The
mid-tier and junior gold miners in this sector’s sweet spot for
upside potential just finished reporting truly-spectacular quarterly
results. Fueled by dazzling record gold prices and lower mining
costs, smaller gold miners’ unit earnings skyrocketed to their
highest levels ever. Those incredibly-rich profits have left
mid-tiers even more undervalued relative to prevailing gold prices,
portending massive catch-up rallying.
The
leading mid-tier-gold-stock benchmark is the GDXJ VanEck Junior Gold
Miners ETF. With $5.5b in net assets mid-week, it remains the
second-largest gold-stock ETF after its big brother GDX. That is
dominated by far-larger major gold miners, though there is much
overlap between these ETFs’ holdings. Still misleadingly named,
GDXJ is overwhelmingly a mid-tier gold-stock ETF with juniors
having little 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+. Today only three of GDXJ’s 25
biggest holdings are true juniors!
Their Q2 outputs are highlighted in blue in the table below.
Juniors not only mine less than 75k ounces per quarter, but their
gold output generates over half their quarterly revenues.
That excludes streaming and royalty companies that purchase future
gold output for big upfront payments used to finance mine-builds,
and primary silver miners producing byproduct gold. But mid-tiers
often make better investments than juniors.
These gold miners dominating GDXJ offer a unique mix of sizable
diversified production, excellent output-growth potential, and
smaller market capitalizations ideal for outsized gains.
Mid-tiers are less risky than juniors, while amplifying gold uplegs
more than majors. So we’ve long specialized in the
fundamentally-superior mid-tiers and juniors at Zeal, actively
trading these smaller gold miners for a quarter-century now.
All
1,510 newsletter stock trades realized as of Q2’24 averaged +15.6%
annualized gains, about double the long-term stock-market
average! And that’s heading higher, after early August’s Japanic
fear spike stopped out more trades with big realized gains. We’ve
been refilling our newsletter trading books since, as gold-stock
prices remain way too low relative to their phenomenal fundamentals
at lofty prevailing gold levels.
GDXJ’s latest upleg has powered 59.2% higher at best over 9.4 months
into mid-July. That’s still modest by historical precedent, and
smaller gold miners’ gains really accelerate later in gold uplegs.
The longer and higher gold climbs, the more bullish sentiment that
fuels which attracts back traders to chase big gold-stock gains.
Eventually a
psychological tipping point is reached and that buying becomes
self-feeding.
For
33 quarters in a row now, I’ve painstakingly analyzed the latest
operational and financial results from GDXJ’s 25-largest component
stocks. Mostly mid-tiers, they now account for 65.6% of this ETF’s
total weighting. While digging through quarterlies is a ton of
work, understanding smaller gold miners’ latest fundamentals really
cuts through the obscuring sentiment fogs shrouding this sector.
This research is essential.
This
table summarizes the GDXJ top 25’s operational and financial
highlights during Q2’24. These gold miners’ stock symbols aren’t
all US listings, and are preceded by their rankings changes within
GDXJ over this past year. The shuffling in their ETF weightings
reflects shifting market caps, which reveal both outperformers and
underperformers since Q2’23. Those symbols are followed by their
recent GDXJ weightings.
Next
comes these gold miners’ Q2’24 production in ounces, along with
their year-over-year changes from the comparable Q2’23. 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.
Weeks before Q2 earnings season even began, I predicted last quarter
would prove gold miners’ most-profitable ever in a late-June
essay on “Gold
Miners’ Record Quarter”. But despite my high expectations, the
smaller gold miners’ epic Q2 performances exceeded them! This
still-mostly-unloved sector is firing on all cylinders. Yet the
vast majority of traders remain unaware, leaving massive room to
chase this bull.
The
GDXJ top 25 experienced some major composition changes over the past
year, with five smaller gold miners rocketing up into these elite
ranks. All are mid-tier and junior producers, which usually have
way-better fundamentals than streamers, royalty companies, and
explorers. So GDXJ is becoming purer as traders bid better
producers’ stocks much higher, increasing this ETF’s upside leverage
to higher gold prices.
