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Posts Tagged ‘Agnico-Eagle’

11
Nov

EARNINGS MATTER BUT NOT FOR MOMENTUM TRADERS

   Posted by: Mr. Gold    in Uncategorized

The last week has marked several records for the gold market – record highs in US dollar, record volatility, record press coverage in response to the proposals formulated by the World Bank’s president to re-anchor the global monetary system to gold. It is understandable that among this intense newsflow, many investors have lost from sight the details provided by the earnings season and the reporting by the principal actors of the gold market – the mining companies.

The volatile swings in the gold market make an interesting background to differentiate the performance of the main players – both as operating companies and as investment vehicles. After all, the reversal of the correlation between gold’s behavior and the euro/dollar correlation has helped, this time again, to propel the yellow metal with a momentum unseen since last May. But CME’s announcement to increase margin requirements in the silver market subsequently depressed the heady levels experienced by the precious metals for four straight sessions. How did the gold stocks performed through this rollercoaster, and what does it tell us about the relevance of earnings, earnings expectations and the companies’ viability as gold proxies?

There were several common characteristics in the results published by North American producing companies. Those with significant by-products (base metals and silver) benefited handsomely from lower cash costs. As expected, many companies have boosted their dividends. Those with larger portfolios of operating mines also used the quarter to execute sequencing in a way least damaging to the overall performance of the company. Yet, as usual, there were some surprises and most relate to grade variability in some of the mines.

Using the date of the earnings results, we have compared share price performance of the top 16 North American producers with the earnings surprises presented for the third quarter. By the close of market Nov 10, the correlation has been high – over 64%. The market has been sensitive to past results despite the wave of new interest from the generalist crowd. It punished the laggards (Jaguar, Centerra, Iamgold, Silver Wheaton) and rewarded the winners (Barrick, Freeport, Yamana, Goldcorp). There are, however, some incongruous discrepancies. Despite lower-than-expected EPS at Agnico-Eagle, investors seem to be swayed by negative cash costs at La Ronde. Coeur d’Alene’s miss has also been rewarded, not least due to silver’s epic run but also due to 99% drop in costs at Palmarejo. Kinross’s disappointment has been shrugged away as all eyes are on Tasiast drilling and most operations performed in line.

It would seem that careful, stock-by-stock analysis has rewarded the investor. But what does it mean for a momentum trader? Here the results are much less convincing.

The precious metals market entered a new phase in reaction to QE2 on November 4. By rebasing the share performance of the producing companies back to this date, we find some surprising results, showing little, if any relevance to the recently reported earnings and cash flows. This is less of a case among silver companies, which have enjoyed a stronger run. Hecla – whose outperformace of consensus earnings was nothing short of extraordinary – has squarely beaten the competition, and its share price has risen by 25 % over the week. But here the ‘logical’ correlations end. Overall, the share performance of the main tickers has a weak relationship with the positive earnings surprises – a mere 22% correlation based on 17 stocks which have reported recently. This is still better than the insignificant correlation between cash flow per share surprises and the stock performance. The difference between the two correlations could imply that generalist investor base is now a more important force as it probably focuses on the EPS numbers despite its limited utility in the context of the mining industry.

In other words, the quarterly operating and financial performance of gold (and silver) miners proves to be a poor guide for the stock’s response to rapid price swings of the underlying asset. The recent spell of momentum trading (with some big liquidations last Tuesday) bears even less relation to longer term beta between the North American gold producers and gold prices in US dollars. It shows that short term gyrations in the market have to be taken in the context of much more long-term relationship between the gold prices and the way they affect both the revenue line of the operating companies and their cost of capital.

