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Rampant debt, credit deflation and
impotent monetary policies are fueling a bull market for gold and gold
equities according to Jay Taylor, editor and publisher of J. Taylor's
Gold, Energy & Tech Stocks. His Progress A1 companies were up a
combined 22% as of Oct. 17. Taylor shares those names and some lesser-known
stories in this Gold
Report interview.
The Gold Report: Jay, what investment themes are
you focusing on in your newsletter?
Jay Taylor: I focus a lot on the huge credit
deflation that the markets are demanding. Debt has become so large that it
cannot be serviced with the amount of income available. The so-called
solution requires the creation of more debt money. In a
fiat currency system, money is debt.
At some point,
total debt levels have to be wound down to levels akin to the normal levels
of the past when total debt to GDP in the U.S. ranged between 175% and 225%.
Following Lehman Brothers it grew to over 360%! These debt levels simply
cannot be repaid from current income steams even with zero interest rates.
Those debt levels are leading to tension in the banking system that bodes
very well for gold because people are starting to lose confidence in the
banking system and in the fiat monetary system itself. As long as credit
deflation remains intact, it will be a very bullish environment for gold and
gold mining stocks.
"As long as credit deflation remains intact, it will be a
very bullish environment for gold and gold mining stocks."
Another major
focus is what I call the "real" price of gold. Is gold going up
relative to most other things? Or, putting it another way, what will an ounce
of gold buy? I like to measure gold's purchasing power in terms of the Rogers
Raw Materials Fund, which includes energy, base metals, food and clothing
related commodities like cotton and wool. Indeed, the real price of gold has
risen dramatically from 17% in July 2008 just before the Lehman Brothers
failure to something like 44% of the fund by March 2009 (See chart below); it
has risen to 49.5% at the height of the European crisis a few months back.
 
From 17%
pre-Lehman Brothers in July 2008 to 47% at the end of October, the trend of
gold's purchasing power in terms of how much of the Rogers Raw Materials Fund
it will buy is in a clear and dramatic Uptrend. Not surprisingly then, the
profits of major gold producers has risen as demonstrated in the chart above.
It is not a
coincidence that gold mining profits of the big household names in the gold
space rose along with the real gold price.
To keep track of
how the big gold mining firms are doing, I follow the earnings of seven majors. If you add up the per-share profits, their
consolidated per-share profits went from $8.30 in 2008 to $20.50 in 2011. The
consensus analyst estimates for 2012 are down a bit to $19.75 in 2012. For
2013, the latest prediction of the collective profits for these seven
companies are $24—almost triple where they were in 2008 on the eve of
this major ongoing credit deleveraging crisis.
TGR: Which miners comprise that list,
Jay?
JT: The seven are Newmont Mining
Corp. (NEM:NYSE), Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE), Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd.
(AEM:TSX; AEM:NYSE), AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. (AU:NYSE; ANG:JSE; AGG:ASX;
AGD:LSE), Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX:TSX; ABX:NYSE), Kinross Gold Corp. (K:TSX;
KGC:NYSE) and Yamana Gold Inc. (YRI:TSX; AUY:NYSE; YAU:LSE). (See chart
below).
 
I picked those
seven because they are large companies, they are in production and they had
operating performance before the financial crisis began with the Lehman
Brothers failure.
TGR: Their per-share profits may have
tripled, but their share prices have not performed anywhere near that well. One
reason for that performance gap is cost increases. Are there other reasons?
JT: Capital expenses (capex) have
increased a great deal from the post-2008 recovery.
Many of the big companies are plowing huge amounts of money back into the
ground, and sustaining capex is rising, so they are expending a considerable
amount of cash to expand or just to keep producing large amounts of gold.
But at least
since Lehman Brothers, day to day operating costs have declined. As a result,
the cash flow from operations has risen dramatically.
