The beleaguered
gold-mining sector continues to be plagued by monumental universal
bearishness. Nearly everyone assumes the gold miners are doomed,
that they can’t survive for long in a sub-$1200-gold environment.
But this belief is totally wrong, a consequence of extreme fear’s
fog of war. The gold miners’ underlying earnings fundamentals
remain very strong, as evidenced by their recent Q3 results.
In all the stock
markets, corporate profits ultimately drive stock prices. Because a
stock simply represents a fractional stake in its underlying
company’s future earnings stream, all stock prices eventually revert
to some reasonable multiple of those profits. These earnings are
truly the only fundamental driver of stock prices. All
deviations from righteous valuations based on profits are just the
temporary products of herd sentiment.
The gold stocks
are suffering such an extreme psychological anomaly today, drowning
in mind-boggling depths of popular fear and despair. The leading
HUI gold-stock index just slumped to a brutal new 13.3-year
secular low this week! The apathy and hate for this sector is
nothing short of astounding. Anyone masochistic enough to make a
bullish contrarian case on gold stocks will be peppered with
scathing ridicule.
But in the midst
of any universal sentiment extreme, prudent investors and
speculators must disconnect from the herd emotions to take a
rational look at the underlying profits fundamentals. And there is
zero doubt today that prevailing gold-stock prices are truly
fundamentally
absurd. The last time gold stocks were priced at these levels
per the HUI ages ago in July 2002, the gold price was merely trading
around $305.
Think about the
wild incongruity of that. Profits drive stock prices, and profits
in gold mining derive almost exclusively from the price of gold.
This is because the mining costs for a particular deposit are
essentially fixed in its mine-planning stages. So higher gold
prices lead directly to higher profits, and this relationship is not
linear. Gold miners naturally leverage gold’s moves, which
can drive huge gains for investors.
This is easy to
illustrate. In this year’s second quarter, the elite gold miners of
the flagship GDX Gold Miners ETF
reported
average cash and all-in sustaining costs of $635 and $895 per
ounce. The latter number can be rounded up to $900 for an industry
average. Such costs mean if gold is trading around $1100, this
industry earns $200 per ounce in profits. What happens when gold
merely rallies 10% to $1210?
Since costs at
individual gold mines are largely fixed regardless of the gold
price, gold’s gains translate directly into higher earnings. A
$1210 selling price less $900 costs yields new profits of $310 per
ounce, a whopping 55% gain on a 10% gold rally! This strong
inherent leverage to gold’s upside is the main reason investors buy
gold stocks. And the riches brave contrarians have won in this
sector have been vast.
Today’s
gold-stocks-to-zero herd groupthink has deluded everyone into
forgetting the gold stocks were the best-performing sector in all
the stock markets between November 2010 and September 2011. The HUI
skyrocketed 1664% higher during those 10.8 years, radically
trouncing the benchmark S&P 500’s 14% loss over that same span.
Buying gold stocks low when few others will can create life-changing
wealth.
And gold stocks
couldn’t be any lower than today, priced as if gold was near $305
instead of reflecting the real prevailing price of $1070. Imagine
the rush to buy stocks in any other sector if its stock prices were
battered to such extreme lows that they implied its products were
selling for around just 3/11ths of their actual selling price. The
epic fundamental disconnect that exists in gold stocks today is
utterly ridiculous.
The best way to
fight irrational emotion to buy low so you can later sell high and
multiply your capital is through research. The more hard
information you have, the more you can root your psyche in reality
and steel yourself from the howling winds of herd sentiment. The
only way to understand today’s actual real fundamentals of the
gold-mining industry is to carefully study how these companies are
performing.
With the gold
miners’ third-quarter results almost all reported, this week I
decided to dig deep into these latest fundamental reads to sharpen
my understanding of this sector’s profitability as a whole. It’s
not easy wading through dozens of quarterly reports, but the
strategic understanding gleaned makes such an effort well worth it.
