Showing posts with label silver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label silver. Show all posts

Monday, July 14, 2014

Financial Sarcasm Roundup for 07/14/14

Open your mouths for a big, fat, heaping spoonful of financial sarcasm.  It's good for you and you'll get used to the taste in no time flat.

The Trans-Pacific Partnership is getting hung up on the US's domestic election calendar.  That would not be such a big deal if the negotiators stick to their regular meeting calendar.  I remember how NAFTA's negotiations had periodic hangups over domestic political pressures but the parties still got a deal done.  If the TPP dealers can't even agree on their next meeting date then they've got more severe problems than one country's elections.  I say dress up some actors in a Chinese New Year dragon dance costume and have them throw some firecrackers into the TPP's next press conference.  That will wake everyone up about the urgency of creating a trade bloc countering China.

A new Great Wall of China is going up around "wealth management" services.  Here's why it's very important for the rest of the Pacific Rim to ring-fence China's economy.  China has obviously not fully identified the problems in the risky wealth management products (WMPs) that channeled its middle class savings into failed infrastructure and empty residential projects.  The inevitable defaults of these WMPs will destroy any Chinese banks that have not pushed them off their balance sheets.  China's obvious hope that FTZs will attract enough FDI to soak up WMP demand is not realistic.  Western banks with any sense will keep their FTZ branches away from the Chinese wealth management chop shops.

The silver fix is getting a new caretaking team.  There will never be a perfect way to set any daily commodity price.  Moving the silver fix to exchanges that habitually make pricing transparent is better than leaving it in the hands of collusive bankers.  The gold fix is the obvious next candidate, and then currencies and interest rate benchmarks.  Regulators are probably tiring of the vast investigations they must launch every time a bank's misbehaving whale trader nearly causes a systemic lock-up.  Taking a global pricing fix away from bank trading desks is like taking the car keys away from a drunk teenager.  Someone has to be the adult on the scene.

I would like to thank several hot San Francisco women for making my day a bit less sarcastic.  They know who they are.  I'm always up for harmless flirtation and the ladies do swoon from my attention.  

Thursday, January 02, 2014

The Haiku of Finance for 01/02/14

Silver long-term price
Much lower than long bull run
Costly mine must close

Tahoe Resources Goes Digging for Metals in Guatemala

Tahoe Resources (TAHO) is digging for silver and other metals in Guatemala.  Transparency International ranks that country 123rd out of 177 countries on its Corruption Perceptions Index.  Uh-oh.  The Heritage Foundation ranks Guatemala 85th out of 177 countries on its Index of Economic Freedom.  Uh-oh.  I know that some mining companies make a difference in emerging economies by investing locally and employing local workers.  I must still pause when a country has sub-par rankings (compared to the US) using objective international criteria.

Tahoe's CEO is a mining engineer and a previous CEO of Goldcorp, a company I respect.  The rest of the team has done time at Hecla, Rio Tinto, and Kennecott, with some previous experience in Guatemala.  These are all good things that help make up for whatever macroeconomic and political deficiencies persist in Guatemala.  Good local relations can help build success even in a bad neighborhood.

Their Escobal project has photos of fully developed infrastructure and MII resources, although I would prefer to see 2P reserves in a company that's ready for production.  The assumptions they published for long-term metal prices ($1100/oz Au, $18/oz Ag) are higher than those metals' historical average prices, so they need to keep their all-in sustaining costs (AISC) significantly below those average prices over the projected 18-year life of this mine.  Look at Kitco's multi-year charts for the price of silver.  The long-term silver price used to range between four dollars and nine dollars per ounce for much of the past three decades.

Tahoe shipped its first silver concentrate in October 2013, so it looks like everything is a "go" for full-scale production this year.  Their Q3 2013 financial statement dated September 30, 2013 shows that their $39.2M in cash on hand is barely able to cover their $38.7M in accounts payable, so it's good that they have a $50M credit facility to keep operations going while they ramp up.  BTW, read that PR statement about the credit facility to see other risks tied to this project.  Like I said above, Guatemala has some persistent deficiencies.  I'd prefer to see Tahoe's operations at a mature stage before I consider this stock as an investment, but it's still nice to see a mining company doing some actual mining at a time when much of the sector has crashed.

Full disclosure:  No position in Tahoe Resources at this time.  

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

The Haiku of Finance for 04/24/13

Mexico silver
Some major wants to mine it
If the price is right

Silver Bull Resources (SVBL) and Silver in Mexico

Silver Bull Resources (SVBL) is digging for metals in Mexico and Gabon.  It was known as Metalline Mining until May 2, 2011, yet I am puzzled that the old MMG ticker still exists.  What the name change has to do with operating a mine is anybody's guess.  Hard data and results are more relevant.

The CEO is a geologist.  I tend to favor operating geologists over consulting geologists but a breadth of consulting experience in different geologies and metals helps.  The rest of the team also has deep experience in the mining sector.

