Monday 10 March 2014

The anthracite coal market, could Ukraine unrest disturb exports & pricing?


The anthracite coal market, could Ukraine unrest disturb exports & pricing?


The current crisis underway in Ukraine and in particular the Crimea peninsula
could serve to have some impact on the anthracite export and price markets particularly related to Ukraine bulk anthracite seaport exports. Ukraine typically exports between 4 to 5 million metric tons of anthracite each year, primarily to Turkey, Bulgaria, Poland, Spain, Italy and Belgium. Naturally, the biggest regional export competitor is Russia. Anthracite accounts for about 30% of Ukraine’s coal production

The pricing of Ukraine anthracite has essentially been controlled by the Ukraine State, given that the majority of coal mined in Ukraine is sold for domestic use, the Ukraine government does not want to purchase high cost coal. Essentially this pricing situation has made Ukraine anthracite competitive and attractive for customers in Asia and Western Europe, but how long can Ukraine’s export market for anthracite continue either un interrupted or indeed un affected by events in Ukraine?

Most of Ukraine’s coal is produced from the Donbas basin, in Eastern Ukraine and when exported by sea often goes through the Berdyansk commercial seaport and or the Mariupol commercial seaport, both located on the Sea of Azov.

So far Russia has focused its attention on securing the Crimea peninsula and is currently in control of the Port of Sevastopol, home of its Black Sea military naval fleet.

The most important seaport and main commercial export port in Ukraine, is the Port of Odessa, which is still under control of the State of Ukraine and not hindered by Russian military activity.

Should the situation in Ukraine worsen and Russian influence in terms of military presence spread to include a partition of Ukraine, where the east of Ukraine becomes under Russian control, then Ukraine would lose its most important energy asset, that of its coal fields. This is why the crisis in Ukraine is a serious one. Should Russian influence spread to east Ukraine, the whole of Ukraine from an energy security perspective would be affected.

There are two private coal miners of significance currently operating and exporting coal from Ukraine, they are;
DTEK, Ukraine’s largest privately integrated energy-company, involved in power generation and coal mining.


Sadovaya Group a pure play coal mining operation, with its head office in Alchevsk, Ukraine, but also with a domiciled address in Luxembourg. Sadovaya has its shares traded on the Warsaw Stock Exchange, ticker (SGR:WSE)
The company has seen its shares decline by 63% over the last 52 weeks.


The potential for supply disruption of Ukraine’s anthracite coal bound for export markets is clearly there and may well drive some of the Asian and European importers to look further afield for anthracite supply. Indeed, any export restrictions would only serve to increase the price of anthracite on world markets, as would demand by Ukraine domestic thermal power producers.



TSX and AIM listed East Coal (AIM: ECX) ceased trading on the 26th February 2014, after acquiring theVerticalnaya anthracite mine and Menzhinsky mine in Ukraine, eventually disposing of these assets after filing for bankruptcy in November 2013.


Clearly the opportunity for Ukraine to attract foreign direct investment into its coal sector, certainly from Western investors, remains challenging, given the difficulties East Coal faced in what was a pre-Russian interventionist environment.

For investors looking to get a position in the anthracite market, opportunities to invest in listed production and earnings play anthracite securities are slim.

South African listed securities, Petmin (PET:JNB) would give investors exposure to the anthracite market in South Africa, but also increasing the risks that the South African mining sector is facing in general with its current workforce unrest. Petmin cancelled a planned listing of their shares on London’s AIM market back in October 2013.

Closer to home, AIM listed Atlantic Coal (ATC:AIM) is one of  few anthracite focussed mining companies that is currently listed, is operationally profitable and with its main Stockton mine located in the anthracite coal fields of Pennsylvania USA, faces none of the geopolitical risks associated with other investment targets. Indeed, Atlantic’s Stockton mine does have the rail and port infrastructure to export, should it be able to increase its mining output through its stated plans to acquire other anthracite assets in Pennsylvania.

Investment Summary:

Listed on AIM, Atlantic Coal (ATC:AIM) is probably the best listed anthracite mining play with which UK investors can get access to at a time when the anthracite market is facing potential supply and pricing volatility.

