To:Dale Schwartzenhauer who wrote (293)
From: mikesloan Tuesday, Jul 8, 1997 12:23 AM
Respond to of 80032
Down, down she goes. Where she stops nobody knows.
Tuesday, July 8, 1997
Millions wiped off gold stocks
Producers struggle to put best possible face on bullion's collapse as they see
share prices take their second-biggest shellacking since the market crash of
October 1987
By PAUL BAGNELL
Mining Reporter The Financial Post
The screws turned tighter on the world's high-cost gold producers yesterday as the price of bullion
collapsed dramatically again.
The price of an ounce of gold plunged US$6.10 in New York, closing at US$318.10, its lowest in
12 years.
One major gold producer, Pegasus Gold Inc. of Spokane, Wash., said it would consider delaying
construction of new mine projects if current gold prices last for several months.
Analysts said they believe other companies with higher-than-average production costs are
considering similar moves.
"They will be taking serious looks at their high-cost mines," said Marc Cohen, a gold analyst at
PaineWebber in New York.
Gold has tumbled US$13.20 from US$331.30 an ounce at Wednesday's close. On Thursday
Australia's central bank revealed it had sold 167 tonnes of gold in the past six months. The news
was unexpected and raised fears that other central banks might sell gold soon.
Since Wednesday's close, the Toronto Stock Exchange's gold and precious metals subindex has
posted a 9.97% decline, wiping millions off the value of gold companies' stocks.
Some fundamental analysts are predicting the gold price may fall as low as US$280, said Walter
Baici, a gold trader with Bank of Nova Scotia in Toronto.
The Toronto Stock Exchange's gold and precious minerals subindex declined by 4.14%
yesterday.
Gold producers scrambled to put the best face possible on the collapsing gold price, detailing the
extent of their hedged gold sales to lock in higher prices.
Others pointed to new, lower-cost gold mines soon to begin production.
The four highest-cost gold producers in North America are Getchell Gold Corp., Royal Oak
Mines Ltd., Kinross Gold Corp. and Pegasus Gold.
Royal Oak chief executive Margaret Witte said the company is now relying on the high price of
copper to make its new Kemess mine profitable.
The British Columbia mine will produce both gold and copper, and copper prices have increased
sharply this year.
In 1996, Royal Oak took writedowns of $37.6 million on the closure of its Hope Brook mine in
Newfoundland and reduced reserves at its Colomac operation in the Northwest Territories. But
Witte said the company is not considering further production curtailments.
Royal Oak reported an average cost of production of US$372 an ounce of gold in the first
quarter.
It has contracts to sell all of this year's production at US$395 an ounce, but has no hedged gold
sales for 1998 or beyond.
"We're disappointed in the panic selling" in the gold market, Witte said. "And that's what a lot of it
is."
But lower gold prices create bargains for companies looking to make acquisitions, she said. Royal
Oak is a potential buyer of gold assets, she said.
Pegasus, meanwhile, has forward sales accounting for 80% of its 1997 production at an average
of US$431, spokesman John Pearson said.
The company's average cash production cost this year is expected to be US$300 an ounce.
Its hedged sales stretch to 2000, Pearson said, and about 18% of the company's proven gold
reserves of 6.5 million ounces is committed under forward sales contracts.
If the low gold price persists, Pearson said, Pegasus will have to consider further delaying
construction of the Zortman extension project in Montana and Pullalli mine in Chile. Both have
already been postponed once because of weak gold markets.
At Kinross, spokesman Gordon McCreary said the company has lined up forward sales for 20%
to 25% of this year's gold production at US$380 or more. Further hedging for smaller portions of
production continues for five years.
Canada's two gold giants, Barrick Gold Corp. and Placer Dome Inc., were both quick to make
their hedged positions known yesterday.
Barrick chairman Peter Munk said his company will sell all its gold from now to 2000 at a
minimum US$420 an ounce. The company has an average cost of US$200 an ounce.
Placer spokesman Hugh Leggatt said Placer has contracts to sell more than 30% of its gold
production until 2001 at US$465 or more.
Nevertheless, shares of both Barrick and Placer both hit 52-week lows yesterday.
Placer shares (PDG/TSE) dropped $1.20 to $19.25 on volume of 5.3 million shares.
Barrick shares (ABX/TSE) closed down 40› at $27.80 on trading of 4.6 million shares.
Among other gold stocks, Pegasus (PGU/TSE) rose 20› to $7.80, Royal Oak (RYO/TSE) fell
21› to $2.65 and Kinross (K/TSE) lost 55› to $5.10. The closes for Royal Oak and Kinross are
52-week lows.
To:mikesloan who wrote (301)
From: John Barendrecht Tuesday, Jul 8, 1997 12:43 AM
Respond to of 80032
TORONTO STOCKS FALL AMID DECLINING GOLDS
ÿTORONTO (Reuter) - Declining gold issues drove Toronto's key stock index sharply lower Monday, as sinking bullion prices slashed 4.1 percent from the value of Toronto's influential golds group.
ÿ The Toronto Stock Exchange's 300 Composite Index dropped 56.32 points to close at 6529.12.
ÿ New York's closely watched Comex price ended at 12-year lows as it fell $6.20 to $319, dragging Canada's two largest gold mining firms to 52-week lows.
ÿ "It's having its impact. Barrick (Gold Corp.) is down and Placer (Dome Inc.) is down," said Montreal-based analyst Bill Ram.
ÿ Barrick, the world's third largest gold producer, slipped 0.40 to 27.80 in heavy trading of more than 4.7 million shares, while Placer topped actives at 5.3 million shares and dropped 1.20 to 19.25.
ÿ The precious metals sector makes up 8.4 percent of Toronto's 300 index and is the fifth most heavily weighted group.
ÿ Volume was heavy at 97 million shares worth C$1.7 billion ($1.2 billion).
ÿ All but two of Toronto's 14 sub-indexes slid sharply. The two gainers were retail and pipelines, while losing sectors included base metals, utilities and consumer products.
ÿ Declining issues beat advancers 615 to 386, with 274 issues flat.
ÿ Getchell Gold Corp. was among other slumping miners, losing 6.30 or 13 percent of its value to 41.70 in light trading. Franco-Nevada Mining Corp Ltd. lost 4.90 to 62.
ÿ Restaurant chain operator Grandma Lee's Inc. rose 61/2 cents to 0.34 in brisk trading after releasing more information about its new strategies.
http://www.siliconinvestor.com/stocktalk/msg.gsp?msgid=1718080
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