How to Value
a Mining Stock
January 16, 2006
I received an interesting question about
company valuations from one of my newsletter subscribers that I thought
I would address as a Commentary. It is a multi-part question that will
take more than one Commentary to address; this week is part one: Valuing
Mining Stocks.
Mining is a finite business. Mineral
deposits contain a certain amount of ore and when that ore is mined out
the deposit is depleted, no matter what you do or wish.
That is in stark contrast to say, an
auto parts manufacturer, who can adapt to new demands and specification
changes and (hopefully) stay in business for many decades. When you value
an auto parts company, you can compare the company's price to earnings,
price to cash flow, operating margin and net profit margin (among other
things) to the company's peers to assess whether the stock in question
is relatively cheap, or relatively expensive. You can also get a sense
of whether the stock is cheap or expensive in an absolute sense by looking
at the book value per share and comparing things like the profit margin
and dividend rate to prevailing interest rates. But, embedded in all this
(except book value per share) is the implicit assumption that the earnings
and cash flow are for all intents and purposes infinite. When you are
dealing with a business that can be reasonably expected to continue in
a similar fashion for many decades, earnings per share, cash flow per
share, dividend rate, etc. are meaningful. That is not the case with mining.
Take a hypothetical mining company that
has only one mine as an example. Let us assume that mine is going to produce
for another five years before the ore will be depleted. Now, let us say
that the company's price to earnings ratio is ten. A hypothetical auto
parts manufacturer also has a price to earnings ratio of ten. Based on
just this one metric, we cannot differentiate between the two stocks.
Let us also assume that the prevailing ten-year interest rate is five
percent.
This means that you can invest your money
in a ten-year bond and earn five percent per year while taking relatively
little risk (other than the risk of interest rates rising, which could
negatively impact all the investments under consideration and is therefore
not considered).
The auto parts manufacturer has a price
to earnings ratio of ten. That means for every dollar's worth of stock
you buy, you expect to earn ten cents, or ten percent, in earnings. It
does not really matter for our purposes whether those earnings are retained
by the company or paid out as a dividend since, either way, the earnings
accrue to the benefit of shareholders. Furthermore, you can reasonably
assume that the auto parts manufacturer is going to be in business for
several more decades and, because you have done lots of due diligence,
you can also assume that the future earnings are likely to be the same
as the current earnings. So, if you buy the auto parts stock, you will
earn ten percent per year as opposed to five percent on your bonds. The
auto parts stock is probably riskier than a bond; however, if you can
make twice as much money it might be tempting.
Then you look at the mining stock and
notice that it, too, has a price to earnings ratio of ten and, therefore,
you can also make ten percent a year if you bought that stock. But you
would be wrong. The mining company's mine only has a five-year life ahead
of it. So, if it has a price to earnings ratio of ten it means that for
every dollar of stock you buy you get ten cents in earnings. But the earnings
are only going to last another five years, so your total earnings per
dollar of cost will only be fifty cents -- half of what you paid for the
stock -- and then the mine is depleted. That's why comparing a mining
stock to other investment opportunities on the basis of price to earnings,
price to cash flow, or dividend yield is complete nonsense. It is just
as futile to compare mining stocks to each other based on these metrics
because mining companies have different mine lives in their operations.
The only reasonable way to evaluate a
mining company is to look at the net present value of the potential future
cash flow, discounted at an appropriate discount rate. You have to take
into account not just the cash flow that the mine(s) is generating, but
also sustaining capital costs (including future exploration and development
costs) associated with keeping the mine in production. Assuming you can
derive a suitable cash flow model for each mine that a company owns you
can then calculate the net present value of future cash flow by using
an appropriate discount rate to represent the geological, political, social
and financial risks. If you sum all the net present values together, add
any other assets on the balance sheet and subtract any debt, you will
arrive at the net asset value per share. In a rational world you would
expect to pay no more for a mining stock than its net asset value per
share -- how do you expect to make money if you consistently pay more
for stocks than what they are worth? But, in the real world, mining stocks
almost always trade for more than the net asset value of their constituent
mines, and for a good reason.
Mining stocks also offer leverage to
commodity prices. Take a gold mining company as an example. Assume we
have a company that mines gold for a total cost of $400 an ounce, and
let us pretend the gold price is $500 an ounce. The net present value
of the mine would be calculated based on the $100 margin. If the gold
price increases by 20% to $600 an ounce the net present value of the mine
will double, since the margin would now be $200 an ounce. Thus the value
of the company increased five times more than the increase in the gold
price. Most people buy mining stocks because of this leverage.
What should be immediately evident is
that if you pay more for mining stocks than what they are worth, on the
speculation that the price of the underlying commodity will increase,
you are merely gambling on the commodity price. Fortunately there is a
way to quantify the premium that one should pay for a mining stock to
incorporate the leverage it has to the underlying commodity price. There
is a formula called the Black-Scholes Model that can be used to calculate
the "option" value of a mining stock. What should be done is to calculate
the discounted net present value of the all the company's mines and then
add the "option value" of the mines as calculated by the Black Sholes
formula to obtain a more realistic asset value per share. By adding the
optionality of mining shares to the net present value of the mines themselves
we can account for the fact that mining shares trade at a premium to their
net asset value because of their leverage to the underlying commodities.
If you calculate the net asset value
of a mining stock as described above you will get a result that can be
used to compare different mining companies to each other, and mining companies
to investments in other sectors. Unfortunately, very few mining analysts
employ the Black Sholes model to calculate mining net asset values, so
for most people buying mining stocks really comes down to blind speculation
on commodity prices.
Next week we will look at exploration
companies, which are much more subjective to analyze than mining companies.
Paul van Eeden
P.S. I may in future stop publishing
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Paul van Eeden works primarily to find investments for his
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