lundi 30 novembre 2015

Mining majors capitulate as metals rout continues

A couple of weeks ago, mining and metals analysts at Barclays put out a research note warning investors that while the sector is having its worst run in fifty years better days aren't necessarily around the corner.

This is how the investment bank summarized the current state of the industry when it downgraded the entire sector:

"The last 5 years have now been the worst period of performance since 1966: Looking forward it is hard to see what might pull the sector out of its tailspin. A demand shock seems unlikely given the state of China’s economy, although there are some signs of near term improvement (M2, property starts, TSF growth).

"Pinch points in supply/demand are getting pushed back implying marginal costs will govern pricing for longer. Costs themselves are under negative pressure.

"Meanwhile, returns on equity are sub cost of equity following unprecedented capex/depreciation levels, and net debt as a proportion of enterprise value is at an all time high. Finally one has to sift through valuations to find metrics that support an investment case."

Two weeks later and their caution seems justified.

Copper is hovering not far off 2009 levels after coming dangerously close last week to falling through the psychologically important $2 a pound level. Iron ore spot prices seems destined to enter the $30s before the end of the year – prices last seen in 2007.

The price of nickel last week dipped to close to $8,000 for the first time in more than a decade and today's price compares with a 1993 to 2015 average of $13,600 a tonne.

Australian thermal coal prices hit a high in July 2008 within shouting distance of $200 a tonne but is now averaging in the $50s. Coking coal's fall has been even more spectacular with premium coking coal falling to $75 a tonne, the lowest since tracking of the spot price first began.

Share valuations have  continued to fall in tandem with commodity prices.

And what little upside potential still existed for BHP Billiton (NYSE:BHP) and Vale (NYSE:VALE), the Brazil environmental disaster killed that off too.

World number one BHP had another down day in New York on Monday as investors react to the news of a "preliminary" $5 billion-plus fine against Samarco, its iron ore joint venture with Vale following a deadly dam burst in Minas Gerais state.

The value of the Melbourne-based company has been cut in half over the last year for a market capitalization of just under $70 billion, a decade low. That compares to $270 billion in 2011 when it briefly became the fifth most valuable publicly traded company in the world, ahead of giants like Chevron and Microsoft.

Vale was already one of the worst performers in the sector but on Monday American Depositary Receipts of Vale trading in New York plunged another 9.5% bringing losses for the Brazilian company  year to date to an eye-watering 63%. The Rio de Janeiro-based company is the world's number one producer of iron ore, ahead of Rio Tinto (NYSE:RIO) and BHP and also holds the top spot for nickel output.

The company's market value ascended to just shy of $200 billion in January 2011, ahead of its main rival Rio Tinto, but is now worth less than $18 billion compared to $60 billion for  The world's second largest miner based on revenue Rio Tinto.

Melbourne-based Rio Tinto which relies on copper and iron for nearly 80% of its earnings are also trading not far off lows hit during the height of the global financial crisis, but year to date losses are modest compared to its immediate peers. The Anglo-Australian giant's stock has been swinging wildly this year and is down more than 28% since the start of the year.
Glencore (LON:GLEN) made solid gains on Monday as the stock recovers from record lows hit September over worries about its debt load. The $21 billion company was first floated in May 2011 and two years later the Swiss commodities trader acquired coal giant Xstrata, turning it into the world's fourth largest miner. Down two-thirds just this year, Glencore is now worth $14 billion less than before the Xstrata takeover.

Anglo-American (LON:AAL, OTCMKTS:AAUKY), the world's fifth largest publicly held mining company in terms of output gained in New York on Monday, but its ADRs are still 66% cheaper than at the start of the year.

The company with roots in South Africa going back more than a century is, despite its exit from gold mining, arguably the most diversified of the majors thanks to its exposure to diamonds (accounting for around 25% of its earnings) through De Beers and its holdings in Anglo American Platinum.

But the slump in rough diamond prices and the platinum bust has seen its market cap tumble to $8.5 billion. Anglo now trades an astonishing 87% below its 2011 high when it was worth $67 billion.

BHP Market Cap Chart

Top 5 mining companies market capitalization data by YCharts

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Canadian Oil Sands granted one more month to fend off Suncor's hostile bid

Syncrude’s $1.9 billion centrifuge plant, currently under construction. (Image courtesy of Syncrude, via Flickr)

Syncrude’s $1.9 billion centrifuge plant, currently under construction. (Image courtesy of Syncrude, via Flickr)

Canadian Oil Sands (TSX:COS) has just over a month to hold off Suncor Energy (TSX, NYSE:SU) and its hostile bid, says the Alberta Securities Commission which ruled late afternoon today.

The commission said COS's poison pill provision must expire by Monday, Jan. 4, 2016.

Suncor, which is Canada's largest oil producer, has asked the regulator to dismantle a so-called poison pill — an anti-takeover measure — adopted by COS directors in October in response to its  $3.3 billion (Cdn $4.3bn) hostile takeover bid.

The targeted company was hoping to give its shareholders more time to consider their options: 120 days or until early February 2016. Canadian Oil Sands now has less time than it sought.

Suncor has been looking to expand in the Canada’s oil sands amid a prolonged slump in oil prices. In September, it bought an additional 10% interest in the Fort Hills oil sands project in northern Alberta from French oil company Total.

The oil giant’s attempt to buy COS would increase its ownership stake in Syncrude — Canada’s largest synthetic oil project — from 12% to 49%.

The ASC gave no reason for its decision, but will issue at a later date.

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The upside of a down mining market

Bob Moriarty and Adrian DayWhen the instinct is strongest to curl up in a ball and wait out the ravages of the down market is also when smart companies snap up distressed projects and get to work while capital costs are low. In this interview with The Gold Report, veteran investors Bob Moriarty of 321gold.com and Adrian Day of Adrian Day Asset Management share their messages to mining company CEOs and investors about advancing frugally to avoid being left in the dark. To make investing in teams doing the right things even easier, they identify a dozen companies that have already taken the contrarian advice to heart.

The upside of a down mining market

Bob Moriarty, founder of 321gold.com, has some advice for CEOs of mining companies: "Hoard your money when the market is bubbling, and spend your money when the market is dying." It seems obvious, but in his words, the majority of investors are "sheep who will lose their money." Pressure from conservative investors can make it difficult for resource managements to make smart decisions. That is why he focuses on the companies that already got the message about the importance of adding value when everything is on sale.

Adrian Day, founder of Adrian Day Asset Management, wants to see companies move forward while still conserving cash. "It's not easy. But a joint venture can help offset work expenses. If a company is constantly raising money in a depressed market, the stock can just collapse," he warns.

Movers and Shakers
A classic example of a CEO who understands the cyclical opportunities in the resource markets, according to Moriarty, was Rob McEwen at Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) circa 2000. "He issued the Goldcorp challenge to find the next 5 million ounces of gold at Red Lake. It wasn't anything but a promotional gesture, but it made everybody in the business view Rob McEwen as a leader moving the industry forward. In that situation, illusion became the reality," Moriarty says.

Day points to Goldcorp as a producing company that is still advancing new projects during this downturn. "It takes a long time to develop a major mine, decide to go ahead, and then bring it into production. Despite that, this company has three new mines ramping up this year, hopefully just in time for a recovery in the market. But even without that, these are operating mines making money at today's prices. That is an example of a company continuing to advance and position for upside," he says.

Another company that Moriarty thinks gets the "buy low, sell high" idea is NOVAGOLD (NG:TSX; NG:NYSE.MKT). "This was a $0.09 stock in the summer of 2001. The company did a joint venture deal in Alaska with Placer Dome that required it to spend $6 million ($6M) in eight years. NOVAGOLD did all the work in 18 months and ended with a $20 stock. That's exactly the kind of aggressive company you want to look for right now," Moriarty says.

Moriarty recently visited California Gold Mining Inc. (CGM:TSX.V), which is in the midst of a major drill program in California on the mine that made John Fremont rich in 1850. "The company had to issue a lot of shares to raise the money, but the drill costs were half of what it was two years ago. That is a smart move," he says.

Almaden Minerals Ltd. (AMM:TSX; AAU:NYSE) would be an absolutely perfect example of this value-added thinking, Moriarty says. "I happen to like the father/son management team of Duane and Morgan Poliquin. I have been to the project and love it. The company is moving toward production on the Tuligtic project in Puebla, Mexico. It spun the other assets off as Almadex Minerals Inc. (AMX:TSX.V) in a 2-for-1 special for shareholders.

"That's a perfect example of what you need to do in a market bottom. Investors tend to forget that commodities move up and down and you can't kill a project because today's price is too low. You have to weather through it. Is Almaden going to be able to produce silver and gold at a profit at a 5-year/10-year trading average? My belief is absolutely yes, so I don't care what the price is today. I want to see it move forward. The cost of diesel is cheap. The cost of iron is cheap. The cost of labor is cheap. It's a tremendous opportunity to take advantage of that.

"If you go down to your local Corvette dealer and a brand new Corvette was quoted to you six months ago at $70M, but today the same red sports car is on special for $6M, that sounds like a hell of a deal to me." Almaden applied that logic to its recent purchase of the barely used 7,000 ton-per-day capacity Rock Creek mill, a move that could reduce the initial capital cost estimate of ramp-up for Ixtaca by $70M. "It was an absolutely brilliant move on Almaden's part," Moriarty says.

Day also sees Almaden's purchase of the discounted mill as a plus, particularly because of the structure of the sale as an option to purchase with payments spread out over three years. "For less than $1M, it has locked up this key piece of infrastructure. That is a wonderful example of taking advantage of a downturn," he says.

Among juniors, Day sees a lot of companies doing good work in this market. "Pretium Resources Inc. (PVG:TSX; PVG:NYSE) is advancing the Valley of the Kings project. The company had to raise new equity, but if a company has a good asset and is demonstrating that it's advancing the project without being wasteful, the market should give it credit for adding value."

Day calls out Lara Exploration Ltd. (LRA:TSX.V) as a company taking advantage of the downturn by entering into agreements with other companies at very low cost. "It is optioning properties out to other people, in many cases receiving payments sufficient to enable it to continue operating without raising equity, which I think is a smart way to continue to work."

