With
gold starting to run again, the mid-tier and junior gold miners’
stocks in their sector’s sweet spot for upside potential are
increasingly surging. Those mounting gains on accelerating upside
momentum are attracting back traders. How far these smaller gold
stocks can likely rally in coming months partially depends on how
they are faring fundamentally. Their latest earnings season
recently wrapping up illuminates that.
Gold-stock tiers are defined by their production rates. Small
juniors mine less than 300k ounces of gold annually, medium
mid-tiers have outputs running from 300k to 1,000k, large majors
yield over 1,000k, and huge super-majors operate at vast scales
exceeding 2,000k. The mid-tiers offer a unique mix of sizable
diversified production, great output-growth potential, and smaller
market capitalizations ideal for outsized gains.
Mid-tiers are much less risky than juniors, and amplify gold’s
uplegs much more than majors. These mid-tiers are nicely tracked by
the GDXJ VanEck Junior Gold Miners ETF. Birthed in November 2009,
it now commands $3.7b of net assets making it the second-largest
sector ETF after its big-brother GDX. While GDXJ is way superior on
multiple fronts, despite its name it is overwhelmingly comprised of
mid-tier gold miners.
Like
their major brethren, the mid-tiers have had a tough year on the
Fed’s most-extreme tightening ever
catapulting the
US dollar parabolic. Between mid-April to late September, GDXJ
collapsed a dreadful 48.8%! That was driven by a parallel 17.9%
gold plunge on an epic 14.2% skyrocketing in the US Dollar
Index! But that crazy-anomalous
Fed dollar/gold
shock was ending, as I analyzed a month ago in another essay.
The
miserable day I wrote that in early November, gold and GDXJ were
still languishing near $1,631 and $28.23. The gold-stock sector had
been abandoned and left for dead after a brutal summer. But the
Fed’s ability to keep goosing the USDX igniting withering
gold-futures selling was waning. Then I argued the Fed’s
“federal-funds rate is nearing terminal-level projections, leaving
little room for more hawkish surprises.”
And
without those forcing the US dollar higher “it is overdue to roll
over hard in massive mean-reversion selling. That weaker dollar
will fuel huge normalization buying in gold futures, which have been
driven to bearish extremes. ... A strengthening gold bull will
attract back investors, amplifying its gains as inflation ravages
stock markets. The battered gold stocks will soar with gold,
winning fortunes for contrarian traders.”
That
indeed started to happen between early November into the middle of
this week. Gold blasted 8.5% higher in less than a month on the US
Dollar Index plunging 6.3%! That launched GDXJ up 26.5% in that
short span, with better mid-tiers far outperforming their
benchmark. Exiting November, we had unrealized gains in our recent
newsletter trades running as high as +66.5%! The gold stocks are
off to the races again.
So
the legions of ostriching traders who ignored this sector’s
incredible buy-low opportunities in recent months need to start
paying attention. While the mid-tiers’ and juniors’ stock-price
gains are accelerating, they remain small if a major gold upleg is
getting underway. GDXJ skyrocketed 188.9% higher in just 4.8 months
out of March 2020’s pandemic-lockdown stock panic, and GDXJ was
just bashed back to those levels!
With
massive upside potential as gold mean reverts higher, the mid-tiers’
and juniors’ fundamentals are important. For 26 quarters in a row
now, I’ve painstakingly analyzed the latest operational and
financial results reported by GDXJ’s 25 largest miners. They
accounted for 65.1% of this ETF’s total weighting as of mid-November
when Q3 earnings season ended, the lion’s share of GDXJ’s sprawling
101 component stocks.
This
table summarizes the operational and financial highlights from the
GDXJ top 25 in Q3’22. 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 Q3’21. Those symbols are followed by their
current GDXJ weightings.
Next
comes these gold miners’ Q3’22 production in ounces, along with
their year-over-year changes from the comparable Q3’21. 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 reported that particular data as of mid-November.
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.
The
elite mid-tier and junior gold miners filling GDXJ’s upper ranks
reported another challenging quarter. Adjusted for a big GDXJ
composition change, their gold production generally declined. And
their mining costs collectively surged on output problems at
individual mines and raging inflation. Nevertheless, these smaller
gold miners remain well-positioned to continuing multiplying gold’s
gains at it mean reverts way higher.
