Bangkok Post

Top platinum miner makes bold call

- STILLWATER (BLOOMBERG)

The world’s No.1 platinum miner said the price of the metal could climb more than 80% over the next four to five years as the global economy recovers and supply dwindles.

That forecast comes as demand for platinum-group metals has already rebounded to pre-pandemic levels, Sibanye Stillwater’s chief executive Neal Froneman said in an interview from his farm in South Africa’s Limpopo province. Platinum has almost doubled from an 18-year low in March amid supply disruption­s and a revival in China’s auto industry, which uses the metal in pollution-control devices.

“Platinum has only just started to re-rate and it will continue,” Mr Froneman said. “There is no reason why platinum will not eventually trade at $2,000 an ounce and probably even higher.”

This is not Mr Froneman’s first bold call. When the South African dealmaker acquired Stillwater Mining four years ago, critics lined up to say he had overpaid for the US palladium producer. Since then, the price of palladium has almost quadrupled, allowing Sibanye to resume dividends and repay debt.

Platinum will be supported by its increasing use in hydrogen fuel cells, while automakers in China and North America are starting to switch the metal in for more expensive palladium in autocataly­sts, Mr Froneman said.

New technology developed by BASF SE — with backing from Sibanye and Impala Platinum Holdings — to partially replace palladium in autocataly­sts could boost platinum demand by at least 300,000 ounces a year, he said.

“Substituti­on has taken off very well in China and the regulatory environmen­t there is a lot more flexible,” Mr Froneman said.

Mr Froneman isn’t alone in his optimism for platinum. The metal could trade at around $1,500 an ounce in 2022, according to Georgette Boele, a senior precious metals strategist at ABN Amro Bank NV. It traded just above $1,100 an ounce yesterday.

“Slowly but surely the stars are aligning for this precious metal,” Boele said in a note on Jan 6.

As for rhodium, the world’s priciest precious metal that extended record gains on Friday, its rally could continue, according to Froneman. There’s still a “substantia­l” shortfall, said chief executive of Sibanye, which is the biggest rhodium supplier. Rhodium has advanced to $21,000 an ounce, taking this year’s gains to 23%, according to Johnson Matthey data.

“There is no reason for rhodium and palladium prices to come back and there is every reason for platinum price to increase,” he said.

 ??  ?? A worker attends to machinery at a smelter plant in a platinum mine in Zimbabwe.
A worker attends to machinery at a smelter plant in a platinum mine in Zimbabwe.

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