by Recyclersteve » Thu Sep 12, 2019 12:59 am
I still stand by everything I said on June 2nd. Nothing has really changed as far as I can tell.
Some people might try to play this in a different way. I don't know what your thesis is about U.S. Steel, but if you think that steel consumption is gonna go up, it still is difficult to predict which companies will win bids for big contracts. That said, playing nickel might be a possible consideration instead. Roughly 2/3 of nickel production goes into making stainless steel. If you think steel production is going up, buying Norilsk Nickel (Ticker: NILSY) might be an alternative to trying to pick a steel producer. Also, Tesla cars use a lot of nickel. A few points about nickel:
1) There aren't a lot of miners who produce nickel and, for most of the producers, nickel is only a small part of their output. It would be a bit like the concept of buying G.E. because they sell light bulbs. So keep that in mind.
2) There is a major nickel producer out of Russia (I know- political risk with Russia) called Norilsk Nickel. It trades with the symbol NILSY. It has done well lately and is much closer to a year high than low, yet still has a P/E ratio of just 9. There aren't a lot of others to trade other than penny stocks not traded on major exchanges. I've traded NILSY several times over the last 10 years or so and had very good results with it. But I wouldn't flinch if it went down 20-30% with no good apparent reason. I have typically just doubled down in this type of scenario. Dividend on NILSY is over 10%, which will excite some people, but there is no such thing as a truly safe 10%. Also, even if the divided is paid in full over the next year, if the stock goes down 20%, what good is that? In other words, don't just buy because of the dividend. Generally, I want to have 3 or more reasons before buying a stock. Being in an uptrend (as NILSY is) does count as one of the three reasons in my opinion.
3) A way that I have also played nickel is out of the stock market by acquiring Canadian .999 nickel coins from 1922 to 1981 except several war related years in the 1940's and 1950's when the composition was changed. Nickel is about $8.21 per pound right now per KitcoMetals.com. It was around $5.25-$5.30ish in January. So it has had a great year so far. Yet the all-time high of over $23 from Spring 2007 is nowhere close. So that tells me it may have a good ways further to run. Even more than a good ways if you add in inflation for the last 12+ years.
If you are dead set on steel stocks, do some research on Schnitzer (Ticker: SCHN) and Nucor (Ticker: NUE) as well. They do a lot of recycling, and, from my name, you might be able to tell that I have a soft spot for those who are careful about wasting our precious resources. I haven't traded SCHN and NUE for at least several years now, so do your own research before investing in either.
Former stock broker w/ ~20 yrs. at one company. Spoke with 100k+ people and traded a lot (long, short, options, margin, extended hours, etc.).
NOTE: ANY stocks I discuss, no matter how compelling, carry risk- often
substantial. If not prepared to buy it multiple times in modest amounts without going overboard (assuming nothing really wrong with the company), you need to learn more about the market and managing risk. Also, please research covered calls (options) and selling short as well.