Gold Juniors’ Q2’16 Fundamentals

 | Aug 28, 2016 04:02AM ET

The junior gold miners and explorers have soared dramatically in an amazing year, before falling hard this week. This sharp correction is doing its job in rebalancing bull-market sentiment, crushing greed and leaving traders wary of this sector. But gold juniors’ recently-released second-quarter financial and operational results prove their fundamentals are strengthening dramatically, a very bullish omen for stock prices.

The junior gold stocks are rightfully considered the Wild West of the gold sector. Most of the hundreds and hundreds of these small companies won’t prove successful. They won’t be able to secure funding to explore sufficiently, won’t be fortunate enough to find an economic deposit of gold to mine, or won’t be able to make the herculean leap from explorer to miner. The odds are stacked heavily against the gold juniors.

Nevertheless, the elite small gold explorers and miners able to overcome and grow their businesses to larger scales will see truly-enormous stock-price gains. The gold juniors are exceedingly important for the entire gold-mining industry, since they feed the critical gold-supply pipeline with new deposits and mines to offset the inexorable industry-wide depletion of current operations. Success here is radically rewarded.

Many of the world’s best junior gold miners and explorers are included in the GDXJ VanEck Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDX), this sector’s leading benchmark. GDXJ began trading in November 2009, and is the world’s second-largest gold-stock ETF after its big brother GDX which tracks larger gold miners. As of the middle of this week, GDXJ’s net assets ran about half of GDX’s. This testifies to junior golds’ popularity.

And it’s easy to understand why in 2016. Between gold stocks’ fundamentally-absurd 13.5-year secular lows in mid-January and last week, VanEck Vectors Junior Gold Miners (NYSE:GDXJ) blasted 202.5% higher in just 7.0 months! While I don’t have universal ETF data, I’d be shocked if any other sizable ETF in all the markets even came remotely close. For comparison, over essentially that same span GDX “only” soared 151.2%. The juniors’ gains have been epic.

But in the single trading week since GDXJ’s dazzling new bull high, this ETF has plunged 14.6% as of this Wednesday which is the data cutoff for this essay. Seeing over 1/7th of the value of even these elite juniors included in GDXJ lopped off in a handful of trading days has really unsettled investors. But it certainly shouldn’t have. Gold stocks are a volatile sector, where sharp bull-market corrections are common.

This important sentiment-rebalancing phenomenon necessary to ensure healthy and long-lasting bull markets last happened in May, which wasn’t too long ago. GDXJ dropped 14.6% in a month, which also served to eradicate greed while breeding serious pessimism. Yet out of those very lows, GDXJ would surge another 57.2% higher by mid-August. That bucked gold stocks’ summer-doldrums downside risks.

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Now normally during major mid-bull corrections, investors assume selloffs driven purely by sentiment must be fundamentally justified. If the junior golds are falling, surely it’s because their costs are rising and operating profits are falling. But that’s rarely true. Corrections are triggered when greed grows too excessive. That enthusiasm sucks in all near-term buyers leaving only sellers, spawning sharp selloffs.

With this newest correction underway, we have the great benefit of the junior gold miners and explorers just finishing reporting their Q2’16 results. Companies trading in the US and Canada are required by their securities regulators to file quarterly reports four times a year. These reports are generally due 45 calendar days after quarter-ends, meaning mid-August. So the latest junior-gold fundamentals are just available.

This week I dug through the new second-quarter reports for GDXJ’s top 34 component companies. That arbitrary number happens to fit neatly into the tables below. While GDXJ held a whopping 47 different stocks as of the middle of this week, the top 34 account for a commanding 93.1% of its total weighting. They include many of the best junior gold miners and explorers in the business, a great cross section.

Each quarter I look at these companies’ 10-Qs filed with the SEC, or the equivalents for Canadian and Australian companies. I feed a bunch of data into a spreadsheet to help me better understand how the individual companies and junior golds as a whole are faring. The tables below summarize some of the key data, and prove that gold juniors’ fundamentals are strong and improving rapidly. This is very bullish.

The initial columns show each top GDXJ component’s stock symbol, its exchange traded on, its current weighting within GDXJ, and its market capitalization. GDXJ is generally market-capitalization weighted, which is the most logical way to construct ETFs for any sector. That’s followed by trailing-twelve-month price-to-earnings ratios, which are left blank when companies are still operating at an accounting loss.

Next comes the junior gold miners’ costs, the dominant factor affecting their profitability. Both the cash costs per ounce and all-in sustaining costs per ounce are included, along with the full-year-2016 projections for AISC if provided. Then comes cash on hand at the end of Q2’16, its percentage of each GDXJ component’s market capitalization, and the cash flows generated from operations in the second quarter.

Finally each company’s quarterly gold production is included. Somewhat oddly, GDXJ’s managers have chosen to include plenty of the large silver miners in their “Junior Gold Miners ETF”. With so many gold juniors to choose from, this dilution of focus seems unnecessary. So for the large silver miners in GDXJ, I listed their gold-only production whenever provided. No production means a company is an explorer.

Despite this past week’s sharp bull-market correction, the junior gold stocks are thriving fundamentally. Their costs are stable or improving, while their operating cash flows are soaring. Investors who loved the junior golds a couple weeks ago ought to be scrambling to buy aggressively now that their stocks are considerably cheaper. Their rapidly-improving fundamentals reveal nothing at all to be concerned about.