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25
Mar

JUNIOR MARKET’S TRAVAILS

   Posted by: Mr. Gold    in Uncategorized

I recently had an opportunity to go through an early stage exploration project with the CEO of a promising Canadian junior. The company controls a nice land package in a friendly jurisdiction and has been adding resources at a stable, though leisurely pace. I was a little surprised when the CEO confided that the company, in response to market expectations, had decided to raise the resource base rather than increase the level of confidence regarding the density, shape and other physical characteristics of the deposit. In other words, the company banks on the market’s infatuation with the growing number of “inferred” resources, and postpones project development stage which would hopefully lead to an estimate of indicated resources. Technically, this means that the drill rigs will step out of the currently known mineralization, rather than “fill-in” the most promising zones with narrower and narrower spacing. But it also makes the economics of the project somewhat difficult to “infer”.

One of the reasons for this ‘either/or’ dilemma lies in the fickle nature of junior exploration financing. The junior exploration budgets were halved in 2009. In fact, the junior equity market had been an early leading indicator of the troubles that eventually befell the mining space in 2008. Interestingly, the equity market impact also appears to be strongly correlated with drill results, which, according to Metals Economics Group, also peaked in May 2008 – around the time mining equities turned downwards in London.

The sector is only slowly recovering from the subsequent damage. North American small cap gold companies raised $6.4bn throughout last year, but the majority of the transactions were concentrated in small amounts (up to $25m, with average transaction for exploration purposes at around $18m). According to RBC, as much as 76 of the transactions were closed for exploration purposes (by comparison only 48 transactions were closed to finance feasibility study and construction). The fragmentation of the junior universe means that this relatively high number of transactions yielded mere $1.2bn for actual exploration (or less than 20% of the total capital increase). Indeed, the actual number of what goes “into the ground” could be even smaller. Earlier this month at PDAC in Toronto, Renaissance Resource Partners estimated that only 30% of the money raised by the juniors goes into actual “exploration activity”, as opposed to other exploration expenses. Such estimates are often contradicted by mining companies’ pie-charts purporting that the budgets are invariably drilling-heavy. Indeed, the seasonality of the drilling season in some severe climates shows that a “drilling” month could be 5-6 times more costly than a month without drill rigs on.

Mining companies conveniently divide exploration into two categories – greenfields exploration on new land and brownfields exploration seeking to prove up orebody extensions near the existing operations. The heuristic proves useful to detect long-term trends in the industry. Globally, early stage greenfields exploration pipeline has dwindled in significance, from 40% of overall exploration effort in 2005 to 32% in 2009. It has been largely replaced by the less onerous – and much less risky – brownfields exploration, whose part, as a percentage of overall exploration effort, has grown from 20% five years ago to 27% last year (the remainder falling into “advanced” exploration category). This shift is understandable in uncertain economic conditions; in terms of the total dollar per recovered ounce, successful brownfields exploration is about three times less costly than greenfields exploration. However, from the industry-wide perspective, there is a fallacy of composition here. The known orebodies – like all mines – are finite resources and no mining sector can survive without new discoveries.

How is, therefore, the new year shaping for the junior market? Overall, both the gold equity market, and the financing rate have stabilized since December. However, there are encouraging signs concerning flow-through financing, which allows Canadian investors to lower their taxes by directing funds to exploration ventures. This system provides a buffer for investors when their equity investments depreciate less than the amount of the tax break. Understandably, the interest in flow-through peaks towards the end of the year, but this time, encouragingly, it has continued after the December season.

Following the financing rounds of 2009, there is now expectation that mid-cap and large companies will engage aggressively in equity deals with juniors (as opposed to simple joint ventures or option agreements). This could be particularly true in Latin America and in Canada, where majors frequently neighbor on prospective ground explored by juniors. Other areas of “relative” concentration can be found on Ghana’s three prominent gold belts. But it would be premature to bank your money on a rush to take out early stage gold explorers. Most large gold producers tend to favor acquisitions of companies closer to feasibility study and thus add to production in the near term, rather than swivel the “growth pyramid” with a thin pipeline of intermediate projects. And although there are exceptions to this dominant strategy (Agnico-Eagle comes to mind), investors who bank on majors’ private placements in early stage companies are bound to be locked in a low-delta option game. The gold equity market, and the gold exploration universe, are bound to remain fragmented and in slow recovery mode, for some time.

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