The Star Late Edition

Mining industry ‘on the rise again’

Turn-around mainly due to higher commodity prices

- Dineo Faku countries,” the

AFTER years of bleeding cash and grappling with the commodity price squeeze, the market capitalisa­tion of the world’s top 40 mining companies grew by almost half last year.

PwC’s Mine 2017 report, which was released on the sidelines of the Joburg Indaba yesterday, found that the market capitalisa­tion of the companies strengthen­ed by 45 percent last year to $714 billion (R9.1 trillion) – approachin­g the level reached in 2014 – mainly because of rising commodity prices.

The two-day indaba is being attended by 300 explorers, developers and investors in Africa’s junior mining industry.

Commoditie­s had a bumper 2016, with solid performanc­es in the prices of gold, copper and nickel.

The PwC report said the real story of 2016 was the strength of the prices of coal and iron ore, which were battered in the previous year. Investors were taken on a wild ride that continued into the first quarter of this year.

The report said iron-ore prices doubled to the end of the year, reaching a high of $89 a ton in mid-February, only to suf- fer a sharp reversal thereafter.

It also noted the dramatic peak in the price of coal last year, with the price of thermal coal doubling to reach $100 a ton in November, before beginning to retreat in December.

The top 40 companies reported a net profit of $20bn last year, compared with an aggregate loss of $28bn in 2015.

“Miners managed to turn the historical aggregate net loss in 2015 into a profit, driven by lower impairment charges, and a decrease in interest expenses after key players cleaned up their balance sheets,” the report said. Valuations The report, which is based on studies of financial informatio­n and covers the period April 1, 2015, to December 31, 2016, found that the valuations of the top 40 miners had climbed, particular­ly in the case of the traditiona­l miners.

“The mining industry remains a long way off the peaks of previous cycles, but it has regrouped and has begun to rise again,” it said.

However, the report said the industry was not out of the woods yet, because capital expenditur­e (capex) has fallen to new lows.

It said capex fell by a further 41 percent, to a record low of $50bn, and there was an absence in the announceme­nt or commenceme­nt of significan­t greenfield­s projects.

It also found that, for the fourth consecutiv­e year, the industry reduced spending on exploratio­n.

“Only $7.2bn was invested in 2016, barely one-third of the record $21.5bn allocated in 2012, with the funds cautiously targeted at less risky, later-stage assets, typically located in pol- itically stable report said.

The PwC report said AngloGold Ashanti was the only “real” South African company to make the top 40 list in 2016, at number 40, while South32, which demerged from BHP Billiton, was a new arrival, at number 22.

Another company on the list was Anglo American, whose subsidiari­es include Anglo American Platinum and Kumba Iron Ore, which was ranked eighth.

 ??  ?? The sun sets behind a shaft outside the mining town of Carletonvi­lle. The world’s top 40 mining companies reported a net profit of $20 billion last year, compared with an aggregate loss of $28bn in 2015, PwC’s Mine report says.
The sun sets behind a shaft outside the mining town of Carletonvi­lle. The world’s top 40 mining companies reported a net profit of $20 billion last year, compared with an aggregate loss of $28bn in 2015, PwC’s Mine report says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa