By Henry Bonner
As we recently explained, the practice of “high-grading” where a miner extracts only the high-grade ore from a deposit has been widely adopted in the mining industry over the past 10 years. The method increases short-term cash flows, but can harm the profitability of a mine over its lifetime.
As an investor, you want the miners in your portfolio to deliver the highest overall return possible.
On this subject, we received a helpful response from reader Mark Jones, a Partner at mining consulting firm Whittle Consulting. He says many mining companies fail to optimize operations for the highest return on investment.
The damage can be caused by well-intentioned, highly proficient technical experts who are applying a narrow-focused approach to the overall mining operation.
They may focus on the individual technical challenges, sometimes destroying part of the shareholders’ value in the process.
In a paper titled Misguided Objectives that Destroy Value, Gerald Whittle, the Managing Director of Whittle Consulting, explains how this happens. He makes some useful points for investors in mining companies. Designing a mine involves a lot of ‘moving parts,’ he explains:
“The fact is that most planning decisions are linked in terms of the consequences they have on the overall outcome, so many complex trade-offs must be considered.” These include the time value of money, the opportunity cost of a decision and planning for a depleting resource.
So what should you look out for? To paraphrase Mr. Whittle:
The mine plan generally attempts to extract as much economic ore as possible; reduce the total expenditures of building the mine; maximize the lifetime of the mine; and minimize the amount of metal lost during the recovery process (where the metal is separated from the host rock).
The problem is that a mine engineer might take on these technical challenges as ends in themselves, instead of maximizing cash returns. As shareholders, our ultimate concern is our return on investment.
The key take-away from these points is that maximizing metal or profit per ton is not the objective – maximizing the cash margin produced per day is.
Another point is that operations engineers prefer to keep everything steady over the life of the mine. It’s easier to run if the same amount of ore comes out each day, and the same amount is processed. But these are not ends in themselves. As Mr. Whittle explains: “Any mining/processing plan that has constant stripping ratio, mining rate, cut-off grade, or plant configuration cannot be optimal, and is therefore subject to improvement.”
“Using simplified, seemingly well-meaning local objectives is not satisfactory, as these can be counterproductive to the overall outcome.”
If you invest in companies who are building or designing a mine, beware if management decides to structure the operation to attempt to address one particular technical consideration.
Shareholders should make sure that technical challenges and operational ease alone aren’t driving management’s decisions. Returns can suffer substantially if management forgets the end goal is to make money for shareholders. You want to see big cash flows early in these capital-intensive projects.
P.S.: Catch Chairman and Founder of Sprott Global Resource Investments Ltd. Rick Rule speak at the Gold Investment Symposium in Sydney, Australia, October 16 &17, 2013. Click here for more details.
Disclaimer: The referencing of material from Gerald Whittle is not an endorsement of Whittle Consulting, and is cited for informational purposes only. No compensation was made or received in consideration of the publishing of this piece.
3 Comments
Reader
maximizing shareholder benefit is not why companies exist, in this case they exist to mine a commodity and sell it. I highly recommend “How the cult of shareholder value wrecked American business” By Steven Pearlstein, Published: September 9 , 2013 in the Washington Post.
Robert_S_Stewart
The biggest cost of accessing remote extraction projects is the cost of connecting it with markets. Non-existent infrastructure, transport and access can cost more than the mine, mill and smelter.
Building thousands of miles of railways, roads, power lines and ports to access remote mining plays is often more expensive and now ABSOLUTELY UNNECESSARY.
Hybrid airships will soon deliver 50-500 ton payloads of construction materials in and mined metals out obviating the need for expensive infrastructure construction. That opens up hundreds of extremely rich deposits in remote settings worldwide.
http://www.interopag.com
Robert
In Australia, there seems to be a growing trend of “gold plating” infrastructure by well meaning design engineers and those on the operations side, which results in greater capital investment.
Often more than not, the extent of this “gold plating” is not required, and the infrastructure is lifecycled off over a shorter lifespan than its design life.