Gold Stock Valuations 4
This week the International Monetary Fund, which has long commanded
the world’s third largest official holding of gold bullion, once again
made some noise about selling 400 tonnes of its gold. Such a sale would represent about an eighth
of the IMF’s total holdings, and as usual such tidings spooked the
markets.
So far in its secular bull, gold has climbed 181% higher
since April 2001. Interestingly,
the IMF has been periodically announcing that it is considering gold bullion
sales over the majority of this entire six-year span. The recurring threat of IMF gold sales
is just another brick in the great wall of worries that gold has handily
overcome.
The old market aphorism that “all bull markets climb a
wall of worries” couldn’t be more true for
gold and gold stocks. Whether it is
IMF sales, other central-bank machinations, allegedly declining investment
demand, or whatever, a myriad of worries plaguing every step of the way higher has
been par for the course in this bull.
For every dollar higher that gold has climbed since $257,
countless worries argued against its progress. And the same remains true today. Yet the hardcore contrarians know that
fear is nothing to fear, indeed it is bullish. The real time to worry in a bull market
is when no one else is worrying, when widespread euphoria reigns. And gold is about as far from euphoria
today as the east is from the west.
So this week as skittish gold-stock investors panicked for
the umpteenth time this year, doing their best Chicken Little imitations
despite gold remaining encouragingly strong in the mid-$600s, I was looking at
gold-stock fundamentals. While you
certainly wouldn’t know it thanks to some of the worst gold-stock
sentiment yet seen in this bull, today’s gold stock fundamentals are
actually the best we’ve seen so
far.
Fundamentals are crucial for stock investment because they
ultimately drive stock prices.
While sentiment-driven trading dominates over the short term and can
batter stocks all over the place temporarily, in the end fundamentals will
dictate their fate. Operating
profits are the primary fundamental statistic of interest, and all throughout
stock-market history all over the world stock prices eventually follow their
underlying profits.
Contrarian investors like Warren Buffett know this well,
seeking to buy companies that are trading at low stock prices relative to their
earnings. Buying low P/E stocks in
growing businesses is one of the surest ways to achieve great long-term success
in the stock markets because stock prices will rise to reflect high earnings
sooner or later.
But unfortunately for the contrarian-oriented gold-stock
investors, gold stocks have never been cheap relative to their earnings in this
bull market. Even though the HUI
unhedged gold-stock index has soared nearly 1000% higher since late 2000 and
earned fortunes for early investors, we never had a chance to buy in
cheap. In fact, during those ugly
bottoming months in late 2000 and early 2001, gold miners were barely earning
any profits at all.
While time has indeed proven it to be the correct strategy
in hindsight, why did anyone buy gold stocks in the early 2000s at valuations
higher than the bubbly tech stocks?
Because during secular commodities bulls the inherent profits leverage
in mining commodities leads to profits rising much faster than stock
prices. Thus a gold stock purchased
in 2000 at 150x earnings could have seen its price go 10x higher since then yet
simultaneously have seen its P/E ratio plunge to 25x due to stellar profits
growth.
This thesis that had to be taken on faith six or seven years
ago is proving true in reality today, and it is very exciting to see! Even over this past year, when gold has
been largely flat, tremendous progress has been made in gold stock
valuations. While gold stocks
aren’t yet cheap in a classic contrarian sense, they are certainly
trending in this direction.
Unfortunately valuation data is little-analyzed because it
is so hard to find. Very few
analysts bother tracking it, especially in a relatively obscure sector like
gold stocks, on an ongoing basis.
Although I don’t have historical valuation data on all the gold
stocks in the major gold-stock indexes, I do have monthly valuation data for
one key elite blue-chip gold stock over this entire bull to date. It is as good of representative as any
for its sector.
This stock is Newmont Mining, which was the world’s
largest gold miner for much of this bull market. It was the biggest and most liquid gold stock
for years and dominated the HUI in terms of weight. Today it is the world’s
second-largest gold producer and largest unhedged gold miner. We only happen to have NEM valuation data
because it is an S&P 500 component, and we’ve long tracked general stock-market
valuations every month.
This first chart shows Newmont’s price-to-earnings
ratio superimposed over its market capitalization since this gold-stock bull began. I’ve seen this same pattern in
many other gold and commodities stocks.
