GOLD ANALYSIS

THE FLIP SIDE OF GOLD

The illusion of gold mining profits

Like rabbits in strong headlights, equity investors with a gold bent continue to chase increasingly challenging cash margin compression.

Author: Barry Sergeant
Posted:  Monday , 24 Aug 2009

JOHANNESBURG - 

The recent round of gold mining profits (and losses) reporting for various periods to 30 June 2009 has shown up a global mining subsector barely scraping a living out of the dirt unearthed at countless locations across the world. Like hamsters on a treadmill, gold miners continue to chase the illusion of profits, backed by a commodity that draws more support than the search for intelligent life in outer space.

The conundrum faced by gold miners and, more tellingly, by investors with a gold bent, who like rabbits in a spotlight, continue to blindly invest in listed gold stocks, is adequately examinable at Barrick, the world's biggest gold digger by production and market value. According to its own advertisements, courtesy of its 2008 annual report, Barrick stands as "the gold industry's only ‘A' rated balance sheet" It also lays claim to "the largest production, reserves and market capitalization".

All this is no doubt true, but also true is that Barrick increasingly scrapes closer to the bottom of barrels, just to stand still. What this says about lesser gold diggers could be illuminating. The key to unlocking a looming potential crisis faced by gold miners is conveniently published cash flow statements: Barrick's show that the world's leading gold miner earned US$2.2bn in operating cash flows during its 2008 financial year. The first wobbly leg is that gold companies are miners, and miners always face material capital expenditure bills; Barrick's total for 2008 was US$1.8bn.

Like most gold miners, Barrick faces dwindling production at existing mines and remains under constant pressure to find or buy, or develop, unmined gold ounces. On this note, Barrick's acquisitions cost US$2.2bn - in cash - during 2008 alone. Barrick's operating cash flows for 2008, less capital expenditure, and less acquisitions, produce a deficit. This was financed by Barrick from existing cash reserves, and new net debt raised, during 2008, of US$1.1bn.

As some kind of a yardstick, BHP Billiton, the world's biggest diversified resources stock, this week posted annual results for its financial year to 30 June 2009, for which operating cash flows are reflected as US$25.2bn. Cash capital expenditure was US$9.5bn, and US$1.2bn was spent on exploration, leaving billions of dollars in free cash flow from the year's activities.

Back in the gold pits, challenges posed by bullion prices continue to mount. For nearly six months now, gold companies everywhere have been facing the year-on-year effects of a dollar gold price that's been churning between roughly US$700 and US$1,000 an ounce since March 2008. While prices have traded around the upper end of that range for most of 2009, and energy prices and other costs have fallen from record levels seen around mid-2008, gold companies are struggling to make profits. This hardly reflects favourably on a mining subsector that has benefited from a commodity that fell less, and has been more stable relatively, than any other.

 

METAL PRICES

 

 

 

 

 

Precious, US$/oz

Low*

High*

Current

From low

From high

Gold

682.41

1006.29

941.74

38.0%

-6.4%

Platinum

744.25

1495.35

1240.00

66.6%

-17.1%

Palladium

160.75

307.50

273.70

70.3%

-11.0%

Silver

8.46

16.24

13.90

64.3%

-14.5%

* 12-month

 

 

 

 

 

The pattern that continues to emerge from reported cash flows posted by gold companies so far this year indicates an industry battling to even break even, when cash capital expenditure is deducted from operating cash flows. The pattern is apparent among even the biggest and best-established gold miners, which have had years to focus on what may be broadly defined as top-tier, long life, low cost, gold mines, and to close or sell those that don't crack the nut.

 

OPERATING CASH FLOW,

 

LESS CAPITAL EXPENDITURE

 

US$ m

2Q2009

1Q2009

2Q2008

Selected Tier I

 

 

 

AngloGold Ashanti

-21

27

-214

Gold Fields

56

162

7

Harmony

177

33

19

Barrick

113

-121

179

Kinross

47

87

-224

Goldcorp

-88

-56

-119

Newmont

-73

57

-75

Yamana

-11

-45

-19

Selected Tier II

 

 

 

Agnico-Eagle

-129

-107

-174

Randgold Resources

-29

0

-9

Almost uniformly low "cash costs" as reported by individual companies in the gold industry are increasingly loosing veneer. The definition of "cash costs" for gold miners is anything but uniform, but uniformly ignores cash capital expenditure and cash spent on acquisitions. Even so, cash costs are rising for most gold miners.

 

TOTAL CASH COSTS

 

 

US$/oz

2Q2009

1Q2009

2Q2008

AngloGold Ashanti

472

445

434

Gold Fields

512

471

502

Harmony

661

537

556

Barrick

452

484

434

Kinross

414

419

466

Goldcorp

310

288

308

Newmont

423

435

439

Yamana

394

379

539

Agnico-Eagle

326

312

113

Randgold Resources

477

461

457

The overall compression equation includes the two basic legs of capital expenditure: unavoidable stay-in-business capital expenditure, and capital expenditure used to build new mines. Few gold miners, of any size, are free of pressure to build new mines. Earlier this year, Barrick announced that it had given the go-ahead for Pascua Lama, a build that will absorb around US$3bn in pre-production capital expenditure. First gold is only anticipated in 2013, leaving an accumulating pile of capital expenditure locked, literally, in the ground until then.

