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stole this from the MAK thread, but partly relevant herePotash...

  1. 4,420 Posts.
    stole this from the MAK thread, but partly relevant here

    Potash looking up

    POTASH seems an altogether more optimistic place to be.

    Bloomberg reports Uralkali, the Russian-based fertiliser giant, expects potash prices to rise strongly this year. It plans to hike prices 18 per cent (to $US530 a tonne) to Brazil and 22 per cent (to $US450/tonne) to India.

    Uralkali lifted its price to China -- the world's largest consumer of potash -- in January by 14 per cent, to $US400/tonne.

    Meanwhile, fertiliser prices are rising fast in the US. And farmers can now afford to pay higher fertiliser prices.

    New York corn prices have climbed by 77 per cent in the past year and wheat traded in the US has risen by 43 per cent.

    Peter Strachan at Stock Analysis says the food supply disruptions caused by the Queensland floods and the unrest in North Africa will become a regular occurrence. He is, of course, talking the global food shortage story, and how the world cannot feed all its 7 billion people.

    Strachan notes that the potash price has risen 20 per cent over the past 12 months and the other fertiliser feedstock, phosphate rock, is up 50 per cent.

    Phosphate hopeful Minemakers (MAK) had a stream of news during the week from both its Northern Territory and Namibian projects, and strong gains on Wednesday and Friday, closing at 49c. Strachan says that, with the rock phosphate price recovering towards $US200 a tonne, he can see the MAK share price moving closer to $1.
 
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