The Gold Report: You recently wrote a paper called
"Stagnation: The New Paradigm?" where you put current commodity
prices in perspective by showing charts going back to 1999. What happened
over the last five years in iron ore and copper and what can we expect going
forward?
Raymond Goldie: The price of iron ore from 2011 to 2015 dropped
more than 70%. If you look at the other great indicator of the mining
industry—the price of copper—you find a similar, but smaller, decline over
the same time period.
[Copper chart located above. Data: London Metal Exchange.]
TGR: What were the fundamentals both behind iron ore and copper's
astronomical moves up going back to 2004 and the subsequent falls?
RG: Iron ore prices really started to rise in 2008 because of
increasing demand for infrastructure needs globally. Copper received added
attention in China as it became seen as money right alongside gold. Chinese
bankers started using copper, especially for foreign trade financing, which
helped push copper prices up to levels that may not have been sustainable.
In both cases, the main reason for the following shift down was that
supply had increased faster than demand.
Both iron ore prices and copper prices are, even at their relatively
depressed levels today, higher than any price that they'd ever seen before
2006.
TGR: The continuing trend lines that you have on both iron ore and
copper in these charts show slow, steady growth going forward. What prices
are you expecting in 2016 and beyond?
RG: One of the things I've learned is that I'm not particularly
good at forecasting prices. The forward strip markets, the futures prices on
the London Metal Exchange, incorporate the aggregate of expectations and are
better at forecasting prices. That seems to be calling for a steady increase
in copper prices over the next 10 years.
In the case of iron ore, there is no forward strip market, so I relied on
the Australian government forecast. We're at a pretty flat bottom now and the
best estimate is a steady increase in iron ore prices.
TGR: What would steadily increasing commodity prices mean for the
commodity equities market?
RG: That's a very good question—how strong is the relationship
between commodity prices and commodity equities? One of the answers is that
stocks of companies that produce copper, like Freeport-McMoRan
Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX:NYSE), the biggest one, and some of the
smaller producers—the biggest one in Canada is First Quantum
Minerals Ltd. (FM:TSX; FQM:LSE)—follow the larger equity market closer
than the commodity prices.
One of the charts that I've put together shows the relative performance of
the Toronto Stock Exchange diversified mining index against the overall
Toronto composite index. It shows seven clear economic cycles since 1960. In
every one of those cycles, equities have experienced two peaks and two
troughs. One of the peaks happens as you recover from the end of the
recession. Then in the middle of each cycle, those equities tend to languish
and decline and form a second trough, finally running up to the cycle end
peak. I believe we are at the middle of one of these mid-cycle peaks right
now.
Source: TSX data, analysis by Salman Partners
Inc. The index is of non-precious metals equities' performance relative to
that of the TSX Composite, recalculated to 100 being the low point in each
cycle immediately after the end of the recession that began each cycle.
TGR: Is there anything different about this cycle than the previous
cycles? Is it acting as predicted?
RG: Many have said we are experiencing uncommon demand, but if we
look at the Western world's demand for base metals in this cycle compared
with some of the previous cycles, we find that the trend of the line for
demand has been pretty much in the middle of previous cyclical trends. Even
China's export data is, on average, sideways. There may, indeed, be strong
growth in China in demand for copper, but there's also been strong growth in
production of copper in China. The net result is that China's impact on the
rest of the world copper market is pretty flat. So it's not a demand story.
I think it's a supply side story that is resulting in copper prices that
are stronger than at any time before 2006.
TGR: What is causing the lack of supply and will that continue?
RG: At the beginning of every year, copper mining companies publish
their production goals, and typically up to 2005, they achieved that. One of
the ways they did that is by tucking away some high-grade ore so they could kick
up the pounds if needed at the end of the year. But since 2005, the world's
copper industry has consistently produced 7% less copper than planned. One of
the reasons we've had these shortfalls is that those areas of high-grade ore
don't exist anymore. They've been mined out.
That is why we have a supply side issue at existing mines. When it comes
to building new mines, not only are we not finding sparkling new copper
deposits at the rate we used to, but also it takes longer to get mines into
production—12, 15, 20 years—because of new environmental compliance
regulations.
That is why this isn't a typical cycle. This is a cycle constrained by
government compliance and governmental regulations.
TGR: Can the junior companies fill that demand in the coming cycle?
RG: Many juniors have superb projects, but they're lacking
financing. Banks generally want to lend to big companies. So the juniors are
sitting, waiting to be taken over or engage in a joint venture with a big
company. But big company shareholders often do not want to see their
companies underwriting big new expansion projects. They'd rather see that
cash returned to them.
TGR: What are the companies that have some money to move projects
ahead?
RG: First Quantum has become a big company by growing internally
and through the recent takeover of Inmet Mining Corp. That big company
interest will allow Cobre Panama to come on stream roughly as planned.
