The
major gold miners just reported their best quarterly results ever!
Record gold prices combined with lower mining costs catapulted unit
earnings to dazzling new records. Yet despite exploding
profitability, gold stocks continue to lag gold’s mighty upleg.
This anomaly won’t last, as investors increasingly realize how
seriously undervalued this sector remains. The resulting capital
inflows will drive gold stocks way higher.
The
GDX VanEck Gold Miners ETF remains this sector’s dominant
benchmark. Birthed way back in May 2006, GDX has parlayed its
first-mover advantage into an insurmountable lead. Its $14.0b of
net assets mid-week dwarfed the next-largest 1x-long
major-gold-miners ETF by nearly 25x! GDX is undisputedly the
trading vehicle of choice in this sector, with the world’s biggest
gold miners commanding most of its 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+. Those two largest categories
account for nearly 4/7ths of GDX.
While GDX’s overall Q2’24 performance remained weak, it is
improving. Last quarter this leading gold-stock ETF climbed 7.3% on
a 4.7% gold rally, for 1.6x upside leverage. Normally the major
gold miners of GDX amplify material gold moves by 2x to 3x.
With gold and gold-stock gains mounting, traders are starting to
take notice. In Q1 GDX had only edged up 2.0% on a 7.6% gold surge,
for dreadful 0.3x leverage.
As a
little contrarian sector usually overlooked, gold stocks have to
achieve amazing feats before they win investors’ respect and
capital. So they tend to underperform earlier in gold bulls, but
way outperform later once they are well-established. Gold’s latest
upleg has already powered up into mighty territory, rallying a
massive 35.8% at best since early October! Gold just achieved its
latest nominal
record of $2,472 this week.
Gold’s hefty gains have certainly driven GDX higher, with its own
upleg climbing 51.6% at best within this same span. But so far that
has only amplified gold a still-anemic 1.4x, which is unusual well
into a major gold upleg achieving
new record-high
streaks. The gold stocks remain fantastic buys relatively late
in gold’s powerful run thanks to this unsustainable anomaly. Past
precedent agues way-bigger gains are coming.
Gold’s last two uplegs attaining new records both crested in 2020,
averaging monster 41.4% gains. GDX leveraged those by a good 2.5x,
averaging 105.4% gains during them! Yet major gold stocks are up
less than half that in today’s similarly-mighty gold upleg.
They’ll catch up, so gold stocks remain a heck of an opportunity.
Their glorious record Q2 results should really up sector interest
among institutional investors.
For
33 quarters in a row now, I’ve painstakingly analyzed the latest
operational and financial results from GDX’s 25-largest component
stocks. Mostly super-majors, majors, and larger mid-tiers, they
dominate this ETF at 87.5% of its total weighting! While digging
through quarterlies is a ton of work, understanding the gold miners’
latest fundamentals really cuts through the obscuring sentiment fogs
shrouding this sector.
This
table summarizes the operational and financial highlights from the
GDX top 25 during Q2’24. These gold miners’ stock symbols aren’t
all US listings, and are preceded by their rankings changes within
GDX 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
current GDX 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.
At
the end of June a few weeks before Q2’s earnings season even
started, I wrote an essay called “Gold
Miners’ Record Quarter”. I concluded then “...gold miners will
soon report a record quarter. ... Amazingly major gold miners’
average Q2 profits are now tracking over an unprecedented $1,000 per
ounce.” That indeed came to pass, well exceeding even my high
expectations of “awesome unit profits of $1,013 per ounce!”
Before we get to the fantastic news, the major gold stocks’ Q2
output disappointed. 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.
Ominously the GDX-top-25 gold majors’ collective production plunged
7.8% YoY to just 7,465k ounces last quarter! That drop was the
second-worst in this research thread, to the lowest levels seen
in its entire long 33-quarter span! These elite gold miners way
underperformed their smaller peers, as the World Gold Council’s
comprehensive Q2 gold supply-and-demand data showed global mining
output climbing 3.3% YoY.
Thankfully this is all due to lazy quarterly reporting. GDX
includes super-major and major South African and Chinese gold
miners. The former report in half-year increments, but on a
more-relaxed schedule than American and Canadian gold miners. The
latter only haphazardly report in English, and when they deign to
their scant results can be delayed for many months. Q2’24 reporting
proved even worse than usual.
South Africa’s Gold Fields didn’t release any Q2 results as of
mid-week, which is atypical. Normally it at least publishes
quarterly updates by now, if not full half-year results. GFI’s
management has probably been distracted by their new buyout of
Canada’s Osisko Mining, to consolidate ownership in a great gold
deposit they jointly own. South Africa’s Harmony Gold’s fiscal year
ends in Q2, so that report is always later.
China’s Zijin Mining and Zhaojin Mining haven’t reported any Q2
results yet either. Occasionally they put out something in the
normal quarter-end reporting window, but mostly not. In the
comparable Q2’23, the super-majors Zijin and Gold Fields had
reported mining 1,091k ounces. But Zhaojin and Harmony had not
issued any quarterly results yet back then. Excluding all four
makes for a much-better annual comparison.
