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“A Gold Royalty with a 10% Yield On Deck” (Dan Ferris)

Checking in on the Extreme Value teaser pitch of "a tiny resource company in Canada" that "reached a deal that will boost its cash flow 10-fold" -- also intro'd by a Steve SJuggerud email as the "No. 1 Income Stock of the Next 5 Years."

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, August 16, 2014

I hate to continue to write about this small company with great frequency, since it smacks of “talking my book” (it’s a major personal holding), but we have received a lot of questions from readers today about Dan Ferris’ latest pitch, so we’re re-running our previous free article about this one.

Last time around, it was teased as a “Classic Extreme Value” and the “next great royalty company”, and a lot of that language is still in the ad, but they are also mailing it this week with the promise that it’s “A gold royalty with a 10% yield on deck” and a “low-risk double in resources.” It’s not really a gold royalty company, though they do own minority stakes in some gold royalty firms and might eventually earn some gold royalties themselves many years in the future, it’s primarily a thermal coal, potash, nickel and iron ore royalty company.

What follows is our article from April 30, it has not been updated or revised but the story is still much the same other than the fact that the deal to acquire their large royalty portfolio has closed, they have booked the first couple days of cash flow on those royalties, and next quarter will be dramatically different in terms of incoming cash as those royalties are on the books for the full quarter. It’s hard to judge reasons for movement in this stock, but it is somewhat depressed lately probably because their iron ore project and core future royalty, run by former subsidiary Alderon, has not yet completed project financing, and because potash prices continue to be soft. I continue to hold the stock and haven’t bought or sold any shares recently.

——from April 30, 2014——-

“One of the best resource companies I’ve ever found is about to close its most lucrative deal ever. This pending transaction could help you make the safest 400% of your lifetime

“A few years ago, this company turned a $650,000 investment into over $200 million. It spent $2 million on a project now worth over $50 million. And it’s about to close its biggest deal yet… boosting its cash stream 10x. Buy shares immediately.”

That’s the teaser pitch from Dan Ferris at Extreme Value — and I tend to like his stuff, so it caught my eye (and he’s got the mighty Stansberry email marketing machine behind him, so it caught a lot of your eyes, too).

Emailed marketing pitches like this are always pretty aggressive — they wouldn’t get your attention otherwise — but Dan Ferris is a value guy who usually couches his language at least a little bit, so you can really sense his love of this stock shining through … here’s some more from the intro:

“Something remarkable happened at the very end of last year.

“A company I’ve followed for years reached a deal that will boost its cash flow 10-fold… practically overnight.

“I’ve previously made gains of 44% with this company. I’ve toured their facilities. The CEO even gave me his personal cell phone number and told me to call anytime.

“And before this deal… It was already a “best-in-class” company – the only kind I like to recommend…

“This tiny stock is – by far – one of the best opportunities in the natural resource sector I’ve seen in my entire career.

“It’s a stock you absolutely must buy if you believe that all the money the Fed is printing is going to eventually lead to higher costs and inflation.”

Well, we’ve been expecting inflation to show up at some point — it sure ain’t here now, but we keep expecting it … so what is the stock Ferris is pitching?

He calls it the “Next Great Royalty Company” … which, combined with the fact that they made a recent deal to boost their cash flow 10-fold, means that I and most of the Irregulars will know who it is. Shall we drag out the suspense a little longer?

Ferris explains his take on royalty companies for us:

“I’m not sure how much you know about the precious metals business, but probably the best way to make money in this industry is not as an explorer… or producer.

“Instead, it’s to get a foothold on profitable mining royalties.

“The way it works is, several smart geologists and investors buy up the “royalty rights” to some of the world’s most productive and lucrative mines.

“And get this: These guys don’t do any digging, production, or actual mining… they simply get paid lucrative ‘royalties’ as the metals come out of the ground. It’s an incredibly simple and lucrative business.”

And I pretty much agree with that — mining is a lousy business, but if you can generate future royalties and keep your costs contained the little corner of the mining market that we call royalty or streaming companies can be plenty lucrative.

