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A new era for SUNKAR RESOURCES with phosphates growth (SKR)     

Master RSI - 07 Feb 2010 22:42

Floated at 120p on June 08 raising 33.6m to fund the development of a fertiliser factory, has used $5.9m for adquisitions September 08 and said it still had $26.9m left at 30 June 09.

The company has a phosphorous rock deposit in Kazakhstan totalling 800 million tonnes capable of producing fertilisers for the next 56 years.
The deposit lies in a flat lying position on the Kazakh steppes close to surface so will be cheap to mine and the world still needs fertilisers.
Positive points
1. Shallow - 1 to 3m depth. Ultra low cost to extract.
2. Close to Tengiz oil field which has high sulphur content, hence cheap source of sulphuric acid.
3. Located at junction of two main railway lines giving direct access to Russia/China.

Sunkar is suppose to be one of the lowest cost producers in the World at sub $125 per DAP (die-ammonium phosphate) tonne. The average is circa $200 with some producers as high as $300.
The case for phosphate deposits is population growth means more agriculture means more fertiliser needed in the future.
RESUME SKR produce phosphate for DAP fertilizer and have licenses and acrage in Kurdistan to last 50-70yrs producing in excess of 100M tonnes of raw material each year. 160m shares in issue, directors own a significant chunk. Also they have a cheap source of sulphur required to produce the DAP

Phosphorus - its role and nature
Phosphorus (chemical symbol P) is an element necessary for life. Because phosphorus is highly reactive, it does not naturally occur
as a free element, but is instead bound up in phosphates. Phosphates typically occur in inorganic rocks.
As farmers and gardeners know, phosphorus is one of the three major nutrients required for plant growth: nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K).
Fertilizers are labelled for the amount of N-P-K they contain.
Most phosphorus is obtained from mining phosphate rock. Crude phosphate is now used in organic farming, whereas chemically treated forms such
as superphosphate, triple superphosphate, or ammonium phosphates are used in non-organic farming.
The current major use of phosphate is in fertilizers. Growing crops remove it and other nutrients from the soil... Most of the world's farms do not have or
do not receive adequate amounts of phosphate. Feeding the world's increasing population will accelerate the rate of depletion of phosphate reserves.
and...
resources are limited, and phosphate is being dissipated. Future generations ultimately will face problems in obtaining enough to exist.
It is sobering to note that phosphorus is often a limiting nutrient in natural ecosystems. That is, the supply of available phosphorus limits the
size of the population possible in those ecosystems.


13 May 09 conference - fertilizers link about SKR ....minesite

Intraday
Chart.aspx?Provider=Intra&Code=SKR&Size= 3 month Candlestick with volume
Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=SKR&Si
3 month Bollinger Bands,RSI, S Stochastic and 50 days MA
big.chart?symb=uk%3ASKR&compidx=aaaaa%3A
Charts - 2 days
big.chart?symb=uk%3Askr&compidx=aaaaa%3A


Plus market trades Number of people who have visited this thread    

Master RSI - 17 Aug 2010 21:49 - 51 of 754

A LOT OF GOING ON, another pair of companies trying to do a deal .........


Russian fertilizer market closer to a mega merger
Published 17 August, 2010, 11:48

Russia is moving closer to creating a new national fertilizer champion, with Suleiman Kerimovs Uralkali and Silvinit, Russian potash producer, expected to merge in the near future.

Yahoo StumbleUpon Google Live Technorati del.icio.us Digg Reddit Mixx Propeller Russias government is keen to support the fertilizer sector, as it provides the country's third biggest source of export revenues. The prime movers in the consolidation of the sector are billionaire Suleiman Kerimov and his associates, with the Russian metals tycoon having bought a controlling stake in agro-chemicals giant Uralkali.

Now two offshore firms, that are believed to be close to Kerimov, have bought 44% of Silvinit, the country's largest potash producer. This will be most likely added to those 25% in Silvinit Kerimov already owns.

The third piece of the puzzle will be when Uralkali launches a take-over bid for the unlisted Silvinit, which is expected to happen in the coming days. It would create the world's second biggest potash producer, but Dmitry Baranov, an analyst from Finam, believes the Russian anti-monopoly service will allow the deal with certain provisions.

The Federal antimonpoly service will issue detailed instructions concerning a deal to merge Silvinit and Uralkali. Even if a structure with offshore companies is used. There will be strict limits for domestic pricing, with exports accounting for 80-90% of the companies profits.

