National Post

Cameco beats estimates ... for now

- Ian BIckIs

Production cuts and some price gains helped Cameco

Corp. post a better-thanexpect­ed profit in its latest quarter, but it said industry headwinds remain.

“You will see from our results that we had a strong finish to 2018,” chief executive Tim Gitzel told on a conference call Monday.

“That said, and as we expected, our 2019 outlook points to a weaker performanc­e from a gross profit point of view.”

The uranium producer has been struggling for years with a sluggish market for yellowcake. Last year, it temporaril­y halted production at its McArthur River mine and later made the shutdown permanent as it and other producers looked to cut back on supply.

The drop in supplies from Cameco and others, and some increased demand, have helped boost spot market prices by about 20 per cent since the start of 2018, but long-term orders have lagged.

The company relied more on stockpiles because of the mine shutdown, leaving its inventorie­s at about a third of where they were at the start of 2018. The drop in inventorie­s and a tough outlook will mean more challenges for next year, Gitzel said.

“We will continue to generate cash from operations in this difficult time. However, the cash generated will not be as robust as in 2018, given the weaker outlook and without the release of working capital associated with the inventory drawdown in 2018.”

The lack of cash flow is a challenge, said BMO Capital Markets analyst Alexander Pearce, but he raised the target price for the company by a dollar to $17.50 on a strengthen­ed balance sheet, a potential settlement with a Japanese utility and a rising uranium price.

“We continue to have reasons to be positive on the stock,” said Pearce in a note.

The company reported Friday a profit of $160 million for the quarter ending Dec. 31, compared with a loss of $62 million for the same quarter a year earlier.

Adjusted net earnings were $202 million, or 51 cents per share, compared with adjusted earnings of $181 million or 46 cents per share for the same quarter in 2017.

The adjusted earnings were well ahead of analyst expectatio­ns of 23 cents per share for the quarter, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

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