Wednesday, December 19, 2007

A Solar Grand Plan

From Scientific American:
By 2050 solar power could end U.S. dependence on foreign oil and slash greenhouse gas emissions


Graphic - Key Concepts

  • A massive switch from coal, oil, natural gas and nuclear power plants to solar power plants could supply 69 percent of the U.S.’s electricity and 35 percent of its total energy by 2050.
  • A vast area of photovoltaic cells would have to be erected in the Southwest. Excess daytime energy would be stored as compressed air in underground caverns to be tapped during nighttime hours.
  • Large solar concentrator power plants would be built as well.
  • A new direct-current power transmission backbone would deliver solar electricity across the country.
  • But $420 billion in subsidies from 2011 to 2050 would be required to fund the infrastructure and make it cost-competitive.

—The Editors

High prices for gasoline and home heating oil are here to stay. The U.S. is at war in the Middle East at least in part to protect its foreign oil interests. And as China, India and other nations rapidly increase their demand for fossil fuels, future fighting over energy looms large. In the meantime, power plants that burn coal, oil and natural gas, as well as vehicles everywhere, continue to pour millions of tons of pollutants and greenhouse gases into the atmosphere annually, threatening the planet.

Well-meaning scientists, engineers, economists and politicians have proposed various steps that could slightly reduce fossil-fuel use and emissions. These steps are not enough. The U.S. needs a bold plan to free itself from fossil fuels. Our analysis convinces us that a massive switch to solar power is the logical answer.

Solar energy’s potential is off the chart. The energy in sunlight striking the earth for 40 minutes is equivalent to global energy consumption for a year. The U.S. is lucky to be endowed with a vast resource; at least 250,000 square miles of land in the Southwest alone are suitable for constructing solar power plants, and that land receives more than 4,500 quadrillion British thermal units (Btu) of solar radiation a year. Converting only 2.5 percent of that radiation into electricity would match the nation’s total energy consumption in 2006.

To convert the country to solar power, huge tracts of land would have to be covered with photovoltaic panels and solar heating troughs. A direct-current (DC) transmission backbone would also have to be erected to send that energy efficiently across the nation.

The technology is ready. On the following pages we present a grand plan that could provide 69 percent of the U.S.’s electricity and 35 percent of its total energy (which includes transportation) with solar power by 2050. We project that this energy could be sold to consumers at rates equivalent to today’s rates for conventional power sources, about five cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh). If wind, biomass and geothermal sources were also developed, renewable energy could provide 100 percent of the nation’s electricity and 90 percent of its energy by 2100....MUCH MORE

Clerics Tell Saudi Ruler to Curb Inflation

From The Telegraph:

A Group of Saudi Arabia Muslim clerics has issued a rare warning to the ruling government that it must take action to curb rising inflation, blaming Riyadh's pegging of the riyal to the US dollar.

A near five-fold increase in oil prices over the past five years has helped the government log large budget surpluses, but Saudis are feeling the pinch from a surge in prices of basic foods in recent months mainly due to a fall in the US dollar.

..."We direct this message to the rulers and officials: we remind you of Prophet Mohammad's words that you are shepherds who are responsible for your flock," the group of 19 well-known clerics, including Nasser al-Omar, said in a statement....MORE

Cramer Predicts DJIA 14,582 At End of 2007

Mr Cramer is rolling out his 2008 prognostications. Here's what he was looking for a year ago.
From 24/7 Wall Street:

January 3, 2007
Cramer says 14,582 is the level that the DJIA will close at the end of 2007. He said he was only off by 7 points n his 2006 predictions. That is roughly a 17% gain for 2007 on the DJIA based on the 12,474 close today.
He does better on individual names:
January 08, 2007
Cramer's Top 3X3 Picks in 2007: Value, Growth & Speculative

Cramer's 3 Top Speculative Picks for 2007 from Friday are:
1) Level 3 Communications (LVLT)
2) Rite Aid (RAD)
3) Savient Pharma (SVNT)

The Cramer Top 3 Growth Picks in order for 2007 from Thursday are:
1) New York Stock Exchange (NYX);
2) Apple (AAPL);
3) Cisco Systems (CSCO).

