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To: Jim Bishop who wrote (105282)5/16/2002 2:48:08 PM
From: Buckey  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 150070
 
You should make s preadsheet with pennies making pennies



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (105282)5/16/2002 2:51:53 PM
From: Jim Bishop  Respond to of 150070
 
Newmont's Dire Hedging Prediction Comes True

May 16, 2002 (Miningweb/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- The gold
business may be short on profits, but not irony. After crusading against gold
hedging during the unruly takeover war for Australia's Normandy, Newmont [NEM]
now sits with a massive loss on its acquired hedge book - exactly what it warned
would happen to rivals.

There are not too many people who expected Newmont to report a hedging loss -
$411 million as at the end of March and equal to nearly all Newmont's cash.

The figure is recorded on the income statement, but is unrealised so does not
affect cash earnings.

The more heavily hedged AngloGold had an unrealised hedging loss of $71 million
at the end of the first quarter.

Newmont's uncompromising attitude on hedging is at odds with the Normandy book
that it has retained despite the market being led to believe it would be
liquidated at the earliest opportunity. Reality made clearing 8 million odd
ounces ? bound up in watertight counterparty contracts ? all but impossible and
Newmont has now defaulted to winding up the book in an "orderly and timely"
manner.

7.3 million ounces remain trapped by hedging, or roughly 8 per cent of Newmont's
proven and probable reserves. That leaves the company a long way out of the
hedging big league, but neither is it insignificant at nearly a full-year's
production.

Rivals AngloGold and Barrick [ABX] have around 19 and 29 per cent respectively
of total reserves covered by hedging; equivalent to around three and four years
of estimated 2002 production respectively.

So far, AngloGold has proved to have the most flexible hedge book of the majors,
closing out nearly five million ounces in the least half year, 1.7 million of
those in the quarter to end March. Newmont could only liquidate 250,000 ounces
in the first quarter.

Newmont president Pierre Lassonde says the hedge book is Australian dollar
denominated so further strengthening in that currency against the US dollar
should ease losses.

One bit of information the company provided, but which others haven't disclosed
as clearly yet, illustrates some of the obfuscation used in reporting hedging
proceeds. Companies routinely show gold prices received well above spot prices
and attribute the difference to hedging, but Newmont added the cost of borrowing
which shows the true net impact.

This year, Newmont is obliged to deliver at least 1 million ounces into its
hedges at a price of $303 per ounce. That seems reasonable enough except that
"associated gold borrowing costs" reduce the final price by $17 per ounce to
$286. With spot gold expected to average $305 an ounce this year, that's an
opportunity cost of $19 million for the year on the minimum ounces to be
delivered.

That this sort of transparency was available in all producer reporting...

Indeed, Newmont can take a bow for one of the most comprehensive and clear
quarterly reports despite coming out of a tumultuous acquisition.

That gave Lassonde the room to continue his aggressive promotion of Newmont as a

"non-hedger" and to further its claim to be "the gold standard". Not quite, but
it's certainly making progress and there is a lot more buzz about this merger
than there was about Barrick-Homestake.

Lassonde remains resolutely bullish on gold, characterising the recent upward
drift in prices as "climbing the wall of worry." He refuted suggestions that
gold has lost its allure as a safe haven and believes it will endure as a
portfolio diversifier used to counter the business cycle.

Noise

Chief executive Wayne Murdy pleaded with investors to wait until the second
quarter so that the "noise" of the merger could be better filtered out.

He focused on projections for the full-year that will see Newmont produce 7.5
million ounces, reduce debt gearing to less than a fifth of total
capitalisation, replace reserves net of production and realize $400 million from
non-core asset sales.

Reserve replacement has occupied a good deal of attention in figuring out
valuation models and Lassonde was explicit in warning investors not to expect a
continuation of traditionally wasteful reserve policies.

The trend will be to lower reserve life at existing operations although there is
a commitment to find new ounces through organic exploration; concentrated around
its existing Nevada holdings. Lassonde also said the firm's extensive land
holdings would be "open for business" to exploration companies.

As predicted earlier this year by Miningweb, Newmont has assumed $2.5 billion in
goodwill ? the excess it paid over fair market value for Normandy ? which will
be adjusted on an annual basis. The probability of an impairment makes a profit
essential in Q1 2003 if Newmont is not to be knocked out of the all important
long-term return on equity ratings.

By the numbers

Newmont reported a net loss of $10.9 million, or 4 cents per share, for the
first quarter, which includes a one-off derivative related gain, compared with a
loss in the year-earlier period of $39.1 million ($0.2 per share).

It sold 1.464 million ounces of gold (1.422moz) with total production costs up
sharply to $262 an ounce ($220).


by Tim Wood

Copyright Miningweb. Distributed by All Africa Global Media(AllAfrica.com)

-0-


KEYWORD: South Africa

*** end of story ***



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (105282)5/17/2002 1:12:03 PM
From: Jim Bishop  Respond to of 150070
 
BETM found interest today. .56 x .62 now