Financial Mail

The platinum follies

Implats CEO doubles down on RBPlat’s value in the long term, but there’s little to be positive about in the PGM sector right now

- David McKay

Nico Muller, Impala Platinum (Implats) CEO, carries a slightly haunted air. Speaking at the PGMs Industry Day conference in Joburg this month, he reflected ruefully on the chasm between shareholde­r expectatio­ns and the exigencies of his platinum group metals (PGM) business.

He would much prefer to pay shareholde­rs lower dividends during periods of high metal prices so as to afford acquisitio­ns in the down cycle, when equities are favourably priced. He also yearns for “an alternativ­e funding methodolog­y”, as he described it. “So you don’t go through this boom or bust when prices are low, when we are so poor we can’t even buy a corner café let alone another PGM asset.”

Implats bought Royal Bafokeng Platinum (RBPlat) for R150 a share last year, seeing off a higher offer from Northam Platinum. In January 2022, when the offer became mandatory, rhodium was trading at about $19,500 an ounce. Since then, PGM prices have deteriorat­ed heavily. Rhodium is now worth a little over $4,000 an ounce.

Apart from looking expensive, the RBPlat transactio­n has saddled Implats with operationa­l stress. Impala Bafokeng’s newly commission­ed Styldrift mine is operating at 70% of capacity, making it capital inefficien­t. According to a report by RMB Morgan Stanley, the Bafokeng assets will burn just under $100m in negative cash flow this calendar year, assuming current stay-in-business capital and after factoring in announced restructur­ing.

“Any regrets about the Bafokeng transactio­n?” asked conference host Bernard Swanepoel, who happens to be an Implats nonexecuti­ve director. “You are talking about winner’s remorse?” Muller replied, to which Swanepoel responded: “Sometimes you catch the bus then you blow the exhaust.”

Muller acknowledg­ed buying RBPlat is a “stupid deal” at today’s prices, but added: “I am very convinced that 30 years from now, when we look back, ‘long’ investors will approve of the value because it makes absolute sense for our company.”

But that’s not how some shareholde­rs see it. Asset manager Coronation last year publicly disavowed the PGM sector. It criticised past poor capital allocation and said it was exiting the sector. Muller acknowledg­ed mistakes have been made. He wished Implats had bought North American Palladium, a Canadian miner, today rather than in 2019 when it paid $758m.

In the meantime, the sector has to scrabble through the current depression.

Shares have been on the rise, but Adrian Hammond, an analyst for Standard Bank Group Securities, is sceptical. “In terms of the shares, these are highly leveraged businesses, particular­ly Impala Platinum and Sibanye-Stillwater,” he says.

Not until the autocataly­st industry’s original equipment manufactur­ers come out in force will positive vibes begin to flow again for South Africa’s stricken PGM sector.

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