Business Day (Ghana)

Newmont, Other Big Gold Miners Missing Out on Bullion’s Record Run

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The world’s biggest gold miners are at risk of missing out on the metal’s record run after spending billions of dollars to become the obvious home for bullion-focused investors.

Despite gold hitting all-time highs almost daily, Newmont Corp. shares were down about 6% this year to Thursday’s market close, while rival Barrick Gold Corp.’s stock had fallen about 2%. Shares of both companies gained Friday as gold set a fresh record high, with Newmont rising the most since February.

“I’ve never seen it dislocate quite like this,” said Peter Grosskopf, chairman of SCP Resources Finance LP and former chief executive officer of Sprott Inc.

Gold is up about 13% this year and set another record Friday at $2,330.50 per ounce. It has rallied sharply since mid-February as tensions escalate in the Middle East and Ukraine, and uncertaint­ies linger about China’s economy and US Federal Reserve policy.

Producers’ stocks soared at the outset of the Covid-19 pandemic as bullion skyrockete­d amid widespread fears of economic calamity.

Newmont and Barrick went on deal-making sprees in recent years, snapping up smaller companies and eclipsing rivals in terms of scale. The logic behind this was clear: With investors increasing­ly wary about the sector, the companies wanted to give the gold-miner curious a place to invest.

Barrick chief executive officer Mark Bristow even secured the GOLD ticker in New York.

Since then, though, miners have seen margins shrink as inflationa­ry pressures persist, with most companies spending more on labor, equipment and processing than expected.

Barrick, Newmont and Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd. have struggled especially in North America, where worker pay and other cost items have spiked in recent years.

“Things like cement, lime, explosives, steel — there’s still a little bit of inflationa­ry pressure in those areas, which we’re working on to bring down,” Barrick chief financial officer Graham Shuttlewor­th said in the company’s latest earnings call.

At Newmont, total operating expenses were 43% higher than analysts expected in 2023, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The Denver-based company also faces skepticism from shareholde­rs about its $15 billion acquisitio­n of Newcrest Mining Ltd., which is poised to deliver less gold production than anticipate­d this year and involves selling several mines that Newmont acquired during its 2019 takeover of Goldcorp Inc.

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