The entire
gold-mining sector was crushed last month, suffering a full-blown
panic. This was triggered by an extreme shorting attack on gold by
American futures speculators. As fear-blinded traders rushed for
the gold-stock exits, they claimed their selling was rational
because gold miners? very existence was threatened by such low gold
prices. But that?s a total fallacy, this sector has no problem
weathering sub-$1200 gold.
The recent pain in
gold stocks has been excruciating. This sector?s benchmark of
choice these days is Van Eck Global?s Market Vectors Gold Miners
ETF, better known by its symbol GDX. It
closely mirrors
gold stocks? long-time leading sector index, the NYSE Arca Gold BUGS
Index that trades as HUI. The carnage in these two gold-stock
metrics has been incredible, shattering the resolve of most
contrarian traders.
In just two weeks
in mid-July, GDX plummeted 22.7% on an exquisitely-timed
shorting attack on
gold futures late one Sunday evening. A panic is formally
defined as a 20%+ plunge in a major index in 2 weeks or less.
Nearly half of GDX?s panic losses hit that Monday morning
immediately after that gold attack. That battered GDX to a new
all-time low, the worst levels seen since it was born in May
2006!
Gold-stock
investors and speculators were so terrified that they kept on
selling, forcing GDX another 5.0% lower on close by early August.
While such horrendous levels had never before been witnessed in the
relatively-young GDX gold-stock ETF, they had been in the venerable
HUI. Gold stocks were last trading at these recent lows 13.0
years earlier in July 2002, when gold was still meandering
near $305!
Having deeply
studied and extensively traded gold stocks over the past 15 years, I
argued in late July that those panic gold-stock levels were
fundamentally absurd. There was simply no way to justify
gold-stock price levels being so darned low given the far-higher
prevailing gold prices. In an essay I showed that gold stocks
had never been
cheaper relative to gold, the metal that drives their profits
and ultimately stock prices.
These recent
epically-extreme gold-stock lows certainly weren?t righteous
fundamentally, they were the product of wild fear run amuck. Yet as
always in a panic-selling situation, the investors and speculators
who succumbed to their own emotions to flee at extreme lows didn?t
want to hear the truth. Right after deluding themselves into
selling at the worst possible time, they?re convinced their
decision was rational.
These traders had
sold gold stocks as if gold was trading at just over a quarter
of its recent lows, which was the height of folly. They sure didn?t
like me pointing
that out several weeks ago, and unleashed a blizzard of angry
feedback. That?s par for the course at extremes when you?re a rare
contrarian fighting the groupthink herd. After writing 665 of these
weekly essays over
15+ years, I really know how traders think.
Their main
argument on gold stocks? panic-grade selloff being rational
surrounded the costs of mining gold. There?s a universal belief out
there that the gold-mining industry isn?t profitable under $1200
gold. I have no idea who started this, but I come across it
constantly. And if $1200 is indeed the breakeven point, then $1100
or sub-$1000 gold would surely lead to widespread bankruptcies and a
gold-stock apocalypse.
After 15 years of
researching this sector more deeply than almost anyone else on the
planet, I certainly didn?t believe that $1200-per-ounce industry
cost level was correct. But I couldn?t prove it right away, as the
gold miners hadn?t released their second-quarter operating and
financial results yet. But since the great majority finally
reported Q2?15 in the last couple weeks, now we can dispel that
$1200-cost fallacy.
Since these
prevailing gold-stock prices are so ludicrously undervalued, we?ve
aggressively redeployed capital into this sector in recent weeks.
We?ve bought and recommended to our newsletter subscribers a bunch
of elite gold miners with very low production costs than can survive
gold prices far under recent lows. I could easily cherry-pick these
elites to show gold mining remains very profitable at today?s
gold levels.
But a far-superior
read on this industry?s current cost structure comes from this
sector as a whole. That flagship GDX gold-stock ETF
currently holds 39 major miners. This week I waded through the
latest quarterly results of all of them. Collectively GDX?s
component stocks account for the vast majority of the world?s gold
mining, so they effectively are the gold-mining industry. And their
costs are far lower than thought.
I built a couple
tables that could fit in the top 34 of GDX?s 39 components.
Collectively they account for a whopping 97% of this entire leading
gold-stock ETF, essentially all of it. To get an idea about the
survivability of this sector, I looked at each miner?s cost
structure, cash on hand, debt levels, cash flow generated from
operations, debt payments, and more. The key results are summarized
in these tables.
A couple notes
before we shatter that myth that gold miners? very existence is
threatened at prevailing gold prices. GDX holds a wide range of
gold miners trading around the world. Since foreign markets have
different financial-reporting standards than the United States, not
all data was available for every company. When any miner didn?t
report a specific data point, I had no choice but to leave that
field blank.
GDX also contains
royalty and streaming companies, which have very different cost
structures than the miners. They generally offer miners large
up-front payments to help finance mine builds. And in return
they?re entitled to collect small recurring payments on these
miners? production over the lives of their mines. They don?t report
costs the same way producers do. This gold-stock ETF also
oddly contains silver miners!