I found the gold miners continue to have costs so low their
operations are very profitable.
That flagship
GDX gold-stock
ETF is the definitive gold-stock trading vehicle, and contains
the best of the world’s gold miners. As of this week, this ETF held
35 of this planet’s elite “gold stocks”. The quotes are because a
handful of GDX’s components are actually silver miners. But there’s
no better roster of the world’s leading and dominant gold miners
than those winning the honor of being included in this GDX ETF.
This week I ran
through the latest quarterly results from all of them, and built a
spreadsheet with a bunch of fundamental data from each. These
tables summarize some of the most important information. They
include each GDX component company’s key cost data for Q3, their
cash in the bank at the end of Q3, and their operating cash flows
generated in Q3. If you are bearish on gold stocks, prepare to be
amazed.
These tables fit
in the top 34 of GDX’s 35 components, 99.2% of its total weighting.
And once again they just shatter the popular myth today that the
gold miners are doomed at these low prevailing gold prices. This
entire industry is operating at both cash and all-in sustaining
costs far below current gold levels! It is vastly more
profitable today than it was over 13 years ago the last time gold
stocks traded at these prices.
Among the world’s
elite gold miners that reported cash costs in Q3, their average was
way down at an incredibly-low $618 per ounce! That’s an
amazing revelation that obliterates the common notion today that
gold miners are in trouble under $1200 gold. Even if gold somehow
plunged all the way down to $650, an absurd apocalyptic extreme even
the most vociferous bears never dream of, gold miners can survive.
Cash costs are how
much it actually costs to produce each ounce of gold on an ongoing
basis, the costs that have to be covered to pay the bills. They
don’t include things like exploration, building mines, and
reclamation costs. Cash-cost levels are the ultimate acid test of
gold-miner survivability. As long as gold remains above cash costs,
miners can keep producing and maintain operations to await higher
prices.
But the problem
with cash costs is they don’t reflect the true costs of mining
gold. Cash costs were all the gold miners reported in the 1990s and
2000s, and they were misleading to investors without a deep
knowledge of this industry’s many idiosyncrasies. So back in early
2013 the World Gold Council, the gold miners’ self-funded industry
group, worked on a new framework for more representative cost
reporting.
This resulted in
the far-superior all-in-sustaining-cost metric introduced in
June 2013. These include all the direct cash costs of mining gold,
as well as many other costs. That includes the general
corporate-level administrative expenses not included in cash costs
like mine-level ones are, as well as all costs required to maintain
and replenish existing production levels. This is essential since
mines are always depleting.
So all-in
sustaining costs also include the exploration, mine-development, and
construction expenses necessary to maintain gold output. They also
include the required remediation and reclamation costs incurred
after mines are economically depleted. So there’s no doubt that
all-in sustaining costs are a much superior cost measure. So it’s
best to consider gold-mining profitability from them, not just cash
costs.
In their
just-reported Q3, the world’s elite gold miners had average all-in
sustaining costs of just $866 per ounce! That’s incredible,
way below the false perception of gold-mining cost levels fostered
by today’s suffocating herd bearishness. That means even at this
week’s brutal new 5.8-year secular gold low of $1069, this industry
is still earning profits of $203 per ounce! That 19% profit margin
is pretty darned impressive.
Contrary to
popular assumptions, the gold miners are not only very profitable at
today’s low gold prices but would still earn plenty even at $950.
These companies have worked very hard to reduce costs to cope with
the current depressed gold prices, and have widely succeeded. The
actual fundamentals of the gold-mining industry today conclusively
prove that this sector has nothing to worry about above $900.
But while some
gold miners are trading at cheap price-to-earnings ratios today, the
majority aren’t. If this industry is really earning $200+ per ounce
at today’s gold prices, why isn’t that reflected in the gold miners’
P/E ratios? The answer is simple. These low gold prices have
forced most miners to write down the carrying value of their deposit
and mine assets, resulting in large non-cash charges to
accounting earnings.
