The
major gold miners’ latest quarterly results proved epic! Thanks to
record gold prices, they achieved record revenues, record
bottom-line earnings, and record operating cash flows. Such amazing
profits drove down gold-stock valuations to their most-undervalued
levels in many years. These super-strong fundamentals combined with
gold’s healthy and overdue pullback are creating excellent buying
opportunities.
The
GDX VanEck Gold Miners ETF remains this sector’s dominant
benchmark. Birthed way back in May 2006, GDX has parlayed its
first-mover advantage into an insurmountable lead. Its $13.2b of
net assets mid-week dwarfed the next-largest 1x-long
major-gold-miners ETF by nearly 19x! GDX is undisputedly the
trading vehicle of choice in this sector, with the world’s biggest
gold miners commanding most of its weighting.
Gold-stock tiers are defined by miners’ annual production rates in
ounces of gold. Small juniors have little sub-300k outputs, medium
mid-tiers run 300k to 1,000k, large majors yield over 1,000k, and
huge super-majors operate at vast scales exceeding 2,000k.
Translated into quarterly terms, these thresholds shake out under
75k, 75k to 250k, 250k+, and 500k+. Those two largest categories
account for over 53% of GDX.
Gold
stocks have been correcting hard in recent weeks, exacerbated by
gold plunging in the wake of the US elections. Traders view Trump’s
tax cuts and tariffs as inflationary, slashing Fed-rate-cut odds.
The prospects of higher yields going forward catapulted up the US
Dollar Index a massive 2.9% in just six trading days! That shook
lose colossal gold-futures selling, hammering gold 6.1% lower since
Election Day.
Gold
stocks per GDX plunged 11.3% in sympathy, actually making for
fairly-mild 1.9x downside leverage to the metal which overwhelmingly
drives their profits. Usually GDX tends to amplify material gold
moves by 2x to 3x. At worst since late October, gold’s total
pullback is running 7.6%. That selloff was overdue and expected.
Just a few weeks earlier, I wrote a whole essay analyzing why
gold’s selloff
risk was high.
At
best gold had soared an incredible 35.0% year-to-date,
trouncing the S&P 500’s 21.9% gains! That left gold
extremely-overbought, and speculators’ gold-futures positioning
exceedingly-overextended. So a sentiment-rebalancing selloff on
these hyper-leveraged traders normalizing their bets was
inevitable. We ratcheted up trailing-stop-loss percentages on our
gold-stock trades to prepare, soon realizing big-to-huge gains.
While gold stocks have surged dramatically this year, they still
really lagged gold with GDX up 42.2% YTD at best in late October.
Gold stocks were starting to catch up with their metal,
accelerating towards that 2x-to-3x upside leverage. But GDX’s
correction ignited before gold’s, after the world’s largest gold
miner reported disappointing and misleading Q3 results. There’s
much more below on Newmont’s latest debacle.
Gold
stocks’ total correction extended to 19.3% as of mid-week, which is
perfectly-normal 2.6x downside leverage to gold. Speculators and
investors rushing to buy gold stocks in mid-October as GDX made a
dazzling secular breakout and
challenged a
far-bigger one ought to be licking their chops! Being able to
now buy in about 20% cheaper with gold miners printing money
in this gold environment is awesome.
For
34 quarters in a row now, I’ve painstakingly analyzed the latest
operational and financial results from GDX’s 25-largest component
stocks. Mostly super-majors, majors, and larger mid-tiers, they
dominate this ETF at 85.0% of its total weighting! While digging
through quarterlies is a ton of work, understanding the gold miners’
latest fundamentals really cuts through the obscuring sentiment fogs
shrouding this sector.
This
table summarizes the operational and financial highlights from the
GDX top 25 during Q3’24. These gold miners’ stock symbols aren’t
all US listings, and are preceded by their rankings changes within
GDX over this past year. The shuffling in their ETF weightings
reflects shifting market caps, which reveal both outperformers and
underperformers since Q3’23. Those symbols are followed by their
current GDX weightings.
Next
comes these gold miners’ Q3’24 production in ounces, along with
their year-over-year changes from the comparable Q3’23. Output is
the lifeblood of this industry, with investors generally prizing
production growth above everything else. After are the costs of
wresting that gold from the bowels of the earth in per-ounce terms,
both cash costs and all-in sustaining costs. The latter help
illuminate miners’ profitability.