They entered their bulls with pitiful low values in the marketplace and meager
earnings which drove ridiculously high P/Es. Yet as their values climbed and
multiplied many times over, their valuations still fell on balance.
Investing in a secular bull sector where stock prices rise
dramatically but still become better values over time is the best of all
possible worlds. Gold stocks in
today’s bull market are going to be a textbook case of this relatively
rare phenomenon that will be studied for decades to come.
Newmont was a beaten-and-left-for-dead little company back
in late 2000 with a trivial little $2.3b market cap. Meanwhile it was trading between 125x to
160x earnings, valuations higher than most of the tech darlings at the top of
their own bubble. It took a maverick
contrarian to buy the world’s biggest gold miner back then when its
prospects looked so bleak and its fundamentals so atrocious.
But this is the magic of a secular commodities bull. Unlike almost everything manufactured,
commodities are very difficult to wrest from the bowels of the earth so their
supplies cannot respond rapidly to price signals. Prices can trend higher for a couple decades before supply and demand
imbalances are totally rectified.
So if you believed gold was on the cusp of a major bull market six years ago, buying
battered-down gold miners was not a difficult decision.
Since those early dark-yet-opportunity-filled days,
Newmont’s market capitalization has soared 1067% higher! Now I have to note that NEM issued stock
to make acquisitions during this time, so shareholders have not reaped this
entire market-cap gain. But the raw
stock-price gains have been excellent too, 388% trough to peak. Outside of the commodities-stock realm,
I think you’d be hard-pressed to find a sector-leading stock that
performed so well over a seven-year period where general stocks were largely dead flat.
Now typically when a stock’s value multiplies nearly
12x higher over just a matter of years, its valuation will rise too. In the initial six-to-seven years of the
general-stock secular bull in the 1980s, for example, valuations roughly tripled. Yet Newmont Mining is not trading at
bubblicious 480x earnings levels today.
If it was, even the most rabid gold bulls would shy away from buying it.
Despite its huge gains in market capitalization and stock
price, Newmont’s price-to-earnings ratio has contracted by a radical 85% since early 2000! Today it is only trading near 28x
earnings, not too far above the S&P 500’s 20x levels today. This illustrates the marvelous profits
leverage inherent in mining scarce commodities. In a rising commodities-price market,
usually mining profits growth will far outpace mining stock-price
appreciation. Despite huge
stock-price gains, valuations decline
over time.
Now admittedly this 1067% market-cap growth and 85% P/E
decline are from best-case points for each series of data. But even if we ignore the best case and
just look at the bull to date today, this trend is still immensely
powerful. As of now NEM’s
market cap has risen 722% since late 2000 yet its valuation has still fallen
85% despite this gain. There is no
doubt the initial gold-stock-bull valuation thesis was wildly correct.
Although I only have comprehensive historical valuation data
for Newmont, in recent years we have started collecting broader gold-stock
valuation data. The trend towards
gold stocks earning far higher profits that drive valuations down while their
stock prices simultaneously climb is accelerating tremendously with
today’s higher gold prices. The
mid-$600s that spooked the milquetoasts this week have been a great boon for
gold miners over this past year.
These next two tables show valuations and market
capitalizations for all of the elite gold and silver stocks of the flagship HUI
and XAU gold-stock indexes. Stocks
that are common between both indexes, and there are many, are highlighted in
yellow. In addition the XOI
oil-stock index metrics are included for comparison’s sake. The first table shows valuations early last
April, when I wrote the second
iteration of this thread of research, and the second table shows valuations
this week.
Between these relatively close (in a secular sense) points
in time, the profits growth in the elite blue-chip gold miners has been staggering. Gold stock fundamentals have never been
better in this bull market, there is no doubt about it.
Carefully examine the HUI and XAU component valuations in
both tables and marvel at how gold stocks’ earnings are rapidly growing
into their prices. And realize that
the HUI was only 6.5% lower the day the second table was made compared to the
day of the first. With the HUI
essentially flat, the profits growth in the elite gold miners is all the more
stunning. This is incredibly
bullish fundamental news.
Check out the generally high P/E ratios as well as all the
blank spaces, which indicate no earnings.
