Wall Street Unplugged
Episode: 330July 22, 2015

Live From the World Nuclear Fuel Conference in Paris

Barrel-of-Yellocake

Welcome back to another episode of Wall Street Unplugged!

Marin Katusa, resource investing expert and founder of Katusa Research, just presented at the World Nuclear Fuel conference in Paris. This is where important political figures and industry executives meet to discuss nuclear policy.

He gives us the inside scoop of this exclusive invitation-only event.

[app_audio src=”http://traffic.libsyn.com/sainvestorradio/WSU20EP20330.mp3″]

This includes why the largest nuclear producer in the world is seeing massive production declines and how American utility companies are not prepared for higher uranium prices.

Marin then discusses how oil prices are likely to fall sharply over the next 12 months. 

He also talks about the latest pullback in Uranium Energy (where Marin is one of the largest shareholders), and his one secret to finding the best ideas in the resource space

As always, thanks for listening and good investing!

 

What’s really moving these markets?
Get free daily updates
More Wall Street Unplugged

NYC… CPI… AI… Oh my!

A trip to the Big Apple… The Consumer Pricing Index shows hot inflation reading… You should do this when the Fed cuts interest rates… Artificial intelligence is starting to take over—I can show you how to profit.

How to outperform Bitcoin over the next year

Bitcoin plunged 10%—for a split second, and is back to all-time highs—here's how to use the situation to your advantage. Apple's stock is down and mainstream media is panicking… But don't be too quick to turn bearish. This new AI…

AI will lead to an earnings explosion

In today's episode: A recent Billy Joel concert experience… AI is booming, providing efficiencies, and disrupting industries… Get in now. Crypto—and our portfolios—are on fire… Bitcoin crosses over $60,000… And MicroStrategy buys more Bitcoin…

AI… bubble or disruptor?

Is AI a bubble or a disruptor? What to expect after NVIDIA's (NVDA) earnings report. And stock volatility, despite solid earnings, signals an extremely dangerous market.