reasons to start buying mining stocks
TRANSCRIPT
Invast Insights
Week Commencing October 21, 2013
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This week we look at the following topics:
1.0 Why it may be time to start buying mining stocks
1.1 Reasons to start buying mining stocks
1.2 The future of China’s railways
1.3 Rio Tinto deserves a pat on the back
1.4 Which stocks are worth buying?
2.0 Initial impressions on the Telstra AGM
3.0 Revisiting the 15 hidden gems
4.0 September jobs report new release date
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1.0 Why it may be time to start buying mining stocks
One of the best ways to have blown money over the past two years would
have been through buying and holding Australian resource and mining
companies. It’s been a disaster with the exception of a few large names like
BHP and Woodside Petroleum (which we hold in our wealth preservation
portfolio). There has been huge value destruction in small to mid tier mining
companies over that period, mainly due to the slowdown in the pace of
Chinese consumption. It’s not that Chinese demand has completely
evaporated but instead the huge investment into infrastructure post 2009
was not replicated in 2012-2013. China is finally starting to increase its rate of
minerals consumption and the iron ore price has been a great example of the
ongoing demand picture. We’ve discussed our view on China in prior reports.
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There is an age old Chinese proverb that goes along the lines of “don’t try to catch a falling knife”. The relevance to markets is that it is always extremely difficult to pick an upturn in a particular stock or sector after it has been battered. The economists will still caution against buying mining companies but we know that economists and most market analysts are always behind the curve, moving their estimates after the horse has bolted. We think mining stocks are about to turn on the Australian stock market for the reasons outlined below.
Before you continue reading on, please take into consideration the fact that we might have our timing wrong. Any investment in mining stocks needs to have at least a three to five year time horizon. Most of the stocks have been decimated in terms of their share prices and valuations. Private equity is yet to pounce, merger and acquisition activity is still dead and most directors are yet to start aggressively buying their own shares. A very well-respected stock broking colleague, who specialises in the mining and resource space and someone who at the height of the market was earning seven figure salaries, recently told us that he is barely earning minimum salary. Meanwhile, clients who have been buying mining stocks from their stock brokers are probably sitting on steep losses.
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1.1 Reasons to start buying mining stocks
Supply is struggling - Copper producer Oz Minerals (OZL) disappointed the
market when it recently released its quarterly production report. While most
of the discussion was around how poorly the miner has performed, our
interest was more around the trends within copper mining.
Oz Minerals owns the Prominent Hill mine which is located 650km North West
of Adelaide in South Australia. It is perhaps one of the most attractive
geographies for mining – an open pit mine, a newly developed underground
mine, access to railway and low sovereign risk. The mine was first discovered
in 2001 and has been in production since early 2009. Oz Minerals has spent
many years and plenty of cash to get the mine up and running but over the
past year the rate of production has fallen from above 1000,000 of contained
copper down to around 70,000-75,000 tonnes this year.
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It is very important to get the full scope of Oz Minerals’ operations – please
watch the following corporate video to get an idea of the scope of the mining
operations and growth plans already in place. We aren’t talking about an
insignificant copper producer at all. This business matters. The problems Oz
Minerals are seeing in its production capacity are consistent with what others
are reporting in the industry. Press the Ctrl key on your keyboard and click on
the image to the left of this text to open the video.
Our rationale is that if a world-class deposit like Prominent Hill located in
Australia is struggling to grow production, the ability of new copper over the
next few years to fill the growing demand picture will see spot price
appreciation. Emerging copper producer Discovery Metals (DML) which set an
ambitious goal of becoming the next Australian mid tier producer out of
Botswana has seen its share price fall from a 52 week high of $1.76 to $0.06 as
of the time of writing. Discovery had been the talk of the industry as it
ramped up into production from development, even attracting a takeover
offer from Hong Kong based Cathay Pacific Group which its board rejected.
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Today, the business is struggling for survival, at the mercy of its banks as
lower copper prices and production problems have caused a cash crunch.
Even in the gold space, large producers like Newcrest Mining (NCM) have
issued several rounds of production downgrades and rising costs, eating into
their margins. We spoke about Newcrest Mining and the gold price in our
Invast Insights report published on 30 September 2013. Rio Tinto recently
reported solid growth in its Escondida copper mine but this has come after
several years of disappointment and huge amounts of capital expenditure. We
think the copper price is bound for a breakout before the year’s end as
stockpiles are drawn down and the supply side continues to weigh on market
fundamentals. When copper moves, all other industrial commodities take the
same direction. A US$4/lb copper price is not out of the question by the end
of 2015 from US$3.25/lb or thereabouts currently.