These GDXJ-top-25 stocks are mostly an expanded subset of the
GDX-top-25 majors. I analyzed their new Q2 results in
last week’s essay,
which were also awesome yet still not as impressive as GDXJ’s.
These GDXJ-top-25 stocks representing 65.6% of this ETF are also
collectively weighted at 25.3% in GDX. GDXJ effectively lops off
GDX’s nine largest holdings, which are mostly deadweight
super-majors.
Those gigantic gold miners perpetually struggle to overcome
depletion at the vast scales they operate. So their output
generally shrinks, except for four quarters after expensive
acquisitions. Their extensive stables of mines also tend to have
higher costs, making for lower profitability. And because of
far-larger market capitalizations, super-majors’ stocks are much
harder to bid higher during major gold uplegs.
Production growth trumps everything else as the primary mission for
gold miners. Higher outputs boost operating cash flows which help
fund mine expansions, builds, and purchases, fueling virtuous
circles of growth. Mining more gold also boosts profitability,
lowering unit costs by spreading big fixed operational expenses
across more ounces. The GDXJ top 25 eked out 0.4%-YoY output growth
to 2,937k ounces in Q2.
While small, that extended mid-tiers’ production-growth streak to
eight of the last nine quarters! That’s quite impressive,
especially compared to the GDX majors’ overall output sliding lower
for six quarters in a row now. The big composition changes in
GDXJ’s upper ranks didn’t affect that comparison much. Also in the
comparable Q2’23, South Africa’s Harmony Gold and China’s Zhaojin
Mining hadn’t reported results yet.
And
the same two non-producing explorers were also among the GDXJ top 25
a year ago, Canada’s Filo Corp. and Australia’s De Grey Mining.
Both are advancing major gold deposits still years from
mine-builds. DEG’s definitive feasibility study for its Australian
project estimated annual production averaging a huge 530k ounces!
And that gold would be super-profitable to mine with AISCs forecast
down near $850 per ounce.
The
standout GDXJ-top-25 performer last quarter was IAMGOLD, which
achieved fantastic 55.1%-YoY production growth! IAG is ramping up a
brand-new gold mine projected to yield 347k ounces each year for the
first six of a long 18-year mining life. That will grow this
mid-tier’s overall production by about 3/4ths, while
seriously boosting corporate earnings with life-of-mine AISCs
expected to average just $854.
This
mine just went commercial in early August, after Q2. Yet IAMGOLD’s
Q2 results still proved so darned impressive its stock soared
16.3% higher the day after they were reported! That output
surge helped drive AISCs 15.4% lower since Q2’23. Unusually so late
in a year, IAG also upped 2024 production guidance at its two other
mines by 12.5% at the midpoint, while slashing their projected AISCs
by 5.2%.
IAG
stock is wildly outperforming even GDXJ, skyrocketing 160.9%
higher at best since early October! Yet this growing mid-tier
remains cheap fundamentally, trading at a 21.6x
trailing-twelve-month price-to-earnings ratio which is low for gold
stocks. We’ve traded IAG a bunch of times over the years, and first
recommended it as a long-term investment at $1.52 per share. This
good stock closed at $5.27 mid-week.
There are plenty of other great growth stories among mid-tiers and
juniors. We’ve always prioritized high-potential smaller gold
miners with new expansions and mine-builds soon going live for our
newsletter trades. These tend to surprise most traders, since it
takes so much expertise and time to stay abreast of many dozens of
gold stocks. Finding such opportunities before the rest of the herd
is incredibly valuable.
Another thriving mid-tier we’ve long traded and invested in is
Eldorado Gold. EGO’s production grew a good 11.8% YoY in Q2, and
this company reiterated its 2024 midpoint guidance of mining 530k
ounces. That is nice growth from 2023’s 485k, and Eldorado has
already forecast midpoint outputs of 570k in 2025, 663k in 2026, and
705k in 2027! EGO stock has soared 113.8% in this upleg, yet still
trades at a 20.0x P/E.
