Xethanol Story

Xethanol Debunked (Updated 8-11-06 to dissect XNL News Release)

In case you didn’t see it, earlier this week the website Sharesleuth.com posted a blistering exposé of Xethanol (XNL: AMEX):

Xethanol Corp

A recent press release from Xethanol describes the company as follows:

Xethanol Corporation’s goal is to be a leader in the emerging biomass-to-ethanol and biofuels industry. Xethanol’s mission is to optimize the use of biomass in the renewable energy field and convert biomass that is currently being abandoned or land filled into ethanol and other valuable co-products, especially xylitol. Xethanol’s strategy is to deploy proprietary biotechnologies that will extract and ferment the sugars trapped in these biomass waste concentrations. Xethanol’s strategic value proposition is to produce ethanol and valuable co-products cost effectively with ethanol plants located closer to biomass sources.

The company has announced that it will be the first to commercialize cellulosic ethanol, despite spending very little on R&D. I was contacted for comments before the Sharesleuth.com story was published. As my comments in the article indicate, the difference in ethanol from corn and ethanol from cellulose is like the difference between traveling to the moon and traveling to Mars. Travel to Mars is probably an order of magnitude more difficult than traveling to the moon, but here you have a company like Xethanol already selling tickets, while spending little on R&D. In comparison others, including the government, have spent millions on R&D over the past 30 years and still don’t have a commercial cellulosic ethanol process.

While I think cellulosic ethanol will eventually be commercialized, I don’t believe it is going to be by a company who just recently jumped into the game with essentially no experience, and then doesn’t invest heavily into R&D. Sharesleuth.com didn’t think so either, hence their investigation. I encourage you to read it to see how some companies capitalize on hype to fleece investors. Xethanol has responded to the article (after their stock fell 40%), but they didn’t address the many serious issues brought up by Sharesleuth:

Xethanol Responds to ShareSleuth.com Posting

One quote that I gave that did not make it into the article is that if Xethanol does manage to produce any cellulosic ethanol, it will be the most expensive ethanol in the world. I think they are capitalizing on the hype, just like they did during the dot com days.

UPDATE 8-11-06 – Examining the Xethanol News Release

I read a Yahoo headline this morning that said “XNL Denies Sharesleuth Allegations.” We must not be reading the same news release, because they didn’t really address the allegations at all. First, let me make it clear that I do not have any financial interest in XNL. I am interested in alternative fuels because I am concerned about Peak Oil and the direction of our energy policy, and I want to see us pursue options that make sense. But I don’t like to see people taken advantage of, and I think that’s what XNL is doing.

Let’s look at Xethanol’s news release:

Xethanol states for the record that its Blairstown, Iowa, facility is producing ethanol at the rate of 450,000 gallons per month currently generating a gross profit of over $.50 per gallon.

This seems to be a complete red herring. The Sharesleuth article indicated that the Blairstown facility is operating at a capacity of 6.6 million gallons a year (550,000 gallons per month). It looks like Sharesleuth somewhat overestimated the capacity of the Blairstown facility. It is unclear why Xethanol threw out this claim, other than to confuse investors with the impression that they had addressed an allegation. And consider that capacity for a moment. 450,000 gallons a month is less than 360 barrels a day! That’s demonstration plant size. Tiny. It seems to me that they bought into the smallest producer they could find, just to get their hooks into the ethanol hype, and are now trying to capitalize.

Furthermore, Xethanol wrote:

In addition, Xethanol has announced a planned expansion of 50 million gallons per year in Augusta, Georgia and 35 million gallons per year in Spring Hope, North Carolina.

That’s the key issue. They “announced” a 35 million gallon per year cellulosic ethanol plant. However, people have been pouring money into cellulosic ethanol for 30 years without coming up with a commercial process. XNL is clearly capitalizing on cellulosic ethanol hype, but in my opinion they are unlikely to have a commercial cellulosic ethanol plant running any time soon. And if they are just a conventional ethanol producer, they are a pretty small producer.

They also wrote:

Xethanol further states for the record that it has research and development agreements in effect with two Federal Laboratories…

For a very small contribution, you can get an R&D agreement with a federal lab. I have worked in R&D. I could get an agreement for a few thousand dollars of funding. I have seen this done before. The question is just what are you getting for your funding? If I happened to be an unscrupulous sort, I could donate a few thousand dollars, drop a few names, and buy apparent credibility by claiming that I have an agreement.

Xethanol further states for the record that criticisms of its low level of research and development expenditures are misleading. Though our expenditures are increasing, Xethanol considers it a source of pride that it has obtained the benefit of what it believes to be valuable technology without either the time delay or the expenditure of the cash necessary for internal research and development.

Right. All of these other companies, including Iogen with millions of dollars of backing from Shell, have been unable to commercialize cellulosic ethanol. But Xethanol will do it while spending very little money. Consider me skeptical.

So what did the news release actually address? None of the substantive issues. They didn’t address the fact that many people involved with Xethanol have been involved in shady behavior. They didn’t address any questions at all about the plant with no utilities. Their “response” was a complete sleight of hand.

For the record, I hate to see people lose money. I make no predictions on whether XNL will go up or down. I have seen very good companies trade lower and really poor companies skyrocket on hype. I tend to believe that XNL falls into the latter category, but time will tell. Some investors will get in and out at the right time and make money. But my prediction is that XNL will continue to be a very small conventional ethanol producer, and will offer up a litany of excuses and delaying tactics for why their cellulosic ethanol plant is not up and running.

Crossing Paths with Billionaires

Finally, it was only after the story was published that I realized that Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban (and like Vinod Khosla, another billionaire) is the majority partner in Sharesleuth.com. He is quoted at the end of the story:

Based on the information that Sharesleuth has uncovered, I have chosen to short shares of this company. My personal approach to investing, and in this case shorting , is very consistent. When there are a lot of individuals with pasts that include sanctions from the SEC, there is a good chance they are up to their old tricks again. Which leads me to want to short the stock.