Agro chemicals are the third biggest export item for Russia after fuel and metals, and the government is keen to encourage its growth. The merged company of Uralkali and Silvinit would hold 30% of global potash reserves and 40% of global exports.

To justify its size, the new company would have to grow both domestically and internationally, with Anna Kupriyanova, a senior analyst at Uralsib Capital, adding that the new market giant will reshape the market itself and also change some regulations in it.

As of today, the share of domestically consumed fertilizer in Russia is 10 % of what is produced in Russia. So, I expect this share will increase to 15-20% within 5-10 years. Obviously, the state will control these prices, and they have always had a huge discount to export prices, but I dont think this will be too negative for fertilizer producers. The export policy will be completely different.

The merger of Silvinit and Uralkali could be just the beginning of consolidation in the fertilizer sector. Recent history in Russia shows, as was the case with energy, that it takes time for a sector to take on a stable form, with the government playing an active role not just in its creation, but also in its operation through influencing domestic prices and export duties.

Master RSI - 17 Aug 2010 22:10 - 52 of 754

Potash Bid Narrows Focus On Fertilizer Makers' Market Heft
Today : Tuesday 17 August 2010

The bid for Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. is focusing attention on an obscure corner of the fertilizer market that holds the key to global food output growth.

Potash itself is a potassium-rich salt that serves as the food, along with nitrogen and phosphates, for wheat, corn and other crops. Crop producers need to use it in specific amounts to glean the biggest possible yields.

"There is no substitute for it," said Stephen Jasinski, the mineral commodity specialist for the U.S. Geological Survey.Supplies of potash--the remnants of ancient seas that are mined by fertilizer makers--are of growing importance to developing nations like China and India, which put a high priority on food security for their large populations.

While the fertilizer is widely used, two regions account for 80% of reserves and two-thirds of production: Canada and the former Soviet Union.

There's little active trade in the commodity. Contracts for potash deliveries aren't listed on an exchange and there isn't a big community of "spot" traders that could provide it on short notice.

Benchmark prices are set by a consortium of Canadian potash producers called Canpotex. Potash prices at the port of Vancouver hit a high of $900 a metric ton in 2008 but then plunged during the global recession.

As the commodity is available from only a few suppliers, they maintain a significant amount of pricing power. But farmers can suspend their use of potash if prices are too high in the hope that prices fall before the lower potassium level reduces crop yields.

Canpotex sells 8 million-9 million metric tons of potash a year, according to its website. In 2008, world potash production totaled 32 million metric tons, according to the International Fertilizer Association, an industry group.

Meanwhile, only 12 countries have the potential for significant production, resulting in a massive export market.

"The theory here is that demand for all three nutrients should increase over time, but there is a potential for potash, particularly in the two largest countries, China and India, to grow even faster," said Harry Vroomen, an economist with The Fertilizer Institute, an industry trade group.

Throughout human history, farmers supplied crops with potassium by scattering ash or using animal waste, but only potash provides enough of the nutrient on a large enough scale to support the global food industry.

That's the main reason for the interest of mining giants in acquiring reserves. On Tuesday, Potash rejected Bhp Billiton's unsolicited $38.56 billion takeover bid and adopted a shareholder rights plan to prevent an unwanted acquisition.

Vroomen said the ratio of potash to nitrogen and phosphates in developed countries such as the U.S. is much higher than in developing regions. China and India in particular, which account for more than a third of the world's population, use a significantly lower amount of potash relative to other nutrients, and are now looking to increase their use as they run into plateauing crop yields.

BHP's interest in Potash Corp. comes amid a push to consolidate the fertilizer industry to take advantage of growing demand for wheat. Monday, Agrium Inc. (AGU), Canada's second-biggest fertilizer producer behind Potash Corp., made an unsolicited bid for Australian wheat exporter AWB Ltd. (AWB.AU), as it seeks to make Australia its launch pad to service the growing Asian markets.

