Showing posts with label rare earth metals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rare earth metals. Show all posts

Sunday, September 14, 2014

NioCorp Developments Bleeds Cash for Niobium

NioCorp Developments used to be called Quantum Rare Earth Development.  The name change from March 2013 has not changed the nature of the company.  They still plan to extract niobium in Nebraska.  Rare earth elements are crucial to the defense and high-tech sectors.  It is crucial that competent miners extract these elements for processing.

Their current CEO is the former CEO of Molycorp, the largest rare earths producer in the US.  It is usually good for a junior resource company to have experienced mining executives, but they need to have the right kind of experience.  Mineweb's reporting on this CEO's tenure at Molycorp mentions losses and legal problems.  Bloomberg's reporting on that period at Molycorp highlights operational problems.  Junior mining companies need a management team that won't bring drama.  Capital markets dislike drama and reward competence.

NioCorp's minor projects in Saskatchewan and Australia are too immature to deserve an economic estimate.  The main NioCorp project at Elk Creek has a 43-101 estimate of MII resources from April 2012.  The grades aren't exactly stellar but the size of the deposit matters.  The 43-101 report acknowledges the logistics trifecta that a mining project needs: roads, power, and water.  I could not locate any photos of this property on NioCorp's website but the 43-101 report indicates the land is mostly flat with some rolling hills.  Flat relief areas are good for the eventual construction of tailing areas.  The report's bottom line recommends an exploration budget of CAD$4.89M to further refine an estimate of the niobium deposit.

I checked SEDAR for their latest financial report dated March 31, 2014.  They had CAD$3.9M in cash on hand but lost about CAD$378K for the quarter.  That gives them quite a few months from that date before they will have to close another capital raise.  The problem I noted from that financial statement is that much of the expenses generating those losses are for administrative matters like management fees.  NioCorp needs to spend towards exploration plan as recommended in the 43-101 report.

I remember first noticing this company back in 2011 when junior rare earth companies were riding the media's fascination with the Molycorp story.  The share price of Quantum/NioCorp has always been in the pennies but crashed during September 2011 and did not really recover until April 2014.  It is still a high-risk prospect.  NioCorp must obviously raise more capital and dilute shareholders further just to prove its Elk Creek project is viable.  Creating a functional mine is a consideration far in the future.

Full disclosure:  No position in NioCorp at this time; no position in its predecessor tickers at any time in the past.

Editorial note:  I made a minor correction on 09/15/14 to the number of months their cash reserve will last based on their burn rate; the cash will last longer than I had first anticipated.  It does not materially change my assessment of this company's prospects.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Montero Mining and Exploration . . . Isn't Producing

I found out about Montero Mining and Exploration (MON.V / MXTRF) two years ago at the height of the rare earths investing craze, and I promptly forgot about it.  Let's see if they're worth remembering.  They've got projects all over the place.

The CEO is a geologist.  That's cool, and I respect experience at Placer Dome.  They've only listed one project manager, on the team for their Tanzania rare earths project.  What about the South Africa phosphate project and the Quebec uranium project?  Well, the September 2011 43-101 report for the South Africa project describes a mineral resource and they published a PEA last year with a decent NPV.  I didn't see any 43-101 report for the Quebec project.  I have no idea what it will cost to bring to production.

Let me get back to that Tanzania project.  The 43-101 report from August 2011 recommends more drilling before issuing a PEA, at a cost of at least US$3.1M or as much as as $5.3M.  This is on top of the $2.6M Montero should have spent on its Phase 1 preliminary work.  That means this thing isn't even close to production.  We can determine whether they can afford to complete this work by reading their most recent financial statement dated November 29, 2013.  They were down to C$63K in cash and their burn rate is over $100K/month.  That means they're barely hanging on.  Their latest announced capital raise from December 3, 2013 is intended to pay off accounts payable rather than continue funding the estimated exploration budget.

Take a look at this stock's historical prices.  It has never traded for more than a few cents since inception and it's now under two pennies.  I am not going to pay the two cents per share to play in this company.

Full disclosure:  No position in Montero, ever.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Great American Energy (SRBL) Has Options on Unconfirmed Deposits and Little Else

It's time to examine the merits of another free pump-action mailer.  MicroCap Market Place sent me a teaser touting Great American Energy (SRBL) and how it's somehow positioned to benefit from rare earth element demand.  I have quite a few doubts about how this company can succeed.

The present Chairman and CEO have zero experience in operating a mine, based on their published bios.  Experience in packaging properties for acquisition is not the same thing as turning them into producing mines.   These guys aren't even geologists.

Their web pages on lithium and REE are industry projections with no descriptions of their properties.  They ignore the likelihood that all projected lithium demand for the foreseeable future can easily be met by existing production from the world's top three producers.

The chief advantage of the option they hold to acquire the Big Smoky Valley lithium project is its proximity to Rockwood's existing Silver Peak lithium mine.  Bear in mind this is merely an option, not a working interest or producing mine.  Determining the value of this project means Great American Energy must have a firm 43-101 estimate of 2P reserves.  The expected life of Rockwood's mine could be a factor in this project; if Rockwood needed to replace declining production then acquiring this Big Smoky Valley project would be a natural fit.  Rockwood's interest in such a deal is unlikely given DOE's $28.4M grant support for Chemetall Foote's expansion of the Silver Peak mine.  There is little need to bring a new lithium mine into production if the existing mine in the neighborhood is growing on its own.  Chemetall Foote is the Rockwood Holdings (ROC) subsidiary operating the Silver Peak mine.  We might as well call it Rockwood Lithium.

Great American Energy also has an option to acquire a working interest in an REE project at Bear Creek.  They have a preliminary report on the project's geology but it does not appear to be 43-101 compliant.  It only covers surface samples and its mention of market values does not suffice as a calculation of project NPV that would complete a preliminary economic assessment.  REE prices have collapsed since 2011, just as I predicted in my interview with the Gold Report in December 2011.

Their annual report for April 1, 2013 doesn't shed much light on their progress other than announcing their business change (they used to be named Southern Bella, hence the ticker).  They ended 2012 with a whopping $4218 in working capital.  That report admits their auditor's going concern doubts and also admits the need for further equity financing.  Shareholders can thus expect further dilution.  I can't understand why the stock has an $88M market cap given these uncertainties.

Great American Energy owns options to acquire properties rather than the properties themselves.  They have a long way to go to raise the capital to buy these properties outright, let alone complete exploration and start production.  The company does not not have firm confirmation of deposit quality for either project that would pass regulatory muster.  There's sufficient lithium production from existing sources for the industry to ignore new deposits for a long time.  The worldwide REE price collapse makes new production of anything other than known high-grade concentrates a very risky proposition.  This is why Great American Energy isn't for me.

Full disclosure:  No position in SRBL or ROC at this time.  

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Mkango Resources (MKA.V) And Rare Earths

Mkango Resources (MKA.V) is chasing one of my favorite things - rare earth elements.  Their CEO has an analyst and transactional background in the mining sector but is not a geologist or miner himself.  Uh-oh, that's not good for a junior explorer.  The non-executive director with the professional background at Randgold was there long enough to take it from exploration into full production.  That is invaluable experience but the team needs more people like that.