Their project in Sierra Mojada, Mexico is coming along.  Their 43-101 data indicated fairly sizable Ag deposits with attractive grades, albeit still in MII categories.  The photograph of the site in their corporate presentation shows several large flat areas adjacent to the projected mine that can accommodate milling facilities and tailings piles.  The site also has a railroad connection, grid power, and water wells.  That is truly the logistics trifecta.

It is significant that Couer D'Alene Mines Corp. owns a big piece of Silver Bull Resources.  It is also significant that Silver Bull's Sierra Mojada project is in the general vicinity of Orko Silver's project.  Coeur D'Alene completed its acquisition of Orko Silver this month.  That puts one of the largest silver projects in Mexico into a producer's control.  I do not believe Coeur D'Alene Mines is ready for another acquisition because they have to shell out CAD$100M to former Orko shareholders and had about US$125M on their balance sheet at the end of 2012.  Silver Bull's current market cap is about US$54M, a bit of a stretch right now for Coeur D'Alene Mines unless they're willing to go into debt or commit the next several quarters of FCF exclusively to another acquisition (unlikely IMHO).  

Their most recent quarterly report dated January 31, 2013 shows cash on hand of US$1.66M and a burn rate of about US$700K/month.  Holy canole, they were running on fumes at the end of that quarter.  These people needed to raise some cash pronto to have a chance at taking Sierra Mojada into production.  Fortunately they did collect about $9.2M from a private placement in February.  That's enough to last another year.

I'm going to wait for Silver Bull's PEA to see how much they think full development will cost.  I also want to see another 43-101 report with 2P data.  Acquisitions in the neighborhood are certainly encouraging because producers need to replace reserves reduced by production.  Let's see if the stock moves once they announce a PEA.

Full disclosure:  No position in SVBL (or other companies mentioned) at this time.  

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Aurcana Corporation (AUNFF) and Silver

Aurcana Corporation (AUNFF / AUN.V) is a Canadian junior miner operating silver projects in Texas and Mexico.  The CEO does not appear to have a background in geology or mining engineering, yet the company is earning positive net income.

Commercial production at their Shafter project began in December, which is good news for a mine that has a 43-101 report.  I find it odd that the 2P numbers aren't readily apparent (I couldn't find them in the 43-101) but they started producing anyway.  Their La Negra project is not yet producing but has an updated resource estimate, with huge silver grades and decent copper grades.

A quick SEDAR search for their financial statements reveals profitability, which is helping them dig out of a C$26M retained earnings deficit (as of September 2012).  That financial hole reveals just how much value future operations must add for the company's share price to climb out of penny stock land.

I'm not sure why the stock hasn't moved given the existing production at Shafter and large potential at La Negra.  The stock is barely above its 52-week low.  Let's see if a feasibility study on La Negra makes the share price jump.

Full disclosure:  No position in Aurcana at this time.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Orex Minerals (ORXIF) Has a Two-Country Strategy

Orex Minerals (ORXIF / REX.V) is exploring for precious metals in Sweden and Mexico.  The CEO has a background in financing and selling mining properties, but his current bio doesn't provide details on whether he's actually been a geologist who has successfully explored a project for ore.  I really like junior explorers when they have an experienced geologist in charge.

Their Barsele project in Sweden has a 43-101 report with indicated and inferred Au grades that are far below the 2.0 g/t I prefer to see in a viable project.  I know how difficult it can be to find grades like that today but someone has to try.  Their Coneto project in Mexico has no 43-101 reports and their preliminary technical reports were published in 2010.  My loyal readers know by now that I take final reports of 2P reserves more seriously than earlier reports of technical information.

Orex has several years' worth of financial reports available.  The latest quarterly report from October 31, 2012 showed C$1.5M in cash on hand and an annual burn rate somewhere north of C$2.5M.  It's hard to pin that rate down precisely because their cash burn has slowed dramatically in recent months.  They will need to raise more cash no later than the end of April 2013 if they want to survive at even that decelerated rate.

This company isn't right for my portfolio because their projects aren't mature.  I believe they need to show significant progress toward discovering high-grade ores at either of their current projects.

Full disclosure:  No position in Orex Minerals at this time.  

Monday, January 14, 2013

Dart Mining (DTM.AX) Exploring for Metals

Dart Mining (DTM.AX) is developing Mo / Cu / Ag deposits in Australia.  I've finally figured out that small Australian companies name their head cheese Managing Director instead of CEO.  Dart's MD has worked in mining engineering and various sectors supporting the mining value chain, and its Chairman is a geologist.  That's pretty cool.

Their most advanced property right now is their Unicorn project, with power, water, and roads already nearby.  The MII grades for each of those three metals are very low compared to world averages for new discoveries.  IMHO the company will have a hard time making that project viable if metal prices collapse, even if the planned mine has a low strip ratio.  Their other projects are still exploration targets with no 43-101 data although a couple of their drill results show promising Au grades.  Dart Mining is benefiting from local government grants that help fund its early exploration program, which is undeniably helpful in conserving investors' cash.

