Peak Gold!
A Primer on the Economics of Gold
Mining, Part Five
Antal E. Fekete
Gold Standard University Live
Oct 4, 2007
Barrick Execs Continue to Exercise
Options and Sell Shares
In Part Four I revealed that
when it comes to owning Barrick shares, the two top Barrick executives,
CEO Greg Wilkins and CFO Jamie Sokalsky have voted with their
feet. In retrospect it looks more like a stampede of insiders
out of Barrick shares and options.
As reported by the Canadian
newspaper National Post on September 21 and 25, Barrick executive
vice president Alexander Davidson exercised 25,000 options for
company shares at $23.85 each on Sept. 18 and then sold these
shares for $39 each the same day. Davidson exercised 5,600 more
options at the same price on Sept. 20, then sold the shares.
He exercised another 19,400 options at the same price the following
day, then sold the shares for $41 each.
Patrick Carver, executive vice
president and general counsel at Barrick exercised 12,100 options
at $29.60 on Sept. 18, then sold these shares for prices ranging
from $39.35 to $39.41 the same day. He exercised another 12,000
options at $29.60 on Sept. 20, then sold these shares for $40.30
each the same day.
Peter Kniver, executive vice
president and COO, exercised 40,000 options for Barrick shares
at $23.80 each on Sept.21, then sold these shares the same day
for prices ranging from $40.26 to $40.32.
Executive vice president and
CFO Jamie Sokalsky exercised 49,100 options at $30,70 each on
Sept. 19, then sold these shares the same day for prices ranging
from $39.45 to $39.61. This is in addition to selling 135,000
shares between Sept. 1 and 14 as mentioned in Part 4 of this
series. Many others at Barrick have exercised options and sold
company shares. The National Post comments:
"Looking for someone to
pick up the tab for a night on town? Well, you might want to
track down one of the 28 executives, directors and/or officers
at Barrick who since Sept. 1, 2007 have exercised and sold more
than 1.2 million options for company shares. Consider the 420,050
options that were exercised and then sold in four days, from
Sept. 10 to Sept. 14. They generated $3,254,651 plus $1,439,812
in total profits for the 15 Barrick officers who performed these
transactions. That's one helluva dinner for starters."
More pertinently I ask the
question: what's the rush to get rid of Barrick shares? What
is it that insiders do know but shareholders may not?
Barrick throws in the towel
It could have very well been
the impending bombshell timed to explode on September 28 when
Barrick CEO Greg Wilkins was to announce that the company "has
no plans to return to the futures markets to hedge its gold production".
This amazing announcement is in my opinion nothing short of an
admission of guilt. Barrick's hedging policy has caused a financial
disaster that was perfectly foreseeable and avoidable. Barrick
executives have been warned that their so-called hedge-plan was
fraudulent and involved the company with unacceptable risks.
I told CFO Sokalsky in person about the errors of his ways already
ten years ago. My 50-page memorandum Gold Mining and Hedging
- Will hedging kill the goose laying the golden egg? that
I prepared for Barrick executives is in the public domain. Ferdinand
Lips in his book Gold Wars quotes extensively from it.
Shareholders would be perfectly
justified in launching class action suits against Barrick executives.
Insiders are well aware of this. Hence the spectacular stampede
to dump Barrick shares that may have their origin in illegally
paid bonuses. Why, these bonuses could possibly represent paper
profits rather than earned profits. It is criminally
fraudulent to pay yourself a bonus out of paper profits. The
contingent liability encumbering paper profits could turn into
real losses for which the funds paid out in bonuses should have
served as cover. Apparently this is what happened to Barrick:
the rising gold price made paper profits from Barrick's "hedges"
evaporate while turning all remaining "hedges" into
a loss-maker. Millions of dollars that Barrick executives have
recently pocketed from bonuses could conceivably be part of the
cover for losses embodied by the 9_ million ounces of "hedges"
under water.
It is remarkable and noteworthy
that CFO Sokalsky has got off from his high horse. He is no longer
touting his so-called hedge plan that involved using paper profits
for the purposes of window-dressing operational profits. Quite
possibly company counsels have warned him that such a tactic
may be deemed illegal and actionable by shareholders.
As reported by Reuters quoting
an interview on CNBC, on Friday, September 28 company president
Wilkins announced the end of the saga of "hedging"
in gold mining. He still appeared to be defending the practice
by promising that the company is going to continue to hedge its
copper production. The red herring of copper hedging will lull
nobody into believing that the discontinued gold hedging strategy
was unobjectionable from the legal point of view. The objection
is not against the use of the futures markets in hedging;
it is against the practice of selling leased metal. There
is no lease market for copper so Barrick cannot sell leased copper.
