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In
the theoretical world of investing, there are two kinds
of investmentsthose which entail a degree of risk
and those which are considered to be risk free. In the
real world, there is no such thing as a risk-free investment.
Investments that are risk-free, such as treasury-bills,
carry inflation risks. Inflation reduces purchasing
power and consequently the returns earned on an investment.
If you could earn a 10% return on your money and the
inflation rate is 6%, your real return is only 4%. The
6% inflation rate reduces the purchasing power of your
dollar wealth. If the economy is experiencing inflation,
the purchasing power of each dollar you earn will erode
in value.
In the example above it becomes obvious that investors
need to distinguish between nominal investment returns
(the return before inflation is subtracted) and real
investment returns, the growth rate in purchasing power.
To obtain real returns on any investment, we must reduce
the nominal returns by the inflation rate in order to
account for the loss in purchasing power. In todays
inflationary world, investors are actually experiencing
negative rates of return. As the table below illustrates,
the interest rate returns on government securities are
less than the inflation rate.

With an annual inflation rate of 4%, todays investor
would have to invest in 30-year government bonds in
order to earn a return higher than the inflation rate.
After taxes and inflation, the return on that 30-year
Treasury bond is still negative. With an annual inflation
rate of 4%, the principal would have to double every
18 years just to keep even.
Because nominal and real investment returns
are negative today, investors are having a hard time
maintaining purchasing power and growing their wealth.
The major stock indexes are down this year and real
interest rates are still negative. Outside of commodities
and real estate, most investments have lost money in
2004. Unless you are investing in hard assets, chances
are you are probably losing money. More importantly,
with inflation rates accelerating, the purchasing power
of your investments are slowly eroding. Furthermore,
fiscal and economic conditions in the U.S. are rapidly
deteriorating. In the words of one South American bank
director, Sometimes I wonder how the United States
holds together. Your investments in productive assets
are down, growth in non-productive sectors is up, and
you purchase more than you produce.[1]
The chief worry of the financial markets
at the moment is still deflation. The deflation camp
remains in ascendancy. The financial headlines tell
us that there is very little risk of inflation. Most
headlines talk about inflation worries moderating. Central
bankers from Alan Greenspan to Ben Bernanke believe
rising commodity pricesoil in particularpose
very little threat to the U.S. economy. Speaking at
Dalton College in Albany, GA., Bernanke said he believes
the Fed will be able to maintain its measured
pace of rate hikes, in part because inflationary expectations
remain low.[2]
However,
deflation and inflation have been and always will be
a monetary phenomenon. As long as there are central
banks and as long as there is no metal backing to currencies,
the potential for inflationindeed hyperinflationremains
a real risk for investors. As this chart of M3 indicates,
the supply of money and credit show no sign of letting
up. In fact, during the next recession, which could
hit the U.S. economy next year, the Fed could find itself
once again lowering interest rates and pumping money
and credit into the financial system and the economy
at a feverish pace. If foreigners no longer provide
us with credit, then Katie, bar the doors!,
the Fed will have to start monetizing our debt and the
U.S. may find it expedient to impose capital controls.
We are now at an historic inflection point in historywith
no turning back the clocks. Had our political leaders
from Reagan and Clinton to Bush I and II been more fiscally
responsible, we wouldnt be facing the largest
monetary storm in history. That monetary storm lies
directly in front of us. Bernanke and Greenspan may
summarily dismiss high oil prices, but for most of us
who live in the real world, higher energy costs are
going to be inflationary. Investors need to start preparing
for $100 oil. Higher oil prices will eventually permeate
all aspects of economic life, driving the costs of basic
necessities higher. In the future you may be able to
buy a flat screen TV, DVD player or personal computer
at a cheaper price, but the cost of everything else
will be rising. The things that you need in everyday
life will all be going up: your grocery bill, your utilities,
the gasoline that powers your car, visits to your doctor
or dentists, tuition, and lastly, taxes.
The economy will vacillate between periods of deflation
and inflation, with each recession bringing forth a
temporary reprieve from what will be an inexorable rise
in the general rate of inflation. Eventually wars, deficit
spending, a rising mountain of debt, and peak oil will
lead towards hyperinflation in the United States.
Already, the U.S. is exhibiting many of
the pre-hyperinflationary conditions that are so prevalent
in many South American and Eurasian economies. Evidence
points to several factors that will lead us there:
| *Large budget deficits |
| *Deteriorating international trade
balances |
| *An eroding international currency
|
| *Eroding financial confidence |
| *Growing protectionism |
| *An expanding war on terrorism and
the need for security |
| *Growing entitlements |
Whether the U.S. experiences hyperinflation or simply
higher inflation rates will be dependent on the political
will of its leaders to rein in spending and bring its
fiscal imbalances into order. At this point, it appears
hopeless with over $51 trillion in unfunded Social Security,
Medicare, and pension liabilities now growing at over
$2 trillion a year. History teaches us that debt imbalances
of this magnitude are always inflated away.
An expanding money supply, abundant credit, and negative
interest rates are inherently inflationary. When investors
realize that they can borrow money at next to nothing
rates and invest that money in hard assets and get an
immediate return, the demand for such assets rises.
This leads to higher prices, asset bubbles or inflation.
This is what is going on now in the financial markets,
the real estate market, and in the commodity markets.
A flood of money and credit throughout the world is
driving asset bubbles and inflation. Central banks can
create money and credit, but they are unable to direct
where that money flows. One of the chief characteristics
of inflationary cycles is asset bubbles. First, it was
stocks in the 1990s. Then, it was real estate and mortgages
in this new century. It is now working its way through
to the commodity markets. The new bull market in commodities
will dominate the financial markets the balance of this
decade and the next.
As debt levels rise in the U.S. at unprecedented levels,
the Fed will increasingly become impotent. Unlike Volcker
in 1979, todays U.S. economy is far more debt
laden. Because of this huge debt overhang and the huge
asset bubbles that support it, the Feds options
are limited. The Fed simply cant afford to raise
rates in the same decisive and single-minded way that
Volcker did during 1979-1982. The Feds new mantra
is measured. This means that real interest
rates will remain negative for a long period of time.
No matter how high inflation finally gets, it is abundantly
clear that the financial markets are undergoing a paradigm
shift from a bull market in paper to a bull market in
commodities or things as I like to call
them. Investors will need to focus on a different class
of assets. Real assets are going to be the big winners
in this new emerging bull market. Commodities are becoming
The Next Big Thing. Precious metals, base
metals, energy, water, and food are where the next fortunes
are going to be made. Precious metals have, will, and
are going to lead this new bull market. It is in regard
to precious metals that I devote the remainder of this
essay.