Their 2012 annual report shows their burn rate has doubled to over $1M/year since they stepped up their drilling programs.  They had just under $3.5M in cash on hand on June 30, 2012, giving them about three and a half years in which to strike valuable grades at any of their active projects.

Dart Mining trades under a dime right now but they have plenty of time to discover valuable deposits.  I'd like to see what their drilling programs find later in 2013.

Full disclosure:  No position in Dart Mining at this time.

Thursday, January 03, 2013

MAG Silver (MVG) In Mexico

MAG Silver (MVG / MAG.TO) mines silver in Mexico.  I've never been south of the border but I hear there's lots of tortillas down there, plus attractive women.  I don't know whether MAG Silver employs attractive Mexican women but if they do they should pay them in pesos rather then tortillas.

I have no quibble with the management team because they have the proper backgrounds.  They have a lot of projects in play.  The Cinco de Mayo project's MII resources look low at first glance but the moly grades actually exceed the average grades found in porphyry copper deposits.  The rest of their projects may show promise after more exploration but it's too early to tell.

Their Q3 financial statement for 2012 reveals US$44M in cash on hand, but they'll need much more than that to complete several simultaneous drill programs.  The diverse project portfolio requires a look at fundamentals from a value perspective.  Their FCF is severely negative and so is their five-year average ROE.

I can't understand why the market values MAG Silver at over $10/share when they've been losing money since 2008.  Inferred grades only get you to the threshold of a production decision.  I could understand the optimistic valuation if one of their larger projects were close to starting production but I can't be so optimistic with so many other undeveloped properties eating up capital.

Full disclosure:  No position in MAG Silver at this time.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

South American Silver Corp. (SOHAF)

South American Silver Corp. (SOHAF / SAC.TO) is looking for silver in Chile.  I've never been down there, nor have I eaten Chilean food or dated Chilean women.  I suspect the latter two are quite spicy.  Mining isn't so spicy but someone has to do it.

The CEO was educated as a mining engineer but doesn't mention who employed him on any of the projects he worked in his career.  His LinkedIn profile says he is currently the VP for Project Development at PolyMet Mining, and doesn't mention his position with South American Silver.  He ought to update his LinkedIn bio; meanwhile South American Silver's press release announcing his hiring sheds a little more light on his background.  I'm harping on this because the CEO's decisions in an exploration-stage junior mining company depend very much on an understanding of geology.  Other disciplines matter more in later stages.

The Escalones project has an Inferred Resource grade for Cu of 0.41%, which is toward the lower averages of most commercially successful copper deposits in the 21st century.  One compensating factor is that this is a fairly large deposit.  The equivalent grades of the other minerals are negligible.  Reading the project's drill and surface sampling highlights gives me the impression that the ore grades are highest nearer the surface and not very deep.

The company is also contesting the Bolivian government's revocation of its subsidiary's mining concessions.  It's unrelated to the property above but nonetheless casts a cloud over the company.  This Malku Khota project is potentially very valuable but the company absolutely must resolve the legal dispute in its favor.

Check out their financial statements for Q3 2012, dated September 30, 2012.  They had US$29.5M cash on hand and have a burn rate of about US$1M per month.  That gives them more than two years to realize value from their projects.

I am not investing in South American Silver Corp. because I prefer mining companies that have de-risked their projects by establishing 2P reserve data.  I also prefer spicy women, as I hinted in my opening paragraph.

Full disclosure:  No position in South American Silver Corp. at this time.

Imperial Metals (IPMLF) Is Not The Miner For Me

Imperial Metals (IPMLF / III.TO) has two operating mines and several developmental and exploration properties.  I'd prefer to analyze them using value investing criteria since they are not a startup mining company, but some details of their properties deserve mention.

Their Mount Polly mine is operating but its 2P reserves are very low grade.  I'd say the same for their Huckleberry mine.  The MII resource grade at their Red Chris developmental project is similarly unimpressive.  What are their cash costs of production?  I have no idea, but I wonder whether these projects  would be worth doing if the price of gold were half of what it is today.  The Sterling project, however, has a very impressive 7.41 g/t Au, so here's hoping they get it started.  It's too early to tell whether their three exploration properties will pan out.

Imperial is earning positive net income but their five-year EPS growth is negative and their five-year ROE is below the mining sector's average.  Those are reasons enough for me not to own this stock, besides the low ore grades for their active mines.

Full disclosure:  No position in Imperial Metals at this time.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Coeur d'Alene Mines (CDE) Disappoints Me

You'd think that a major silver producer like Coeur d'Alene Mines (CDE) would be able to write its own ticket with silver prices in the stratosphere.  Think again.  The company has manageable long-term debt so long as they can maintain their present net income.  That is in doubt; they suffered major losses in 2009 and 2010, and the quarter ending September 29 showed another loss.

