17 JANUARY 2025
GEIGER COUNTER LIMITED
(THE "COMPANY")
RELEASE OF REPORT AND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The Directors announce the release
of the Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30
September 2024, which are included as an attachment to this
announcement.
http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/7790T_1-2025-1-17.pdf
CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT
- FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER
2024
The broader uranium market has
performed strongly over the last few years as nuclear's vital role
in the carbon-free energy mix continues to be widely acknowledged.
Supply-side concerns persist, which has put pressure on the price
of uranium and driven returns in the sector.
After a promising start to the
Company's financial year in which the net asset value rose from
64.66p to a figure of 71.30p at the end of March 2024, the second
half of our financial year saw more market conditions ease as the
spot price for Uranium (U3O8) declined from
its rapid rise to US$107/lb in January, although it still retained
an increase of 10% by the end of the period under review. The net
asset value of the fund ended the year at 53.93p, representing a
decline from 2023, and the Company's share price return was also
negative as the share price fell from 52.0p on 30 September 2023 to
44.25p at the end of September 2024.
Despite this decline, global support
for nuclear energy combined with a palpable lack of supply suitable
for Western markets coming online is supportive of long-term demand
strength. Nuclear energy has become the basis of carbon emission
reduction strategies across the world. Recognition by global
governments - from the US, China, Japan and across Europe - of
nuclear power's pivotal role in reaching net zero, due to the fact
it produces zero carbon emissions and does not produce other
greenhouse gases through its operation, has seen it included in
green policy frameworks the world over.
More recently, commercial power
agreements signed by big tech companies (including Amazon,
Microsoft and Google) validate the core role of nuclear power
within global energy policy amid seeming western utility
complacency to manage fuel inventories which are rapidly
approaching critical levels, especially in the US, which is
currently the largest consumer of nuclear fuel.
The discount to net asset value for
the fund was 17.9% at the end of September 2024, and remains a
primary focus for the Board and portfolio managers alike. Through
consistent and meaningful action, we believe we are now, finally,
on the path to slowly correcting this imbalance. The section below
titled Share price discount to NAV provides more details on
this.
Investment
The early part of our financial year
from September 2023 to Spring 2024 marked a very buoyant period in
the uranium sector following a successful COP28 conference which
showed strong international support for nuclear energy. Spot prices
for uranium surged during this period and reached a high point of
$107 per lb in January 2024. Prices and enthusiasm ebbed away
however and following the peak in January 2024 the price per pound
fell to $81.75 per pound at the end of September 2024.
Interestingly, global support for "base-load" power provided by
nuclear energy extrapolated, as the only feasible source for
powering national grids worldwide. The US voting to restrict the
importation of Russian-sourced material at the end of April and a
number of other countries such as Japan, France, Sweden and South
Korea agreed to further extend existing reactor lives and expand
generating capacity. In Asia, China nuclear roll-out continues
apace. With 15 reactors currently already under construction,
China's total nuclear power generation capacity is on track to
exceed 100GW before the end of the decade, with the region
overtaking the US as the largest nuclear power market.
The UK, perhaps more determinedly
post-period end, is also investing heavily in nuclear power, with
Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C on path to become Britain's first
new nuclear reactor in 30 years. Your investment managers and Board
of Directors remain optimistic that the portfolio is positioned
appropriately to benefit from continued support for uranium. The
investment managers report on pages 11 to 17 sets out the
investment position more fully.
Share price discount to NAV
The Directors and Manager remain
concerned about the wide discount to NAV, and have implemented a
strategy to mitigate this trend.
The discount has widened
significantly since 2022 when the shares were trading at a premium
and the Company was issuing new shares. Following the
subscription rights exercise in April and May 2024 the discount has
remained at a fairly wide level and thus, in response, we have
engaged in a program of buy backs to provide liquidity, increase
the NAV per share and ideally narrow the discount. The
narrowing is of course not guaranteed as the provision of liquidity
can of course create new sellers. Although a challenging
balance to attain, we are actively monitoring this and are
optimistic that this will benefit.
