Looking over DBRSY valuation ratios I was struck by the high price to sales (~7) compared to Price/Book(1.2) and Price/Earnings (9.4). I don't think it is the case that their profit margins are huge. What am I missing?
Here is some old news for any that have not read it.
(FROM ANNUAL REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS) Chairman's Statement Institutions, companies, systems and, indeed, people prove their value not in good times, but in times of challenge and stress. This is when the weakest go to the wall and the best come into their own. The past year - during which the De Beers Central Selling Organisation (CSO) achieved record sales in the first half of 1997 and the lowest second half sales since 1994 - was indeed a challenging time, both for the industry and the Company which serves it. Once again, however, De Beers showed that it comes into its own when the industry is under stress, moving decisively in the face of economic turmoil in the Far East to restore sentiment in the cutting centres by a sustained reduction in the size of its sights. The fact that the industry looks to De Beers for leadership and comfort in times of turbulence is a tribute to its management of the market and we will continue to ensure that this trust is not misplaced. The breadth of the global diamond market is reflected in the fact that, despite the downturn in Asia, the number of diamond jewellery pieces purchased and the amount spent by consumers in local currencies in the year under review were both equal to the 1996 figure. The strength of the US dollar and the sharp decline in many Asian currencies however, resulted in a four per cent decline in US dollar terms in the value of rough gem diamond sales by the CSO. At US$4 640 million, these were, nevertheless, the second highest annual sales on record. Although De Beers' headline earnings on a combined basis were up one per cent at US$1 044 million, total net earnings were nine per cent lower at US$1 229 million. This included both a surplus arising from the disposal of interests in JCI and a provision for an anticipated loss on the disposal of interests in Lonrho (the 1996 results included the surplus from the disposal of interests in Johnnic). Diamond stocks were reduced by six per cent, reflecting both increased market share and the high level of first half-year sales. It was possible to maintain the dividend at 102,8 US cents per De Beers/Centenary linked unit by reducing the cover on an attributable earnings basis. The rollercoaster year began with continuing supply-side concerns which focused both on the decision, taken at the end of 1996, to terminate purchases under the badly flawed contract with Russia and fears of uncontrolled supplies from Angola. De Beers, however, saw these concerns not as a problem, but a challenge. The inherent strength of our distribution network, the application of new pricing policies towards the bottom end of the market, the run-down of Russian stocks and reduced production from Angola all contributed to the fact that our market share was substantially increased, demonstrating again that the De Beers group of mines in Botswana, Namibia and South Africa remains the most consistent and reliable source of world production. The outlook was further improved in October when, after protracted negotiations, Almazy Rossii-Sakha (Alrosa) and De Beers finally signed a new trade agreement which reaffirmed their mutual recognition of the importance of single-channel marketing, even as it re-established full co-operation between the world's two major diamond producers. The agreement has the endorsement of both the President and Government of the Russian Federation and hopes are that, depending on its satisfactory operation, an agreement which has been widely and properly welcomed by the diamond industry, will be extended beyond its 13-month term. If supply-side concerns were uppermost at the beginning of the year, problems with demand cast a shadow over the second half. The Japanese market, the second biggest consumer of diamond jewellery after the USA, continued in recession. On top of this, currency turmoil in South East Asia, an important market for diamond jewellery, resulted in a sharp decline in demand in this growth area. This was aggravated by the fact that more than half the world's diamond jewellery consumption is influenced by the exchange rate between the US dollar and other currencies. Buoyant first half sales, however, had earlier stimulated trade confidence and led to a high level of trade inventories. De Beers responded swiftly to the change in the economic climate by reducing its sales substantially towards the end of 1997. This restrictive sales policy has continued into 1998, with the first three sights of the year being substantially below the level of the corresponding 1997 sights. As the year progresses we will monitor the situation closely and manage supplies to reinforce confidence in the value of our product. It should, of course, go without saying that we will be able to do this more effectively in those areas where there is little competitive selling onto the market. The outlook in 1998 is not one of unrelieved gloom. The problems in the Far East have once again focused attention on the importance of the American market, which accounts for more than a third of world diamond value. In 1997 that market saw encouraging growth of up to eight per cent in retail consumption of diamond jewellery and we hope for further growth in 1998. Nevertheless, despite continued growth in US demand, economic changes in Asia have made America a buyers' market, resulting in increased competition, pressure on prices and lengthening credit terms. Problems in the Far East, however, while pressing, are not permanent. Renewed prosperity in Japan has been postponed, not cancelled, and economists expect a resurgence of growth once the process of economic restructuring is complete. Despite the current slowdown, consumer attitudes towards diamonds in Japan remain positive and De Beers is developing several new campaigns to take advantage of the eventual recovery in consumer confidence. Once the Asia Pacific region emerges from its present economic and currency turmoil, we are confident it will provide substantial new markets which, in turn, will increase worldwide diamond demand. De Beers is also active in the emerging markets of Turkey, the Middle East, Pakistan and India, a growing region which now accounts for 10 per cent of world diamond demand, and in China - whose potential remains huge - De Beers' marketing programmes are already achieving results. Nevertheless, it is clear that 1998 will pose even greater questions before the economic storm in South East Asia blows itself out. How the industry