The Cramer Top 3 Value Picks for 2007 from Wednesday in order are:
1) Altria (MO)
2) Goldman Sachs (GS)
3) Halliburton (HAL)


Jabal Omar eyes sukuk to fund $2.9bn project

Name dropper.
From ArabianBusiness.com:

Saudi Arabia's Jabal Omar Development Company plans to tap the Islamic debt markets to help finance an 11 billion riyal ($2.9 billion) project in Mecca that will be built by developers including Binladin Group.

Jabal Omar awarded Binladin, the country's largest contractor, and Saudi Oger, owned by the family of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri, the contract to build the project, the Saudi developer said in a statement on Monday....

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

As Ethanol Takes Its First Steps, Congress Proposes a Giant Leap

From the New York Times:


NYT Illustration

Congress is on the verge of writing into law one of the most ambitious dictates ever issued to American business: to create, from scratch, a huge new industry capable of converting agricultural wastes and other plant material into automotive fuel....MORE

Australian Pension Funds May Lead Carbon Investments, Bank Says

From Bloomberg:

Australian pension funds may be among the first in the country to invest in international carbon markets and commit to buying emissions credits from overseas projects, Credit Suisse Group's head of carbon trading said.

Pension funds are examining investments in the carbon market to broaden their portfolios, partly driven by a trend away from credit market investments, New York-based Paul Ezekiel said today in an interview in Sydney. Utilities such as AGL Energy Ltd. and Origin Energy Ltd. that will be obliged to cut their emissions will probably also be early investors, he said.

The global market for emissions credits may double this year to as much as $70 billion, the International Emissions Trading Association said last week. Australia's new Labor Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on Dec. 3 signed the documents to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, committing the nation to binding targets to limit gases blamed for global warming.

``We have had discussions with some investors who are clearly looking at this asset class for the first time, because they are now saying they need to broaden their exposure a little bit,'' Ezekiel said.

...Widening losses in credit markets may be helping to drive interest in carbon investments, Ezekiel said.

``You're also seeing a little bit of accelerated interest in this market because of what you've seen in the credit markets more broadly,'' he said.

``You're seeing some sectors fall out of favor here, and will be for some time, so people are looking to broaden and diversify their exposure to other markets. I wouldn't say it's broad but I think we're at the front end of that.''>>>MORE

EcoSecurities to buy clean coal carbon credits (ECO.L)

From businessGreen:

Carbon trading firm has reached agreement to buy CERs from Chinese clean coal power plants

Carbon trading firm EcoSecurities has confirmed it is to acquire a number of Certified Emission Reduction credits (CERs) from clean coal plants in China.

A spokeswoman for the company said that it had reached an agreement to buy CERs from a number of Chinese companies specialising in clean coal plants, but that the details of the deal had not yet been finalised....MORE

Mining Firms Bulk Up, Echoing Big Oil Mergers (BHP, RTP)

From the Wall Street Journal:

BHP Bid for Rio Heralds
A New Era for Resources;
The OPEC of Iron Ore?

First there was Big Oil. Now comes Big Mining.

For years now, mining companies have gotten rich supplying the raw materials that have fueled consumer booms from China and India to Brazil. As commodities prices soared, these companies socked away cash and snapped up rivals. Now they are embarking on another round of deals that promises a new class of juggernauts. The resulting megaminers would have great influence over the cost of raw materials like iron ore, copper and uranium -- and, by extension, the price of consumer electronics, cars and new apartment blocks.

Last month, Anglo-Australian miner BHP Billiton announced a $125 billion proposal to merge with Anglo-Australian rival Rio Tinto. The deal would combine the world's No. 1 and No. 3 miners into a company worth as much as $320 billion at current market values -- bigger than every global oil company except Exxon Mobil Corp. and Russia's OAO Gazprom. It would be the world's largest producer of copper and aluminum, its No. 2 iron-ore provider and potentially the largest source of uranium....MUCH MORE

Are Commodities a Bubble Ready to Burst?

From The Telegraph:

Peak oil, peak metals, and this year peak food. Every bookshop has a corner warning that mankind will soon outrun the basic resources of the globe.

It was ever thus. Variants of the theme emerge at the top of each commodity super-cycle, only to be deferred for another 20 years or so as new supply comes on-stream and technology outwits the pessimists. Shortage can turn to glut very fast once inflation forces central banks to hit the brakes.

Some will remember Limits to Growth, published by the Club of Rome in the 1970s. It said the world's oil reserves would run dry in 30 years. Gold supply would last nine years.

