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China Green Agriculture Inc T.CGA


Primary Symbol: CGA

China Green Agriculture, Inc. is engaged in the research, development, production and sale of various types of fertilizers and agricultural products in the People's Republic of China (PRC) through its Chinese subsidiaries, Shaanxi TechTeam Jinong Humic Acid Product Co., Ltd. (Jinong) and Beijing Gufeng Chemical Products Co., Ltd. (Gufeng), and its variable interest entity (VIE), Xi'an Hu County Yuxing Agriculture Technology Development Co., Ltd. (Yuxing). The Company's segments include Jinong (fertilizer production), Gufeng (fertilizer production) and Yuxing (agricultural products production). The Company's primary business is of fertilizer products, specifically humic acid-based compound fertilizer produced through Jinong, and compound fertilizer, blended fertilizer, organic compound fertilizer, slow-release fertilizers, water-soluble fertilizers and mixed organic-inorganic compound fertilizer produced through Gufeng.


NYSE:CGA - Post by User

Post by amarkspon Jun 15, 2010 3:06pm
804 Views
Post# 17191016

Price weakness

Price weaknessPrice weakness likely being caused by Wall Street Journal and other articles on Phillipines open pit mining. As I suspected, this does not impact CGA per my phone call to Savage today. I doubled my position today at US$1.99

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/miner-in-limbo-as-pit-stop-clouds-tampakans-future/story-e6frg8zx-1225880106878

THE massive $US5.2 billion ($6bn) Tampakan copper-gold project in The Philippines is under a cloud following news that the provincial government has approved an environmental code that would ban open-cut mining in the region.

The implications of this development for the protracted $540 million takeover bid for Indophil Resources by China's Zijin Mining remain to be seen, but it creates uncertainty.

The Tampakan mining interests are held by Sagittarius Mines. Indophil owns 37.5 per cent of Sagittarius and the other 62.5 per cent is owned by Xstrata, which is also the operator.

One of the conditions of the Zijin bid is that during the offer there is no change in Philippine law applicable to any member of the Indophil group, Sagittarius or the Tampakan project that has a material adverse effect on Indophil's business.

Tampakan has estimated JORC-compliant mineral resources of 2.4 billion tonnes, containing 13.5 million tonnes of copper and 15.8 million ounces of gold at a 0.3 per cent copper cut-off grade.
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Here is another article of interest.

Outlook for mining upbeat

Rising prices, global recovery cited; value of Q1 output up 28%

THE PHILIPPINE MINING INDUSTRY could be headed for a good year given higher metal prices and the prospect of more investments, officials and analysts said.

The value of metallic mineral production rose by 28% in the first quarter, the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) reported, and a trade official said the sector overall was expected to achieve "moderate investment growth ... particularly towards the end of the year."

The potential impact of a provincial government’s looming ban on open-pit mining was discounted and an industry observer also noted that the successful conduct of the May 10 national elections was boosting market confidence and could fuel investments.

Board of Investments managing head Elmer C. Hernandez, in a speech at the 1st Mining Engineers’ Convention in Davao last week, said the government was optimistic as "the global economy is slowly positioning for the economic rebound."

A "continued upsurge in world metal prices, particularly for gold" will likewise attract more mining investments, he added.

Latest MGB data put the value of first quarter metallic mineral output at P20.72 billion, up from P16.20 billion in the same period last year. Gold accounted for the bulk at P13.1 billion, followed by copper concentrate (P3.95 billion) and nickel concentrate (P2.14 billion).

"Mineral production for the second quarter is also expected to increase year on year because the higher metal prices is a driver for more production," said Glenn Marcelo C. Noble, chief of the MGB’s Mining Economics Information Division, in a telephone interview yesterday.

The bureau, said Mr. Noble, is looking at a 20% increase in production for 2010. "We are not looking at any crisis that may affect metal prices, so there is an optimistic outlook for production within the year," he said.

A 39% increase in output value, to P107 billion, was recorded by the MGB last year.

Mr. Hernandez, meanwhile, reiterated the MGB’s target of luring $13.5 billion worth of mining investments by 2013. Some $2.8 billion has already been poured in by investors since the 2004 Supreme Court ruling allowing foreign ownership of local mining ventures.

The bureau has forecast $1.428 billion worth of investments this year versus 2009’s $640.22 million that was 1.51% short of the $650-million target.

The upbeat forecast comes even amid a likely ban on open-pit mining in South Cotabato, the site of Xstrata Plc’s $5.2-billion copper-gold project.

"There are many other prospects," Mr. Hernandez said in a text message yesterday.

Industry expert Richard Mills, chairman of executive search group Chalre Associates, said the policy was unlikely to be mimicked in other provinces. Xstrata Copper for its part has said its project was not in any danger as national laws were on its side.

Investments this year will come from expansions of existing projects and from new entrants, likely from Australia, Japan, China and Canada, Mr. Mills said.

"Global metal prices have certainly improved... And I think the overall good impression that the Philippines made with the successful elections just recently [will attract investors]," he said in a telephone interview.

The MGB said the 11% rise in value for gold came via higher prices -- above $1,000 per ounce -- during the period. Actual output for January to March, however, was down 7% to 8,389 kilograms.

Known as a "safe haven" investment, gold is expected to continue gaining this year as the global economy has yet to recover, the MGB said.

Copper concentrate production, meanwhile, rose 45% to 58,078 metric tons during the period, with soaring prices pushing growth in the red metal’s value to 94%.

Prices, the MGB said, are expected to rise even further as no new major mines are expected to come onstream worldwide in the next three years.

Nickel concentrate output was up 72% to 9,742 MT while its value increased by 36% on a recovery in prices -- at $9.05 per pound which the MGB said was due to higher demand for stainless steel. Prices, however, are not expected to hit the over $23 per pound hit in 2007.

Nickel ore shipments, meanwhile, rose by 42% to 1.2 million MT. Value was up 105% to P1.08 billion.

Zinc posted the highest growth in value, 149% to P116.6 million, even as output fell 3% to 5,194 tons.

Silver saw value rise 135% to P310 million as output rose by 70% to 12,410 kilograms. Prices during the period averaged $16.90 per ounce, with the MGB noting declining world supplies and significant industrial and jewelry demand.

The only decliner for the period was chromite, which saw a 29% drop in value to P20.4 million on a nearly identical 26% output drop to 2,408 metric tons.

"At present there is a turnaround of events as demand for base metals have (sic) partially returned as major economies begin to bounce back from the economic slump," the MGB said.

"At the same time, stockpiles of metals are diminishing, giving rise to a scenario where demand is rising faster than supply. This situation is expected to stabilize metal prices at its current levels or may even boost it upward," the bureau added.

Twenty-five players -- 11 nickel mines; eight gold mines (also producing silver); three copper mines (with gold and silver as ‘co-products’); a polymetallic mine producing gold, silver, copper and zinc; a nickel plant, a chromite mine, and numerous small-scale gold operations -- accounted for output during the first quarter, the MGB said. -- reports fromJessica Anne D. HermosaandKathleen A. Martin

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