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The Debt Time Bomb: Amend, Extend And Pretend

April 30, 2019

“Hey Marin, we don’t invest in gold companies for yield. We invest in gold stocks as a hedge to the overall markets. And for leverage on the price of gold.”

What a bunch of nonsense.

Have you ever heard the phrase, “What a gold mine!”?

That common, age-old expression was actually a positive reference to having something very valuable. Notably, a gold mine that paid its owners very well by producing gold.

Yet in the last two decades (the span of my career), gold miners have been anything but responsible dividend payers to their owners – the shareholders.

It’s a theme I’ve been introducing to my readers over the last couple of months. And this topic is picking up major steam.

Investors (and capital) are starting to wake up.

While executives have made fortunes running the larger gold producers, the shareholders have been given the shaft (no pun intended)! Cash and stock compensation for executives continue to grow. Yet, dividends to shareholders for the most part have gone in the opposite direction.

It’s no wonder wealth funds like the Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund – with trillions under management – have been cutting weightings in the mining sector for a decade. Take a look…

Within a generation, the gold sector has gone from being one of the best yield producers in the global markets to one of the worst.

To analyze the dividend history of producing gold companies over the last century was demanding. We spent countless hours in public and university libraries. Our team combed through the last 107 years of business newspapers on microfiche.

I was hoping to find this data compiled by someone else, but we couldn’t find it. So we had to do it ourselves.

You will not find this information anywhere else in the world.

The chart below shows the average yield, since 1912, of gold producing companies. This includes the special dividends, where data could be found. The trend is crystal clear: Shareholders are getting less and less in dividends from gold producers. I’ll explain why later.

The Unwinding of Golden Leverage

The gold sector has treated shareholders very poorly over the last two decades. And I detailed it all when I published my piece on The Golden Trap of Leverage.

Look, unless you sold gold stocks in early 2011, share prices have fallen for most companies.

There are a few exceptions, like Kirkland Lake Gold which is the top performing gold producer the last few years. It was a KRO pick in 2017 under CAD$7.

And before that, Newmarket Gold (a pick at CAD$1.50 in 2015), which was bought out by Kirkland Lake at a 1:1 value.

With a decade’s worth of languishing gold stock share prices, the appetite to keep funding these burning matchsticks continues to fall.

Equity financings on the TSX and TSX-V are down 70% in a decade. Don’t believe me? Check out the chart below.

With less equity money around, companies have had to turn to debt. Fueled by ultra low interest rates, companies have willingly loaded up on cheap debt.

But you and I both know that the problem with debt is that you eventually have to pay it back.

In the corporate world, there is no such thing as a debt jubilee – when the debt issuer has to forgive the debt.

As you know, I spend a great amount of time focusing on balance sheets. And I’ve been intimately involved with a couple mine start-ups from exploration to production. Not to mention lots of involvement in financing the construction. You can learn a thing or two from my experience that analysts don’t pay attention to when they build their spreadsheets.

Because of the Global Financial Crisis, the entire gold sector has adjusted its understanding of financing using cheap debt. Little did they know they are hooked on financial heroin.

Its new understanding is just unrealistic…

  • Most producers can’t even provide a respectable return with uber-cheap, 2.5-4% interest debt-money.

The real cost of borrowing money in the gold sector today is much higher than it was in 2011-2013. And make no mistake, the chickens will come home to roost.

All of this reminds me of my favorite line in the gangster movie Goodfellas.

The movie isn’t for everyone (a lot of swearing and gruesome killing; rated R/18A), but Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci and Ray Liotta are great in the movie. Here’s the line…

Business bad?

F*** you, pay me.

Oh, you had a fire?

F*** you, pay me.

The place got hit by lighting?

F*** you, pay me.

Bankers aren’t as ruthless as the mob. But the shareholders will be wiped out just the same. If the debt burden is too high, very little will be left for the shareholders’ (equity) side of the ownership.

Never ever forget: Debt almost always takes priority over equity.

And by now you’re wondering how I plan on profiting off of all of this…

Marin, What About Your “Extend & Pretend” Theory?