As this series Peak Gold!,
a primer on the economics of gold mining, has set out to show,
the economics of copper mining is as different from that of gold
mining as night is different from day, on account of the different
behavior of the underlying marginal utilities (see below).
Be that as it may, Barrick
has thrown in the towel. Truth has won over falsehood. President
Wilkins said in the interview: "Frankly, our investors are
really looking to benefit from the upside of gold and we share
that point of view." He did not explain why it took him
so long to come around to honoring the wishes of shareholders,
nor did he say what other criteria than serving the interest
of shareholders may guide his actions. Deafening silence surrounds
the question what he is planning to do with the 9_ million ounces
worth of "hedges", now deeply under water as a direct
result of the foolish hedging policies of management, and a potential
source of further horrendous losses in case the price of gold
advances further.
The fact is that Barrick is
haemorrhaging gold, and the executives are trying to cover it
up. Rome is burning and Nero fiddles on the roof. A few days
earlier, at the Denver Gold Group Forum, Wilkins talked to the
assembled mining experts complaining about the high price of
truck tires explaining how he was going to fix the problem. Not
one word was said about the 9_ million ounces of "hedges"
under water, or how they can be lifted before they do further
damage to the company and its shareholders. The CEO talks about
building a truck tire factory when the gold mine is on fire.
Perhaps, if he put out the fire first, then he could afford to
pay the going price for truck tires.
Of course, he must have noted
that "hedging was practically anathema" at the Forum,
as niftily put by Citigroup analyst John Hill. Was Wilkins just
trying to be considerate in avoiding an unpleasant subject? The
gold price reacted to the news that Barrick has thrown in the
towel by jumping almost $10 to $744, a 28-year high. That cost
the company and its shareholders a cool 95 million dollars.
Still, Barrick shareholders
have every reason to celebrate. I take this opportunity to congratulate
them upon their victory over a fossilized management. I pledge
my further support to them with my pen. I shall provide a post
mortem on Barrick's unilateral hedging strategy. I have changed
the subtitle of this series to: A Primer on the Economics
of Gold Mining, to indicate that a new era has started in
the history of gold mining. The mindless rush of gold mining
companies to play "follow the leader" is over. I could
not find anybody willing to defend Barrick's indefensible strategy
of unilateral hedging. This strategy has been thrown where it
belongs: to the garbage dump of history. Make no mistake about
it: this was the greatest mining disaster in the history of
gold mining.
Two-legged straddles
I shall now explain what Barrick
has done wrong, and how it should have proceeded instead. What
I have to say is basically no different from what I told Sokalsky
ten years ago. Selling gold futures at price spikes in excess
of annual output is no hedging, it is naked forward selling.
As events have proved, I was right: naked short selling is a
foolish strategy as it can make even the #1 gold miner suffer,
not just a loss of face, but also the loss of billions of dollars.
Consider two hypothetical gold
mines, AXY and XAB. Compare their operations which are very similar
yet fundamentally different. Both mines work with two-legged
straddles having a short and a long leg. With their short legs
they both enter the gold futures market. The difference is in
where they put the long leg. I wish to emphasise that this example
is schematic, that is, oversimplified for easier comprehension.
The actual situation is considerably more complicated, but simplifying
it does not affect the underlying principle. AXY enters the long
leg of its straddle into the bond market; XAB keeps the long
leg anchored in the gold mine itself.
From this it should already
be clear that XAB's are true hedges in the sense that they are
rooted in mining. By contrast, AXY's hedges are false. The gold
mine has been turned into a hedge fund. At any rate, its "hedges"
have nothing to do with gold production. AXY needs gold only
as a source of cheap financing for its gambling ventures.
Fraudulent hedging
Suppose there is a $10 upwards
spike in the gold price. AXY reacts by selling 100 gold futures
contracts. In doing so it locks in a selling price for gold,
gold that it arranges to borrow from a bullion bank at 1 percent
per annum interest, in order to sell it and invest the proceeds
at 6 percent in the bond market for a net income of 5 percent
per annum. AXY does not think that it is in any danger on account
of a possible advance in the gold price. "What goes up must
come down". In any case it reasons that the gold sold forward
is in hand: it can be scooped up from its mines at any time.
But as we have seen in Part Three, this is a fundamental mistake.