The other reason
share prices have not risen is most of the market believes that $1,700/ounce
(oz) gold is near its peak. In short, unlike me and others who follow
Austrian economic theory, most investors do not understand that gold is money
and that as long as the credit market problems persist, it will become
increasingly valuable. Americans especially are ignorant about gold. They are
much more likely to buy Facebook or Google; they do not even consider buying
gold shares. At some point, these people will wake up to the reality that the
gold mining companies, not the Federal Reserve, have the power to produce
money—at least money people can trust.
TGR: Your Inflation-Deflation Watch
(IDW) index measures major commodities and equity and bond indexes. It
suggests that we are on the verge of an inflationary breakout. Has the IDW
consistently tracked previous breakouts in the gold price?
JT: I started the IDW in January
2005, so it does not have a long history. We had a
brief period of deflation from the index's starting point of 100 to around
94, following the Lehman Brothers collapse, and then it started to rise. Last
year, it hit new highs. Now, with each successive quantitative easing (QE),
the IDW is having a hard time making new highs. We are seeing lower highs and
lower lows. (See chart below).
 
Now, I am not
sure which way the IDW is going to break out. We have a
pennant formation here: If you draw a line through the top points of the IDW
and a line through the bottom points of the IDW, you will see that a moment
of truth is quickly approaching. It may not be decisively up or down; it may
meander for a while. But we may be perched on a knife's edge, in which we may
now be facing a moment of truth in how our current economic pathology plays
out. We could be on the verge of either a hyperinflationary depression or a
deflationary depression, which Bob Prechter, Ian Gordon and others believe
will make the 1930s period look like child's play.
What I do think
is undeniable is that QE is increasingly impotent. I personally believe we
are most likely headed toward a deflationary depression. Unless the Fed and
other central bankers completely obliterate the capitalist system and turn to
a statist system, and distribute trillions of dollars to lower income and
middle income people, I do not see us getting to hyperinflation.
TGR: An inflationary breakout could be
good for the gold price, but possibly bad for mining equities if costs rise
faster than the price of gold.
JT: I absolutely agree. In a
hyperinflationary scenario it becomes very difficult to like gold mining
stocks or any kind of business activity because it is so difficult to plan.
In that environment, you want to own physical gold and silver, ideally free
and clear of debt.
TGR: Your top-tier gold producers, or
what you call your Progress A1 companies, were up a combined 22% as of Oct.
17. Which do you expect to be steady performers in an environment of high
gold prices?
JT: Sandstorm Gold
Ltd. (SSL:TSX.V) has been my No. 1 pick all year, and would stay No. 1
especially in a more inflationary environment.
"Most investors do not understand that gold is money and
that as long as the credit market problems persist, it will become
increasingly valuable."
That is because
Sandstorm enters into agreements with start-up mining companies whereby it
can buy gold at the cost of production for the life of a mine in exchange for
providing startup capital required to get into production. Assume that gold
went to $5,000/oz, and the cost of production goes up to $4,900/oz. That
would squeeze the producers' margins. But Sandstorm would still be buying
some agreed to percentage of life of mine production at, say, $400/oz, which
is more or less its current cost of gold purchase. That provides Sandstorm a
gigantic profit margin even at current gold prices of around
$1,600–1,700/oz. Not only that, Sandstorm does not have to invest more
for sustaining capital through the life of a mine as the operating company
must do. As per its agreement, after it supplies startup capital, Sandstorm
doesn't have to spend any more money to keep buying gold at the cost of
production, usually based on feasibility studies when the project went into
production. A typical arrangement would have Sandstorm being able to buy
between 10% and 25% of a project's gold production at cost.
Another favorite
is Dynacor
Gold Mines Inc. (DNG:TSX). It will produce around 50,000 oz (50 Koz) this
year. Basically, it is a gold refiner. It buys gold ore from licensed
producers in Peru and makes a couple hundred or so dollars an ounce. It
assays the gold from shipments and then pays the miner on the spot for the
gold contained in the ore after building in a spread for its recovery
services.
TGR: Rather like a toll road.