Over the years, I’ve written in great detail about the oil patch and how the massive debt issues would be extended by access to capital looking for yield. (Here’s a link where I discuss Extend & Pretend.)

In this scenario, the existing loan would be refinanced. The term of the loan would be “extended” and the company and bankers would “pretend” everything is okay.

The oil patch played out exactly as I wrote a few years back. The worst companies went bankrupt, but most managed to kick the can down the road another few years.

In the May issue of Katusa’s Resource Opportunities, I will revisit a report I wrote four years ago that made mainstream media news. This time, unfortunately for the shareholders, the outcome will be different.

It’s all in the math.

I believe we are reaching a point in the energy AND gold sectors where two things will happen:

  1. Much higher corporate interest rates will be required to refinance these non-performing assets. Because they were put into production in a low-cost debt environment to “Extend & Pretend” the loan.

Obviously, you want to avoid being a shareholder of these companies.

  1. Larger companies will be looking to acquire assets that enable the company to increase their “debt flexibility”. This means increasing their asset base to get lower debt costs across the board.

It’s kind of like the “bigger is better” and the “too big to fail” concept. Neither are correct, but that is where the market will be going.

You will see single mine producing mid-tiers, in all commodities, merging.

The question will be… which management keep their plush corner offices and which ones will move onto their next venture?

The one benefit is most of the mining community is getting a bit long in the tooth and they don’t want to stay on. So this issue won’t be as big of a deal as in the 2011-2013 merger bonanza.

Now, you can either buy these fiscally disciplined producers or you can buy the companies that they will be targeting. I’m focusing on the later because there’s better upside if you pick right and sit tight like an alligator.

Why take this approach?

Be it base metals or precious metals, world class discoveries are few and far between. And, it’s cheaper for majors in the current market to buy a world class deposit than the actual cost to find the deposit themselves.

  • Over the last decade, senior gold producers have spent on average $74 per ounce acquiring projects and companies.
  • Over the same time span, they’ve spent $136 per ounce discovering ounces.

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see it’s cheaper to buy the project, than it is to go from grassroots to discovery.

Now let’s take this one step further…

Remember there’s 70% less money around for financing gold projects than there was in 2009. This means that only the very best projects and management teams are going to get funded (this is a good thing).

For the rest, it’s going to be very tough sledding. There’s no room for error in these markets.

Now, tack on a strong USD and rising costs of capital (higher interest on the debt) and it’s downright ugly.

Things Are Heating Up For Our Portfolio

Most people can’t wait for the next episode of Game of Thrones. Count me among them, because “winter is finally coming”. But it’s coming to the resource sector as well. Sorry gold bugs, “winter is coming”.

But my team and subscribers can’t wait until I publish the final results of another ground-breaking chapter in my Golden Debt and Leverage series.

On May 1st, I will reveal the summary data of all the debt in the resource and energy markets to KRO subscribers.

This report was such a monumental task that our data feed providers blocked my analysts for reaching the feed cap – TWICE!

There are two charts in particular that I know will be immediately replicated by institutions and brokerages, and I’m happy to let them. Imitation is the greatest form of flattery.

You’ll want to know the date of the next debt time bomb in the resource and commodity markets.

While most people are concerned with the U.S. government debt…

Smart investors looking to make spectacular bets will be paying attention to the catalyst dates of the corporate debt time bombs.

And if you’re not a subscriber to Katusa’s Resource Opportunities, consider signing up so you’ll be the first to access the research and investment thesis.

*******

Marin Katusa, an accomplished investment analyst, is the senior editor of Casey Energy Dividends, Casey Energy Confidential, and Casey Energy Report. He left a successful teaching career to pursue analyzing and investing in junior resource companies. In addition, he is a regular commentator on BNN and he is a member of the Vancouver Angel Forum where he and his colleagues evaluate early seed investment opportunities. Marin also manages a portfolio of international real estate projects. Using advanced mathematical skills, he has created a diagnostic resource market tool that analyzes and compares hundreds of investment variables. Through his own investments, Marin has established a network of relationships with many of the key players in the junior resource sector in Vancouver.


China is the world’s biggest gold producer with more than 355 tons annually. Australia is second.
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