The report spoke of the "sudden and uncontrollable collapse" of economic life. What in fact collapsed were oil and gold prices. We can see now that the 1970s was a central bank monetary bubble.

The question for investors who have sunk $150bn into commodity index funds - and trillions in mining and energy stocks - is whether the roaring boom of the last five years is another bubble, or whether the Malthusians are closer to the mark this time....MORE

The Price of Biofuels

From MIT's Technology Review:

Making ethanol from corn is expensive. Better biofuels are years away from the gas tank. Farmers are reluctant to change their practices. But do we really have any alternative to biofuels?

The irrational exuberance over ethanol that swept through the American corn belt over the last few years has given way to a dreary hangover, especially among those who invested heavily in the sprawling production facilities now dotting the rural landscape. It's the Midwest's version of the tech bubble, and in some ways, it is remarkably familiar: overeager investors enamored of a technology's seemingly unlimited potential ignore what, at least in retrospect, are obvious economic realities.


More than a hundred biofuel factories, clustered largely in the corn-growing states of Iowa, Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, South Dakota, and Nebraska, will produce 6.4 billion gallons of ethanol this year, and another 74 facilities are under construction. Just 18 months ago, they were cash cows, churning out high-priced ethanol from low-priced corn, raising hopes of "energy independence" among politicians, and capturing the attention--and money--of venture capitalists from both the East and West Coasts.

Now ethanol producers are struggling, and many are losing money. The price of a bushel of corn rose to record highs during the year, exceeding $4.00 last winter before falling back to around $3.50 in the summer, then rebounding this fall to near $4.00 again. At the same time, ethanol prices plummeted as the market for the alternative fuel, which is still used mainly as an additive to gasoline, became saturated. In the face of these two trends, profit margins vanished....MUCH MORE

Sex, population and the predicted share crash of 2008

From thisismoney:
In 2002, I wrote in the London Evening Standard, This is Money's sister title, about an appealing theory that claimed to accurately predict the future for the stock market. The prediction? US shares would race higher before beginning a decade-long slump in 2008. UK shares would be close behind...

'Investors should brace themselves for one of the most powerful rallies the UK has ever seen before the stock market falls into a Japan-style recession that could last for a decade or more. A slide in London house prices, starting from about 2008, is expected to be the first sign that the good times are over in the UK before the economy - and share prices - languish until at least 2022.

'The theory goes that a tidal wave of babies born after the Second World War is reaching the optimal spending age of 46 - couples begin to spend more because their children fly the nest. In marketing circles, it is known as the Harley-Davidson effect: the biggest buyers of the bikes are men in their fifties. This spending drives the economy and, therefore, stock markets.'

London Evening Standard, 8 March 2002

So crudely, the theory is based on sex....MORE

Nanosolar ships First Product

From the nanosolar blog:

After five years of product development – including aggressively pipelined science, research and development, manufacturing process development, product testing, manufacturing engineering and tool development, and factory construction – we now have shipped first product and received our first check of product revenue.

...Our product is defining in more ways I can enumerate here but includes:

- the world’s first printed thin-film solar cell in a commercial panel product;

- the world’s first thin-film solar cell with a low-cost back-contact capability;

- the world’s lowest-cost solar panel – which we believe will make us the first solar manufacturer capable of profitably selling solar panels at as little as $.99/Watt;

- the world’s highest-current thin-film solar panel – delivering five times the current of any other thin-film panel on the market today and thus simplifying system deployment;

- an intensely systems-optimized product with the lowest balance-of-system cost of any thin-film panel – due to innovations in design we have included.

Today we are announcing that we have begun shipping panels for freefield deployment in Eastern Germany and that the first Megawatt of our panels will go into a power plant installation there....MORE

‘Klimakatastrophe’ picked as Germany’s word of year. AND: 5 Drinking Stories That Put Yours To Shame

From Reuters:
The Society of the German Language (GfdS) has picked “Klimakatastrophe” (climate disaster) as its “word of the year”, an annual honour awarded to the term the prestigious Wiesbaden-based group feels has captured the spirit or dominated the headlines and public discussion of the year....
And, if sweet liquor eases the pain* here's some trivia from MentalFloss:

Turns out, the best drinking stories in history are actually, well, historical. So raise a glass to your forefathers and marvel at these tales.

cheers-three-mugs.jpg

1. Admiral Edward Russell’s 17th-Century Throwdown

Think you can drink like a sailor? Maybe you should take a moment to reflect on what that truly means.

