₪ David Pescod's Late Edition March 25, 2008 ARISE TECHNOLOGIES (T-APV) $2.13 +0.65 TIMMINCO LTD. (T-TIM) $19.90 +1.91
We’ve been whining and complaining more than a little, that how come the mess created by the boys on Wall Street is spilling over into so many other sectors of the market? Who would have thought with oil going from $85.00 to $110.00, we could still see oil and gas stocks drop 50%? But that’s the market we are in, where there is still a lot more fear than greed out there. Hopefully by the end of the year, it will be quite different and Jeff Rubin of the CIBC will be right.
One story we have followed and are shocked by the stocks meltdown is Arise Technologies. But in an article this past weekend in the Globe and Mail, I think it will have people once again, looking at this story.
Eric Reguly writes, “Solar power will cost next to nothing. The fuel – the sun – is free. The price of the photovoltaic cells used to covert sunlight into electricity will plummet. Just give it time. That's the theory of Ian MacLellan, the founder, vice-chairman and chief technology officer of Arise Technologies, a Canadian photovoltaic (PV) cell company. But there's one small hitch: Arise doesn't have time.
PV cells are still expensive. The solar energy market needs priming. Arise shareholders want profits. Mr. MacLellan is 51 and would like to see his company make a buck before he's a senior citizen. Enter Germany. The ever-so-generous Germans tracked him down and made him an offer he couldn't refuse - free money, and lots of it - as long as Arise promised to build a PV factory on German soil. The German love-fest even came with flowers for Mr. MacLellan's wife, Cathy. Today, Arise's first factory is about a month away from completion in Bischofswerda, a pretty eastern German town about 35 kilometres east of Dresden, in the state of Saxony. Covering two storeys and 100,000 square feet, the sleek grey metal building will have some 150 employees and produce enough PV cells each year to power the equivalent of 60,000 houses. The value of the annual output, based on today's prices, will be $375-million, or more than three times the company's current value on the Toronto Stock Exchange. "I couldn't build this in Canada," Mr. MacLellan said. "Germany is a very high-quality environment for us. I have nothing to worry about." Arise couldn't build the plant in Canada because the level of financial incentives, engineering and construction expertise and general awareness of the growth potential of renewable energy simply don't exist there.”
For those who are interested in Arise Technologies, give the article a read. Simply to www.globeandmail.com and under “Search” type Eric Reguly. It’s called “Lessons from Germany’s Energy Renaissance.” If you would like Sara’s report on Arise, e-mail Debbie at debbie_lewis@canaccord.com.
CDN WESTERN BANK (T-CWB) $25.45 +1.36 CDN. IMP. BANK OF COMM (T-CM) $67.40 +0.60
Another article yesterday caught our attention because it’s not too often a small bank based in Western Canada attracts the attention of Bloomberg’s, which is read by just about every financial- type around the world. They featured Canadian Western Bank and you’ll notice that their chart is like that of many other financial institutions around the world, but there are some pretty interesting comments by writer Sean Pasternak on this bank.
He writes, “The top-performing North American bank stock of the past five years has 35 branches, and is led by a chief executive officer who has no voice mail and says he isn't smart enough to understand complex debt investments. Canadian Western Bank knows about lending to companies in oil-rich Alberta, however, and that helped the company avoid quarterly losses for the past 20 years. The stock more than quadrupled in the five years ended Dec. 31, six times the return of the 24-member KBW Bank Index, which includes Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc.
``They focus on the high value-added, predictable businesses,'' said Martin Hubbes, chief investment officer at AGF Funds Inc. in Toronto, which oversees about $28 billion and holds Canadian Western shares. ``You don't see them getting involved in offbalance sheet SIVs or capital markets activities.''
Canadian Western's profit probably will climb about 20 percent this year, while the average bank will report a ``modest decline,'' said Dundee Securities Corp. analyst John Aiken. The Edmonton, Alberta-based lender has avoided credit losses stemming from the subprime mortgage crisis, which has led to about C$6.65 billion ($6.5 billion) of writedowns at bigger Canadian rivals Bank of Montreal and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.
The bank primarily lends to companies that service Canada's oil and gas industry, the largest supplier of fuels to the U.S. Alberta's jobless rate hit a 30-year low last year, and its economy is forecast to lead Canada with 3.2 percent growth in 2008, according to a Feb. 21 report from Bank of Nova Scotia.”
Pasternak also writes, “Chief Executive Officer Larry Pollock, who has been in the position for 18 years, said the bank doesn't invest in things it doesn't know. ``We're not smart enough to understand that stuff,'' Pollock said in a telephone interview. ``I think that's where everybody got caught. They got hoodwinked into relying on ratings, when they should be concentrating on do you really know what you're buying here?'' Instead, the bank's asset liability committee, which consists of about 15 people ranging from senior managers to accountants, evaluates credit risks case by case. Canadian Western, which does about 80 percent of its lending to companies, works primarily with firms that don't even have credit ratings.”
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