Is the gold mining sector about to take off?

By Phil Oakley Aug 16, 2012

Phil Oakley

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Gold has had a quiet year.

Despite the prospect of more money printing by the world’s central banks, and minuscule interest rates, it seems that not many people see inflation as a big threat at the moment.

But things can change quickly in the financial world. Often the best time to buy things is when nobody really wants them. It’s interesting that renowned investors George Soros and John Paulson have been buying gold recently.

It looks a smart move to us. Gold is worth holding, if only as a form of insurance against paper money going bad – which it eventually will, if all the printing continues. We certainly see no reason to hold low-yielding government bonds.

But what about gold mining stocks? If you believe that you should own gold and that it will go up in price, surely gold stocks are a good investment?

Large gold miners have been disappointing investments

The logic behind owning the shares of gold mining companies seems quite sensible. By having a slice of the company’s gold in the ground you should benefit from leverage.

By this, I mean that a rise in the gold price - other things being equal - should lead to a bigger proportional rise in the profits of the gold mine. Of course, the same leverage works in reverse when gold prices fall, which makes owning gold stocks a riskier proposition for an investor than owning the metal itself.

Spot gold price vs HUI gold miners index

Source: Bloomberg

But the relationship between gold prices and the price of gold stocks has broken down sharply this year. Have a look at the chart above. It tracks the spot price of gold (yellow line) with the HUI index of gold mining stocks (white line) during the last year. It contains a lot of the major players such as Goldcorp Inc and Barrick Gold.

The HUI index includes gold mining companies that do not hedge the price of their gold production beyond 18 months. This means that these companies should see their revenues closely correlated to changes in the price of gold.

Yet as you can see, during the last six months, gold stocks have significantly underperformed against the price of gold bullion. But even over a longer period of time, a broad index of gold stocks like the HUI has done worse than bullion.


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It’s been better to own physical gold

During the last ten years, the HUI index has gone from 120.8 to 424.3 - an increase of just over 250%. Now that’s pretty good, and a lot better than having your money in most stock market funds.

But the price of gold has risen from $308 to $1,604 per troy ounce - an increase of 420%. There have been brief periods when gold stocks have performed better than gold, but it doesn’t look like the leverage theory has worked out in practice. Why?

There are several reasons. One is the fact that gold mining companies used to hedge their production by getting another party - typically a bank - to buy their output at a guaranteed price. Scarred by years of low and lacklustre gold prices, they wanted some security for their efforts. As the price of gold surged, many companies lost out on big profits because they had already agreed to sell their output for much lower prices.

Now, of course, hedging is virtually non-existent among most major gold mining companies. But the other big problem they’ve now encountered is cost. It’s costing a lot more money for mining companies to get their gold out of the ground. Cash costs have soared due to high energy prices and the cost of specialised workers.

This has meant that profits have actually been going down at a lot of gold mining companies. It’s quite ironic that gold companies that have been seen as beneficiaries of inflation have now become victims of it.

Then there’s the growth in exchange traded funds (ETFs), which have made it a lot easier for investors to own physical gold. Some investors have also bought gold royalty companies such as Royal Gold (Nasdaq: RGLD) or Franco Nevada Corp (NYSE: FNV). These companies finance gold mining companies and get a share of their production revenues (a royalty) in return. This means their profits are linked to the price of gold, but are not dragged by cost inflation. As a result their shares have done well, leaving them trading on punchy multiples of expected profits.

So when will gold miners live up to their promise?

You could say that if gold stocks haven’t done what they should have done, then why bother with them?

Well, some interesting changes are afoot in the sector. And when gold sees a renewed surge of interest - as we expect it will - neglected gold stocks could benefit.

Looking at the table below, the big companies don’t look screamingly cheap on traditional measures such as price/earnings multiples (although Petropavlovsk’s valuation looks intriguing). However, dividend levels at companies such as Newmont Mining are getting towards a reasonable level as miners realise they need to give investors an incentive to buy the stocks rather than an ETF.

CompanyShare pricePrice/earnings ratioDividend yield (%)
Goldcorp US$36.71 19 1.4
Barrick Gold US$34.69 8.1 2.2
Newmont Mining US$46.63 11.4 3.2
Yamana Gold US$15.09 14.2 1.6
African Barrick Gold £4.37 9.4 2.4
Petropavlovsk £4.34 4.7 2.9

With the rest of the mining sector being hit by the slowdown in demand for industrial metals, you also have to wonder how much longer rampant cost inflation will be hurting gold miners. If other big players are cutting back on projects, then the pressure driving up the costs of staff and machinery will ease off.

But there’s one other major driver that could ignite the sector – and that’s takeover activity. The big question is: if the gold assets of these companies are genuinely cheap, then why haven’t they been bought by corporate buyers?

Well, now it looks as though they might be. Yesterday, Barrick Gold, which owns 74% of African Barrick Gold, announced that it might consider selling its interest. This morning it has said it’s in ‘preliminary’ talks with China Gold. (I took a look at African Barrick in detail earlier this month.)

My colleague Simon Popple looked at some other promising gold miners in his recent cover story for MoneyWeek.

• This article is taken from the free investment email Money Morning. Sign up to Money Morning here .

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  • 1. Elvis Presley

    (16 August 2012, 12:39PM)  Complain about this comment

    The sector looks ripe for M&A activity as you say; the long-term shareholders (including institutions) are suitable duffed up to take almost any decent offer that comes along.

  • 2. John Hopeful

    (16 August 2012, 02:41PM)  Complain about this comment

    Thanks, Phil, for your encouraging note. I have held Petropavlovsk since 2009 and watched it rise to about £12 and fall massively to below £3.50. A common reason for this has been the " Russian " factor", but is the risk of nationalisation in Russia so much greater than in South Africa where the performance of gold mining shares has been so much better?
    My average is £6.96 so I need a 50% increase on today's share price to break even.

  • 3. Soros dumping shares to buy gold

    (19 August 2012, 09:43AM)  Complain about this comment

    In 2012, George Soros has sold all of his equity positions in major financial stocks according to a 13-F report filed with the SEC for the quarter ending June 30, 2012.

    Soros has reportedly unloaded over one million shares of stock in financial companies and banks that include Citigroup (420,000 shares), JP Morgan (701,400 shares) and Goldman Sachs (120,000 shares). The total value of the stock sales amounts to nearly $50 million.

    Where has Soros shifted his money? At the same time he was selling bank stocks, he was acquiring some 884,000 shares (approx. $130 million) of Gold via the SPDR Gold Trust.
    Why would you dump over a million shares of stock in major banks and purchase more than 100 million dollars’ worth of gold?

    It would make sense if you believed that a collapse of the financial system was about to happen.

  • 4. Nurbergring

    (23 November 2012, 11:14AM)  Complain about this comment

    'Cash costs have soared due to high energy prices and the cost of specialised workers.'

    These costs may have 'soared' but are insignificant compared to the rise in value of the underlying commodity over the last ten years.

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