The record for history’s largest cocktail belongs to British Lord Admiral Edward Russell. In 1694, he threw an officer’s party that employed a garden’s fountain as the punch bowl.

The concoction? A mixture that included 250 gallons of brandy, 125 gallons of Malaga wine, 1,400 pounds of sugar, 2,500 lemons, 20 gallons of lime juice, and 5 pounds of nutmeg.

A series of bartenders actually paddled around in a small wooden canoe, filling up guests’ cups. Not only that, but they had to work in 15-minute shifts to avoid being overcome by the fumes and falling overboard.

The party continued nonstop for a full week, pausing only briefly during rainstorms to erect a silk canopy over the punch to keep it from getting watered down. In fact, the festivities didn’t end until the fountain had been drunk completely dry.

2. The London Brew-nami of 1814

The Industrial Revolution wasn’t all steam engines and textile mills. Beer production increased exponentially, as well. Fortunately, the good people of England were up to the challenge and drained kegs as fast as they were made. Brewery owners became known as “beer barons,” and they spent their newfound wealth in an age-old manner — by trying to party more than the next guy.

Case in point: In 1814, Meux’s Horse Shoe Brewery in London constructed a brewing vat that was 22 feet tall and 60 feet in diameter, with an interior big enough to seat 200 for dinner — which is exactly how its completion was celebrated. (Why 200? Because a rival had built a vat that seated 100, of course.)>>>MORE

*Phil Hartman voicing Troy McClure in the Simpsons' "Bart's Inner Child" :
{A few weeks ago, I was a washed-up actor with a
drinking problem. Then Brad Goodman came along
and gave me this job and a can of fortified
wine!
[drinks from a can]
Ah...sweet liquor eases the pain.}

And:

Oh, hi! I'm Troy McClure. You might remember me
from such self-help
videos as "Smoke Yourself Thin"
and "Get Confident, Stupid". Well, now
I'm here to
tell you about the only real path to mental health.
That's
right, it's the Brad Goodman
[
squints at cue cards] something-or-other...

-- Troy McClure introduces "Adjusting Your Self-O-Stat",
"Bart's Inner Child"-- Troy McClure describes how
self-help aided him, "Bart's Inner Child"

How the world will change (part one)

A two-parter from China Dialogue:

In the first of two excerpts from his book How the World Will Change With Global Warming, Trausti Valsson says the retreat of Arctic pack ice will lead to new shipping routes in a spatially altered world.

The activation of the polar areas – especially that of the Arctic – will occur as the global climate continues to get warmer. In the past, extreme cold has led to year-round ice cover and has primarily been the prohibiting factor for limiting the development and presence and a more extended range of biota and human activities.


Global shipping, utilising the shortest distance between continents via the Arctic Ocean, has therefore not been possible despite courageous historical attempts to find a passage. The warming of the Arctic, on the other hand, will mean that the whole northern part of the globe – the site of most of the landmass of Earth – will become open to a different and increasing biota and, eventually, to the development of a system of important central areas for human activities. This will lead to a spatial system of centres that, in many ways, will be different from that of the globe today.

The two basic spatial systems of the globe, the semi-spherical system of the northern hemisphere and today’s middle-latitude ribbon around the globe, will co-exist for a long time to come, but the importance of semi-spherical space will gradually be strengthened at the expense of the central ribbon space. At the same time that it loses some of its uniqueness, the ribbon space will expand to the north. As the North continues to warm, it will, as a result, become spatially stronger. The importance of the South, in contrast, will weaken as, in many areas, it becomes undesirably hot for human activities....MUCH MORE

Part Two

Property bust? Lunar land prices are rocketing

From Reuters:

Property investors smarting from this year's housing bust in the United States might do well to look farther afield -- even out of this world.

Internet searches for lunar land prices show the cost of buying an acre of the moon's surface has risen 40 percent since the start of 2007, investment bank UBS told clients in a tongue-in-cheek analysis.