AXY does not have the gold in hand: it only has a bird in the
bush. The hedge is fraudulent because the 5 percent net interest
income is commingled with operative profits, disregarding the
contingent liability that AXY still has on its open "hedges".
As we have observed, it is criminally fraudulent to represent
paper profits as earned profits.
True hedging
The other gold mine XAB reacts
the same way to the initial $10 upwards spike in the gold price:
it also sells 100 contracts of gold futures, the short leg of
the straddle. The difference, as already suggested, is in the
long leg which in this case is entered into the actual production
of gold from the mine.
In more details, XAB is alive
to the opportunity offered by the fact that the upward spike
in the gold price has promoted some of its submarginal grades
of ore into the payable category. To fix our ideas suppose
that XAB has a submarginal vein of gold bearing ore it affectionately
calls Moonbeam. Even though submarginal, Moonbeam it is not barren.
It is pregnant with profits which XAB wants to capture.
A godsend, XAB finds that Moonbeam
is now payable, thanks to the $10 upwards spike in the gold price.
The trouble is that the godsend may be available only for a couple
of minutes, and it is not possible to get the gold out of the
ore and take it to the market in such a short space of time.
No problem. That is where hedging, in the true meaning of the
word, comes in. Using the facility offered by the
gold futures market XAB can lock in the spiking price now; mine
and deliver the gold later. Geologists at XAB know exactly how
much of Moonbeam ore should be earmarked and mined in order to
come up with the right amount of gold that must match the amount
sold forward. The mine goes ahead and produces the gold. Never
mind if the price of gold has fallen back in the meantime. The
higher selling price is locked in. When the gold produced from
Moonbeam ore is sold, the mine lifts its hedges, i.e., covers
the short position in the futures market.
In effect, XAB has sold gold
at a profit from ore that, absent hedging, represents zero value.
It looks like prestidigitation, but it isn't. It is the same
idea as harnessing energy from the tide-and-ebb movement of the
oceans. XAB harnesses the fluctuating gold price which represents
energy. The energy of tides, given the skill of engineers, can
be put to use. Likewise, the skilled gold miner can squeeze gold
out of worthless rock. That's the challenge of the profession,
challenge that not every gold miner can meet.
Notice that XAB does not care
if the price of gold has increased between its selling of gold
futures, and its selling cash gold later. It is true that any
increase generates a loss on the short leg, but it is compensated
dollar for dollar by the higher price it will receive for the
gold extracted from Moonbeam. XAB only cares about the opportunity
of selling gold profitably, gold, the production of which in
the absence of hedging would involve the mine with a loss. If,
on the other hand, the gold price fell back, then the short position
of XAB in the gold futures market would show a profit. That profit
could be taken immediately.
Suppose that the chance of
the gold price moving up or down after every $10 spike is 50-50.
Then the mine will enjoy an extra income from its hedging
operations because 50 percent of its hedges will be closed out
profitably without even touching any gold bearing ore.
The other 50 percent is just as beneficial making it possible
to extract gold profitably from submarginal grades of ore. Herein
you have a win-win strategy. Quite unlike Barrick's which is
a lose-lose strategy - except in a bear market for gold.
Fool's gold future
This being a post mortem
I want to explain most carefully what has made the boat of
Barrick hit reef. The #1 gold miner did not understand the subtle
difference between selling gold futures and selling borrowed
gold. While both come under the heading "selling gold forward",
there is an important difference. The gold mine selling gold
futures has not sold the gold, so any possible mis-judgement
in timing is self-correcting. On the other hand, the gold mine
selling borrowed gold has thereby finalized the terms of the
sale. Only delivery is put off. The self-correcting feature is
missing. Any error in timing could be disastrous.
Barrick is totally ignorant
of (true) hedging. Observe the difference between two operations:
(1) Selling gold futures for hedging purposes is one thing. It
simply means booking a selling price now, with the actual sale
of newly mined gold to follow later. A subsequent increase in
the price of gold is not hurting because the gold mine has retained
the right to sell gold at the higher price later.
(2) Selling borrowed gold is
another thing altogether. The actual sale of newly mined gold
at a fixed price has been consummated, only delivery remains.
Every cent of an increase in the price of gold is hurting because
the increase means that the gold has been sold at the wrong price.
AXY acts as a hedge fund. Its
straddles are fraudulent. Even if the financial results are positive
in the end, it cannot report, still less pay out, a profit. Profits
are paper profits. They will not be finalized until the "hedges"
are lifted. There is a contingent liability which can turn into
real losses if the gold price has a subsequent run on the upside.
