Avoiding Unnecessary Meetings

September 20th, 2007 by MICE Editor

Avoiding unnecessary meetings is one of the more important things that you need to learn about when you are working your way up the food chain at work. Your office is probably filled with all kinds of people and many of them are probably not the best workers. This wouldn’t be so bad if you were not responsible for the work churned out by so many of them! They key to success when getting out of meetings is teaching your employees or underlings some good time management skills.

Time management is something that we can all benefit from. This kind of skill will help you and others to become more efficient in their everyday work. If you can get everyone working on a good schedule then you will be able to keep them in line much better which will allow you to avoid having to have all kinds of meetings just to chastise your workers.

There are a couple of ways that you can teach these skills to your people. You can give a mini seminar for one or you can bring someone else in to give it. This is a powerful tool that will help you to get the message across. After this seminar it is up to you to enforce all of the things that were taught. You need to keep on top of everyone and remind them of all the tips that were given out. Make sure that they understand that you mean business and that you will not tolerate having to schedule meeting after meeting just so that you can reprimand them.

Always remember that good time management is THE best way to avoid unnecessary meetings each and every day of the year. If you work on this you will see your team becoming more efficient in no time flat.

Learning time management is important and is intimately connected with learning to focus, and setting priorities. Visit http://managingtime.info for more information.

Conventional Mining Will Keep Uranium Price High

September 18th, 2007 by MICE Editor

“I never thought I would say this,” announced Dustin Garrow, marketing director for Paladin Resources (TSX: PDN) at the close of his presentation to an audience comprised of utility and nuclear fuel insiders. Then, he forecast a rise in the price of uranium in the coming months to between $80 and $100 per pound. A long-time industry consultant, Garrow acts as an intermediary between uranium producers and utility fuel brokers.

The Platts Nuclear Fuel Strategies conference held this past week in Washington, D.C. was sobering for U.S. utilities, yet revitalizing for the assorted suppliers and vendors attending this educational workshop. The jump in the spot uranium price to $55.75/pound, over the weekend, was hardly a surprise for those who participated. The conference’s mood was buoyant and electrifying as steady demand continues to strengthen for the ‘active supply’ of uranium. Analysts may be forced to upwardly revise their price expectations going forward through the end of this year and for 2007.

TradeTech published on the company’s website commentary on uranium transactions, writing, “Many sellers continue to seek market-related pricing terms for spot delivery and buyers continue to show a willingness to raise bid prices in order to secure supply at fixed prices. The buyer mix remains diverse, with utilities, producers, intermediaries, and speculators seeking market purchases. Long-term uranium demand remains strong and continues to exert upward pressure on the spot uranium price. The spot uranium market is expected to remain active through October.”

We talked further with Gene Clark, Chief Executive of TradeTech, by email after briefly chatting at the Platts conference. He added his company was tweaking assumptions on price projections for utilities in a soon-to-be-published uranium market study. “We expect prices in the fourth quarter to continue to significantly exceed all previous expectations,” Clark wrote to us. “Active supply, which is our measure, determined by telephone interview of uranium actually being offered in the market, is back to the level of its historical low in the second quarter of 2004.” Earlier this year, Clark forecast spot uranium would reach $55/pound.

Clark considers this a major factor for uranium price forecasting. “Many potential sellers of uranium are holding back supply, making it ‘inactive,’ because they are satisfied with their level of sales for this year,” he explained. “Barring the entry of a major new source, active supply is expected to remain low for the rest of the year.” The major source of demand, through the end of the year is likely to come from traders and hedge funds, Clark informed us. He lowered the demand status of primary users such as utilities from the ‘must have’ category to discretionary buying.

World Uranium Mining Trends and Outlook

“We’ve been trying to encourage utility companies to work more closely with junior uranium companies,” announced Michael Knapik, Chief Editor of Platts’ NuclearFuel, before the uranium mining panel began their presentations. In a previous presentation that morning, Charles Peterson, a partner with the DC-based law firm Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP had talked about the security of future uranium supply. Utilities have been hooked on buying low-cost uranium from Canada, Australia and Kazakhstan. Peterson has been advising utilities to begin discussions with speculators who have been purchasing uranium as the price has soared. “Some utilities are cooperating with speculators,” Peterson observed.