Their free cash flow is positive but their five-year ROE and EPS growth rate are atrocious.  What went wrong?  Maybe it's bad karma from their legal dispute with Rye Patch Gold over a claim in Nevada.  Their net metals sales and OCF have grown significantly since 2008, so this should have translated into net income given their declining capital expenditures.  The trouble at the Kensington mine undoubtedly hurt them.

The fundamentals just aren't compelling enough for me to dig deeper into the company's problems or wait for a turnaround.  There are other silver producers in the resource sector that deserve my attention.

Full disclosure:  No position in CDE at this time.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Figuring Out Mines Management (MGN)

Mines Management (MGN) deserves my attention today.  I always look for management that's truly experienced in the mining sector.  Their current management team is heavy on finance and general corporate work but could benefit from more than just one principal officer who's a geologist.

Their Montanore project in Montana looks promising if they can get a final 2P estimate.  It's fairly close to existing roads, so the site may be viable if they can solve any extant water problems and get approval for a power transmission line.  It's important to note that their estimates use a long-term silver price of $6.24/oz, which is far more realistic than the current spot price of over $34/oz for a mine with an expected long life.  If the inferred grade of about 2oz/ton Ag doesn't improve with further drilling and analysis, then MGN will have to keep its cash cost of production under $12/ton for this mine to be viable.  Granted, the same dirt also has copper so they may have some wiggle room on cash costs.

Their La Estrella project in Peru is not as well-explored as the Montana project.  Preliminary drilling results show 1.0g/t Au may be available, which is not terribly exciting but may be the new normal given the declining grade quality of new mines worldwide.  That makes it worth pursuing.

The financial results so far have been disappointing.  A review of their Q3 2012 10-Q reveals the company's candor about risk factors such as lack of 2P reserves and the likelihood of continued losses.  Their burn rate appears to be at least $8M/year, and with less than $12M cash on hand as of this past September they'll have to raise more capital by December 2013.

I kind of like this one, even though the Peru project looks like a hedge on the Montana project's viability.  Montanore doesn't need that much more work to get started if the final NI 43-101 confirms some decent reserves.  I'll pay attention to whatever final data they publish.

Full disclosure:  No position in MGN at this time.  

Sunday, July 08, 2012

Coyote Resources (COYR) Leaves Investors Howling

The mailbag is getting thinner.  A few more blog posts and I'll have run through all of the penny stock teasers I've been receiving for months.  Today's selection is a pumper from Carpenter Global Stock Advisory.  It's about Coyote Resources (COYR), a junior exploration company in Nevada.  It's trading at just over seven cents a share right about now.  Let's try to ascertain why.

Coyote has two properties in Nevada.  The Tonopah property was once a producing mine.  The Golden Trend property has yet to produce anything.  The remaining ore at Tonopah is probably recoverable but Coyote will have to raise enough capital to remove the shaft blockages and reconnect the mine to local infrastructure.  By their own preliminary estimate, dewatering alone will cost over $4.6M, surface processing will cost $7.5M, and permits will cost $7.5M.  Read all about it in the company's roadshow brochure.

It's nice that they had a geologist as their CEO.  It would have been nice if he could have stuck around, but he resigned from the company on May 25, 2012.  It would be nicer still if Coyote had sufficient capital on hand to fund the almost $20M worth of improvements estimated above that must be in place before a single ounce of ore can be extracted.  They do not have the capital yet; their balance sheet as of March 31, 2012 shows very little cash available.  Their news releases show no developments since July 2011.  That departed CEO is mentioned in a Schedule 13D/A filing dated June 26, 2012, wherein he sold all 5M of his COYR shares for a whopping $19,500.  Wow, that's not exactly a ringing endorsement of the company's prospects.

Let's recap.  The CEO left and sold all of his shares, the closed mine is still blocked and waterlogged, the company has not raised capital needed to re-open the closed mine, and the other exploratory property is still an unknown.  Good luck making money on this one folks.

Full disclosure:  No position in COYR, ever.

Friday, February 03, 2012

Frivolous Lawsuit Bothers Hecla Mining (HL)

Some people just can't take life's setbacks in stride.  Drops in a company's share price are normal and can happen for any reason or no reason at all.  Some shareholders are suing Hecla Mining just because the share price dipped.  They allege the company made statements that overestimated its value.  Numbers from operational results don't support such an allegation.  Hecla is generating decent ROE (about 12%) and margins are extremely healthy.  It helps that the price of silver is at record highs but Hecla has been around for over a century, so somebody there must know what they're doing.  

Accidents happen in mining.  It figures that a union would bring this suit.  Unions just don't get the free market.  It also figures that the source of this irritation is a bricklayers' union.  These particular opportunists must be as dumb as bricks, reflecting unfairly on the vast majority of bricklayers.  The case should be thrown out forthwith for lack of merit.  