When companies
initially buy deposits and build mines, the costs incurred are put
on their books as assets. But as gold prices drop, all deposits
become less economical to mine. So the SEC’s accounting rules
require companies to write down these assets to reflect
prevailing values. These asset-impairment charges are costs that
flow through the income statement. They have temporarily
overwhelmed real earnings.
But gold-driven
writedowns are not that important or relevant over the long term.
They are non-cash, so they don’t represent current costs. They are
something of an accounting fiction in the quarters in which they
hit. And assets’ carrying values are seldom righteous anyway, since
these values aren’t increased when gold prices rise. They can only
be adjusted lower, not higher. And writedowns soon flush off of
income statements.
Traditional
trailing price-to-earnings ratios include the last four quarters’
accounting earnings per share. So once the big writedowns pass
beyond the latest year, accounting earnings again reflect underlying
operating profitability. So as recent impairment charges roll out
of the EPS calculations, the gold miners’ headline P/E ratios will
rapidly shift from nonexistent to reflecting anomalous fundamental
undervaluation.
An alternate
measure of gold-mining profitability that isn’t skewed by impairment
charges is operating cash flows. Q3’s are listed above for
these elite GDX companies. Not only were they all positive last
quarter, but some were large relative to the companies’ market
capitalizations. As long as businesses can generate positive cash
flows from operations, and make any debt payments, they can keep
operating indefinitely.
These very strong
operating cash flows have led to huge cash hoards for many of the
elite gold miners, which are also noted above. In many cases the
cash on hand at these gold miners is really large compared to their
market caps. Strong cash positions mean the gold miners can weather
a low-gold-price storm for quite some time even if gold would
somehow miraculously plunge below their core cash costs.
The third-quarter
results of the world’s elite gold miners included in the flagship
GDX gold-stock ETF are incredibly bullish. Contrary to
groupthink bearish expectations that gold miners are teetering right
on the edge of bankruptcy, they are thriving even at low prevailing
gold prices! Their key all-in sustaining costs are far below
current gold levels, so they are generating big operating cash flows
to boost their large coffers.
And these miners’
strong fundamental positions are improving. My
last iteration
of this research using Q2’15 results showed average cash and
all-in-sustaining costs for the elite GDX gold miners of $635 and
$895. In just the single quarter of Q3, barely any time to change
the course of such capital-intensive operations as gold mining,
these fell another 2.6% and 3.3% to $618 and $866. The gold miners
are strengthening!
With gold stocks
languishing near such fundamentally-absurd prices relative to the
metal that drives their profits, their upside from here is utterly
vast. As I discussed in
an essay
last week digging into the core fundamental relationship between
gold stocks and gold prices, the gold stocks are highly likely to
at least quadruple from current levels. Contrarian investors
are chomping at the bit to return, waiting on a key signal.
And that is gold,
which has been
savaged by extreme selling by American futures speculators
following late October’s hawkish Fed surprise on December rate
hikes. They’ve been dumping hyper-leveraged gold-futures contracts
at extraordinary rates in recent weeks, both by liquidating existing
long-side bets and adding new short-side ones. But the full sizes
of these gold bets are finite, with speculators nearing limits.
Sooner or later,
all the speculators brazen enough to sell gold into major secular
lows will have done so. And that will lead to big gold-futures
short covering, since those leveraged downside bets on gold have to
be offset by buying long contracts to close them out. With
speculators’ gold-futures shorts very high again following that
hawkish Fed surprise, another major short-covering rally in gold is
imminent.
And naturally as
gold rallies, gold miners’ profits leverage to their metal will kick
in with a vengeance. This industry’s profits growth as gold climbs
will dwarf the gains in gold. That’s going to lead to sharply
falling valuations as P/E ratios drop, attracting in legions of
value investors. And considering the gold stocks are now
ludicrously trading as if gold was near $300 rather than $1100,
their upside from here is vast.