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* Mining stocks have cash – Not all, but some are starting to build their
coffers. Take another Australia mining company – Mount Gibson Iron (MGX).
The stock halved in share price value between February and April this year.
The reason you might ask? Stock broking analysts and investment banks
reduced their outlook on the iron ore price from around US$120 per tonne to
as low as US$85 per tonne and guess what? The iron ore price not only held
up above US$120 per tonne, but shot up to as high as US$150 per tonne.
Mount Gibson saw its stock price rise from a low of $0.405 in late June to
around $0.83 as of the time of writing. Investors and traders out in the market
realised that the forecasts were nonsense and valuations needed to be reset.
The most interesting point about Mount Gibson is that its cash balance grew
to $420m during the same quarter which saw its share price collapse then
recover. The business is on track to produce around 9-9.5m tonnes of iron ore.
Atlas Iron (AGO) is also in the iron ore space and comparable to Mount Gibson
in terms of production, sitting on around $120m in net cash when netting out
its debt obligations. Atlas has previously been aggressive on the merger and
acquisition front but a similar fate to its share price has seen a more conserva-
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tive approach in its growth. Once the market optimism returns, both these
businesses can put their cash to use and start spending on buying
competitors or developing their assets. The point here is that despite all the
fear and gloom, iron ore producers are sitting very comfortably in terms of
their balance sheets.
* Mining index continues to lag – The Materials Index (XMJ) has lagged by a
large amount relative to the ASX200 (XJO) and the Financials Index (XFJ) over
the past two years. The index is currently sitting at 9,706 points having
reached a high of 12,147 points in November 2011 and a low of 8,203 points in
June this year. The index was well above 15,000 points in April 2011. The chart
below shows the performance of all three indices over the past two years.
Charts have been taken from Invast’s share trading platform where the
advanced charting tool can be expanded to perform detailed analysis. The red
line indicates the Materials Index, green line the Financials Index and the blue
line the broader market as measured by the ASX200 Index.
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Image: Chart via Invast share trading platform – XJO, XMJ, XFJ indices as of 16 October 2013
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1.2 The future of China’s railways
During the September quarter, Brazilian iron ore giant Vale and Rio Tinto added over 40 million tonnes of annualised capacity into the market each while BHP and Fortescue Metals added around half that each also. The expectation was that iron ore prices would tumble under such extreme supply growth and guess what – the investment banking analysts were wrong again. The iron ore price has held up very well. In Invast Insights published on 16 September 2013, we spelled out our thoughts on China – basically remaining bullish. We said that steel production in China continues to charge ahead at an annualised rate of around 700 million tonnes per annum, growing year by year.
Most of the bears or skeptics out there focus on the rate of Chinese investment infrastructure with the odd attention seeker pointing to “ghost cities” where apparently nobody lives. This is a common excuse for being negative on China and negative on mining companies including iron ore stocks. At Invast we actually think that China will continue to invest
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aggressively in the years ahead, albeit very differently to the way it did in 2008-2010. One area which we think will underpin investment is the Chinese rail system and associated infrastructure.
There were some problems with the way investment was put into place very quickly between 2008-2010. We are not naïve enough to think that there weren’t any overcapacity issues. But in our view, China has learnt from these lessons and is ready to invest aggressively in large-scale investment which has the potential to provide solid financial returns and most importantly, social benefits to appease any political backlash. One of the best areas of investment is rail infrastructure for the following reasons.
• China already has one of the highest logistics costs in the world when measured relative to GDP. The investment into rail infrastructure has lagged other forms of transport on a relative basis over the past two decades even though it has grown in absolute terms. According to a report published by Armstrong & Associates, CSCMP & CLSA, logistics costs as a proportion of
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GDP two years ago in China stood at 18.1% compared to 8.5% in the USA and
8.3% in Germany respectively. We may think the Chinese have invested
enough in recent years through large infrastructure programs but there is still
huge scope for improvement in the railroad system.
• Speak to anybody who has recently visited a major city in China and they
will tell you that one of the major problems is the congestion in major
cities. There are more than 150 cities in China with a population greater
than one million citizens and this number will continue to grow as rural
residents migrate into major centres for jobs and education. We estimate
that around 15% of these cities have an adequate urban rail transit system
and most of these are only relatively new which means there is huge
scope for expansion.
