Here's a chart I find interesting.
Source: The Wall Street Journal
China's oil futures contract launches early next year (2016). What do you suppose happens then?
See also: Like it or not, China's crude oil futures will be a global benchmark
Have a great Thanksgiving, my American friends. Canadians, you've had your Thanksgiving already.
Fun fact: 1 in 6 people in Britain now celebrates Thanksgiving, according to what my XM radio tells me. But it's not an official holiday. The Queen is still ticked off about the Revolution, I guess.
"In the Valley of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man Is King." Market charts, analysis and links
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Welcome to the Money Pit -- Bigger, Longer and Uncut
Some writers hate the editing process. Thomas Jefferson was famous for this -- he chafed against James' Madison's edits and sometimes couldn't even look at them. But Jefferson was smart enough to know that the editing process made his final product stronger. "We the people..." and all that.
I'm not opposed to editing, either. But sometimes a lot of the story gets cut out.
Therefore, here is the original -- bigger, longer and uncut -- of my Money Pit story that ran on Energy and Resources Digest today.
I encourage you to go read the edited version of my story that ran at Energy and Resources Digest. My editor does a great job. And she gets to the point! I am loquacious to a fault, I'll admit. It's just this time, I think too much was left on the editing floor.
First, here’s why the markets and investors ae so bearish on mining.
The return on capital for companies in the Bloomberg World Mining Index (BWMI) is brutally bad. Return on capital is used to give a sense of how well a company uses its money to generate a returns.
Invest a dollar, generate $1.30 or so, right? Well, the return on capital for the BMI has averaged MINUS 4.3% since turning negative at the end of September.
Just take a look at this chart showing big miners’ return on invested capital …
I'm not opposed to editing, either. But sometimes a lot of the story gets cut out.
Therefore, here is the original -- bigger, longer and uncut -- of my Money Pit story that ran on Energy and Resources Digest today.
I encourage you to go read the edited version of my story that ran at Energy and Resources Digest. My editor does a great job. And she gets to the point! I am loquacious to a fault, I'll admit. It's just this time, I think too much was left on the editing floor.
Welcome to the Money Pit
The past year has been a terrible time to be in mining. But that’s okay. Mining has been on the downslope so long that we’re starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel.First, here’s why the markets and investors ae so bearish on mining.
The return on capital for companies in the Bloomberg World Mining Index (BWMI) is brutally bad. Return on capital is used to give a sense of how well a company uses its money to generate a returns.
Invest a dollar, generate $1.30 or so, right? Well, the return on capital for the BMI has averaged MINUS 4.3% since turning negative at the end of September.
Just take a look at this chart showing big miners’ return on invested capital …
Source: Bloomberg
Sure, some companies in India and China seem to be getting by. You can also bet they’ve got big government sugar daddies. For the rest of the mining, world, it’s a portrait of pain.
The biggest miners are taking staggering losses. During the past 12 months, major mine owners including Freeport-McMoRan Inc. and Vedanta Resources have written down asset values by a combined $42.2 billion.
I wish I could say that was a one-time event. But it’s only 46% more than the previous year, in which miners wrote off $28.9 billion. Yeesh!
Miners are priced like their mine shafts are on fire. There are 27 precious metal miners listed on major U.S. exchanges (NYSE, Nasdaq, and NYSEMkt) that trade at less than book value. In other words, at less than what the companies would be worth if you broke them up and sold off the parts.
Does that sound like a lot? Well, hang on to your miners’ hat. We ran a scan of the major exchanges in the U.S., Canada and the United Kingdom. We looked for precious metals and industrial metals miners. We insisted on real companies, with volume, not “real estate” or shell companies. Care to guess how many trade below book value? Would you guess 50? 100? More?
The answer is 273. That’s 273 working miners, developers and explorers. All trading like investors think they should be sold for scrap.
And they’re not all small, either. Newmont Mining, the world’s largest gold miner by market cap at around $9.3 billion, trades at less than book value. Vale S.A., a $20-billion company, trades at just 0.46 times book value.
China Syndrome Hits Metals Hard
The reasons for this carnage should be obvious. Chinese demand for raw materials once seemed unquenchable. Now, mountains of overproduced and unwanted material pile up on the docks.
As a result, copper recently traded at a six-year low. Coal prices have fallen through the floor. The price of iron ore has fallen 75% from its recent peak. Spot gold is down 43% during the same time period.