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He gives a few examples of the huge returns this company has generated in the past decade or so:

  • “A few years ago this company made a $2 million investment in iron ore. That investment is worth over $52 million today, a 2,500 % gain. And that doesn’t include an estimated $700 million in royalties over the life of the mine.
  • “From 2003-2005, the company spent $650,000 on a uranium-producing site. In 2010 it sold the uranium asset for $210 million – a gain of 32,000%. And it still holds a royalty on every ounce of uranium produced at the site.
  • “It paid $14 million for a Canadian property that has since paid out $20 million in cash – and will keep on paying $3 million a year or more for the next 15 years. All told, I estimate it will collect more than five times its original investment.”

And a few more clues:

“[Royalty] companies typically pay huge sums for royalties on mines that are already producing, or about to start.

“The next great royalty company usually pays next to nothing for its royalty stakes. Instead, it trades its knowledge to the big miners for a cut of their sales….

“… this company is not just interested in gold. Although it will profit tremendously from a gold rebound, it gets its royalty income from base metals like nickel and other natural resources.

“It also has investments in uranium, platinum, and palladium….

“… has just acquired some even more valuable royalty streams – royalties tied to the most basic components of modern society, like food and electricity.”

And yes, we then get to the “Christmas Eve Surprise” that brought this company to the attention of many investors, and drove the price up by about 50% in a matter of weeks (it has come down some since) …

“Five years ago, when the markets were crashing all around, this company was sitting on more than $100 million of cash in the bank. Plus it had millions of dollars of royalties coming in every year to pay its bills.

“Executives sat down and made a list of the assets they’d most like to own (at the right price).

“They’re about to get one of their top three in a single deal that could double this company’s share price (or more) in the next few years.

“They recently made an incredible deal. There were multiple parties involved, and it took months to pull together behind the scenes before an agreement was reached – just before everyone headed home for Christmas.”

OK, I won’t hold out any longer — and frankly, the clues kept rolling in, so I imagine most of you could have figured out this one without me (the ad is here if you want to go check the clues on your own or get more of Ferris’ take … it’s OK, we’ll wait).

Dan Ferris says they are turning their $5 per share in cash into new assets that he thinks will be worth more than $14 per share based on those new steady royalties they’re acquiring in coal and potash … so yes, this is our old friend Altius Minerals (ALS in Toronto, ATUSF on the pink sheets).

And as coincidence would have it, Ferris’ ad started circulating over the weekend … and I last wrote about Altius for the Irregulars in the Friday File on, well, Friday. Three days ago. So I’ll just share with you a piece of my commentary in that article.

The short version is that I own Altius, I first learned about it from a Dan Ferris teaser about five years ago and have held and bought several times since, and they did indeed make a transformative deal on Christmas Eve that’s expected to close next month.

That deal was largely for a large portfolio of currently producing royalties in coal and potash in Western Canada, all of which are on very long-lived mines with (usually) at least several decades of reserves, royalties that have generated close to $30 million a year in recent years… and those royalties mean that even though the company is taking on some debt (assuming the deal closes) and losing it’s big cash cushion with this deal, Altius can now for the first time be valued just on next year’s cash flow at pretty close to where it’s trading now, even without taking account of what I had previously considered their largest asset (the 3% gross royalty on the future Kami iron ore mine), and without really considering that this management team probably deserves a nice premium price for their long term success.

Here’s a taste of what I wrote to the Irregulars on Friday … I own the stock, I end up liking them more every time I look at them so I’ve been nibbling every few months for a while and bought a little more on Friday, and the value is still based to a large degree on commodity prices (and on the deal actually closing), but I was perhaps a bit more conservative in my comments than he was in the teaser pitch:

******Friday File excerpt from March 21******

And the reason Altius came up for reader questions, aside from the fact that the shares have been falling in the last few weeks, is that Altius just reported their quarterly results. Those quarterly results aren’t usually a reason for Altius to do much (another reason why I like it as a core investment), but it’s usually worth taking a look — and there was actually a bit of news hiding in there.

