Skip to Content
scroll

What does the future hold for gold miners and their shareholders?

Our Q&As are emailed in our Saturday Morning Report, find the answer to this question below.

The Latest Q&A

Question asked

What does the future hold for gold miners and their shareholders?

Hi Guys, Thanks always for generously making yourselves available to answer our questions! As I write, the gold price is more than $6100 per Oz AUD ($4000 USD). If the price of gold remains at or above say $3000 USD for an extended period of time - years. What will the gold miners do with the outsized profits they will be receiving? Questions Can/should investors expect outsized dividends? Obviously hedging will affect profits. How far into the future do gold miners hedge sales? Also, Is there likely to be a scramble of consolidation in the industry? Who are likely to be the winners from consolidation? Cheers, Nick

Answer

Hi Nick,

A few questions in here but it’s certainly an interesting “Hot” topic today with spot gold having traded above $US4050 / $A6150 on Wednesday. We are bullish towards gold medium term making your questions very valid, even though we are a little cautious in the short term. We can go back and look at the playbooks from coal and iron ore stocks who made huge profits in recent years as their respective commodities surged higher, until one day they proved again that commodities are cyclical markets:

  • We anticipate a mixture of more exploration expenditure as previously uneconomic projects now make sense financially, buybacks and growing dividends.

In terms of hedging, which can be a two-edged sword, it’s a mixed bag with many such as Evolution Mining (EVN), Westgold (WGX) Newmont (NEM) and now Regis Resources (RRL) largely unhedged. Similarly, Northern Star (NST) have ceased their forward hedging policy recently, in order to take advantage of rising gold prices.

  • At this stage NST still has ~20% of forward production hedged and EVN ~6%.

Importantly hedging is a lever that miners can pull when they see fit but with gold rising exponentially it’s not surprising that many have eased off, a good reason gold could drop a few hundred dollars quickly!

Consolidation works only when assets work together. Consolidation simply to get bigger, is not a good strategy. We will see more of it, but in our view, gold companies are generally better off focussing on production efficiencies, driving down costs, and delivering value to shareholders in that way, rather than focussing heavily on M&A.

chart
image description
VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX)
Back to top