Sunday Times

Holland has hope for South Deep

Gold Fields boss warns of job cuts, says the mechanised mine will make profit

- By MUDIWA GAVAZA gavazam@sundaytime­s.co.za

● Consolidat­ion cannot save SA’s gold sector and job cuts are likely to continue, says Gold Fields CEO Nick Holland.

Holland, whose company has been linked to a possible merger with larger rival AngloGold Ashanti, told Business Times: “There might be some local gold assets that can be moved around, but I think consolidat­ion in the South African industry has largely happened.”

With a 132-year history in SA, Gold Fields is one of the few remaining pure gold miners at a time when companies like Sibanye-Stillwater are working to offset gold losses with revenues from platinum operations.

Holland has long held the view that consolidat­ion is good for deriving synergies in the local sector.

Six years ago, Gold Fields unbundled its labour-intensive operations — Kloof, Driefontei­n and Beatrix mines — into Sibanye, which this week said it was cutting 6,670 jobs to curb losses.

Reflecting on that deal, Holland said: “There’s not too much left to happen in SA. I think it’s more globally where the opportunit­ies lie.”

Ian Cruickshan­ks, an independen­t analyst, thinks it’s better to have two major gold miners in the country for competitio­n. AngloGold has said it wants to cut ties with SA and a merger would go against that intention.

“I don’t see any alternativ­es there except to carry on as separate entities,” said Cruickshan­ks.

Gold mining is seen as a sunset industry. Regarding its future, Holland admitted: “If you look at the deep-level, convention­al, labour-intensive mines, you’ll find that they’re getting deeper, the grades are declining, the costs keep going up, the trade unions keep getting increases that are beyond inflation when productivi­ty doesn’t match it.

“Eskom now wants to get a lot more money, so I think the writing is on the wall. It’s not looking good.”

The crown jewel of the group is its lossmaking South Deep mine, the only mechanised gold mine in the country. More than R32bn has been invested since its conception in 2006.

“We’re a little bit different because we’re mechanised and we have a large ore body ahead of us and we’re shallower than some of those deep-level mines,” said Holland.

He remains steadfast in his belief that the mine can still turn in a profit. Analysts have questioned whether Holland and his team will turn around operations.

Holland, 59, has been at the helm since 2008. When asked if he was ready to hand over the reins, he said: “I still have an appetite to lead the company.”

Cruickshan­ks said Holland has been managing as well as anybody else might

We have to accept there’s a lot of job losses that will probably still happen in the gold industry

Nick Holland CEO Gold Fields

have done in extremely difficult circumstan­ces over the past few years.

“What I’d like to see is more signs of a succession plan. If something happens, who takes over? The company owes it to the investors to make a plain succession plan available.”

Holland said Gold Fields has fixed South Deep’s cost base. “The grade on the operation is well understood. Now it’s a question of getting the volume. Drive the volume and you’ll bring down the cost because of the fairly high fixed cost component of running an operation with the level of infrastruc­ture that we have there.”

Gold Fields has brought in three consultant­s from Australia — where many mines are already mechanised — to assist with operations.

“They’re helping us to improve our whole value chain of mining, planning, execution — things like drill or blast, our mechanisat­ion and our fleet management,” said Holland.

South Deep has had major restructur­ing in the past year, reducing its workforce from about 4,000 to 2,460.

This restructur­ing was met with strong opposition from labour. The National Union of Mineworker­s went on a 45-day strike at the end of 2018. The strike cost Gold Fields about R360m in lost revenue, according to its own calculatio­ns.

“Gold is only 1% of the country’s GDP now. It’s not that it’s not relevant anymore, but we’ve seen gold decline year after year for the past 25 years. That trajectory won’t change and we have to accept there’s a lot of job losses that will probably still happen in the gold industry,” said Holland.

On Friday, Gold Fields announced an 82% drop in normalised profit for the 2018 financial year compared with 2017. The group — which has a presence in SA, Ghana, Australia and South America — has seen its share price down 44% from its high in August 2016.

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