Coal Tycoon Making Last Stand For U.S. Industry

 | Mar 27, 2015 05:20AM ET

A cloud of coal dust continues to hang over the U.S. coal industry .

Lately, the industry has been dealing with some bad publicity from the coal ash spill into North Carolina’s Dan River last year.

Coal ash is what you get after coal is burned by utilities for power. This remaining ash can contain a toxic combination of arsenic, selenium, boron, and other substances.

On top of that, the coal business in the United States is looking bleak.

It’s facing pressure from competing fuels, like natural gas; a strong U.S. dollar; and the Obama administration, which would like to see the industry go away.

h2 Down in the Dumps/h2

The terrible state of the American coal business was highlighted by a recent analysis from energy consultant group Wood Mackenize.

The company found that about 17% of the forecasted U.S. production for this year – about 162 million tons – is “unprofitable.” More specifically, the study said that 14% of thermal coal production and 58% of metallurgical coal production were money-losing operations.

Wood Mackenzie pointed to Central Appalachian coal as being in the deepest hole, with 72% of that coal output being unprofitable. Conditions were found to be better for North Appalachian coal and Illinois Basin coal.

But the hardest hit is metallurgical coal.

Prices are predicted to hit a six-year low (below $110 per metric ton) globally later this year. This is despite 30 million tons of production cutbacks already announced by the likes of privately held Walter Energy and Alpha Natural Resources (NYSE:ANR). Canada’s Teck Resources Ltd (NYSE:TCK), the world’s second-biggest exporter, says at least another 15 million tons in cutbacks are needed to stabilize prices.

However, Wood Mackenzie’s Senior Research Analyst, Dale Hazelton, did say, “If you’ve got the money to buy a coal asset, this is the time to do it.”

h2 Scooping up Hot Deals/h2

And it seems Murray Energy is doing just that. The company is forking over $1.4 billion for a controlling stake in Illinois Basin coal producer Foresight Energy Partner (NYSE:FELP) and its general partner, Foresight Energy GP, LLC.

The deal is expected to close in the second quarter of this year.

In late 2013, Murray also acquired five longwall coal operations from CONSOL Energy Inc (NYSE:CNX) to position itself as a leader in North Appalachian coal.

In October 2014, Murray made yet another deal with CONSOL, buying its assets in the Illinois Basin.