• Rail investment is not just something which we have drawn up ourselves
because we felt like it, instead it actually features prominently in Beijing’s
long term reform plans. One of the first major reform measures adopted
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by the new Chinese leadership was to reform the Ministry of Railway into a
planning/regulatory arm and a operating arm now called the China Railway
Corporation.
We plan to go into more detail on Chinese rail infrastructure in future reports,
but for the time being the above goes some way to explain why steel
manufacturing capacity continues to grow in China and iron ore continues to
be consumed my steel mills as fast as it is being produced in Australia and
Brazil.
The investment banking analysts who only a few months ago were
forecasting iron ore prices to fall below US$100 per tonne are now slowly
revising their estimates higher. With all that in mind, we think the copper
price is next to move higher. In the meantime, you can watch our recent
interview with CNBC Capital Connections program, which touched on these
themes and other topics. Press the Ctrl key on your keyboard and click on the
image to the right of this text to open the video.
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1.3 Rio Tinto deserves a pat on the back
In addition to the above views, here is a summary of our initial impression on
the Rio Tinto quarterly production report which we published on the Invast
blog on 15 October 2013. Make sure you check the blog daily to see our
running commentary on the whole market and mining companies when
sensitive news breaks:
It has been a year of transition at Rio and the market has on aggregate been
skeptical - a new CEO, huge exposure to the iron ore price, Chinese growth in
question etc. But sometimes you need to sit back and congratulate a
company for delivering a very good set of numbers and in light of the
circumstances mentioned above, the third quarter trading update is exactly
that - a good set of numbers. There tends to also be a sense of renewed
optimism coming out of this report with Rio talking about its ability to push
its Pilbara assets, ahead of time and under budget.
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The highlights for us are obviously the growth in iron ore shipments and
production, up 4% and 2% respectively from the same period last year. The
iron ore price is holding up above A$140 per tonne which will bode well when
the earnings numbers are released in February. Copper is also the big
standout and shouldn't be ignored, up 23% on the back of disruptions last
year and significant capital expenditure at Escondida.
Bottom line: Rio is current trading on around 11x next year's consensus
earnings numbers. There is large scope for upside in these earnings estimates
which have already factored in some turnaround, but not the full extent that
this report card suggests. If Rio continues to report solid numbers, cut costs
and benefits from an improvement in iron ore and copper prices - the latter
yet to materialise - then it can easily see its share-price with an 8 in-front of it.
Invast sees the mining and resource stocks shifting in investor preference and
likely to outperform the broader share market over the next twelve months.
We're ringing the bell and Rio provides us with very good reason to do so.
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1.4 Which stocks we think are worth buying?
There is no shortage of mining stocks promising the world on the Australian
market. Anybody can put together a glossy presentation and talk up their
prospects but in this environment one thing is vital – cash. If our time horizon
is three to five years, you need to be in businesses which have leverage to
earnings growth but enough resources to ride out the downturn in case we
are wrong. The following stocks are top of our list but please keep in mind –
perhaps sounding like a broken record here – your time horizon needs to be
at least three years. There is a chance that we have our timing wrong, but our
underlying thesis is unlikely to change.
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*Table data as of 17 October 2013 – source Invast Share trading platform.
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2.0Initial impressions on the Telstra’s AGM
There are three certainties in life - death, taxes and David Thodey's commitment to dividend payments for Telstra shareholders. Today's AGM does not provide any real new news but it does dash any nerves that were out there in the market about Telstra's earnings, the new government in Australia and the NBN process. Telstra says the NBN is under review but is working towards its own agreement terms - for the time being there does not seem to be anything detrimental to the company. Perhaps a little more information would have gone done well with the market, but the nature of these things can often limit what a public company says.
The market was perhaps looking a lot closer to guidance to see if there would be any changes. Going into 2014, there have been some analysts out there with rosy growth assumptions underpinning an argument for dividend growth. Telstra says it is forecasting low single digit total income and EBITDA growth with free cash flow of $4.6- $5.1bn. This is in line with guidance provided at the result release in August.