But here are the
latest quarterly results of the leading companies in the gold-mining
industry. Each stock?s symbol and exchange is noted, along with its
weighting in GDX and its market capitalization. Then the particular
2015 quarter the data is taken from is noted, followed by miners?
costs per ounce produced. These include cash costs and all-in
sustaining costs for that quarter, and full-year 2015 AISC guidance.
Gold miners? cost
structures greatly affect their cash positions and cash flow, which
are obviously critical for their survivability. Here each miner?s
cash in the bank at quarter-end is listed, with the percentage of
their current market capitalizations that represents. That is
followed by the cash flows generated from operations. Companies
with strong positive cash flows have virtually zero risk of facing
bankruptcy.
Finally, each
miner?s quarterly production is noted. My spreadsheet to evaluate
this sector had many more columns with other metrics, but these are
the key ones that fit in these tables. Taken as a whole, the
gold-mining industry is much stronger financially than
virtually everyone believes today! This is super-bullish for gold
stocks given the choking cloud of extreme fear that is still
suffocating this sector.
Since the 1990s,
cash costs have been the dominant measure of gold-mining cost
structure. That is what it actually costs to mine each ounce of
gold. Cash costs include direct production costs, onsite
administration, regulatory, royalty, and tax expenses, along with
smelting, refining, and transport costs. Cash costs are the
acid-test measure of what it costs the gold miners to bring their
product to market.
And cash costs
remain far below current gold levels, averaging just $649 and
$620 in Q2?15 for the actual gold miners among GDX?s top 17 and next
17 component companies! That?s way lower than even today?s dismal
prevailing gold prices, which means the gold-mining industry will
have no problem at all weathering $1100 or even $1000 gold. Their
current mining operations could easily survive even at $800!
Now I certainly
don?t expect gold prices to slip under $1000, let alone plunge to
$800. Gold?s recent lows were totally artificial, the
product of unsustainable
extreme record
gold-futures shorting. But since these low gold prices breed
endless hyper-bearish commentary, realize that even if the bears
miraculously prove right the gold-mining industry is not at risk.
Today?s mix of major gold miners could keep right on producing.
And the whole
notion of sector-wide bankruptcy risk is silly given the way large
gold miners operate. They run multiple gold mines, all with their
own cost structures. So when times get tough, they can simply
mothball the mines with cost levels too high for prevailing gold
prices. And even within individual mines, they have a lot of leeway
in choosing to mine higher-grade ore if necessary to lower per-ounce
costs.
During this year?s
second quarter where gold prices averaged $1172 before gold was
attacked by the futures short sellers in July, the gold miners? cash
costs were much lower than widely assumed. In theory, gold
miners can survive as long as the gold price exceeds their cash
costs along with general corporate expenses. They are not included
in cash costs like mine-level administrative expenses are.
But gold mines are
depleting assets, with all deposits finite. So in order for gold
miners to continue to be viable going-concern businesses, they need
to constantly discover new gold to mine. This involves lots of
exploration, which is very expensive. So back in June 2013, the
World Gold Council introduced a new gold-mining cost measure known
as all-in sustaining costs. They include far more than cash
costs.
In addition to all
the direct cash costs, all-in sustaining costs include all
corporate-level administrative expenses along with all costs
required to maintain and replenish existing production levels. The
major items included are reclamation and remediation along with all
the exploration, mine-development, and capital expenditures
necessary to sustain current production levels. This is
definitely a superior cost measure.
When gold-stock
bears claim the gold-mining industry needs $1200 gold to survive,
it?s these all-in sustaining costs they are referring to. Yet in
Q2?15, again before the recent shorting-fueled gold woes,
industry-wide all-in sustaining costs per ounce were far below
that $1200 threshold. GDX?s top 17 component gold miners had
average AISCs of $936, while the next 17 looked even better
averaging $857.
So even $1000
gold, which again is super-unlikely as gold rebounds dramatically on
massive futures short covering, isn?t a problem at all for gold
mining?s survivability. While there are certainly higher-cost and
lower-cost gold producers, as an industry current production levels
are sustainable at well under $1000 per ounce. That?s not a
threat at all, despite being falsely implied as one in today?s
gold-stock prices.
And Q2 certainly
wasn?t an anomaly on the AISC front. Most gold miners provide AISC
guidance for the entire year. And since gold-stock investors
are so focused on costs these days with gold prices so low, the gold
miners tend to be conservative in their AISC outlook to avoid
disappointing. And the full-year-2015 AISC projections from these
major gold miners are right in line with their actual second-quarter
results!
The gold miners?
current low cost structure relative to prevailing gold prices was
reflected in their cash positions too. Most are sitting on cash
hoards so large that they are equivalent to big fractions of these
companies? total market capitalizations! That means they could
actually afford to lose money from their operations for many
quarters, although that certainly isn?t in the cards anywhere above
$950 gold levels.
Even better, these
cash positions were growing fairly rapidly in the latest
quarter due to high positive operating cash flows in this industry.
When any business is generating large cash flows in its ongoing
operations, it has virtually no risk of going bankrupt. And many of
the elite GDX gold miners reported operating cash flows that were
large relative to their current cash positions and even market
capitalizations.