As we reported at the conference last week, Scotiabank’s vice president of economics Patricia Mohr believes uranium will continue to be a bright spot in the commodities market in 2007. She pointed out her bank’s commodity index had probably peaked in August, but she felt uranium would be the “exception to this.” Mohr cited inadequate mining supply as the primary driver in the spectacular rise in the uranium price. Uranium producers only contributed 65 percent to last year’s demand, while the balance came from inventory sales and blended down uranium from decommissioned Russian warheads.

Paladin and Namibia

Dustin Garrow talked about Paladin’s amazing success story, discussing how he was approached by the company’s CEO in 2003 when the stock was trading for three cents and offered stock options. Three years later, Garrow remains ebullient on Paladin’s growth prospects in Africa and elsewhere. It is a tribute to unrestrictive environmental regulations in Namibia and Paladin’s rapid execution at the Langer Heinrich uranium project that the company can announce it will be shipping its first yellowcake in early 2007.

In an interesting disclosure, Garrow explained how Paladin had arranged a syndicated loan agreement to fund its mine development and construction. Clauses within this loan agreement required the mandatory forward sale of a portion of the mine’s production. Those two sales contracts of more than 5 million pounds of U3O8 are scheduled for delivery between 2007 and 2012 to two U.S. utilities. Garrow led the audience to believe selling at such a low price was not something Paladin desired. Arranging the sale with his partner, Garrow said, “My partner and I have a combined 50 years in this business, and we provided this uranium to our most preferred customers.”

Currently producing about seven percent of the world’s uranium, Namibia has become a hotspot since we reported on this country last March. At the time, there were but three companies. Since then, the number has grown to 14, according to an announcement by the Ministry of Mines and Energy. We checked the progress on Forsys Metals (TSX: FSY), which we reported upon in March. Forsys spokesman Sean Felker told us, “We are revising our resource calculation and releasing it in the fourth quarter.” The company has spent this year further proving up their resource, while the company’s stock continues flying under the industry’s radar screen.

A research report by Orion Securities in Toronto, which participated in raising money for Forsys, suggested the all-in cost to mine the company’s Valencia project could come in under $25/pound and would have an IIR of 30 percent after tax. Early estimates show the Valencia project might annually produce 2.5 million pounds of U308 over ten years. This was sufficient to interest the fuel broker for a major U.S. utility. Felker said, “We’ve started the process of marketing our uranium after the utility sent a consulting geologist to study the property.” Due diligence was done on site in Namibia. Felker explained his company’s Valencia project was about 30 months away from where Paladin’s Langer Heinrich is today.

Forsys appears to be following Paladin’s lead. As success was developing for Paladin in Namibia, the company moved to near completion of a bankable feasibility study at the Kayelekera uranium project in Malawi. Now, Forsys is considering other uranium properties in Africa. Both companies, and others developing uranium projects in Africa, will utilize the open pit method to maximize recovery of uranium from their mines.

David Miller Predicts More U.S. Uranium
Will be Conventionally Mined

It is likely that rising uranium prices will beget more costly uranium extraction methods, which of course will provide a more solid floor for the uranium price over the next ten to fifteen years.

The presentation made by Strathmore Mineral’s President David Miller vividly illustrated why the United States can continue mining uranium over the next two decades. Admittedly, the United States is unlikely to return to the glory uranium production years of the 1950s and 1960s. “The U.S. can still become a medium size uranium producer,” Miller told the audience. He predicted conventional mining would replace the preferred method of ISR mining in the United States in less than ten years. In Miller’s presentation, he forecast conventional uranium mining – through underground and open pit mining methods – might exceed 16 million pounds annually by 2020.

Miller’s research demonstrated a number of uranium companies whose combined annual production could reach nearly 30 million pounds by 2020. In several slides, he extrapolated production estimates from various companies – such as Uranerz Energy (Amex: URZ), UR-Energy (TSX: URE), Energy Metals (TSX: EMC) and Strathmore Minerals (TSX: STM) – to reach annual uranium production in excess of ten million pounds after 2012.

