Mining sector takes cautious approach to gold deal rush
After overspending in last cycle, diversified miners stick with dividends and buybacks for bruised shareholders
The wave of consolidation sweeping the gold mining sector is for now passing the wider sector by as diversified majors have delivered returns to keep shareholders happy and investors are wary of repeating past mistakes, executives say.
Newmont Mining said in January it would buy Goldcorp for $10bn, creating the world’s biggest gold producer. This followed Barrick Gold’s agreement in September to buy Randgold Resources in a $6.1bn deal.
In previous cycles, gold industry mergers have paved the way for broader activity, but executives say they expect the focus to stay on mid-tier gold companies and the sale of any assets the new merged companies do not want.
Mark Bristow, CEO of the new Barrick, said gold had reached a point where action was inevitable.
“The one thing about business is that it eventually kills you. If you don’t perform, the options run out. The gold mining industry is actually at that point and now you’re seeing people making decisions,” he told reporters on the sidelines of Mining Indaba in Cape Town.
Gold companies also need to grow because of a decline in the share of active fund managers. The big passive funds only invest in big companies.
“A key driver to the gold sector is its need to stay relevant to investors from both active funds and the increasingly important passive funds,” said Richard Horrocks-Taylor, StanChart’s global head of metals and mining.
Passive funds make up an estimated 50% of metal funds, compared with 80% in 2012, as active managers quit the sector after the 2015 price crash.
Many gold miners have suffered from poor share price performance and been unable to reward shareholders with the buybacks and dividends that the diversified miners delivered.
Chris LaFemina, an MD at Jefferies, said shareholders, bruised by overspending at the top of the last cycle that never delivered returns would only clamour for broader consolidation if the macro environment changed.
“We need to see the cycle shift from a defensive slow growth, low interest rate environment to growth and inflation,” he said.
In the last cycle, the world’s second biggest miner, Rio Tinto, was hit by some high-profile problems. In 2013, it announced a $14bn writedown almost entirely on the value of its two most significant acquisitions, the Alcan aluminium group in 2007 and Mozambique-focused coal miner Riversdale in 2011.
But it was also the first to recover and now has the best balance sheet in the business, leading to speculation it could be the first to emulate the merger activity in gold.
It has handed billions back to its shareholders in dividends and buybacks, sold unwanted assets, and bought nothing significant since 2012, leaving its portfolio heavily dependent on iron ore and some analysts say light on copper.
LaFemina said that could remain the case for now, barring incremental deals.
“I don’t think there’s anything obvious for Rio to do other than return capital to shareholders,” LaFemina said.
But even fund managers, keen to maximise their own returns, predict there will be action at some point.
“Rio is now prioritising returning cash to shareholders and one could argue at the expense of volume growth, and investors are questioning whether they will find themselves in three years’ time with a company ex-growth,” said a fund manager who owns shares in Rio and spoke on condition of anonymity.