INVESTOREXPO  investorexpo.com
  Published by: Dan Deadlock / Christopher Gulka, CA CFA
  TABLE OF CONTENTS:
  1. StockExpo (resource update) 2. BioEnvelope
  Good Reading: <http://moneycentral.msn.com/articles/invest/models/6135.asp?special=msn>
  For our new subscribers, StockExpo is prepared by an overseas friend of ours  (Campbell) with significant experience working for resource and hedge funds.  The sector continues to struggle but his insight is valuable and will become  even more so when commodities turn. Once our new site is finished he will have  updates weekly.
  Stockexpo: Resources and other Smallcap ----------------------------------------
  2000 was a year where a lot of our gains came very early in the picture, and  we spent the rest of the year fighting a slow rearguard action where all gains  made seemed to get wiped out from unexpected events and market forces. A couple  of picks (ARQ and ESX) sitting in commodities in extreme bull markets (platinum  and oil) didn't move all year despite the best efforts of management to turn  them around. I found most of my successful picks came from timing gold shares,  which is about as hard as it gets.
  The good news this year is that 1) I will be keeping this column a bit more concise  and hopefully more regular and 2) the smallcaps are long overdue for a turnaround  and we have a lot of opportunities.
  My theme this next quarter is that this is the time of year that most resource  plays get formed and financed, and most gains are made here. After March/April  the market quietens down and generally it is a good idea to sell most juniors  as the promoters basically put their feet up over summer. The obvious clue to  look out for is financings, where the management essentially compensates the  brokers to run the stock up a bit for them before getting away a placement at  the best possible level (excuse my cynicism!) after which activity either stalls,  as exploration news can take a while to generate, and broker coverage. The junior  resources market has been so tough that most stories are just not going anywhere  without the help of a broker and team of promoters pushing them - you can see  by volumes that the only stocks that get into a decent uptrend are those with  volume and active trade. Consequently, I am going to generally cover stocks that  have a genuine story and volume in them to raise the probability that they will  be successful. To pick resource stocks just on exploration bets at the minute  doesn't make sense, nor does bottom fishing "value" plays regardless of how attractive  the resource. Without support and coverage most of these plays fizzle out quickly.
  The best performing commodities at the minute are natural gas and the PGMs. Both  have structural problems in that there is real difficulty in delivery or supply  (gas has too much demand for current supply and platinum/palladium has the issue  of the Russians consistently not delivering). In Australia tantalum has been  a successful story as well, as the material is extensively used in mobile phones  and other high tech devices, and there is a world undersupply at present. The  base metals have real questions over direction, as the probability of a recession  is worrying traders at present about future demand, and we have seen nickel and  copper come back from their highs. Gold has its own problems, the biggest of  all is a lack of new investment demand, despite a bear market in stocks and the  US dollar falling from its peaks. Gold has shown signs recently that it could  be bottoming, and all the signs are there for it to rally - but the price has  yet to follow through. My own opinion is that the gold price will stay at these  levels until a "triggering event" occurs to overwhelm the shorts in the market  and get a solid wave of new buyers into the market. This could be a bank default,  a dollar crash, a derivatives blowup, whatever. The gold price at present is  historically cheap versus just about everything else, and has always moved (usually,  led) with the commodities, which leads me to feel that 2001 is going to be a  better year for it. 
  Focus Stocks:
  Durban Deep (DROOY/AMEX) $0.69
  DROOY is the single best gold value play out there at present. DROOY produces  over 650,000 oz, has a market cap of $75m, and is basically option money on gold.  The company is recovering from several bad investments and hedge decisions taken  in previous years and will grow production strongly in the next two quarters.  Durban is one of the key stocks bought by international investors for leverage  on the gold price and has managed to absorb several South African mines which  will grow production by around 25% in the next year. Its cash costs are around  $240, with a lot of leverage from here. It also carries no debt besides some  hedging and has a decent treasury, making it a reasonable low-risk bet with a  lot of upside. 
  Kinross Gold (K/Toronto) $0.80  
  Another extreme-leverage play to the gold price, which is a reasonable bottom  fish and is a broker favourite, given its liquidity and volatility. At these  levels we are not confronting a lot of risk in owning Kinross, and the upside  is significant given its near-million oz production and low market cap ($183m).  My view to owning stocks like Durban and Kinross is that your downside is pretty  limited from here, and the stocks have both based. Both offer decent upside if  the gold price moves and institutions and brokers follow them. If you feel like  you want some security to your investment, Placer at these levels is the least  hedged and carries the lowest debt to equity out of the North American majors  and will participate in a gold rally. Kinross has struggled through an ocean  of bad news and is due a turnaround fundamentally, through the restart of one  of its mines.