Leverage
- 21st Century Investing
One of the favored ways of making money over the last
decade has been to borrow at short term rates and invest
long. This has been popularly referred to as the
carry trade. With a positively sloped yield curve
as we have today, an investor can borrow short-term
funds at less than 2% and invest those funds in higher
yielding investments. This leverage allows the investor
to magnify returns. For example, let us suppose that
I can borrow money at 2% and invest that money at 5%.
The difference of 3% is my net profit. However, my returns
are actually much greater due to leverage. I can buy
$1,000,000 of Treasury bonds paying 5%, while my cost
of borrowing is only 2%. In making that $1,000,000 investment,
I only need to put down 10% or $100,000. The rest of
the money $900,000 or 90% can be borrowed. Instead of
a return of 3%, my return is multiplied tenfold to 32%
through the use of leverage.
As
the above example illustrates, through the use of leverage,
I am able to turn a 3% return into a 32% return simply
by using low cost borrowed funds. At a time when real
interest rates are negative, it pays to borrow money
and invest in real assets that are appreciating in value.
This is what has been going on in the real estate markets
in the U.S. and elsewhere around the globe thanks to
monetary inflation. Real interest rates are what you
actually earn (or what you pay, if you borrow money)
after the impact of inflation. They are nominal rates
minus the inflation rate. Negative real interest rates
such as we now have in the U.S. become the rocket fuel
that ignites hard assets. Abundant money and credit
and the negative interest rates that follow are what
gives birth to asset bubbles. Look behind the cause
of every asset bubble in history and youll find
monetary inflation as the cause.
OptionsWhat and Why
A second way that leverage can be used to increase
investment returns is through the use of options. Websters
dictionary gives several definitions for the word "option"
a choosing, choice, the right of choosing, something
that is or can be chosen, the right to buy, sell, or
lease at a fixed price within a specified time. In the
financial world, we are concerned with the last definition
of the word "option." First, we need some
practical explanations.
In the financial markets, an option is created through
a financial contract known as a derivative. Originally,
options were created by individual contracts between
two parties that gave the option holder the right to
buy or sell a particular commodity for a specified price
and time. Every option is either a call option or a
put option. Owners of a call option have the right to
buy a particular good at a specified price, while the
owner of a put option has the right to sell a particular
good at a specified price and time.
In todays financial marketplace, you can buy
options on almost every conceivable financial instrument
and intangible asset in the market price. You can buy
options on stocks, stock indexes, bonds, interest rates,
commodities, and currencies. You can even own an option
on the right to buy land, a residential home, an apartment,
or a commercial building. The ownership of a call option
gives its owner the right to call the underlying asset
or good away from someone else for a specified price
and for a specified time. Likewise, the owner of a put
has the right to sell a particular good or asset to
someone else by forcing that person to buy the underlying
asset or good at a specified price during a specified
period of time.
The right to buy or sell these assets is acquired through
the purchase of a call or put option. Options are used
for the purpose of buying or selling something. They
are bought in the marketplace through traders by paying
a premium to the seller of an option. In an option trade,
there are two parties involved. For every owner of an
option, there is a seller. The seller of an option is
known as an option writer. When an option is sold, the
option buyer pays the option seller (or writer) a premium.
In exchange for the option premium, the option writer
confers the rights to buy or sell something in exchange
for the premium received. In an option trade, the buyer
has all of the rights to buy or sell something at a
specified price and for a specified time period. The
option writer (or seller) has all of the obligations
to either provide the specified asset or good or to
buy the specified asset or good to fulfill the option
contract obligation. In the case of a put option trade,
the option writer is required to buy the underlying
asset or good at the price specified in the contract
-- regardless of market price or conditions.
Options [which are derivatives since they derive their
underlying value from the basic asset or good upon which
they are written] have risen in popularity over the
last two decades. They are used in the financial markets
for various reasons that range from risk management,
speculation, trading efficiency, or for arbitrage. For
example, a car dealer in the U.S., who buys foreign
cars from Japan, runs a currency risk. If the dollar
falls against the yen, as it is doing now, the car dealer
runs the risk that he will have to pay more dollars
for the cars he orders from Japan. Why? Because the
price of the dollar is falling against the Japanese
yen. This means the cars he buys will become more expensive.
To hedge this risk, he may buy a currency option on
the yen that locks in the price of the yen versus the
dollar. In this way, he has hedged his risk of a dollar
devaluation against the yen and has controlled his exposure
to this risk.
Option Trading for Speculation & Efficiency
Options can be used for trading efficiency and as a
means of leverage when investing. If you are bullish
on gold and believe that gold stocks will advance, as
gold rises, you could buy the shares of Newmont Mining.
Newmonts shares are currently trading at $47.
If a trader believes that Newmonts shares could
rise more than 20% to $57 a share, he could buy 100
shares of Newmont at $47. A 100 share purchase of Newmont
at $47 a share would cost an investor $4,700. Alternatively,
an investor could choose to buy an option on Newmont.
For example, he could buy a January $50 call option
for 100 shares of Newmont Mining for $195. If the price
of Newmont rose to $57 a share as expected, an investor's
profit would be as follows for both trades:

In the illustration above, an investor could buy an
option on Newmont Mining for less money, control the
same amount of shares, and make more money through the
leverage afforded by options. If the trader was more
aggressive, he could invest the entire $4,700 and buy
roughly 24 option contracts ($4,700/$195 = 24.1 contracts).
In this example, a trader would control 2,400 shares
of Newmont for the same amount of money. With leveraging
the same amount of money as a cash purchase, his potential
profit would be $12,120 instead of the cash profit of
$1,000.
The above example has been simplified. Ive left
out the cost of commissions and have rounded the option
contracts to 24 instead of 24.1. Option contracts are
sold in round lots of 100 when purchasing stocks. However,
as can be seen from this illustration, options can be
used as a substitute for a position in the more fundamental
asset or shares of Newmont Mining. If the entire amount
of the purchase was used to buy options instead of the
actual asset, those options could be used to leverage
the trade. In the example above, an investor would be
able to control 2,400 shares of Newmont with options
versus 100 shares in the cash market.
The Time Factor
In the above example the use of options appear as a
more attractive means of investing in stocks due to
the magnification of leverage. However, options have
their own unique risks. To understand this risk, I would
like to repeat once again an explanation given in Part
I of this article written back in 2002.
As attractive as options are for efficiency and leverage,
they also have a few problems. Options have a time factor.
In the example above, the option contract would expire
in September. If the price of Newmont did not rise above
the call price of $35, the option contract would expire
as worthless. If the trader had bought the actual shares
of Newmont Mining instead of the option contract, he
would still own the shares of Newmont. When an investor
or trader buys an option, it has a time value component.
There are many more aspects involved in an option purchase
that an investor or trader has to deal with that impact
the price of an option contract. The world of option
trading exposes investors to a lexicon of terms known
as "The Greeks. Ive covered these aspects
in my articles Rogue Wave - Rogue Trader and Rogue Waves
& Standard Deviations - Part 1, but they are worth
repeating, since they have relevance to the discussion
of this article. The Greeks measure different dimensions
of risk in an option position. The aim of a trader or
speculator in an option contract is to manage the Greeks
so that all risks are acceptable.