Lacing a year-end note with caveats, and not a little holiday cheer, UBS strategists said their "esoteric research" of archived news reports suggests lunar property trends may even be a leading indicator of U.S. house prices....MORE

Blackstone plans $872m investment in Ugandan dam project

From the WSJ via Financial News Online:

Blackstone’s quest for new private equity deals has led it to Uganda's Lake Victoria, where it just agreed to invest in an $872m (€606m) dam project called Bujagali.

Sithe Global Power, a power-development company Blackstone owns, plans to declare as early as Tuesday its agreement to spearhead the 250MW Bujagali hydroelectric station on the Nile River about five miles downstream from Lake Victoria

Sithe Global will put up $110m towards the project. Industrial Promotion Services, the investment arm of Aga Kahn, the Muslim spiritual leader, will put up $60m and the government of Uganda will contribute $20m.

A total of $682m in debt financing will be provided by a group including the European Investment Bank, International Finance Corporation and the African Development Bank.

Fighting Rio piles on the prospects (RTP, BHP)

From The Age:

RIO Tinto's superior growth argument against BHP Billiton's spurned $US150 billion ($A174 billion) takeover proposal has gone into overdrive.

Hot on the heels of a $US991 million expansion of the Kestrel coalmine in Queensland and $US2.4 billion in Pilbara iron ore expansions, Rio has now pointed to its ability to capitalise on a $US1.5 billion spot pricing bonanza in iron ore, as well as giving the go-ahead for a controversial $US300 million nickel project in the US.

Rio's heavy promotion of its growth options and value-enhancing opportunities comes as the British Takeover Panel is expected to direct BHP tonight to either "out up or shut up" with its 3-for-1 scrip proposal, with the usual six to eight weeks' decision time expected.

A defiant Rio has argued that BHP needs Rio more than Rio needs BHP, such is the range of its opportunities. The latest spot pricing plans for iron ore and the go-ahead for the Eagle nickel mine near Lake Superior in Michigan are the latest shots to be fired....MORE

Fast Money's Jeff Macke Blasts Barron's Over "Sell Buffett" Call (BRK.A) Reactions to Barron's Cover Story on Berkshire-Hathaway

From CNBC's Warren Buffet Watch:
"This stock is still up 25 percent year-to-date. He has taken the steel-toed boots to the S&P yet again, in his folksy, avuncular, heart of a freakin' riverboat gambler type of way. Love the guy. Don't short Buffett because Barron's tells you to. I'm still waiting for the EchoStar deal they promised."
Also from WBW:
Berkshire Hathaway Shares Down 5% As Barron's Says Sell, But Bulls See Buying Opportunity
Berkshire Hathaway shares closed down 4.6 percent today (Monday) at $136,400 after a cover story in Barron's over the weekend recommended, "Sell Buffett: Sorry, Warren, Your Stock's Too Pricey." That erased just over $7 billion in Berkshire's market value in one day. Buffett-Bulls, however, see a buying opportunity in today's decline....MORE
Here's the Barron's story:

Sorry, Warren, Your Stock's Too Pricey

WARREN BUFFETT'S STAR HAS NEVER BEEN HIGHER.

The Class A shares of his Berkshire Hathaway (ticker: BRK-A) have surged 30% since Aug. 1, to $143,000, after hitting a record $151,650 last week. Berkshire now has a stock-market value of $220 billion, ranking it sixth in the U.S., behind only ExxonMobil (XOM), General Electric (GE), Microsoft (MSFT), AT&T (T) and Procter & Gamble (PG) -- and above such heavyweights as Johnson and Johnson (JNJ) and Google (GOOG).

The Berkshire rally reflects the company's haven status; it's dodged the mortgage and credit problems that are causing billions of dollars of losses at financial institutions including Citigroup (C), UBS (UBS) and Merrill Lynch (MER). While many of these battered companies are being forced to raise capital, Berkshire enviably holds $39 billion in cash. Some of the recent strength in Berkshire reflects Wall Street's expectation that Buffett, its CEO and controlling shareholder, will put some of that in an attractive investment in a financial company. Buffett might even buy his long-sought "elephant" -- a $10 billion-plus acquisition -- on the cheap....MORE

Here's The Aleph blog:

Not Dissing Warren the Wonderful

Look, Barron’s can say what they want about Warren Buffett, and his company Berkshire Hathaway, but I have just one thing to say here: Berky is the ultimate anti-volatility asset. When the hurricanes hit in 2005, I told my boss that the easy money, low-risk, low-reward play was to buy Berky. My boss liked to take risks, so that idea was shelved. Too bad, it was easy money. After all, who could write retrocessional coverage (Reinsuring reinsurers) except Berky? Every other writer was broke or disabled…

Now we have a different type of hurricane. Prior bad lending practices are destroying lending/insurance capacity in mortgages and elsewhere. This could be an investment opportunity for Berky. Thing is, outside of the Sovereign Wealth Funds, Berky has one of the biggest cash hoards around, and during times of panic, where assets get sold at a discount, cash is valuable.