Another one Day sees as an example of a company using property options or earn-in partnerships to conserve cash is Riverside Resources Inc. (RRI:TSX.V). "Riverside acts as the operator, and the partner pays a small management fee. The company has also been able to generate some key strategic alliances that call for the partner paying for the generative work. That is a great deal. Someone else pays it to go out and look for properties. Obviously, the partner has the right to earn in to the property if it likes it, but if it declines for whatever reason, then Riverside has generated a project at someone else's cost. This company is active largely on someone else's dime and earning a little bit of money for it. Lots of companies are doing this kind of thing without having to raise additional equity. It's mostly small stuff, but it keeps the company active without raising money."

Day's final example of a junior taking advantage of unique opportunities right now is Midland Exploration Inc. (MD:TSX.V), which has been active in the wake of a $15M equity raise, largely through the Quebec pension funds. "That is a lot of money and it puts the company in an exceptionally strong position if it sees something that it wants to buy. This company had zero projects dropped in the last 12 months, and it has added at least four new partnerships in that time. Midland was very active even before the equity deal, but now it can both do more work on projects and shop its projects to bigger companies and get better deals. It's an outstanding arrangement," Day says.

Streaming Deals
Day sees a down market as a golden opportunity for royalty companies. Last year, Franco-Nevada Corp. (FNV:TSX; FNV:NYSE) added a billion dollars' worth of new royalties, both major streams with big-cap companies and some small royalties. "A lot of those were distressed companies, so they were able to take advantage of other companies' distress and get large, attractive, long-life royalties. This year, it's probably on its way to almost another billion in bargain shopping," he says.

"Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd. (OR:TSX) acquired Virginia Mines Inc. (VGQ:TSX) and an attractive royalty on the Éléonore project. More recently, it acquired a package of royalties from Teck Resources Ltd. (TCK:TSX; TCK:NYSE), another distressed company," Day reports.

"Royal Gold Inc. (RGLD:NASDAQ; RGL:TSX) and Silver Wheaton Corp. (SLW:TSX; SLW:NYSE), on the silver side, are also making smart deals right now. The royalty and streaming companies are generally taking advantage of other companies' distress because typically they have better balance sheets," Day says.

The Contrarian Conclusion
"The companies aggressively moving projects forward right now are going to be the leaders tomorrow," Moriarty concludes.

Moriarty's parting words are for the investors. "The people who make money in investments are contrarians. What you need to understand is popular psychology. When everybody wants to buy something, sell it to them. When everybody wants to sell something, buy it from them. It is that simple. There are no gurus. There's nothing magic about the market. When everybody's screaming, buy page 1; when everyone is happy, you want to be selling page 1 and buying page 23."

Want to read more Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you'll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Interviews page.

 

Source: JT Long of The Gold Report 

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DISCLOSURE:
1) JT Long conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report and The Life Sciences Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an employee. She owns, or her family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: NOVAGOLD, Pretium Resources Inc., Midland Exploration Inc. and Silver Wheaton Corp. Goldcorp Inc. and Franco-Nevada Corp. are not affiliated with Streetwise Reports. The companies mentioned in this interview were not involved in any aspect of the interview preparation or post-interview editing so the expert could speak independently about the sector. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) Bob Moriarty: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
4) Adrian Day: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Franco-Nevada Corp., Goldcorp Inc., Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd., Royal Gold Inc. and Almaden Minerals Ltd. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
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Participating companies provide the logos used in The Gold Report. These logos are trademarks and are the property of the individual companies.

Source: JT Long of The Gold Report  (11/30/15)

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Mapping Alaska's fatal flights

The short summer months of June, July and August are the deadliest months for flying in Alaska, according to Ben Matheson who mapped the last 15 years of fatal airplane crashes using data from the National Transportation Safety Board.

Go see his blog for interactive maps detailing each plane crash.

Being a bush pilot is a dangerous occupation:

On average, just under 22 people die annually in Alaskan aviation incidents. 2009 and 2014 each had just four fatal crashes, claiming seven and five lives respectively.

But it’s not during Alaska’s cold, wet, and dark winters that tragedies claim the lives of pilots and passengers. The short three months of summer account for a disproportionate amount of crashes over the past 15 years. 55% of the fatal crashes in this period happened during June, July, and August. It’s a period of intense activity: the salmon are running, there’s no shortage of daylight. People naturally get around more this time of year and spend more time in the air.

Read more.

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Ronald-Peter Stöferle: Monetary Tectonics and The Austrian School of Economics

First there is monetary inflation, then there is asset price inflation, and the final stage will be consumer price inflation.

That is according to Ronni Stöferle, publisher of the In Gold We Trust Report and author of the new book, Austrian School of Investors.

Ronald-Peter Stöferle - Monetary Tectonics and The Austrian School of Economics

Watch Interview with Ronald-Peter Stöferle

Talking points from this week's interview –

Why is the Austrian school of economics relevant today?
What is monetary tectonics?
How inflation migrates from a monetary nature to asset prices and ultimately to consumer prices?
Will we experience hyperinflation?
Does the FED have control?

Ronald-Peter Stoeferle is a Chartered Market Technician (CMT) and a Certified Financial Technician (CFTe). In 2006 he began writing reports on gold and gained media attention when he expected the price of gold to rise to USD 2,300/ounce when the current price was only at USD 500. His six benchmark reports called "In GOLD we TRUST" drew international coverage on CNBC, Bloomberg, the Wall Street Journal, Economist and the Financial Times. He was awarded "2nd most accurate gold analyst" by Bloomberg in 2011.

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Insolite : une mousse d'or de 20 carats...

L’or, ce métal précieux qui fait tourner les têtes, existe aujourd’hui sous une forme tout à fait nouvelle. Des chercheurs de l’École polytechnique fédérale de Zurich, en Suisse, ont en effet créé une mousse d'or encore plus légère qu’une plume. Et ils imaginent d’ores et déjà de nombreuses...

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Avec FireSat, la Nasa veut détecter les départs d'incendies depuis l'espace

Afin de lutter plus efficacement contre les feux de forêt, la Nasa veut utiliser des détecteurs thermiques installés sur des satellites en orbite terrestre basse. Baptisé FireSat, ce réseau d’alerte sera opérationnel 24 heures sur 24 et pourra transmettre des images géolocalisées en basse...

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COP21 : vers un – nouveau – record de chaleur en 2015

Encore un nouveau record ? Selon l'OMM, les années de 2011 à 2015 constituent la période de cinq ans la plus chaude connue et, après ses 10 premiers mois, 2015 s’annonce comme une année record. Avec l’effet El Niño conjugué, le seuil symbolique de 1 °C de hausse depuis la fin du XIXe siècle est...

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L’inclinaison de l’orbite lunaire : une énigme enfin résolue

Selon la théorie standard de la formation de la Lune, son inclinaison orbitale par rapport à l’équateur devrait être telle qu’une éclipse de Soleil pourrait se produire tous les mois, ce qui n’est pas le cas. Deux chercheurs français pensent avoir trouvé la clé de l’énigme. Elle fait intervenir...

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Dossier : la marée plastique empoisonne les océans

Chaque seconde, cent tonnes de déchets (sur les quatre milliards produites annuellement) finissent en mer, dont une grande partie est constituée de matières plastiques. Certains n'hésitent pas à parler de « septième continent ». Objets flottants ou microparticules, ces déchets plastique se...

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Les futures batteries au sodium se préparent

Après deux ans de recherche, une équipe française vient de mettre au point une technologie alternative aux batteries lithium-ion dans certains secteurs. Ce prototype fait appel au sodium, moins cher et plus abondant que le lithium, et présente de bonnes caractéristiques, par exemple des charges...

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dimanche 29 novembre 2015

Yuan could soon sit inside elite basket of currencies

The Chinese yuan is gathering prestige in the eyes of the International Monetary Fund, a move that could set off alarm bells in Washington.

When the IMF executive board meets on Monday, it is expected to decide on a recommendation to include the yuan, also known as the renminbi, in its basket of elite currencies known as special drawing rights (SDR), Business Insider reported.

Special drawing rights do not trade freely but they are considered important because the IMF values its crisis loans, for example to Greece, in SDRs. China asked for the yuan to be included last year but it has been considered too tightly controlled to qualify, says BI, adding that it could be weighted between 10 and 16 percent of the SDR basket. The last time the SDR was rebalanced, in 2010, the U.S. dollar accounted for 41.9 percent, the euro was 37.4 percent, the British pound was 11.3 percent and the Japanese yen was 9.4 percent.

The decision, which approved would go into effect next September, is sure to raise questions as to the continued hegemony of the U.S. "greenback" as the world's reserve currency.

In the early 1970s, then-U.S. President Nixon negotiated a deal with Saudi Arabia whereby in exchange for arms and protection, the Saudis would denominate all future sales of oil in U.S. dollars. Other OPEC members agreed to similar deals, ensuring perpetual global demand for greenbacks. The dominance of the U.S. "petrodollar" continues to this day.

The era of U.S. dollar dominance, however, could be coming to an end, due to increasing competition from the world's second largest economy and primary consumer of commodities: China.

China and Russia have been furiously signing energy deals that indicate their mutual energy interests. The most obvious is the $456 billion gas deal that Russian state-owned Gazprom signed with China in 2014, but that was just the biggest in a string of energy agreements going back to 2009. That year, Russian oil giant Rosneft secured a $25 billion oil swap agreement with Beijing, and last year, Rosneft agreed to double oil supplies to China in a deal valued at $270 billion.

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African Minerals sued by Sierra Leone villagers

African Minerals Limited (OTCMKTS:AMLZF) is being sued in a London court over allegations that it evicted residents and violently mistreated workers and villagers living close to one of its mines in Sierra Leone.

The iron ore company, whose Tonkolili project was its flagship before being put on care and maintenance in 2014, "is accused of complicity in false imprisonment, assault and battery, trespass and theft of the claimants’ property. It is also allegedly implicated in a fatal shooting of a 24-year-old by police during a protest over pay and conditions," according to a weekend report in The Guardian.

The multi-million-pound lawsuit will involve 142 claimants who are aiming to receive compensation for injuries sustained during two incidents in 2010 and 2012. African Minerals denies the allegations and says it has "no vicarious responsibility" for actions taken by police and that English courts lack jurisdiction in Sierra Leone, states the media report.

It's just the latest piece of bad news for African Minerals, which used to list on the London Stock Exchange but now trades over the counter as a penny stock. The company was heavily impacted by the Ebola crisis in 2014. In December of that year, the combination of a lack of investment and slumping iron ore prices forced the miner to halt its operations.

