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mining

Mining stocks’ rally postpones industry restructuring

Investors in mining stocks could face years of weak returns as a rally in share and industrial metals prices eases pressure on companies to restructure and curb oversupply.
The mining sector is known for over-investment in boom times and crashes when demand weakens as economies slow, but many companies say they have learnt lessons and are making efforts to reduce debt and control spending.
Mining stocks have more than doubled since multi-year lows touched in January, a rebound analysts link to cheap cash from Chinese financial stimulus rather than a fundamental increase in demand for industrial materials.
The rally has given companies with fragile balance sheets a reprieve from the bankruptcies and mergers analysts say are needed to adapt to lower demand.
This could extend the stagnation as production at weaker firms limps along, adding to inventories. “We see significant excess capacity in the (mining) industry which needs to be reduced before the fundamentals will improve, and this could easily take three years.
We are therefore taking a cautious view towards the industry,” said Lewis Grant, a senior portfolio manager at Hermes Investment Management.
He said he was particularly wary of smaller firms and drawn towards miners with exposure to gold, such as Randgold Resources, as gold is seen as safe-haven investment.
Commodity markets boomed shortly after the millennium, driven by demand from China, the world’s biggest raw materials market.
They started to falter early in 2011, led by copper after it became clear Chinese consumption was not as great as previously thought.
In January this year, at the height of concerns about Chinese demand and weak balance sheets, the market capitalisation of mining firms fell to less than $300bn, a 75% fall from $1.1tn in March 2011.
It has since risen to $480bn, according to the MSCI global mining index.
Mining companies, including Glencore, BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Anglo American, have all announced asset sales and said they are focused on lowering costs.
But the sales are taking time and in some cases, industrial sources say mining assets have been taken off the market.
Glencore has put on hold a copper mine sale, people familiar with the matter said. A company spokesman last week declined to comment, but Glencore has repeatedly said its policy is to only sell if it can achieve the right price.
“If we had January-like conditions for six months, it would have gone a long way to cleaning up excess supply in commodities like iron ore, but China stimulus means we’re back to where we started,” Richard Knights, analyst at investment bank Liberum Capital, said.
A surplus of iron ore, used to make steel for buildings and infrastructure, is expected to persist for the foreseeable future because the market is flooded and yet firms are still producing more, analysts say. As the impact of Chinese stimulus has waned, they have also become bearish about copper, used as a conductor for electricity and as a building material.
“For a new commodity bull rally to happen, you need to see further capitulation and to see further tightening of the belts for some of these companies,” David Neuhauser, managing director at US hedge fund Livermore Partners, said.
Livermore says it owns Glencore shares and has sold short Anglo American. Glencore, along with Anglo American, faces the biggest debt burden of the major miners, analysts say, and they have mooted Anglo American as a potential takeover target.
Firms with less debt, notably Rio Tinto, which could seek to expand, are also wary of paying too much for other companies.
Rio Tinto spent $38bn on Alcan in 2007 at the top of the commodities boom in a deal viewed by analysts as the most calamitous the sector has seen.
As the first mining company to take a major hit from a slowing market, Rio was forced to reform and its new CEO Jean-Sebastien Jacques, who took over at the start of July, said this month that maintaining a strong balance sheet was a priority in such a capital-intensive sector.
The firm has outlined a moderate capital expenditure plan of less than $4bn this year, $5bn for next year and $5.5 for 2018, compared with $17.4bn in 2012 when adding to production was all the rage.

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