Vancouver Sun

Barrick’s dividend boost looks like a harbinger for the gold industry

- JUSTINA VASQUEZ

Bullion giant Barrick Gold Corp. pleasantly surprised the market by raising its dividend 25 per cent. Will the move portend a new era of largesse from the normally tight-fisted gold miners?

There are certainly reasons for investors to be hopeful. Producers have been striving to cut costs and consolidat­e operations, while the price of gold has climbed over 20 per cent in the past year to hover around US$1,500 an ounce. Barrick’s move Wednesday was echoed a few hours later when Canadian rival Kirkland Lake Gold Ltd. raised its quarterly payout 50 per cent. B2gold Corp. preceded both by announcing its first-ever dividend a day earlier.

“The companies are positioned to start to pay dividends and give more back to shareholde­rs,” Joe Foster, a portfolio manager and strategist at Vaneck, said by phone. “It happens to coincide with the rising gold price, so you’re getting to see more aggressive moves on the dividends front than we would have seen if gold was US$100 or US$200 lower.”

Gold miners trimmed costs following the sharp decline of the metal’s price toward the start of the decade. Barrick and B2gold are both expecting costs this year to come in at or below the lower end of company guidance.

Not all producers have embraced increased payouts this earnings season. On Tuesday Newmont Goldcorp Corp., the world’s largest gold producer, held its dividend steady as it grapples with integratin­g problemati­c assets acquired in its mega-merger with Goldcorp Inc.

In an interview after assuming the role of chief executive officer Oct. 1, Newmont’s Tom Palmer used a common phrase in the gold industry: capital allocation discipline. For Palmer, that means the first focus will be paying down debt, then funding projects, and finally increasing dividends.

A discipline­d approach should continue to translate to shareholde­r returns, says Stephen Walker, RBC Capital Markets’ head of global mining research.

“Shareholde­rs have been asking companies to be more discipline­d,”

Walker said by phone Wednesday. “The ability to return a portion of excess capital to shareholde­rs” is evidence of their improved cost performanc­e, he said.

 ?? HANDREK-REHLE/BLOOMBERG MICHAELA ?? The rising gold price means firms can “give more back to shareholde­rs,” says Joe Foster of Vaneck.
HANDREK-REHLE/BLOOMBERG MICHAELA The rising gold price means firms can “give more back to shareholde­rs,” says Joe Foster of Vaneck.

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