That’s followed by a bunch of hard accounting data reported to
securities regulators, quarterly revenues, earnings, operating cash
flows, and resulting cash treasuries. Blank data fields mean
companies hadn’t disclosed that particular data as of the middle of
this week. The annual changes aren’t included if they would be
misleading, like comparing negative numbers or data shifting from
positive to negative or vice-versa.
In
mid-October well before this latest earnings season got underway, I
predicted gold
miners’ epic quarter in an essay. That concluded “dazzling
record gold prices combined with forecast lower mining costs will
catapult unit earnings to astounding levels. They are likely to
about double to amazing records, extending gold stocks’
massive-earnings-growth streak to five consecutive quarters.”
Indeed that mostly came to pass.
Despite their epic quarter, as long-time readers know I’ve never
been a fan of most of the world’s largest gold miners that dominate
GDX. They perpetually fail to organically grow their
production at their vast operational scales, unable to overcome
depletion. They’ve mostly been able to boost output only through
expensive acquisitions. And paradoxically their mining costs have
been rising faster than their smaller peers’.
So
for a quarter-century now, our very-profitable
subscription-newsletter gold-stock trading has focused on
fundamentally-superior smaller mid-tiers and juniors. Operating
fewer gold mines often at lower costs, they are better able to
consistently grow production through expansions and new
mine-builds. Both their earnings growth and stock-price
appreciation have long proven way better than GDX’s super-majors and
majors.
GDX’s little-brother
GDXJ ETF mostly
comprised of mid-tiers is much better. Like usual I’ll analyze
the GDXJ-top-25 stocks’ Q3’24 results in next week’s essay. I bring
this up now because the world’s biggest gold miners certainly aren’t
best-in-breed. Last quarter was the seventh in a row where the GDX
top 25’s production slumped, now by 1.4% year-over-year to 8,491k
ounces. That seriously underperformed this industry.
About a month after every quarter when earnings season is underway,
the World Gold Council publishes the best-available global gold
supply-and-demand data. That’s detailed and analyzed in the
fantastic Gold Demand Trends reports, which are essential reading
for gold-stock traders. The WGC found that world gold-mining output
actually grew a strong-and-impressive 5.8% YoY to 31,824k
ounces in Q3’24!
Last
quarter’s GDX-top-25 output was only halfway up into its
past-34-quarter range. That’s despite the world’s biggest gold
miner Newmont reporting Q3 production rocketing up 29.3% YoY to
1,668k ounces! That sounds fantastic, but two big factors make it
misleading. First the comparable quarter’s output was slashed by a
major strike at one of Newmont’s larger gold mines in Mexico, which
suffered zero output in Q3’23.
Second Newmont paid $16.8b last year to gobble up Australian
super-major Newcrest Mining, with that deal closing in early
November 2023. Rather damningly even despite that strike, in Q3’23
the combined output of NEM and NCM actually ran 1,744k ozs which was
much better than Q3’24’s! To establish a baseline, in the four
quarters before Q3’23 NEM+NCM production averaged a way-higher
1,979k ounces.
Newmont has actually cursed the gold-mining sector for years,
seriously damaging sector returns and institutional-investor
perceptions through rank mismanagement. I’ve written extensively
about this in the past, including why NEM’s
gold-stock
mega-mergers are really bad for this sector. Newmont overpays
wildly, resulting in tens of billions of dollars of subsequent
writeoffs that really tank overall sector earnings.
NEM
is not only the world’s biggest gold miner, but the only one
included in the S&P 500. So for large fund managers, Newmont is the
only gold stock liquid enough for them to consider taking positions
in. And Newmont’s operational performance has proven so inferior
to its peers’ for decades that a Newmont-centric view of gold
stocks will sour anyone on this sector. Q3’24 saw another
infuriating case in point on this.
Most
gold miners offer production and cost guidance, trying to set market
expectations. Released early in new years, this can naturally
change as individual mines encounter operational challenges or
unexpected outperformance. Good managements adjust their
guidances as conditions shift, but not Newmont! It is endlessly
overpromising, pretending everything is awesome, then
underdelivering to disappoint everyone.
