a mine in Borneo claiming that the operator lacked a forestry permit. To my ears, this sounds like a Russian approach to resource nationalization, using legal technicalities to tamp down exports.
Like a cascade of dominoes, China's renewed appetite for coal has now made the US the coal exporter of last resort for the entire world. And since the US holds the world's largest coal reserves, that situation may never be reversed.
Stifel Nicolaus analyst Paul Forward expects U.S. coal exports to jump a full 39 percent this year, to 82 million tons.
Consider Alpha Natural Resources (NYSE: ANR), the largest US exporter of coking coal, with 22 percent of the domestic coal export market. Since the beginning of this year, the stock shot up 200 percent!
US Coal Stocks Are Now Cheap Investments
Fortunately for smart investors like us, the news hasn't quite yet sunk in on the Street.
The stocks of most US coal producers have declined 40 percent or more from their July highs, and are now testing support levels last seen in April when they broke through the previous resistance level set in January.

By comparison, for those interested in investing in Chinese coal, China's coal producers have corrected even more:

My read of the charts suggests that coal stocks may have bounced off a classic double-bottom last Friday, making coal ripe for another charge upward. The shares have already gained 9-10 percent since then.
For investments in coal, I like Peabody Energy (NYSE: BTU) and Arch Coal (NYSE: ACI), but for those who prefer to play a basket of shares, the coal ETF (NYSE: KOL) works too.
I'm not the only one who sees a boom time ahead for companies like Peabody. Analyst David Khani of Friedman Billings Ramsey believes the stock will more than double in a year, largely due to foreign markets which account for more than half of Peabody's profits. He believes that demand will outpace supply for at least another two years, and that prices could double again next year.
The domestic outlook is bullish too, with some 30 new coal-burning power plants under construction in the US.
Takeover Targets
Aside from the strong market fundamentals for the black stuff, there is another angle that makes coal a promising sector right now, and that's mergers and acquisitions.
Billionaire Wilbur Ross, chairman of the International Coal Group, told Bloomberg that he anticipated "an unprecedented amount of both domestic and cross-border mergers and acquisitions" in the coal sector, as China seeks to secure enough energy to keep its economy going.
The reason is simple: Compared to China's top coal company, the top U.S. coal producers are hugely undervalued, at $2.11 a ton for Peabody Energy Corp (NYSE: BTU) vs. $15.52 for China Shenhua Energy Co.
With a huge store of US debt on its balance sheet, the dollar still dragging the bottom, and an insatiable need for more energy, China is on an aggressive campaign to secure energy supplies from the US by hook or by crook.
According to the New York Times, 9 out of 10 unsolicited hostile bids launched by Chinese firms on foreign targets since 2005 were focused on natural resources. The Asian nation has recently made several hostile bids for foreign steel makers.
Likewise, smaller coal companies are takeover targets for larger companies with better operational efficiencies.
Rail Benefits Too
There is another investing angle on the China coal crisis that we must not forget: the railroads. Norfolk Southern (NYSE: NSC), one of the industry's largest coal shippers, stands to benefit handsomely, as do Burlington Northern Santa Fe (NYSE: BNI) and Canadian Pacific Railway (NYSE: CP).
Although the rail sector got hit along with everything else in the June-July selloff, shares have recovered to May levels or better, and look ready to make another run up now.
On the whole, I see no direction but up for coal prices and coal stocks, and the profits will come quickly. This looks like an excellent entry point for the group.
Now, don't get me wrong. I am deeply concerned about carbon emissions, and it gives me no joy to announce a new boom for King Coal. In time, I am hopeful and confident that carbon emissions will come with a price, and coal producers and coal-burning power plants will have to pass those costs on to the consumer, which will ultimately benefit renewable energy.
The transition will take a long time though, because you don't just put up thousands of wind turbines and solar arrays and miles of transmission lines overnight. Nor will the billions in capital committed to coal production and distribution and coal-fired power plants just get up and walk away.
If you have an agnostic approach to investing, coal is a clear investment winner for the near to medium term.
Until next time,
Chris
P.S. This is the sort of early warning that gives investors a shot at the best profits. To discover our very best picks in energy, subscribe to the 20 Trillion Report.







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7 rating
We have always been supportive to all the Countries of the free world in the past, however, we need
to insure we will be in good shape
as far as heating homes this winter
before those of other countries. Our own people must be considered a
priority before taking on the responsibility of the supplying coal products to the free world.
to gordan fulks i am amazed at PHD people who cant just take things for what they are. your the the one whos thinking global warming etc. he said carbon emmision you said global warming and ran with your own PHD analyticle B.S. you use words like demonstrate twice as if you know whats in his head. how do you know he lacks scientiffic tech. by his two words '' deeply concerned '' you are incredibly frightning i would hate to be trying to help an old lady who fell then you come by and say ''His behaveior 'demonstrates' he pushed her .