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With concerns about peak oil heightened by growing worldwide demand, skyrocketing energy costs are impacting budgets from the largest companies down to individual families. But availing yourself of the investment opportunities stemming from the worldwide energy crisis can have a positive affect on your bottom line—provided you invest wisely.
There’s much more to making money in the energy sector than predicting the direction of oil and natural gas prices. As with any investment, selectivity is essential: Just because commodities prices are rising doesn’t mean that every company is a winner. These decisions, of course, are founded on reliable information and analysis.
Every other Friday, Elliott H. Gue breaks down the complexities of the world’s energy markets in The Energy Letter, a free e-zine that features in-depth analysis and expert commentary on the latest trends in liquid natural gas (LNG), tanker companies, coal and uranium mining, offshore and deepwater drilling, and even alternative and renewable energy.
A year and a half ago, Elliott’s bullish outlook on uranium prices paid handsomely for readers who followed his recommendations of junior uranium-mining companies that the market had overlooked.
Some of the opportunities and topics that Elliott has recently covered include:
· A primer on selecting the most profitable driller companies both domestically and internationally;
· The exciting prospect of drilling in newly-discovered deepwater and unconventional reserves, such as the Tupi field off Brazil’s coast and the Bakken Shale in Montana;
· How rising overseas demand, especially among European utilities companies, is revitalizing US coal producers and related industries; and
· The booming business of building pipeline networks and processing facilities for natural gas.
In short, The Energy Letter provides readers with the sound market intelligence and actionable advice that investors need to profit from developments in the energy markets.
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