The news was relatively minor — aside from the fact that they still expect their new royalty acquisition deal (the one they announced on Christmas Eve) to close at the end of next month. There is no news yet as to whether the operator of the Genesee generating plants will exercise its right of first refusal on that particular royalty (that’s the biggest royalty in the deal), but an an Ontario pension fund has exercised its right to force Altius to buy all of the Carbon Development Portfolio assets, so instead of buying half for $21 million they’re buying the whole thing — primarily a growth platform for future potential coal and potash royalties — for $42 million. Assuming that the Genesee royalty stays in the deal, the total for everything is about $280 million. That makes the immediate deal look slightly less attractive, since the Carbon Development Portfolio is not a current cash flowing portfolio, but it does give more future potential in exploration projects that could be partnered or extensions to existing mines that could be sold in exchange for future royalties, exactly the kind of thing Altius is good at doing if you give them enough time.

And, still assuming that the Genesee royalty stays, the total average royalty cash flow for the new Altius should be in the neighborhood of $30 million (that’s the low end of average over the last four years, including Altius’ Voisey’s Bay royalty). If we assume that their corporate costs/overhead stay in the neighborhood of $3 million per year, which has been fairly consistent (not counting gains or losses on investments, just the actual cash flow that the company consumes to keep operating), then that means effectively $27 million in EBITDA per year at no cost.

Even if we assume no growth in production or in commodity prices, that royalty portfolio — which is all long-lived, most of the mines have at least 20 years and some up to 70 years of reserves — could reasonably be worth $380 million in a discounted cash flow model (10% discount rate). Remember, these are pretty stable royalties — the coal ones are tonnage based coal royalties for power plants that are at the mine mouth, the coal price doesn’t matter … and the potash royalties for mines run by the big three potash operators in Canada, and potash is showing some signs of bottoming out at $300 (it’s right around five year lows now, largely because of fears that the Eastern Europe potash cartel was breaking up and could crush prices by boosting production … that cartel, the Belarus/Uralkali group, shows some signs of getting back in sync). That doesn’t mean the royalties are guaranteed to stay in this range, but they’re a lot more stable than some.

They also have just over $100 million in outside investments (primarily in Alderon Iron Ore, the Kami mine developer they spun off, and in Virginia Mines), so we can guess at a pretty conservative value of $480 million for the company based just on the producing royalties and publicly traded investments. They’ll have about $150 million in debt when this deal closes, so I think that would leave $330 million as a pretty conservative value for the equity. Right now the equity is at $370 million, so it’s not a deep value conservative bargain. (Those numbers are Canadian dollars, though for my long-term purposes the difference isn’t enough to be of concern.)

But wait — I didn’t mention the one asset that we had previously been thinking of as their primary and most valuable asset: The royalty on that Kami mine that will be built by Alderon. So that’s the wild card.

The Kami mine is going to be built, I’m pretty certain — they’ve ordered their long-lead-time equipment, they’ve made their long-term power purchase deal and the government is committed to building the transmission lines, the government is generally lining up behind the project (partly because of the closing of the Wabush mine in the same area by Cliffs, which lost them 400 jobs — Alderon could hire twice that many workers to build the mine), and they’ve gotten close to $200 million of committed funding from their partner Hebei.

There are still steps to take before construction, including additional off-take deals and project financing, but those are expected fairly soon and it’s possible they could be producing iron ore in as little as two years. At current projections and recent iron ore prices, the royalty if they don’t expand the mine (there are plans to double production a few years after they start) would be in the neighborhood of $25 million a year. Iron ore prices are down a bit, and there is great fear about what Chinese demand might be in the coming years, but as long as prices don’t fall below $80 the economics of the mine still look pretty good to me. The mine hasn’t been built so this is risky, of course, but I expect this to be Altius’ largest royalty in three or four years — and even if it is half of what is projected that puts Altius over the edge to be a very easy buy for me here in the low teens. Adding another $12 million in EBITDA should add another $100 million to Altius’ valuation even if you’re being pretty conservative.