Positive cash
flows from mining are exactly what you?d expect when prevailing gold
prices are well above current costs. I didn?t come across a single
miner in these tables that was actually losing money in operations.
Amazingly given the extreme bearishness on gold stocks out there,
this industry is still strongly cash-flow-positive. Gold
miners aren?t just surviving under $1200 gold, they?re actually
thriving!
But unfortunately
few investors and speculators realize this, for a couple key
reasons. Since popular fear remains so extreme, traders are seeking
out bearish analysis and commentary in order to rationalize their
own pessimism. They don?t want to admit they were fools to flee
gold stocks near fundamentally-absurd 13-year lows reflecting gold
prices around a quarter of today?s levels! They want to think that
was smart.
Popular
bearishness is always most intense and extreme right near major
secular lows, when traders are wrongly convinced an
already-devastated market will keep spiraling lower indefinitely.
And for the hardened contrarian traders who can overcome this
groupthink orgy of gold-stocks-to-zero nonsense, they are often
scared away by gold miners? accounting earnings. Many if not most
are showing losses now.
But these
nonexistent price-to-earnings ratios are very deceiving. As gold
miners? Q2 results proved, they are generating large positive cash
flows by mining gold today. The negative accounting earnings are
not from operating losses, which would indeed threaten the viability
of gold-mining companies. These losses are from huge write-offs
of gold-mine and gold-deposit asset values sometime in the last four
quarters.
Since gold in any
particular deposit essentially has a fixed cost to mine, lower gold
prices erode future potential profit margins of that deposit.
Accounting rules force gold miners to write down the value of these
properties even if the recent gold lows are temporary anomalies.
These non-cash impairment charges can be very large,
overwhelming normal operating profits until the write-downs roll off
the books.
In any other
sector in all the stock markets, such large one-off write-downs
would be ignored by analysts since they don?t reflect ongoing
profitability. But since virtually no professional analysts
follow this despised and forgotten sector, there is no analysis to
separate ongoing operations from one-off events. So until four
quarters after large write downs, they greatly skew P/E ratios and
scare investors away.
But as long as the
gold price recovers from its recent artificial
extreme-shorting-spawned lows, which is already starting, write-offs
are really irrelevant. Taking impairment charges not only has
zero cash impact, but it certainly doesn?t affect the gold
contained in any deposit. That gold in the ground is all still
there and waiting for higher gold prices, which will quickly restore
its economic value and mineability.
The gold-mining
industry?s existence certainly isn?t threatened with today?s $1100
gold, let alone that false $1200 number always thrown around. The
vast majority of the world?s gold production today would be
profitable on a sustaining basis at $1000, and could easily survive
a temporary panic-grade plunge under $800. Thankfully the odds of
that happening are virtually zero since gold traders already
capitulated.
Gold is overdue to
mean revert sharply higher as American speculators are forced to
cover their
extreme record gold-futures shorts, and the usual massive
Asian seasonal
buying ramps up. These higher gold prices will not only greatly
boost gold miners? profitability, but more importantly traders?
confidence in this left-for-dead sector. And as we?ve witnessed
recently, that?s going to lead to the gold stocks just soaring.
As of the middle
of this week, GDX had rocketed 18.6% higher in just 5 trading
days since its all-time record lows of early August! The notion
that gold stocks priced as if gold was near $305 was righteous was
ridiculous, and investors and speculators are finally starting to
overcome their crippling fear and understand that. So they are
returning to gold stocks, which will accelerate the rally and beget
more buying.
The gold miners?
latest quarterly results just reported in the last couple weeks
decisively prove that this industry is far healthier than
universally assumed. Production costs are still way below current
gold price levels, in both cash-cost and the more-importantly
all-in-sustaining-cost terms. This has left these miners with
massive cash war chests and large positive operating cash flows,
revealing surprising financial strength.
With the gold
stocks still trading
near all-time
lows relative to the price of gold which drives their profits,
there?s never been a better time to throw heavily long this
contrarian sector. GDX is a great ETF which offers exposure to the
world?s biggest and best gold miners. Nevertheless, the best
opportunities in gold stocks are in the smaller miners. Many have
lower costs and higher profits, leading to low actual P/Es today.
At Zeal we?ve been
aggressively buying these elite smaller miners with potential gains
running from 4x to over 10x as gold mean reverts higher. These new
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The bottom line is
the gold-mining industry?s cost structure is far lower than that
$1200 number often thrown around. The world?s biggest gold miners
are producing gold on an all-in-sustaining basis for well under
$1000 per ounce. And on a cash-cost basis, they could weather an
$800-gold anomaly for many quarters. Gold miners? survivability is
not in question at today?s gold prices, they have zero bankruptcy
risk.
Amazingly given
the irrational bearishness cursing this sector today, most of the
larger gold miners are sitting on massive piles of cash. And these
are growing rapidly thanks to high positive operating cash flows.
Soon this will be reflected in P/E ratios as the asset-impairment
write-offs roll off of current-year earnings. Investors and
speculators will suddenly realize just how epically cheap gold
stocks are today.
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