responds to these challenges will determine the contours of the diamond world for years to come. De Beers is well poised to shape that world. The reduction in stocks in 1997, the quota arrangements with contracting producers and the strength of the De Beers balance sheet and banking arrangements, give us the resources to manage the downturn currently affecting the industry. Furthermore, under any future foreseeable scenario, the De Beers Group will continue to produce about 50 per cent of the world's gem diamonds by value, both from its own mines in South Africa and in partnership with the governments of Botswana, Namibia and Tanzania. Moreover, this production comes from some of the lowest-cost diamond mines in the world and De Beers has the distribution network to manage the marketing of this production and any additional goods bought under contract or on the open market. During 1997 several major developments in the De Beers Group ensured that we would retain this critical competitive edge. In Botswana, continuous operations at Orapa and Jwaneng began in January 1997. The US$400 million Orapa 2000 Project - an expansion which will increase Orapa's annual production to 12 million carats and lift Debswana's total production to above 25 million carats a year from the year 2000, is proceeding according to schedule. This development not only strengthens Botswana's central role in the worldwide diamond industry, but also underlines the critical importance of diamonds - and the sound and sustained management of this resource - to Botswana's thriving economy. In Namibia, where total carat production was slightly higher than in 1996, the new bucket wheel dredge and floating treatment plant were commissioned in April 1997. This development is designed to prolong the life of onshore operations and, at a cost of US$40 million, represents a major investment for Namdeb. The future of Namdeb, however, lies with the offshore deep-water operations conducted by De Beers Marine which last year increased its contribution to 35 per cent of Namdeb's total output. In 1998, De Beers Marine, which invented deep-sea diamond mining, plans to expand its full-time production fleet to five ships. Namdeb's diamond cutting and polishing factory at Okahandja - to be supplied with rough diamonds by De Beers CSO in London - is also expected to come into operation this year. De Beers' South African mines increased production marginally during 1997, with Venetia, the most modern mine in the industry, contributing nearly half of all South African carat production. The year was also noteworthy for the signing of a historic two-year wage agreement with the National Union of Mineworkers and the welcome introduction of a new Mine Health and Safety Act. De Beers is proud of a top safety record by international standards and remains committed to improving its performance still further. The Company has commissioned an independent survey of employment equity policies and practices on its South African mines and is vigorously pursuing adult education and training initiatives with the twin aims of improving career development prospects and achieving basic literacy for all employees by the year 2000. Our investment in developing the skills of all those who work for De Beers reflects not only our determination to remain at the forefront of all diamond expertise, but our belief that the success of companies will increasingly be measured by their sensitivity to the human and physical environments in which they operate. With this in mind, education continued to be the major focus of our main channel for social investment, the Chairman's Fund. Recently, the Fund also established Area Committees to enable us to respond more directly to pressing local needs near De Beers' mines in the Northern Cape and Namaqualand. At the same time, business between the Company and suppliers owned by previously disadvantaged communities nearly doubled in 1997, while the mines launched a number of other imaginative initiatives to assist emerging entrepreneurs. De Beers' well-known commitment to the environment was underlined last year by progress at all its operations towards compliance by the year 2000 with the ISO 14001 standard for environment management. De Beers Marine has compiled environment management programmes for its deep-sea operations in South African waters, appointed environment managers to all its vessels and once again used the Jago submersible to assess the impact of deep-sea mining off the South African and Namibian coasts. Beyond the 19 mines, large and small, which De Beers manages in South Africa, Botswana, Namibia and Tanzania, the Company's technical resources and geological expertise were again directed towards the discovery of world-class deposits and the investigation of known deposits in Africa, Canada, Brazil, Europe, Australia and Asia. Despite ongoing security concerns, the Company is establishing prospecting bases in Angola following its 1996 agreements with Endiama, the state mining company, that gave it the exclusive right to prospect in three key areas in the country. As evidence of its strengthening ties with Angola, last year it signed an agreement with Endiama to construct a 12-storey building in Luanda where the bulk of Angolan diamond production will be sorted and valued. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the new government has undertaken a review of the country's mining operations, the contract to purchase the MIBA mine production is in abeyance. De Beers last year, however, successfully bid for seven out of the nine tenders for the MIBA production. Prospecting negotiations with the new government are continuing and the first phase of an airborne survey has been conducted. During 1997 the Company also began negotiations, or concluded prospecting agreements, with a number of countries, including China, Gabon and Guinea. Co-operation with the governments of African countries to help them realise and benefit from their diamond resources remains central to our future plans and interests. As the only mining group with the skills and the knowledge to mine diamonds under all conditions - from desert to deep-sea - and in every type of mine from underground to opencast and beach, we are also determined to extend our global reach. In Russia, where technical co-operation with Alrosa continued with exchanges of specialist personnel, De Beers' joint venture partner, Terra, began exploration work in the Arkhangelsk region and further opportunities for exploration and mining in Russia are being examined. These are but a few of the areas where De Beers' unrivalled expertise in diamond exploration and mining, as well as its proven track record of working together with governments and smaller