Their Songwe project in Malawi has a 43-101 report.  Good for them but I would like to see a final report with 2P reserves.  Photos of the site show a scratched-out dirt road but it's unclear whether it connects to the nation's larger transportation network.  They need C$1.6M to complete the next phase of drilling, modeling, and economic estimation.

It's hard to tell whether they have the financial strength to move forward with that plan.  The most recent financial statement they show on their website was for a company previously named "Alloy Capital."  Searching SEDAR reveals interim financial statements for Mkango dated September 30, 2012.  These statements reveal C$645k in cash on hand at the end of September, and with a burn rate of over C$100k/month they'll run out of cash by March 2013 unless they raise capital.  Shareholders can thus expect serious dilution unless Mkango is willing to option out part of the 100% ownership of its Songwe property.

Management deserves kudos for keeping expectations realistic, and I'm not about to compare them to Mountain Pass until they have a firmer understanding of their ores.  Since they only have one key leader who has gone all the way to production, they don't have the bench strength to go it alone in this corner of the world.  The driver of Mkango's future valuation will be the quality of whichever strategic partner they bring in prior to a production decision.  That uncertainty, plus the lack of clarity for their financial health, makes them too risky for me.

Full disclosure:  No position in MKA.V at this time.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Synopsis of the San Francisco Hard Assets Investment Conference 2012

The San Francisco Hard Assets Investment Conference is my favorite trade show ever.  It was different this year with the exhibitors split between two levels at the Marriott Marquis but the seminars and workshops were phenomenal.  I'll provide my recaps of the many platform speakers from November 16-17 below.  The bold words indicate wisdom I find worth applying in my own portfolio.

First up on Friday morning was Mickey Fulp, Mercenary Geologist.  He took questions on his stock picks and other topics.  He likes Athabasca Uranium and thinks that the SEC's probe into Molycorp is likely minor but will hurt other REE miners like Tasman Metals and Quest Rare Minerals.  One guy in the audience threw out a random question about some movie called "Wall Street Conspiracy" that alleges organized crime is involved in uncovered shorting.  Mickey thinks you have to find ways to make money in the markets anyway, although I think there's enough manipulation to make that difficult.  Another guy asked about the disconnect between the price of gold bullion and gold mining stocks; Mickey uses the Toronto (TSX) Venture Exchange as a proxy for junior gold producers.  He thinks big miners are now looking at dividend strategies and junior miners have underperformed because risk averse investors are dumping speculative stocks.  Some clueless nutcase asked about a "billionaire gift tax;" Mickey had never heard of it and neither have I.  When asked whether he likes silver producers, Mickey said he usually reviews silver companies that find silver deposits with base metals but would like to find a stand-alone silver company.

Jonathan Moore from Summit Business Media welcomed everyone to officially kick off the conference.  Being an active participant is what I'm all about but the rest of the folks needed to hear it from Jonathan.  He mentioned a couple of incentive games they had but I left those to attendees less fortunate than me.  

Paul Van Eeden gave a keynote talk on "rational expectations."  His take on monetary policy is radically different from what you'll find in most gold bugs' newsletters.  He is correct in stating that the Fed will do anything to prevent deflation and that collapsed lending demand has destroyed the multiplier effect that would normally drive inflation.  I differ with him in my expectation that this depressed multiplier is not at all a permanent condition.  I expect some artificial stimulus to lending demand, probably from home mortgage modification programs.  Anyway, Paul thinks the gold price's expectation of inflation is likely irrational because real world inflation hasn't fulfilled that expectation.  I say just wait long enough for policy to force lending and gold will get all the inflation it expects.  Paul also thinks gold, silver, and copper are still in a bull phase while every other metal has crashed (thanks to China's overbuilt infrastructure).  He thinks junior stocks are acting like the prices of base metals because investors are losing their risk appetite, making them attractive buys.  Paul concluded with his bullish case for the U.S.  He said our high unemployment rate means labor is available, our low interest rates are good, and low energy costs from fracking and horizontal drilling are attractive.  Maybe so Paul, but those interest rates won't stay low for long so any major producer that wants to buy a junior had better do so right now.  

Adrian Day was up next, pondering whether miners have a tough road ahead if the resource boom is over.  He noted that central banks have not restructured the balance sheet expansions they launched in 2008.  He cited the U.S. Debt Clock's figures for how much the average American taxpayer owes in unfunded liabilities, which as of his address at the conference was over $1M/taxpayer.  My SWAG-type estimate leads me to believe the Fed will be comfortable with a prolonged level of high inflation that reduces that liability to around $10K, or 1% of the present relationship.  I have no historical basis for this estimate other than my impression that the average American won't tolerate outright cuts to entitlement programs and so policymakers must indulge this attitude by letting inflation do the job.  Of course, the attendant second-order effects from high inflation won't be anyone's fault.  I really need to get off this soap box and back to Adrian, who BTW said policymakers will do all it takes to keep interest rates low so the interest payments on government debt don't spiral out of control.  He noted that many central banks are reducing their dollar holdings and that commodities move in long cycles as major economies industrialize and urbanize.  I disagree with one thing Adrian said when he claimed China is still growing.  I think their whole "industrialize and urbanize" phase is pretty much ending as they hit a demographic wave of peak earnings and wring debt out of government-backed development entities.  I got over the China bull story even though it took me a long time to realize their numbers are fraudulent.  Adrian's a smart guy and I'm counting on him to see the light soon.

I listened to Jeb Handwerger share some ideas from his newsletter.  Here's one astute observer who notes that a significant portion of the U.S. population pays no income tax; he said two thirds but the exact number is up for debate if you include those who pay some state income tax.  Jeb notes that Europe's socialist/Keynesian policies led to austerity and revolts, and that this is soon coming to the U.S. thanks to our entitlement programs (bingo, I agree).  Jeb intrigued me when he said the fiscal cliff deal is already done in Washington and the public rhetoric is just politics.  When you think about it, all Congress has to do is send the President a bill delaying the implementation of the year-end automatic cuts indefinitely.  Presto!  Cliff averted, can kicked, problems unresolved.  I also agree with Jeb's statement that this means the Fed will print a way out of the fiscal cliff.  He expects gut-wrenching hyperinflation to bring exponential gains to hard asset investors within a decade.  Jeb picked up on something I've been seeing with increasing regularity since I started attending these shows, namely that new resource discoveries are getting harder.  I even see that in weekly roadshow presentations from exploration companies that get excited over a few tenths of a gram of metal they claim to have found.  Folks, these discovery dearths will drive major producers to acquire solid junior producers.  

Keith Schaeffer told us that oil is worth a lot, natural gas is worth less than oil, and we can expect a boon for oil services.  The Marcellus boon is enormous.  Low inventories and rising production should support oil prices.  Distillates are important to the world economy and demand for them remains high.  New gas finds often have value-added products.  A global policy shift against nuclear energy makes LNG attractive.  No new refineries are being built in the U.S.  He mentioned some stocks he likes because bottlenecks at refineries make them attractive, plus they pay dividends.  I'll compare them in a separate blog posting once I have a chance to view their ROEs and other fundamentals.  Good job, Keith.  