  Geomaque (GEO/Toronto) $0.28 
  GEO is a gold play which has picked up interest from exposure to a PGM exploration  target and in the process just completed a financing at current levels. It produces  roughly 60000oz per year, which will increase to approximately 90000oz according  to recent financials. The company made a cash loss on operations last year, which  I believe was caused by production problems on their old mine, which caused the  slide in the share price. The story going forward is much more solid, and the  cashflow in the company will be positively influenced by any rise in the gold  price. The reason to look at it now is that it completed the placement to take  up the option in the PGM property, which has a basic resource of 37 million tonnes  averaging 1.1 g/t palladium, 0.27 g/t platinum, 0.38% copper, 0.21 g/t gold,  1.85 g/t silver and 0.032% nickel. These are numbers that aren't tremendous,  but high enough to get the company to a status of a bankable feasibility study,  and the brokers excited enough to start pushing it to clients. I don't have any  idea as to metallurgy issues with recovery or grade here, so I am just using  ballpark guesses, based on current metals prices. With the palladium resource  theoretically over a million ounces, this could be quite a significant play for  the company, which capitalized at roughly C$16m - very cheap for this level of  production and with a PGM play in it that could run. I am trying to find out  more info on this company for the next letter.
  Environmental Solutions (ESWW/NASDAQ) $1.30
  ESWW is a technology play that leverages off the high current PGM prices. The  company has developed a new catalytic converter that uses ceramics rather than  PGMs for its active catalyst, which is interesting given that the major expense  in the unit is the metals. The car companies are sick of accelerating palladium  prices (they made a bad bet three years ago and switched the majority of catalyst  usage from platinum to palladium, which since has since risen five times) and  are looking for something that will cut costs and keep the regulators off their  back in the face of ever tightening pollution controls. The company recently  entered into a relationship with Chase Manhatten's corporate advisory department  to strengthen their bargaining hand in negotiations with the car companies, which  they are apparently beginning this month. This will be a story which will evolve  this year as the negotiations develop. To my knowledge the product is the best  on the market at present, and with PGM prices going north every day it wont take  long before this product is pushed aggressively. In addition they also develop  technology to clean diesel engines' emissions and a new spark plug that improves  fuel efficiency dramatically. The catalyst is the reason for my interest, but  the other products are also of note. At these levels the market cap is around  $16m, any positive developments will dramatically affect the price.
  Starfield Resources (SRU/CDNX) 0.62
  This is another PGM exploration play, which is fairly advanced and seems to be  attracting a lot of attention. Essentially the company has a resource that contains  25.0 million tonnes grading 0.84% Copper, 0.57% Nickel and 1.23 g/t of Palladium/Platinum.  This is an inferred resource, which means that the probability of it being inaccurate  (either +ve or -ve) is fairly high. However the geology of the area is favorable,  and the company has performed a fair amount of drilling. My major gripe with  it is that the intersections are deep (around 150-200m) which means that an open  pit situation is unlikely for a mining plan. This means that underground is the  only option and this relies on the PGM prices being high for the duration of  the mine. A fairly minor problem with the company in this stage! I feel at the  current market cap (C$10m) this is a reasonable bet and the fact that they just  completed a small financing may draw attention to it out of the herd. I am familiar  with the management and their ability to deliver to the market. For now, watch  the volume and look out for this one on a pullback.
  Pacific Northwest Capital (PFN/Vancouver) 0.75
  Another PGM exploration play, with several advanced properties and positive PGM  results. PFN came to life last year and ran extremely aggressively on the back  of some positive drilling results in their River Valley prospect, but since slumped  back due to drilling disappointment to what is quite attractive levels given  the status of exploration. The most attractive thing for me in this play is their  funding by Anglo American Platinum, the worlds' biggest producer - this means  that the property obviously merited the interest of a major who was willing to  earn in to it based on it as a geologic prospect. We should be getting some results  from recent drilling shortly, and the price is gently creeping up in anticipation.  In addition there will be some speculation over the Sudbury prospect, which is  quite interesting as PGMs usually occur in the presence of nickel, and Sudbury  produces a fair amount of PGM as a byproduct. The market cap is again around  C$12m , with dilution which is attractive for this state of play. Palladium and  platinum will continue to be strong and PFN is a stock that will attract attention  due to its track record and relationship with Amplats.
  Southernera (SUF/Toronto) 2.34
  Southernera I have featured here several times, and it seems to be getting ready  for another run. The company produces diamonds from its mine in South Africa,  which has accounted for most of the cash flow in the last year or two. In addition,  it has diamond exploration targets in Canada and has acquired a platinum mine  near its diamond mine called Messina, which it aims to get back in production  shortly. Southernera is a well followed stock, and has given some great returns  in the past. The management recently was replaced, and the original team seem  back in control, which has settled the market down a bit. They recently closed  a small financing at these levels, which will finance the Canadian exploration  primarily. The old diamond mine will continue to produce cashflow from a new  discovery adjacent to the mine, which will underpin the company. In addition  Messina should begin production this year, following its financing (likely through  debt). The market cap of Southernera is around C$60m, which is a pretty low risk  bet as the future production from the platinum is going to be very profitable  at these prices and the cash flow from diamond production more than underpins  it at present. As I write this, they just made an announcement that their huge  Angolan diamond project has moved to a production decision phase, with the feasibility  study being accepted by all partners. The project, though carrying high political  risk carries an IRR of around 185% on the first phase, which is attractive enough  to warrant taking the risk of production, given the extremely short payback period.  SUF is tremendously undervalued in the market given the advanced state of its  projects, and any success in one of them should result in a big rerating of its  share price.