JT: Exactly. It is a toll operator,
but one that can pick and choose, and it chooses very high-grade gold ore. I
believe the average grades it has run through its mill has been around 0.9
ounces per ton in the latest reporting period. Dynacor could well double its
production over the next two to three years. It also owns an 800 Koz
non-NI-43-101-compliant deposit.
TGR: Is that Tumipampa?
JT: Yes. Tumipampa is in the middle
of some of the world's biggest gold and copper skarn porphyry deposits.
Dynacor will explore and develop that on its own. If it turns out to be as
big as management expects it may be, Dynacor will look for a major gold or
copper joint venture partner to advance the Tumipampa project into
production.
In addition,
some of Dynacor's competitors were recently de-licensed by the Peruvian
government for using mercury-based processes in recovering gold. That played
to Dynacor's favor because its environmental compliance is fully up to snuff.
Jean Martineau,
the company's CEO, is a Canadian who has spent many years in Peru. He built
Dynacor slowly, depending on internal growth. Because of him, Dynacor enjoys
a great relationship with the small miners in Peru.
TGR: Do you have another name from the
A1 group?
JT: Eurasian Minerals
Inc. (EMX:TSX.V) made it into the A1 group based on $6.2 million (M) in
cash flow it expects next year from a royalty interest expected to grow
dramatically over a number of years on a large mine in Nevada operated by
Newmont. Eurasian is a project generator with lots of working capital; lots
of projects in Australia, Turkey, Haiti and the U.S.; and, now, cash flow.
This company has a lot of cash on its balance sheet and major companies
spending major dollars to find world class deposits. If just one hits—I
think there will be more than one success over time—this stock will be
a big winner.
I would also
mention OceanaGold
Corp. (OGC:TSX; OGC:ASX), which is about to start production on a
copper-gold operation called Didipio in the Philippines. The copper
production will help offset the high cost of gold production in New Zealand.
TGR: Where will its growth come from?
JT: Mostly from the Philippines. The
startup is fairly modest. Initially plans were to produce on a much larger
scale but then scaled back production plans so capital costs would be much
more modest. But this is a very large gold-copper
deposit that should lead to significant growth for years to come. OceanaGold
also has some growth potential in New Zealand, mostly high-grade, underground
material with fairly high costs. I own this company because of its Philippine
prospects.
TGR: In September you predicted that
many of the "names in this letter will likely vanish" if asset
prices take another massive plunge. Which companies have enough cash to last
two or even three years?
JT: Most of the A1 companies are in
pretty good shape and have cash flow from production that will keep them
alive. Aurizon
Mines Ltd. (ARZ:TSX; AZK:NYSE.MKT), for example,
has more than $200M in working capital and lots of growth prospects in
Québec.
Alexco Resource
Corp. (AXR:TSX; AXU:NYSE.MKT), a silver producer
in the Yukon, has only $32M in working capital, but lots of exploration
potential and new projects coming on stream in the next couple of years. It
will be able to grow those largely from internal cash flow.
"Lots of money is to be made in the right kind of gold
mining companies."
And while Petaquilla
Minerals Ltd. (PTQ:TSX; PTQMF:OTCBB; P7Z:FSE) has a lot of debt, it also
has good, strong cash flow.
I think
investors should focus on the A1 companies, especially investors with a
lower-risk tolerance. Choose the companies with advanced projects and cash
flow that can grow organically without having to go back to the markets.
I am interested
in companies that are growing and have good businesses, whether or not the
share prices reflect that. Ultimately the share prices should catch up.
TGR: With $200M in working capital,
will Aurizon launch a dividend?
JT: If Aurizon put out a small dividend because its peers are doing it, that
might make its share price more attractive. These days, it does not take much
of a yield to make people happy.
But Aurizon is
earning into eight or so projects being developed by juniors in
Québec. If any of them become significant mining projects in their own
right, Aurizon will need a lot of capital to develop them.