Unfortunately, we are not the only
investment trust to experience this trend: the widening of
discounts across the Investment Trust sector have created
significant dislocations in valuation. The difficulties asset
managers find when investing in niche sectors and the negative
impact of passive investment, which is often just driven by
momentum, are part of the reason for the lack of reaction to under
valuation. We are very fortunate to have a broad retail base,
helpful to a small trust and generates relatively good
liquidity.
During the period under review the
Board has utilised its share buyback powers to repurchase
11,469,543 ordinary shares at a cost of £6.07m. Since the end
of September, the Company has continued to utilise the share
buyback authority and has repurchased a further 1,687,405 shares at
a cost of £869,275.
London listing
Further to the Company's
announcement on 22 March 2024, the Board has determined to move the
Company's admission to trading on TISE to admission to listing in
the closed-ended investment funds category of the Official List of
the FCA and to trading on the Main Market of the London Stock
Exchange.
The Board firmly believes the
Company is well placed to take advantage of investment
opportunities in the uranium sector, and the exposure supplied from
the listing will be of benefit to the Shareholders of the Company.
In the coming year, we expected to see favourable supply and demand
characteristics continue. Your Company is very well placed to
exploit these unique conditions, not least because of the
exceptional skill and expertise of the management team, whose
strategy we wholeheartedly endorse. We are confident that the end
result will justify a prolonged wait.
On behalf of the Board, I would like
to thank shareholders for their continued support in the
Company.
Ian
Reeves CBE
Chairman
December 2024
INVESTMENT ADVISER'S REPORT -
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER 2024
Summary investment thesis for Uranium miners
Nuclear power continues to grow
globally, more recently accelerating given its benefits as zero
carbon baseload power, whilst the supply of uranium to supply these
has been constrained due to over a decade of low prices.
For Uranium, the demand side of the
equation is the easiest to analyse, as there is a global fleet of
413 reactors, whilst the West is more a story of reactor life
extensions to help meet carbon emission targets, China is the major
source of fleet growth globally, adding ~10 reactors per year, with
plans to add 100 of the next decade. Into the 2030's SMR's (Small
Modular Reactors) will likely become the main source of growth in
the west given their quicker construction times can better match
end user demand and thus receive industry led financing. This is an
incremental source of demand that has seen large progress this
year, with big US tech companies such as Amazon, google, Microsoft
and Meta (Facebook) all looking to nuclear as the power source for
their new AI data centre plans.
The supply side of the equation is
where recent developments have really shifted from a long-term
structural shortage to nearer term supply risk for a major
component of the West's electricity generation. Russia has banned
exports to the US, whilst the US looks likely to enter a trade war
with China under Trump. China and Russia control around 75% of
nuclear supply chain from production via JVs and offtake with
Kazakhstan, ownership of mines in Namibia, influence over Niger's
production post their coup. By owning ~75% of the worlds
conversion, enrichment and fabrication they control much of the
supply chain in converting U3O8 in to nuclear fuel for reactors.
China has already banned the exports of some rare earths used in
chip manufacture to the US, so with the worlds largest stockpiles
of uranium is likely to use uranium as a threat against Trump's
intended tariffs if we see a wider trade war.
The conclusion of this is that with
~75% of the worlds nuclear fleet being in the West, we believe
there is structural shortfall in western uranium supply today, not
in 5-10 years as some global supply demand models assume. China
will continue to build inventories for energy security and due
these stockpiles being key in them expanding their nuclear power
plant construction around the world. Russia will continue to sell
to China. Kazakhstan's SOE Kazatomprom will continue to look to be
a reliable supplier to western utilities, but given Russian control
on some of their production via JV's and China having large
offtakes on their supply, whilst both Russia and China share large
borders, this will limit available material to western
utilities.
The West's largest producer Cameco is
largely sold out for the next 5 years and likely beyond, leaving
limited spare supply for Western reactors to contract. Nexgen, the
funds largest position, is the largest source of incremental
supply, starting in 2029, with minimal contracts in place it is
perfectly positioned to benefit from the upcoming contracting
cycle, where it should capture most of the anticipated upside in
the Uranium price. The funds positioning is heavily weighted to
Western producers and developers, primarily through Canada's
Athabasca basin, with the larger developer weight enabling them to
benefit from higher priced uranium sales contracts and a materially
improving regulatory backdrop as Western countries become
increasingly aware of the energy security implications.
