World’s 2nd largest zinc miner sounds profit warning
November 27, 2007
Greetings investors!
Uh uh …
First there was this proposed BHP Billiton/Rio Tinto Ltd. merger to create the world’s largest integrated mining company. Now the world’s second largest zinc producer is warning of lower earnings.
Am I the only one who thinks we’ve been too long at the trough?
Zinifex Ltd. of Australia has warned investors that rising costs, the strong Australian dollar and lower zinc prices could hold back earnings this year. Net profit is still ontrack to exceed last year’s record result, but I think this is a harbinger of leaner times ahead.
I don’t like to be the skeleton at the feast, but higher costs and inflated currency values have created an artificially expensive operating climate for mineral explorers and producers. A downtick or (heaven forbid) prolonged dip in metals prices could be disasterous.
Look, it’s the reverse scenario of a few years ago. After a prolonged bear market for copper, nickel, and precious metals (closer to a nuclear winter in fact), producers had wrenched down operatings costs so far that any upward moving in pricing sent profits and share valuations sky high.
In this reverse scenario, we’ll see it all go the other way.
Personally, I think BHP and Rio are both looking to their future survival, rather than a way to expand profits over the short term. They’re already planning into the next bear market.
The only way to stay in business when aluminum and steel return to ’90s prices is to be the world’s largest volume producer with the thinnest margin.
But it’s always profitable to buy the right penny explorers, if you can get them cheap. Nobody ever went broke finding minerals, merely from producing metals at costs that were too high to sustain profitability in a dwindling commodities market.
Be real careful out there.
Kb
The BarkerLetter on November 27th 2007 in Commodity investing, Copper, Gold, Iron, Molybdenum, Nickel, PGMs, Steel, Zinc