TGR: Alexco operates the Bellekeno
silver mine in the Yukon, which saw a 12% increase in silver production in
Q3/12. Where will Alexco's growth come from?
JT: It has a number of projects on
the drawing board, including three in the feasibility stage and several more
where it is developing a resource. It has a host of earlier-stage projects as
well. For me, Alexco is one of the more attractive silver plays and its
location in the Yukon makes it politically safe. It seems to have almost
endless growth potential.
TGR: Petaquilla Minerals seems like an
event-driven story. It has an ongoing issue with Inmet Mining Corp.
(IMN:TSX). Could you explain that situation?
JT: To develop its business, Inmet
needs the project that Petaquilla has going in Panama. Inmet's efforts to
influence the Panama government to get Petaquilla out of its way have not
worked so far.
Petaquilla is
producing nice cash flow from its operation in Panama. It also has very
good-looking projects in Spain and Portugal.
Eventually, I
believe Inmet will have to buy Petaquilla out. Inmet made an offer that
Petaquilla found insufficient. A game of chicken may be going on now.
TGR: Inmet just got close to $1
billion (B) from Franco-Nevada Corp. (FNV:TSX; FNV:NYSE) to develop its
projects in Panama. Could Inmet use some of that money to sweeten a bid for Petaquilla?
JT: For sure. Petaquilla's market cap
is not that big. For Inmet, a relatively small sweetener would do. It is
similar to giving your kids an increase in their allowance.
TGR: Can you share some newer names
that excite you, but may not be familiar to people who are not regular readers
of your newsletter?
JT: The first is a uranium play. Blue Sky
Uranium Corp. (BSK:TSX.V) has a project in Argentina. It has only 23M
shares outstanding, and sells at about $0.085 or so. It has a large tract of
land where AREVA (AREVA:EPA) will spend several million dollars to earn 70%
interest in the project.
As I understand
it, AREVA has selected this as one of its three top prospects for a major
uranium discovery. It is very near-surface, even at-surface in places, a
flat-lying, low-grade, massive target. Trenching results should be out soon
and sampling work in the past leads me to believe there is a high probability
of success on this project. The company is just starting to tell its story.
Blue Sky's
market cap is maybe $2M. I bought it for my retirement account. I got a lot
of shares for very little cost because it is so inexpensive. So that's a
speculative story that I think is worth watching.
Another company
that is very exciting is Bravada Gold Corp. (BVA:TSX.V). I like the project
generator model—focusing only on early exploration and not spending on
costly drilling. Bravada is mainly following that model in Nevada. It has a
project that is called the Wind Mountain project. It just recently signed a
deal with Argonaut
Gold Inc. (AR:TSX). Argonaut has to spend $7.5M on the project to earn an
option to buy gold equivalent resource there, paying $30/oz for that resource
and leaving a 1% net smelter royalty for Bravada.
Bravada has a
market cap of about $7.5M. The project already has just under 1 million ounce
(Moz) gold equivalent resource at this time (all categories). I think those
numbers will go up considerably with $7.5M spent on drilling. Some of that
will go to upgrading, but a lot of it will be
stepout drilling. Wind Mountain is a former gold
producer. It has lots of other projects that other companies are spending
money to go in to develop. Bravada's stock is at $0.055 cents right now and
is very undervalued. It's very small, but it has good management and does
have other projects in Nevada that money will be spent on by other partners.
I don't think people are paying attention. Argonaut is a proven, smaller
midtier producer that could make it happen.
I also like Aurvista Gold
Corp. (AVA:TSX.V) in Québec. It has an open-pittable resource,
just under 3 Moz, with lots of exploration potential.
This is the kind
of company Aurizon is likely at some point to take a run at. Norvista
Resources Corp., a private merchant bank in Toronto, already has an interest
in Aurvista.
Norvista is also
involved with Solvista
Gold Corp. (SVV:TSX.V; SVVZF:OTCQX). It had some interesting intercepts
in Colombia, one is 149 meters (m) at 2.1 grams per ton (g/t) gold and
another is 185m of 1.68 g/t gold. However, these are vertical deposits, so it
is unclear how much can be mined economically. But again, Solvista has deep
pockets behind it.