These themes are discussed in more
detail below.
Long term supply shortage
Source: UxC, Company reports, RBC
Capital Markets estimates
Performance
The first six-months of the
financial year saw the net asset value of the Company increase from
64.66p as at 30 September 2023 to 70.74p at the end of March giving
an overall return of 9.4%, as positive news flow from the uranium
sector supported the underlying portfolio of equities.
After this strong first half the
sector saw some weakness in with the spot Uranium (U3O8)
price consolidating from its January peak of $107 per lb to end the
financial year at $81.75 per pound, representing a respectable rise
of 10% over the 12-months to end-September. The underlying equities
followed a similar trajectory.
The Company's net asset value
subsequently declined (including a 5.5% dilution effect from the
issue of shareholder embedded rights) and against a backdrop of 6%
appreciation of sterling (which reduced the value of its
non-sterling assets) declined 23.5% to end the year at 71.3p, down
around 16.7% lower on the year to end-September.
Nevertheless, though the uranium
sector has shown considerable volatility over the year the
fundamental outlook has strengthened. Most notably, recent
commercial power agreements signed by big tech companies (including
Amazon, Microsoft and Google) validate the core role of nuclear
power within global energy policy amid seeming western utility
complacency to manage fuel inventories which are rapidly
approaching critical levels, particularly in the US, which is
currently the largest consumer of nuclear fuel. This has
simultaneously supported uranium prices and prompted a sharp
recovery in sentiment towards uranium mining equities in recent
months.
Volatility belies improving outlook
A number of factors have contributed
to this recent volatility. Following a period of frenetic activity
in early 2024, during which utilities "up-flexed" their contracted
purchases, forcing producers to buy material in the spot market and
reduce product inventories in order to meet their delivery
obligations, they have since pulled away from the
market.
Latterly, base-load hungry
technology companies have stepped into the void, with a number of
power purchase agreements signed by the likes of Microsoft, Amazon
and Google. These companies that already have significant energy
requirements, expected to increase further with the demanding
proliferation of AI, are seeking their own clean energy sources,
with nuclear energy proving the only feasible solution to meet
these high energy demands. These investments will see several of
the dozen previously abandoned nuclear reactors (including Three
Mile Island) in the US restart, with some agreements also directed
at encouraging deployment of small/advanced modular reactors
towards the end of the decade. At over $100/MWh, Microsoft's fixed
price agreement with Constellation, which will enable the restart
of Three Mile Island, is priced at a level nearly twice that of
comparable wind and solar PPAs.
This underscores the recognition in
industry that nuclear power is the singular optimal solution for
energy requirements of today whilst adhering to Net Zero targets,
and underlines the crucial role of nuclear power in the
energy mix. Naturally, this development supported uranium prices as
the critical ingredient for nuclear energy, and prompted a sharp
recent recovery in sentiment towards uranium mining
equities.
Meanwhile, latest data from
consultant UxC indicates that many western utility inventories
remain at the low end of recommended levels coming into 2024. Those
in the US are estimated to have around 110Mlbs, which is sufficient
fuel for approximately 2 years of annual usage at today's
levels. Given the lengthy process of mine to reactor for
uranium, including the time it takes to mine, convert and enrich
uranium, and then manufacture fuel bundles for use in reactors,
Western utilities are seemingly unequipped for increased nuclear
power consumption - or indeed maintained levels of power usage. As
a result, there is an increasingly pressing need for US utilities
to re-engage meaningfully in uranium contracting to avoid
disruption to supply, which will fortify the uranium
price.
Furthermore, geopolitical risks have
also returned to the fore and at the time of writing have
materially intensified, directly impacting the uranium supply chain
in response to changes in US legislation aimed at phasing out the
imports of Russian-sourced fuel by 2027 and linked with the use of
US arms by Ukraine, Russia has taken retaliatory action
implementing its own ban on export of fuel to the US in November.
Such a backdrop may shake off many utilities' recent seeming
complacency towards inventory management and prompt more action to
secure fuel from alternate sources while substantially raising the
probability of another round of contracting.