It will be an interesting few years for Altius, but I think there’s a very good chance that the reliable nature of their new core royalties is being quite undervalued — probably in part because they’re more economically sensitive and China-sensitive and are for non-scarce commodities (or disliked commodities, like coal), but the modern world is going to need iron, potash and coal for the foreseeable future. Not as sexy as gold or silver royalties, but coal, potash and nickel are all at relatively low prices and could grow in value — which would substantially increase Altius’ cash flow at no additional cost. They could also fall in value, or the mines these royalties are based on could be shut in for low prices, nothing is guaranteed — but I think it’s pretty rare to find a company with this level of certainty in their cash flow, and margins this spectacularly good (they could feasibly be generating pre-tax earnings of $50 million in three years) … and as soon as they’ve paid down a bit of the debt from this new transformational deal and as soon as the Kami mine starts up, Altius is very likely to become a substantial dividend payer as well.

I think we have to use a little bit of optimism to be confident that the stock is worth C$14 today … but not a lot, just enough to accept that the Kami mine will be built and iron ore prices won’t fall more than 25% from here, that Western Canada will still require coal-fired electricity, and that Canadian potash is not too far from bottoming out in price and won’t fall another 50% in a price war with Belarus. If those three things are true, Altius could easily be worth $20 if it got a similar valuation to some of its royalty-owning peers (and Altius is, I think, a much more shareholder-friendly and more conservatively-run company than its peers).

Pretty much every time I write about Altius I end up wanting to own a larger position … so I’ll continue to put my money where my mouth is and I’ve added a small bit to my holdings today, I wouldn’t want to be an aggressive acquirer at these prices because Altius is quite volatile and the stock could easily fluctuate quite a bit and provide some bargain purchase opportunities in the future, but I plan to hold the shares for many years and I like it very much at this price. If Altius earned a similar valuation to Franco Nevada (FNV), the (mostly gold) royalty company, they could be trading at 30X 2015 earnings … I expect Altius to have earnings of about $20 million in 2015 (the possible range is pretty big, depending on their interest costs and commodity prices), which means there’s potential for Altius to be bid up to a $600 million market cap, which would be a gain of about 60%. That’s far from guaranteed, of course, and there’s plenty of uncertainty — but it’s a valuation that could be justified. Altius remains one of my top three holdings, along with Berkshire Hathaway and Apple.

[this article was originally published on March 24, it has not been revised or updated — though the Altius deal to acquire new royalties has now closed, and they have announced a secondary offering that could, in part, help ameliorate the need for debt for the deal]

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Nancy Sommer
Guest
May 7, 2014 6:13 pm

I have been reading lately about “Operation Bluestar” and its mystery silent partner. Do you have any idea who this mystery partner is?

Frenchy
Frenchy
May 8, 2014 2:14 pm
Reply to  Nancy Sommer

Hi Nancy,
Funny how I’ve just submitted that one to Travis to decipher. Hopefully he can.

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Chick
Guest
Chick
May 7, 2014 7:22 pm

Is Altius a passive foreign investment company for American investors?

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330 4HL
Member
330 4HL
July 15, 2014 11:49 am

Hi Travis,
As you know, I’m not a big fan of ALS since they were forced to take 100% of the coal assets. How the Carbon Development & Genesee assets shake out will have a pretty large impact on how they move forward. If they can turn around those via sale or JV I would be much more positive.
The share price seems to be having a bit of a bounce today, probably as a result of your article & that of Dan Ferris, but I expect the commodities market to drop off over the summer and ALS with it.
One holding that they have that I like a lot is Virginia. I did a rough calculation a couple of years back of the royalty that Goldcorp will be paying once Elenore ( 10 million oz. and counting) is in production next year, and value it alone at $12+ at current prices. At some point, either GG or one of the royalty cos. such as Franco-Nevada will take a run at that royalty and I expect it to bring a premium.
My target is $18-$20 for VGQ

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330 4HL
Member
330 4HL
July 15, 2014 1:22 pm