Urastar Gold
Corp. (URS:TSX.V; URNRF:OTCQX) has the La Juliana gold project in Mexico.
It is small but very strategically located in the middle of Alamos Gold
Inc.'s (AGI:TSX) Mulatos operation. Agnico-Eagle is there too. Urastar's
project will probably have to be taken out. If it is, Urastar can use the
money to keep developing El Antimonio, its primary target in the region.
TGR: Urastar is led by Adrian
Robertson and Bill Reed.
JT: Both have very good records,
Robertson from a technical point of view and Reed as an exploration geologist.
TGR: How does a
company get a property smack dab in the middle of what Alamos and
Agnico-Eagle have?
JT: I suppose Urastar picked up the
projects when no one was interested in those targets. Often, little companies
form relationships with people; they get to know people more intimately than
the majors. But I'm honestly not sure of the history of this acquisition.
TGR: Any other companies you would
like to mention?
JT: Northern
Freegold Resources Ltd. (NFR:TSX.V; NFRGF:OTCQX) in the Yukon has just
under 6 Moz gold equivalent, with copper and molybdenum in the deposit as
well. Northern Freegold's infrastructure situation is much better than most.
It has direct access to the property and a power line can be extended at a
cost of $10M or so. That is a low capex number
relative to a 6 Moz gold deposit. The economics have yet to be established,
but it looks very promising.
TGR: Do you have any insights to leave
our readers with today?
JT: Lots of money is to be made in
the right kind of gold mining companies. I am much more bullish on gold than
other commodities, in large part because I do not see good, solid economic
growth around the world. I would like to think you could make money producing
other minerals that would help people more than producing gold that will just
sit in vaults. But that is the reality.
The markets are
forcing us to acknowledge the truth that gold is real money. The markets and
the truth are rearing their beautiful heads. That is the real positive news.
TGR: Thank you very much, Jay.
As he followed
the demolition of the U.S. gold standard and the rapid rise in the national
debt, Jay Taylor's interest in U.S. monetary and fiscal policy
grew, particularly as it related to gold. He began publishing North American Gold Mining Stocks
in 1981. In 1997, he decided to pursue his avocation as a new full-time
career—including publication of his weekly J. Taylor's Gold, Energy
& Tech Stocks newsletter. He also has a radio program, "Turning
Hard Times Into Good Times."
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DISCLOSURE:
1) Brian Sylvester of The Gold Report conducted this interview. He
personally and/or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned
in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The
Gold Report: Goldcorp. Inc., Aurizon Mines Ltd., Petaquilla Minerals
Ltd., Franco-Nevada Corp., Argonaut Gold Inc., Aurvista Gold Corp., Solvista
Gold Corp., Urastar Gold Corp. and Northern Freegold Resources Ltd. Streetwise
Reports does not accept stock in exchange for services. Interviews are edited
for clarity.
3) Jay Taylor: I personally and/or my family own shares of the following
companies mentioned in this interview: Sandstorm Gold Ltd., Dynacor Gold
Mines Inc., Eurasian Minerals Inc., Alexco Resource Corp., Petaquilla
Minerals Ltd., Blue Sky Uranium Corp., Bravada Gold Corp., Aurvista Gold
Corp. and Northern Freegold Resources Ltd. I write solely for my paid
subscribers. After the fact, companies sometimes purchase the right to
reprint articles written for my subscribers. As host to the web radio show,
"Turning Hard Times into Good Times," the following companies have
been or currently are sponsors to the show: Dynacor Gold Mines Inc., Eurasian
Minerals Inc., Blue Sky Uranium Corp., Bravada Gold Corp., Aurvista Gold
Corp. and Northern Freegold Resources Ltd. I was not paid by Streetwise
Reports for participating in this interview.
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