Without them, the GDX top 25’s aggregate Q2’23 production falls to
7,005k ounces. That would leave the latest 7,465k in Q2’24 up an
excellent 6.6% YoY, double the WGC’s global-gold-mining rise!
That being said, the super-majors and majors continue to struggle to
overcome depletion. That’s been a vexing problem in gold stocks for
many years now, and one key reason smaller gold miners way
outperform larger ones.
The
world’s largest gold miner Newmont remains the leading example.
Last quarter its production soared 29.6% YoY to 1,607k ounces, which
looks awesome. But that big growth only happened because NEM
gobbled up Australian super-major Newcrest Mining for $16.8b last
year, with that deal closing in early November. Mergers and
acquisitions usually provide short-lived four-quarter production
boosts in this sector.
Just
a year ago in Q2’23, NEM and NCM as separate entities produced
1,796k ounces. So the combined Newmont’s output actually
effectively plunged 10.5% YoY! Newmont has proven a serial
disappointer on both the production-growth and mining-cost fronts
for many years, really retarding GDX’s performance. NEM has long
been the
gold-stock mega-merger ringleader, which have always been quite
bad for this sector.
Unable to organically grow production at their vast scales,
super-majors spend tens of billions of dollars to buy smaller
rivals. These acquired gold miners are usually
fundamentally-superior, operating fewer gold mines at lower costs.
Their resulting better profitability and lower market
capitalizations give their stocks greater upside leverage to gold.
But those advantages vanish once assimilated into the super-major
Borg.
Newcrest, along with earlier Newmont prey including Goldcorp, had
far-better fundamentals and stock-price performance when they were
standalone companies. In Q2’23 for example, NCM’s all-in sustaining
costs ran $1,196 per ounce mined. That was way more profitable than
NEM’s $1,472 then. Despite often touting its supposed economies of
scale, Newmont’s AISCs are usually among majors’ highest and worst.
You’d think with NCM’s pre-merger production running nearly a third
of the combined NEM’s, the latter’s AISCs would retreat to reflect
that new blend. Yet last quarter Newmont’s all-in sustaining costs
still surged 6.1% to $1,562, the least-profitable among all
reporting super-majors! Something is dreadfully wrong when
acquiring superior lower-cost gold miners fails to drag down overall
costs in the merged companies.
In
addition to slaying fundamentally-superior smaller majors and larger
mid-tiers with much-better upside potential, gold-stock mega-mergers
taint this sector in other damaging ways. Both Newmont and Barrick
Gold have long chronically overpaid to execute their competing
buyouts, squandering their shareholders’ wealth. These deals
are also mostly financed by huge share issuances, heavily diluting
existing owners.
I
sure wish that only hurt NEM and GOLD shareholders, but it really
tarnishes this entire industry. These dominant super-majors
accounting for 23.3% of GDX’s weighting are plagued by endless
staggering goodwill writeoffs for their huge buyout
overpayments. I saw a study as of the end of Q1 pegging those at
$17.2b over the years for Newmont and a jaw-dropping $39.5b for
Barrick! These devastate accounting earnings.
Fund
managers often look at aggregate sector profitability before
deciding to allocate capital to individual stocks. Colossal
mega-merger writeoffs greatly taint that, masking awesome
fundamentals of plenty of wildly-profitable mid-tier and junior gold
miners. Newmont’s and Barrick’s mismanagement have left their
stocks among the GDX top 25’s weaker performers, with their heavy
weightings retarding gold-stock upside.
Distorted by often-floundering super-majors, it’s unfortunate GDX
remains this sector’s most-popular benchmark. Settling for this ETF
guarantees sector underperformance compared to researched stock
picking, staying with better fundamentally-superior
mid-tiers and
juniors to avoid all that deadweight. They are consistently
growing their outputs with organic expansions, often driving down
mining costs for fatter profits.
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.
The
GDX top 25 reported their highest-ever average cash costs in Q2,
$1,020 per ounce which climbed 6.7% YoY! There were no extreme
outliers skewing that, with nearly 3/4ths of these miners that
reported cash costs seeing increases. Everything is getting more
expensive in this inflation-ravaged world, thanks to central banks’
colossal debt monetizations. That includes most of gold mining’s
necessary direct costs.
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 major gold
miners’ true operating profitability.
Incredibly last quarter the GDX top 25 gold miners averaged just
$1,239 AISCs, which plunged 10.2% YoY! That was the biggest
annual retreat by far in this 33-quarter research thread, to the
lowest GDX-top-25 average AISCs since Q1’22! Back in that late-June
earnings-season-preview essay, I had predicted “...Q2 average
AISCs could fall as low as $1,235”. The primary reason was
one extreme low-cost outlier.
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 GDX top 25 averaged a much-higher $1,360 per ounce in Q2.
Interestingly that still would’ve shrunk 1.5% YoY, the majors’ trend
of mining costs grinding lower is real. For three of the last four
quarters, GDX-top-25 AISCs have retreated. Before that they had
risen for 19 quarters in a row!
For
the great majority of the last 33 quarters, the GDX 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.