ATC shares have rallied in recent days by 5%, partly due to a recent announcement of a major equipment purchase. Over a 5 year period, the stock is down 70%, over the last 12 month the stock is down 26% but in the last 6 months the stock has rose by 39%.

Further information on the company can be found at

Friday 7 March 2014

Atlantic Coal AIM:ATC, Revving Up With Major Equipment Purchase and Lowering Idiosyncratic Risks

Last friday, Atlantic Coal (AIM:ATC) one of only a few globally listed anthracite miners, and one of just a limited number of AIM listed coal miners, announced a major order for six Komatsu Model HD785-7 100 ton haul trucks and two CAT D9 dozers. 

The market seems to have really missed the significance of this news by Atlantic Coal at a time when the anthracite sector in the USA has been posting some good results. I draw people's attention to a recent article in the Republican Herald a daily newspaper serving Pottsville, Schuylkill County, the main anthracite coal production regions in Pennsylvania, with Greg Driscoll, president and CEO of Blaschak Coal Corp, one of the leading US anthracite miners. Driscoll, reported that  Blaschak had seen record production output in 2013 and that the anthracite community at large in Pennsylvania was quite optimistic about prospects for the sector heading into 2014. The full interview can be seen at;
 http://republicanherald.com/news/local-coal-companies-producing-record-numbers-1.1639580

Share Price Prognosis:
I would see the order for this additional equipment as being a strong sign by management that demand and pricing for anthracite will remain robust throughout 2014 in line with the sentiment put forward by Blaschak who are backed by the private equity group Milestone Partners, http://www.milestonepartners.com and where this private company has no need to indulge in any PR share ramping.

The idiosyncratic risks for Atlantic Coal appear to be lowering as the company is now operationally profitable and appears to be lowering its debt risk. The average daily share volume traded through the stock is circa 14 million daily about 26,000 stg in real terms, making it at least for AIM, one of the more liquid stocks on the market. The US is certainly heading out of recession and the economy is on the move. I know this from personal experience given that I am a significant investor in the US, but also having just returned from a 6 week visit to the Midwest, can testify that there is a feel good factor heading back to the market. 

Whilst the recent weather in the US may have had some impact on mining activities (coal washing plants hate freezing weather), the longer term prognosis for ATC looks good and with uncertainty surrounding anthracite production from Russia and the Ukraine, because of geo-political risk, the ability for cheap anthracite imports to head to the US may well be set back. Anthracite is also a specialist coal and has a number of sales outlets, and is not just exposed to thermal heating market demand, but that of the steel sector where it is used as a carbon additive and reductant, the industrial sector where it is used in water filtration (A massive growth sector in the US) and in diverse demand markets such as bottle colouring, yes you might actually be buying some Atlantic Coal when you next purchase a Budweiser!!!

Anyway, thoughts are my own as usual,  but still  born out of more that 20 years of successful investment experience.







Atlantic Coal plc / Index: AIM / Epic: ATC / Sector: Mining
28 February 2014
Atlantic Coal plc ("Atlantic" or the "Company")
Purchase of New Equipment to Significantly Increase Production

Atlantic Coal plc, the AIM listed open cast coal production and processing company with activities in Pennsylvania, USA, is pleased to announce that it has ordered six Komatsu Model HD785-7 100 ton haul trucks and two CAT D9 dozers. This equipment purchase is expected to enable the Company to continue to increase the run-of-mine ("ROM") production profile at its Stockton Colliery, a producing opencast anthracite operation in Pennsylvania ("Stockton"). The purchase of the equipment is to be funded through a lease purchase agreement at a total cost of $8.5m over six years.

Atlantic Managing Director, Steve Best, said, "We anticipate that the acquisition of the new equipment will assist with our operational efficiency and enable us to meet our production goals for the immediate future. This should allow us to increase our production of ROM coal to the wash plant and maximise the circa 1.8* million tons defined anthracite reserves at Stockton."

"We look forward to providing further updates on our progress at Stockton and our Pott and Bannon project, together with our wider strategy to increase our presence in the US anthracite industry, at the appropriate time."

*As announced on 11 June 2013. The revised estimate is subject to completion of drilling to confirm the extent of prior by-passed coal on the south wall of the mine and development of an updated mine plan for recovery of remaining coal.