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Dreams can go to pot

Until BHP Billiton came around, the price of potash and PotashCorp were moving pretty much in unison. The mineral’s price increased fourfold in 2008, peaking at more than $800 a tonne. The PotashCorp share price also quadrupled to a high of $241. Both then declined, the mineral to about $400 a tonne and the shares to a pre-bid $110. The parallel price falls would have been even steeper if the potash industry had not cut production by 40 per cent.

The big rally was a bit surprising. Potash, which makes plants grow tall and strong, had long suffered from price wilt: down 35 per cent between 1977 and 2007, adjusted for inflation. During that period, production grew at a modest 1 per cent annual rate.

It hardly sounds like a hot investment. But both the Anglo-Australian mining company and the Canadian producer think investors have missed something: growth in the developing world will produce profits far exceeding those already captured in the pre-bid share price.

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