Paying out paper profits in bonus is a criminal fraud. The fact
that AXY is a gold mine has nothing to do with its adventures
in the world of gambling. Any hedge fund can do it (and will
probably do a better job of it). The problem plaguing Barrick
now is that it has commingled paper profits from gold and bond
speculation with operating profits from gold mining and has,
apparently, dipped into its treasury and paid hefty bonuses to
executives and directors. The money is gone, but the contingent
liability remains. When the gold price increases, it becomes
a loss that gets larger with every cent of an increase in the
gold price. The potential loss is open-ended.
Double jeopardy
No wonder that the 28 Barrick
executives are in such a mad hurry to cut and run before their
bonuses are attached by court injunction in a possible class
action suit. Damn whoever invented bonuses in the form of options.
Cash bonuses would not have left such a stinking paper trail.
By contrast, consider XAB.
It acts as any proper hedger does who is involved in the production
of real goods. Its straddles are true hedges: they aim at benefiting
the company from favorable price hikes by producing gold from
ore body whose market value is zero in the absence of a hedging
strategy. This operation is completely independent of the fickleness
of interest rates and of the variation of the gold price.
Note that the profitability
of the "hedges" of AXY is exposed to "double jeopardy".
It depends on the assumption that neither interest rates nor
the gold price will rise. Should either do, the "hedges"
will show an immediate loss. Higher interest rates make the market
value of bonds fall, hurting the long leg of the straddle. A
higher gold price will increase the cost of lifting the straddle.
Maximizing the life of the gold mine
But the main difference between
the two strategies has to do with the fact that true hedging
(the strategy of XAB) extends the working life of the gold mine,
while fraudulent hedging (the strategy of AXY) shortens it. True
hedging spares the richest ore bodies and shifts mining towards
the submarginal grades or ore. This also means the most efficient
deployment of the capital of the mine.
Barrick-type hedges result
in a ruthless exploitation of the mining resource. Naturally,
AXY wants to squeeze the maximum amount of cash out of its "hedges",
regardless of the damage it may cause to the logevity of the
mine, because it wants to buy as many bonds as possible. In consequence
the richest grades of ore are extracted first and the mine is
exhausted prematurely. When it is forced to close down, it will
still have a lot of valuable gold-bearing ore left behind.
Economics of Gold Mining
The economics of gold mining
is as different from that of base metal mining as day from night.
The aim of a copper mine, for example, is to maximize profits
without regard for the working life of the mine. The reason is
that the marginal utility of copper is declining. This means
that if you do not market your copper at the earliest opportunity,
then competition grabs your market share and runs with it. Tarda
venientibus ossa - says the Latin proverb (late-comers
to the meal get the bones). In the case of copper miners late-comers
have to sell at a lower price.
By contrast, the marginal utility
of gold is declining so slowly that it is practically constant.
There is no pressure on the miner to rush his product to the
market. His concern is to get as much gold throughout the mine's
extended working life as possible, regardless how long it may
take. If it takes longer, no harm done. The mine stands to benefit
from deliberate currency debasement practiced by governments.
Debasement has the unintended effect of promoting the submarginal
ore bodies of the gold mines to the payable category.
Incidentally, this is the secret
of the popularity of owning gold mining shares in spite of the
meager returns to invested capital. Gold mining shares have a
built-in option-feature. The option expires when the gold mine
is exhausted. Thus given two identical gold mines with exactly
the same geological features, the one worked more conservatively
will command the higher share price and the higher market capitalization,
because the underlying option has the longer maturity date. The
market will assign the lowest market capitalizartion to the gold
mines that go after the highest grade of ore, even if the dividends
paid by that mine are higher.
Having said that, we find that
the hedging stategy of XAB still has shortcomings and calls for
further improvements. Both AXY and XAB are using unilateral hedging
strategies. As a side-effect speculators are invited to converge
on the short side of the market and compete with the gold mines
to nip every gold rally in the bud. What is needed, clearly,
is bilateral hedging and its four-legged straddles to eliminate
that threat. This is the subject of the next instalment of Peak
Gold!.
GOLD STANDARD UNIVERSITY LIVE
Session Three of Gold Standard
University Live will take place in Dallas, Texas, from February
11 through 17, 2008 (please note the change of place and date.)