A
Review of The Greeks
Essentially, the Greeks are techniques for hedging against
the behavioral aspects of an option, future or a cash
position. There is "Delta," which tries to
capture gains from volatility by hedging a portion of
the option value. The idea behind Delta
is to make money on volatility. The more times you can
delta-hedge an option, the more profit can be realized
to help pay for the option investment.
Then there is "Gamma." Gamma is the second
derivative of the option price, which deals with the
sensitivity of the delta (rate of change of the delta)
with respect to the cash price of the underlying asset.
Because of the convexity of the option price curve,
there is a greater opportunity for the change of the
option price if the cash or spot price moves. In other
words, greater convexity delivers more bang for the
buck if youre long, and more pain if you are short.
Options become more expensive when volatility in the
market is high, and less expensive when volatility is
low. The sensitivity of an options price to changes
in its implied volatility, all other things being equal,
is called the "Vega." There are other Greeks,
such as "Rho," which deals with an options
sensitivity to changes in the domestic interest rate.
Time is a Deciding Factor
Essentially, the problem for all option investors is
TIME. An option gives the option holder the right to
buy or sell an asset for a specified time period. When
the time runs out, the right to buy or sell a particular
asset also runs out. Option investors are always playing
against the element of time. When you are investing
in options, you have to not only be right about the
investment, you also have to be right about your timing.
The price of an option will change with the passage
of time. The tendency for an option price to change
due to the passage of time is known as time decay. "Theta"
measures the change in the option premium for a given
change in the period of expiry (usually the passage
of time). Theta describes how much time value is lost
from day to day as a result of time decay. It is a precise
measure of time decay.
In the example of our 90-day call option on Newmont
Mining at inception, the option will hold 100% of its
time value. However, each day it will lose 1/90 of its
value. After day one, the option would have a time value
of 89/90. During the early days of an option's maturity,
it retains most of its time value. Time decay is almost
constant during the first two thirds of the option's
life and it increases during the final third of the
options life as shown in the graph above. Therefore,
option investors are always playing against time.
Investing in The Perfect Option
- Junior Mining Stocks
In the gold and silver market, there is a way to invest
in "the perfect option. This form of option
still offers the leverage to the price of gold and silver
that can be found in a regular option. However, it has
the advantage of not having the same risk of time decay.
The perfect option vehicle for investing in the gold
and silver markets can be found by investing in the
shares of junior mining companies. Junior mining companies
outnumber senior mining companies by almost an 8:1 margin.
Juniors are either an exploration company that explores
for new deposits of gold or silver or they may be a
small mining company with only one or two mines in operation.
A Risky Business
Dry Holes and Financial Risk
A Junior mining company carries more risk than a senior
mining company does because they are essentially exploring
for new mine deposits. Like the oil business, they may
end up with a dry hole. The money spent in trying to
find a new deposit may fail. Therefore, their shares
are subject to greater risk and volatility than senior
mining companies. They also fluctuate and are more volatile
against the rise or fall of the price of gold or silver.
Because of the risk involved in finding new deposits
of gold or silver, juniors mainly rely on equity financing
through public offerings, private placements, or joint
ventures with major mining companies. The risk for a
junior is that the company will not find new deposits
of gold or silver. Another risk is the possibility that
when they do find deposits, they may not have the financial
wherewithal to develop and maintain the property on
which the gold or silver deposits were found.
Dirty Dealings
There is also the risk of fraud. Several years ago,
the junior mining industry was tarnished by the Bre-X
scandal. Bre-X Minerals went from becoming the worlds
largest gold deposit to the biggest gold swindle in
mining history. Investors lost billions of dollars in
the fraudulent stock scheme. The founders of Bre-X had
gone to the jungles of Borneo and supposedly found the
largest deposit in the world. Bre-Xs Busang project
in Indonesia turned out to be a hoax. Vivian Danielson
and James Whyte write, But Busang was more than
an ordinary gold scam with a few zeros added, caused
--- once again -- by gullibility and the lure of riches.
It was an extraordinary popular delusion, adding yet
another chapter to that great and awful book of human
folly. Busang was a tragic triumph of ego and emotion
over reason and science, as well as a triumph of timing,
for it might well have remained a small, low-grade scam
had it not been picked up and carried along by a Bay
Street juggernaut with more cash than common sense and
an army of investors predisposed to believe. ...Bre-X
was a mammoth embarrassment, not only because it overshadowed
the good work carried out by honest geologists and engineers,
but because it had become one scam too many. Mining,
particularly junior mining, is an industry that needs
public support to survive. The trust over decades by
honest mining men had been undermined too often by unscrupulous
characters out to make a quick dollar through deceit
and trickery." 1
For the exploration mining industry, the Bre-X scandal
was the final straw. In its wake, new capital dried
up for many junior exploration companies. Those companies
that survived the scandal saw their stock prices crater,
like the Internet bust, in the mining stock market crash
that followed Bre-X. The combination of the scandal
with lower prices for gold and silver and the technology
boom of the late 90s saw capital dry up for the
industry.
Junior Fundamentals
Every industry goes through a cycle. As
a result of a multi-decade bear market in metals, the
mining industry contracted and consolidated. This was
forced upon the industry as a result of lower prices
over the last two decades. Most companies cut back their
exploration budgets dramatically to conserve costs.

With gold selling below $400 for most of the 80s
& 90s, it didnt pay to go out and explore
to find new ounces. Instead, it was more profitable
to buy other companies. Prices got so low during the
mid and late 90s that many companies, such as
Barrick, made more money through the sale of derivatives
than they did actually mining gold and silver. Most
mines lost money during this era. In order to control
costs and revenues, they were also forced to mine their
high grade ore.
As a result of industry consolidation,
the industry became dominated by very large producers
(VLPs). The size of their annual production, coupled
with the short mine life of their reserves, presents
a significant problem for the industry. The underlying
assumption that these large producers can explore, discover,
or even acquire large gold deposits to replace depleted
reserves is fatally flawed. As H.R. Bullis has pointed
out, A key point in the discussion is that, due
to the nature and size distribution of gold deposits,
their location and the difficulty in finding and delimiting
them, it will be extremely difficult for the VLGPs (Very
Large Gold Producers) to discover and define, on a year-on-year
basis, new reserves of sufficient size to maintain life-of-mine
profiles and therefore to maintain their current production
rates over the intermediate to longer term.[3]
As the next set of tables illustrates, global gold
production has remained stagnantif not slightly
lowerover the last six quarters. Furthermore,
there has been a fall in output for four out of the
top ten producers, Newmont Mining, Barrick Gold, Freeport
McMoRan and Rio Tinto. Those producers who have gained
in production have done so through acquisitions over
the past year. In addition to declines in production
at major producers, unit costs per ounce have risen
by over 17% over the last 12 months.

