Gold Miners and Explorers Face Serious Supply Problems
Commodities / Gold & Silver Stocks Jun 29, 2010 - 03:25 AM GMTBy: The_Gold_Report
 Geologist Brent Cook, of Exploration  Insights, in this exclusive article for The Gold Report,  takes a look at the major gold mining companies' dilemma—declining production  as the gold price is hitting record levels. He also explains how the junior  gold explorers are confronting a similar dilemma—fewer legitimate exploration  properties with the real potential to host a major economic deposit. The rare  micro-cap company that discovers a meaningful gold deposit is immediately in  the sights of the cash-rich gold mining companies in need of new reserves. More  importantly, anyone owning these junior companies, a few of whom are mentioned  later, stands to make a substantial profit.
Geologist Brent Cook, of Exploration  Insights, in this exclusive article for The Gold Report,  takes a look at the major gold mining companies' dilemma—declining production  as the gold price is hitting record levels. He also explains how the junior  gold explorers are confronting a similar dilemma—fewer legitimate exploration  properties with the real potential to host a major economic deposit. The rare  micro-cap company that discovers a meaningful gold deposit is immediately in  the sights of the cash-rich gold mining companies in need of new reserves. More  importantly, anyone owning these junior companies, a few of whom are mentioned  later, stands to make a substantial profit.
Exploration Success Comes from Being in the Right Place
Geologic success can only come about if a company is exploring in the right geologic terrain—a terrain that is capable of hosting a major deposit. This is, of course, easier said than done, and it is critical that the speculator in this sector be able to recognize the difference between a legitimate play and a questionable story.
Unfortunately for the speculator, Mother Nature has been very generous and supportive to the exploration sector. She has scattered gold, copper and silver anomalies all over the world, then hidden what lies beneath them under gravel and jungle. She has then left the elucidation of what lies below the surface to a discipline that is best described as art informed by science: geology. Geology and minerals exploration are not exact sciences. Minerals exploration is not accomplished through the careful mixing of measured quantities at a sterile laboratory or by complex mathematical calculations done on a computer. It is done by geologists working in the frozen wastelands and barren deserts of countries that most of us didn't know existed 10 years ago. They are invariably dealing with a limited data set and projecting that information into the third and most important dimension, depth. Testing that dimension requires drilling, an expensive endeavor that usually provides more questions than answers.
Success for the speculator therefore depends on 1) investing in management that is intelligent, honest and financially committed and 2) properly assessing a property's potential to host a major deposit as early as possible. The "Life cycle of a junior explorer" graph presented below (Fig. 1) illustrates the normal evolution of a successful discovery from startup to production. The time to buy is when you find the right management team exploring in the right place—at the right price, of course.
 
 
(Fig. 1- Life of a junior mining  share) 
  
  Profiting Comes from Selling at the Right Time
  
  Knowing when to sell becomes a more complex issue after the initial success:  you have to know what the mineral deposit could actually be worth. To do so  early on requires a realistic estimate of the probable mining, processing and  capital costs, plus, metallurgical recovery, strip ratio and local  infrastructure. Tax rates, royalties, permitting and social and political  issues all have to be factored in as well. Ultimately, your sell price should  be dependent on a rough net present valuation (NPV) estimate of the deposit the  junior company has discovered, or at least appears to have discovered. That  basic knowledge provides the edge that allows an investor to sell a stock when  other less informed speculators are still buying. 
  
  Gold Mines and Discoveries are in Short Supply
  
  Major gold mining companies are facing a big problem. They are unable to find  and develop enough ounces to keep up with demand, for the simple fact that  economic gold deposits are extremely rare. The chart below (Fig. 2) of global  gold mine production during the past 30 years demonstrates this fact.  Production shows a very simple trend: it rose until about 2000 and has fallen  since then. This reduced production occurred even as the price of gold has increased  nearly 400% in the past 10 years. This incongruity tells us something  fundamental—there's a problem.
  
  
  (Fig. 2- Global gold mine production 1980 to 2009) 
  
  From 1980 to about 1992, production from South Africa, North America and  Australia increased dramatically. Since then it has been falling just as  dramatically. Production in the rest of the world (Rest of World) picked up at  about the same time production dropped in the established mining districts, and  has been filling the gap in production since then. The reasons for the early  increase in production from South Africa, North America and Australia, and the  later increase in the rest of world are due to factors that are not likely to  be repeated. This has important implications for major gold mining companies,  exploration companies and ultimately us here at Exploration Insights. 
  
  There are three main reasons why gold production increased up to 2000, despite  declining gold prices. 
The first is the advent of new  mining and processing technologies that made previously uneconomic low-grade  deposits economic. This was mostly a result of heap-leach technology and  bulk-mining methods. This meant mining companies could now scrape up large  areas of low-grade mineralization and sprinkle a cheap solution of cyanide on  the rock to recover the gold. This primarily worked on near-surface oxidized  deposits in relatively dry climates.
  
  The second is that vast regions of the world that had previously been closed  for various reasons were opened up to exploration. These new areas include much  of Latin America, Africa and the former Soviet Union. I was part of that  movement; we were able to walk onto obvious deposits with new eyes and rapidly  drill out those resources. It also became markedly easier to get into these areas,  so we were able to go deeper into the jungles and deserts. 
  