I didn't spend much time with the exhibiting companies' pitches in the main hall but one had a funny tag line.  The guy from Bullfrog Gold made my day when he said, "Bullfrog Gold is ready to jump!"  That's a classic.  I have no idea whether that's an accurate assessment so maybe I should cover them in a separate blog post.

Benjamin Cox from Oren Inc. gave an absolutely outstanding workshop on using data from financing rounds to evaluate a mining company's viability.  Ben once worked for D.E. Shaw and brings a much-needed quantitative voice to the cottage industry of junior mining.  His nuggets of wisdom came fast and furious and I enjoyed listening.  Here it comes, line by line.  A mining project that provokes NIMBY bumper stickers will likely have permitting problems.  Management must work 70 hours per week.  Companies repeatedly financing for small amounts with large dilution are problems.  Inelastic demand for a commodity makes it desirable for mining (hey, I'm thinking there's hope yet for silver and rare earths).  Zinc is useful in galvanized products for infrastructure so no zinc means buildings rust and fall down (listen up, China).  The massive $5T in capital tied up in steel milling makes coking coal indispensable (well, I think there's more to it than that, like demand for steel and aluminum products, but it's an okay starting thesis).  I was very intrigued by his admiration for co-branded mining companies because they can share supporting resources; I see these mining companies all the time but it seems to me like they're stuck between spinouts.  Viewing them as mini-conglomerates puts them in a whole new light but let's not forget how the inefficiencies of conglomerate mergers in the 1970s put the whole "sharing resources" theory through a major wringer.  

Benjamin continued on a roll by mentioning free tools investors should use:  Google Earth to view a property's geography; USGS Mineral Resources Program to learn about metals; SEDAR for viewing Canadian public company filings; the Fraser Institute's Economic Freedom index to assess political risk; and common sense.  He was of course pitching Oren's paid notification services but much of the data he used to walk us through mining deal financing was free of charge.  Here comes more free wisdom from this sharp guy.  Successful financing closes indicate a company that's executing its business model.  Brokers are rational and charge more to raise money for harder projects.  Broker fees are thus indicators of a project's difficulty. A fully subscribed book indicates success.  A short time to close a deal is good, and so is an oversubscribed deal.  Companies can review Oren's tear sheets to see if a broker fits their deal by average deal size, number of total deals, and percent of deals with warrants.  A bought deal is a broker's promise to close a financing round with its own money, and for Benjamin that's a useful indicator of a broker's confidence in a company's prospects.  

Benjamin surprised me when he said he likes companies that pay management decent salaries because real talent doesn't come cheap.  Management that works for free indicates little value added.  The exception for him is a management team that owns a big stake in their company because they're getting paid in equity.  That's actually in line with Silicon Valley metrics for tech startups.  One thing I like about Oren's model is their use of this data to find troubled deals, then examine the company from a vulture investor's standpoint to see if they have quality hidden assets worth buying.  Man, this talk was a joy to behold because it's so rare to see a serial entrepreneur lay out a value creation philosophy with multiple applications.  

It wouldn't be a hard assets show without a keynoter from James Dines, legendary analyst and employer of attractive female models.  He was in classic form, sticking with his prediction of a further slowdown in China.    He expects China to spark a dollar crisis when it reduces its dollar holdings for gold to bail out its insolvent banks.  I'm skeptical of global warming, so I have a hard time swallowing his admonition against buying sea-level real estate.  I further doubted his claim that rare earth mining stocks will recover after tax-loss selling.  Come on James, a slowdown everywhere will keep REE demand down.  He sees the U.S. government becoming the world's largest landlord with housing bailout programs.  I think James is counting on more foreclosures while the Fed retains ownership of massive amounts of mortgage-backed securities to make that prediction come true.  James is obviously a precious metals fan but warns us not to keep precious metals on our person or in our homes (yeah dude, that means you have to trust a bank vault instead).  James predicts a whole bunch of disruption from online learning, religious wars, regional separatism, cyberwar in World War IV, and a U.S. police state.  He restated the main geopolitical thesis from one of his books, that political activity oscillates between whether the state or the individual is supreme.  He also plugged Photocyclops, his reprint service for his fine art photography.  I had no idea he was into taking pictures, but then again his models provide some great scenery.

Rohit Savant from CPM Group broke down the costs of production, 50% of which is labor.  The lead times of bringing new mines online mean supply changes will lag changes in operating margins, so profits rise or fall ahead of supply changes.  Metal prices are the most important factor driving exploration spending.  Country risk is the largest risk in mining.  The dental sector is the third largest source of gold demand but palladium is becoming a more cost-effective substitute.  A recent sharp rise in cash costs squeezed margins across the mining sector, explaining why gold mining stocks have underperformed bullion.  His figure that 90% of gold from primary mines had a cash cost of less than $1052/ounce leads me to believe that many gold producers can survive as long as fear of inflation keeps gold prices high, even though they'd be unprofitable in normal times.  

I skipped Ian McAvity's address because I heard enough of him in the past and I don't need to hear him anymore.  I instead went to hear about Precious Metals Warrants but after forty minutes I realized I had heard precious little about how to invest.  I did hear that currencies will engage in competitive devaluation at some point but with no indication of which those would be.  I also heard praise for limit orders, which I consider to be amateur's tools.  I stopped using limit orders years ago when I figured out that selling options could accomplish the same thing and even generate cash.  I'll blog the stock picks I heard separately.  

Rick Rule was the next keynoter.  This guy is one terrific salesman.  If I were running a brokerage I'd show recordings of his talks to the sales force because he can spin any macroeconomic environment into a bullish argument.  Rick used a sales sign analogy to argue that people are good at shopping for goods on sale but not for financial assets.  He thinks we're in a cyclical decline within a secular bull market for commodities because supply constraints will persist from a lack of exploration.  He thinks the "return-free risk" proposition of Treasuries is questionable (I agree, which is why I no longer own fixed income).  Rick expects to see takeovers in the gold sector; it produces a Carlin trend equivalent annually with no replacement from discovery.  He laid out Sprott's three criteria for buying a mining stock:  NPV greater than enterprise value of the company plus the capex of its mine; an IRR greater than 25% (ideally 30%); and a payback period of three years or less.  He finished by noting that a company's timeline from preliminary economic estimate to bankable feasibility should be about two years, as this progression adds value and allows for arbitrage by investors.  My takeaway from that observation is a company that can't go from PEA to feasibility in two years isn't a worthy investment.  