The reason costs have risen is due to strengthening
producer currencies, especially the rand against the
dollar, declining ore grades and higher fuel, labor,
and power costs.
The combination of size of annual production, short
mine life, and rising costs presents myriad problems
for the VLGPs. The exploration department of major producers
will have to explore and find or buy deposits that will
extend mine life. With costs rising, they will also
have to find or acquire ounces at a reasonable cost,
something the industry has not been very good at doing.
Combining with another large producer through a takeover
or merger would not accomplish these objectives. The
takeover company would have to provide the acquirer
with longer life reserves or a lower cost producing
mine.
The VLGPs are facing an almost impossible task because
of the size of their annual production. They will have
to explore and find new major gold deposits, which are
getting increasingly hard to find. If they use acquisitions
as a means of replacing reserves, theyll have
to find companies whose mine life is considerably longer
(ten years or more). In addition to making new discoveries
or acquiring other reserves through acquisition, the
VLGPs are facing time constraints. Due to growing environmental
restrictions and growing geopolitical risks, it is taking
longer to bring a new mine into production. The larger
the size of the project, the greater the delays and
the scrutiny by regulators. In short, the large producers
will have to use a combination of exploration and acquisition
just to maintain their present production rates. This
is a daunting task and it is very unlikely that VLGPs
survive at their present size. The majors have been
reluctant to buy juniors and have opted instead to buy
other producers. Purchase prices have been uneconomical
with most acquisitions made at above spot prices of
gold. Ill return to this topic in a moment. Suffice
to say the majors, as well as the intermediate producers,
are going to have to go on the acquisition trail again,
if production rates are to be maintained over mid-to-long
term. This means junior exploration companies with sizable
deposits and low production costs will once again become
takeover targets.
Chasing Ounces
The problem for investors is what to look for in a
junior when making an investment purchase. The standard
practice in the industry is to chase ounces. Advisors
recommend buying the junior with the largest amount
of ounces on the balance sheet. There is very little
regard for the mineability or the profitability of those
ounces. The market counts ounces and applies littleif
anydiscrimination to the quality of those ounces.
Inferred ounces are treated in similar value to measured
and indicated ounces, which are of higher quality. In
a similar fashion, there is very little distinction
made between ounces that are unprofitable and those
that can be mined profitably. This same mistake is made
by majors when they make acquisitions. Most takeovers
have been made at prices that are above the spot price
of gold. Very few acquisitions have been made at a reasonable
price to allow for a margin of safety should the price
of gold or silver drop sharply.
In this regard investors will likely find
three categories of ounces when shopping around for
a junior mining company. They are as follows:
| Mineable Ounces |
| - Inferred |
| - Measured and Indicated |
| - Convert to Reserves |
| Profitable Ounces |
| - Actually mined and produced |
| Dreamable ounces |
| - there, but not there |
Mineable Ounces are just exactly what
is implied. They are ounces in the ground that are of
sufficient size and quality that they can be mined.
In order to put in a mine, a company has to conduct
a feasibility study. In order to proceed to feasibility,
ounces have to be in the Measured and Indicated category.
Inferred ounces are not acceptable, since they cannot
be converted into Reserves, which are developed from
Measured & Indicated ounces. Mineable ounces may
only be marginally profitable. So the first thing that
an investor needs to do is to distinguish among the
categories of ounces. Measured and Indicated ounces
or Reserve ounces are worth more money to an acquirer
than inferred ounces.
The next category of ounces is what I refer to as Profitable
Ounces. These are ounces that actually can be profitably
mined by a company, resulting in profits for shareholders.
One of my big beefs with the mining industry is that
they have cared very little about profitability and
have been more concerned with empire building and acquiring
ounces. An investor only needs to spend a few moments
examining the quarterly financial statements of most
mining companies to realize that very few of them make
money. The returns on capital and equity have been abysmal
(4-6% range). In fairness, part of this has been due
to a protracted bear market in metals. But there are
other reasons as well. The industry has often overpaid
to acquire ounces. As the table below illustrates, since
1994 when the industry began to consolidate and expand,
most acquisitions have been made at prices above spot
gold. The average for the industry is 101% of spot.
Very few companies have acquired deposits cheaply.

The last category of ounces is what I call Dreamable
Ounces. Because of location, geology, metallurgy or
geopolitical reasons, these ouncesalthough definitely
therewill unlikely be brought into production.
They are for the most part figments of imagination of
the promoters of these companies and the brokerage firms
who peddle them to unsuspecting investors. The ounces
are either spread out in too many locations or because
of the metallurgy of extracting those ounces, will require
gold prices at a gazillion dollars to make the production
profitable.
Three Possible Outcomes for Juniors
Having an understanding of what kind of ounces a junior
mining company holds will also be helpful in determining
the eventual fate of a particular junior exploration
company. There are only three possible outcomes for
a junior exploration company. They are as follows:
1.Go into production.
2.Get acquired by another producer.
3.Go bankrupt or fade into oblivion.
For long-term investors, the first outcome of becoming
a producer offers the best possibility. The share priceand
therefore the market cap of producersis much larger
than non-producers. Until a company goes into production
and actually mines the gold and silver, it has no source
of revenues. If you believe prices are going higher
in this new gold and silver bull market, production
is one of the best ways to make money from higher prices.
The larger market caps afforded producers is a testament
to this fact.
The second outcome for a junior exploration company
is that it gets acquired by a producer. As mentioned
above, finding large profitable deposits are getting
harder to find globally. Those exploration companies
with million ounce deposits can become an attractive
takeover candidate by a small to mid-size producer.
An exploration company that has one million ounces that
are highly profitable is a rare find. It is the diamond
in the ruff.
The Cost of Acquiring Gold Production
Total Cost Acquisition
The cost of acquiring gold production is a function
of three variables: the adjusted market capitalization
of the potential target company (or asset), the cash
operating costs for mining those ounces, plus the estimated
capital cost over the life of the assets. This is referred
to in the industry as Total Cost of Acquisition or TCA.
On a historical basis over the last three to four years,
the weighted average acquisition price has been $330
an ounce. This price is a reflection of the lower gold
prices that prevailed between 1994 and 2003 when most
acquisitions were made. In any one year, TCA can average
90% of current spot prices for gold. As gold prices
climb higher, obviously the TCA cost will also climb.
As shown in the chart below of most recent acquisitions,
the $330 price has been a good benchmark in determining
acquisition prices.

The $330 price is a reflection of what the company
paid to acquire the ounces of the target company, the
capital cost of putting in and operating a mine, and
finally the cost per ounce of production.
This brings me back to the key points
of investing in a junior exploration company. They are,
in my opinion, the only key points an investor
needs to understand: Will there
be a mine and will the mine be profitable? In
this regard I come back to an earlier point on distinguishing
among the quality of ounces. Not all ounces are created
equal. Some ounces will eventually become mineable.