Back
in late February, NEM initially set 2024 guidance at 6.9m ounces of
gold mined around all-in sustaining costs of $1,400 per ounce. That
was good, as this company produced 5.5m ounces in 2023 at higher
$1,444 AISCs. In late April Newmont’s Q1’24 results reported AISCs
of $1,439, and management declared then NEM was “Firmly on track to
deliver 2024 guidance for production, costs and capital spend”.
In
late July NEM reported mining 1.6m ounces at way-higher $1,562 AISCs
in Q2’24. Management tried to obscure those from investors,
removing AISCs from the opening summary of the quarterly press
release to bury deeper in a table! And 2024’s guidance was again
reaffirmed, with the assertion “On track to deliver 2024 guidance
for production, costs and capital spend”. On the crucial AISC
front, that meant $1,400.
In
H1’24, Newmont’s AISCs averaged $1,500 per ounce. Thus to hit that
still-active guidance of $1,400 on the year, H2’24’s AISCs would
have to plunge to a $1,300 average. NEM intentionally implied
some hope of that, asserting “anticipating a sequential increase in
production in the second half of the year, weighted towards the
fourth quarter”. I was skeptical of $1,300 after Newmont’s long
history of disappointing.
Meanwhile gold and GDX were surging into late summer and early
autumn, the metal hitting many new
nominal record
closes. GDX broke out to a 4.2-year high in late October, and
closed a mere 0.9% under achieving an epic 11.8-year one!
With gold still powering higher on balance, that
psychologically-huge
gold-stock
secular breakout would’ve happened within days and
accelerated the
bullish sentiment shift.
Most
gold miners would issue separate press releases between quarterly
results if operations materially affected their guidances.
There were plenty of examples of that in Q3’24, including from the
GDX top 25’s best performer operationally last quarter IAMGOLD. It
is ramping up a major new mine-build, which is why its production
soared and mining costs plunged. But that process encountered some
setbacks.
Processing plants naturally have to be adjusted when they first come
online, as the actual ores run through vary from what geologists
projected. IAG had to shut down its mill for over a week to replace
components with ones better suited to the ores. So it warned that
mine’s 2024 guidance was lowered from its 153k-attributable-ounce
midpoint to the lower end near 130k. IAG’s stock still climbed 3.3%
the next day!
Investors fully realize plans change, we just like to be informed
not blindsided. But the inept management running Newmont doesn’t
respect investors. Just one day after GDX achieved that awesome
secular high, NEM released its Q3’24 results after the close. Those
were mostly great, with revenues, earnings, and operating cash flows
skyrocketing 85%, 484%, and 64% YoY! 2024 output guidance
was even reaffirmed.
But
management again tried to hide soaring AISCs, not mentioning them at
all in the quarterly summary like every other gold miner. Those
actually shot up 13.0% YoY to $1,611 in Q3’24, averaging $1,537 in
2024’s first three quarters! Still rather than come clean and raise
2024 cost guidance, NEM merely said it expected “All-In Sustaining
Cost (AISC) of $1,475 per ounce in the fourth quarter”. Soaring
costs weren’t analyzed.
Most
gold miners seeing rising costs detail exactly why and what they are
doing to mitigate those. But not Newmont. If Q4’24 AISCs actually
come in at $1,475 which seems unlikely given its long track record
of misleading investors, 2024’s would average $1,522. That’s
a big miss, but investors might not care much with far-higher
prevailing gold prices. But NEM’s dissembling leaves analysts
wondering what else it is disguising.
In
my line of work as a professional gold-stock speculator and
newsletter writer for a quarter-century now, I talk with plenty of
fund managers. I consult for some as well. Every time Newmont
comes up, you can just feel the contempt for its poor management and
endless underperformance. It has long been a pox on this sector,
deadweight dragging down its peers. The day after those Q3’24
results, NEM’s stock crashed 14.7%!
Dumbfoundingly that was its worst daily loss in 27 years in
the best quarter ever for gold stocks! And that didn’t even happen
in a weak sector tape, as gold rallied 0.7% that day for GDX to
amplify. Most of the radically-superior mid-tiers and juniors in
our newsletter trading books were flat or even climbed a bit that
day! But NEM’s dishonest attempts to obscure cost challenges left
institutional investors totally exasperated.