Great mid-tier and junior growth plays like these are discussed
often in our newsletters, enabling our subscribers paying the bills
supporting these essays to buy in earlier and lower. With such
amazing opportunities and huge gains among smaller gold miners, why
bother with the deadweight-retarded GDX ETF at all? And even the
GDXJ top 25 is saddled with plenty of stocks that chronically
underperform.
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.
In
Q2’24 the GDXJ top 25’s average cash costs soared 16.2% YoY to
$1,048 per ounce, the highest on record! But that remains far below
prevailing gold prices, so it isn’t concerning. That was also
dragged higher by an extreme outlier, Equinox Gold’s $1,747. This
mid-tier faced unusual challenges last quarter, mainly transitioning
one of its eight mines to a new pit deposit after “geotechnical
issues” in a depleting one.
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 mid-tier
gold miners’ true operating profitability.
The
GDXJ top 25’s average AISCs last quarter amazingly fell 5.8% YoY
to just $1,242 per ounce! That proved their fifth consecutive
quarter of sizable-to-big annual declines, to their lowest levels
since Q1’22! As I’ll analyze shortly, such low costs naturally
fueled fantastic profits. But unfortunately those average AISCs
were skewed much lower by another extreme outlier, this time to the
downside which is quite unusual.
Astoundingly Peru’s Buenaventura reported deeply-negative AISCs last
quarter of -$578 per ounce! This sorcery is only possible
because of big silver, copper, zinc, and lead byproducts. Just 30%
of BVN’s Q2 revenues came from gold, but like plenty of
poly-metallic miners it chooses to report in gold-centric terms.
That’s a shrewd decision, as gold stocks command higher interest and
earnings multiples than base-metals miners.
Buenaventura has a big revamped silver-zinc-lead mine ramping back
up. While BVN’s gold production fell 10.9% YoY last quarter,
silver, zinc, and lead output skyrocketed 175.2%, 82.0%, and
134.8%! And in Q2 that mine was only operating at 80% capacity, and
is expected to ramp to 100% by year-end. So this company could
report super-low gold AISCs due to byproduct credits for
years to come, dragging down averages.
As
BVN had long languished as a super-high-cost gold miner, it is
tempting to exclude its negative AISCs. Without them, the rest of
the GDXJ top 25 averaged a much-higher $1,356 in Q2. That would
have risen a modest 2.8% YoY, still good. Yet EQX was an opposing
high-cost outlier at $2,041 last quarter, and without it or BVN the
rest of these elite mid-tiers were running $1,310 AISCs which
slipped 0.7% YoY.
For
the great majority of the last 33 quarters, the GDXJ top 25’s
average AISCs were skewed higher by a handful of extreme outliers.
While I pointed that out in every results essay, I always still used
the actual averages including outliers to calculate implied
sector unit profits. BVN was often one of those super-high-AISC
ones, and for consistency its super-low negative AISCs now also have
to be included in this analysis.
Gold
powered up to 11 new nominal record closes in Q2’24, helping
catapult last quarter’s average price up 18.2% since Q2’23 to a
dazzling record $2,337! That trounced all previous highwater marks
including Q1’24’s $2,072 and Q2’23’s $1,978. Subtract last
quarter’s GDXJ-top-25 average AISCs of $1,242 from that, and
mid-tiers and juniors earned crazy record unit profits of $1,095
per ounce! That is off-the-charts high.
The
previous record unit earnings were $928 way back in Q3’20, when both
gold prices and AISCs were much lower. Professional fund investors
love earnings growth, and the GDXJ top 25’s unit profits last
quarter soared 66.2% YoY. And that’s just the latest in a
magnificent five-quarter streak unparalleled in all the stock
markets, where sector unit profits skyrocketed 33.8%, 106.4%,
125.7%, 62.6%, and 66.2% YoY!