Some ounces will be highly profitable. Lastly, others
are only Dreamable or exist as a figment of imagination
in the mind of the promoters.
To distinguish among the categories of ounces, first
an investor needs to determine whether a junior exploration
company will eventually become a producer. Secondly,
if it becomes a mine, how profitable it will become?
And finally, if acquired, how high a price will be paid
for those ounces?
Looking
at actual industry history and using the historical
$330 TCA, the more profitable the ounces, the higher
the acquisition price with all other factors remaining
equal. In the example shown, among three companies with
different operating costs per ounce of $250, $200, and
$150, the company with the lower cost per ounces should
command a premium in a takeover. There would be less
risk and it would be more profitable for the acquirer
to buy the company with $150 cost of production than
to pay less money for a company with a $250 cost of
production. If gold prices fall, the $150 ounces could
still remain profitable. Conversely, if gold prices
rise, the $150 ounces would generate more profits for
the acquiring company. In either case, the acquiring
company would be better off buying the cheaper cost
ounces. They are simply more economical to operate in
either a rising or falling gold market.
Other Factors: Integrity, Management,
Deposit, and Location
There are other factors to consider when looking at
investing in a junior that should also be given consideration.
These factors relate to the integrity and experience
of management. If you dont have honest and knowledgeable
people running the company, very little else matters.
Quality of management should be at the very top of the
list when you consider investing in a company.
Other factors that need to be looked at are the location
and the size of the deposit. Some companies have boasted
of sizable ounces, but they dont tell you that
most of these ounces are spread all over in three, four,
or five locations. If the deposit isnt large enough,
it becomes uneconomical to mine.
A final point on location is related to the geopolitical
risks of the deposit. Is it located in a mining-friendly
country? The country should have laws that respect and
protect property rights. Geopolitical risks should also
be factored in the investment decision. Wars, revolutions,
expropriation are real risks and must be factored in,
regardless of how favorable or sizable the deposit.
The Finance Cycle
Another factor that is given very little consideration
is how a company gets its financing. How a company is
financed can make all the difference to a companys
survival and the returns shareholders can expect to
earn on their investments. Junior exploration companies
entail a high degree of risk. Very few juniors ever
end up becoming a mine. Statistically the chances of
a junior exploration company turning into a profitable
mine are 1 in a 2,000. Because of this high degree of
risk, it becomes enormously expensive for a junior mining
company to get initial financing. The risk involved
in actually finding and developing ounces are enormous.
Obviously, a company acquiring an existing deposit,
where there are known reserves, is less riskier than
a company that is starting from scratch and hoping to
make a discovery.
Most initial stage financings are done at what I call
"usurious" rates. The brokerage firm will
charge the company an 8 percent commission and legal
fees. In addition to upfront commissions, the brokerage
firm will also demand 20% in broker shares. Since most
initial financings are issued with warrants, the brokerage
firm may get an additional 10-20 percent in the form
of warrants that accompany each share. In effect, the
brokerage firm may get the equivalent of 30, 40, or
50% of the offering in shares and commissions. This
usurious form of compensation is highly dilutive to
the founders and management of the company as well as
the shareholders. Over the course of several financing
cycles, the junior companies becomes overly diluted
and find it difficult to attain success. An example
below illustrates this point over a three-stage financing
cycle.
Danger of Dilution
As mentioned above, the more dilutive the share structure,
the lower the price of the stock. If a company is acquired
on the basis of ounces, the fewer number of shares the
better. This is because the total purchase price of
the company will be made on the basis of ounces. That
purchase price will have to be divided by the number
of fully diluted shares. It boils down to simple arithmetic.
The fewer the amount of shares given a fixed set of
ounces, the higher price per share in a takeover. The
higher the amount of shares, the lower the takeover
price per share.
Keeping shareholder dilution to a minimum can impact
investment returns in a major way. Companies should
either negotiate better terms from the start with their
brokerage firm or renegotiate the terms as the project
is developed and the risks are removed from the property.
It is better to negotiate fair and equitable terms from
the start. If that cant be done, the company should
try and break away and secure better terms from an investment
bank, fund managers, or large private investor/shareholders.
This is possible if the project is economical or if
the property has been drilled enough to remove most
of the geological and metallurgy risks. The other possibility
is the depth and reputation of management. An experienced,
proven, and reputable management team can often negotiate
favorable terms right out of the gate when going public.
Pump, Dump, and Short Cycle
There is another aspect to the finance cycle that most
investorsand in many cases junior mining executivesmay
not be aware of. This is the pump, dump, and short operations
conducted by some of the brokerage firms that underwrite
junior exploration companies.
On a daily and weekly basis, there are numerous financings
that come to the market. Most of these companies will
never make it, despite the high hopes of the founders
and the brokerage firms that take them public. The odds
of a junior mining company making it into actual production
are about 1 in 2,000. Many of these companies will survive
by either consolidating, locating another property,
or starting the process over again. In addition to the
high risks involved in exploring for gold and silver,
generally there arent enough buyers to absorb
all of the selling that comes into the market from new
financings. This is where the pump, dump, and short
cycle comes into play.
The Pump
In order to sell shares to the public, the brokerage
firm will promote the new offering with a high degree
of hype in order to induce investors to buy into the
offering. Once the offering is complete, the mining
company now has the funds to begin drilling and exploring
for gold. As drill results start to come in, enthusiasm
for the stock heightens. With most investors having
little understanding of how to read a drill or assay
report, they tend to get overly hyped. The brokers tend
to get everyone excited and talking about the stock.
Often the hype can build into a frenzy with the new
company being" talked up" as the next big
mining play because of their discovery of the The
Dream and Fantasy Mine. At this point enthusiasm
for the stock is at a peak and the brokerage firm that
sponsored the company starts unloading their broker
shares, which they received as a fee for doing the financing.
These shares are acquired at a very low cost. Since
many of these shares are acquired on an option basis,
the firm can sell the shares as broker warrants as their
inducement to do the financing. So these are shares
that can be easily sold into the market, because there
is very little cost associated with the shares. The
brokerage firm has no cash at risk. It is pure profit.
The Dump
The brokerage firm takes advantage of the enthusiasm
and hype as an opportune time to unload their shares
to an unsuspecting public. Investors at this time are
caught up in all of the hype, believing they are going
to make a fortune in the stock. That enthusiasm by the
public creates demand for the shares, which are unusually
bid up in spectacular fashion. Eventually, the brokerage
firm has sold enough shares to absorb all of the buying
and the stock starts to crater with individual investors
losing big money. The brokerage firm may also begin
to spin the firms biggest clients out of the stock
in preparation for selling them the next Penny
Dreadful (the firms next offering).
