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Whatever Happened To Those Ethanol Companies?
By: Hard Assets Investor   Monday, November 23, 2009 1:37 PM

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Sometimes it's nice to revisit your old hangouts and reminisce. Investors in first-generation corn ethanol producers, however, just wish they could revisit their money.

The three publicly traded refiners we've been tracking over the past 18 months are moribund. Two—VeraSun Energy Corp. (Pink Sheets: VSUNQ) and Aventine Renewable Energy Holdings, Inc. (Pink Sheets: AVRNQ)—are bankrupt. The other, Pacific Ethanol, Inc. (Nasdaq: PEIX), is solvent in name only; its four operating subsidiaries have all filed Chapter 11 petitions, while the holding company stares at the prospect of standing before the bankruptcy bench itself. So what happened?

 

Margins Improving, Revenues Still Falling

It's ironic that one of the major factors leading to these companies' woes has improved over the past six months. Since May, the gross dollar yield obtained from the conversion of corn into fuel has risen fourfold, but it's too little, too late.

That's because the margins were so thin at the outset. Crushing corn into ethanol yielded only 37 cents a bushel[1] at the beginning of May, when corn was contracted at $4.14 a bushel, leading to a gross margin of just under 9 percent. But the price of ethanol has since risen 28 percent, while corn's price has fallen six percent, so margins have improved. At last look, the gross yield was $1.88 per bushel, or 48 percent.

 

Ethanol Vs. Corn

 

But although margins may be wider now (yet still nowhere near the spreads obtained when these refiners first came online), much of those revenues aren't being realized, due to production shutdowns or asset sales.

For example, seven of VeraSun's ethanol plants are now cranking out blending components for Valero Energy Corp. (NYSE: VLO). In a deal that closed this May, the nation's largest oil refiner swooped in to snatch the ethanol plants from VeraSun's bankruptcy estate.

Valero's not the first of the oil majors to embrace biofuels; big oil has been looking at adding integrative ethanol components to its operations for some time. For example, Royal Dutch Shell plc (NYSE: RDS-B) stepped into the biofuels arena back in 2002 with an investment in a Canadian company that brewed ethanol from plant waste. Chevron Corp.


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11/23/2009 10:46:13 PM
by Peabody09
You'll be happy to know that most of the corn feedstock based ethanol industry is still very much alive and well.  Only about 15% of the industry capacity is sitting idle today.  Most of the companies who successfully navigated through the economic downturn tend to fly under the radar screen of the public securities traders.  Other than ADM, most of the publicly traded ethanol companies were late entrants into the industry with inexperienced management that understood IPOs, but didn't understand commodities.  The fragmented array of established privately held ethanol producers did a much better job of preparing for and navigating through stormy waters.  You just don't read about them in the WSJ.
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