In April of this year Shandong Iron and Steel Group acquired the remaining 75 percent of Tonkolili for around $170 million. The Chinese steel company said in April that it planned to return the mine, which is the second largest iron ore mine in Africa, to full production during the wet season.

 

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Ces dinosaures qui construisaient des nids...

Au fil des découvertes sur leur squelette ou sur leurs plumes, la filiation entre dinosaures et oiseaux apparaît de plus en plus forte. En étudiant leurs œufs, une équipe de chercheurs parvient à la conclusion qu'alors que certains dinosaures les enterraient, comme le font les crocodiles,...

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En time-lapse spatial, les glaciers de Karakoram coulent...

Dans le cadre d’une étude sur les comportements des glaciers face au changement climatique, un glaciologue suisse a créé des gifs animés de leur évolution à partir d’images prises par trois satellites Landsat. En changeant de point de vue, les chercheurs peuvent suivre leurs dynamiques sur 25...

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Quand les robots apprennent à dire « non »

Aux États-Unis, à l’université de Tufts, des chercheurs apprennent au robot Nao à rejeter les ordres venant d’un Homme s’ils s’avèrent dangereux pour lui. Une expérimentation qui fait fortement penser à l’une des trois lois de la robotique d’Isaac Asimov.

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Un jour, Mars sera peut-être une planète aux anneaux

C’est inexorable : étreint par les forces de marées de Mars, l’un de ses satellites, Phobos, finira en morceaux. Avant qu’ils ne s’abattent tous sur la surface de la Planète rouge, une étude estime que les débris pourraient former des anneaux durant un à cent millions d’années. Cela promet un...

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En bref : Raspberry Pi Zéro, un micro-ordinateur à 5 euros

La Fondation Raspberry Pi bat un nouveau record en proposant un micro-ordinateur qui tient dans la main et coûte environ cinq euros. Le produit est déjà en rupture de stock.

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samedi 28 novembre 2015

Un moustique OGM contre le paludisme

Des chercheurs de l'université de Californie ont développé une technologie particulièrement efficace pour créer des populations de moustiques génétiquement modifiés pour résister au paludisme. La technique qui utilise le système CRISPR-Cas9 avait fait ses preuves chez la drosophile.

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ExoMars 2016 en route pour son site de lancement de Baïkonour

ExoMars, qui comprend une mission en 2016 et une autre en 2018, franchit une étape importante avec le transfert de la première sur son site de lancement de Baïkonour. Ce programme, auquel participe la Russie, est le second de l’Esa à rejoindre la Planète rouge. A travers ce projet, les objectifs...

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COP21 : probable nouveau record de chaleur pour 2015

Encore un nouveau record ? Selon l'OMM, les années de 2011 à 2015 constituent la période de cinq ans la plus chaude connue et, après ses 10 premiers mois, 2015 s’annonce comme une année record. Avec l’effet El Niño conjugué, le seuil symbolique de 1 °C de hausse depuis la fin du XIXe siècle est...

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Le LHC explore le quagma du Big Bang avec une énergie record

Chaque année, durant un mois, lors des saisons de fonctionnement du LHC, les physiciens font entrer en collision des ions lourds pour sonder les mystères du plasma de quarks-gluons, le quagma. Ils viennent de battre un record en multipliant par presque deux les énergies mises en jeu. De quoi...

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vendredi 27 novembre 2015

Brazil sues BHP, Vale for 'initial' $5 billion over spill

Brazil suing BHP, Vale for $5 billion over spill

Screenshot from PigMine 7, via YouTube

Brazil's federal government and two states are suing Samarco, an iron ore miner jointly owned by BHP Billiton and Vale, for $5.3 billion over a catastrophic tailings dam burst that devastated the country's second largest river system, the Rio Doce.

The government attorney general, the Advocacia-Geral da União, or AGU, announced the 20 billion real civil damages lawsuit late on Friday, but warned that "the figure is preliminary and could be raised over the judicial process, since the environmental damages of the mud’s arrival at the ocean have not yet been calculated."

The November 5 disaster that killed at least 15 people caused 60 million cubic metres of mine waste – a mix of water, iron and other waste materials such as silica — from the site in Brazil’s Minas Gerais state to wash downstream into neighbouring state Espírito Santo through remote mountain valleys reaching the Atlantic ocean 600 kilometres away earlier this week.

Toxic materials, including arsenic, and levels of lead, aluminum, chromium, nickel and cadmium many times higher than the legal maximums, were found in the waters of the Rio Doce by a United Nations team and confirmed by Vale on Friday.

Vale and BHP also on Friday announced the establishment of a fund of undisclosed size to help restore the environment. Brazil's environmental watchdog earlier levied a 250 million real ($65 million) fine on Samarco.

Vale: 'Several years' for Brazil mine disaster river to recover

More images from Agência Brasil Fotografias

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Even the iron ore price has a bottom

Iron ore fell to a record low on a spot price basis this week. On Friday the Northern China 62% Fe import price including freight and insurance (CFR) managed to lift 10c off the record low to trade at $43.50 a tonne, down more than 12% in a month.

The price dropped 47% during 2014 and declines so far this year come to 39%. Today's price compare to $190 a tonne hit February 2011 and an average of $135 a tonne in 2013.

For an iron ore price below $40 you have to go back to 2007 when annual contract pricing between the Big 3 producers – Vale, Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton – and Chinese and Japanese steelmakers were still the industry norm.

During the 2008 negotiations, the so-called benchmark was upped 68% to $60.80, but the triumvirate continued to lose out on billions under annual contract pricing. Growing Chinese port stockpiles saw action in the industry shift to mills and traders, ushering in the era of rapidly rising and volatile prices based on spot assessments by MetalBulletin and The Steelindex.

The big three producers – Vale, Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton – have been following a scorched earth policy of raising output and slashing costs to weather low prices and push out competitors.

It's been highly successful. Up to a point.

On cash costs basis major producers have been adding capacity in the teens, but breakeven costs including freight, insurance and other costs range between $28 – $39.

The Big 3 (and no 4 Fortescue) have all vowed to cut mining costs even further with Vale boasting recently that it's 90mtpa S11D project in the Amazon will push costs into single digits.

But these cost savings have been largely thanks to a falling currency with the real dropping to record lows this year. A weaker Aussie dollar has also helped Pilbara producers as has falling diesel prices.

Freight rates for Capesize vessels (named so because the ships are too wide for the Panama canal), the predominant carrier used in the 1.3 billion tonnes seaborne iron ore trade fell to just $4,015 a day last week (it topped out a ludicrous $234,000 in June 2008).

But like currencies and crude oil, freight rates can't decline indefinitely.

Capital Economics, a London-headquartered independent researcher, in a note on Friday says that while the price of iron ore may fall below $40 a tonne as more low cost supply (notably S11D and 50mtpa Roy Hill in Australia) is added, it won't stay there for long.

Senior commodities economist John Kovacs says the fact that prices are now approaching the breakeven cost for even the largest miners, coupled with a modest rise in global iron ore demand next year and near term supply losses (BHP-Vale joint venture Samarco will take 9mt off the market and more Chinese mines will close) could spell a gradual recovery.

The closure of high-cost capacity will increase the market power of the larger miners and could provide the impetus for prices to rise argues Kovacs.

Capital Economics sees the price of the steelmaking raw material to rise steadily, reaching $55 a tonne by the end of 2016.

Even iron ore price has a bottom

Source: Capital Economics, UBS, Bloomberg

Image of ice fishing on the Hai river in Tianjin by galexkeene on Flickr

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Cameco’s former Chief Mine Engineer on why he’s long NexGen

McArthur River prior to entering production around 1998. Doug Beattie is pictured at the front.

McArthur River prior to entering production around 1998. Doug Beattie is pictured at the front.

Canada’s Athabasca Basin is arguably the best place to look for uranium in the world, and it’s the backyard of Cameco, the world’s largest producer.

A few small exploration companies have been able to find and delineate uranium deposits there and make money for shareholders by selling them to majors such as Cameco.

CEO.CA has covered some of the leading successes in the region of the last five years, including Hathor Exploration, Alpha Minerals, Fission Uranium and lately, NexGen Energy.

We wanted to get a better handle on the situation from a man who was involved in designing and building the richest and most complex uranium mine, McArthur River. Doug Beattie is a former Chief Mine Engineer at Cameco. Mr. Beattie very generously agreed to answer a few questions from the CEO.CA community.

Here’s a bio of Doug from the Canadian Nuclear Society in 2003, the year he won theirInnovative Achievement Award for his work at Cameco.

Doug Beattie was the lead engineer in the conceptualization, design, and successful implementation of the innovative mining method in use at the McArthur River uranium mine in northern Saskatchewan. The ore bodies, located at a depth of 500 to 620 m below the surface, have a very high uranium concentration of above 20%, approximately 200 times that of the Elliot Lake mines. The health hazard associated with mining high-grade ore required the development of a remote method. This was further complicated by the porosity of the surrounding fractured sandstone rock, which is subject to groundwater flow. The chosen solution was to freeze the ground in the area of the ore to be mined, develop tunnels above and below the ore body, and then remove the ore by a remote raise-boring technique. The two techniques, freezing and raise-boring, had been used previously for other purposes, but had never before been used in combination for production mining. Doug Beattie graduated in mining engineering at Queen’s University. After working as a mining engineer in Saskatchewan and Australia, he joined Cameco Corporation in 1993 as Senior Mining Engineer at the McArthur River exploration project. He later became Engineering Superintendent during the construction phase, and Mine Superintendent during the ramp-up to full production. He is currently the Corporate Chief Mine Engineer at Cameco’s Head Office. Doug Beattie is receiving this award for his leadership in the conceptualization and implementation of this new mining method.

CEO.CA: Mr. Beattie, thank you for agreeing to this interview. When you worked for Cameco, you travelled the world evaluating uranium projects. Where does NexGen’s Arrow rank amongst the undeveloped projects in the world today?

I would put Arrow firmly in the top five of undeveloped projects worldwide. There have been very few uranium discoveries in the past 10 years. Finds in the Basin and at 4 Mile in South Australia are the only ones of significance that come to mind.

During the last uranium price boom in the late 2000’s, almost all projects assessed were known deposits from the 1970s and ‘80s. Many of these deposits had been mined at one time and many others failed previously to pass economic hurdles and did so once again. A bunch of mediocre deposits were given a fresh coat of paint but ultimately the owners took multi-billion-dollar write downs on them cumulatively.

How large do you think Arrow is now and how large do you think it can grow to?