Miller explained to the audience that U.S. production could surpass 20 million pounds later in the second decade and help provide U.S. utilities with more than one-quarter of their annual consumption. He has argued, along with the Uranium Producers of America, for the development of a domestic uranium supply to benefit U.S. utilities from over-dependence upon foreign uranium.

We talked with him after his presentation about time frames and the mine operating costs at various uranium grades. Miller told us, “It will take the U.S. about four to six years to get up to steam.” A lot of the hurdles to overcome were not the mining issues or fund raising to bring those projects into production. “There are a number of interested parties wishing to participate in different U.S. uranium projects,” he told us without naming anyone in particular. “It is the permitting time which takes so long.”

He calculated, from studies he was recently involved with, that the operating costs for an underground mining and milling operation would cost about $80 to $120/ton. An average grade of 0.1 percent U3O8 would yield two pounds per ton, but a feed grade averaging 0.2 percent would yield four pounds per ton. Uranium ore yielding four pounds per ton would cost about $25/pound. Miller explained that grades at Green Mountain, which SXR Uranium One is currently investigating for purchase, and his company’s Roca Honda property, should be profitable using the $100/ton benchmark. Both properties have reported economic grades through various studies.

Strathmore’s Roca Honda property in New Mexico demonstrated its resource through a National Instrument 43-101. Miller emphasized the higher percentage of recovery in New Mexico. “Historically, the Grants Uranium District in New Mexico recovered mid 90s percent,” he told us. “You don’t produce mine 340 million pounds (historical production in this area) by having poor recovery.” By comparison, Miller said the recovery rate in Wyoming was in the low 90s percentage-wise. These percentages exceed conventional mining average recovery rates as stated in the IAEA Red Book.

In evaluating production costs, derived from discussions with other industry insiders, it is likely the resurgence of conventional mining could potentially double the capital and operating costs of several uranium projects. While it is possible some or several ISR uranium projects in Wyoming, Texas or New Mexico could enjoy operating costs for less than $30/pound, the capital cost for an underground U.S. uranium mine and mill could reach $200 million.

Rising labor costs, environmental regulations, increased start-up costs and even weather-related occurrences, such as the cyclone impacting production at Australia’s Ranger uranium mine, point to a continued rise in the price of uranium over the next few years. At the very least, utilities might be facing a new floor price should the overheated uranium market step back a few price levels over the coming year or years.

In the next feature in this series, further conversations we had at the Platts conference confirm Gene Clark’s comments, and those made by others, that the uranium price has exceeded nearly everyone’s expectations. And it should continue doing so in the months ahead. To be continued.

James Finch contributes to StockInterview.com and other publications. Visit http://www.stockinterview.com to read the archived articles on the nuclear fuel cycle. You can always write to James Finch at jfinch@stockinterview.com

Attending a Convention or Trade Show in Denver Here’s Helpful Information

September 18th, 2007 by MICE Editor

If you’re attending a convention or trade show in Denver, and you’re a stranger to town, here is information that can make your visit here more enjoyable.

1.DIA (Denver International Airport). When you arrive at DIA, you will walk down your concourse to a center area. This is where you will find steps down to the trains that connect our concourses to the main (Jeppesen) terminal. When you reach the terminal, you’ll get off your train and walk up two flights to the main level, which is actually called Level 5. This is where you will pick p your luggage. If you are renting a car, you will find the major car rental companies are also on Level 5.

2.Catch a taxi to the downtown area. Denver’s largest taxicab companies are Yellow Cab (303) 777-7777) and Metro Taxi (303-333-3333). Be aware that a cab ride to downtown Denver isn’t cheap. Yellow Cab charges $43.00 plus a $3.25 gate fee, plus $1.00 for every passenger beyond the first. You can pick up a cab on Level 5 (where you got your luggage), Island 1.

3.Save money. Take a shuttle downtown. A less expensive alternative to taxis is to take a shuttle. My choice would be Super Shuttle (800-525-3177). It offers service to just about any hotel in the metro area and its fares are reasonable.