When a company says they are operating a plant to produce a product, and that plant has no utilities, I want to short that stock.

So I am short 10,000 shares of Xethanol. I would like to short more, but I haven’t been able to borrow any more. I am currently in the money on the shares.

Had I known this, I might have hit Mark up for some Mavs tickets. 🙂 Having grown up not far from Dallas, my favorite professional teams are the Dallas Cowboys, the Dallas Mavericks, and the Texas Rangers. One piece of unsolicited advice for Mark, though. The next time the Mavs are up 2-0 in the NBA Finals, make sure it doesn’t get out that the city of Dallas is planning the victory parade. It just gets your opposition fired up.

On Tap

The next two articles I plan to write are one dealing with California’s clean energy initiative, and then one detailing which technologies I believe will be the winners and losers in the energy sector going forward.

3 thoughts on “Xethanol Story”

  1. The following got posted in another thread, so I am pulling it here into the correct thread. I told the author via e-mail that I would do this, and then I will respond in just a bit:

    ——————–
    Robert

    Thank you for your informative article, I am a former investor in Xethanol (Sold my shares at around $10) I have been reading everything I can find on Xethanol, and now am of the strong opinion that the company is a sham. However I am still miffed by the company’s reference to proprietary technology. This quote is taken from their web site under the News section:

    “Xethanol Acquires Advanced Biomass Gasification Technologies, Inc. from UTEK
    Acquisition Includes Exclusive Worldwide License to Assist in Integration and Commercialization of the Technology

    NEW YORK & TAMPA, Fla.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–June 14, 2006–Xethanol Corporation (OTCBB:XTHN), a biotechnology driven ethanol company, and UTEK Corporation (AMEX:UTK;LSE-AIM:UTK), a specialty finance company focused on technology transfer, announced today that Xethanol has acquired Advanced Biomass Gasification Technologies, Inc. (ABGT), a wholly owned subsidiary of UTEK, in a stock transaction.

    ABGT holds the exclusive worldwide license for MicroGasification technology developed at the Energy and Environmental Research Center (EERC) at the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks. The MicroGasifier produces syngas from carbon matter. Syngas drives a portable, power generation system that provides energy solutions for companies and municipalities with simultaneous waste disposal and power needs. Xethanol and EERC are mutually funding a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) to further apply the MicroGasifier in the production of ethanol. EERC will perform system integration of the MicroGasifier for customers.”

    To a lay person this sounds very plausible, but shouldn’t their be some record of this license or a patent filing if it existed? In your opinion does the above technology have any merit? Also Xethanol is quoted as saying this in the Fortune Small Business article 2/3/06:

    “Xethanol will use a recently discovered form of yeast to ferment various types of garbage into ethanol. It has obtained rights to the process from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, where a scientist discovered that a yeast in the intestines of a type of beetle can convert plant-based waste product into ethanol.”

    The question that arises is, why would the U.S.D.A. give the rights to this process to Xethanol and not other companies? It does not make sense.

    Perhaps your expertise in these areas can shed some light for others.

    Thank You
    J.G. Philadelphia

  2. First of all, congratulations on getting out of Xethanol at $10 a share. I think the evidence is pretty strong that they are taking advantage of investors. While they are not 100% sham, I believe that their legitimate ethanol plant is merely a cover to give them some credibility with investors.

    I think they are acquiring low-priced technologies to give the impression that they are really working on cellulosic ethanol. The payoff for the company that cracks this in an economic fashion is enormous. They realize this, and are engaging in a charade that will pump their stock. They may actually believe they can solve this problem, but I have spoken to some very well-connected people in the ethanol industry who have told me they wouldn’t touch the company with a 10-foot pole. Either they are scamming people, or they are incredibly ignorant about the magnitude of the problem they are facing.

    Do any of these technologies have potential? Given the many different approaches that have been tried on cellulosic ethanol, the odds are not favorable. Maybe they have licensed the silver bullet. I doubt it. Look at Iogen, a company that is actually producing cellulosic ethanol on a pilot scale. Look at the jobs they have advertised on their web site:

    Research & Development

    Staff Scientist – Pretreatment & Hydrolysis Process Development
    Staff Scientist – Fibre Chemistry
    Research Associate – High-Throughput Screening
    Research Associate – Co-Products
    Laboratory Technicians

    Engineering

    Senior Designer
    Intermediate Designer
    Junior or Intermediate Modeler
    Process Engineer
    Senior Process Engineer
    Project Manager/Senior Mechanical Engineer

    Manufacturing

    Plant Process Engineer
    Plant Operator
    Quality Control Laboratory Technician
    Laboratory Technician – 1 Year Term Position
    Manufacturing Research Associate
    Welder/Fitter and/or Millwright

    Finance

    Purchasing Supervisor

    Commercial Development

    Agricultural Geographic Information System Analyst

    That is the sign of a company that is serious about solving the cellulosic ethanol problem. I haven’t checked, but I bet Xethanol is not advertising those kinds of employment opportunities, which means they either aren’t serious, or they don’t know what they are doing.

    Why did the USDA license a technology to them? Probably because the potential was low, and nobody else wanted it. There are all kinds of technologies and patents that never get licensed because they just don’t have enough potential for success. My guess is that this is why other cellulosic players didn’t license the technology.

    By the way, there was another article out today critical of Xethanol:

    ‘Gaping Holes’ at Xethanol

    Cheers,

    RR

  3. Can anybody tell me which kind of process is using Xethanol?

    I’ve been reading about cellulosic, and Xethanol is unique company that say anything about the process they use.

    Thanks

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