Full disclosure:  No position in HL at this time.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Argentex Mining Corp. (AGXMF) Bringing Pinguino Property To Maturity

There's more to Argentina than gauchos and Peronists.  There's metal down there and Argentex Mining Corporation (AGXMF) says it found some.  Argentex is drilling at a number of prospective properties in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina.  The company's property at Pinguino looks particularly intriguing.  The ore grades appear decent, with a 43-101 report estimating fairly low grades of gold but decent grades of silver and indium.

The Pinguino property is smack dab in the middle of an active mining sector but that does not guarantee it can become a viable mine.  The nearest road leading to Pico Truncado and a port for export appears to be about 50 km away, based on eyeballing the company's map.

The IFC's equity investment in October 2010 is a huge vote of confidence in the company but the warrants attached to their equity, if ever exercised, will dilute existing shareholders by about 14%.  The consolation for investors is that the share price will have to rise by 245% in five years before that C$1.14 exercise price is triggered.  Getting the price to the level requires management's commitment to make Pinguino a viable producer.  I do not know at this time whether Pinguino has the logistics trifecta - water, power, roads - to make this possible.

Argentex's burn rate of approximately $602K/month means its cash of $1.9M (as of April 30) would have lasted until the end of August 2011.  The problem is that they still had liabilities of $1.87M; netting that against the short term investments of $3.2M would have left them them with a reserve of $1.4M.  At their present burn rate they were perilously close to running out of cash at the end of last summer.  They're obviously still operating as of the present date thanks to a recent bought deal that netted them C$10M in cash at a valuation far higher than what the IFC obtained.  That is a very encouraging sign for a junior resource company; if the company was having operating problems or sitting on poor properties, subsequent investors would demand lower prices for investments.

Argentex lives to fight another day.  If they use that C$10M wisely, it will last 16 months and they will have the opportunity to show later investors that they can commit capex to logistics infrastructure at Pinguino.

Full disclosure: No position in AGXMF at this time.  

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Notes From The San Francisco Hard Assets Conference 2011

This year's Hard Assets Conference was as big as they come.  The last weekend in November always brings a ton of mining experts to The City.  Enough time has passed for the information discussed there to be actionable in the markets, so now it's time to review the show.  I'll summarize the main points of lectures I attended below, with my own observations in italics.

Ian McAvity, "Deliberations on World Markets" 
- The euro was designed to blow up in a crisis and North American markets are amazingly complacent about its implications.  All this time, I thought the eurozone was just another fox-hunting club for aristocrats. 
- Alan Greenspan's money creation did not help the stock market, citing Shadow Government Statistics' revised unemployment numbers. 
- Another debt ceiling showdown may shock markets.
- Retail investors are still selling equity mutual funds.  Maybe so, but somebody's still buying.  I wonder if pension plans and professional money managers are the dumb money.
- Ian predicts the DJIA will be under 8000 in 2012 and that gold is undervalued versus equities.  Specific price targets are usually trouble for market commentators.  I'll go along with a general bearish case but I'm not as brave as Ian to predict a specific goal for the market.  Fair value based on mean reversion to a P/E ratio at its historic average of 14 implies DJIA may eventually go as low as 5000 or so.  Whether gold is undervalued depends on whether it resorts to its own historic mean price in the low 600s per ounce.
- Plotting the price of gold against the DJIA indicates a technical trend of higher highs and lower lows.  My MBA-trained mind says those price moves are just a random walk.  The market doesn't do what you want it to do. 
- Ian thinks gold mining stocks lag moves in bullion and that only majors will provide good buying opportunities.  I think Ian should attend some of the company presentations at this conference.  Juniors with properties that have decent ore grades and logistical factors can break out. 
- The US and UK are arrogant to treat the rest of the world like colonies.  China and Brazil may lead a currency revolt.  True, but China would have to de-link the renminbi from the US dollar first, making its exports less competitive at a time when its main import markets - the US and Europe - are slowing down.

Keith Schaeffer, "Oil & Gas Investments Bulletin"
- Oil patch activity via horizontal drilling and fracking will change juniors.  You betcha.  This is already happening, with players in the Bakken formation and elsewhere paying top dollar for labor. 
- The market prices the value of discoveries in mining more quickly than in oil and gas.
- Shale formations resemble potash plays; relatively uniform geology means the market can price discovery more quickly.  Good observation, Keith.
- "Price per flowing barrel" juniors are picking up steam.  My interpretation is that juniors who actually produce at a mature wellhead deserve better valuations than those still in exploration.
- The US has several years of cheap natural gas ahead, with more discoveries possible.  We can thank fracking for this good news.  Tell your elected officials to keep the EPA out of a proven technology. 

