The Mercury

Pan African upgrades its full-year guidance buoyed by bullion price

- TAWANDA KAROMBO

PAN AFRICAN Resources is well on course for a stronger financial performanc­e this year, after lifting its output guidance and projecting a lowering of its production costs, amid strengthen­ing prices of the yellow metal.

The mid-tier gold producer yesterday raised its production guidance for the year ending June 30, 2024, to the upper end of its earlier forecast to between 186 000 and 190 000 ounces, up from 180 000 to 190 000 ounces.

The company has concurrent­ly ceased “processing of marginal surface sources” at the Evander Gold Mine in Mpumalanga which had become “uneconomic­al”.

Pan African CEO Cobus Loots said the mine contribute­d approximat­ely 2 500 ounces in the first half of the company’s current financial year, and would have seen the company surpass its 190 000 ounces guidance if it had been maintained in operation.

“We are pleased that Pan African will achieve the upper end of our fullyear production guidance, and would have exceeded guidance had we continued with the processing of surface material at Evander in the second half of the financial year,” Loots said.

“The robust production results, combined with record rand gold prices, should see the group deliver an excellent financial performanc­e for the year.”

The all-in sustaining cost guidance for Pan African has, however, been maintained at between $1 325 (R24 800) per ounce and $1 350 per ounce for the current operating year.

This at an assumed exchange rate of $1:R18.50 against gold prices of around $2 308 in midday trading yesterday.

In the outlook, Pan African has projected that gold production for its 2025 financial year will bump up to between 215 000 ounces and 225 000 ounces, with the company planning to commission its Mogale Tailings Retreatmen­t (MTR) project later this year.

“Our MTR project remains on schedule, and we look forward to commission­ing it later in 2024,” Loots said. “We have now demonstrat­ed that the addition of the Soweto Cluster resources further improves the economic attractive­ness of this world-class project.”

Pan African said capital costs for the MTR project remained on budget, with no expenditur­e overruns expected. The miner is working with an updated exchange rate and gold price $1:R19 and $2 200 per ounce, respective­ly.

The payback period on the MTR project’s upfront capital investment of $135.1 million was reduced to approximat­ely two years from 3.5 years post commission­ing.

In March, Pan African completed an internal pre-feasibilit­y study for the Soweto Cluster, with the most feasible outcome being possible developmen­t of re-mining, overland piping and pumping infrastruc­ture to process the material at the MTR plant.

“Using this option, the MTR plant’s capacity can be expanded to process

1 million tons per month of feed material, compared to the current design capacity of 800 000 tons per month, resulting in a life-of-mine of 21 years for the combined Mogale and Soweto Cluster resources,” it said.

The company is now proceeding “with the necessary permitting and servitudes required for the re-mining and processing of the Soweto Cluster, with a final investment decision” expected in due course.

Shares in Pan African closed 0.90% firmer at R5.60 on the JSE yesterday.

 ?? | SUPPLIED ?? THE MID-TIER GOLD producer yesterday raised its production guidance for the year ending June 30, 2024.
| SUPPLIED THE MID-TIER GOLD producer yesterday raised its production guidance for the year ending June 30, 2024.

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