We are seeing some producers cut back. Glencore, the world’s third-biggest copper miner, decided to suspend production for 18 months at its copper mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia. Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE: FCX) is cutting copper output in the U.S., Mexico and Chile.
Meanwhile, zinc mines have closed in Australia and Ireland. And the supply of gold produced by mines dipped 1% in the third quarter.
And yet prices, after bouncing, turn lower again.
And some metals are seeing production increase. Iron ore producers in particular seem to be in some kind of suicide pact, blowing out the lid on production and sending prices plunging. In fact, there’s a new iron ore mine coming online in Australia this year. At full capacity it will produce 55 million metric tons of ore a year. At the same time, Vale is bringing a new iron project online in Brazil.
This all sounds bearish, and it is, short-term. Now for some good news.
China’s Not Dead!
Despite all the handwringing, Chinese demand for base metals is still growing. Sure, demand is growing more slowly. But China’s copper demand is still going to be 4% to 4.5% higher this year than last. And it should grow another 3% or more next year.
What’s more, that estimate may be low. The country’s latest five-year plan sets out ambitious expansion targets. China’s President Xi Jinping said he expects China’s economy to grow around 7% this year.
That’s MUCH higher than Wall Street’s target. But let me say that there are $3.51 trillion reasons why President Xi can be right. That’s the size of China’s foreign exchange reserves. And if China has to spend its way to a recovery, it will.
Also, China just lifted its one-child policy. It’s too early to tell, but I bet there are a lot of little brothers and sisters on the way in China. As the father of two children, I can tell you that kids need an enormous amount of STUFF. And that could boost China’s GDP – as well as its consumption of aluminum, rubber, and other commodities – more than anything.
Miners Are Slashing Costs
There’s many ways to be profitable. One is to see demand go up, and with it, prices. Another is to cut costs. And that’s what many miners are doing. For one thing, energy costs are falling, as oil prices crater.
Also, miners are increasingly turning to automation in mines. Iron miners Rio Tinto (NYSE: RIO) and Fortescue Metals (ASX: FMG) are deep into automating trucks and mining machines. BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP) is testing automated trucks as well.
By the way, this is good news for Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT) and other makers of automated equipment.
New Sources of Demand
3D printing is all the rage. So what goes into 3D printing powder? Titanium dioxide, steel, cobalt and other raw materials. All these have to be mined, of course.
Titanium dioxide in particular comes from sludgy “mineral sands.” Who mines that? Rio Tinto for one. And the company sees demand soaring.
Rio Tinto is “positioning ourselves on a technical side and a production side” for a potential spurt in demand for 3-D printing powder, the company’s diamonds and minerals chief executive Alan Davies said in press reports.
I’m not saying that 3D printing demand will replace conventional demand for mine production. I’m saying that with new technologies advancing at the speed of light, there are things being invented right now that will still require mined materials. Not everything can be a collection of electrons on the Internet. The world still needs real stuff.
Get Ready to Shift Higher
After all, the International Monetary Fund still expects global GDP to grow 3.1% this year and 3.6% next year. And hidden within those headline numbers are about 300 million people in Asia just itching to join the middle class.
That means they’ll want air conditioners and modern kitchens. They’ll want phones. They’ll want cars.
And here’s the funny thing – despite all the gloom and doom over China, China’s car sales rose 13% in October from a year earlier. Does that sound like a collapse to you? Heck no. In fact, it sounds like a rebound.
So, we’ll see demand for commodities rise again. China’s gold demand is already roaring ahead. Its demand for copper and iron will get back on track, too.
So, sure, mining has been a money pit lately. But that won’t last. Demand will come back strong. And the better mining stocks are on the launch pad.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Gold and Silver Juniors at Dirt-Cheap Prices
Here is a second set of interviews I did at the New Orleans Investment Conference. These are producers with cash flow that are priced dirt cheap.
You can check out GoGold's home page and its latest presentation.
Great Panther Silver (NYSEMkt: GPL). This company is hitting record production and lowering costs. It has plenty of great things going on. CEO Bob Archer gives you the scoop.
Visit Great Panther's home page and check out its latest presentation.
Finally, I talked to David Wolfin from Avino Silver and Gold (NYSEMkt: ASM). How many mines do you know are cash flow positive, doubling production and inked a major deal with Samsung? Here's David to tell you about it.