It will have three parts:
(1) a course on Adam Smith's
Real Bill Doctrine and its Relevance Today, consisting of
13 lectures, from February 11 through 14;
(2) a debate on the Economics
of Gold Mining with industry participation;
(3) a panel discussion entitled
Gold Profits in Troubled Times where paraphernalia such
as the basis, the gold and silver lease rate, the NAV of gold
and silver ETF's and the variation of these will be discussed
with invited experts. Program (2) and (3) are scheduled for the
week-end February 15-17. The registration fee covers participation
in the debates during the week-end. It is also possible to register
for the week-end program only at a reduced fee. Participation
is limited; first come first served. Participants pay their own
hotel and meal bills. The cost of the closing banquet is included
in the registration fee.
For the benefit of European
friends of Gold Standard University, Session Three, will be repeated
in March, 2008, at Martineum Academy in Szombathely, Hungary,
where the first two sessions were held, provided that a sufficient
number of people register. More details will follow later.
For further information please
inquire at GSUL@t-online.hu.
Peak Gold!
A.E. Fekete, Peak
Gold! Part One, August 16,
2007.
A.E. Fekete, Peak Gold! Part Two,
September 10, 2007.
A.E. Fekete, Peak Gold! Part Three,
September 19, 2007.
A.E. Fekete, Peak Gold! Part
Four, September 20, 2007.
References
A.E. Fekete, Peak Gold! Part One, August 16, 2007.
A.E. Fekete, Have Gold Bugs Been Barricked by the U.S.?
www.gold-eagle.com,
July 12, 2007
A.E. Fekete, Gold Vanishing Into Private Hoards, www.gold-eagle.com,
May 31, 2007
A.E. Fekete, To Barrick Or To Be Barricked, That Is the Question,
www.gold-eagle.com,
August 11, 2006
A.E. Fekete, The Texas Hedges of Barrick, www.goldisfreedom.com,
May, 2002
Charles Davis, So Big It's Brutal, Report on Business,
The Globe and Mail: Toronto, June 2006, p 64.
Bob Landis, Readings from the Book of Barrick: A Goldbug Ponders
the Unthinkable, www.goldensextant.com,
May 21, 2002
Richard Rohmer, Golden Phoenix: The Biography of Peter Munk,
Key Porter Books, 1999
Ferdinand Lips, Gold Wars, Will Hedging Kill the Goose
Laying the Golden Egg? p 161-167,
New York: FAME,
George Bush's "Heart of Darkness" - Mineral Control
of Africa, Executive Intelligence Review, January 3, 1997,
see in particular:
Barrick's Barracudas
Inside Story:
The Bush Gang and Barrick, by Anton Chaitkin
George Bush's
10 billion giveaway to Barrick, by Kark Sonnenblick
Bush abets Barrick's
Golddigging, by Gail Billington
See also: http://american_almanac.tripod.com/bushgold.htm
DISCLAIMER
AND CONFLICTS
THE PUBLICATION
OF THIS ARTICLE IS SOLELY FOR YOUR INFORMATION AND ENTERTAINMENT.
THE AUTHOR IS NOT SOLICITING ANY ACTION BASED UPON IT, NOR IS
HE SUGGESTING THAT IT REPRESENTS, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, A
RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL ANY SECURITY. HE HAS NO POSITION,
LONG OR SHORT, IN BARRICK STOCK, NOR DOES HE INTEND TO ACQUIRE
ONE. THE CONTENT OF THIS ARTICLE IS DERIVED FROM INFORMATION
AND SOURCES BELIEVED TO BE RELIABLE, BUT THE AUTHOR MAKES NO
REPRESENTATION THAT IT IS COMPLETE OR ERROR-FREE, AND IT SHOULD
NOT BE RELIED UPON AS SUCH.
Oct 4, 2007
Professor
Emeritus
Memorial University of Newfoundland
email: aefekete@hotmail.com
Professor Antal E. Fekete was born and educated
in Hungary. He immigrated to Canada in 1956. In addition to teaching
in Canada, he worked in the Washington DC office of Congressman
W. E. Dannemeyer for five years on monetary and fiscal reform
till 1990. He taught as visiting professor of economics at the
Francisco Marroquin University in Guatemala City in 1996. Since
2001 he has been consulting professor at Sapientia University,
Cluj-Napoca, Romania. In 1996 Professor Fekete won the first prize
in the International Currency Essay contest sponsored by Bank
Lips Ltd. of Switzerland. He also runs the Gold Standard
University.
Copyright ©2005-2010 by A. E. Fekete<
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