 

CAPITAL EXPENDITURE (CASH)

 

US$ m

2Q2009

1Q2009

2Q2008

Selected Tier I

 

 

 

AngloGold Ashanti

-257

-241

-303

Gold Fields

-209

-166

-327

Harmony

130

-65

-163

Barrick

-605

-470

-326

Kinross

-125

-78

-185

Goldcorp

-351

-354

-303

Newmont

-580

-330

-445

Yamana

-132

-112

-155

Selected Tier II

 

 

 

Agnico-Eagle

-155

-155

-267

Randgold Resources

-75

-28

-38

Gold miners, long attuned to loyal investors trained to continually pour cash into fresh stock issues, have used relatively buoyant gold prices to raise billions of fresh dollars on equity markets during 2009. Individual issues, inevitably in the form of direct placings by intermediary stock brokers, that have raised at least US$100m each this year have been seen out of the likes of Harmony, Red Back, Osisko, Agnico-Eagle, Kinross, Newcrest, Newmont (more than US$1bn), Lihir, Iamgold, Royal Gold, and Centamin Egypt.

There have been dozens upon dozens of smaller issues. Convertibles, a form of hybrid debt-equity have not been uncommon; AngloGold Ashanti issued securities in this format to the tune of US$733m. At least one pure debt bond has been issued, by Barrick, to the tune of US$750m. For the uninitiated, it may seem that gold miners spend at least as much time mining equity and debt markets as they do digging the precious stuff out.

 

 

Global tier I gold stocks

 

 

 

Stock

From

From

Value

 

price

high*

low*

USD bn

Yamana

USD 9.12

-24.0%

175.5%

6.684

Goldcorp

USD 36.18

-11.4%

161.4%

26.434

Polyus

USD 38.00

-17.4%

171.4%

7.244

Harmony

ZAR 73.41

-44.7%

40.9%

4.007

Lihir

AUD 2.45

-32.7%

61.2%

4.841

AngloGold Ashanti

USD 37.70

-12.7%

182.0%

13.356

Zijin

CNY 8.91

-27.5%

137.0%

13.742

Barrick

USD 34.77

-15.0%

101.3%

30.369

Newcrest

AUD 28.55

-23.2%

72.5%

11.511

Gold Fields

ZAR 95.50

-23.6%

79.3%

8.618

Kinross

USD 19.48

-7.1%

184.4%

13.534

Newmont

USD 40.81

-18.1%

92.8%

19.577

Buenaventura

USD 26.60

-11.1%

195.6%

7.312

Freeport-McMoRan

USD 64.15

-32.3%

308.6%

26.417

[[SPDR Gold Shares ETF]]

USD 93.58

-5.5%

41.8%

32.659

Tier I averages/total

 

-21.5%

140.3%

193.645

Weighted averages

 

-20.6%

136.1%

 

 

 

 

 

 

TIER II

Stock

From

From

Value

 

price

high*

low*

USD bn

Zhongjin

CNY 51.55

-27.2%

397.4%

5.966

Iamgold

USD 11.85

-4.1%

433.8%

4.347

Simmer & Jack

ZAR 2.19

-45.3%

49.0%

0.343

High River

CAD 0.34

-62.6%

750.0%

0.204

Eldorado

USD 11.07

-2.8%

365.1%

4.111

Agnico-Eagle

USD 57.55

-14.6%

175.7%

8.975

Centerra

CAD 6.54

-15.7%

626.7%

1.418

Randgold Resources

USD 58.02

-21.8%

160.4%

4.789

Shandong Gold

CNY 50.33

-25.1%

281.3%

5.242

Peter Hambro

GBP 6.74

-29.8%

332.1%

1.901

Hecla Mining

USD 3.08

-58.3%

211.1%

0.728

Golden Star

USD 2.59

-3.7%

547.5%

0.565

Franco-Nevada

CAD 28.05

-10.9%

141.4%

2.900

Fresnillo

GBP 6.21

-16.3%

567.2%

7.336

JSC Polymetal

USD 7.82

-15.5%

682.0%

2.463

Red Back

CAD 10.69

-4.5%

273.8%

2.272

New Gold

CAD 3.76

-41.2%

300.0%

1.235

Northgate

CAD 2.42

-14.2%

261.2%

0.572

Tier II averages/total

 

-23.0%

364.2%

55.368

Weighted averages

 

-19.2%

288.1%

 

* 12-month

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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 responses to this article

No more true than with Tier 11 DRDGold
But hey ! They gave the shareholders a 5 cent dividend. That means if You own 10,000 shares, You can buy a hamburger in the states ! YIPPEEEEEEEEE !!!!

by Hubert on August 23 2009, 12:43
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Well said Barry
For once I understand the logic in Barry's normally unintelligible diatribes. Gold stocks have always been and will always remain the domain of timeous speculators. Investors shouldn't go near them.

by Popeye on August 24 2009, 04:44
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Perhapse But
Exactly what is the difference between speculating and investing? There are no perfect answers. Some people find oil some don't etc. You have to be in to win but you aren't likely to win unless you have a plan. Gold investors, and it IS an . .more

by Simon on August 27 2009, 20:50
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