Lindsay Hall from RMB Group gave a workshop on commodity futures options.  She was one seriously hot chick and I wouldn't mind exploring an option in her future, if you know what I mean.  It's too bad I didn't have time to get her phone number because I was too busy taking notes in her workshop.  Maybe that's just as well, because she probably would have been too overwhelmed by my sheer manliness to focus on her presentation.  Anyway, she cited figures projecting the U.S. will still have an imported oil dependency in 2035, which contradicts the IEA's recent report concluding the U.S. is on its way to oil independence.  She devoted a large portion of her time to a bunch of scary headlines about Iran's threats to stability in the Persian Gulf.  That is too much emphasis on sensational Iranian rhetoric with no analysis of the country's order of battle or out-of-cycle force movements.  She mentioned some report that Iran successfully tested a missile that has range to U.S. bases in the region, but offered no consideration of the warhead's blast radius or circular error probability.  I think it's cute when amateurs with sales backgrounds try to frighten other amateurs.  Her pitch on option spreads made sense and even introduced the concept of an "oil CD," where you devote a portion of your capital to a bull call spread on oil futures and the rest to a CD with a matching maturity.

Louis James from Casey Research was on the platform talking about "quality, man."  He meant that engineers' economic studies on feasibility drive a mining company's quality.  A published study that doesn't move a stock's price may mean the study was meaningless.  Saying "no" to many deals is good because we can wait for Warren Buffett's fat pitch when an engineering study shows us quality.  I like this Louis guy.  I first heard him last year at the Rare Earths Summit and he's definitely sharp.

The keynote panel on up and coming stocks churned out a bunch of picks in uranium, phosphate, and energy technology.  I'll get to them all eventually in separate articles but it was cool to hear more about uranium in particular.  I did not know that the uranium market had a supply glut when Japan's reactors all went offline.

Saturday morning brought back Rick Rule for some introductory Q&A prior to the official opening of the second day.  Someone asked him about stories on fake gold bars; he mentioned that Sprott's policy is to buy only bars with well-known custodial histories and store them in the Royal Canadian Mint.  Rick senses the possibility of a psychotic break in the market and was glad he had lots of cash on hand in 2008 to use when people made panic sell decisions.  He thinks the euro/dollar ratio at 1:1 makes sense but they have two common problems.  First, they are transfer mechanisms for unsustainable liabilities in societies that have lived beyond their means.  Second, they are subject to downward manipulation (I presume through monetary stimulus).  I like Rick's florid use of language when he says interest rates area function of confidence and that Western governments are at war with savers.  I'll bet Mitt Romney would agree with Rick's statement that spenders outnumber savers and are a bigger constituency for low interest rates.  Rick was astonished that the official CPI calculation doesn't factor in taxes and doesn't account for the aggregation of debt.  I'm not so astonished myself, partly because we all have different effective tax rates and partly because accounting for unpayable debts would drive the official CPI through the roof.  I was pleased when Rick said he had a high opinion of Allied Nevada, a junior stock I owned until it doubled a few years ago.  I re-connected with one of that company's principal backers at this conference to thank him personally for doing a great job.

Rick Rule then got to the main part of his talk on how to interview the management teams of junior mining companies.  Here's my recollection of his thought process.  The first thing to know in interviewing management is that their prepared pitch minimizes management stress.  Juniors create value by answering unanswered questions.  Will they make a discovery?  Is the discovery worth anything via execution?  Junior companies are not asset plays because they typically don't have proven and probable reserves.  They're really more like an intellectual property play in Silicon Valley that needs R&D.  People are more important than property in early stages.  Rick advises us to ask CEOs about their specific skill sets and previous successes.  This will help find the Pareto 20% of managers who have the best chance to succeed.  More questions for the CEO:  Who's the second most important person in your company and why did you hire them?  What are their specific skills and successes?  What role does each director have?  Use these questions to reach an early conclusion that some CEOs just want to raise money so they can cash out.  Rick says that a small mine can't make you big money.  If a CEO seeks a more attractive deposit they can expand, ask for evidence.  Ask the CEO how they will test their exploratory thesis.  A good explanation of an execution plan helps you eliminate companies that will generate a random result rather than a deliberate one.  Another thing to ask a CEO:  If your last success was at a different location, in different terrain, with different minerals . . . what makes you think you can apply those skill sets to a project you haven't done before?  A medical analogy would be that oncology is not the same as neurology, so gold expertise does not necessarily translate to copper.  Not all mining is the same.  Rick's further questions for a CEO:  How much money must you spend on ground over a specific time period?  What's your monthly burn rate?  How much cash do you have on hand now?  Know that it takes money to answer the company's unanswered questions and succeed.  More questions:  What if limited drilling yields poor results?  Will you continue?  Most projects lose, so you need big winners to subsidize many losses.  More questions:  How will I find out about your company's success?  Via press release, or may I call you to find out results?  These answers reveal whether management thinks granularly about drill results.  Rick warns us that we'll never get perfect answers to every question.  The purpose of asking is to whittle down one's list of companies to a small list that will increase the chance of successful investing.  Rick closed by saying that his prospect generator companies have significantly outperformed.

Pam Aden from the Aden Forecast was one keynoter I did not need to hear.  She claimed we're in the twelfth year of a bull market, so I guess she hadn't heard of the 2007-2009 bear market.  Maybe she meant gold and not stocks but it really wasn't clear from her data.  She projected some charted bubble peaking in 2013, but what she meant still wasn't clear.  Her whole thesis for buying gold rested on technical analysis of channels.  Puh-lease.  That's when I picked up and left.

Chris Berry from House Mountain Partners gave a great workshop on the supply and demand fundamentals behind the rare earth sector.  I first met Chris this past March at TREM12 in Washington, DC, when I was on a panel with his father Dr. Michael Berry.  He's a chip off the old block and sharp as a tack.  He argued that each REE has its own supply/demand mix.  Problems for major REE producers like Molycorp and Lynas spell opportunity for juniors.  China's REE exports are down because global demand is weak.  Chris thinks Moylcorp's book value is greater than its market value, so its problem is management rather than assets.  He thinks that makes Molycorp a buyout target; I'm not so sure, because with earnings going negative and ROE negative for the last twelve months an acquirer would be hard pressed to add value simply by changing management.  The debt load Molycorp carries from its last big acquisition will persist.  Anyway, Chris also noted that lanthanum's record price increase last year only added one cent per gallon to the price of gasoline.  He believes that REE juniors need to raise cash with a dilution strategy, off-takes, intellectual property, and supply chain integration.  Bigger does not mean better for REE producers because they must have what the market wants; just look at Molycorp.  Well done, Chris.

Brent Cook from Exploration Insights shared his wisdom.  He said producers' margins are not increasing with the price of gold because cash costs are increasing and deposit quality is declining.  Discoveries are down significantly and annual production is outpacing new discoveries.  Majors must replace their lost production and quality deposits command a premium.  Not all deposits are identical; geology must confirm an investment thesis.  Topography determines whether mining facilities are physically realistic, and showed a photograph of steep hills cut by deep ravines as an example of an infeasible site with no flat areas for milling or heap leaching.  Brent likes prospect generators with smart business models, some of which he describes in his free articles.  His website has an excellent free report with insights into geology and mining, and a link to Sprott's free mining investment explanatory materials.

