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For financial professionals in Italy
February 2021
Global Perspectives Investment Viewpoints Environmental Social Governance (ESG)

Taking stock of the mining sector

  • Tal Lomnitzer, CFA
    Tal Lomnitzer, CFA
    Senior Investment Manager

Portfolio manager Tal Lomnitzer discusses the drivers of change in the mining sector and why environmental, social and governance (ESG) credentials matter in the move towards a digitised, electrified and fossil fuel-free future.

  Key takeaways:

  • Resources companies need to ensure that their planning, transparency and reporting satisfy the increasingly complex demands of capital providers to ensure that money flows to new projects.
  • As the world strives towards a digitised, electrified and fossil fuel-free future, resources have an integral and essential role to play.
  • Companies that incorporate and report on non-financial factors such as sustainability should find this beneficial when seeking development capital.

We live in strange and turbulent times. 2020 has been a humbling reminder of just how quickly our fragile world can shift. Recognition that invisible natural forces can pose indiscriminate danger to society, regardless of race, creed or country, seems to be amplifying existing societal trends, particularly the trend towards sustainability.

In a world that is increasingly sustainability-focused, and quite rightly so, there is a hidden danger that primary industries, such as resources production, fall by the wayside in the eyes of financiers. The impending European Union Green Taxonomy (a classification system for environmentally sustainable economic activities) will be an important litmus test as it attempts to define destinations for capital that are aligned with sustainable development goals. Resources companies need to ensure that their planning, transparency and reporting satisfy the increasingly complex demands of capital providers to ensure that money flows to new projects.

Iron Ore Mine Site Port Hedland Western Australia

Resources have a key role to play in sustainability

Resources provide the essential and fundamental building blocks of economic development. While demand for some commodities, such as coal and oil, seem likely to plateau and decline as the world decarbonises, demand for other commodities will likely continue to grow and even accelerate. The green tinged stimulus from Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) member governments in reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic promises a wave of investment in renewable energy which will require copper, lithium, cobalt, nickel, iron ore and silver, to mention but a few raw materials.

“As the world strives towards a digitised, electrified and fossil fuel-free future, resources have an integral and essential role to play."

When it comes to global mining finance, the availability of capital may be considered through various lenses.

Management and bank lending teams tell us that financing is very much available to bigger companies, which are ironically choosing not to access it, even at very attractive cost of capital. Big companies have repaired their balance sheets and are holding onto capital discipline to avoid causing a replay of the 2015/16 situation when their cost of financing exploded. It is tempting to conclude that a good way of getting cheap financing is not to want it! That will be of little solace to smaller companies developing new projects.

Clearly the nature of the commodity is an important determinant of the ease with which capital can be raised. Financing constraint is more evident around developing or trading some fossil fuels. Meanwhile, pure plays in other commodities like copper have been able to raise and upsize facilities, as evidenced by the likes of Freeport-McMoRan or First Quantum, retiring 2021 and 2022 maturities at attractive terms.

ESG factors are growing in importance

Single asset, pre-production companies face different pressures and a higher burden of proof that their projects work at an economic, legal, environmental and social level. ESG factors are growing in importance. In future, having a bankable feasibility study alongside government approvals and environmental permits will be just as important as they are today, but a project will also need to show its ESG credentials. Quantifiable and auditable standards on ESG parameters, similar to JORC or 43-101 reserve/resources measures, safety, anticipated emissions, Scope 1, 2, and 3 carbon emission disclosure (see glossary), a pathway to net zero emissions and adherence to international and national standards for human rights, and safe tailings (mine waste) management are all necessary commitments that should be hardwired at the inception of a new project. Junior miners – relatively new mining companies in search of natural resources, typically in the development and exploration phases of a project – that set themselves on the right path to incorporating and reporting non-financial factors should find that this will yield benefits as they seek development capital.

Sparks fly as a worker supervises the flow of hot liquid metal as it flows from a furnace at a metallurgical plant in Norilsk, Russia. Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg

Country and risk exposure are real challenges for junior miners taking on big development and exploration projects in tough jurisdictions.

Finding money to spend between discovery and the bankable feasibility study can be tough once the excitement of blue-sky resource growth has subsided. However, it is at this stage that we would encourage companies to think creatively. In these cases, alternative financing may be needed, such as minority stake sales to large companies or prepays/offtakes. We believe that we will see more big miners get involved for a small initial joint venture stake, with options to increase based on milestones. We would prefer to see this happen at the project level, rather than the corporate level. Streaming is an increasingly common form of raising capital, but one that we would consider carefully unless it has re-purchase provisions.

Discipline required when financing projects

When it comes to mining finance, one should be careful what one wishes for. Whilst we all want good projects to attract finance, it is important to recognise that the point at which the mining industry becomes too easily financeable is usually the point at which commodity prices start to wobble. New supply often means lower prices in the future for commodities – the lithium boom of 2014-2018 and subsequent bust is a recent reminder. Consider the difference between an industry like technology, where more financing can create its own demand by creating products people did not know they needed, against mining, which relies largely on derived demand.

Rio Tinto - Autonomous Haulage Trucks, West Angelas minesite; credit Christian Sprogoe Photography

Financing does not create new demand. It is incumbent upon the industry to maintain discipline when financing is freely available, offering forward only the best projects and avoiding the temptations of the past to overbuild because finance is available. Unfortunately, this is a lesson too often forgotten, which only serves to highlight once again the importance of a project’s longevity and low operating costs if it is to survive through the cycles.

Interestingly, whilst there is growing availability of capital for exploration in mining, and we have not yet seen interest from equity providers to fund large development projects, it may well be that the best way for a junior to proceed is to partner up with a senior company with deep pockets, but a skinny pipeline of new projects. By working together there is a greater chance of ensuring that the right projects come to market at the right time, thereby avoiding the sins of the past. It may be slower, but as the African proverb goes, ‘if you want to go fast, go alone, if you want to go far, go together’.

First published in Mining Journal Intelligence’s Global Finance Report 2021. Reproduced here with permission.

Glossary:
JORC: The Australasian Joint Ore Reserves Committee (JORC) code sets minimum standards for the reporting of exploration results, mineral resources and ore reserves.

43-101: a national instrument for the standards of disclosure for mineral projects in Canada.

Scope 1 emissions: direct carbon emissions from a company’s owned or controlled sources.

Scope 2 emissions: indirect emissions from the generation of a company’s purchased electricity, steam, heating and cooling.

Scope 3 emissions: all other indirect emissions that occur in a company’s value chain.

These are the views of the author at the time of publication and may differ from the views of other individuals/teams at Janus Henderson Investors. Any securities, funds, sectors and indices mentioned within this article do not constitute or form part of any offer or solicitation to buy or sell them.

 

Past performance does not predict future returns. The value of an investment and the income from it can fall as well as rise and you may not get back the amount originally invested.

 

The information in this article does not qualify as an investment recommendation.

 

Marketing Communication.

 

Glossary

 

 

 

Important information

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Horizon Responsible Resources Fund
The Janus Henderson Horizon Fund (the “Fund”) is a Luxembourg SICAV incorporated on 30 May 1985, managed by Henderson Management S.A. Henderson Management SA may decide to terminate the marketing arrangements of this Collective Investment Scheme in accordance with the appropriate regulation. This is a marketing communication. Please refer to the prospectus of the UCITS and to the KIID before making any final investment decisions.
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