Frank Holmes (U.S. Global Investors), "Looking For Super S-Curves"
- The average currency crisis lasts four years, based on 47 preceding crises in the last 400 years.  "This time it's different." The last world reserve currency to be dethroned was the British pound after WWII, but the transition was eased by the ready emergence of the US dollar as a replacement.  There is no such alternative on the horizon now.
- Many majors have such good fee cash flows they don't need to tap capital markets.  I hear you, Frank.  Too many juniors run out of cash too soon because they don't raise capital to match forecast spending.  Majors usually don't have that problem.
- China and India will see their share of world GDP catch up to their share of the world's population.  Not if they face resource constraints first.  China has coal and rare earth metals but needs oil and hydroelectric power.  India needs local infrastructure for "last mile" water delivery. 
- Rising US interest rates today would destroy the price of gold.  A surprise dollar collapse would cause such a spike.  Gold bugs ignore this at their peril. 
- Frank thinks gold is not a bubble now because the spike in gold prices in the early 1980s was driven by futures market buying, while today buying is cash driven.  Really?  What about allegations that GLD is stuffed with futures contracts and not bullion?  I shudder to think what a crisis of confidence - even if unfounded - around GLD's holdings would do to gold bugs.

Adrian Day, "The Resource Boom: Is It All Over?"
- Long cycles in copper's price history imply the boom isn't over.  But isn't Dr. Copper a reliable indicator of economic activity? Guess what happens to copper when the Great Recession gets cranking again.
- Adrian says even 5-6% annual GDP growth in China makes it attractive versus the rest of the world.  Adrian, China has needed at least 9% per year just to avoid social unrest, based on their population growth.  If GDP doesn't keep pace with population, unrest will destroy much of what the country has built. 

Axel Merk, "Currency Wars"
- The gold/inflation relationship implies inflation expectations are decreasing.  If that holds, investors are in for a shock when the Fed and ECB try to save their respective sovereign solvency by printing away.
- Chinese companies have pricing power due to artificial government support, so companies that compete successfully in China can raise prices even if the US dollar declines.  I'm not sure if the "successful" companies he means are those Western companies with operations inside China; I'm assuming so.  Chinese companies selling inside China shouldn't care what the dollar does unless their supply chains have sources in the US.
- Central bank balance sheets are proxies for currency printing.  The ECB has a different mindset than the Fed and is not necessarily inclined to QE-style printing.  The Fed has no desire to mop up excess liquidity by raising interest rates, as that would be as politically suicidal here as in Europe.    Interesting insights. 
- Axel advocates the "currency as asset class" philosophy.  I'll only agree up to the point that currency falls under "cash," as I still subscribe to the classic asset class definitions of debt, equity, and cash.  Everything else for me is a subcategory of those three things.  I truly believe currency is only useful as a hedge of other cash positions, not a something to use as a long bet or portfolio diversifier.
- The S&P is not a true international diversifier, as 90% of S&P listed companies hedge their earnings in dollars.  This is a good argument for owning international equities rather than international currencies as a diversifier.

Rick Rule (Global Resource Investments): Keynote
- He endorsed Frank Holmes' view that increasing freedom in emerging markets would lead to growth.
- Income growth in lower socioeconomic classes drives commodity growth because they buy more material "stuff" to improve their lives.
- Chinese per capita energy consumption has grown but is still only 9% of US energy use.  Hey oil shale frackers, have you made any contacts in China yet?  Just asking.
- Legacy supply issues from a bear market in 1982-2002 constrain resource supply now due to a lack of investment then.  Investors in hard assets tend to ignore things like capex requirements, which is why they get burned on junior mining companies that can't fund their exploratory budgets.  I'll say it again . . . the major producers don't have this problem.
- The 2-3 year lag between a mining company's preliminary economic assessment and its bankable feasibility studies bring arbitrage opportunities.  Buyouts happen at the bankability stage but discoveries happen before then.  I didn't know that.  Thanks Rick!
- Another liquidity crisis can destroy production finance, especially for capital intensive sectors like resources.  Rick Rule is far from the only speaker here to warn that another credit shock will create an enormous buying opportunity in stocks.  I've noticed a common theme of "bumpy ride ahead" at the Hard Assets Conference.
- Investors should seek more advantageous terms from junior companies.  Issuers like to give investors 2 1/2 year warrants but reserve five year full options for themselves.  I would call that evidence of an asymmetric information advantage of the company over the investor.

