Head-to-Head Analysis of 11 Junior Silver Producers in Mexico
posted on
Sep 30, 2013 07:12AM
One of these days U.C. will be on this list!
Good Comparision!
Posted by: Rob Fuhrman
Earlier this week, we published a head-to-head comparison of the six junior and mid-tier gold producers in Mexico. However, today’s look at primary silver producers is perhaps even more interesting.
Silver’s added volatility means that silver miners have felt the pinch even more than their gold producer brethren. In 2013 alone, the price of silver has had an amazing range between $18 and $32. This means production costs, economics, discipline, and flexibility are key.
We have conducted a thorough analysis of the junior and mid-tier producers in Mexico. Using our scoring system, we’ve identified a handful as being opportunities that could outperform the market.
For this analysis, we used Tickerscores, our independent, empirical, and universal scoring system for precious metals stocks. Full analysis methodology can be seen at the bottom of this page or using this link.
In addition, we’ve broken down the average scores in each of of our major categories, so that you can see how each stock compares to the average.
In alphabetical order, here is a quick evaluation of each company along with their score in all four main categories. We’ve also provided relevant analyst comments as well.
Comments: Endeavour is a growing silver producer. Management has done a fantastic job growing reserves and production every year since 2004. Price to cash flow and price to earnings ratios are low compared to their peers.
Comments: The drop in silver prices has hurt Great Panther with a $5.2 million loss in Q2 and they will need to continue to work hard to become profitable at current silver prices. $23 million in cash gives management some flexibility to ride out current silver prices.
Comments: The management team at Golden Minerals made a prudent decision to suspend production at the Velardena mine. The company has a low float of 49 million shares outstanding and approximately $30 million in cash. The stock price has been crushed, moving this year alone from $4.40 to $1.15, which does provide a big discount to past prices. It is probably best to wait until silver appears to be on the upswing before diving in again.
Comments: Excellon owns the La Platosa mine, which is the highest grade silver producer in Mexico. The focus is to build cash flow and increasing the current mine life by finding new resources. All in cash costs are approximately $14/ounce. They rolled back shares 5:1 on May 8th 2013 and the company has been buying shares back in the open market.
Comments: Scorpio is well set for future growth with $23 million in cash, and has the top cash to market cap ratio of all Mexico Silver producers (27%). Scorpio owns 5,590,000 shares of Scorpio Gold that provides additional leverage to an increase in metal prices. Scorpio is looking for organic growth to take them to the next level.
Comments: Silvercrest management has some serious skin in the game; the president, chief financial officer, and chief operating officer each own over 2 million shares. The Santa Elena expansion boasts an impressive IRR of 88%, adding 8 years to the current mine life. The IRR is calculated using $28 silver. Using $19.50 the IRR is still impressive at 49%. Silvercrest is expecting a big jump in production from 2.4 million AqEq to 3.5-4 million AgEq in 2014. Sprott owns 8 million shares, Libra Advisors LLC owns 6.4 million.
Comments: Impact is a small silver producer producing between 150,000 and 175,000 ounces a quarter. Cash costs are calculated by Visual Capitalist to be approximately $17 an ounce. Impact is doing an excellent job of ramping production; ounces mined increased by 25% Q2 2013 vs. Q2 2012.
Comments: Avino has a very low float for a producer with only 27 million shares outstanding. Avino follows an interesting business model trying to re-open a former producing mine. The PEA has a 54% IRR using silver price of $20.54.
Comments: Santacruz is the newest silver producer in Mexico achieving commercial production April 2013. Management has set some very aggressive growth plans targeting 5 million ounces of production in 2016. Santacruz is an interesting value play as $40 million was raised earlier this year at $2 per share and the current share price is $1.35.
Comments: First Majestic is a pure silver producer with strong growth going from 11.3 – 11.7 million ounces in 2013 to 16 million ounces by end of 2014. First Majestic has five mines in production with a sixth in the developmental stage. Silver reserves are strong with 556 million AgEq ounces which gives each investor approximately 4.75 ounces per share.
Comments: Aurcana is trying to setup a $50 million credit facility with Red Kite Mine Financing to ease short-term liquidity issues. This was supposed to be completed in July and but it has been pushed back several times, now with a new target date of September 2013. At some point Aurcana will become a good value play with Shafter adding significantly to the mineral reserves. The question is: when?
Our algorithm that we use for Tickerscores breaks down each junior producer based on four major areas, which are weighted according to the current economic climate. Each area has multiple sub-variables that are also weighted. The four major areas are: financials, management, efficiency and growth, and performance and valuation.
The “Financials” section studies liquidity, debt ratios, cash flow, and cash relative to other producers in the jurisdiction. “Management” examines insider ownership, institutional ownership, YTD insider transactions, previous merger and acquisition experience, and experience with a major producer. “Efficiency and Growth” looks at revenue growth, ounces produced, net income, cost control within the business, and the growth prospects for the mine. “Performance and Valuation” is measured by performance vs. a basket of other junior producers, their enterprise value per ounce, book value per share, and return on equity.
From these 20+ variables, a score out of 100 is calculated for each company. The scoring system is extremely stringent and a score of 60+ is considered a very well-rounded. Companies that score well have excellent growth prospects, financial stability, and could provide market-beating returns.
Tickerscores provides investors access to independent investment research on over 300 precious metals stocks. Using a universal scoring algorithm composed of 20+ variables, the system allows investors to compare these stocks head-to-head in a unique visual format. Tickerscores is independent, empirical, and provides investors with unprecedented access to junior mining research.
Cheers
West Coast Guy