Last April when folks were getting euphoric about gold, gold-stock
fundamentals were certainly nothing to write home about. Now compare these mediocre results to
this week’s impressive metrics.
While the gold stocks aren’t yet classical contrarian
bargains like the unloved oil stocks, they are getting a lot closer. Between the HUI and XAU, they contain 20
elite gold miners. A year ago,
fully 50% of these companies couldn’t earn any profits. Today this number has dropped to
10%. Also a year ago, of the half
of the stocks earning profits, 60% had P/Es over 50x earnings. Today only 17% of the profitable
companies sport such crazy P/Es.
Over the past year, the simple-average P/E of the HUI has
plunged 62% despite just a 6.5% decline in the HUI itself. While the headline XAU only fell 7.3%
between these two data points, its own simple-average P/E has fallen 50%. These are stunning improvements in
valuations over such a relatively short period of time. They prove that the gold miners are
finally starting to earn some real profits in this gold bull.
Since simple-average P/E calculations for stock indexes are
easily skewed by extreme outliers, I have long preferred to compute composite
index P/Es by using market-capitalization weightings. This way a tiny company with a crazy P/E
cannot influence the overall index P/E anywhere near as greatly as it would in
the conventional simple-average approach.
The market-capitalization weighted-average P/Es of the HUI and XAU show
similar dramatically positive results.
Last year, the HUI had a MCWA P/E of 35.2x. Today it has fallen to 23.2x, a 34%
decline! Provocatively this
compares very favorably to the S&P 500’s 20.3x and NASDAQ’s
32.5x current MCWA P/E ratios. It
is incredible to realize that gold stocks as a sector are a much better
fundamental bargain today than tech stocks! Who would even have entertained such a
heresy a year or two ago?
The XAU’s MCWA P/E has fallen 30% to 22.6x, which is
again competitive with other sectors of the general stock markets. As a gold-stock investor and speculator
over this entire bull I can scarcely believe my eyes, but finally after
believing in a controversial thesis for years with little confirmation gold
stocks’ earnings are really growing into their stock prices. Gold stock valuations are finally
reasonable!
There are a couple more specific observations of interest on
these tables. First, note how small
the gold miners generally are in market-cap terms today despite the HUI’s
nearly 1000% run higher since late 2000.
Together all 20 of these elite gold stocks are only worth $149b
today. To see how small this is
compared to other sectors, check out the massive oil stocks’ market
caps. The combined market cap of
the 13 XOI companies is almost 12x larger than that of the 20 HUI/XAU
companies.
These tiny gold-stock market caps, despite us being seven
years into their bull market, show how far we still have to run in a secular
sense. They also show how fast gold
stocks will move when more mainstream investors get interested in their
fortunes. The smaller a sector is
in terms of its market-cap footprint, the faster and higher it will go if a
given amount of capital bids on it.
There is still not much room in the entire gold-stock sector for serious
capital, so mainstreamers will face a bidding war when they catch on to the
gold bull.
Second, note that the HUI and XAU both contain Freeport
McMoRan Copper & Gold, FCX. At
$27b, FCX alone represents 26% of the market cap of the HUI and 19% of the
market cap of the XAU, both indexes’ largest component. Since FCX mines vast amounts of the
dazzlingly profitable copper, its P/E is considerably lower than most of the other
gold and silver miners. Thus
FCX’s copper production is still skewing the HUI and XAU P/Es lower.
From a pure P/E-analysis-over-time standpoint, this is not a
problem. Since FCX has been in the
gold-stock indexes in the past its effect is fairly comparable across the
years. Its recent acquisition of
Phelps Dodge may change this in the future though by altering its gold/copper
mix, making it more copper-heavy.
Regardless, in simple P/E terms where FCX’s low P/E is weighted
equally with all other component companies to minimize its influence, the HUI
and XAU still show remarkable price-to-earnings ratio contraction over the last
year or so.
Three or four years ago before the base metals bulls started
getting exciting, it used to bother me that a major copper producer (that is
also a major gold producer) was “tainting” the purity of the
gold-stock indexes. No more. Today’s emerging gold-mining
method of choice is digging big open pits to process low-grade ore. It is usually much cheaper than digging
shaft mines, and much easier to find low-grade deposits than the rare
high-grade ones.