Firstly, I want to point out that I am a mining engineer and not a geologist but I am comfortable with some of the current estimates made by others that are in the range of 150 million pounds U3O8. As Zone 2 at McArthur River demonstrated, it does not take much strike length of ore to build pounds in a hurry.

I think the point of the surface exploration exercise is to get sufficient comfort that a decent production schedule, hence cash flow model, can be put together for the first 10 to 15 years of mining and then to concentrate on finding additional mineralization to flesh out the production schedule beyond that once underground. Surface drilling does not need to find every pound, it just needs to point you in the right direction.

At McArthur River, we committed to going underground in late 1992 with the understanding that we had a resource of 260 million pounds U3O8. This was sufficient to justify the capital to go take a closer look. I believe that the total mined to date plus still in the reserve column now totals over 600 million pounds U3O8. Under no circumstances am I implying that this will be the outcome at Arrow, I just want to point out that at some point you need to plan to get underground and not worry about putting more pounds in the inferred resource column from surface.

Eagle Point is a similar case. The ore zones currently being mined were all defined by underground drilling after surface drilling indicated that there may be something of interest in the area.

What do you think is the adequate drill spacing for inferred resources?

That is best left to the exploration geologists to answer.

How long do you think it would take to permit, then build Arrow?

My understanding of the current regulatory requirements is that it will likely take 4-5 years to get the necessary permits once an initial resource is declared. A pre-feasibility study is necessary in order to understand the project parameters in order to then submit a Technical Proposal to the government. The EIS and feasibility study then require completion in order to submit the necessary documentation for an Environmental Assessment decision. Both provincial and federal agencies will review the project extensively. So a couple years of study and a couple years of approvals appears to be the norm.

It will likely take an additional four years of construction activity to get all of the infrastructure in place. I assume the critical path will be shaft sinking and lateral development underground.

What do you think Arrow would initially produce and could produce once it is fully ramped up?

When we did the initial design work for McArthur River I was happy with scheduling 18 million pounds U3O8 per year and the mine has been achieving this for 15 years now.

For Arrow, presuming the back of the napkin resource estimates by others are accurate, I would be happy to do a pre-feasibility study based on 10 million pounds a year of drummed U3O8. This would likely be achieved by initially mining in the 500 tpd range, which constitutes a small mine.

What type of mining techniques to you think will be used, and what split would you anticipate? Blast hole? Raise Bore?

For radiation reasons, blast hole stoping grades above 3-4% U3O8 becomes problematic. So I assume the portion of the ore above this grade would be raisebored similar to McArthur River.

Mentioning raiseboring as a mining method usually causes eyebrows to raise and eyes to roll amongst the analyst community. They thought I was nuts for proposing it at McArthur River in the late 90’s. But I would like to point out that McArthur River used only four raiseborers during the first 10 years of production to average over 18 million pounds U3O8 per year and were not only the world’s largest producer but also the world’s lowest cost. Cost per pound is what matters, not cost per tonne. Radiation is the overriding issue.

How difficult do you think it would be to mine a basement-hosted deposit like Arrow versus mining uranium at McArthur River?

The geometry at Arrow is excellent. Underground mining engineers pray for vertical ore bodies and this is present at Arrow. I have only seen the core photos that NexGen has published on their website and the core looks reasonable. Small stopes similar to Eagle Point are likely in order.

With respect to raiseboring of the high grade, there are multiple ways to attack this geometrically. McArthur River is constrained by the location of the water-bearing sandstone but, being so far down in the basement rock at Arrow, this should not be an issue. No ground freezing is used at Eagle Point and I expect that to be the case at Arrow.

Could the owner of Arrow eventually grow to be a serious threat to Cameco?

I think everyone can peacefully co-exist. Cameco has successfully navigated the treacherous waters known as Kazatomprom who now dominate supply without too many hiccups. Cameco are excellent marketers of uranium. The miners of Arrow will need to be also.

Uranium deposits are wasting assets. I mention above that it could take 8-9 years to put Arrow into production. Although Cameco is currently focused on ramping up Cigar Lake, the 2012 NI 43-101 demonstrates that the mine life is roughly 12 years. So planning for the next generation of mines needs to commence in the next 2-3 years. Likewise, the easy ore at McArthur River (Zone 2 in the basement and Zone 4 Lower) is largely mined out and the tough stuff in the water-bearing sandstone remains.

Are uranium buyers looking for a new entrant with a low-risk Canadian deposit to buy uranium from?

I have no idea. The number of potential suppliers is down somewhat but Kazatomprom has also made significant inroads recently into the U.S. supply chain.

Does it make sense for NexGen and Fission to merge?

I currently don’t see the urgency. I think both projects need to complete pre-feasibility studies, at least, to see what sort of synergies may exist. Obviously, access to capital is what is going to determine the outcome here. It makes no sense to build two mills.

How might Cameco be viewing Arrow right now?

I think Cameco should be viewing the whole trend as a twin to Rabbit Lake, which has been in production for 40 years now. Rabbit Lake started off as an open pit and then they discovered and mined a series of deposits over a 12-km strike length by following the Collins Bay Fault. The PLS/Arrow trend looks remarkably similar though the ultimate mining sequence may be different.

What’s in Cameco’s pipeline? Why buy and build Arrow if they have other good stuff?

Cameco has three good deposits for future exploitation: Millennium, Kintyre and Yeelirrie. Millennium has some similarities to Arrow and has easy road access to the mill at Key Lake. So it would seem logical to bring this into production first when the inevitable production decline at McArthur River commences.

Kintyre and Yeelirrie are in Western Australia and are both open-pit deposits. These are probably the two best undeveloped deposits in Australia assuming Jabiluka never sees the light of day. Little infrastructure exists and both need mills.

So if Cameco acquired Arrow I would rank it after Millennium but before Yeelirrie and the smaller Kintyre.

Fukushima has of course totally changed the development timeline equation. Cameco was on an acquisition spree prior to Fukushima but now must conserve capital for better days.

Cameco tried to acquire Hathor’s Roughrider deposit but backed off when Rio Tinto bid. Any comment on how they make acquisitions?

I would characterize Cameco as conservative. And rightfully so, in a post-Fukushima era. They have typically performed analysis in-house instead of relying on investment bankers and engineering firms to goad them along. In my days working with the business development team during the last boom, we were known as “Sleepy Hollow” which we wore as a badge of honour. As mentioned previously, what was available for acquisition during the last boom was quite frankly garbage. We let others fall on their sword acquiring it. We sat on the sidelines.

What might Cameco want to see prior to making a bid?

No idea.

Does Cameco have a minimum size threshold?

No idea.

Considering that Arrow and PLS are different types of deposits would the size threshold be different for each deposit?

The open-pit measured and indicated resource at Kintyre is 55 million pounds and at the Millennium underground deposit it is 76 million pounds. Cameco saw fit to acquire Areva’s portion of Millennium a few years back. So these acquisition thresholds applied in at least pre-Fukushima days.

Arrow has no declared resource at the moment but if Cameco is not keeping an active model of the drill results up to date as they are issued they would be falling down on the job.

If not Cameco, who else? Is there a possibility of foreign state-owned enterprises buying in, from India for example?

Currently mining companies are more concerned with preserving balance sheets than they are about seeking out new growth opportunities. But this is why we call it a cycle. Mines are wasting assets so I suspect in 24 months’ time, the focus will begin to shift towards growth again and this will be reflected in asset values.

Fission adequately demonstrated by hanging out the For Sale shingle lately that there is little appetite out there for a greenfield development project, so a great deal of patience will be necessary to allow sentiment to shift from a market in over-supply to one that sees future shortages.

Apart from Cameco, the obvious candidates are Asian utilities, a recapitalized Areva and major miners such as Rio Tinto or BHP. Dark horses such as Paladin Resources and even Neal Froneman’s (ex-Uranium One CEO) Sibayne should not be ruled out. If the market capitalization still refuses to properly reflect fair value, then I would suggest that private equity may be the proper way to go until the downturn is waited out and uranium becomes the toast of the town again. Shareholder dilution while waiting for this to happen is not a good solution.

Is there room for another producer in the uranium space if NXE were to look at developing this project?

There is always room for another producer if they are cost competitive. ERA’s Ranger mine is almost certain to close in the next couple of years once stockpiles are milled out so this is one less supplier. Cameco has not indicated what their plans are for tailings disposal post-2018 at Rabbit Lake so there is the potential to lose this supply source also, at least temporarily. Note that both of these mines are stalwarts from the ’80s and ’70s, respectively.

If you were the CEO of NexGen, what would you be focusing on?

I would start to understand what the approvals process is and what data should be collected while the drills are currently turning and the core is fresh, not two years later when you have to send the drills back out to collect information you did not know was important for the EIS and feasibility study. Rock quality, rock strength, packer testing, waste rock characterization, acid mine drainage potential, those sorts of issues should be dealt with now while the core is fresh and the drill holes are open. Baseline data collection for the EIS should also be underway.

I would also ensure that I had a good community relations program in place so that the potentially impacted communities are kept in the loop. This cannot be overstated.

Are you invested in any uranium stocks right now?

I am a shareholder of NXE. I have a very low risk tolerance which therefore excludes 99.5% of exploration companies. But what NXE is currently drilling in my opinion only comes around once every 20 years. The timing is a shame.

What are you up to these days?

After 35 years in the underground mining industry I am happily retired and still living in Saskatchewan in the summers at least. I am glad to pass on knowledge that I have gained to ensure the safe extraction of ore in the Saskatchewan uranium and potash mining industries so that they can remain a strong and important part of the provincial economy. Unfortunately, no text books have been written on how to underground mine uranium in particular so it would be a shame to see this institutional knowledge lost like it has been in other countries. Otherwise I am trying to get the handicap below 5.

Thanks for your time, Mr. Beattie! 

BY TOMMY HUMPHREYS

Get an email or text message whenever NexGen has an insider trade or is mentioned in our community, chat.ceo.ca, by subscribing for alerts at the NexGen channel (http://chat.ceo.ca/NXE). 

Readers might be also interested in: He shorted Bre-X. Now fund manager is going long NexGen

This interview is provided for general informational purposes and is not intended to be investment or professional advice of any kind. See NexGen Energy’s profile on www.sedar.com for a full description of risks facing the company. Author is a shareholder in NexGen and is biased. Always do your own due diligence and talk to a licensed investment advisor prior to making any investment decisions.