During the pump phase of operations, a penny stock
can often climb to heights in the market that can mesmerize
investors with thoughts of making large fortunes. The
brokerage firm and its brokers are talking the stock
up and talk on the street can fuel a stock rally that
resembles the Internet boom in the U.S. in the late
90s. However, during this time as the stock price
gets elevated through hype, the companys managementalong
with the brokerage firm and large shareholders who acquired
their stock earlier at lower pricesuse this opportunity
to dump their shares. Eventually the news starts to
fade, the price of the shares start to fall, and small
investors, who bought into the market at the top on
hype, are stuck with high prices shares.
In some cases the pump and dump operations are conducted
in collusion with the brokerage house that took the
company public.
If it is a reputable company with good prospects, an
investor simply needs to hold and ride the cycle out.
Eventually, more drill results and favorable news on
the company will help to elevate the shares again as
the company expands its drilling operations with successful
results. However, this does not always happen. Most
drilling will result in some degree of mineralizationmost
of it will not be worth much. It may simply be iron
ore, which is worth less than actual gold, silver or
other base minerals. The hype was over the possibility
of finding large gold and silver deposits. The company
may find some gold and silver, but it may be so small
or uneconomical that it is virtually worthless.
The Short
In addition to pumping and dumping a stock, a brokerage
house will often begin shorting the stock after a brief
time period following the initial financing. They do
this to make money. They sell the stock short into the
hype phase when the price of the stock is rising and
investor demand is at its peak. Eventually, enough selling
comes into the stock to absorb all buying and the stock
then begins to fall due to additional selling pressure.
The brokerage house will stop talking up the stock and
eventually the news dries up and the stock craters.
At this point, they will quietly start buying shares
and cover their short position at a nice profit from
disappointed investors who, are now selling their high-priced
shares at a lower price.
Some brokerage firms make more money shorting the shares
of companies they underwrite than what they actually
made in financing the company. It is all part of the
business and the brokerage house makes money on either
side of the trade. In Vancouver, the mindset of some
brokerage firms is based on failure. Most of the junior
mining companies that are taken public will never reach
production. The vast majority of companies will fail.
Given the odds of failure, brokerage firms have found
it more profitable to bet on failure than to bet on
success. The simple fact is that most junior mining
companies will fail or never reach the production stage.
Even then, very few companies will ever become profitable
as most mines dont make money.
Only a very small group of companies ever break out
of the pack or the vicious pump, dump, and short cycle.
Those that do are the real winners and they are rare.
Finding these companies is not an easy job, which is
why most advisors recommend buying a large basket of
juniors to protect and diversify a portfolio. All you
need is one spectacular company to make up for all of
the ones that dont work out. Because of the high
degree of failure of most junior mining companies and
the shenanigans that take place in the finance cycle,
an investor is better off investing in a mutual fund
or dealing with a knowledgeable advisor.
Caveat Emptor
Buyer Beware. With all of the hype that surrounds the
junior mining sector, investors and mining executives
need to become more aware of what goes on during the
financing cycle. For mining executives, it becomes imperative
that they get educated on the conduct of their brokerage
firm. Is the brokerage firm supportive of the company
or is the brokerage firm pumping, while dumping their
stock? Is the brokerage firm shorting shares in an effort
to drive down the price and profit from the trade? Not
monitoring the actions of the brokerage firm can be
costly to the company's financing plans. Many times,
before the next financing takes place, the brokerage
firm will drive down the shares to take the stock down
and make it easier to finance. Juniors are valued on
the basis of ounces or the potential ounces the company
may own. Driving the price down before an offering makes
it easier to sell the shares to knowledgeable investors.
It also enhances the brokerage firm's profit opportunity
in making a profitable trade.
For example, lets say the price of the shares
are currently selling at $0.75 a share and that based
on the ounces, the company's fair value for shares would
be $0.60 a share. The brokerage firm may start selling
the shares or shorting the stock ahead of doing a financing
at $0.40 a share. Financing the shares at a lower price
increases the odds of conducting a successful financing
and making a profitable trade for the brokerage firm.
Since the brokerage firm will receive broker shares
in addition to commissions for doing the financing,
those broker shares and warrants can then be sold at
a profit. If the financing is done at $0.40 a share,
the warrants may be exercisable at $0.45-0.50 a share.
If the stock is currently selling at $0.75 and fair
value for the stock is $0.60, knocking the stock down
makes it easier to do the financing and also makes it
more profitable for the brokerage firm to trade out
of the shares later on after the financing has been
completed.
From management and shareholder point of view, the
financing should be done at as high a price as possible.
This brings in more money to the company that can be
used to conduct drilling and it also means less shareholder
dilution since fewer shares have to be issued at the
higher price. Oftentimes the brokerage firm's goal of
doing a financing at a lower price are in direct conflict
with management's goal of minimizing shareholder dilution.
Unless management monitors the brokerage firm's market
operations, they may not be aware that the brokerage
firm is driving down the share price ahead of a financing.
A company should have access to Level II quotes, which
lists bid and ask prices and also discloses who is making
the bids and offers. In some cases, an brokerage firm
may have one of its subsidiaries doing the selling to
disguise their market actions. Knowing who the subsidiaries
are and following the brokerage firm operations is critical
to holding the brokerage firm accountable. It will also
help in the negotiating process.
Examples of Manipulation
With all of the scandals going on in the market, investors
as well as mining executives need to become aware of
what goes on in the marketplace with their shares. Two
examples will illustrate this point. Last year while
accumulating shares of a junior, my firm began to see
increasing liquidity come into the market. The amount
of offers coming to the market each day was higher than
normal for most juniors. We were able to acquire shares
at a much faster pace than usual. Because as a fund
most of our purchases are sizable, it takes time to
acquire a position in a company. Even then because of
the sizable buying that we do, share prices may often
rise. That is because the float or available stock of
most juniors is small and the stock during its early
life may be thinly traded. On one particular day when
we had accumulated a large number of shares, I got a
call from a broker at the brokerage firm. He asked me
if I liked this particular company. I said I did. He
then began to explain to me the advantage of backing
off from my buying, so that the firm could take the
shares down. The advantage to me would be that I could
then buy my shares at a lower price. He then promised
me they could deliver the shares I intended to buy at
more favorable terms. I told my trading department of
the phone call. My trader picked up on what was going
on and informed me that this particular firm had been
shorting a tremendous amount of shares. In essence,
the firm was trapped short and my persistent buying
was causing them to lose money. They hoped to get me
out of the way by promising me shares at lower prices.
In the end, the stock went much higher and the firm
realized significant mark-to-market losses on their
trading books.
In another example a newsletter friend of mine told
me about a company on his recommended list that was
getting ready to do an additional financing. Being aware
of what goes on in Vancouver, he monitored the brokerage
firm's market operations and also had the company execs
monitoring the market. Ahead of the upcoming financing,
their brokerage firm had been a heavy seller of the
stockdespite some rather spectacular drill results,
which had driven up the stock price. At first the brokerage
firm denied it. Finally, the mining company confronted
them with evidence of their market operations. In the
end, they fired the brokerage firm and are now getting
financing in Europe.