NovaCopper
Inc. (NCQ:TSX; NCQ:NYSE.MKT) has an equally good project. In fact, it's
smaller and higher grade. It's in Alaska, which many people would consider to
be a more stable jurisdiction than Panama, but it can't yet get full
financing. The project continues to be studied and permitted, but we don't
have the financing to bring it all the way through to production yet. The
company has managed to get enough interest from investors that it's staying
alive, but it doesn't have financing all the way through to production.
Nautilus
Minerals Inc. (NUS:TSX) is a small company, but it was able to find
financing, largely through partnering. One of those partners is the
government of Papua New Guinea, which is in for 30% of that project at the
bottom of the ocean off the country's coast. That has provided enough
financing to move the project all the way through to production.
TGR: Has Nautilus answered the risk question associated with
underwater mining and proved it can be economical?
RG: Nautilus is merging mining technology and deep ocean oil and
gas drilling technology. I have confidence that the engineers have figured
out a way to make it work.
TGR: Are you following other copper companies?
RG: Reservoir
Minerals Inc. (RMC:TSX.V) has a joint venture with Freeport-McMoRan,
which has named Reservoir's Timok Project in Serbia as one of its top
priorities. This is a country that has been wracked with war; only recently
has there been calm. The political instability resulted in a lack of new
technology used to explore ore deposits in a seasoned mining area. The Timok
project combines a known occurrence of large, high-grade ore deposits with
modern exploration methods to find some humdinger resources. The company is
working on permitting and engineering in preparation for raising final
financing.
TGR: Is nickel following the same pinch-point curve™* as copper?
Source: London Metal Exchange
RG: Nickel is also in a mid-cycle low, something that occurs well
before the end of an economic cycle. As long as economic growth continues, we
will see a recovery in the price of commodities that relate to that recovery.
Nickel is one of them. In fact, I'm more optimistic about nickel than most
other commodities because it is a supply side story. The demand is growing
fairly consistently at about 4% or so a year.
The supply side issue is that in January of 2014, the government of
Indonesia, the Saudi Arabia of nickel, banned exports of raw nickel as part
of a move to producing finished nickel. China had been making lots of cheap
nickel from this high-grade Indonesian ore and stocked up before the door
shut. We're not quite sure when the Chinese will run out of that ore, but
it's almost certainly before the end of this year. Once that happens, a
shortfall of 200,000 or 300,000 tons a year could push the price up from the
current $5 a pound ($5/lb) range to something more like $11, 12 or 13/lb.
Remember, the price of nickel got into the $20/lb neighborhood in 2007.
TGR: What junior companies do you follow in the nickel space?
RG: Royal
Nickel Corp. (RNX:TSX) and Sherritt
International Corp. (S:TSX) are covered by my colleague, Nik
Rasskazovskiy. What's driving the price of both companies is the nickel
price. Royal Nickel has a project in Quebec and is looking for a big brother
to help develop it. Sherritt is North America's go-to play on nickel. It has
operations in Cuba, Canada and Madagascar and is one of the world's
lowest-cost producers of nickel. Once we see confirmation that the Chinese
have run out of Indonesian nickel ore, nickel prices will turn up, and then
we could start to see joy in the share prices of Sherritt and Royal Nickel.
TGR: Looming supply challenges have been reported in the zinc
space. What is your outlook in that market?
RG: A few months ago a lot of investors noticed that many of the
big world zinc mines are closing down. Some speculated we were running out of
zinc and that the price might go from the current $0.91/lb to as high as
$2/lb in a couple of years. The problem is that because of that prediction, a
lot of production—particularly in China, Peru and at Vedanta Resources Plc's
(VED:LSE) projects in Africa and Asia—ramped up fast. The net result is the
price of zinc isn't $2/lb. It's about $0.91/lb and likely to stay in that
range for the next few years.
TGR: Are there junior companies that can still be successful?
RG: Trevali
Mining Corp. (TV:TSX; TV:BVL; TREVF:OTCQX) is one of the best zinc plays.
It has a joint venture with Glencore International Plc (GLEN:LSE), the
world's biggest zinc producer and trader. Also, it has mines in Peru and
Canada, so it's already in production. Better yet, that production is low
cost.
Zazu
Metals Corp. (ZAZ:TSX) is an Alaskan play on a zinc deposit that, fortunately,
can make money at $0.94–0.95/lb. But it needs a big brother.
TGR: Do you have any words of wisdom that can help investors
re-engaging with the market as the summer comes to a close?
RG: We have seen the bottom in copper. We are still waiting for the
bottom in nickel, and zinc could be a couple of years out. I would focus on
copper equities. Start with the big, liquid copper producers. That used to
mean Freeport McMoRan, but it also now has huge interests in oil and gas. I
have really no idea what's going to happen to oil and gas prices in the
foreseeable future. So I turn to First Quantum, which is Canada's go-to
copper play. This is probably the best performer among base metals equities
between now and the end of this year. Looking out further will be the time
for other junior copper plays and then later, nickel, and even later, zinc.
TGR: Thank you for your time.
*Pinch-point curve™ is a term trademarked by Raymond Goldie.