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INFOGRAPHIC: The bitcoin universe explained

Courtesy of: Visual Capitalist
This infographic explains the wide ranges of the Bitcoin universe, accompanied with quotes from some of its best-known business leaders.

The diverse selection of companies in the Bitcoin universe is one of the multiple reasons that we are bullish on the cryptocurrency.

Slowly, but surely, we expect Bitcoin to creep out of the hype cycle “trough of disillusionment” that many technologies go through.

Original graphic by: Bitcoin Magazine

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PDAC kicks of March 6-9

PDAC International Convention, Trade Show & Investors Exchange is the world’s leading Convention for people, companies and organizations in, or connected with, mineral exploration. In addition to meeting over 1,000 exhibitors and 23,500 attendees from over 100 countries, you can also attend technical sessions, short courses and networking events.

Since it began in 1932, the four-day annual Convention has grown in size, stature and influence, and today, is the event of choice for the world’s mineral industry.

Convention runs from March 6-9, 2016 at the Metro Canada Toronto Convention Center

Register here. 

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Toxic elements found in water weeks after Brazil’s mine disaster — Vale

Toxic elements found in water weeks after Brazil’s mine disaster — Vale

The spill has been called the biggest mining disaster in Brazil’s history, with about 20 people either confirmed dead or still missing after the dam burst sent a wave a mud cascading into a village. (Image: Screenshot of Marcelo Silva’s video via YouTube)

Toxic materials, such as arsenic, were found in the water of the Rio Doce river days after a dam burst at a mine in Brazil earlier this month, Vania Somavilla, sustainability chief at Vale (NYSE:VALE), said Friday.

Speaking at a news conference in Rio de Janeiro, Somavilla confirmed that the Institute for Water Management in Minas Gerais (IGAM) had found levels of arsenic above legal limits, local mining news outlet EM reports (in Portuguese).

IGAM found levels of arsenic, lead, aluminum, chromium, nickel and cadmium many times higher than the legal maximums at various points along the river. The tests were taken between Nov. 7 and Nov. 12, as the mud from Samarco’s dam crawled downstream.

The admission comes two days after a United Nations report alleging “high levels of toxic heavy metals and other toxic chemicals” in the river and criticizing both the companies and the government for their “defensive” response to the accident.

But just as its joint-venture partner BHP Billiton (ASX:BHP), which yesterday released a statement reiterating that the tailings that spilled on the Rio Doce River contained not hazardous to human health, Vale stressed that the vast amount mud unleashed on Nov.5 only contained water, mud, iron-oxide and sand, none of which are harmful.

More to come…

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Une forêt virtuelle... qui pousse, pour les MMO et pour la science

Simuler une forêt qui évolue avec les années, pour améliorer les jeux vidéo… et aider les scientifiques : c’est l’une des initiatives qui seront présentées les 27 et 28 novembre au Forum des EIP (Epitech Innovative Projects) de l’école Epitech, pour une dixième édition qui rassemble plus de cent...

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Stellar Diamonds applies for large-scale permit in Sierra Leone

Stellar Diamonds applies for large-scale permit in Sierra LeoneStellar Diamonds (LON:STEL), a exploration company focused on West Africa, applied Friday for large scale mining at its Tongo project in Sierra Leone.

Chief executive Karl Smithson said the move, which includes the submission of the mien’s final Environmental, Social and Health Impact Assessment (ESHIA) report, marked key milestones as Stellar moves from explorer to miner.

“Notably, as far as I am aware, this is the first large scale mining licence of any kind to be applied for since the onset of the Ebola crisis,” he added.

“As such this therefore also marks an important milestone for the country of Sierra Leone which needs to attract new private sector investment,” Smithson noted.

In early November, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared Sierra Leone Ebola-free, a disease responsible for the deaths of 11,313 people in the region.

The Tongo application will now be processed by the National Minerals Agency and then forwarded to the Minerals Advisory Board, which will make a recommendation to the Minister of Mines.

A preliminary economic assessment in August indicated the project may produce almost one million carats of diamonds over 18 years, generating $387 million in revenues.

On Tuesday, the company posted its first revenues from mining, as trial production got underway at Baoule in Guinea and losses were trimmed to £3.05 million from £4.1 million last year.

The company said at the time it remains upbeat on the future of diamonds, despite a recent prices drop.

Shares in Stellar Diamonds were down more than 5% at 13.75 pence in early afternoon trading in London.

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Près de l’étoile KIC 8462852 : des comètes, oui, et non pas des extraterrestres

L’étrange étoile KIC 8462852 donne du fil à retordre aux astronomes qui l’étudient. Un objet qui rôde autour d’elle a plusieurs fois bloqué une quantité importante de lumière : jusqu’à 22 %. C’est du jamais vu et personne ne sait vraiment expliquer ce phénomène irrégulier. S'agit-il d'une...

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Gold down to lowest since 2010

Gold down to lowest since 2010

Image from archives.

The price of gold hit its lowest level in more than five years Friday in early U.S. trading, pressured once again by the belief that the Federal Reserve will hike interest rates next month and bearish outside markets.

The probability of the Federal Reserve increasing interest rates for the first time since 2006 rose to 74% on Friday from 72% yesterday, Bloomberg reports.

Additionally, the U.S. dollar index higher — which measures the dollar against a basket of other currencies— was higher again this morning and trading near this week’s seven-month high.

Gold traded at its lowest levels since February 2010, down to almost $1,052 an ounce right after 9:00 am ET.

February Comex gold was last $14.80 at $1,054.80 an ounce while other precious metals were mixed. Spot silver was down 0.69% at $14.06 an ounce, spot platinum was up 0.52% at $848.30 an ounce, while spot palladium was up 0.71% at $555.90 an ounce.

Gold down to lowest since 2010

Courtesy of Kitco Live Charts.

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Rio Tinto to go ahead with $1.9 billion bauxite project in Australia

Rio Tinto to go ahead with $1.9 billion bauxite project in Australia

Rio Tinto Aluminium Weipa celebrated 50 years of operations in 2013. (Image courtesy of Rio Tinto)

Rio Tinto (LON:RIO), the world’s second-largest mining group, has approved a $1.9 billion bauxite project in Australia, bucking a trend among most top miners that have mostly delayed new mines to weather the effects of slumping commodity prices.

The South of Embley project, located on the Cape York Peninsula of Queensland state, will now be known as Amrun at the request of traditional owners, the Wik Way people, and will include a new mine and port, the company said in a statement.

Amrun will replace the East Weipa mine, extending Rio's Cape York bauxite operations by 40 years, which the miner expects to capitalize on as market predictions point to a substantial demand increase of the material in the next few years.

Prices for bauxite have already jumped in recent years as China's supply of the material has deteriorated, and exports from Indonesia were halted under an export ban.

Chief executive, Sam Walsh, said the project would provide 1,400 permanent jobs and 1,100 in the construction phase, set to begin in 2017.

"Amrun is one of the biggest investment projects in Queensland this year and it will continue to create opportunities for education, employment and economic growth for local businesses and communities on Cape York over coming decades," he said in a statement.

Walsh noted the mine is expected to open in 2019 and initially produce 22.8 million metric tons a year of bauxite, a raw material used in the making of alumina, which in turn is a key ingredient for aluminum production.

Bullish on copper, iron ore

Rio Tinto aluminum chief executive Alfredo Barrios said the company expects China’s annual imports of bauxite to reach 145 million tons by 2030, from around the current 45 million a year.

Depending on the market fundamentals by then, output from the Amrun mine could be increased to 50 million tons a year, Barrios said.

Queensland Resources Council chief executive, Michael Roche, welcomed the news, saying the project approval would be a “massive boost” for the state’s mining sector as it will bring A$1.5 billion into the beleaguered local economy.

The company believes that bauxite, along with copper and iron ore, are the three commodities the company is most excited about for the future, despite the short-term outlook for both the red metal and seaborne ore.

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Bodle Technologies : vers un écran de smartphone basse consommation

Bodle Technologies, une jeune pousse britannique née de travaux réalisés à l’université d’Oxford, a mis au point un procédé optoélectronique qui pourrait bousculer le marché des smartphones. Il permettrait en effet de réaliser des écrans consommant très peu d’énergie. De quoi doper...

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Commentaires sur Or et crise : Une illogique exceptionnelle par Goldman

Rien d’illogique puisque ce sont des ordinateurs qui font le boulot à la place des spéculateurs boursiers. Les ordinateurs n’intègrent pas le paramètre de l’actualité dans leurs modes de calcul.



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COP21 : le changement climatique a aussi un impact sur la santé

La conférence des Nations Unies sur les changements climatiques s'ouvre ce dimanche 30 novembre au Bourget, près de Paris, et se tiendra jusqu'au 11 décembre 2015. Des avancées politiques sont espérées pour ralentir le changement climatique qui a de nombreux effets négatifs sur la santé des...

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Cerveau : le précunéus serait-il la zone du bonheur ?

En utilisant l’IRM (Imagerie par résonance magnétique), une équipe de scientifiques japonais a localisé chez des volontaires une zone cérébrale du cerveau appelée précunéus et impliquée dans le ressenti du bonheur.

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jeudi 26 novembre 2015

Follow the yellow brick road: a journey into the world of coloured gemstones

Gemfields CEO Ian Harebottle with brand ambassador Mila Kunis

Gemfields CEO Ian Harebottle with brand ambassador Mila Kunis

Nestled among the hills of Egypt’s eastern desert are a series of underground mines. The workings, where miners once scratched deep into the mica and talc schist of the craggy hills searching for stones, have lain dormant for over 2 millennia.

Neither gold nor copper were being pulled from the mines. Instead, something far more precious to the legendary source of beauty and power the miners served, and from whom the exhausted Cleopatra Mines now take their name.

Emeralds.

Cleopatra is said to have loved emeralds above all other luxuries, and they remain a lasting symbol of her legacy. She was known to drape herself in garments laced with the piercing green stone, favoured visitors bearing the gem as gifts, and bestowed emeralds carved in her likeness to visiting dignitaries. The story goes that she split her largest stone in two – giving half to her lover Mark Antony, the Roman general and politician, to take into battle and keeping the other half by her side.

There was nothing prized higher by the last Pharaoh of Egypt.

POWERFUL SYMBOLS

For nearly five centuries gemstones have been synonymous with wealth, power, luxury and royalty.

Cultures around the globe have, and continue to, attribute mystical ability to gems – from the power to heal, to invisibility and the ability to foretell the future.

