Posts by Michael Allan McCrae:

Rollerblading down a salt mine

In the never-ending quest to find really cool places to roller blade, film makers must have scored a coup when they were given permission to "bomb" down a defunct Polish salt mine. The high speed stunt went viral on YouTube with over 300,000 views since it was uploaded this summer.

Fox talk show host believes Keystone is going to happen

Bill O'Reilly, the talk show host on Fox, believes Keystone is going to be approved, and it will be good the U.S. O'Reilly made the comments during an interview with talk radio host Charles Adler, which will run later this week. O'Reilly is a leading news commentator on the U.S. cable network Fox News. He is watched by four million people each day.

Freeport’s copper production is off 13% in Q3 due to labour disruptions

Buffeted by falling copper prices and labour unrest at Grasberg, Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (NYSE:FCX) reported net income of $1.1 billion, $1.10 per share, compared with $1.2 billion, $1.24 per share duing the same quarter a year ago. Consolidated copper, gold and molybdenum production in the third quarter were all down compared to a year ago. Freeport sold 947 million pounds of copper, 409 thousand ounces of gold and 19 million pounds of molybdenum, compared with 1.1 billion pounds of copper, 497 thousand ounces of gold and 17 million pounds of molybdenum in the third-quarter of 2010. Regarding Grasberg Mine operations, Freeport said the impact of the eight-day strike in July 2011 and the ongoing strike, which started in September 2011, totaled about 70 million pounds of copper and 100 thousand ounces of gold. The strike has recently turned ugly with reports of sabotage and injuries.

Pentagon should stockpile rare earth materials: Coffman

U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman (R-CO), who sits on the House Armed Services Committee, is pushing the US Department of Defense for the establishment of a national inventory of rare earth materials. “I support the procurement of such high-demand, at-risk rare earth materials to help fulfill Department of Defense (DOD) requirements and therefore reduce supply-chain vulnerability. By using the Annual Materials Plans as a vehicle, the Department can identify critical rare earth oxides, alloys, metals, or magnets, depending on what best suits DOD’s needs, and then fulfill a portion or the entirety of the associated requirements,” Coffman wrote in a letter to Ronnie Favors, the administrator of the DLA Strategic Materials.

Platinum Underwriters Holdings, Ltd. reports third quarter 2011 financial results

HAMILTON, Bermuda, Oct. 18, 2011 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Platinum Underwriters Holdings, Ltd. PTP +2.18% today reported a net loss of $53.5 million and a loss per common share of $1.43 for the quarter ended September 30, 2011. The results for the quarter include net premiums earned of $166.8 million, net favorable development of $27.8 million, net investment income of $29.8 million and net realized gains on investments of $7.5 million. The results also reflect the net negative impact of $112.4 million from major catastrophe losses, net of retrocessional coverage, reinstatement premiums and taxes.

Gas prices rise in September while food prices decrease

The Producer Price Index rose 0.8 percent in September due to higher gas prices. Food stuffs, on the other hand, declined after a strong run up through the summer. Analysts were expecting a more modest rise in the PPI. The Producer Price Index results, released by the U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics on Wednesday, showed that all finished energy goods were up strongly in September. "The index for finished energy goods advanced 2.3 percent in September after decreasing in each of the previous three months. Nearly seventy percent of this rise can be attributed to the gasoline index, which increased 4.2 percent. Higher prices for liquefied petroleum gas and diesel fuel also were factors in the rise in the finished energy goods index," according to the statement.

Canadian commodity producers are still optimistic, just less so

Canadian resource companies have less optimism than they had during the summer, according to the Bank of Canada's Business Outlook Survey, which was released on Monday. "Responses to the autumn survey point to less optimism among firms than in the summer survey, as weaker expectations for U.S. growth and a more uncertain global outlook weigh on business sentiment. Indicators of future business activity, capacity constraints and price pressures have all moved down from the levels recorded in the previous survey," wrote the survey's authors. Miners and other resource firms expect commodity prices will rise less rapidly over the next 12 months.

IAMGOLD plans to keep on buying

IAMGOLD Corporation, which produces nearly one million ounces of gold each year, is looking is looking for projects capable of 150,000/oz of gold per year and has two million oz of reserves. The company made the announcement during a corporate presentation in October. Bloomberg reported that the company is looking for transactions in the range of $300 million to $500 million.

Large shredder meets large tire

SSI Shredding Systems had a video go viral when it uploaded a film of the company building a large shredder and then letting it loose on a variety of items. The video has had an astonishing 2.3 million views since it was uploaded nearly four years ago. SSI Shredding claims that the "Monster" is one the most powerful shredders on earth.