Will be unexciting for the next little while because of confusion of the merger with Falcoinbridge (FL-T). There are other base metals that offer better upside such as Inco (N-T), Teck Cominco (TEK.SV.B-T) or Inmet Mining (IMN-T).
All the mid/upper tier majors have gone through some correction. There are other companies he would choose first. If you are buying put in your price and wait for it to be reached. Could be a 20% correction.
Has been pretty much his least favourite major mining stock in Canada. It really hasn't made a lot of money for investors over the years. Have good assets, but haven't developed them well. Not managed all that well.
A little piece has come into play in the last 6 months. There has been overcapacity on the smelting side for the last couple of years, so you bought actual mines i.e. the concentrate out of the ground. Now the concentrate has gone from $0.02 a pound to over $0.18. Extremely inexpensive on the mining side.
Thunder Energy (THY-T), Mustang Resources (MUS.A-T & MUS.B-T) and Forte Resources (FRZ-T) are merging to form a trust. These 3 together will make a pretty decent trust. Down at these levels you'll probably make a little bit of money from here.
The Pembina area is a very expensive play right now. Not the same kind of value, matrix story is was 2 1/2 years ago. They're a very good operator and should do well with their Pembina play but he is looking for significantly undervalued stocks.
A little worried about the metals market in general. Heading into a seasonally weak period. If global growth slows down, demand for all metals is going to come down.
Finally working out its problems with Falconbridge (FL-T) and starting to realize some value. There was a fly in the ointment with the US hedge fund interfering, but feels there is no concern. Would prefer other areas.
Has a good management team. The assets they were given were high decline gas properties. Have been able to keep production relatively flat, but expectations on future production is not very positive. He's been lightening up his positions.
Problem with commodities and the materials sector is that we are very likely this year to see US interest rates continue to go up which can choke off the US economy. If the US economy slows down, we are likely to see the worldwide economy slow down. Europe is in bad shape and if we see both Europe and the US both slow down, where is the demand for more raw materials going to come from? China? China exports most of their stuff to the United States. He’s bearish on commodities.