I went to Paul Van Eeden's workshop to hear more of his contrarian perspective.  He's bearish on gold because he thinks it's too expensive.  He also thinks the world has passed Peak Oil and that U.S. oil shale deposits are experiencing much more rapid decline rates than first predicted, making it unlikely the U.S. will fulfill the IEA's prediction of becoming a leading oil producer.  He sees opportunity in natural gas given its low prices but depletion rates are high.  I think Paul should read the NYT's investigative series on the shale gas bubble because it will help confirm his thesis that there's less to the shale revolution than what's advertised.  He puts the fair value for gold at $800-900/oz (I say that's still too high, far above its historical average) and openly questions valuing it in U.S. dollars given U.S. inflation rates.  I personally don't mind gold measured in U.S. dollars because I'm a U.S.-based investor, my portfolio is denominated in U.S. dollars, and my living expenses are in U.S. dollars.  Paul noted that high gold prices mean miners produce low grade ore veins first, saving high grade deposits for times when gold prices are low.  It was interesting to hear him say the Fed has stabilized its balance sheet by matching purchases of new securities with sales of ones it currently owns.  Paul is a fan of this Fed's anti-deflation strategy.  I marvel at the risk the Fed takes and wonder why it has yet to lose money on a trade.  The next couple of years will reveal whether Paul is correct to place such confidence in Ben Bernanke's PhD thesis / wish fulfillment.

Chris Gaffney from EverBank keynoted his macroeconomic perspective.  Investors now understand that Greek debt is riskier than German debt and so PIIGS interest rates have risen (IMHO hedge funds still haven't figured this out and that's why they're so dumb).  Europe's rescue fund is too small to cover a potential default by Italy (IMHO analysts haven't figured this out yet and that's why they're so dumb).  Chris thinks the euro will survive because it's too important to Germany as an export promotion mechanism.  I strongly disagree with that notion.  IMHO losing one eurozone member breaks a taboo and others will follow to avoid being the last Prisoner's dilemma victim remaining.  I'm also pretty sure German taxpayers have limits to their patience and will vote out incumbents who wantonly subsidize profligate countries' debts.  Anyway, back to Chris' arguments.  He expects the U.S. federal government to push its fiscal responsibilities onto state and local governments forcing them into their own budget crises.  He is not alone among the other gurus here in expecting a false solution to the fiscal cliff that will delay its consequences into the future.  He likes Shadow Stats' inflation measure (so do I) and notes Paul Krugman wants more inflation (revoke that man's Nobel Prize in Economics).  Chris uses the Economist's back page statistics to show how countries with high current account balances generate demand for their currencies.  He finally gets to some currency picks.  He likes Norway because it's an oil-based economy; Sweden for some odd reason I can't recall; Australia for its exports of natural resources to China (yeah, not for much longer); Canada for its strong banks; and also Singapore, China, and gold.  I can't agree with his pick for Singapore because it's such a thinly traded currency or China because I think they'll have to hyperinflate away their debts just like the U.S.  Otherwise, Chris really did his homework.

I never miss Al Korelin's address because the guy's a legend in financial journalism, although I'm pretty sure he hits the same basic themes every year at this show.  He advises us all to get information from as many sources as possible, and to be diversified even within metals and other hard assets.  He predicts the growth of U.S. government involvement in the economy will hurt the stock market and help hard assets.  He prefers to invest in companies rather than commodities because companies give him leverage (i.e., it's a truism in mining that companies with a levered balance sheet will rise faster when metal prices rise because their prospects of paying off that debt just increased mightily).  He evaluates mining companies on management, asset quality confirmed by assessment, ability to execute, and location in the world (i.e., minimal political risk).  He also thinks the current administration will favor taxing mining companies as a revenue source.  That's a scary thought, sort of like a windfall profits tax taken to an extreme for a hot sector.

I had to hear more from Louis James over at his workshop because his address on "quality, man" was so great.  I like his irony when he said President Obama's victory provides clarity with an open advocacy of higher taxes and an anti-rich mentality.  Louis thinks the precious metals markets haven't peaked yet.  I think that's a kind way of saying they're overvalued, which is why I've reduced the gold portion of my portfolio from the large concentration I had a couple of years ago.  Louis says not to panic when the market drops, just keep averaging down.  His counterpoint to skeptics who say companies can't raise billions in capex for big projects is to evaluate the project's potential returns.  Global capital markets are big enough to fund desirable projects now matter how big they look.  Louis' next piece of advice will probably fall on deaf ears but it's worth repeating.  He advises investors not to invest unless a company meets their decision criteria with high standards.  I really do think too many people will ignore that and instead give in to some great story's temptation, but Louis does the public a great service by putting this out there anyway.  Louis framed his "cash, courage, and contrarianism" approach for everyone to benefit.  Courage enables you to ignore short-term market action if you are confident in your long-term strategy.  Contrarianism enables you to buy a stock even if its price has been beaten down.  Cash allows you to make this happen.  Have all three factors and you're probably going to win, at least some times IMHO.  He added that there's no one safe place to invest in mining because it's unpopular everywhere for being dirty, messy, and costly.  His criteria for investing in a mining stock includes a 2x return in 12 months, which interestingly enough reminds me of Mickey Fulp's philosophy.  Louis also thinks the gold/silver ratio is a poor indicator of either metal's price movement.  I totally agree, and I roll my eyes whenever some analyst throws out a ratio of a metal to another metal, the DJIA, or anything else except a currency an investor must use to buy said metal.

It wouldn't be a Hard Assets show without Peter Schiff on the keynote roster.  I got my picture taken with this true icon of finance when he appeared in his booth (check my Facebook archive).  Peter went on a tour de force of the U.S. and its dollar.  Here comes my summary of this man's brilliance, with no adulteration on my part.  At some point, the Fed won't be able to fool the world anymore.  It won't be able to withdraw liquidity (by selling securities) to fight inflation.  The Fed must thus continue to lie and pretend there's no inflation.  Inflation drives up mail delivery costs but the price of stamps is fixed to the CPI.  That's why USPS is going bankrupt.  "Fiscal cliff" means we actually have to pay for government spending with taxes, not debt.  Politicians' promises aren't free and the fiscal cliff is the price we have to pay.  Even the fiscal cliff's spending cuts aren't really cuts, but smaller future increases.  The real cliff comes when the Fed can no longer keep interest rates artificially low.  Artificially setting interest rates creates distortions, especially if inflation is greater than the official interest rate.  Peter believes interest rates must rise to around 7% but this will cause pain.  The U.S. government has admitted its debt is a Ponzi structure when our leaders say the government will default if they can't raise the debt ceiling.  About one third of U.S. debt matures in a year and the Treasury plans to keep rolling it.  Big banks will fail if interest rates rise and the Fed never stress tested this outcome.  Banks profit now from the spread of the Treasuries they buy over Fed credit they owe.  Higher rates will flip that spread and destroy banks.  The deficit skyrockets when the U.S. government can't collect taxes in a recession to cover exploding spending on freebies (i.e., EBT cards for the bottom 47%).  The U.S. has a reprieve right now due to Europe's problems making the dollar relatively stronger.  If the U.S. tried to finance its sovereign debt by selling long term bonds, then long term rates would be skyrocketing.  A sharp rise in interest rates will put trillions of losses on the Fed's balance sheet.  The world will call the Fed's bluff when it takes its attention off Europe (if/when it blows up) and starts a run on the dollar.  The U.S. Dollar Index will go into freefall, consumer prices will rise, and the Fed's credibility will be gone.  Peter believes we face either  hyperinflation or a deflationary collapse worse than the 2008 crisis.  Politicians will opt for inflation because it buys them time but each round of monetary stimulus is less effective than the last.  Peter expects a monetary crisis and sovereign debt crisis right here in America.  My loyal readers know I expect a similar outcome.  The funniest part of Peter's talk came when he asked rhetorically how the Fed and Treasury will bail each other out, because Treasury is required by law to make whole the Fed's losses but the Fed is buying Treasuries!  The audience LOL'd but I was too sad to join in.  I expect the government will have to invent brand new accounting rules for itself to make that problem disappear after the dollar crisis.