You can check out Avino's home page here. And you fellows will have to send me a link to your latest presentation.
Do your own due diligence before you buy anything, folks.
GoGold Resources (TSX: GGD) has the Parral tailings project in Chihuahua, Mexico. They've delivered on-time and under budget. They're spending another $5 million to double production. They have another project coming online in the first quarter of 2016.
I'll let Sean Tufford tell you the rest ...
You can check out GoGold's home page and its latest presentation.
Great Panther Silver (NYSEMkt: GPL). This company is hitting record production and lowering costs. It has plenty of great things going on. CEO Bob Archer gives you the scoop.
Visit Great Panther's home page and check out its latest presentation.
Finally, I talked to David Wolfin from Avino Silver and Gold (NYSEMkt: ASM). How many mines do you know are cash flow positive, doubling production and inked a major deal with Samsung? Here's David to tell you about it.
You can check out Avino's home page here. And you fellows will have to send me a link to your latest presentation.
Do your own due diligence before you buy anything, folks.
3 Hot Juniors from New Orleans Investment Conference - $TMI, $PGLC, $UEC
Recently, I attended the New Orleans Investment Conference. It's a darned good conference, and it's in New Orleans, so that's win-win in my book.
I talked to a bunch of junior companies while I was there. Here are three of them.
TriMetals Mining (TSX: TMI) is a gold explorer in Nevada with a big claim dotted with outcroppings of gold ore at surface.
Here is a link to TriMetals' latest presentation.
Pershing Gold (Nasdaq: PGLC) is developing a gold mine in Pershing County, Nevada.
Here is a link to Pershing Gold's latest presentation.
Uranium Energy Corp. (NYSEMkt: UEC) is a uranium producer in Texas.
Here is a link to a recent presentation from UEC. The presentation they showed me at the conference does not seem to be on the website yet. Guys, when you have it, post a link in the comments.
I talked to a bunch of junior companies while I was there. Here are three of them.
TriMetals Mining (TSX: TMI) is a gold explorer in Nevada with a big claim dotted with outcroppings of gold ore at surface.
Here is a link to TriMetals' latest presentation.
Pershing Gold (Nasdaq: PGLC) is developing a gold mine in Pershing County, Nevada.
Here is a link to Pershing Gold's latest presentation.
Uranium Energy Corp. (NYSEMkt: UEC) is a uranium producer in Texas.
Here is a link to a recent presentation from UEC. The presentation they showed me at the conference does not seem to be on the website yet. Guys, when you have it, post a link in the comments.
A Precious Find for Gold Standard Ventures ($GSV)
In September, I posted a link to a video I shot in Nevada, while on a site visit with gold explorer Gold Standard Ventures (NYSEMkt: GSV). You can see the original video here:
This week, Gold Standard Ventures announced a precious find north of its Dark Star deposit.
Here's what happened to the stock (so far).
(Updated chart)
Nice move! Well done, gentlemen. Well done, indeed. If gold wasn't so weak right now, the stock would probably be doing even better.
Today, I'm going to start posting videos from my recent trip to New Orleans, where I interviewed explorers, developers and producers. Who knows what the next precious find will be?
All the best,
Sean
This week, Gold Standard Ventures announced a precious find north of its Dark Star deposit.
Jonathan Awde, CEO and Director of Gold Standard commented: "This second, wide, high grade intercept is significant, as it gives dimension to the recently announced new discovery at Dark Star. We feel that we are in the midst of what could turn out to be another major discovery for us in one of the most prolific gold belts in the world. We are also very pleased with the progress in our ongoing Pinion and North Bullion drill programs where we expect to meet all of this year's objectives for these targets. The next 6 months will be very exciting for Gold Standard shareholders."
Here's what happened to the stock (so far).
(Updated chart)
Nice move! Well done, gentlemen. Well done, indeed. If gold wasn't so weak right now, the stock would probably be doing even better.
Today, I'm going to start posting videos from my recent trip to New Orleans, where I interviewed explorers, developers and producers. Who knows what the next precious find will be?
All the best,
Sean
Saturday, November 7, 2015
Check out this chart from StockCharts.com for $USD
The dollar is breaking out to the upside. We can rant about it all we want, but we have to deal with it.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)