John Thomas (Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader), "Rare Earths In The Global Context"
- The stock market now discounts worse GDP growth. 
- High frequency trading accounts for 80% of the trades in the oil market, driving huge price swings. 
- Rare earth elements are illiquid; prices peaked on April 29, 2011, mainly driven by China's actions.
- The US dollar has been declining in value since the birth of the Fed in 1913.  The many Ron Paul fans at this conference will like that one.
- Housing will fall until 2030 when Millennials will want to buy homes.  Right now 85M Boomers want to sell their homes to 65M Gen-Xers.
- Fracking has unlocked a huge US natural gas supply.  LNG exports to China will boom.  This makes me think of Japan's dependence on US oil in the 1930s.  The US oil embargo against Japan triggered their strategic decision to attack the US.  There is a huge lesson here for strategists looking for an inflection point that can trigger US-China conflict.  I believe resource access for China and India is one such inflection point, and possibly the single most severe one.
- John recently visited China to see if they were manipulating rare earth prices.  Key leaders there gave the official line that they wanted to give manufacturers an advantage in finished goods.  The Chinese government is tracking down unauthorized rare earth miners to get them to register in advance of consolidation.
- John is bearish on the platinum group metals because a likely recession next year will hurt the automobile market.  PGMs are used in catalytic converters.  Here's another expert forecasting a recession in 2012.  Pay attention, investors!
- I asked John if he thought the Congressional budget "super committee" deliberately failed to come to agreement.  John didn't think they conspired, but we shouldn't count on anything from our capital other than higher taxes.  I do think some surprise budget cuts are in store for discretionary spending. 

Mickey Fulp, "Mercenary Geologist"
- Rio Tinto wants badly to get into the Athabasca Basin and they've never lost a bidding war. 
- Mickey doesn't like insiders who sell their own stock when the company is under duress.
Readers, I have to tell you that I've learned a ton from Mickey's lectures at the Hard Assets Conference and its predecessor events.  His website is a terrific free education.   

Paul van Eeden, "Looking for Value" Keynote
- The bottom four quintiles of earners have seen declines in their percentage of the economy's overall income, even while the top 1% has seen huge after-tax income growth.  Don't tell the Occupy Wall Street crowd.  They might try to enter the exhibition hall.
- The bottom 99% owes 73% of the debt in the US but their consumption drives the economy.  This tells me that the postwar US model of debt-based consumption as a driver for growth is about to expire.  No middle class can survive burial under huge college loans that can't be torn up in bankruptcy court.  The next wave of growth - once Great Depression 2.0 has run its course - will have to be based on production. 
- Metals prices indicate the equity bull market is over.  China's new "ghost cities" drove its manufacturing growth; this is an unsustainable model.  Construction of capital goods without demand is malinvestment.  China's growth story experiment is thus destructive of capital.  Finally, some sanity on China.  I drank from the China punch bowl for long time until recently learning that much of the story is based on fraudulent finances, hidden debt, and trains to nowhere.  Now I'm stuck with FXI until China jump starts its consumer economy, if ever. 
- Chinese consumers can't afford overbuilt apartments (bought by speculators), so they fall into disrepair.  Yikes, looks like consumers will be on their backs for a while.
- Chinese GDP is calculated on production, not consumption.  Wasteful production of unneeded goods counts toward China's growth miracle.
- Paul thinks the Fed isn't dumb enough to force inflation up to intolerably high levels.  The thing about such high inflation is that it can come accidentally when you're just shooting for moderate inflation that will devalue sovereign debt.  The Fed may not be dumb enough to force this, but I don't know if they're smart enough to avoid it.
- Gold bullion prices typically move first, then majors, then juniors.  Juniors won't rally until the bullion price resets.  Boy am I glad this guy was a speaker.  The hits just keep on coming.  Please bring Paul back next year for more contrarian wisdom. 

Al Korelin, "What Twenty Years . . ."
- Al believes the equity markets are unsound and invests exclusively in hard assets.  That's pretty harsh; he's even more of a skeptic than me. 
- Middle East instability can make gold skyrocket.  Always remember that oil is priced in dollars, for now anyway.

Jack Lifton, Technology Metals Research
- Jack restated the contentions of his recent article on junior rare earth companies. Jack's bottom line is that only handful of publicly traded rare earth miners can produce all of the world's needs.    I won't repeat much of what Jack said because frankly the man is so brilliant that I don't think I could do him justice.  Read his articles for yourself to get the best view in the world on rare earth metals. 

John Kaiser, Kaiser Research Online
- He says gold's price rise is sustainable.  I disagree.  Everything reverts to mean sooner or later.  That mean for gold is in the low 600s.
- Gold miners' low share prices (relative to bullion) reflect anxiety that hyperinflation will make cash flows evaporate.  Excellent.  I would add that the majors have hedged their dollar exposure and will suffer less than juniors in such a scenario.  Pay attention, investors.
- The US's sovereign debt load makes us strategically weak and out military spending is unsustainable.  However, a US recession will hurt "parasite economies" like China due to their export-driven models.  That means the US can expect a GDP lead over China that will last another 20-30 years.  Hmm, that last bit is interesting, original thinking.

Michael Berry, Morning Notes
- Michael covered a lot of familiar ground on unpayable sovereign debt, China's malinvestment, the Fed's balance sheet, coming austerity in the developed world, and emerging markets' booming demand for commodities.  I frequently read his free "Discovery Investing" commentaries.  They are a good look into junior miners. 