Advice To The Wary
These kinds of stories can be seen daily by anyone with
a Level II quote system that displays bids and offers
and who is behind them. No mining company seeking financing
or an investor with substantial positions in juniors
should be without this kind of information. Knowledgeable
people who have been around the business for a long
time are very aware of what goes on in the financing
cycle. That is why many companies have chosen to seek
financing elsewhere.
An investor needs to be aware that this goes on in
order to make smarter purchases and avoid being taken
to the cleaners in a pump, dump, and short cycle. If
your broker calls you and is pumping the firm's offering
and you see that they have been big sellers, walk away
from the offering or at least wait until the firm gets
done pumping or shorting the stock. Knowledge is everything
in this business and very few juniors will ever make
it to production much less survive longer term. That
is why the average investor may be better off in a fund
or seeking professional advice. Not all juniors are
created equal. Not all ounces are mineable and very
few ounces are profitable. Caveat emptor. Its
your money that is at stake.
Despite the shenanigans and market manipulation schemes
of certain brokerage houses, investing in juniors can
be quite rewarding for the enterprising investor. We
are still in the early stages of a new bull market in
precious metals that is going to see the price of gold
and silver go to levels undreamed of in the past. Demand
for gold and silver is going up each year, while supply
fails to keep up with demand. This has resulted in persistent
deficits with above ground stockpiles of silver and
gold falling sharply. This gold and silver bull market
is still in its formative stage and has much further
to run.
I have written on numerous occasions of
the outstanding fundamentals that now underpin this
emerging bull market in precious metals. For a further
explanation of the fundamentals behind this new bull
market, please refer to my Perfect
Storm Series and previous Storm
Watch Updates, especially The
Next Big Thing, The
Perfect Option, and Silver:
the undervalued asset looking for a catalyst. Other
articles referring to the fundamentals include archived
Market WrapUps Pac-man,
Clicks & Bricks, The
Silver and Gold Train Wreck-Part 2, and Open
the Checkbook- Buy the Ounces.
Investment Versus Speculation
The issue I would like to address now is one of investment
philosophy. The current mantra in the financial community
is that juniors are valued on the basis of ounces. It
doesnt matter what the status of those ounces
are. The marketplace rarely distinguishes between ounces
that are mineable and those that arent mineable
or between profitable and unprofitable ounces. The financial
markets and investors count ounces and very little else.
Yet, as we have seen, not all ounces of gold and silver
are equal. Some will be mined, while others never will
be. Some ounces will be profitable, while others will
be mined at a loss.
In their pioneering book, Securities Analysis
written in 1934, authors Benjamin Graham and David Dodd
made an important contribution to the investment world
in drawing a line between investment and speculation.
Graham and Dodd made the transition on Wall Street from
thinking like traders to thinking as owners of a business.
In the midst of a stock market crash, they posed the
question of what would a reasonable businessmanas
opposed to a speculatorbe willing to pay to own
and buy a business. In other words, what price should
an investor pay for a company in order to make a profit
and realize a return of capital? What price would offer
the investor a margin of safety in case the financial
environment changed or the fortunes of the company deteriorated?
Graham and Dodd investors wanted the protection of a
strong balance sheet as insurance against todays
troubles or against unforeseen future shocks.
As Benjamin Graham would often say, Investment
is soundest when it is most businesslike. One
of Grahams famous disciples and perhaps one of
the greatest living practitioners of the Graham and
Dodd philosophy is Warren Buffett. Buffett took Graham
and Dodd one step further. His philosophy evolved into
"growth-at-a-reasonable price." Buffett is
known for making shrewd investment decisions. However,
his investment decisions were really business decisions,
because he looked at any stock as a business. Therefore
in treating his investment decisions from a business
perspective, he very seldom overpaid to buy and own
a stock. Today that philosophy has made Buffett the
second richest man in the world. That wealth was made
exclusively from investing.
Can this same philosophy be applied to the junior mining
business or is investing in juniors completely different
from other forms of investment? The current thinking
in the financial community is all based on ounces. The
whole idea is that in a bull market gold and silver
prices will head much, much higher. This will eventually
make all ounces profitable. This is akin to the rising
tide will lift all boats philosophy. There is certainly
a degree of merit to this concept. If gold and silver
prices head past $800 and $15 respectively an ounce,
all ounces become profitable. A junior that may not
be able to mine gold at $400 an ounce or silver at $6-7,
may be able to do so at $700-$800 and $10-12 an ounce.
In essence, according to this way of thinking, higher
prices solves everything. It will make certain ounces
that are now unmineable, mineable. It can also make
ounces that are unprofitable turn a profit.
The Profitability Question
However, looking at this same argument from a business
point of view, would it not be more profitable to own
a junior that holds mineable and profitable ounces at
todays market prices? If a company can mine gold
and silver at a profit at $300 gold and $6 silver, how
much more profitable will the company become at $800
gold or $20 silver? A company that is profitable at
lower prices makes much more money when prices rise.
That higher degree of profitability allows the company
to pay dividends to its shareholders and or buy other
companies or deposits. The company that can mine ounces
more profitably eventually commands a higher market
price for its shares. Profitable companies can also
pay higher dividends to their shareholders. Profitable
companies can also become more attractive to an acquirer
especially if their reserves are long life and those
reserves can be mined at a low cost. A good example
is Wheaton River, a highly profitable mining company
and the target of a recent takeover attempt. Wheatons
ounces are highly profitable, which is why it was such
an attractive takeover target.
The mining industry is no different from any other
industry or business. Those companies that can mine
gold and silver profitably will realize a much higher
stock price over the long run than those companies who
lose money for their shareholders. The mining sector
is notorious for losing money or for paying little attention
to shareholder value. Companies have gone on to build
empires at a terrible expense to shareholders. Few profits
have been made and more money has been wasted in worthless
acquisitions. The takeover tables shown in this essay
are a perfect example of this practice. Little attention
is paid to the price paid or the profitability of ounces
acquired.
That is why, when you survey the mining industry, you
find fewer companies that have remained profitable for
shareholders over the long run. The metals market was
caught in a multi-decade bear market. Yet there were
companies that remained profitable during this entire
bear market period. They did so by controlling costs,
watching what they pay to acquire property and remaining
efficient and what they mine. Companies such as Freeport
McMoRan, Newmont, Alcoa, and BHP remained profitable
and paid dividends throughout the long bear market in
commodities. In order to survive, they had to run their
mining operations as a business. Now that the bear market
in commodities is over and a new bull market has begun,
the companies are making record profits and share prices
are reflecting this fact.
