-- Posted Friday, 14 December 2012 | | Source: GoldSeek.com
By Richard (Rick) Mills
Ahead of the Herd
As a general rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the best information
Investors
seeking leverage to precious metals should focus on junior resource
companies who own the world’s undeveloped gold and silver deposits as
they provide the best exposure to a rising precious metals price
environment.
You
need to find the quality management teams with money in the treasury,
the ability to raise more and owning the advanced projects that are well
along the development path towards a mine.
A mine that is going to be a long life, lowest quartile all-in cost producer in a geo-politically safe country.
These
companies are the world’s future gold/silver producers and of course
many will be in the sights of mid-tier and major producers for takeover
candidates as reserve replacement targets.
The gold mining industry needs to discover 90 million ounces of gold every year just to stay even.
But
despite increased exploration expenditures, a record US$8b in 2011, and
an increasing gold price, gold ounce discovery is not keeping up to the
rate needed to replace mined ounces.
The
Metals Economic Group estimates that the 99 significant discoveries
(defined as greater than 2 mil oz) found between 1997 and 2011 replaced
only 56 percent of the gold mined during that same period.
According
to the Thomson Reuters GFMS’s Gold Survey 2012 global gold mine
production was flat (output rose 0.1 percent to 1,366 metric tons) in
the first half of 2012.
The
average grade of ore processed globally dropped 23 percent from 2005
through the end of last year and is forecast to decline another four
percent in 2012.
The
GFMS report also said the average cash cost across the gold mining
industry for mining an ounce of gold is a record $727 per ounce. The
average cash margin dropped to $872 an ounce in the second quarter from
as much as $1,032 an ounce in last year’s third quarter
Average operating/cash cost figures include only those costs directly associated with the production of the gold such as;
- Wages
- Cost of energy
- Raw materials such as steel, explosives etc
A complete breakdown of costs, an all-in cost figure, courtesy of CIBC, shows cash operating costs pegged at $700 an ounce.
Sustaining
capital, construction capital, discovery costs and overhead at $600.
Add in $200 for taxes and you get US$1500.00 as the replacement cost for
an ounce of gold.
Using the all-in figure provides a more accurate and definitive picture of actual mining cost and profit.
Also,
according to CIBC World Markets, the sustainable number gold miners
need is $1,700/oz. The long term gold price chart from the World Gold
Council shows gold has been in consolidation since late 2011.
Capital
inputs account for about half the total costs in mining production -
the average for the economy as a whole is 21 per cent. Obviously many of
the costs, once incurred, cannot be recovered by sale or transfer of
the fixed assets.
Mining
is an extremely capital intensive business for two reasons. Firstly
mining has a large, up front layout of construction capital called Capex
- the costs associated with the development and construction of
open-pit and underground mines. There are often other company built
infrastructure assets like roads, railways, bridges, power generating
stations and seaports to facilitate extraction and shipping of ore and
concentrate.
Capex costs are escalating because:
- Declining ore grades means a much larger relative scale of required mining and milling operations
- A growing proportion of mining projects are in remote areas of developing economies where there’s little to no existing infrastructure
Secondly
there is a continuously rising Opex, or operational expenditures. These
are the day to day costs of operation; rubber tires, wages, fuel, camp
costs for employees etc.
The bottom line? It is becoming increasingly expensive to bring new mines on line and run them.
“In
the next few years, escalating costs, talent shortages and competing
infrastructure builds will make it very difficult for mining companies
to complete their capital projects on time and on budget. These types of
cost and time overruns can create significant risks for miners,
including the danger of scaring off potential investors.” Deloitte, David Quinlin, European Mining Lead, Switzerland
Since
2006 the major gold producers have spent 40 percent of their entire
market capitalization building new mines. As you can see in the chart
below it isn’t going to get any cheaper - major miners will need to
spend 60 percent of their market capitalization building new mines in
order to sustain the same level of production going forward.
The
major gold producers desperately need to replace their mined gold
reserves yet can’t afford to build many of the large deposits slated to
be built.
The reasons behind flat-lining gold production, and record cash and all-in costs, are numerous:
- Production declines in mature mining areas
- Slower than expected ramp-ups of output
- Development time up
- The entire resource extraction industry suffers from a lack of skilled people
- Extreme weather
- Labor strikes
- Protests
Additional challenges include:
- Increasingly more remote and lacking in infrastructure projects
- Higher capex costs
- Increased resource nationalism
- Increased environmental regulation
- More complex metallurgy
- Lower cutoff grades
The declining mined and mineable gold grade is a direct result of the industry’s inability to discover new high grade/high margin deposits.
Junior
market caps have been savaged - 25 percent of the stocks on the TSX.V
are under a nickel, another 25 percent are under a dime – 50 percent of
the stocks trading on the TSX.v are under a dime, a total of 70 percent are under .20 and 80 percent are under .30 cents. Less than 20 percent of stocks on the Venture are over .30 cents and only seven percent of stocks are over a dollar.
Producers
are not able to replace their reserves because there’s a lack of
discovery, few large high grade deposits are being discovered and most
of those that have been discovered aren’t owned by producers …The junior exploration sector is presently in the midst of one of the worst financing environments ever experienced by the sector.
With today’s extremely low share prices, financing - if money is even available - is going to massively dilute shareholders forcing a tremendous number of future rollbacks.
Financing
for many juniors is going to be challenging – very ironic that just a
few short years ago, with gold at only $400 oz, it was much, much easier
to raise money then today with gold at $1700.00 oz! Those juniors with
some money, and not wanting to excessively dilute shareholders raising
more with devastated share prices, will conserve their cash and
drastically cut expenditures.
The
outlook for many juniors in 2013 is grim, many will not survive. Expect
rollbacks, property sales for cash, shares for debt and mergers and
acquisitions (M&A) to become the norm. Exploration will drop, the
discovery of the future supply of gold, silver and other metals will be
put on hold.
A
Junior exploration company’s place in the food chain is to acquire and
explore properties. Their job is to make the discoveries that the
mid-tiers and majors takeover and turn into mines. Junior exploration
companies own the majority of the world’s future gold mines.
The
juniors who do have money for exploration and development of their
properties, and those few who can get financed, will be well rewarded in
the market place for discoveries and bringing the lowest cost projects
to production.
This
author believes that there is exceptional, and as of yet, undiscovered
value in junior companies with quality assets in safe stable countries.
The
bottom line for investors in the resource sector is that many juniors
working in safe stable jurisdictions, already own what the world’s
mining companies increasingly, desperately need.
Ahead of the Herd has posted a short list
of junior resource precious metal companies with defined deposits
operating in North America. The AOTH list is free, you may access it here.
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