-- Posted Friday, 14 December 2012 | | Source: GoldSeek.com
Source: Brian Sylvester of The Gold Report
Miners
in Latin America are facing both growth and challenges. Heiko Ihle,
senior research analyst with Euro Pacific Capital, examines the factors
behind these trends. In this Gold Report interview, Ihle urges
investors to evaluate mining companies based on three important features
rather than on the performance of others in the region.
The Gold Report: Heiko,
you cover many companies in Latin America. One silver miner in Mexico
is challenging an eviction notice from its property in Chihuahua,
Mexico, which is causing a stir in the mining industry. Does that give
you cause to reevaluate Mexico as a mining jurisdiction or is this an
isolated incident?
Heiko Ihle: Mexico
is a more challenging mining jurisdiction than the United States or
Canada, but it's also a much easier place than Bolivia, for example.
There are some common challenges with mining there. One of the companies
I cover has some issues with the community in Oaxaca. This sort of
thing happens all the time, and it's mostly business as usual.
TGR: What sort of gold and silver prices are you using in your models to evaluate these companies?
HI:
I'm a stock analyst, as opposed to a macroanalyst, so I use
conservative numbers: $1,600/ounce (oz) long-term gold prices and $34/oz
long-term silver prices. In the long term, those numbers are likely to
be a little too low, but they produce a margin of safety to our net
asset value (NAV) and cash-flow models.
TGR:
The silver companies you cover in Latin America are for the most part
outperforming your gold companies. Does this make you more bullish on
silver than gold, or are you evaluating specific cases and what those
specific equities offer?
HI:
I look at specific cases because the best gold company can't prosper if
it can't get gold out of the ground at a decent cash cost. Similarly,
the best silver company won't flourish if a community demonstration
shuts down its plant. Again, I am an individual equity analyst; I look
at the microeconomic company-specific factors and make my decisions
accordingly.
TGR: What are three must-haves for the companies you cover?
HI:
The number one thing is good management. Bad management can run the
best company into the ground. I've seen it in stocks that I covered and
in stocks that I owned.
TGR: How do you quantify good management?
HI:
If I speak with a management team and I get the sense that it doesn't
understand what's going on, then that would put it into the bad
management category. If it continuously disappoints, if it continuously
over-promises and under-delivers, that would put it into the bad
management category. I worry, too, if there is no coherent team—even if
the CEO, CFO and chief geologist are great people, there is a chance
that they do not work well together. It sounds simplistic, but I always
pay close attention.
TGR: What are the other must-haves?
HI:
A company must have a good asset. Even if it has great management, if a
company doesn't have a good asset, nothing's going to be pulled out of
the ground. It needs to have a decent land package with room for
expansion. The grades need to be right. The type of ore needs to be
right. It needs to be permitted or have decent progress toward
permitting. The third must-have is a functional mill with potential for
expansion. The chain is only as strong as its weakest link, and if one
of these factors is broken, the whole system is going to crumble.
I
do a lot of site visits to evaluate the mills. I look for spare
capacity, and I go through all the geological reports for permitting.
TGR: What segment of the precious metals market is going to provide retail investors with the best bang for their buck in 2013?
HI:
I suggest people figure out what area they want to invest in, then
narrow it down to a couple of companies. Go back to those three
must-haves that I mentioned. Look into management, look into the assets
and look into the permitting and the operational phase of the firm.
I
would also say people should diversify. And if they just go across base
metals, gold and silver, they will be doing themselves a favor.
TGR: So your advice is to evaluate individual companies and divide the portfolio up by commodity.
HI: Yes, and commodities shouldn't be your full portfolio.
TGR: Thank you so much, Heiko.
Heiko
Ihle joined Euro Pacific Capital in November 2011 as a senior research
analyst covering companies in the mining and engineering and
construction (E&C) industries. Prior to joining Euro Pacific, Ihle
spent over six years with Gabelli & Company, more than five of which
as a research analyst. While at Gabelli, he was awarded second place in
the 2010 Financial Times/StarMine
Top Analyst Awards for the Engineering & Construction space. A
native of Germany, Ihle received his bachelor's degree in finance and
management from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2004, and his
Master of Business Administration from the University of Miami in 2006.
He has been a CFA Charterholder since 2010 and is currently a member of
the CFA Institute and the Stamford CFA Society.
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