| Email This Article Email This Article  | 

Profit from Potash

Posted June 26, 2008

“Potash prices have just started to move. Last year a ton of potash cost $210. This year, it costs $625 a ton. Within the next three years, prices will average $1,350 a ton.” — Andrew Mickey

by Andrew Mickey

Baltimore – (TFN): We’re still at the early stages of this run. Potash stocks have had their ups and downs, but there’s a lot more ups than downs to come.

Potash prices have just started to move. Last year a ton of potash cost $210. This year, it costs $625 a ton. Within the next three years, prices will average $1,350 a ton. That’s according to fertilizer industry consulting firm Fertecon.

Over the long term, the picture gets even brighter. Fertecon says long-term prices for potash will more than double from here.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Andrew Mickey is a regular contributor to Taipan Daily, your FREE resource for late-breaking investment opportunities to help you beat Wall Street to the profits.

Filled with investment analysis and insight for every sector (from blue chips to small caps… from options to ETFs… from emerging markets to the tech sector), Taipan Daily delivers just the right blend of safe opportunities with the fast-moving plays, so you have an insider’s edge over the Street… and other investors.

Sign up now for your FREE Taipan Daily e-service to help you find the best moneymaking investments for your wealth.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Potash prices are going parabolic. This commodity is different, though. Potash is vital part of fertilizer. Food demand continues to rise. Global farmland per capita is declining. The agriculture boom is still in its early phases.

At the end of the day, you can drive less to reduce exposure to high oil and gasoline prices. But can you eat less food? Find a chart of potash price forecasts and learn how you can profit from the potash boom.

****Make sure you sign up for our free TFN News Feed for breaking news, special reports and new financial videos. You can pick your favorite reader . Or if you prefer, you can have or free daily email delivered to your inbox .

Related Articles


Comments

close Reblog this comment
blog comments powered by Disqus