Sibanye-Stillwater confident in price-hit PGMs

22nd March 2024 By: Martin Creamer - Creamer Media Editor

Sibanye-Stillwater confident in price-hit PGMs

Sibanye-Stillwater CEO Neal Froneman
Photo by: Creamer Media

While the operating environment remains challenging, with macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty persisting, the medium- to long-term view of Sibanye-Stillwater remains largely unchanged on the fundamental outlook for the metals it produces, with the exception of nickel.

The Johannesburg- and New York-listed green metals and gold mining company said it was confident that the price weakness of platinum group metals (PGMs) during 2023 did not signal a structural change in PGM fundamentals, such as that of the nickel market, but was more temporary in nature, Sibanye-Stillwater CEO Neal Froneman said during the company’s results presentation covered by Engineering News & Mining Weekly.

“And we’re beginning to see increasing signs that support a better demand outlook,” said Froneman.

“We believe that the precipitous decline in PGM prices during the first half of last year was due to a confluence of negative factors and exacerbated by unexpected destocking of inventory which caught the market by surprise, causing increased uncertainty and market anxiety.

“This bearish sentiment was reflected in a significant build-up of speculative short positions in palladium, which also contributed to the price pressure,” Froneman added.

The substantial declines in the prices of most commodities, with the notable exception of gold, and persistent cost inflation, has translated into materially lower earnings and cash flows placing the entire global mining industry under severe financial pressure.

Sibanye’s financial results for the year ended December 31 were similarly impacted by the sudden and sharp decline in PGM and nickel prices.

The 33% year-on-year decline in the average PGM basket prices in particular, resulted in a dramatic fall in the profitability of Stillwater in the US and, to a lesser extent, Sibanye’s South African PGM operations, which remain profitable, while experiencing a 42% decline in the average four- element PGMs basket price resulted in adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) more than halving period-on-period to R5.8-billion for the last six months of last year.

Consequently, group adjusted Ebitda for 2023 fell to R20.6-billion, 50% lower than the R41.1-billion for 2022, which was in itself a 40% decline from record levels of R68.6-billion for 2021, which marked the peak of the commodity price cycle.