Fundamentally, I don’t think we differ too much on ALS. Do I remember you saying you think the value is in the $17-$18 range? If so, I think you are on the money.
My main concerns are the previously mentioned coal assets, but equally, the breadth of their investments at the moment. Altius is a VERY small operation. I’m a bit worried that they may be spreading themselves a bit too thin in juggling so many balls at once. As we have seen in the past, a misstep can have a massive impact on the share price. I’ll feel a bit more comfortable paying a slightly higher price for the shares once I can see that they’ve got their arms around all the assets.
cheers

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mindfulmoney
mindfulmoney
July 15, 2014 4:05 pm

Does anyone have an opinion on if it’s “better” to purchase shares using ALS.TO or ATUSF?
I use Scottrade and have bought on the OTC, but never Toronto.
Just curious, thanks.

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William F Tilson
Member
William F Tilson
July 15, 2014 6:08 pm

Since the Ferris tease is titled “A Gold Royalty with a 10% Yield On Deck”, I find your analysis quite refreshing in that you stuck with the facts – coal, iron, potash – instead of fabricating a BS sales pitch about something sexy like gold. Based upon what I read on the company’s website, the only gold interest they have is in two (2) Newfoundland projects that are still in the exploration stage. I was also struck by the fact that the company reported a US$ 22,565,000 loss for the fiscal year ended 4-30-2014. You overwhelmed me with projections of future value, but that loss stuck in my gullet and did a good job of reducing my enthusiasm. Finally, if the company is truly converting itself into a royalty company, then a large, ever-increasing dividend is the only way I think they will ever get my interest – just like the O&G royalty investments. Also, keep the faith with Sandstorm Gold. The Colossus mine debacle has been settled in a manner that I think is very favorable to Sandstorm Gold, and I really do not know anything about gold mining, but I certainly think that Nolan Watson knows exactly what he is doing. I am sure you know that he was the CFO of Silver Wheaton when it went from zero to billions. Thank you very much for your usual honesty and integrity. I have gotten to the point that I can count the investment advisors who I trust on one hand – and still have two fingers free to smoke a cigar.

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330 4HL
Member
330 4HL
July 15, 2014 7:06 pm

they also have an 8% stake in Virginia (VGQ) which is a gold company

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pieter de R
Member
pieter de R
July 21, 2014 4:34 pm

What is the point in buying ALS if they don’t pay any dividend and in stead keep racking up debt to buy more (possible) royalties, it seems more like an inflation game to me , with inflation up commodity prices go up and hence their royalties increase
All the while the investor has to hope, that some ione woulkd like to pay more for the shares than he did

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Jon DoeFour
Jon DoeFour
July 24, 2014 5:21 am

I just looked at the price chart for ATUSF. Up plenty in the last several weeks, up lots since last year. Wish I’d bought in 2013. It is too expensive at todays prices so I hope it goes down closer to last years levels. If so, then I’ll buy some.

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cw99
August 16, 2014 2:20 pm

Do you think Ukranian crisis will help Altius?

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Robert
Member
Robert
August 25, 2014 3:08 pm

Altius lost $22m in 2014. What’s that all about and why isn’t it a concern?

Bakermre
Irregular
Bakermre
September 2, 2014 12:18 pm

I am a member of PDAC and have followed Altius (ALS-TSX) for some time. I met them again this year in Toronto in March, with about the same conclusions as in prior years: These guys are cautious, conservative with their money and resources, well endowed intellectually and professionally talented. That says a lot; but they are still at the mercy of cyclically weak commodity markets and a very uncertain Chinese market going forward. Yes, I do believe their time shall come, but it is most unlikely much before 2018 to 2020. An investment in ALS has had its ups and downs over the past 2 years: $9.09 on 6/24/2013 and $16.32 on 4/28/2014; now it trades at $14.30 CAD. More or less dead money at the moment. It would be wise to follow this one and watch its progress, Travis must see more immediate gains than I do, or he has more patience. I am glad not to hold it, at least until I meet ALS again next March at the PDAC . Travis, please keep us posted, until then.

bobbill
bobbill
November 4, 2014 3:57 pm

Any ideas or guesses on how much farther ATUSF will fall. Bought in at $13.37 so looking at big lose if I sell now but was thinking of selling anyway. Any thoughts appreciated.