The next big speaker I cared about was Dr. Michael Berry, my fellow TREM12 panelist.  I read his Morning Notes daily for insights into junior producers, and here come more of his insights with as little filtering as I can manage.  Dr. Berry believes debt and taxes are negatively correlated (right on!) and some tax increases plus austerity are likely.  It's easier to raise taxes than cut spending.  Entitlement expectations finally make deliberate debt reduction impossible (hey, thanks to the 47% who enjoy being victims).  The final curse of the reserve currency dollar is unrestrained debt issuance.  The administration will demand much higher taxes in its second term (IMHO probably a negotiating tactic for now but who knows).  "Taxmageddon" means rates up and credits down.  The non-partisan Tax Foundation publishes tax changes by state.  The effect of more taxation will be to decrease consumption and GDP.  The Fed's ZIRP is financial repression (yes indeed!), forcing savings into Treasuries.  Austerity's effect on household income will hurt the housing market.  The administration believes it has a mandate to force more taxes on the wealthy but entitlement spending is unlikely to be seriously considered for reductions.  This is all good news for precious metals, energy, and agriculture.  Investments in ordinary debt and equity markets are likely to fall.  Commodity volatility means trading opportunities (IMHO options and futures will come in handy).  Dr. Berry looks for growth in water, potash, and silver stocks.  Less liquid markets will sell off more quickly.  Policymakers will expropriate your wealth!  Dr. Berry showed his latest Discovery Investing scorecard and I noticed that some of the same companies were listed twice, both by their OTCBB ticker and TSX or TSXV ticker.  Hopefully he can develop a filter that will prevent double-counting companies, unless of course the scorecard allows for arbitraging the same ticker in different markets.  Dr. Berry's bottom line is that risk plays will help beat financial repression and taxation.  Good show, Doc!

Quinton Hennigh from Exploration Insights gave a terrific workshop on separating the wheat from chaff in junior gold deposits.  He mentioned that the DOW/gold ratio declines in tough times and heavy gold exploration coincides with that ratio's troughs.  Costs are stable when mining proliferates but drilling costs have escalated in the last 20 years (I disagree with this scenario, as we see heavy mining activity today but with rising costs from higher energy prices).  Digging deeper through more complex ore bodies drives up processing costs.  He said he likes royalty companies because they pay better than junior producers!  I think Louis "quality, man" James would like Quinton's investment criteria, so here they are.  Criteria 1:  Quinton likes juniors that find deposits a major would want to acquire.  Criteria 2:  Simple metallurgy suggests low processing costs.  Criteria 3:  Deposit veins are good when they good lateral and vertical continuity and are open in most directions.  Criteria 4:  Good deposits have uniformly high grades.  That's a good wish list, so anything that doesn't fit is an investment candidate to throw away IMHO.  Quinton also says juniors should avoid "chaff" veins.  These ephemeral veins display poor continuity and tend to be "shooty" (I guess like shoots on a tree branch).  Mineralogically complex veins have high processing costs.  Mine engineers on site exercise "grade control" by differentiating ore from waste as truckloads of rock exit a pit.  Too much waste means lost money.  Oxidized rock is cheaper to process, so seeing it at shallow depth is a good sign.  A high sulfidation gold system is bad because it is notoriously refractory and harder to process.  It should also go without saying that concentrated ore bodies that are closer to the surface are cheaper to extract than dispersed ore bodies deeper down.  Quinton's workshop answered a lot of the questions I had always pondered while staring at geological findings in company roadshow presentations.

The last key speaker I saw was Jay Taylor, another gold legend.  Jay noted that debt in the U.S. has grown faster than income, making us an insolvent nation.  M2 velocity is very low.  Speculative investment vehicles hurt first in contraction periods (LOL bye-bye stupid hedge funds!).  Jay is another guy who likes royalty companies and well-funded project generators!  Maybe I'm missing something here, but it seems like experts recognize value in business models that return the value of extracted resources to investors by way of dividends and royalties.  

Alrighty, it's time for the closing keynote panel moderated by Rick Rule.  He had to get in a jab at James Dines for his attractive models but they mostly behaved themselves this year.  Rick asked his panel how this year's election will matter.  They thought is eliminated the possibility that a new President would fire Ben Bernanke, thus continued QE.  James raised his usual ruckus about a coming calamity.  Rick asked what the equity market is indicating.  Some panelists said it portends a serious bear market and more poverty for Americans.  James (of course) didn't even answer the question except to mention tax loss selling and even obliquely predicted a new political party (where that came from, who knows).  Rick poked James by saying, "There's a couple of candidates in your booth that I'd vote for."  Rick asked if the bond bull bubble would continue.  One panelist thought that any reversal would mark the trade of the decade.  James (again the original) thought pension funds will disappoint people and that it's smarter to live off capital than negative yield (yes, folks, there's a difference and some part of that capital will at least pay a dividend).  Rick asked about monetary inflation and gold.  Someone said a comment I really liked:  "Gold is not an inflation hedge, it's a crisis/inflation hedge."  I suppose I should put the emphasis on crisis but I'll let my readers chew it over. Rick asked whether deflationary periods are bullish for gold.  One guy said that historically gold did better in real terms during deflation but we no longer have analogs for comparison because the world has used fiat currencies since the 1930s.  Here's where Jim Dines went off on a wild tangent about China pursuing resources in Africa.  I wish the guy would just give a straight answer once in a while, but when you're the senior mind in the precious metals analyst community I guess you have free reign.  That means I have something to look forward to in three decades.  Anyway, Rick's final question was about where the markets are in the junior resource cycle and whether anyone has a favorite subsector or stock.  One guy thinks we're in a tremendous buying opportunity thanks to short selling.  Jim likes REE stocks and said bullions are outperforming their respective stocks.  He  was a classic at the end, saying, "Whether you're rich or poor, it's good to have a lot of cash."  I should have mentioned that one of my life goals is to be on one of these panels someday.  I also should mention that the only real standout stock I noticed this year was Ucore, and I'll have more to say about it in a later article.  

My only pet peeve about the show is that the organizers change the name every couple of years.  It was the Gold Conference for a couple of decades, ending with the first year I attended in 2005.  Then it was the Resource Conference, then Hard Assets, and next year it will be the Metals and Minerals Conference.  These constant changes dilute the brand and lead to confusion for people who might be attracted to the resource sector but don't follow it regularly.  