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Bottom line: There is nothing new coming out of the Telstra AGM, but
sometimes that's exactly what the market wants to hear. Thodey is working
hard to steady the ship and he knows that volatility in earnings is not
something his shareholder base will tolerate. We think 30 cents per share
dividend payout in 2014 - as forecast by many analysts and consensus - is too
high and the number will come in line with that of 2013. Even still, a 28 cent
per share fully franked dividend is not a bad outcome at all given low cash
rates, but it does limit Telstra's ability to continue rallying. It should be a core
portfolio holding for the conservative investor, but unlikely to be an
investment which will shoot the lights out.
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3.0 Revisiting the 15 hidden gems
In our first published Invast Insights report dated 26 August 2013, we
published a list of 15 hidden gems we thought were worth adding to your
watch list. We made the point that not all of the stocks were buys but all of
them deserved to be on a stock watch list for various reasons. We take this
opportunity to review the list and report the performance on each stock. The
data shows that our winners were much larger than our losers – the best gain
was in software developed Praemium (PPS) which gained 52.6% in the two
months since publishing our report. The worst performer? Vision Eye Institute
down 10% as of the time of writing but a stock we have full confidence in and
something we followed up in prior reports. The lesson here is that it is ok to
have losers in your portfolios but the winners need to more than make up for
any loss – exactly the case we see in our 15 hidden gems. Our best winner is
five times greater than our worst loser. We can live with that.
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Here is the complete list and their performance results over the timeframe.
* Table data as of 17 October 2013 – source Invast Share trading platform. IMF
performance depends on participation in share purchase plan.
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Even though we didn’t rate all of these stocks as a buy, if for example one was
to have purchased $10,000 in each of the 15 stocks – the portfolio would have
returned $17,336 over the past two months or around 11.6%. Not bad
considering markets have barely gone anywhere over the past two months
while the US debt crisis has crippled markets, weighed on sentiment and
driven up volatility.
IMF has been one of the worst performers of the list but it’s worth noting the
business announced a capital raising which has seen its share price fall. New
shares were offered at $1.70 to institutional shareholders and a share
purchase plan is open to ordinary shareholders at $1.70 a share for up to
$6000 worth of shares. So under the above scenario, a $10,000 investment
and participation in the share purchase plan would bring down the average
purchase price closer to $1.86 which would be a total decline of 3.2%
compared to the 8.2% decline reported above. When we put the list together
we specifically excluded mining and energy stocks. We maintain that bias for
smaller companies.
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The list remains unchanged for the time being but we will review it in January
with the following stocks all contenders to make it to the list.
*Icar Asia (ICQ) – Often nicknames the next Carsales.com in Asia, this is a
business which has seen its share price rise by three times over the past year
and continuing to go higher as of the time of writing. The stock owns a
portfolio of automotive websites in Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand as well
as an automotive magazine in Malaysia. Funnily enough, Carsales.com (CRZ)
has purchased 19.9% of the company – a move which some say underscores
the attractiveness of the business. We still need more convincing on the stock
but if results stack up by January, we will be including it in the list.
*Mobile Embrace (MBE) – We wrote about Mobile Embrace in Invast Insights
published on the 9th of September and 14 October. In our first report we
suggested this Telco as a great growth business and since then the share price
has more than doubled. We then suggested taking profits even as the share
price continues to run up. Like ICQ, we still need a little more convincing on
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the whole story, revenue and earnings are growing but so too have market
expectations and so there needs to be a period of consolidation before we
add it to the gems list. It’s on the back of our minds but not the highest in
priority at the moment, we are pleased with our recommendation to get in
and then get out – banking profits for readers of this report.
4.0 September jobs report new release date
Because of the US government shutdown and debt ceiling problems, US jobs
numbers were not released on time and are now scheduled to hit the market
on Tuesday 22 October 2013. Consumer price index numbers will be released
on 30 October 2013 and producer prices on 29 October 2013. In its last
monthly employment report, the Labor Department said 169,000 jobs were
added to nonfarm payrolls in August and the unemployment rate was little
changed at 7.3%.
Visit our resources page and listen to daily trading updates via podcast.
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5.0 Disclaimer
Please note that you are receiving this report complimentary from Invast Financial Services Pty Ltd (AFSL 438 283). Invast staff members may from time to time purchase securities which are included in this or future reports. The authors of this report may or may not be holding a position in the securities mentioned. Please note that the information contained in this report and Invast's website is of a general nature only, and does not take into account your personal circumstances, financial situation or needs. You are strongly recommended to seek professional advice before opening an account with us.
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