So during times of panic, we should expect Berky’s valuation to expand. This is one of those times....MORE

Banks See Green in Carbon Projects

From the Wall Street Journal:

Investing Directly Adds
To Potential for Profits
In Emissions Trading

After piling into the burgeoning market for trading in carbon-emissions credits, some financial firms on Wall Street and elsewhere are going a step further, getting into the nitty-gritty of fixing leaking oil pipes in Russia and building hydroelectric dams in Latin America to create new credits themselves.

Those projects stand to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, one of the chief causes of climate change. The banks see a different kind of green, though. The projects can be converted into carbon credits, which can be sold at a profit on the European carbon market.

For financial firms such as Barclays PLC; Allianz SE's Dresdner Kleinwort and its carbon expert, Ingo Ramming; and Morgan Stanley, the decision to get their hands dirty with carbon-reduction projects is adding a new dimension to the emerging carbon-trading business. By getting directly involved, the firms are no longer simply acting as middlemen executing trades but are sometimes flexing their own financing muscle as well.

"It's a sign that the banks genuinely believe that the multibillion-dollar carbon market is only going to grow and grow," said Andreas Arvanitakis, an analyst at Point Carbon, a carbon-market research firm based in Oslo....MORE

Monday, December 17, 2007

Solar Stocks Comparison Table (12/17/2007)

From China Analyst:
Ticker Mkt Price Daily YTD Rev Rev Chg EPS EPS Chg P/E P/E Net

Cap
Chg Chg 07E 08E % 07E 08E % 07E 08E Margin
WFR 19378 83.42 -3.6% 113% 1929 2411 25% 3.29 4.19 27% 25 20 32%
FSLR 18346 231.97 -7.8% 677% 479 801 67% 1.19 1.99 67% 195 117 29%
STP 13316 78.43 -5.2% 131% 1371 2311 69% 1.09 2.04 88% 72 38 13%
SPWR 10036 121.49 -5.2% 227% 770 1235 60% 1.24 2.07 68% 98 59 3%
LDK 6289 68.18 20.0% 153% 475 970 104% 1.30 1.82 40% 52 37 31%
YGE 3055 33.21 -7.6% 202% 518 878 69% 0.44 0.91 104% 75 37 8%
JASO 3179 68.07 -2.5% 354% 329 767 133% 1.20 2.03 69% 57 34 19%
TSL 1213 47.98 -1.7% 154% 293 676 131% 1.28 2.83 122% 38 17 10%
ENER 1229 30.84 -6.4% -9% 242 429 78% -0.20 0.95 N/M N/M 32 -23%
ESLR 1477 15.02 -9.6% 98% 68 103 52% -0.25 -0.08 N/M N/M N/M -28%
SOLF 1153 24.01 -8.9% 105% 289 590 104% 0.31 0.93 203% 78 26 7%
CSUN 426 10.78 -1.0% -2% 233 421 80% -0.16 -0.06 N/M N/M N/M 8%
CSIQ 581 21.20 -9.9% 102% 296 713 141% -0.08 1.31 N/M N/M 16 -6%
AKNS 151 6.56 -8.3% 152% 31 58 86% -0.44 -0.29 N/M N/M N/M -29%
HOKU 177 10.62 -6.0% 307% 4 7 109% -0.40 -0.25 N/M N/M N/M -139%
SPIR 173 20.78 -7.4% 151% N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A -10%
ASTI 182 17.15 -15.8% 491% 1 2 108% -0.68 -0.13 N/M N/M N/M N/A
BTUI 121 12.79 -0.8% 31% 64 78 22% 0.24 0.72 200% 53 18 4%
DSTI 61 4.03 -5.2% 8% 0 N/A N/A -3.24 -2.13 N/A N/M N/A N/A
Go to China Analyst for the truncated right side of the table.