 
Marketed to investors as a “Junior Gold Miners ETF”, GDXJ certainly
shouldn’t have any super-majors in its ranks! They belong in this
same ETF manager’s larger GDX ETF. But inexplicably over this past
year, GDXJ’s custodians readded super-major Kinross Gold. It
had been a past top GDXJ component, but got rightfully booted in
Q4’20. In 2022 KGC expects to produce near a colossal 2,000k
gold-equivalent ounces!
For
years I’ve railed against majors and super-majors tainting GDXJ’s
mission and effectiveness. There’s no reason all miners producing
over 250k ounces per quarter can’t be exclusively included in GDX.
With 100+ component stocks, GDXJ has plenty of other holdings to
boost weightings on that far better reflect smaller mid-tier and
junior gold miners. Forcing Kinross back in contrary to GDXJ’s
specialty is really distorting.
Last
quarter the GDXJ-top-25 gold stocks mined 3,300k ounces of gold
which climbed a solid 4.8% year-over-year. Yet excluding KGC’s
enormous 541k Q3’22 output since it wasn’t a GDXJ component a year
earlier in Q3’21 paints a way-different picture. That slashes last
quarter’s collective production to 2,759k ounces, plunging 12.4%
YoY! That was much worse than the GDX-top-25 majors’ 4.1% YoY
decline in Q3.
Yet
GDXJ’s sequential production growth from Q2’22 really
outperformed, rocketing up 13.3% quarter-on-quarter! Kinross isn’t
a factor here, since it was added back in before that prior
quarter. The GDX top 25 which I
analyzed a couple
weeks ago saw their Q3 aggregate production plunge by 3.9%
sequentially from Q2. That was damning because global gold-mining
output usually surges dramatically from Q2s to Q3s.
The
World Gold Council tracks all that global gold supply-and-demand
data in its fantastic quarterly Gold Demand Trends reports. In
Q3’22 total world mine production surged a strong 6.5% QoQ. That’s
actually par for the course according to the WGC. During the entire
decade ending 2021, on average Q1s, Q2s, Q3s, and Q4s saw sequential
QoQ world gold production running -8.5%, +4.1%, +7.0%, and +0.7%!
So
the mid-tiers and juniors of GDXJ clocking in with outstanding 13.3%
QoQ gold production growth are far outperforming their larger major
peers. That’s the primary attribute of smaller gold miners that
makes them more attractive than larger ones. Operating at smaller
scales, it is far easier for mid-tiers and juniors to
consistently grow their gold output on balance compared to
majors which usually fail to overcome depletion.
These sweet-spot-for-upside-potential mid-tiers and juniors usually
only operate a few mines at most, so occasional expansions and
relatively-affordable mid-sized mine-builds really boost their
outputs. That helps them overcome depletion to generally grow
their production over time. Meanwhile most of the majors have
struggled with shrinking production for years, unable to find enough
gold and buy enough mines.
The
smaller gold miners’ second big advantage over larger ones is their
lower market capitalizations. In mid-November right after Q3
earnings season, these top 25 GDXJ components averaged market caps
of $2,890m. That was just 30% of the average market caps of the
GDX-top-25 majors, and that is skewed high by the majors wrongly
included in GDXJ. This smaller-miner ETF is mostly a subset of that
larger one.
I’ve
long argued GDX and GDXJ inclusion should be mutually exclusive,
greatly increasing these ETFs’ utility to investors. Since the same
company manages both, that should be easy to do. Yet 14 of these
GDXJ-top-25 stocks are also GDX-top-25 ones, and fully 21 are also
GDX components! The GDXJ top 25 were clustered between the 12th to
34th rankings in GDX, totaling 26.4% of it compared to 65.1% of
GDXJ.
Yet
despite that big overlap, the larger majors and super-majors GDXJ
excludes are mostly dead-weight in GDX. Its top 11 majors accounted
for a whopping 66.8% of its weighting exiting Q3’s earnings season,
and averaged huge market caps of $17,647m! So despite the
commingling of GDX and GDXJ holdings, the latter ETF is much better
weighting fundamentally-superior mid-tier and junior gold miners
much more highly.