4.When you need copies or printing services. Just about every downtown Denver hotel has a business center where you can get copies made or other business-type services. But not all of these are open 24/7. So, if it’s 11:00 pm and you need 200 copies of a brochure pronto, you can go to Fed Ex Kinkos at 1509 Blake St.

5.The Colorado Convention Center. The Convention Center is located at 700 14th St. (between Stout and California on 14th St. It has onsite parking (daily event rate = $7.00) , wireless Internet access and excellent food and beverage service. If you are lucky enough to be staying at the new Hyatt Regency Convention Center, you will be literally across the street from the Convention Center. All downtown hotels are relatively close to the Center but the to closest are the Denver Marriot City Center at 1701 California St. and the Hyatt Regency at 650 15th Street. You can get more information on the Colorado Convention Center by going to http://www.denverconvention.com/center.asp

You can learn more than will help you enjoy your stay in Denver at my web site. Just go to http://www.best-denver-vacation.com.

Douglas Hanna has lived in the Denver metro area for more than 30 years and is an expert on both Denver and Colorado. He is also the author of more than 100 ezine articles on a variety of subjects.

Confidence Meeting Women Starting a Conversation

September 18th, 2007 by MICE Editor

It happens to everyone. There she is. Sitting with her friends. Making eye contact with you all night long. The two of you have had a two hour silent conversation with your eyes. All this time, you try and build up the courage to walk over and introduce yourself.

Her interest is so blatant that your friends threaten to disown you if you don’t approach her. They even give you “the Ultimate pick-up line” to use on her.

Armed with this. You stand. Calmly walk over to her. Perfectly deliver your opening line.

She smiles.

And then it happens…

Your mind goes blank. You don’t know what to say. In fact, you start to question whether English is even your native language. You sputter out a couple of questions, things start to get awkward.

Dead silence.

After a few seconds that feel like ten hours of painful silence, she turns to her friends, ignoring you. You return to your friends. Dejected.

This is the reason most men are afraid to approach women: Not because they lack a good pick-up line, or are too chicken. It is because they do not know what to say – AFTER THE PICK-UP LINE.

Fear of silence.

The number one reason men fear approaching women is they don’t know how to start a conversation. But I am going to teach you a single, simple three-step technique, that you can use immediately.

How do you start a conversation with a woman?

Use the Ask-Answer-Ask technique. It is simple, but it works.

It is simple as you are going to ask very common questions:

1. What do you do for a living?
2. What kind of music do you like?
3. What TV shows/Movies do you like?

That sort of thing.

But, you are going to ask them in a certain way that creates conversation, as follows:

STEP 1. ASK – You ask her a general question.

Example:

You: So what do you do for a living?
She: I’m an accountant.

Now, the mistake most guys would make here is trying to come up with something clever to say about her job, or whether she knows so-and-so who is also an accountant. Something to fill the silence. Don’t do that. It looks needy and desperate. Wait. In silence. With no comment. It is her turn to respond. It is your job to wait.

Until she says:

She: So what do you do?

Good! Now she has reciprocated and you can respond. Then, the next step is easy.

STEP 2. ANSWER – You answer your own question.

You: I am a stock broker/fireman/etc.

These first two steps are precursors to a conversation. You both throw out a fact about each other. So in the next step the conversation can begin.

STEP 3. ASK – You ask a related, more specific question.

Now you are on equal footing. You have each asked for information about each other. Now, it is your turn to ask a more detailed question about her.

You: So what do you like best about being an accountant?

Now you are in conversation. And when this subject slows down, and it will, you start the process over with a new question:

STEP 1: ASK

You: So what kind of music do you like?
She: Green Day.

Once again, you do not respond. You do not comment, even if this is your favorite band of all time and you used to be their drummer before they made it big.

STEP 2: ANSWER

She: How about you?
You: Red Hot Chili Peppers.

STEP 3: ASK

You: I saw Green Day last time they were in town and…

Now we’re talking.

Chris Taylor
Magnetic Mindset Ezine for Men
“Discover what really works with women”

http://www.magneticsexlife.com