Business Day

Competitio­n rises for mining assets as gold regains shine

Bullion climbs as investors seek safe havens after Brexit vote, writes Luzi Ann Javier

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SO MUCH for the run on cheap gold mines. Producers who were forced by slumping prices to unload assets last year are regaining leverage. With bullion off to its biggest rally to start a year in four decades — aided by the UK’s vote to quit the EU — mine buyers are paying higher premiums and the pace of deals is accelerati­ng, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The value of reserves held by major producers has almost doubled since the third quarter of last year, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

The revival comes after a three-year slump led to losses, rising debt and a fire sale of assets. With valuations dropping, private equity firms and companies, including Zijin Mining Group, pounced.

The number of acquisitio­ns worth at least $1m rose 14% last year to 192, the first increase since 2010, data compiled by Bloomberg show. But now investors are pouring money into gold funds, and prices are near the highest in more than two years, boosting premiums for available mining assets that are getting harder to find.

“Scarcity of high-quality targets, both producing and developmen­tstage, is more of a factor than bargain hunting,” says Michael Siperco, an analyst at Macquarie Capital Markets in Toronto. “We could see potential acquirers more willing to pull the trigger on transactio­ns, given the improving near and longer-term macro environmen­t for gold.”

The average premium paid on deals worth at least $1m is about 42% in this quarter, up from 29% in the first quarter, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The 60 deals pending or completed in the quarter are the most since the fourth quarter of 2011, the year that bullion surged to a record high of $1,921.17/oz.

Teranga Gold Corporatio­n, a Toronto-based producer, agreed on June 20 to buy Gryphon Minerals, based in Subiaco, Australia, at a premium of 53%, based on the closing price before the deal was announced. That compares with an estimated 33% premium given by Vancouver-based Goldcorp, the world’s largest producer, when it agreed in May to acquire Kaminak Gold Corporatio­n.

Gold has rallied 25% this year, heading for the best first half of any year since 1974. Prices touched $1,358.54/oz on June 24, the day after a UK plebiscite showed a majority wanted to exit the EU, a vote dubbed Brexit, prompting investors to stock up on bullion as a haven as global equity markets plunged.

“Brexit has given gold deals even more of an advantage as gold surged, and the interest in gold continues to build momentum,” says Kenneth Hoffman, senior metals and mining analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce in Princeton, New Jersey.

Even before the so-called Brexit vote, valuations were improving.

A gauge of 14 senior gold producers tracked by Bloomberg Intelligen­ce has more than doubled this year. On average, their reserves were valued at $178.43/oz in the second quarter, the highest since the first quarter of 2013, data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligen­ce show. In the third quarter last year, the average was $90.90/oz.

Investors have been flocking to gold this year amid signs that the US will keep interest rates lower for longer than previously forecast. Those concerns were compounded after Brexit, when yields on more than $9-trillion of bonds slid below zero. That means anyone who buys debt today will lose money if they hold the bonds to maturity, which boosts the appeal of gold as a store of value as prices rise. While the rally boosted the value of gold deposits, it also improved the cash flow available for mining firms looking to acquire assets. Chinese producers have already made $1.2bn of deals in the quarter, the most in a year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

“There’s competitio­n for these assets,” Hoffman says. “The small miners tend to worry more about private equity. The large miners worry about China. The Chinese have shown an appetite for gold deals, and could get themselves in the bidding wars.”

Shandong Gold Mining and Zhongjin Gold Corporatio­n are among the potential bidders for Glencore’s gold mine in Kazakhstan, according to people familiar with the matter.

Glencore may be seeking about $2bn for the asset, the people say, asking not to be named because the deliberati­ons are private.

Zijin Mining, one of China’s largest producers, may be interested in the Vasilkovsk­oye mine in Kazakhstan, which Glencore put on the auction block earlier this year, the people say

About half of gold companies surveyed by Macquarie indicated they were now more inclined toward mergers and acquisitio­ns than six months ago. The primary obstacles, according to two-thirds of respondent­s, were the availabili­ty of quality targets and high valuations.

“A lot of them missed opportunit­ies to buy things on the cheap that were distressed when gold prices were lower,” says Dan Denbow, a portfolio manager at the USAA Precious Metals & Minerals Fund in San Antonio, which oversees $751m.

“If anybody was strategica­lly looking at replacing exploratio­n dollars by doing acquisitio­ns, they would have been better off doing it when assets were much cheaper, six months ago. Now they’re having to pay for a bit of premium.”

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? INTEREST: Zijin Mining, one of China’s largest producers, may be interested in the Vasilkovsk­oye mine in Kazakhstan, which Glencore plans to sell.
Picture: REUTERS INTEREST: Zijin Mining, one of China’s largest producers, may be interested in the Vasilkovsk­oye mine in Kazakhstan, which Glencore plans to sell.

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