No
wonder plenty of fundamentally-superior smaller gold miners’ stocks
have already more than doubled in this upleg, and will likely at
least double again before it gives up its ghost. With
broader-stock-market earnings likely to come under increasing
pressure as Americans struggle with raging inflation, gold stocks
are a shiny bastion of epic profits growth. And that remains on
track to persist during coming quarters.
Over
halfway through Q3 now, gold has already averaged $2,419 on close
this quarter! That is likely to climb further before quarter-end
too, with gold now trading around $2,500. Combining with
even-higher gold prices are plenty of GDXJ-top-25 miners forecasting
better production and lower costs in the back half of 2024
compared to its first half. I found plenty of examples of that
wading through the latest quarterlies.
Another one of our fast-growing smaller-gold-stock trades and
investments is New Gold. From early October to mid-week, NGD stock
has skyrocketed a phenomenal 202.2% higher! Yes, that’s already
a triple in still-immature gold and gold-stock uplegs. In its
Q2 quarterly NGD declared “production set to increase and all-in
sustaining costs set to decrease in the second half of the year”,
detailing all the reasons.
GDXJ-top-25 average AISCs also have a solid chance of forging lower
again in Q3’24. But conservatively let’s assume gold averages just
$2,400 and AISCs surge back up to $1,300. That still would make for
huge record GDXJ-top-25 unit profits of $1,100, which would soar
another 65% YoY! As more investors finally realize how fast and
huge gold-mining earnings are growing, they will flood back in to
chase this sector.
These elite mid-tiers’ hard accounting results under Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles or other countries’ equivalents were
also quite strong in Q2 despite GDXJ-top-25 composition changes.
Overall revenues surged 13.2% YoY to $7,731m. But that’s not a
record because major Harmony Gold hasn’t reported yet. Its fiscal
years end in Q2s, so Q2 and full-year results are released later
than other quarters’.
Bottom-line accounting profits soared 48.2% YoY to $832m
collectively across the GDXJ top 25. But as always in this sector,
there were plenty of large unusual items flushed through some income
statements in Q2’24 and the comparable Q2’23. The biggest by far
was Equinox Gold recognizing a $470m gain on its previous 60%
stake in its big mine-build, when EQX bought the remaining 40% from
a joint-venture company!
But
estimating adjusted earnings last quarter is more muddled than
usual. Several of the GDXJ top 25 reported big deferred income
taxes, which weren’t separated from normal quarterly income taxes.
So after spending too much time trying to understand all the
income-statement notes explaining these latest unusual items, they
still aren’t clear enough. So I can’t reliably estimate overall
Q2’24 adjusted earnings.
These elite mid-tiers’ and juniors’ cash flows generated from
operations climbed 26.3% YoY to $2,645m, while their cash treasuries
surged 10.7% to $7,402m. Both are on the higher sides of their
ranges during the last 33 quarters. The GDXJ top 25 are earning and
holding plenty of cash to continue financing their all-important
expansions and mine-builds, which are necessary to continue growing
production on balance.
With
gold achieving new records, gold miners earning money hand over
fist, yet gold stocks remaining seriously undervalued relative to
prevailing gold levels, this sector’s setup remains
exceptionally-bullish. Sooner or later gold-stock sentiment
will reach a tipping point where speculators and investors alike
rush to chase their mounting gains. Before gold stocks blast higher
again, you need to get informed and get deployed.
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The
bottom line is the mid-tier and junior gold miners just reported
truly-spectacular quarterly results. As they continued collectively
growing production, record gold prices fueled its highest quarterly
average ever by far. Such lofty gold levels combined with lower
average mining costs made for massive record unit earnings, forcing
long-battered gold-stock valuations relative to gold even lower.
That’s all super-bullish.
And
with gold forging higher still and plenty of gold miners forecasting
lower costs in coming quarters, gold-stock profits are heading even
higher. Such rich and fat earnings should increasingly attract fund
investors to this sector, driving gold-stock prices much higher.
Traders need to do their homework and get deployed before this
sector reaches its psychological tipping point, when chasing spawns
big popular buying. |