In addition, in the context of
limited western conversion and enrichment capacity, Russia's
actions may prompt enrichers to increase centrifuge throughput
which would incrementally tighten the market for
U3O8:faster centrifuge throughput increases
the input of U3O8 at the front end, while the
more rapid processing also reduces the yield of fuel grade product
per unit of input. Any move to speed up centrifuge throughput will
shift the market from so called "underfeeding" to "overfeeding",
acting to increase upfront demand for uranium and therefore
reducing secondary source of unenriched uranium supply. At present,
unenriched uranium available for re-sale by enrichers equates to
the annual output of a major uranium mine, at around 15Mlbs
U3O8.
It is notable that, while
U3O8 prices have retraced from their Q1 peak,
conversion and enrichment prices have seen a largely uninterrupted
upwards trend to current highs (see below) and recent events point
to little let up in this regard. Higher prices are now belatedly
increasing investment in western conversion and enrichment capacity
to accommodate rising fuel demand and improve security of supply,
as highlighted by Urenco which has commenced construction of new
enrichment capacity, as previously discussed in our Interim
Report. Importantly, sustained conversion and enrichment
price environment is seeing the market tilt back towards the use of
more U3O8. following its recent price
pull-back, contributing to support for pricing.
U3O8 is converted into HF6 and then
enriched to higher U235 content, before being fabricated into fuel
rods for reactors. The below chart shows how conversion and
enrichment has already materially increased in price following
Russian and Chinese tensions. This is positive for U3O8 and
suggests that it should follow suit.
Demand outlook positive as governments reiterate growth
ambitions
Consistent with the COP28 targets
set out in late 2023, the countries in attendance at the Nuclear
Power Summit, organised by the International Atomic Anergy
Association earlier this year, all backed plans for a wider
adoption of nuclear power as a key source of base load power. This
sentiment has largely been repeated at the current COP29 confab in
Baku. Here 6 other nations signed up to target a tripling of global
generating capacity by 2050 while the outgoing Biden administration
put forward plans to add 200GW to its nuclear fleet.
While it remains to be seen whether
the incoming Trump government will stick with such goals it has
campaigned on policies which will "unleash" energy production from
all sources, including nuclear power, to provide affordable and
internationally competitive energy prices.
Central to Trump's plans is energy
security and supply chains independent of Russia and China, thus
yielding power to Western suppliers of energy, and subsequently
uranium. Furthermore, the appointment of Chris Wright who has
links with oil and gas industry and reactor developer, Oklo, to
head up the Department of Energy provides some indication of the
direction of travel with less emphasis seemingly placed on more
variable forms of renewable power. Other sources forecast less
ambitious scenarios with the most recent update by the
International Atomic Energy Agency provided scenarios ranging from
40% growth in generating capacity up to 2.5 times by 2050.
Encouragingly, the primary message is one of widespread bi-partisan
support for nuclear power.
China National Nuclear Power
Corporation provided 2024 investment targets indicating a +52%
year-on-year increase. With 15 reactors currently already under
construction, China's total nuclear power generation capacity is on
track to exceed 100GW before the end of the decade, with the region
overtaking the US as the largest nuclear power market. India Atomic
Energy Commission announced plans to expand nuclear output to 100GW
by 2047, from around 8GW today. While extremely ambitious, it
indicates the potential growth in nuclear in emerging economies,
which will drive fuel demand exponentially.
Meanwhile, dovetailing with its
restricted exports of uranium to the US, Russia has also opened a
public consultation into plans to construct as many as 34 new
nuclear power plants over the coming two decades which would nearly
double its current fleet of 36 reactors.
Reactor restarts also continue to
offer support for future fuel demand. France's state-owned utility
EDF has increased its estimate for domestic nuclear power
generation to 340-360TWh this year, up from a previous estimate of
315-345TWh, as reactors are brought back online following stress
corrosion investigations. The Japanese utility Chugoku Power
announced the gradual restart of a reactor at Onagawa, with power
generation scheduled to commence in late December 2024 and
commercial operations expected in January 2025. As a reminder,
latest WNA data indicates less than 6% of Japan's electricity is
generated from nuclear, down from around 30% pre-Fukushima. Of
Japan's 33 operable reactors, 12 are approved to operate, another
16 are progressing through the restart process, and two are under
construction as the government targets nuclear to generate a 20-22%
share of electricity. The message is clear: nuclear energy is the
sole solution for a clean baseload power, and states are now waking
up to this reality, resulting in meaningful developments in the
sector across the globe.