I'll render a final observation on my incentive to keep attending.  James Dines deployed his local models once again but wouldn't allow me to have my picture taken with them.  Bummer.  I did notice that the investor relations dude hired by one of the junior miners kept hitting on those Dines Newsletter models.  I've seen this IR dude do this at other conferences and I wonder when he'll find the time to promote the company that hired him.  Argh, kids these days.  

Full disclosure:  No positions in companies mentioned unless specifically noted.  No consideration was offered, rendered, or accepted for any mention of any financial or information service mentioned.  Nothing in this article constitutes an endorsement of any product or service.  

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Molycorp Downgrade Shows Trouble From Neo Materials Acquisition

I had a few positive things to say about Molycorp's acquisition of Neo Materials when I was a TREM12 panelist this past March.  The company was showing some real strategic thinking by going whole-hog for vertical integration.  Now the bloom is coming off the acquisition rose with S&P downgrading Molycorp's credit rating.

The strategic bet for a company like Molycorp is that the long-term added value from tighter integration will generate enough free cash flow to pay down the debt used in that acquisition.  The monkey wrench in the formula has been the weakening global demand for high-tech goods that rely heavily on REEs for their capabilities.  That hurts demand for Molycorp's ores.

MCP is trading at a P/E of about 10, and is only about a dollar above its 52-week low of about $11 (compared to a high of over $58).  It would be a bargain if not for the likelihood of a very serious downturn in Europe and the U.S.  That would spell further difficulty for any REE producer, no matter how dominant their position.

Full disclosure:  No position in MCP at this time.  

Monday, March 26, 2012

Alfidi Capital Lessons From TREM12

My more inquisitive readers may know that I was invited to be an expert panelist at the IAGS Technology and Rare Earth Metals Center "TREM12" conference this month in Washington, D.C.  I never miss a chance to show off my knowledge and feed my ego.

I can't recap the entire two-day knowledge fest but I'll offer some highlights.  Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) gave an impressive talk on Congress' efforts to streamline permitting regulations for mining and the need for more aerial hyperspectral imaging surveys of unexplored properties in the U.S.  David Sandalow, an Assistant Secretary at the U.S. DOE, acknowledged that the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy was the natural choice to lead the "whole of government" interagency effort on critical metal supply security.  DOE's Innovation Hubs are fully funded, but IMHO they should focus on business incubation and license out the tech they're developing.  One panelist said something ignorant about wind energy, that its cost is essentially free once you amortize away the initial capital costs (IMHO this is stupid because it ignores the cost of regular maintenance, inspections, blade failure, etc.).  

The panel on automotive tech and grid storage made it clear that there will be no shortage of lithium to meet the world's needs, which is one reason why the Li-Ion battery market is expected to consolidate into a smaller number of manufacturers.  The automotive panel also emphasized that the U.S. will need to update its transmission grid to accommodate a growing hybrid/electric vehicle market, and the demands of energy storage at grid level will help drive smart grid build-outs that will optimize charging times for vehicles.  The graphite panel noted the many applications for this material but some have no synthetic alternative.  Ambassador Ichiro Fujisaki of Japan discussed how Japan, the EU, and the U.S. have coordinated their WTO complaint about China's REE policy; they've learned lessons from past oil supply shocks and know that Japan's increasing reliance on renewable energy (especially after the Fukushima meltdown) will make REEs critical.

The final speaker, Dr. Si Jinsong from the Chinese Embassy, restated the PRC's official view on why they are curtailing rare earth exports.  Environmental damage is IMHO a red herring.  China can always dial back its domestic industrial use of REEs or get more aggressive about enforcing environmental regulations to mitigate damage from REE production.  His claims that China has exported too much already and is facing resource exhaustion mean little to me.  REEs are typically found in conjunction with base metals and China still has plenty of those.  The real money quote came late in his presentation when he said the U.S. and China should work together to expand high-value manufacturing.  That is as transparent a statement of intent as the West will ever see from China.  The PRC's longstanding policy is to attract the onshoring of high-tech manufacturing supported by foreign direct investment so Chinese engineers can capture technical knowledge and Chinese industry can build a high-tech export base.  U.S. policymakers need a thorough education in China's grand strategy, and they should start by reading Unrestricted Warfare to see recommendations straight from the People's Liberation Army.  

The fun part for me was my participation on the panel "Supply and Demand: In Balance or Imbalance?" moderated by Clint Cox of The Anchor House.  We had some pretty lively discussions of the structure of the REE market, with Dr. Michael Berry contributing his macroeconomic perspective and Michael Silver from American Elements speaking as an operator within the sector. I'll restate some of my own points from the panel below.

I led off with my assessment of the massive imbalance in the critical metal market and forecast for a future balanced market. Any market where 97% of supply and 100% of alloy processing must originate in China is the definition of a market far out of balance. I argue that a balanced market in strategic metals will eventually look like today's energy market. A power plant doesn't care if the feedstock is natural gas or coal because you don't have to change a turbine's physical structure to use either one. A transmission grid doesn't care whether electrons come from hydropower, geothermal, solar, nuclear, or fossil fuels so long as those electrons can get to your home appliances. Eventually the metals markets will balance when diverse supply sources, efficient technologies, and synthetic substitutes can arbitrage away single sources of supply. U.S. GDP has grown for the past several decades even though per capita energy use has declined. We can use the same energy metrics for the metals market.

I noted that Molycorp's acquisition of Neo Materials changed the game for REE producers by creating a true vertical business model. The deal was cash-heavy rather than stock-heavy, which I thought odd given the strength of MCP shares trading at 23 times earnings. I wondered out loud whether Molycorp thought that the balance sheet risk of assuming a half billion dollars in debt outweighed the avoidance of shareholder dilution. Molycorp is the only REE producer than has the financial and operational strength to initiate M&A; all other REE producers are still young and are thus more likely to be bought themselves (like by an oil supermajor seeking lanthanum or cerium for fluid cracking) than to be buyers of alloy processors.

I threw several policy prescriptions at the audience, starting with a big one for federal government policy. Several other panelists had noted that DOD seemed to be the weak link in the interagency effort to secure critical metal supplies. I think I know why. DOD's weapon system procurement program managers are selected from career warfighting officers, which makes sense if you want people who can dream up future capabilities for armored vehicles and fighter aircraft. The weakness of this approach is that warfighters don't think like logisticians. They don't know how to reach down three or four levels worth of subcontractors to find supply chain vulnerabilities. I would like to see DOD's Defense Acquisition University incorporate supply chain security into its curriculum so program managers get the insight they need. I would also like those professional logisticians who do join the acquisition workforce to think more like intelligence officers when they screen contract sources for components and raw materials. The intelligence community has plenty of data on natural resource repositories in many countries; developing indicators and warnings of supply curtailments that procurement managers and logisticians can use should be a priority for the intelligence community.