Cost
inflation was extensive in the
GDX-top-25
majors’ Q3’22 results. Not surprisingly mid-tiers suffered
these same pressures. In normal times, 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 at full-speed. 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 costs across,
lowering unit costs and boosting profitability.
But
while fixed costs are the lion’s share for gold mining, it also
demands sizable variable costs. Energy is the biggest
category, including electricity to power ore-processing plants like
mills and diesel fuel to run excavators and dump trucks hauling raw
ores to those facilities. Other smaller consumables range from
explosives to blast out ores to chemical reagents necessary to
process various ores to recover their gold.
The
GDXJ top 25’s generally-lower outputs would’ve driven their costs
higher last quarter regardless of consumables prices. Less
ores processed through mills or lower-grade ores both reduce gold
ounces produced, forcing each to bear more fixed costs. But these
elite mid-tier gold miners were also paying more for variable-cost
consumables. That proved a common theme through the majority of
their quarterlies.
Pan
American Silver’s Q3’22 Management Discussion and Analysis was a
representative example of this challenge. PAAS’s management warned
that “During Q3 2022, all operations were negatively impacted by
inflationary pressures, mainly reflecting increased prices for
diesel and certain consumables, including cyanide, explosives, and
steel products (such as grinding media), as well as supply-chain
shortages.”
That
continued “We are also experiencing indirect cost increases in other
supplies and services due to the inflationary impact of diesel and
consumable prices on third-party suppliers.” And B2Gold advised
“The Company’s operations continue to be impacted by global cost
inflation with fuel costs reflecting the most significant
increases.” Diesel prices skyrocketed in the middle of this year,
more than doubling in the US!
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 mid-tier gold
miners. They illuminate the minimum gold prices necessary to keep
the mines running.
In
Q3’22 these GDXJ-top-25 mid-tiers reporting cash costs averaged a
record $987 per ounce, surging 8.9% YoY! While that is far
below prevailing gold prices, it is concerning. Thankfully a couple
extreme outliers skewed this average way higher. Excluding
the lofty cash costs reported by SSR Mining and First Majestic
Silver, the rest of these miners averaged a way-better $878 which
would’ve retreated 3.0% YoY.
SSRM
suffered a horrendous Q3, seeing its total gold production crash
51.5% YoY which was far worse than any of its peers! That was
because operations were temporarily suspended at its primary
gold mine in Turkey. In late June, a small cyanide leak was
discovered from a pipe running to its leach pad. That was quickly
cleaned and fixed, but local regulators didn’t authorize mining to
resume until late September.
That
mine being offline for a quarter catapulted SSR Mining’s cash
costs up 64.5% YoY to $1,051. They will collapse back to
inflation-adjusted norms in coming quarters with that mine running.
Even worse were First Majestic Silver’s insane $2,767 cash costs
which soared 59.5% YoY! That company operates three primary silver
mines that are thriving, and a fourth small gold one yielding under
a quarter of AG’s gold in Q3.
That
problematic mine has been plagued with sky-high costs ever since AG
bought it, and they continue to worsen despite much guidance to the
contrary. The three-fourths of First Majestic’s gold production
coming from its silver mines is considered a byproduct, so reported
cash costs are only for that little gold mine’s 16k ounces in Q3.
That rounding error of a sliver of GDXJ-top-25 output shouldn’t
unduly taint the whole.
Thanks to these same extreme outliers, the GDXJ top 25’s average
all-in sustaining costs blasted 17.7% higher YoY to a record
$1,403 per ounce in Q3’22! Interestingly that was right in line
with the GDX-top-25 majors’ $1,391. GDX also includes SSRM and AG,
so they heavily distorted its average costs as well. They reported
extreme AISCs skyrocketing 89.0% YoY to $1,901 and 45.1% YoY to a
dumbfounding $3,317!
Exclude them, and the rest of these elite mid-tier and junior gold
miners averaged far better AISCs of just $1,252 per ounce last
quarter. That would’ve merely been up 5.0% YoY, really impressive
with inflation raging worldwide! That is also right in line with
the GDX majors’ average of $1,239 excluding SSRM and AG. Both
companies expect their AISCs to plunge, forecasting full-year
2022’s running $1,330 and $1,800.
