By Tanisha Heiberg and Promit Mukherjee
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – South African gold miners are looking to cut debt and boost dividends as bullion hits record highs, with analysts and fund managers predicting a sectoral growth spurt over the next two years amid rising investor interest.
Shunned by investors due to mines that are old, deep, and difficult to extract, the country’s gold miners have traded at a discount to their global peers for years.
Higher prices, as spot gold
Interviews with companies executives, analysts and fund managers show that higher gold prices could see some local miners bring their net debt to zero and pay healthy dividends over the next 18 to 24 months.
“Gold mining companies will spew a lot of cash in the next 12 months,” said Franco Lorenzani, an independent mining analyst.
Sibanye Stillwater
Its net debt, which stood at 20.964 billion rand ($1.2 billion) in 2019, dropped 40% year-on-year in the first quarter.
Higher prices have also made more marginal ounces profitable for Sibanye, spokesman James Wellsted told Reuters, adding the company was looking at other ways to benefit from favourable market conditions.
“Maybe mining secondary reefs … might be viable at these prices,” said Wellsted.
Pan African Resources
Gold Fields
(GRAPHIC – Percentage change of gold price vs JSE’s gold index Percentage change of gold price vs JSE’s gold index: https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/qmyvmkybbvr/chart.png)
Rene Heichreiter of Noah Capital said he was advising his clients to continue to invest in local gold miners, predicting a exponential jump in revenues in the coming months.
Some investors have already turned bullish.
Factsheets of fund managers seen by Reuters show South Africa’s Fairtree increased its exposure to Harmony Gold
But the operating environment remains risky.
While power cuts and regulatory uncertainty have always hung over operations, the mining sector is also battling rising COVID-19 cases in underground mines where social distancing is a challenge.
This could threaten output, as some analysts warn the frenzy over high prices could backfire as investments add to costs.
“Whenever the gold prices go up the costs tend to go up with it,” said Nedbank mining analyst Arnold Van Graan.
(Reporting by Tanisha Heiberg and Promit Mukherjee; Editing by Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo and David Evans)