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jonomalley
Member
November 5, 2014 12:49 pm

Ths is for posting travis. ATUSF is one of my largest holdings so it’s been a bit gut wrenching to watch the slide down into the $8’s. After reading Dalton’s letter I dug deep into my courage bin and bought some more. They just seem too solid long term to pass on the sale price. Dalton is always focused on the big picture, long term value for shareholders and I think he hedges his bets to the point where I think it’ll take a lot for them to get into serious trouble, which I think these prices are more reflective of being likely. We’ll see. I’ve only got about 20 years for it to pan out so I hope they get moving!

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jonomalley
Member
November 5, 2014 12:50 pm

Thanks for posting travis. ATUSF is one of my largest holdings so it’s been a bit gut wrenching to watch the slide down into the $8’s. After reading Dalton’s letter I dug deep into my courage bin and bought some more. They just seem too solid long term to pass on the sale price. Dalton is always focused on the big picture, long term value for shareholders and I think he hedges his bets to the point where I think it’ll take a lot for them to get into serious trouble, which I think these prices are more reflective of being likely. We’ll see. I’ve only got about 20 years for it to pan out so I hope they get moving!

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Mike carey
Mike carey
December 17, 2014 11:19 am

Travis,
Can you comment on the recent earnings release for Altius of 10 Dec 14? Thanks.

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robtcohen
Irregular
December 21, 2014 8:51 pm

I’m posting this on Dec 21, 2014. Dan Ferris is enthusiastically drumming for new subscribers at $750 for year, 12 issues, during trial period of first 3 months all money can be refunded, otherwise if one quits subsequently , it’s a pro-rated refund.
He is very excited, the stars are lined up, it’s a “perfect storm,” December is implied as the month to pick up mining stocks sold for tax losses. But don’t buy weak companies. He seems to know some good ones that are way down.
Well, to me, heck-fire, they’re all down. The prestigious biggies:
Rio Tinto, Billion, Freeport Mac, and Vale at $8 pays 15 percent yield!
I also of course like Silver Wheaton and Newmont. both below $20 or very low 20s.
It is ok by me if somebody whom subscribes wants to mention some Dan picks too.
Because, it will be me, Putin, Ferris et al with dreams of resurgence.

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maddogdne
January 5, 2015 12:48 pm

Travis, looking at the price action chart today [1/5/2015] sure makes me wish I had bought this stock on Dec 16th when I could have owned shares for $8.48, because I surely would have sold them when they hit $12.56 a few days later! Which really surprises me, since I would have interpreted your remarks from 12-17-14 as being somewhat negative!

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Gary
Guest
Gary
May 8, 2015 1:02 pm

Just got a mailing from Ferris on “The Next Great Royalty Company” — presumably Altius again. He’s been flogging it for years, and it’s been going dead sideways for 5-6 years with virtually no dividends. Is it likely to show life any time soon or is it more likely to continue in the doldrums for another couple of years? If the latter, I would think it would be better to pursue opportunities that might actually grow instead of collecting dust and cobwebs?

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E R
Guest
May 20, 2015 11:05 am

Re; Another sector. I am STILL trying to get the names of the NFC chip maker for ApplePay &/or the motion sensor chip for iWatch. Did I miss the answer AGAIN? Anybody?

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Dave
Guest
Dave
June 5, 2015 10:21 am

I just came across your site today after seeing Dan Ferris’ teaser for the first time on “the next great royalty company.”
I was looking for info on who this was without having to go through the whole sales speel.
From what I see on your site, this next big thing has been promoted for the last few years.
Do you still own this stock, and is it still one of your big 3, or have you moved on?
Also, it is running at about 11.10, are you recommending to buy at this price or wait for a pullback?

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hendrixnuzzles
June 5, 2015 8:59 pm

$ATUSF Hi Travis, long ATUSF, just waiting it out.
Commodities low…Altius stays low.
Commodities up…Altius goes up.
Nobody knows when that’s going to happen. But it’s going to, sooner or later.

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