The Star Early Edition

Gold Fields back in the black but cuts forecasts

- Ed Stoddard

BULLION producer Gold Fields swung back into the black in the second quarter but cut production forecasts for its problemati­c South Deep mine in South Africa, a mechanised operation that has had many set backs.

The company said yesterday that South Deep was expected to produce 6.5 tons of gold this year, down 8.5 percent from a pervious forecast of 7.1 tons.

South Deep, which sits atop a mammoth 40 million ounce reserve, is Gold Fields’ last remaining South African asset. It is fully mechanised and has been plagued by a number of technical difficulti­es.

Gold Fields said it still maintained a target of breaking even on the project by the end of next year.

The company has a wage deal in place at the mine until March 2018, which means labour costs should not take it by surprise. By contrast, its South African peers are locked in protracted wage talks with restive unions.

Chief executive Nick Holland said the focus at South Deep was on getting work practices and safety right, a process that was hurting production now but should pay off in the longer run.

“If you fix safety, you fix productivi­ty and work practices… we stopped work in a lot of areas we were not happy with,” he said.

Holland said overall the company was of the view that it could make money, even if gold’s spot price dropped to $1 000 (R12 914) an ounce.

Gold has rebounded nearly 6 percent from a five-and-a-halfyear low of $1 077 touched in late July to more than $1 140 an ounce, but is 40 percent off record peaks of more than $1 920 scaled four years ago, and is vulnerable to sudden shifts in sentiment.

“We’re good at a $1 000. We can be robust at $1 000,” Holland said.

He said costs at Gold Fields’ Peru operations were below $700 an ounce and the company was also benefiting from currency depreciati­ons in Australia and South Africa.

The company reported normalised earnings for the quarter to the end of June of $22 million versus a loss of $13m incurred in the previous quarter. – Reuters

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