Wall
Street didn’t understand what had happened, blaming NEM’s crash on a
relatively-minor earnings-per-share miss. But that event tainted
gold-stock sentiment among fund managers, prematurely forcing
this sector to correct. Again for professional investors and
analysts not focused on gold stocks, Newmont is the only
supposed-blue-chip gold miner they would consider. And it pooped in
the punch bowl with that Q3 report!
Newmont wasn’t alone on costs, most major gold miners suffered
sharply-higher ones last quarter. Those were mostly blamed on
rising labor prices in the latest 10-Qs. A sizable fraction of
the GDX top 25 said their AISCs this year are going to come in at
the upper end of their 2024 guidances. Yet their stocks didn’t
plunge after their Q3 results, as those managements were honest and
open explaining those challenges.
Unit
gold-mining costs are generally inversely proportional to
gold-production levels. That’s because gold mines’ total operating
costs are largely fixed during pre-construction planning stages,
when designed throughputs are determined for plants processing
gold-bearing ores. Their nameplate capacities don’t change quarter
to quarter, requiring similar levels of infrastructure, equipment,
and employees to keep running.
So
the only real variable driving quarterly gold production is the
ore grades fed into these plants. Those vary widely even within
individual gold deposits. Richer ores yield more ounces to spread
mining’s big fixed expenses across, lowering unit costs and boosting
profitability. But while fixed costs are the lion’s share of gold
mining, there are also sizable variable costs. That’s where recent
years’ raging inflation hit hard.
Cash
costs are the classic measure of gold-mining costs, including all
cash expenses necessary to mine each ounce of gold. But they are
misleading as a true cost measure, excluding the big capital needed
to explore for gold deposits and build mines. So cash costs are
best viewed as survivability acid-test levels for the major gold
miners. They illuminate the minimum gold prices necessary to keep
the mines running.
The
GDX top 25’s cash costs last quarter soared 19.2% YoY to a record
$1,142 per ounce. The previous high was the preceding Q2’24’s
$1,020. Gold-mining costs naturally follow gold higher, but way
more slowly than that. Better gold prices eventually allow lower
ore grades to be mined, which force unit costs higher. Q3’s
cash-cost inflation is concerning, way worse than the
prior-four-quarter average increase of 3.2% YoY.
All-in sustaining costs are far superior than cash costs, and were
introduced by the World Gold Council in June 2013. They add on to
cash costs everything else that is necessary to maintain and
replenish gold-mining operations at current output tempos.
AISCs give a much-better understanding of what it really costs to
maintain gold mines as ongoing concerns, and reveal the major gold
miners’ true operating profitability.
Unfortunately the GDX top 25’s AISCs, which are mostly comprised of
those cash costs, proved very disappointing as well in Q3. They
surged 8.0% YoY to $1,431 per ounce, their highest levels ever!
In the four quarters before that, GDX-top-25 AISCs had actually
averaged 3.5%-YoY declines with inflation coming back under
control. The previous record was $1,405 in Q3’22. Again labor
costs were most often cited.
Those sharply-higher AISCs were the chonky fly in the ointment in
the major gold miners’ latest results. In my mid-October essay
previewing gold
miners’ epic quarter, I had explained that “A surprising number
of major gold miners continued guiding to considerably-lower
costs in Q3 and Q4.” I even used Newmont as an example, which I
did qualify with “While I really doubt NEM will achieve such low Q3
and Q4 AISCs...”
With
Q2’24’s GDX-top-25 AISCs clocking in at a nine-quarter low of $1,239
and plenty of gold miners forecasting better H2’24 costs, my
worst-case scenario for Q3’24’s was $1,350. So seeing $1,431 was
quite a shock. And that includes Buenaventura’s crazy negative
$680 per ounce! Its big silver, zinc, and lead output used as
gold byproduct credits skyrocketed 122%, 98%, and 251% YoY from a
mine expansion.
