Gold Stocks Anticipating Blockbuster Earnings Amidst Record Gold Prices

 | Feb 09, 2024 02:15PM ET

The gold stocks’ latest earnings season is nearing, and it should prove awesome.  Plenty of the major gold miners were forecasting lower costs heading into year-end, which boost profits.  Amplifying them much more, last quarter gold achieved its first record closes in several years.  So this sector is preparing to report what will likely prove some of its fattest earnings ever, which ought to fuel some interest in gold stocks.

For thirty quarters in a row now, I’ve painstakingly analyzed the latest results reported by GDX’s major gold miners.  This VanEck Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDX) dominates this sector, commanding 30.5x the assets of its next-largest 1x-long major-gold-miners-ETF competitor!  Right after every earnings season, I dig into the latest quarterly reports from GDX’s 25 largest component stocks including the world’s biggest gold miners.

Interestingly Q4 data is the most challenging to analyze.  Most gold miners operate on calendar years, so some companies simply report full-year results lumping in Q4.  That leaves considerably-less quarterly detail than normal non-year-ending quarters.  While some Q4 numbers can be backed out using Q3 year-to-date ones, not all can.  So from a sector level, Q4 results are less granular than Q1, Q2, and Q3 ones.

Further complicating Q4 analyses, the regulatory filing deadlines after year-ending quarters run much later.  Annual reports are way longer and require much more effort to prepare than quarterly ones.  In the US, publicly-traded companies have to file 10-Q quarterlies with the SEC by 40 days after quarter-ends.  But the deadline for full 10-K annuals extends to 60 days, so many gold miners report in late February.

These reporting deadlines are even looser in Canada, the epicenter of the gold-stock universe.  Normal quarterly reports for larger gold miners are due 45 days after quarter-ends, but annual deadlines extend way out to 90 days!  So plenty of Canadian gold miners don’t report Q4 results until late March.  And on Canadian venture stock exchanges where smaller gold miners list, those deadlines are 60 days and 120 days.

So attaining a largely-complete picture on Q4 gold-stock sector results requires waiting well into March, when Q1 is almost over!  As a speculator and investor I’ve always thought it frustrating to delay that long.  I usually do my Q4 analytical work in March, rather than in the second months after normal quarter-ends.  But after many years of digging into these quarterly and annual reports, some key results are predictable.

While gold mining is complex and challenging, gold-mining earnings are fairly simple.  Profits are just the difference between prevailing gold prices and the costs of producing gold.  So a great proxy for sector earnings subtracts the GDX-top-25 gold miners’ average all-in sustaining costs from quarterly-average gold prices.  That reveals the major gold miners’ collective profits per ounce, illuminating key earnings trends.

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While the cost side of this equation requires some estimates, gold prices don’t.  In Q4’23, gold averaged $1,976 on close.  That surged a big 14.2% year-over-year, and was just a hair under the all-time record of $1,978 from Q2’23!  So last quarter gold was trading at record levels, and achieved its first new record closes in 3.3 years.  That was no fluke either, with Q1’24 shattering that averaging $2,031 quarter-to-date.

Gold being 14% higher last quarter doesn’t just make for 14%-better earnings, as gold-mining profits leverage higher gold prices.  A year ago in Q4’22, the GDX-top-25 gold stocks averaged $1,267 AISCs while gold averaged $1,731.  That made for implied unit profits of $463 per ounce, about one-fourth up into the past 30 quarters’ range.  If AISCs stayed flat and gold rallied 14%, earnings would surge way more.

Q4’23’s $1,976 average gold prices less $1,267 AISCs would yield $709 in unit profits, rocketing up 53.0% YoY!  The gold miners’ big profits leverage to their metal is a primary ingredient in their allure.  When gold is powering higher on balance, gold-stock earnings and stock prices usually soar.  So mining costs aside, last quarter’s near-record gold prices alone greatly boosted profitability.  Q4 results will look fantastic.

Most of the major gold miners provide all-in-sustaining-cost guidance, target ranges where they expect AISCs to shake out.  Full-year guidances are usually given early in Q1s, then sometimes later refined after Q2 or Q3 results if production is better or worse than expected.  Naturally Q3 guidances for any particular year are the most-accurate, as gold miners have three established quarters of production to predict from.

In their latest Q3’23 results, the GDX-top-25 gold miners averaged midpoint full-year-2023 AISC guides of $1,304 per ounce.  That’s 2.9% higher than Q4’22’s, and in-line with Q3’23’s $1,304.  But it’s important to realize that $1,304 is a full-year forecast.  During 2023’s first three quarters, the major gold miners’ AISCs averaged $1,313, $1,380, and $1,304 per ounce.  Average those, and they ran about $1,332 year-to-date in Q3.

To achieve that $1,304 average full-year midpoint guidance, Q4 AISCs have to drop low enough to offset 2023’s first two quarters’ higher levels.  The number that makes that work is way down at $1,220 per ounce!  I suspect that is a bit too optimistic, but the gold miners themselves are collectively predicting that Q4 will see last year’s lowest AISCs.  $1,220 would prove their best quarterly average since back in Q4’21.

That’s not a big stretch, as that would merely make for a 3.7%-YoY decline from Q4’22’s $1,267.  In Q3’23, the major gold miners’ average AISCs plunged 7.2% YoY to $1,304.  But for conservatism’s sake, let’s assume the GDX-top-25 AISCs last quarter will shake out around $1,275.  That would make for a slight 0.6%-YoY rise, and leave full-year all-in sustaining costs near $1,318.  That really portends fat profits.

Last quarter’s $1,976 average gold price less $1,275 projected AISCs yields implied unit earnings of $701 per ounce.  That would soar 51.3% YoY from Q4’22’s $463, and would prove the most-profitable quarter for major gold miners as a sector since Q2’21.  That would also be over 2/3rds up into the GDX top 25’s 30-quarter range of per-ounce earnings.  2020 saw bigger profits before inflation started raging out of control.

That year GDX-top-25 AISCs averaged just $1,013, which was still much higher than all the years before.  While there are some exceptional low-cost gold mines in the world, overall AISCs will never retreat back to pre-inflation levels.  In just 25.5 months from February 2020 just before the pandemic-lockdown stock panic to April 2022, the Fed ballooned its balance sheet or the US monetary base by 115.6% or $4,807b!

As of last week the Fed’s balance sheet still remains 83.5% or $3,471b higher than pre-pandemic levels!  And other major central banks followed suit in redlining their monetary printing presses in recent years.  So with global money supplies far higher, general price levels including mining costs will never return to where they were.  But that enormous monetary inflation baked into the world economy is very bullish for gold.

Global gold prices will almost certainly eventually normalize at levels reflecting this crazy money-supply growth.  Gold averaged $1,577 in January and February 2020 before central banks panicked.  Climbing 80% from there just to reflect the Fed’s huge dollar inflation alone not even considering the rest of the world’s would catapult gold near $2,839.  Gold ought to continue climbing faster than AISCs in coming years.

With the major gold miners set to reveal blockbuster results in coming weeks, will traders care?  Depends on these markets.  Despite gold’s near-record Q4’23 and record-shattering Q1’24 so far, speculators and investors aren’t paying attention.  The gold stocks continue to languish well out of favor, nowhere near reflecting today’s high prevailing gold prices.  GDX has mostly drifted sideways on balance in recent months.