Ruby, known in Sanskrit as ratnaraj, means “King of Gems.” Burmese warriors believed that if rubies were inserted under their skin, they would become invincible in battle.

To this day Princess Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, wears an elegant sapphire engagement ring on her left hand, a stone passed down from the late Princess Diana to her son William.

Before there were designer purses, fast cars, and priceless paintings there were gemstones – the perfect union of artistry and natural phenomenon. The physical embodiment of luxury.

However, over the last century, coloured gemstones have become a vestige of the past, all but forgotten by the modern consumer.

After losing ground to fine art and luxury brands, coloured gems were surpassed by diamonds in the mid-20th century under the watchful eye and incredible focus of De Beers and the Oppenheimer family. After centuries as the world’s premier luxury asset, coloured gemstones appeared destined to become an overlooked, underappreciated specialty item.

That is, until recently.

Over the past six years, there has been a slow revitalization of the coloured gemstone industry, and it has been led by one name: Gemfields.

Note: I’ve written this article out of interest in Gemfields and the coloured gemstone space. I have received no compensation from Gemfields, and I am not a shareholder in the company. However I may purchase shares at some date in the future.

DRIVEN BY PASSION

I first met Ian Harebottle, CEO of Gemfields PLC, in early 2012 over a Skype call. I had responded to a job advert for a role at Gemfields, thinking my extensive site experience (a grand total of 18 months at the time) made me the ideal candidate to work at the up-and-coming miner’s head office in London. Mr. Harebottle had other plans. He was looking for enthusiastic engineers and geologists to work on site in Zambia and later, Mozambique.

Mr. Harebottle emphasized that candidates must meet one criteria: passion. He said he was looking for smart people that were truly passionate about what they were doing.

At 25 and having spent the better part of the last year living in a yurt in Mongolia, I was considerably more passionate about spending some time in a city. We wished one another well and parted on good terms.

Over the past several years I’ve often thought of that conversation, and Mr. Harebottle’s insistence on passion, particularly as I’ve watched Gemfields’ explosive growth and string of successes.

On Monday for instance, Gemfields announced that an auction of emeralds from its Kagem mine in Zambia had raised US$19.2 million, exceeding all expectations.

Mr. Harebottle seems to practise what he preaches: speaking with him, it is immediately clear he is passionate about the gem space, his company, and life. Even over the phone he radiates excitement, waxing poetically about his love of gemstones and spouting phrases such as “I believe in the psyche of every human being exists a love for colour!” An avid motorcyclist, he is nearly bursting with a tightly coiled enthusiasm for everything we discuss.

Mr. Harebottle and Anna Haber with Gemfields models.

Mr. Harebottle and Anna Haber with Gemfields models.

But you can’t understand Ian, Gemfields, or the coloured gemstone industry until you understand gems. To do that, we must start at the beginning with that most famous, and infamous, gem: Diamond.

GEMSTONES AND THE RISE OF THE DIAMOND

“It’s always best to start at the beginning and all you do is follow the yellow brick road”
– Glinda, the Good Witch

In 1947 advertising writer Frances Gerety was working late at her desk on a series of ads. Exhausted after a long day and ready to head to bed, she said to herself “God, send me a line.” Scribbled down a few words and went off to sleep (How Diamonds Became Forever, The New York Times; May. 2013 ).

Whether by divine intervention, genius or blind luck unbeknownst to Ms. Gerety, she had just crafted what would be one of the most prolific lines in advertising history. She had initiated a campaign that would become synonymous with love, marriage and luxury; and help to launch an industry that would change the face of luxury goods around the globe: “A Diamond Is Forever.”

Until the mid-1940’s diamond was just another gemstone sharing the market, relatively equally, with coloured gems such as: Ruby, Emerald and Sapphire. Precious stones, or gemstones, were thought to be the domain of the rich and famous. Too expensive for the middle class and destined to adorn the fingers and necks of royalty and movie stars.

Gems were typically discovered and mined in the classic “gold rush” scenario. A local rock hound or geologist would stumble upon a small deposit and gemhunters from around the globe would ride into town, pick the deposit clean and quickly move on. Little structure or organization existed in the industry and gems were considered such a rarity that they were out of reach for the average consumer.

That all changed in the 1870s in a small town in South Africa known as Kimberly.

Here, on the De Beers family farm, massive diamond bearing pipes (later known as kimberlites) were discovered. This time, instead of being picked clean, the pipes were purchased and consolidated by the infamous Cecil Rhodes (and later the equally notorious Oppenheimer family) – thus birthing De Beers Consolidated Mines, Ltd.

De Beers’ genius lay in their ability to consolidate the industry and form a monopoly. It won them complete control over diamond mining, sales and distribution.

Once this happened, however, they quickly discovered an inconvenient fact:

Diamonds are not that rare.

The Oppenheimers, undeterred, proceeded to combat this issue by controlling the supply and limiting the number of diamonds to reach the market each year. A feat only made possible when you own all of the mines.

The next step was to create a market and drive the price up, hence the employment of Ms. Gerety, whose famous words convinced millions of newly engaged young women that they deserved a diamond ring and every hopeful young man that he should part with 3 months’ salary to obtain a hard shiny rock.

This combination of consistent, controlled supply and ingenious marketing turned the diamond into the world’s pre-eminent gemstone.

An unfortunate consequence of this was that the diamonds’ coloured counterparts were left to adorn figures of the past.

However, not everyone forgot about coloured gemstones, and the Gemfields team has set out to restore them to their former glory.

“Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain! ” – The Wizard of Oz

Talking to the Gemfields team and seeing their passion for their work, it often feel like they are “on a mission from God.” And they are on a mission, but the entity behind the scenes is a (slightly) less impressive figure: Brian Gilbertson, the CEO and founder of private equity group Pallinghurst Capital.

If you haven’t heard of Mr. Gilbertson you’re not alone. His ability to remaining relatively anonymous is astounding given his track record in the mining industry.

After a stint designing missile systems in Paris, Mr. Gilbertson started his mining career with JCI, a major De Beers shareholder, before being poached by Gencor in 1988. He quickly rose through the ranks and eventually headed the company.

In 1994, under Mr. Gilbertson’s leadership, Gencor purchased Billiton, a company that had been around since the 1800s. Gilbertson quickly turned Billiton around and spun it out just three years later. The new Billiton would go on to merge with Australian miner Broken Hill Properties in 2001. The resulting behemoth became BHP Billiton, the world’s largest mining company; of which, incidentally, Gilbertson was CEO (Brian Gilbertson: The Industry’s Godfather, Global Mining Observer, Oct. 2014).

To say Mr. Gilbertson is a man who sees opportunities where others do not is an understatement. He has a reputation for finding overlooked potential and delivering on his vision.

Upon identifying the coloured stone space as an “overlooked industry” in 2007, Pallinghurst decided it was too good of an opportunity to pass up and proceeded to acquire 75% of the Kagem emerald mine in Zambia (the government maintained ownership of the remaining 25%).

In 2008, with the Kagem mine as its primary asset, Gemfields was born. Gilbertson brought in Harebottle and his team to run the show; of which Pallinghurst retains approximately 48%.

HOW DOES THIS ALL WORK?

“No thief, however skillful, can rob one of knowledge, and that is why knowledge is the best and safest treasure to acquire.” – Glinda the Good Witch

To be clear: for all intents and purposes, gemstones are useless.

They are a luxury good, and with the exception of industrial-grade diamonds, they serve no practical purpose. All value they possess is perceived by the market or the individual. There is perhaps nothing teetering higher on the apex of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs then a gemstone.

However …

They are rare and they are beautiful. They have captivated our imagination and symbolized wealth and luxury throughout history, and unlike many luxury goods their durability allows them to stand the test of time (measured in millennia as opposed to centuries or decades).

They also represent an interesting niche in the mining and commodities space.

Unlike base metals they are not something we need to support our way of life, and unlike gold bullion they are not used as a store of wealth to support and balance our global economies. Unlike nearly anything else society mines, their value is subjective, and as such can be created.

As long as people have wealth to spend, they will want beautiful things, and given our multi-millennial preoccupation with gems it is safe to assume that demand will not be going away anytime soon.

“You’ve had the power all along my dear.” – Glinda the Good Witch

The Gemfields model is simple: Plagiarism.

They intend to replicate, and improve upon, the De Beers diamond model in the coloured gem space. Mr. Harebottle put it to me simply: “We did a market analysis, we saw the opportunity, and figured there is no point in reinventing the wheel. We just try to avoid the mistakes and do the good bits even better.”

The process consists of three steps: Consolidate, Evaluate, Market.

CONSOLIDATE

The vast majority of gemstones are purchased for jewelry, with buyers intending to use them to create “lines” of products. Whether designing engagement rings, necklaces or earrings, most jewelers intend to create hundreds or thousands of identical pieces to sell to consumers. To do that they must be able to ensure predictable, consistent supply chains.

Supply chains that will get them the stones they need when they need them.

Consolidation was central to De Beers’ success. It is also what has, historically, been lacking in the coloured stone space, and has thus allowed the diamond to capture the market.

Because high-quality coloured gems are many times rarer than diamonds, consolidation and reliable supply has been difficult to achieve.

Difficult, but not impossible …

Gemfields’ Kagem mine currently produces around 20% of the world’s emerald supply and their share of the market is expected to grow with recent acquisitions in Colombia. Additionally, they are producing as much as 20% of the world’s rubies at their Montepuez mine.

Consolidation enables Gemfields to sells their stones via an auction system, which is not only beneficial to themselves but to the space as a whole.

Gemfields holds separate ruby and emerald auctions several times per year and attendance is selective. Receiving numerous requests to attend a given auction, invites are typically only extended to a select few.

Mr. Harebottle emphasizes the importance of selling to the right buyers, groups that are experienced working with coloured gems, and have shown commitment to expand the space. As he puts it: “Coloured gems are so incredibly rare that they need to be handled perfectly. Handled by serious people, like ourselves, that share the vision and can champion coloured [stones] for the benefit of all the other producers and the rest of the industry.”

Selecting a small cohort is also essential in ensuring that each buyer has enough time to examine the stones, get to know the product, and make the right bid.

Follow the yellow brick road - Rough gemstones photo

The rough gemstones are first divided into hundreds of different quality grades (size, color, clarity, etc…) and then into different “schedules” or lots consisting of gemstones of varying quality grades that will support production runs of similar product lines. Buyers must make silent bids on an entire schedule; while only the most exceptional stones are sold individually.