Challenging supply growth remains supportive for
prices
Supply side challenges have also
surfaced which act to support U3O8 prices
Kazakhstan, which produces around 40% of uranium mined globally,
revised its Mineral Extract Tax code with the result that tax rates
in the country will rise from around 6% to 9% for 2025 and
thereafter up to 18% depending on the quantity of uranium mined. In
addition, Kazakh authorities also introduced a price related tax
contribution varying from 0.5% of the uranium value above $70/lb
rising to 2.5% at prices above $110/lb. This represents an
additional cost on regional production which has been struggling to
reach production targets.
Increased capital costs is
inhibiting the potential for new supply in the short to medium
term. The Langer Heinrich project in Namibia, which is
targeting steady state production of approximately 5Mlbs is proving
slower and more costly to bring online.
Development of the most advanced and
strategically important greenfield asset, Nexgen's Rook I project,
has also seen its expected capital cost increase from C$1.3bn to
C$2bn, with the increase reflecting some upward cost pressure but
also increased scope of water and underground tailings management.
Nevertheless, the group will seek to recover these costs in any
prospective sales agreements as it takes financing discussions
forward. Crucially in November, Nexgen announced that it had
received official Federal Approval for its project, representing a
considerable de-risking. In a broader context, economic
softness may also affect BHP's proposal to move ahead with its
Olympic Dam expansion.
Elsewhere, the newly installed
military government in Niger revoked the uranium mining licenses of
France's state-owned Orano, which was in the process of resuming
development of the Imouraren project, as the country aligns with
nations such as Russia and Turkey. Although Niger's share of
uranium production has been declining, the action will further
encourage Western buyers to source supply from less risky
jurisdictions.
Cameco, however, announced that it
had added 2 years' worth of reserves to its Cigar Lake mine,
extending the reserve life from 2034 to 2036.
Portfolio activity and positioning
As previously discussed, the Company
is well placed to benefit from such developments with holdings
primarily focused on assets located in western regions. There is a
heavy weighting to Canada's Athabasca basin which currently hosts
some of the best geology globally in politically secure regions.
With Cameco's uranium supply largely contracted for the next 5
years and beyond, we believe utilities will increasingly need to
diversify their supplier base. Near-term mine restarts by
UR-Energy, Paladin and Uranium Energy, and the medium-term
greenfield developments of Nexgen will figure highly in the minds
of utility companies.
Importantly, since end-September
Nexgen received Federal Approval for its Environmental Permit, the
final permit required for project go-ahead. This paves the way for
official government sign-off in the near future and represents a
considerable step forward for the group.
We reduced some exposure to Paladin
following its all-share approach to acquire Fission Energy,
although Canadian approval for the merger is proving
protracted.
During the year the Fund
participated in a placing by Ur-Energy, which is in the process of
ramping-up production at its US operation and has converted some
in-the-money warrants in explorer Cosa Resources. Ur-Energy was one
the main detractors to Fund performance over the year with its
shares declining nearly 30% in sterling terms in the second half of
the year ahead of a placing which was undertaken at a discount of
over 20% to the prior closing price.
Elsewhere the group also retains
exposure to projects that may benefit from more favourable
government policy. Illustrating growing need to access secure
sources of supply, there have been calls for a relaxation on the
uranium mining ban in Western Australia by Australia's Chamber of
Commerce which could be a precursor to a potential change in state
policy that currently prevents uranium project being developed.
Relaxation of such policies would benefit investments, such as
Laramide that owns the Westmoreland project.
It is possible that such moves could
also be adopted by other countries, such as the US, that are
seeking to encourage much needed domestic production and to reduce
nuclear fuel supply chain risks. This would impact the likes of
IsoEnergy which, in addition to an interest in one of the
highest-grade projects in Canada, own the Coles Hill project,
located in the state of Virginia where uranium mining is currently
prohibited.
Robert Crayfourd and Keith Watson
New City Investment
Managers
December 2024
Enquiries
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