Frank Trotter, EverBank Direct
- EverBank believes the big economies drive the world economy, not emerging markets.  He sounds like a contrarian at this conference given the many speakers who think the future lies with emerging economies. 
- The euro gave peripheral countries a "free ride" so they could borrow at lower rates.  Germany is not necessarily willing to take a big hit to GDP just to bail out the PIIGS.
- Positive drives of a currency's value include budget, debt, and trade numbers all in positive directions.  Norway is #1 by this standard but Canada and Australia also look good.  IMHO, these fundamentals are a more valuable set of metrics for currency investors than the "pips" traders watch.

John Nadler, (Kitco), "Silver's Cloudy Lining"
- The silver market is in surplus with record volume in 2010.  Government silver stockpiles have declined for years. 
- Average cash cost of production for the top 30 producers worldwide is now $5.20/oz.  This is extremely important to note.  Producers in the bottom quartile of production costs are more likely to add shareholder value.  It pays to be a cheap operator. 
- Investment demand has absorbed all surplus production; almost all of this demand came from silver ETFs. 

The final event is always the Bulls and Bears keynote panel.  Rick Rule, James Dines, Paul van Eeden, Ian McAvity, and Adrian Day held court.  Rick moderated and kicked off by asking his panelists to nominate black swans that kept them worried.  Count the swans: the end of our Bretton Woods system; a bank crisis that shocks China's growth and causes social unrest; resource scarcity; India awakening; Africa developing; overnight euro destruction. 

The panelists anticipate the failure of the eurozone.  These are very well-informed experts who have made a living for decades by being on the right side of the markets.  I take their conclusions seriously.  They were also very strongly supportive of gold's continued rise, except Paul, who thinks it will collapse to $850/oz.  I can't call the end of gold's bull run.  All I can say is that I'm not in love with any asset; my GDX holdings are just another asset class.  I reduced my concentration in GDX as gold climbed. 

Rick ended this year's confab by asking for things that could go right.  Where are the white swans?  The panelists responded:  Congress could enact an austerity budget; technology innovation over decades could solve the growth crisis; the Fed could return to sound monetary policy (yeah right IMHO!); an outbreak of fiscal integrity in DC and justice in due course for the victims of the MF Global collapse.  That last comment got a rousing response from the audience of hard -core hard assets investors who remained until the very end!

Thanks for another great year, Hard Assets Conference.  I should also note that Jim Dines once again had an excellent booth staffed with attractive female models.  That's one investment that never goes out of style. 

Friday, November 11, 2011

South American Silver (SAC.TO) Stays Down South

South American Silver (SAC.TO / SOHAF) has some things going for it, like over $28mm of working capital and preliminary estimates of favorable cash costs of production.  It also has 43-101 reports for its iridium and gallium deposits.  Those are always nice to see in junior resource companies. 

The bad news is that SAC.TO hasn't turned a profit, although their losses in the most recent three-month and nine-month periods have attenuated from comparable periods in 2010.  The price of silver is above its historical average; claims of demand growth aside, there is no assurance that this price will remain elevated forever.  Always remember that the single most important determinant of a resource company's value is the market price of its resource.

Risk-seeking investors are welcome to take a closer look at South American Silver.  I'd prefer a profitable company.

Full disclosure:  No position in SAC.TO / SOHAF.PK at this time. 

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Critiquing Some "Sovereign Investing" Concepts

A fellow private investor asked me today for my assessment of the following portfolio ideas for a hyperinflating economy:

- Physical gold and silver
- Agricultural commodities
- Cash-rich large-cap stocks

Those ideas were mentioned in today's edition of "The Sovereign Investor" email from Eric Roseman.  Here's my critique. Physical gold and silver don't come in small denominations.  They will be quickly depleted in a barter economy.  Try dividing a gold brick into spare change at the grocery store and you'll see what I mean.  Gold and silver have to produce some kind of yield - like dividends from mining stocks - to be practically useful. 

Foodstuffs make excellent stockpiles of hard assets for hard times.  I have many shelves full of canned goods and will keep adding to my pile.  I would have to take a serious look at agriculture-related stocks' fundamentals (five year ROE, etc.) to complete this part of the portfolio. 

Cash-rich large cap stocks can be deceptive; it all depends on what the balance sheet is hiding.  GE was cash-rich in 2008 but took TARP money to avoid a bailout.  Investors would have to sift through a cash-rich company's financials to figure out just how quickly that cash would be depleted if hyperinflation pushed up raw material costs faster than the firm can raise prices. 

It's not bad advice in general because it covers several asset classes that are mostly non-correlated.  The key is to translate these things into forms that are fungible and allow investors to pay for their daily existence without depleting their portfolios. John T. Reed's book on hyperinflation is a much better guide to assembling a portfolio. 

Full disclosure:  Long GDX with covered calls.