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Spend don't splurge, investors tell miners as M&A, capex surge

29th October 2018

By: Bloomberg

  

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MELBOURNE – The world’s biggest miners are cranking up spending for the first time in half a decade as well as pursuing more takeovers – and investors are flashing hazard lights as commodities prices slide and as doubts swirl over the outlook.

Capital expenditure among the ten largest metals and mining companies is forecast to advance to about $35-billion this year, the first annual rise since 2013, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

At the same time, the value of M&A in the sector has already surged to the highest in six years, spurred by deals including Barrick Gold Corp.’s $5.4-billion acquisition of Randgold Resources

“You are seeing a sort of a pivot to growth,” said Camille Simeon, a Sydney-based investment manager at Aberdeen Standard Investments, which manages about $730-billion in assets including BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto Group shares.

However, companies need to be certain new projects can deliver improved returns, and they should be wary of major deal-making after the industry’s past failures, she said. “Given their history, that’d be a red flag for us.”

Sector leader BHP has flagged a list of growth options, raised its annual exploration budget and this month boosted its stake in SolGold, owner of a coveted copper project in Ecuador. Anglo American in July give the go-ahead to a $5-billion mine in Peru, while Vale SA last week approved about a $1-billion expansion of a Brazilian copper operation.

“The key is that growth equals value for shareholders,” Olivia Markham, co-manager of BlackRock’s World Mining Trust said in an interview last month. The fund, which is backing companies with copper growth plans, expects miners to also continue to focus on returning cash to investors, she said.

BHP, Anglo and Vale are among companies on the 27-member International Council on Mining and Metals, an industry group with a combined market value of about $500-billion, gathering Tuesday in Melbourne for a bi-annual meeting. Key sector executives, including from Rio, MMG and Goldcorp, will also address a separate, three-day conference taking place in the same city through Thursday.

“There’s a lot of activity underway at the moment, and a lot of us have depleting assets,” Elizabeth Gaines, chief executive officer of Fortescue Metals Group, which in May approved a $1.3-billion project to build a new iron ore mine, said in a phone interview.

“Capital budgets are reflecting that, though it’s more about reinvestment – value over volume is still a key theme,” said Gaines, who’ll address the Melbourne conference Wednesday.

BHP itself has pointed to a cautious short-term outlook and raw materials have declined in recent months on concerns over US-China trade tensions and the potential for weaker global demand for industrial commodities. Producers have also retreated, with the Bloomberg World Mining Index of more than 110 companies tumbling last week to a two-year low.

Over the medium term, a lack of capital spending by miners in recent years should help tighten some commodity markets, as there are few new operations ready to add supply, according to Aberdeen’s Simeon. “Assuming demand holds up, then the fundamentals for some commodities are going to be looking more attractive,” she said.

Other key issues that’ll be addressed at the meetings this week:

Demand: China-US trade tensions are among risks to demand, yet worries are overdone, Goldman Sachs Group said this month. “There is demand,” including from a boom in EVs, Fortescue’s Gaines said.

“The fundamentals are looking strong and that’s why we are seeing investment in exploration and other opportunities.”

Quest for Copper: Miners are scrambling for copper deals with a potential deficit of as much as eight-million tons by 2030, according to Rio. Caution is still required, according to Simeon. “Do you just throw anything at copper? I don’t think that’s the case,” she said. “It’s got to be the right opportunity that will deliver the right returns.”

Rising Costs: The sector is feeling a squeeze from higher prices for inputs, including fuel and chemicals, and now faces the prospect of rising labor costs, particularly in Australia, Newmont Mining Corp's COO Tom Palmer said last week. Inflation is “hitting all commodities and all players across the industry", Rio CEO Jean-Sebastien Jacques said in August.

Edited by Bloomberg

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