chessplayer - 18 Aug 2010 07:18 - 53 of 754


Sunkar Resources PLC
Half Yearly Report
RNS Number : 2320R
Sunkar Resources PLC
18 August 2010
INTERIM CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
SIX MONTHS ENDED 30 JUNE 2010
HIGHLIGHTS
The Company received the consent of the Government of Kazakhstan to change its work programme commitments under its Subsoil Use Contract ("SUC") to develop the Chilisai phosphate deposit
The SUC changes will align mining development with future fertilizer production and will mean ore extraction commitments in 2010 to 2012 of 1 million tonnes per annum with cumulative development expenditure commitments extended from 2014 to 2020
Resource estimate of 293 million tonnes in the Measured and Indicated category and a further 182 million tonnes in the Inferred category in accordance with JORC announced during the period
Resource estimate, which covers 40% of the overall of the licence area, more than sufficient to meet the first 20 years of fertilizer production
Engineering contractor SNC-Lavalin selected to prepare and have commenced a Bankable Feasibility Study ("BFS")
Preliminary results of BFS due in the second half, final results due in first half of 2011
Discussions on supply and off-take agreements continue
Mining rate on course to complete 1 million tonnes extraction in 2010
The Company is well financed for immediate needs: cash at US$7.5m at 30 June 2010: Equity Line Facility of 10 million in place

Charirman Teck Soon Kong commented "the long term outlook for the phosphates sector remains positive and world prices began to increase in the second half of 2010, with the benchmark of US Gulf DAP now nearing US$500 per tonne. The underlying fundamentals of food demand and population growth in Asia remain and thus, I believe, that our project, which benefits from scale, location and developed infrastructure is well positioned for the future."
For further information please contact:

Sunkar Resources plc



Serikjan Utegen, CEO
Tel: +44 20 7930 8678

Donald Sinclair, CFO
Canaccord Genuity Limited



Andrew Chubb
Tel: +44 20 7050 6500

Bhavesh Patel

chessplayer - 18 Aug 2010 07:31 - 54 of 754

According to figures that I have just seen presented on CNBC,agricultural productivity is greatly increased by fertilizers.

Productivity per acre:
U.S. 120 bushels
World 55 bushels
India 45 bushels

The figures for the U.S. reflect the much more intensive land fertililization taking place.

chessplayer - 18 Aug 2010 08:21 - 55 of 754

After the rejection of BHP $38 b bid for Potash the whole sector is on the up.
SKR must be a great one to hold

Master RSI - 18 Aug 2010 08:37 - 56 of 754

chessplayer

Thanks for the news and information this morning, it is pretty clear that fertilisers give a better crop.

Any chances of editing a bit post 53, lost of info we do need like contacts and the blank spaces beteween lines makes a very long post.

thanks, will delete that if you do the editing.

chessplayer - 18 Aug 2010 09:07 - 57 of 754


I am a bit of dinosaur on the computer.
How do I close the spaces

Balerboy - 18 Aug 2010 09:27 - 58 of 754

back space at the beginning of a paragraph.

Master RSI - 18 Aug 2010 10:06 - 59 of 754

Or highligh the blank spaces or things you do not want and delete

Balerboy - 18 Aug 2010 10:08 - 60 of 754

? highlight the blank space....

chessplayer - 18 Aug 2010 10:29 - 61 of 754

I think I got it sussed out Thanks.
Will be an expert on this thing in no time!

Master RSI - 18 Aug 2010 12:05 - 62 of 754

chessplayer

well done, better than the share price at the moment

I do not know how old you are, but as they say, never too OLD to learn a thing or two

Master RSI - 18 Aug 2010 12:08 - 63 of 754

BHP says that they are going ahead with the bid and posting details to shareholders

so big interest on the sector meaning good for SKR

chessplayer - 18 Aug 2010 12:41 - 64 of 754

Russia have been hard hit by this drought situation,and SKR appear to have the support of the Kazakh government,so it would appear that failure cannot be contemplated. After all,we are talking about measures to avoid starvation.
I trust that I am not sounding overly dramatic.

hjs - 18 Aug 2010 13:25 - 65 of 754

Following BHP's bid for PotashCorp, BHP is making " a big bet that agricultural fertiliser ingredients - including Potash, nitrogen, and phosphate will rise in price as the developing world requires more meat and plants"

This must be very good news for SKR.

chessplayer - 18 Aug 2010 16:02 - 66 of 754

Given that the stock is about 1/6th of its flotation price of 2 years ago and the almost frenzied demand to maximize crop output, a 10 bagger must be on the cards.

Balerboy - 18 Aug 2010 22:50 - 67 of 754

You need cash to buy fert, bad harvest.... no spare cash... first to go is fert, then sprays.

chessplayer - 19 Aug 2010 07:23 - 68 of 754

If that is the case,why has a $38 billion bid for Potash been rejected as woefully inadequate.

Balerboy - 19 Aug 2010 09:04 - 69 of 754

could it be used for something other than farming??

chessplayer - 19 Aug 2010 09:08 - 70 of 754

Such as
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