But
even GDXJ’s adjusted $1,252 is still really high, and high AISCs cut
into profit margins. A great proxy for sector unit profits is
calculated by subtracting mid-tiers’ quarterly-average AISCs of
$1,403 from the quarterly-average gold prices. Those ran $1,727 in
Q3’22, slumping a slight 3.5% YoY. That implies the GDXJ top 25
earned $324 per ounce of gold produced last quarter, which collapsed
a massive 45.8% YoY!
These elite mid-tier and junior gold miners haven’t earned so little
in any quarter since Q4’18. During the couple years leading into
Q3’22, those quarterly implied unit profits averaged a hefty $681!
But Q3’s unit earnings are also heavily distorted by those anomalous
costs at SSR Mining and First Majestic Silver. If they are excluded
the rest of the GDXJ top 25 earned a much-more-reasonable $475
per ounce last quarter.
And
that ought to really improve going forward. The majority of these
elite smaller gold miners still have 2022 AISC guidance lower than
their Q3’22 actuals. While those again averaged $1,403, the average
full-year forecasts were much lower averaging $1,232. And to
drag down 2022’s four-quarter averages so much, this current Q4
needs to see way better AISCs. Many of the GDXJ top 25 predicted
much-lower ones.
Gold
is faring better too, again soaring $138 higher in less than a
month since early November! With this exceedingly-hawkish Fed
out of room to keep surprising markets after such uber-aggressive
tightening, gold is mean reverting out of
this year’s
extreme anomaly. While gold is only averaging $1,697
quarter-to-date in Q4, that should improve considerably as gold
continues powering higher on the weakening US dollar.
Assume gold averages around $1,725 this quarter and GDXJ-top-25 Q4
average AISCs plunge near $1,175 on better production, and
mid-tiers’ implied unit profits could nearly double back up to $550
per ounce! While predicting a precise target is impossible, all
signs are pointing to much-better profitability in Q4 than Q3.
Last quarter had a lot of individual-mine challenges that these
companies said are being resolved.
These elite gold miners’ hard accounting data reported to securities
regulators under Generally Accepted Accounting Principles or other
countries’ equivalents also reflected Q3’22’s trials. Even
including Kinross, the GDXJ top 25’s total revenues still fell 5.5%
YoY to $6,555m. That reflects generally lower gold output excluding
KGC, which again fell 12.4% YoY. Those lower average gold prices
certainly didn’t help either.
The
mid-tiers’ and juniors’ actual accounting profits looked far worse,
plummeting from $212m a year earlier to a $240m loss in Q3’22! But
these weak earnings were skewed by unusual one-time losses that were
flushed through income statements. An example is Osisko Gold
Royalties’ big $108m non-cash loss in Q3’22, on no longer
consolidating its former mine-development division in its corporate
financial statements.
Cash
flows generated from operations were also weak even with Kinross’s
addition, falling 14.6% YoY to $1,343m. That’s still consistent
with lower production and softer gold prices though. Finally the
GDXJ top 25’s aggregate cash treasuries fell a similar 15.0% YoY to
$7,817m. That’s above midway between the 26-quarter range running
from $3,576m to $10,144m, leaving these smaller gold miners with
plenty of cash.
They’ll probably continue using it to expand their existing gold
mines and develop new ones, growing their production on balance.
Some of these mid-tiers have new mine-builds that are going live in
coming quarters. They are projected to operate at much lower all-in
sustaining costs than existing mines, which will drag down
companies’ overall costs. The fundamentally-superior mid-tiers and
juniors have huge upside potential!
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The
bottom line is the mid-tier and junior gold miners reported a
challenging Q3. They generally suffered lower production on
individual-mine problems, which combined with inflationary pressures
to force mining costs to record highs. Yet these companies are
reporting those issues are largely resolved, paving the way for
better output and lower costs during this current Q4. That should
really boost mid-tiers’ profitability.
And
their earnings should be further supercharged by gold itself mean
reverting way higher. Big gold-futures buying is fueling a growing
gold upleg as the Fed-goosed US dollar rolls over hard. Gold’s
strong upside momentum is attracting back traders and rekindling
bullish sentiment. That will drive increasing interest in the
fundamentally-superior smaller gold-mining stocks, which really
amplify gold’s gains during uplegs. |