This is perhaps a more progressive (and humane) version of the traditional De Beers package buying system, where an invitee was presented with a package of diamonds at a set price. He could then either choose to purchase all of the diamonds in the package or none, but if he walked away he risked never being invited back.

Gemfields’ sheer quantity of stones has allowed them to be the first to apply this system to the coloured gemstone space. Additionally, this model ensures that jewellers will receive similar quality stones in quantities great enough to design their product lines around (and perhaps most importantly design their marketing around). Although this system may irk the small-scale buyer or those who don’t receive an invite to the auction, it is on the whole beneficial to the space and helps to expand the market.

And as Mr. Harebottle points out: Gemfields is not the only company selling coloured gemstones.

EVALUATE

The 4 Cs are the universally recognized diamond grading system: Colour, Cut, Carat and Clarity. This system, created by De Beers, seems on first glance to be an excellent system for customers to understand the value of a potential purchase and pay accordingly … but this is only half true.

Originally there was only one C: Carat (1 Carat= 200 mg). The carat or size of a stone was all that consumers cared about and it was used to determine the value of a stone.

Then, in the early 1950s, De Beers created the other 3 Cs in a move to maintain their iron grip on diamond supply.

Around this time diamonds had been discovered in Russia in massive quantities. Because De Beers no longer owned most, if not all, of the world’s mines, they were in danger of losing control of the supply and pricing of diamonds.

Instead of attempting to gain control of the Russian mines, they simply purchased their output – smaller diamonds, but of a clearer variety than those produced in South Africa. (The Incredible Story of How De Beers Created and Lost The Most Powerful Monopoly Ever, Business Insider, Dec. 2011)

Left with the need to sell a mountain of tiny diamonds, De Beers came up with, and marketed, the 4 Cs. Thus increasing the value of the small but clear (aka Clarity) Russian diamonds.

One of Gemfields’ most critical moves, which has set them apart from the competition, is the creation of a comprehensive coloured gemstone classification system. It’s something they are only able to do because they control such a significant portion of the market.

Mr. Harebottle is quick to point out there is no such thing as a better gemstone. They are simply different, and as long as the customer loves his or her purchase then Gemfields has done their job right.

There are, however, more expensive gemstones, and this is predominately a factor of rarity. Larger gemstones are rarer than smaller ones, intense colour is rarer than weaker colours, and both drive up a gem’s value.

An example of this is seen in ruby, where “pigeon blood” red is the premier colour, fetching prices multiple times that of a less-rare variant of the gem.

Gemfields’ rough grading systems for both emerald and ruby were developed by their head of global sales, Adrian Banks (Gemstones on Jermyn Street: White is a Colour, Global Mining Observer, Oct. 2014). The emerald system, for example, consists of several steps:

  • First, the gems are divided by size into six categories ranging from 4mm to greater than 31mm;
  • They are then subdivided by colour with stones of similar hues and intensities grouped together;
  • Next, stones are divided by transparency;
  • And finally, they are separated based on defining traits of individual stones such as how the stone will be cut and consistency of colour.

Follow the yellow brick road - gemstones seperated into categories - photo

The system allows Gemfields to supply buyers with a level of consistency in supply and value never before seen in the market. The effects of this system are twofold.

Not only can it be, in addition to marketing, largely credited with the consistent increase in price per carat Gemfields has seen at each auction, it has a trickledown effect on the entire industry. It allows consistency in pricing and confidence in supply to develop over time, with each consecutive auction bidders develop a sense of the prices expected to purchase a lot of a given “quality” of gemstones, in turn allowing them to reflect this cost in the pricing of their jewelry and products.

It also provides Gemfields with tremendous influence over the industry.

MARKETING

Mr. Harebottle considers Gemfields to be a “luxury miner,” possessing the skillsets of the best mining houses in the world – but also understanding how to promote and market their product.

There are few better ways to describe Gemfields’ aptitude for marketing than this:

Follow the yellow brick road - Mina Kunis - photo

That is actress/model Mila Kunis in an emerald campaign; she is Gemfields’ official brand ambassador. Her support does not come cheap however, commanding a considerable price tag with a third of Gemfields marketing budget committed to the Mila campaign and the associated marketing capital (ie. advertising space, photography, videography, etc). But Mr. Harebottle couldn’t be happier about the relationship and believes Ms. Kunis to be the perfect fit for Gemfields.

And, it would appear the market agrees …..

Gemfields has managed to increase both the supply (i.e. the quantity of gems hitting the market) and the price per carat of their stones, both ruby and emerald.

Take a moment to consider how remarkable this is, as it flies in the face of conventional supply and demand. When I mentioned to Mr. Harebottle that he had set himself the formidable task of running a mining company while simultaneously creating the market for his product, he put it a different way: “The market has always been there, it just became forgotten. We’ve simply managed to help reinvigorate or resuscitate the market.”

The truth is, engaging Ms. Kunis is only the tip of the iceberg. Gemfields’ marketing strategy, headed by Anna Haber, is prolific. From magazine ads to fundraisers and bespoke parties, they are everywhere in the coloured gemstone and luxury goods space – and I for one cannot think of another miner that’s graced the pages of Vogue Magazine lately.

Calling Gemfields ambitious is an understatement.

In February 2013 they took it a step further with the purchase of the Fabergé brand in a US$90M paper deal. If you are wondering why you’ve heard that name before, it’s because of these:

Follow the yellow brick road - famous Faberge eggs - photo

The famous Fabergé Eggs. House of Fabergé started in St. Petersburg in the mid 1800s and was the official goldsmith to the Russian Imperial Court, producing eggs for the Tsars to give to their wives for Easter.

The Fabergé name, one of the most iconic jewellers in the world, is now being utilized by Gemfields to promote coloured stones in art and jewelry.

The acquisition of a brand-name retailer is a move we’ve seen before in the diamond industry with Aber Diamonds (now Dominion Diamond’s) purchase of luxury brand Harry Winston. Interestingly they’ve since sold Harry Winston to focus purely on mining.

The question: Is Gemfields overextending themselves by stepping into the retail space?

Possibly. Despite revenue of nearly US$9M in 2015, Fabergé has run at a loss of over US$15M the past two years and likely will for several more.

But my thoughts are: likely not.

Unlike diamonds, which already have an established market and consistent prices, coloured gems need focused aggressive marketing. Controlling a famous brand like Fabergé is an excellent way to do that.

Perhaps it will make sense to sell off Fabergé down the road once the coloured stone market has stabilized – only time will tell.

But given that Gemfields was able to wrestle Fabergé away from Mr. Gilbertson (who had previously taken it from Unilever), as well as the fact that it hasn’t hurt their market capitalization, and that they undoubtedly possess the most capable coloured gemstone teams in the world – it appears to makes sense.

GEMFIELDS TODAY

“There’s no place like home.” – Dorothy

Today Gemfields PLC (GEM-AIM) has a market capitalization of US$342M (£227M) and is trading at just over US$0.60 (£0.40), nearly 10X where it began six years ago.

GEMstock

Highlights from the last year include:
– Revenue of US$171.4 million;
– After-tax profit of US$12.3 million;
– US$28 million in cash (30 June 2015); and
– A gemstone inventory on hand, estimated at a production cost (considerably below the expected selling price) of US$101.1 million.

The Gemfields portfolio is expansive, and growing quickly. It consists of emerald, ruby and amethyst projects in Africa, the recent acquisition of two emerald projects in Colombia, licenses and partnerships in Sri Lanka, Ethiopia, Madagascar and Colombia, a trading arm, and Fabergé.

Note: Gemfields financial year ends June 30th. For simplicity throughout this report a given financial year has been referred to as the calendar year of its later half.

EMERALD

The Kagem emerald mine is Gemfields’ flagship project, first acquired by Pallinghurst, and what Mr. Harebottle refers to as the company’s “foundation and first love.”

And to be fair, they have every reason to love it.

With outputs constantly above 20M carats annually, Kagem has produced on a massive scale and is singlehandedly responsible for at least 20% of the world’s emerald supply.

GEM2

Zambian emeralds are distinct from the more well-known Colombian variety; possessing a slight bluish hue. And despite somewhat humble beginnings, the distinctive Zambian emerald has caught on thanks to Gemfields aggressive marketing… and, no doubt, Ms. Kunis.

Image6
This ramp-up of value culminated at auction last year when the average price per carat price hit an all-time high of US$65.89 for high-quality rough emeralds.

GEM3

In the past year Gemfields has poured about US$35M into Kagem; providing new equipment, and improving facilities and infrastructure. Kagem’s processing plant hit record levels of activity, and the capacity of the wash plant, a key piece of infrastructure, is in the process of being doubled.

And more to the point: It would appear Kagem is only getting started.

Earlier this year SRK Consulting completed an updated resource/reserve estimate on Kagem predicting a 25-year mine life, an NPV (10% discount) of US$520M, and nearly 2 billion carats in-situ.

Further confirming that Kagem has a long, bright future in front of it are the results from Gemfields last low quality emerald auction released earlier this week, which brought US$19.2M into the company.

Though perhaps the most interesting thing about Kagem is it’s not even Gemfields’ most exciting project.

RUBY

“When I get those ruby slippers my power will be the greatest in Oz.” – The Wicked Witch of the West

Ian calls Gemfields’ Montepuez ruby mine a “once in a lifetime” discovery.

And he may be right.

Prior to Gemfields, Montepuez was a reserve owned by private Mozambican company Mwiriti. After discovering red corundum on the grounds, the owners went shopping for potential partners at some of the world’s premier mining houses.

In late 2011 they settled on Gemfields, who picked up 75% of the project for only $2.5 million, with Mwiriti controlling the remaining 25%.

A recent feasibility study completed by SRK predicts:
– A 21-year mine life expected to produce over 430m carats;
– A projected LoM cash flow of $2.76 billion;
– Post-tax NPV (10% discount rate) of $996M;
– An IRR of 311.7%

Which is pretty amazing, especially if you consider the fact that the mine essentially paid for itself in under three years.

Gemfields’ inaugural ruby auction in June 2014 brought in $33.5M, all but recouping the $34.5M spent to date on purchase price, capital and operating costs (Gemstones on Jermyn Street: White is a Colour, Global Mining Observer, Oct. 2014).

Gemfields ruby auctions are still in their early days but appear very promising. The first “tester” auction, which sold gems of mixed quality, was completed in January 2014. This was followed closely by two high-quality and one low-quality auctions over the next year.