Q2’24’s average gold price blasted up 18.2% YoY to a dazzling record
$2,337! That trounced all previous highwater marks including
Q1’24’s $2,072 and Q2’23’s $1,978. Last quarter’s phenomenal gold
prices less those GDX-top-25 average AISCs of $1,239 catapulted
sector unit profits to a jaw-dropping $1,099 per ounce! That
proved the best ever by far, shattering the last record of $884
achieved way back in Q3’20.
Those average unit earnings soared 83.7% YoY, leaving their
four-quarter explosion running +93.8%, +42.3%, +34.9%, and that
+83.7%! There’s almost certainly no other sector in all the stock
markets seeing earnings surge as fast as the gold miners. This is
going to increasingly attract fundamentally-oriented fund investors
to deploy capital, and relatively-small institutional buying will
catapult gold stocks way higher.
Potential upside targets are outside the scope of this essay, but I
analyzed some of those in mid-July predicting
gold stocks
proportionally overshooting to the upside. I did more work on
that a couple weeks ago looking at a
gold-stock
tipping point nearing. That’s when usually-ignored gold stocks’
popularity snowballs as gains mount, enticing traders to
increasingly chase their strong momentum amplifying their gains.
And
gold-mining earnings are set to continue growing, supporting
much-higher stock prices. This current Q3 is half over, and gold
has already averaged a stunning new record $2,406 so far!
Meanwhile many of the GDX top 25 are forecasting higher production
and thus lower AISCs in H2’24 than in H1’24. Newmont is a great
example, declaring in its Q2 results it is “On track to deliver 2024
guidance for production, costs”.
NEM
is still forecasting AISCs to average $1,400 this year, even though
they were considerably higher in Q1 and Q2 at $1,439 and $1,562. In
order to drag down full-year AISCs near $1,400, Q3 and Q4 would have
to average just $1,300! I’m skeptical Newmont can achieve that
given its dismal track record, but its AISCs still ought to trend
lower. Higher Q3 gold prices with lower GDX-top-25 AISCs will
make for fatter profits.
The
major gold miners’ hard accounting results under Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles or other countries’ equivalents were also very
strong in Q2. The GDX-top-25 majors reporting revenues saw them
soar 25.3% YoY in aggregate to $17,449m! Those were on the higher
side of the last 33 quarters, mainly because total production was
considerably higher in the past and Chinese miners sometimes
reported sales.
The
GDX top 25’s bottom-line accounting earnings matched their implied
unit profits, skyrocketing 72.1% YoY to $2,905m last
quarter! Those were understated too, due to unusual noncash items
periodically flushed through income statements. These are typically
impairment writedowns, and NEM didn’t fail to add another $246m of
those on top of Q1’24’s $485m! Adjusting for such items, GDX-top-25
profits were $3,394m.
That
soared an even-bigger 88.8% YoY from similarly-adjusted Q2’23
levels! These adjusted earnings were almost certainly gold miners’
best ever, but rarely bottom-line nets have been higher. Those were
driven by unusual huge noncash gains like reversals of impairment
charges or revaluing existing mines higher for new deals being
done. As adjusted earnings are nebulous and subjective, I haven’t
recorded them.
With
record gold prices and good production, the GDX top 25’s total cash
flows generated from their operations soared 46.1% YoY to $6,905m.
That’s also among the highest ever, only exceeded when those Chinese
gold majors randomly decided to grace investors with their quarterly
financials. Total cash treasuries grew 4.5% YoY to $15,652m, which
was also on the higher side of the last 33 quarters’ data.
And
on that gold-stock-tipping-point front, there’s evidence investors
indeed started paying attention to major gold miners’ Q2 results!
Barrick reported on August 12th, with unimpressive 6.0%-YoY output
shrinkage and AISCs surging 10.6% to a too-high $1,498. Yet its
stock blasted 9.1% higher that day since earnings per share of $0.32
beat analysts’ estimates of $0.26, surprising fund managers
not paying attention.
One
of our trades IAMGOLD reported after the close on August 8th, and
its stock rocketed up 16.3% the next day! IAG’s production
soared 55.1% YoY, forcing its AISCs 15.4% lower. Incredibly it also
upped its full-year production guidance by a huge 12.5% while
slashing its AISC guidance by 5.2% from respective midpoints! Gold
stocks’ phenomenal fundamentals are starting to get noticed, which
is a super-bullish omen.
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The
bottom line is major gold miners just reported their best quarter
ever, with unit earnings skyrocketing to their highest levels on
record by far! Enormous earnings were fueled by average gold prices
dazzling at all-time highs while mining costs ground lower. These
trends are likely to persist, yet gold-stock prices remain seriously
undervalued relative to their super-bullish fundamentals. This
anomaly can’t and won’t last.
Gold
miners’ phenomenal Q2 results will help drive more investor
interest. As sector gains increasingly mount, sentiment is nearing
a tipping point where gold stocks return to favor. That will bring
back traders in droves to chase growing gains, driving a massive
mean reversion and overshoot to opposing extremes. There’s still
time to add gold-stock allocations to portfolios before they grow
more popular and soar again. |