In a bull market, the price of most mining shareswhether
they are majors, intermediate or junior producers, as
well as junior exploration companieswill rise
with the tide. Some will rise more than others. Those
companies that can mine ounces profitably and enhance
shareholder value through profits and growing resources
will reward investors the most. An investor who can
find, invest and hold on to these companies will make
more money through the application of sound investment
principles than those who speculate. Investing in junior
exploration companies or junior producers will become
most profitable to the investor, if these investment
decisions are made with a businesslike approach. Im
not making an argument against the find-the-ounces crowd
or the crowd that believes higher prices will make all
ounces more profitable. Im simply making the case
that not all ounces are created equal. Those that are
mineable at a profit will be worth much more to shareholders
or acquiring companies in the end. From a businessmans
point of view, the most important issues when looking
at a junior exploration company boil down to two simple
questions. Will there be a mine? and Will it be profitable?
An Opportune Time to Invest
Finally, once you have determined that you have found
a junior that has merit, I believe one of the best times
to buy that company is in the gestation phase when its
share price has fallen. To better explain this concept,
an investor needs to know which phase of the mining
cycle the company is at. There are six phases in the
development of a junior exploration company. These phases
are as follows:
Phase 1 Discovery
Phase 2 Reality
Phase 3 Gestation
Phase 4 Feasibility
Phase 5 Construction
Phase 6 Production
The discovery phase is the beginning of the junior
mining cycle. A company raises money and goes out and
drills a potential deposit in the hopes of making a
major discovery. The deposit may have been drilled or
mined in the past. The founders of the company could
have already staked some ground and have found surface
mineralization. At the point of finding surface mineralization
and the possibility of finding gold or silver, the company
has several decisions to make. They can go find equity
money to explore the property or partner with an established
company to do the work and take on the expense. In the
case of equity, the owners will approach a brokerage
firm whojudging on the merits of the property
or experience and integrity of managementwill
take the company public.
During the discovery process, the company drills the
property looking for mineralization. Drill results start
to come in and if they are successful, the discovery
gains success and the price of the stock starts to fly.
At this point, investors are simply dreaming and speculating
as to the property's gold and silver potential, if there
will be a mine, and how many ounces it will contain.
Share prices can oftentimes go parabolic on news of
the initial discovery and all of the hype that surrounds
it.
Eventually, the second phase, the reality phase, starts
to set in after much of the hype has worn off. Share
prices at this point can fall sharply from their high.
Analyst reports may bring in a dose of reality or investors
may realize that the initial discovery isnt all
it was cracked up to be after several drill results
have come in.
Assuming the deposit holds promise, the
company will have to raise more capitalif they
havent already done soto drill out the property.
If there is going to be a mine, the company will have
to do development drilling on the property in an effort
to find the degree of mineralization, the actual size
and grade of the ore-body, its depth and more about
the geology of the deposit. During this gestation phase,
the company isnt discovering new ounces. They
are conducting infill drilling. They are developing
the property, taking inferred ounces into the measured
and indicated category, which makes them more mineable.
During this phase of the mining process, the share price
tends to fall as much as 40-60 percent from their discovery
peak. There is very little news and no new discoveries
are made. The company is simply defining the deposit
and getting it ready for the next phase of the cycle
which is feasibility. This is an opportune time to invest
in a promising junior as shown in the graph below:

The fourth phase of the junior mining cycle is the
feasibility phase. A feasibility study is done with
a major engineering firm with two questions in mind:
Can a mine be put in? And will it be profitable? The
feasibility study tries to estimate the cost of operating
a mine. The price that the mining company will have
to pay for labor and energy to operate the mine as well
as the capital costs of putting in a mine are estimated
in the hopes of defining profitability. The mining engineers
are trying to determine "the payback period
or how long it will take the company to recoup its investment.
The feasibility phase removes much of the risk of the
project. It determines if there will be a mine and if
it be profitable. A completed feasibility study moves
ounces into reserve category, which makes them more
valuable. Assuming the feasibility study shows merit,
the stock price usually begins to start climbing on
release of this news. Oftentimes a stock may take off
on the news that a feasibility study is being undertaken.
The next phases of construction and eventually production
are the culmination of the junior mining cycle. As the
company goes through these final phases, the stock price
keeps climbing as investors anticipate the rewards of
production. As a producer, the company now has revenues
and a source of profit. As a general rule, producing
companies have much higher market caps, because they
have the ability to turn ounces into dollars of production
and hopefully profits to their shareholders.
The Best Time to Buy
I have simplified this process, leaving out many of
the details of each phase. For a more complete understanding
of this process, the investor is encouraged to read
or obtain a copy of Mining Explained published
by the Northern Miner. What I wanted to illustrate here
is the best buying opportunity in the junior mining
cycle, a time where much of the risk of the deposit
or company has been removed. Generally speaking, this
is the time when the share price can be bought at very
attractive prices before the share price could potentially
begin to accelerate again. This is when it looks like
the company will evolve into a mine. It is also the
part of the junior mining cycle at which time takeovers
occur.
In summary, the two most important questions to be
asked when making an investment in a junior are: Will
there be mine? And will it become profitable? Mining
is no different than any other business. A common sense
approach to investing in mining is no different than
any other industry. Can they produce a widget and can
they make money in making that widget? To repeat once
again Ben Grahams often repeated mantra of value
investing, Investment is soundest when it is most
businesslike.
If you believe as I do that we have begun a new bull
market in precious metals that will last for many years
and that we are just at the beginning phase of this
new bull market, then investing in junior producers
and junior exploration companies can become the most
profitable way to participate in this emerging bull
run. As with the use of options, which offer the investor
a way in which to use leverage, junior miners offer
investors leverage to the price of precious metals.
They represent a call option on the future price of
silver and gold. Unlike regular options, they have no
time expiration. This makes them "the perfect option."
The juniors have been hit hard this year in a corrective
cycle. The froth and speculation that dominated the
sector at the beginning of the year is now absent. Most
funds and large investors have been playing the market
cautiously trading in and out of shares of the major
and intermediate producers. The shares of majors and
producers are selling at a 30% premium to NAV, versus
an average of 27%. On the otherhand, the price of many
high quality juniorsincluding a few that are ready
for feasibilityare practically being given away.
From this perspective, the price of the majors remained
overpriced, while the price of many juniors are under
priced to their NAV. For a value investor, this provides
an opportunity to buy, while prices are depressed and
below net asset values. The time to buy cheaply is when
nobody wants to own them. I believe that time is now.
Juniors are the perfect option.
Jim Puplava
Past
Storm Watch Updates
[1] Swanson, PhD, Gerald, The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide, Englund, p.1.
[2] Bernanke, Ben S., Higher
energy prices are manageable, Darton College, October
21, 2004.
[3] "Gold Deposits, Exploration Realities, and
the Unsustainability of Very Large Gold Producers,"
CIMICM, March 24, 2003.
****
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