I also had three other policy recommendations up my sleeve; these were more attuned to things that will help the markets for critical metals become more transparent and liquid. First, I argued that some exchange (preferably the Chicago Mercantile Exchangeshould create a futures market for rare earth metals. Producers and end users of both base metals and precious metals can hedge their needs with future contracts in gold, copper, and steel. Agribusiness can do the same with contracts in rice and soybeans. Creating contracts for rare earth metals seems like a decent thing to do for manufacturers who can't mitigate single-source supply risk with contracts for guaranteed delivery from miners. Second, I believe the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should adopt some version of Canada's National Instrument 43-101 resource reporting convention that accommodates nuances in ore deposit volumes and grade quality. This will accelerate mining investment in the U.S. by allowing miners to identify more exploration projects that show some early promise. Finally, I suggested that the U.S. government fund an estimate of the production cost curves for REE mining projects worldwide. Investment banks publish costs curves for base metals, precious metals, and oil/gas wells because the thousands of those sources worldwide are well-known. The small number of rare earth mines operating worldwide are so early in production that their costs are only estimates, or they are in semi-transparent economies like China where state subsidies can mask true cash costs. The U.S. intelligence community has enough analytic horsepower and data to publish initial estimates of the world's REE mining costs. Uncle Sam should do this in the spirit of the CIA's World Factbook as an open-source, unclassified academic reference for the entire world, and the best place to publish it is on the U.S. Geological Survey website.  

That just about completes the wonderful time I had at TREM12. I made plenty of contacts from the Defense Logistics Agency, the Institute for Defense Analyses, and other government agencies that will have to carry the ball on policy execution for critical metal security. I even got some free entertainment when I saw a junior executive from a mining company try to flirt with a hot babe from an executive branch office. I'll conclude by saying that I'll definitely return in the future, because I can never get enough lunch buffets, fruit smoothies, and house recipe cannolis from the Ritz-Carlton Pentagon City.  It's nice that TREM holds its annual conference someplace swanky.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Monday, March 12, 2012

Molycorp Deal For Neo Material Technologies Moves REE To Vertical Integration

Molycorp has been consistently ahead of the game in rare earth metal production.  They were first to see the potential in reactivation of the old Mountain Pass rare earth motherlode.  Now they're the first REE producer to move toward large-scale vertical integration.  Molycorp's $1.3B offer for Neo Material Technologies will give the combined company end-to-end control of an entire REE value chain, from ore to finished products (specifically magnets).

Molycorp made a bold move last year with a $35M investment in Boulder Wind Power.  This investment sustains a wind turbine technology that is not dependent on dysprosium and is strategically complementary for Molycorp given that company's seeming lack of dysprosium among its deposits.  I've seen other media reports that describe Boulder Wind's technology as "non-ferrous," which is curious given Molycorp's move toward neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) magnet combinations.

It's worth noting that Great Western Minerals Group has had a well-integrated business model for many years.  Molycorp's model is large in scale and is notable for having something that has eluded Great Western for some time:  profitability.

Full disclosure:  No positions in any companies mentioned.  

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

DOE Reached Same Conclusion On Wind Rare Earths As Alfidi Capital

Some of my fine readers may have noticed my recent interview in The Gold Report where I named dysprosium as the rare earth metal most likely to remain strongly in demand.  I mentioned it in the context of continued strong demand for wind turbines that also used neodymium in their magnets.  Well, lo and behold, the U.S. Department of Energy reached a similar conclusion in its 2011 Critical Materials Strategy.  It specifically named dysprosium and neodymium as two of five metals that may pose supply challenges for the clean energy sector.  The Gold Report has a good article pointing out implications for the rare earth mining sector.

The DOE report also has some great details on alternative technologies that may ameliorate the rare earth supply crunch when they are fully mature.  This is another subject I mentioned in my interview.  Listen up, Wall Street!  Keep reading this blog if you want to hear about emerging industry issues.  

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Hints On Due Diligence In Rare Earth Mining

My genius readers have the chance to read my interview today with The Gold Report, which I've noted has also been picked up by other online media outlets.  I mentioned the logistics trifecta - water, power, roads - as something absolutely critical to a productive mine.  I also need to elaborate on the subject of production costs.

Investment banks and resource industry sources regularly publish information on the cost production curves for specific mining sectors.  Professional investors and analysts prefer to invest in projects whose cash costs of production are in the bottom quartile of their peer group.  I'm not sure how 25% became the threshold or whether it's been academically validated as a useful cutoff, but it's become an industry truism.  This business rule holds true for minerals, oil, natural gas, coal, potash, and any other resource that must be extracted from the earth's crust.  That's why junior miners whose executives have good business sense will tell you whether their cash costs place them in the cheapest 25% of their peer group. 

The problem with rare earths and other critical metals is that there are too few operating mines worldwide to construct statistically valid cost curves.  The rare earth sector is currently dominated by Chinese mines whose financial reporting may not be transparent.  The important point to remember is that investors must use factors besides the cost of production to evaluate new resource projects, especially those in the exploratory stage.  I'll recap some of those factors below.

Management experienced in the sector.  I get impatient whenever I sit through investment conferences and roadshow presentations and listen to a mining company CEO whose background was in investment banking, management consulting, financial brokerage, or something else unrelated to mining.  That tells me the insiders and founders are just looking to dress up a bad property and quickly flip it to the next round of suckers and bagholders.  Yes, folks, there really is some of that from time to time in resource investing.  Effective mining CEOs need to be operating geologists, without exception.  They should ideally have a career history encompassing an entire project lifecycle, from exploration to shut-down.  It's also nice to see other geologists and mining engineers on a junior resource company's management team. 

National Instrument 43-101 compliant report.  The SEC's rules for companies disclosing resource reserves are much more restrictive than Canadian securities rules.  The SEC requires disclosure of a company's resources that can be economically extracted.  Canada, with a more liberal bent to encourage development of its resource sector, requires companies preparing for production to publish what's commonly known as a 43-101 report.  The importance of the report for investors is its disclosure of a company's proven and probable reserves, aka "2P reserves."  This reserve category is the most useful estimate of what a company can economically extract, and does not include inferred or implied resources that may later be added to the 2P category after production begins.  The 2P number can be plugged into a valuation model to determine the company's worth. 

Burn rate.  This is the amount of money a junior company is spending monthly to operate.  Divide its annual net losses by twelve, then divide that monthly loss into its cash on the balance sheet.  I also like to subtract shot-term liabilities from the cash on hand just to see if the company will survive for a year.  Companies that run out of cash before their exploratory results are complete will need to return to investors hat in hand.  Raising more capital will dilute shareholders immediately (through common stock issuance) or eventually (through warrants and PIPEs). 

Logistics trifecta.  I've said it before and I'll say it again.  Water is for heap leaching a mineral deposit, which will also require plans for treatment and disposal of tailings (either in a pond or dry-stacked after baking) that retain traces of toxicity.  Electric power is for the equipment and base camp; the company must either be a mile or two away from a transmission line and have planned capex for a step-down transformer, or must have large volume diesel tanks on site.  Roads to the project site can be of the gravel and unimproved variety but they must at some point lead to a metals refinery by linking to other hardball roads or a port. 

There you have it, critical elements investors.  Please do your own homework while researching investment opportunities.  I can't do investors' homework for them because nobody pays me anything to do so. 

Friday, December 16, 2011

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.