Still since Q3’24’s average gold price soared 28.6% YoY to a nominal
record high of $2,477, the major gold miners were super-profitable
even with high $1,431 AISCs. Subtract those, and implied sector
unit profits ran $1,046 per ounce. I sure didn’t expect them to
print under Q2’24’s dazzling record $1,099, but those are still
fat-and-rich earnings. They soared 74.0% YoY from Q3’23’s,
and that’s nothing new for gold stocks.
During these last five reported quarters ending in Q3, the GDX top
25’s implied unit earnings rocketed by 87.2%, 42.3%, 34.9%, 83.7%,
and 74.0% YoY! That massive profits growth is unequalled in
all the stock markets, truly remarkable. And despite gold’s healthy
pullback, this current half-over Q4’24 is shaping up to be another
stunner. So far this quarter, gold is averaging $2,686 which would
make for a 36%-YoY soaring!
But
even if gold’s pullback or larger correction hasn’t fully run its
course yet, if gold averages a far-lower $2,515 for the rest of Q4
this quarter would still achieve $2,600 overall. And the majority
of the GDX-top-25 gold miners with guidances still see AISCs
improving into year-end. Assume $2,600 gold and $1,400 AISCs in Q4,
and we’d be looking at record $1,200-per-ounce profits
skyrocketing another 100% YoY!
While it was a bummer last quarter’s AISCs came in much higher than
expected, the underlying hard accounting numbers reported to
securities regulators were spectacular. The GDX top 25’s
total revenues soared 27.0% YoY in Q3 to a record $34.2b! That
matches gold’s quarterly-average 28.6% gain less that 1.4% output
shrinkage. That huge sales growth catapulted bottom-line GAAP
earnings an epic 142.7% higher!
Those hit $5.3b for the GDX top 25, astounding levels! And they
were pretty clean, as gold miners as a group are often flushing
unusual large unrealized and sometimes realized gains and losses
through their income statements. The most-common ones are
impairments to mines’ carrying values on books and occasionally
reversals of those. I track these, and reversing out material ones
yields even-better Q3 profits.
Adjusted those ran $5,828m, skyrocketing 152.0% YoY from Q3’23’s
adjusted levels! Either way, major gold miners’ Q3’24 earnings were
their highest ever reported by far. The gold miners are
printing money at these lofty prevailing gold prices, which will
enable them to expand existing mines and build new mines to overcome
depletion and hopefully grow their output. Q3’24 indeed proved gold
miners’ best quarter ever!
That
forced down gold-stock valuations to their lowest levels seen in my
34-quarter research thread, and maybe ever with such gigantic
earnings. Early this week, the GDX top 25 averaged
trailing-twelve-month price-to-earnings ratios of just 22.5x. That
was skewed higher by a few outliers, with plenty of major gold
miners trading in the low double-digits. And most of these
P/Es don’t even yet include Q3’s just-reported profits!
So
the major gold miners’ Q3’24 results proved epic overall. It was
disappointing AISCs surged sharply, and infuriating Newmont
deceptively trying to hide them blasted gold-stock sentiment on the
verge of a huge secular breakout! But holy cow the gold miners
still have massive room to run to reflect these awesome prevailing
gold prices. They could easily double from here with such
epic fundamentals on strong gold.
This
overdue gold pullback and resulting gold-stock correction are great
gifts. Speculators and investors who were interested in gold stocks
in late October should be salivating at buying much lower soon
here. After our newsletter trades were stopped out at big
realized gains, I’m looking to reload our trading books with
fundamentally-superior mid-tiers and juniors as gold’s selloff
matures. Then gold stocks are off to the races.
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The
bottom line is major gold miners just reported their best quarter
ever by far! Fueled by dazzling record gold prices, revenues,
earnings, and operating cash flows all blasted up dramatically to
all-time record highs. And that was despite resurgent mining costs
also climbing to records partially fueled by more-expensive labor.
Those fat-and-rich profits drove gold-stock valuations to their
lowest in many years.
Gold
stocks are correcting now, forced by gold’s overdue rebalancing
selloff after it soared to extreme overboughtness on
excessively-bullish speculator gold-futures positioning. The
world’s largest gold miner trying to obscure rising costs sparked
the gold-stock selling. But what an amazing opportunity to add gold
stocks at deep discounts with their strongest and most-bullish
fundamentals ever. Their upside is far from over. |