  The third is that geologists had a whole slew of new exploration tools with  which to scan the earth. These include satellite imagery, geophysics and more  sensitive chemical tools.
The net result was that new  technologies kept old deposits going longer and made previously uneconomic ones  viable, thereby ramping up production into the early '90s. New deposits in  previously unexplored and off-limits areas kept that production going until  about 2000. All well and good, but as the image below shows (Fig. 3), the  industry is not finding as many new deposits as they need to in order to  maintain current production levels. And, although we can expect incremental  technological improvements in processing, mining and exploration, there is  nothing revolutionary on the horizon.
  

(Fig. 3- Global gold discoveries by size. After  McKeith, Schodde, and Baltis, 2010) 
  
  This is a worrisome slide for major gold producers—they are unable to sustain  themselves. For the most part they are surviving via old deposits that are  running out of ore and newer deposits that are quickly headed into the  "old" deposit category. Reserves from these aging deposits are not  being replaced by new discoveries. Producers' problems are further exacerbated  by rising exploration and development costs, plus the significant time it now  takes to permit and finance a new deposit, if they are able to at all—a subject  for another day.
  
  Everything I have said up to now is good news for the junior explorers and for  those of us speculating in this sector. If a company can make an economic  discovery, there are ready buyers willing and able to pay a significant premium  for something they want and need.
  
  Now for the Bad News: It Ain't Easy. Consider this Next Diagram. 
  
  
  
  (Fig. 4- Schematic diagram of geologic models, environments, and  types of deposits associated with subduction-related magmatic arcs; after  Corbett) 
  
  This very complex schematic diagram, a small cross section through the earth's  surface, illustrates all of the deposit types and settings associated with  subduction related magmatic mineral systems: essentially the Pacific Ring of  Fire and some zones running up through Central Europe and Eurasia. With each of  these individual settings comes a characteristic mineral and alteration  assemblage that changes with distance from the hydrothermal source. This  "zoning" reflects and is a result of different chemical, pressure and  temperature environments. On top of those primary factors we have to overlay  the structural setting and rock type, either of which can be the make-or-break  feature for the formation of an economic mineral deposit. An economic mineral  deposit results from the unique combination of all of these features, a  combination that rarely occurs in nature. 
  
  Although nearly every intrusive magma body (the hatched bodies in the diagram)  will have some of the right stuff, I would estimate that 90% of these mineral  systems do not contain a geologically economic deposit—they have anomalies; the  very same anomalies that keep the exploration industry in business. That  "geologically economic" classification doesn't consider the added  criterion that takes the mineralization into the truly economic category: it  has to be near enough to the surface and recoverable to be economically viable.  To those hurdles we can add political, environmental and social obstacles. 
  
  Now place the same diagram under thick jungle cover or hundreds of meters of  gravel and you begin to get the sense of how hard it actually is to make a real  discovery. This is why maybe less than 1% of the exploration projects out there  will ever turn into an economic discovery, and nearly all the exploration  companies eventually go broke. 
  
  It is also why the Exploration Insights portfolio is comprised of  relatively few companies—almost everyone is looking in the wrong place. Some of  the companies on our list that were, and are, clearly the right people in the  right place include AuEx Ventures Inc. (TSX:XAU), Lydian International (TSX:LYD), Mirasol Resources Ltd. (TSX.V:MRZ) and Kaminak Gold Corporation (TSX.V:KAM). We  recognized early on that they were run by intelligent and committed people and  just as importantly, they were exploring in the right place. That is really all  it takes, plus a bit of luck. 
  
  If, for example, you are a company exploring for gold, you have to know where  you are, and, more importantly, where you are not in these geologic models. If  you are an investor in said company, you had better know too. It means all the  difference between making a fortune on what the market has presented you—a  sweet spot where the major miners need new deposits and can afford to pay top  dollar for discoveries—and missing a real opportunity. 
  
  Brent Cook
  Economic Geologist and Author
  Exploration  Insights 
  
Brent Cook brings more than 25 years of experience to his role as a geologist,  consultant and investment adviser. His knowledge spans all areas of the mining  business from the conceptual stage through to detailed technical and financial  modeling related to mine development and production. His hallmarks include  applying rigorous factual analysis to the projects and companies he examines, and  augmenting his analysis with on-site field evaluations. He has worked in more  than 60 countries on virtually every mineral deposit type. Brent's weekly Exploration  Insights newsletter focuses on early discovery, high-reward  opportunities primarily among junior mining and exploration companies. Paul van  Eeden, who produced Exploration Insights' predecessor publication,  claims Brent "has always been my primary source of information and  intelligence with respect to mineral exploration investments." 
Want to read more exclusive Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you'll  learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews  with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Expert Insights page.
DISCLOSURE: Brent Cook, entities that  he controls, family, friends, employees, associates and others may have  positions in securities mentioned, or discussed, in this article. While every  attempt is made to avoid conflicts of interest, such conflicts do arise from  time to time. Whenever a conflict of interest arises, every attempt is made to  resolve such conflict in the best possible interest of all parties, but you  should not assume that your interest would be placed ahead of anyone else's  interest in the event of a conflict of interest. 
The GOLD Report is Copyright © 2010 by Streetwise Inc. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Inc. hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but never in part. The GOLD Report does not render investment advice and does not endorse or recommend the business, products, services or securities of any company mentioned in this report. From time to time, Streetwise Inc. directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.
© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.
	

 
  
 
	