While contrarian
investors and speculators are waiting for a decisive green light
from gold to pour back into the radically-undervalued gold stocks,
they fear the same thing futures speculators do. Everyone is
worried Fed rate hikes will prove gold’s nemesis, forcing it
to keep spiraling lower indefinitely. The idea is higher yields on
other assets will make zero-yielding gold less attractive, retarding
investment demand.
Fortunately,
history proves the exact opposite! Gold investment demand
actually flourishes during Fed-rate-hike cycles because they are so
damaging to overvalued stock and bond markets. Since 1971, the Fed
has executed 11
rate-hike cycles. Gold actually rallied in the majority, 6 of
those. And during those 6 Fed-rate-hike cycles where gold rallied,
its average gain during the exact cycle spans was an amazing +61.0%!
The Fed’s last
rate-hike cycle ran from June 2004 to June 2006, where it hiked its
federal-fund rate by a whopping 425 basis points through 17
consecutive hikes. Yet even though that more than quintupled the
FFR, gold still soared 49.6% higher over that exact span!
Fed rate hikes are no threat to gold with one important exception,
when gold enters those rate-hike cycles trading near major secular
highs.
In the other 5
Fed-rate-hike cycles since 1971 where gold fell, this metal was
already high when the Fed started increasing rates. That
certainly isn’t the case today, with gold languishing near major
secular lows. And gold’s average loss during these rate-hike cycles
where it entered high was just 13.9%, asymmetrically small compared
to its rate-hike-cycle gains. Gold stocks have nothing to fear from
rate hikes.
And today’s
already-excellent gold-stock earnings fundamentals based on their
low costs and robust operating cash flows will see incredible growth
as gold mean reverts far higher as investment demand inevitably
returns. Gold’s woes began in early 2013 with the
radical
distortions from the Fed’s wildly-unprecedented open-ended
third quantitative-easing campaign.
Normalization
will restore those conditions.
Between 2010 and
2012 before the Fed’s
stock-market
levitation, the gold price averaged $1490 in those last
normal years. In 2012 alone, it averaged $1669. Let’s round
these to $1500 and $1650 to get an idea of the gold-mining
industry’s profits growth as gold mean reverts to normal levels. At
rounded all-in sustaining costs of $875, $1500 and $1650 gold would
yield enormous profits of $625 and $775 per ounce.
These
merely-average gold levels would generate staggering profits growth
for this industry up around 215% and 290% for a gold bull on the
order of just 40% to 55%! Such extreme earnings growth would fuel
an enormous upleg in gold stocks even if they were reasonably valued
today, but coming out of the prevalent fundamentally-absurd lows
that upleg will have to be epic. This should greatly excite
investors!
With the general
stock markets
very overvalued thanks to the Fed’s levitation in recent years,
there isn’t much fundamental upside to be found. Yet gold stocks,
because sentiment is so overwhelmingly and irrationally bearish
against them, have vast potential. They can be played by going long
the GDX gold-stock ETF of course, but that sector benchmark’s gains
will be dwarfed by those in the best of the elite miners.
After having
studied and traded this contrarian sector for 16 years, we can help
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The bottom line is
gold miners’ underlying earnings fundamentals remain strong today
even with the low prevailing gold prices. The all-in sustaining
costs of this sector’s elite miners are quite low, leading to
profitable operations generating large cash flows filling corporate
treasuries. This reality evident in the latest quarterly results is
a stark contrast to perceptions that the gold miners’ stocks are
circling the drain.
Sooner or later
all stock prices ultimately reflect their underlying corporate
profits, and gold stocks are no exception. The extreme and
wildly-irrational fear that has pummeled this sector to
fundamentally-absurd price levels can’t and won’t last. And once
that breaks as gold mean reverts higher, smart contrarians are going
to flood back into this dirt-cheap sector and drive gold stocks
radically higher over the coming years.
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