Why SA-listed gold has lost its sheen

by Nicholas Hops | 31,Aug,2023 | Coronation Fund Managers, Investments, Q3 2023

Nicholas Hops, Head of Equity Research, Coronation Fund Managers

In July 2021, we wrote about the gold position that was held across many of Coronation’s client portfolios. A year later, we sold down the bulk of this position to increase our exposure to well-priced global equities. Up until the beginning of November 2022, this proved to be the right decision. However, soon after, gold shares rallied, indicating that we had sold too early. Nonetheless, we think that the rally has been meaningfully overdone and we don’t see value in JSE-listed gold equities at these levels.

 

In the year and a half that we owned the gold shares, we saw a flat but still high gold price and a re-rating of the global gold sector with all multiples rising. After Russia invaded Ukraine, the gold price spiked to $2 050/oz, and the multiples of South African (SA) gold stocks increased at a greater rate than their global peers. We used this opportunity to begin lowering our position on the resultant reduced margin of safety. We reallocated much of the capital into select global equities, which had become attractively priced.

War, policy and central bank buying boost appeal

Fast forward a year to the present, and we have had an even more extended gold bull run than we initially anticipated, despite a 21% pull back in the second half of 2022 to $1 622/oz. The impact of Russia’s war and Western stimulus pushed inflation upwards in 2022, which, when combined with several US bank failures in 2023, drove nominal gold prices near to all-time highs at $2 062/oz. Coronation clients have benefited from our exposure to global shares, which have performed well in this period, but would have benefited even more had we remained invested in gold equities.

In addition to continued high inflation and the US bank failures, we have seen a material increase in central bank buying of gold in the last 12 months. China has been the primary driver here and helped to drive total central bank purchases up to their highest level in decades. Central bank purchases equalled 24% of global gold demand in 2022 and this has continued at north of 20% in 2023 thus far. This is double the c.10% run rate from 2010 to 2021 and has been a key driver of the gold price in the short term. It is plausible that China will continue to buy gold for their reserves, and this could keep prices high versus history. Our normal gold price of $1 700 is 36% above the 30-year real average and c.10% below elevated spot prices. We estimate there is c.20% downside in both AngloGold and Gold Fields, which compares very unfavourably to cheap equity markets.

Running to stand still

Our initial conviction that the multiples must narrow was due to an improved operational outlook at AngloGold and Gold Fields versus their global peers, which had not been reflected in their ratings. Part of this thesis proved right, but the operational improvements at AngloGold have not endured and we have seen a large pickup in mergers and acquisitions at both companies. The tendency for gold companies to make acquisitions when gold prices and cash flows are good has stuck through this cycle and results in poor shareholder returns over time. Given the shorter life nature of gold ore bodies in general, we view all capital expenditure and acquisition spend as essential to maintaining group volumes. The larger a company is, the faster it needs to run on the treadmill to stand still.

 

 

What we find unique about this more recent rally is that it has been almost entirely limited to the SA gold shares. Part of our initial investment case was the narrowing of the multiples gap between AngloGold and Gold Fields and their global peers due to an improved operational outlook. The enterprise value/earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation multiple discount peaked at 50% in 2020 and narrowed to 20% in March 2022, a level we felt more accurately reflected the higher cost and shorter life portfolios of AngloGold and Gold Fields.

 In June 2023, we have since seen that discount narrow to 14.5%, the lowest since 2007.  The “gap” between their combined all-in sustaining cost and their global peers has increased to the highest in five years, with all the deterioration being driven by AngloGold. Gold Fields’ operational performance has been better than AngloGold’s, but a massive increase in attempted and successful mergers and acquisitions detracts strongly from this. Interestingly, the relative multiples of both entities have moved in lockstep, despite Gold Fields’ better operational performance.

Despite a deterioration in operating performance and capital allocation, the SA gold stocks have re-rated up to the smallest discount to their global peers since 2007. Given a strong increase in the gold price this year we have seen earnings estimates increase on top of this re-rating; sending the share prices of both companies close to all-time highs. We believe a key driver of the share prices versus their global peers has been large buying from SA index tracking investors after both shares saw their index weightings increase in March on the back of changes implemented by the JSE.

These changes saw their weightings in the Capped Swix Index increase from 3.58% to 5.33% towards the end of March. A sharply rising gold price and a much bigger index weighting drew in a lot of buyers to AngloGold and Gold Fields and have now pushed the shares well above our assessment of their fair values.

AngloGold and Gold Fields are shorter life and higher cost assets than their peers and we believe the current multiples they trade on are too generous. The gold price has seen the benefit of several tailwinds in the last few years, which could abate going forward, with the key unknown being central bank buying of the metal.

After the recent rally, we find the JSE-listed gold shares even more overvalued than they were before. With near record upside on offer across our SA equity portfolios and attractive opportunities in global markets, we feel that the current risk/reward on offer in SA gold equities is not in our favour and hold no position in either AngloGold or Gold Fields.

Nicholas Hops
Head of Equity Research, at Coronation Fund Managers | + posts