  Olympia Energy (OLY/A Toronto) $2.50
  Olympia is a smaller oil and gas producer with production based in Canada, reasonably  valued in the market ($96m on cashflow multiple of around 4-5) and likely to  grow significantly in 2001. The oil sector is coming off a top in the big names,  but the smaller end of the sector has not run as hard and offer great value,  particularly given the potential growth from M&A that will happen this year.  OLY/A was a strong stock in 2000, and is on the radar screens of most analysts,  making it a focus stock in the smallcap end of the market. I believe oil will  tight this year again, as the problems facing the industry in infrastructure  that produced the enormous run last year have not been solved, and the inventories  available to the buyers are still at critical levels. The market is caught between  worrying about future production cuts from OPEC and worrying about the likelihood  that the price will revert to its historical mean price of around $20, making  the price likely to be volatile and range between $24-34 in the year. The gas  situation however is even more bullish, as US power plants are forced for environmental  reasons to adopt cleaner fuels, and I can see the gas market remaining strong  for the year at least. This bodes well for small producers, and funds are going  to increase their allocation to the sector once the commodity prices settle down  a bit. Olympia grew its cashflow 26% in the last quarter from increased production,  and the management has a good track record in M&A and an excellent reputation  in the market. I include it as one of my picks to offer people an idea in the  energy sector that is of a reasonable size, with broker support.
  Corner Bay Minerals (BAY/Toronto) $1.37
  Corner Bay was a highly successful stock in 1999, with a large silver deposit  in Mexico. The silver price has been extremely poor over 2000, more or less tracking  gold, and the commodity is long overdue a rerating. Silver is an industrial metal  that is used in photography, and demand outweighs supply by around 20% per year,  and the price has been subdued as a tremendous inventory was built up in the  80's which is finally reaching levels I would call interesting. The project itself  hosts around 79m tonnes at around 1.5oz Ag/T, with decent recoveries and the  company just raised money in December to complete a feasibility study and go  to a production decision. The stock is well known among brokers and institutions,  and has a market cap of around $20m, which is extremely low given the size of  the resource. This one should be watch carefully for volume increases as it will  indicate that the stock is being accumulated in preparation for another run. 
  I will try and update the letter on a weekly basis, with short commentary on  new situations. For the moment, the stocks above are my best picks. Good luck  for 2001!
  2. BioEnvelope Technologies (BIE.A:CDNX $1.75)    bioenvelop.com ----------------------------------------------
  The following has been brought to our attention from a strong group out of Montreal  with excellent credibility. They focus on long term growth potential that is  significant and not the short flips. Chris has followed this a for over a year,  when the stock was a jcp (RFL.a:CDNX), and at one point the stock reached over  $6 per share. Now that the vend-in and the name change has been completed, the  only speculation is the size of their  contracts and timing. The stock came under tax loss selling in December, reaching  a low of $1.16 on small volumes. The stock swiftly moved up to over $2.50 in  a couple of weeks, again on small volumes, but has settled  back again into a reasonable range. A large financing may be in the works, and  speculation is that it will be at higher levels. Outlined below is a breif synopsis  on the Company.
  BioEnvelop is a biotechnology company specialising in the conception, development,manufacturing  and marketing of biodegradable protein-based coating solutions and packaging  materials for use in prepared food and packaging. 
  BioEnvelop has developed two key products: 
  1. Longevita(TM) is a protein-based coating solution for use in the agri-food  industry. Longevita(TM) increases the shelf life of food by protecting the food  from airborne microbes. It is targeted at large-scale food processing companies;
  2. Bioplastifilma(TM) is a biodegradable protein-based coating solution that  is an ecologically sound substitute for synthetic wax, polyethylene and other  products used to protect and transport food. Bioplastifilma(TM) is a replacement  for synthetic wax on milk cartons, for example, creating an impermeable yet biodegradable  surface that allows the carton to be recycled.
  BioEnvelop's strategy is to negotiate sub-licences for the manufacture and marketing  of its key products, with strategic partners in relevant sectors of the economy.  The Company is currently focusing its efforts on obtaining strategic partnerships  in Canada, the United States, Mexico and Europe. 
  In Canada, BioEnvelop is currently completing installation of production equipment  in the agri-food industrial park in Ste Hyacinthe, Québec. As of January 2001,  annual production capacity of Bioenvelop's products will reach 500,000 kilograms.  Initial delivery of the Company's Longevita product for use in the processing  of meat pies by Groupe Premier Chef, a part of Aliments Blais et Breton, will  take place in late January, 2001. The contract with Groupe Premier Chef, which  is renewable, is valued at $8.2 million over five years. 
  During the past year, BioEnvelop created InterbioEnvelop, a 50%-owned European  subsidiary whose objective is to market BioEnvelop products in European markets.  InterbioEnvelop will shortly begin a series of production trials for its Longevita  product with Harry's, a large bakery products company in France. Production trials  will commence in January 2001.  ______________________________________________________________________________
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