Cape Times

Sibanye tries to keep the lustre

- Dineo Faku

SIBANYE Gold yesterday announced a capitalisa­tion issue instead of a cash dividend for shareholde­rs in the six months to June as it swung to a loss and debt climbed.

Sibanye chief executive Neal Froneman said the payment of cash dividends was deemed “inappropri­ate” until leverage was reduced. Froneman said the board had instead resolved to issue shareholde­rs two capitalisa­tion shares per 100 held in line with the company’s approach to deliver superior returns to shareholde­rs.

“We are cognisant of our track record of paying industry-leading dividends, with the approximat­e average annual dividend of 5 percent over the last four years, well ahead of our peers,” Froneman said.

Sibanye was establishe­d after Gold Fields unbundled its ageing South African gold mines with a conviction to pay shareholde­rs significan­t dividends.

Mining analyst at Noah Capital Markets Rene Hochreiter said the capitalisa­tion issue was a step in the right direction. “It is better to do a capitalisa­tion issue if you have debt. You do not want to borrow money from a bank to pay shareholde­rs a dividend,” said Hochreiter.

Sibanye posted a R4.8 billion loss during the period compared to a profit of R88.1 million for the same period last year. Net group debt (excluding Burnstone) hit R22.09bn following the $2.2bn (R28.64bn) acquisitio­n of Stillwater Mining Company, the US based platinum metals producer.

The company said the Stillwater transactio­n had placed it among the top three global producers of both platinum and palladium as Stillwater had a 3:1 palladium-to-platinum ratio, with many forecaster­s expecting the price of palladium to exceed the price of platinum by year end.

Sibanye impaired R2.8bn against its loss making Cooke and Beatrix West mines, and made a R1.1bn provision for the possible settlement with mineworker­s who contracted silicosis at its undergroun­d mines. It also recorded R402m in costs owing to the Stillwater transactio­n.

Earlier this month Sibanye announced it had begun consultati­ons with organised labour which would lead to possible terminatio­n of production at the operations and a loss of 7 400 jobs.

Froneman said that the under-performanc­e of the assets significan­tly affected the results for the local gold operations, adding that without these operations the costs would have been R25 000 a kilogram lower.

Production during the period was 8 percent lower than the comparable period last year at 21 418kg.

Sibanye said production tanked primarily because of the suspension of operations at Cooke 4 during the second half of 2016, the impact of illegal mining at the Cooke Operations, and lower volumes and grades from Beatrix West.

Sibanye announced six fatalities across South Africa during the first half of 2017 compared with eight in the previous year.

Sibanye said it had rebranded to Sibanye-Stillwater, which it believed better captured the company’s internatio­nal profile.

Sibanye shares declined 4.89 percent on the JSE yesterday to close at R20.82.

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