Virtually all the time in these types of open-pit deposits,
byproduct metals exist. Thus most
gold miners in the world today have byproduct metals that they mine in
conjunction with their gold at most of their operating mines. Pulling other metals along with gold is
part of the game now. These
byproduct metals, thanks to raging bull markets driven by insatiable Asian
demand, can greatly contribute to overall gold-mining profits.
While FCX certainly has the largest proportion of
byproduct-to-gold production in terms of revenues realized, many of the other
elite gold miners also have significant byproduct production too. Since this is the reality today and it
is really helping gold miners’ overall valuations drop, I don’t
believe the concept of 100% gold-mining purity is relevant for the HUI and XAU
anymore. Yes, their index
components should be primary gold miners,
but they don’t have to be 100% gold.
Byproduct revenue is wonderful and it should be embraced,
not scorned. At Zeal we consider
any byproduct revenue to be a big plus when we pick our stocks to buy. It enables companies to develop
lower-grade gold deposits that would not be economical at today’s gold
prices without their byproduct revenue.
So operations like FCX’s are ultimately very bullish for
gold-stock valuations and prices.
The vast progress made in gold-stock valuations over the
past year is incredibly encouraging regardless of its causes. It confirms and verifies the once-controversial
thesis that guided the earliest investors in this bull market six years
ago. We were willing to buy gold
stocks at ridiculous valuations back then not because they were fundamental
bargains at the time, but because they would turn out to be fundamental
bargains as the gold bull marched higher.
There is no disputing this now.
And I think this trend is even more relevant today than it
was six years ago. The higher the
gold price goes, and it is very likely to continue much higher due to its stellar fundamentals, the
greater the profits for the gold miners will grow. And as they’ve done in the past six
years, overall these profits will probably multiply faster than stock prices
due to the tremendous profits
leverage inherent in this business.
This means that not only are gold stocks highly likely to
continue appreciating on balance, but they will get cheaper and cheaper like
the oil and base-metals stocks. These
lower valuations are crucial in a bull market as they open the door for much
broader investor participation.
Early on, only brave or foolish contrarians buy in. They believe in a secular bull before
anyone can see it and they bear huge risks. Since the contrarian pool of capital is
so small in the grand scheme of things, they can only drive up a sector so
far. Eventually value investors realize
the early contrarians were right, and they notice that the sector’s P/E
ratios are favorably low. So they
start to buy into the attractively-valued stocks and drive them much higher
than the contrarians could have alone.
Then ultimately the mainstream investors follow the early
contrarians and later value investors in.
The mainstreamers collectively control gargantuan amounts of capital
that can drive a sector stratospheric, but they won’t buy in until late
in the game when momentum compels them to.
Without the value investors buying in first, which wouldn’t happen
without low valuations, the momentum necessary to seduce in the mainstreamers
near the end of the bull would never exist in the first place.
So if the gold stocks’ lower-valuation trend continues
in the coming year, they will become even cheaper relative to the general stock
markets. These low valuations will
attract in new investors and a much larger pool of value capital than the
contrarians could ever hope to control.
If this scenario plays out as it ought to, obviously now is a great time
to buy while general sentiment remains so irrationally pessimistic.
At Zeal we have traded these gold and gold-stock bulls since
they began, and have been blessed with outstanding realized profits over the
years. We buy gold stocks when
others are scared, like today, and sell them when others are euphoric, like
last May. If you are willing to
fight the thundering herd and take a contrarian chance on earning big profits
in the likely approaching major gold-stock upleg, please subscribe to our
acclaimed newsletter
today. Periodic weakness offers
excellent buying opportunities.
The bottom line is gold stock valuations are really looking
excellent today, the best we have seen in this entire bull market. More elite gold stocks are profitable
than ever before and they have lower valuations as individuals and a sector
than ever before. From an
earnings-fundamental perspective at least, there has never been a more
attractive time to add long gold-stock positions than today.
As usual the psychological wall of worries is drowning out
these truly important fundamental developments, but sentiment can’t trump
fundamentals for long. Sooner or
later traders will realize $650 gold is very profitable for miners and they
will rush in to buy. Profits are
always the ultimate long-term driver of stock prices.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
May 18, 2007
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