GEM4

Average per-carat prices range from US$688.64 (Gemfields highest ever) at the Dec. 2014 high-value ruby auction to US$4.02 at the April 2015 low-value ruby auction.

However, Montepuez has faced ballooning operating costs that have nearly tripled from 2014 to 2015, resulting in only a 40% increase in the number of carats produced.

GEM5

The cost of producing a carat of ruby at Montepuez has gone from US$1.22 to US$2.57 in the past year. If costs continue to grow, this will become a major issue.

But, before sounding the alarms it’s important to note that Montepuez is still very profitable, bringing in over US$45M in revenue at a cost of less than US$31.5M.

Perhaps most importantly: this is a project that is currently in the bulk sample phase (ie. very early in the mining lifecycle), and one that has undergone a major (read: expensive) ramp up.

The first thing to remember is that gem mining is not only tricky, it’s volatile. Unlike traditional metal deposits, gems are not evenly dispersed throughout the orebody. Instead they often occur in clumps or highly mineralized pockets, similar to the “nugget effect” sometimes seen in gold deposits. Because of this, planning is difficult, production more sporadic and some years will inherently be better than others.

Fluctuating costs and production are thus part of the nature of gem mining and are to be expected as Montepuez progresses into full steady state production, and throughout its life.

Second, Gemfields annual report claims that even though the grade of the mined material has decreased, with fewer carats produced in 2015, the value of the material is considerably higher. This is a phenomenon that is unique to gemstones; where value can increase exponentially with the size and rarity of a stone.

Put simply: One 20-carat gem may be worth many times what 20 1-carat gems are worth.

Only future auctions can confirm this.

With 500 people on site at any given time, Montepuez is quickly moving towards full production. Having sunk nearly US$10M of capital into the mining fleet in the past year, Gemfields has increased operating capacity by over 90%. Gemfields next intends to increase processing capacity by 50% to 150 tonnes per hour, and could potentially build a second wash plant, bringing capacity to 320 tonnes per hour in the future.

Runaway operating costs are something that investors need to watch closely and hold the company accountable for.

But if Gemfields stabilizes and makes good on projections in the feasibility study, Montepuez will not only be a massive win, it will quickly become the jewel of the Gemfields portfolio.

ADDITIONAL PROJECTS

Kagem and Montepuez are Gemfields’ highest-profile projects and make up the bulk of the revenue stream, but they are far from the only assets on the books.

In addition to emerald and ruby, Gemfields has the Kariba amethyst mine in Zambia, which produces 40% of the world’s amethyst.

They have a lucrative sapphire trading arm in Sri Lanka that purchases rough sapphire from reputable parties, as well as an operating interest in several exploration properties throughout the country.

Gemfields also owns a majority interest in an Ethiopian company that is conducting emerald exploration on a 200 km2 stretch of property.

And they are currently putting licenses in place through a subsidiary in Madagascar.

Most recently, Gemfields acquired two projects in Colombia, most notably the Coscuez emerald mine in the famous Muzo district. Coscuez is one of the world’s most famous emerald mines and has been in operation for over 25 years. Gemfields picked up Coscuez for US$12.5M in cash and US$2.5M in shares in September 2015.

When I asked Mr. Harebottle how he intended to navigate the notorious quagmire that is gem mining in Colombia and the various nefarious elements he can expect to encounter there, he was unperturbed. He stated that Gemfields intends to bring its unique combination of transparency, responsibility and expertise to the region. An influx of capital doubtlessly won’t hurt either, in an area where mining methods have changed little in the past 100 years, and profits have a reputation of ending up in the pockets of cartels rather than being reinvested into projects.

Visit in 2014 to the Gemfields Kagem Mine in Zambia. At the sorting house, a sorter examines the translucency, size, and color of an emerald crystal before adding it to an assortment.

What is most important about Coscuez is that it will finally give Gemfields access to the quintessential Colombia emerald. While Zambian emeralds have seen a steady increase in value under Gemfields’ mindful stewardship, the Colombian variant remains the benchmark for the stone – maintaining the greatest renown and fetching the highest prices.

Gemfields has generated significant revenue year over year since the company was formed in 2009.

GEMrev

That said, the biggest issue Gemfields faces is that profits are down by nearly 25% from 2014 despite increased revenue. As a result, the company’s share price has been crushed, dropping 37% in the last 2.5 months.

GEMprofit

But let’s take a closer look.

Gemfields itself attributes the decrease in profit to higher costs and lower gross margins. As noted earlier, mining gems is difficult and notoriously volatile.

Examining Gemfields’ “gross profit” provides us a better understanding of the profit made by a given mining operation after taking into account the costs of running that operation. This does not reflect general administrative costs (marketing, legal fees, head office expenses, etc.).

Gross Profit = Revenue – Cost of Goods Sold

Here we see a decrease of only $95,000, or 0.1%, from 2014 to 2015.

GEMnext

This suggests that the increased costs are being incurred in areas outside of the operations. A quick look through Gemfields’ financial statements shows us that sales and general administration costs are up 15% in 2015.

GEMsales

In fact, marketing and advertising costs alone (an area few miners need to worry about) have increased by nearly 20%.

GEMmarketing

If you think about it, this makes sense.

In the last 3 years, Gemfields has:
– Acquired a second emerald mine in Colombia;
– Acquired and operated Fabergé (at a loss);
– Brought the Montepuez mine through feasibility and completed a bulk sample;
– Run a prosperous trading arm;
– Developed partnerships in Sri Lanka, Madagascar, and Ethiopia;
– Hired actress Mila Kunis as an “ambassador” to promote their gems.

They have also remained one the top performing mining stocks in the world over the past few years.

Rising corporate costs will need to be halted at some point, and they are really only acceptable when they bring about accretive growth.

But I believe they have.

To me, moves like this indicate a management team that is thinking beyond quarterly or annual earnings. They are doing exactly what they’ve said they would do – building the world’s leader in coloured gemstones and creating a fully integrated mine-to-market machine.

THE COMPETITION

I would be remiss if I did not mention Gemfields’ competitors; they are, however, few and far between and many of those that do exist are notoriously secretive. The coloured gemstone industry is largely a black box controlled by private organizations and individuals. These vary in form, ranging from small-scale artisanal miners throughout Africa, Asia and South America, wealthy private companies, and often an almost (and sometimes literally) cartel-like structure in Brazil and Colombia.

The result? It makes it very difficult to determine what is going on in the industry as a whole.

However, at the time of this writing I could find only two other publicly traded coloured gemstone companies:

True North Gems (TGX-V) is a Vancouver-based junior exploring for rubies. True North is currently in the early development stage of their Aappaluttoq mine in Greenland. By all accounts this project has a lot of potential and is one to watch. It may, however, be some time before commercial production is achieved.

Richland Resources (RLD-LSE) owns and operates a sapphire mine in Australia, as well as an online gem retailer selling predominantly sapphires and tanzanite.

Gemfields’ market capitalization is currently nearly seven times that of their publicly traded competitors (combined) and they control a market share that is an order of magnitude greater.

Beyond employing a very capable team and being by far the best capitalized (thanks largely to Mr. Gilbertson), Gemfields is far and beyond the most aggressive marketer and promoter I’ve seen in the space.

WHAT’S NEXT?

“Everything you were looking for was right there with you all along.” – The Wizard of Oz

When I asked this question in our interview, Mr. Harebottle told me I sounded like a banker (as he sees them always looking for more blue-sky potential) and said: what’s next is to make sure that all of Gemfields’ operations, and Fabergé, are running optimally.

And, of course, that is the right thing to do.

But… I don’t fully buy it.

Since our conversation Gemfields has bought the Coscuez emerald mine in Colombia. They’re nursing relationships and licences across Asia and Africa and they’re putting in a concerted effort to expand Fabergé.

This is a group that’s hungry for projects and growth – perhaps picky, but certainly hungry.

I don’t know what’s next on Gemfields’ plate, but I am certain the company is not done yet.

Although he didn’t mention it to me personally, in researching this article, I read other interviews where Mr. Harebottle insinuated ambitions at a someday merger with De Beers.

On first glance, this seems absurd.

But a lot can be said for momentum, and Gemfields has it in spades. De Beers, on the other hand, no longer appears to have much at all. The company has struggled to maintain its grip on the diamond world in recent years as competition increases, and De Beers is now navigating the realities of lower rough diamond prices.

The diamond industry is facing some serious headwinds as global economic growth continues to stall.

There are notable exceptions, of course. Such as when a Chinese billionaire makes arecord-breaking (US$48.4M) blue diamond purchase for his 7-year-old daughter. And the recent discovery of a 1,111-carat diamond by Lucara (the largest diamond recovered since the Cullinan stone, which was cut to make the Crown jewels) has already sent shockwaves through the industry and will be sure to pique consumer interest.

But perhaps stumbling diamond prices are the opportunity that Gemfields (and coloured gemstones) have patiently been waiting for?

The gemstone industry can be likened to a ship, and for it to work properly it requires a captain – why not Gemfields?

I’m reminded of the biography of Steve Jobs, where author Walter Isaacson recounts a man insistent on perfection and so attentive to detail that he demands all Apple products be equally beautiful on the inside as the out. So that if a customer were to pry off the back of an iPhone or Mac, they would see that the components were arranged neatly and orderly, and that the circuitry was beautiful.

To most, this would – and did – seem absurd. But that was the level of commitment required to build the most valuable company on earth.

In many ways, I see the same precision of action and encompassing obsession at work in Gemfields. When I asked Ian what makes them special he summed it up simply: “I don’t think working at Gemfields is a job for almost anyone on our team; our staff loves what they do and for most of them it’s their passion, so our people tend to go way way beyond what’s expected.”

Take a look at their website and you’ll see the immense thought they’ve put into its design. In fact, even their financial statements are a work of art.

This may be unimportant. A waste of time and energy.

But to me it speaks to something bigger. Because when I see a company that puts this much care into a financial statement, I think about the attention they must be devoting to their operations, to their community engagement and government relations, to their sales and marketing – to the things that matter.

That is why I am impressed with Gemfields, and to what I attribute their success in a space where many before them have failed. There will undoubtedly be challenges and hurdles ahead, but Mr. Harebottle and his team seem well on their way to creating a truly remarkable industry outlier.

And while success can never be assured, we would all do well to remember what lies at the end of the yellow brick road …

final

 

 

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