operators, make it the partner of choice around the world. But, if they serve to justify De Beers' claim to be a truly global company, a glance at the exploration portfolios of many other general mining companies confirms the recent attraction of diamond mining as a worthy investment. The source of this attraction is the history of stable and rising diamond prices over the last 60 years - ever since the creation of the CSO successfully insulated gem diamonds from price volatility and mismatches between surges in supply and demand. Now, at the end of nearly seven decades of sustained and managed growth, the current upheavals offer opportunity for all in the industry to reflect both on the lessons of the past and on whether and how we can shape a future in which all can continue to benefit - from producing countries, many of which are critically dependent on the sound management of this resource, to the cutting centres, retailers and the consumer herself. It is De Beers' hope that recent entrants in the field will recognise the sense of single-channel marketing and will not be tempted to undermine the very factor - predictable and stable prices - which attracted them into the industry in the first place; nor that they will commit the cardinal error of assuming that De Beers will act against its own interests and the interests of its shareholders in a competitive world. The experience of the last few years at the bottom end of the market where three major producers competed for market share illustrates the dangers inherent in that assumption. In the recent past the industry has experienced the difficulties that can arise with any fragmentation or erosion of the single market. De Beers will use the year ahead to prepare itself not only for the expected major recovery in world demand, but also to devise new ways of preserving the single market by deploying its unique marketing skills on behalf of its own core producers and its own clients. De Beers remains committed to spending a large part of its budget - some US$200 million this year - on the promotion of diamond jewellery around the world. It should be remembered, however, that this is a service which we undertake primarily on behalf of our core producers and clients. It has already been reported that De Beers is engaged in test marketing a branding concept which, we believe, will give additional comfort to our clients and be a guarantee of quality and trust to the consumer. That brand will be imbued with all the authority and diamond expertise which has underpinned the Company's leadership role over the last 110 years. Those in the industry know that this is no empty claim, that in every aspect of diamond mining and marketing, including its unique knowledge and skills in sorting, classification and pricing, De Beers remains the ultimate authority. It is this knowledge and innovation in what might broadly be termed "diamond science" which will keep De Beers at the cutting edge of the industry as the Group prepares itself for the demands and the challenges of the next century. It should come as no surprise when, as part of that preparation, it begins to deploy its strength in new and imaginative ways. The graveyard of history is littered with companies that failed to change with the changing times. The fact that, 110 years since it was formed, De Beers continues to dominate the international diamond landscape is sure testimony of its ability to change and adapt to fresh demands and new challenges. This is due in no small part to the fact that it was forged in crisis: the rapid and anarchic birth of the modern diamond industry on the Kimberley diamond fields. Another crisis nearly 70 years ago saw the creation by my grandfather of the CSO, to introduce order and balance into the then chaotic marketing of diamonds. Under the wise leadership of his successors, my father Harry Oppenheimer and Julian Ogilvie Thompson - who stood down as Chairman at the end of 1997 after 13 years of unparalleled growth and achievement - the Company has continued to change and develop, even as it has remained the constant guardian of the interests of the diamond industry. Indeed, it might be said that, paradoxically, the key to its continuity has been its willingness to adapt to changing demands and to rise to the challenges of the time. 1998 is seeing another defining move in the history of the De Beers Group: the separation of its management ties to Anglo American Corporation, to become an organisation with its own management team and with all the energies and skills of its human resources dedicated to one company and one product. The appointment of Gary Ralfe as De Beers' first Managing Director with responsibilities for the worldwide group reflects this intention. The move enables De Beers to re-shape itself into a closely integrated, tightly focused multinational, fit for its historic role as South Africa's truly global mining group. It will, however, continue to hold its important non-diamond investments, which have served it extraordinarily well throughout its history and which have given De Beers the financial strength to sustain the diamond industry in good times and bad. De Beers' new corporate headquarters will be established at the former Debid House at Crown Mines, Johannesburg. This site, together with its adjoining buildings which include the Diamond Research Laboratories, is already the physical expression of some of the diamond skills which have made De Beers the dominant diamond company in the world today. It will, therefore, be a fitting South African home for this unique company, which can in truth be said to have created the modern diamond industry in all its many facets and which today enjoys an unrivalled position as the innovator and benchmark of all diamond expertise. Although it has offices and associates in many countries - in much of Africa, as well as Switzerland (the corporate headquarters of De Beers Centenary), the United Kingdom, Belgium, China, Israel, India, Russia, Canada, Ireland, Japan, Sweden and Hong Kong - De Beers' roots remain in South Africa, its past intricately bound up with the history of South Africa's industrial development. It intends to play its full part as a major investor in the country's future and as a constructive player in the economic resurgence of Africa. The much quoted remark of my grandfather Sir Ernest Oppenheimer remains as true a reflection of the Company's intentions today as it was 40 years ago when he said: "The aims of this group have been - and they still remain - to earn profits but to earn them in such a way as to make a real and permanent contribution to the well-being of the people and to the development of southern Africa." With that history it can be seen why De Beers applauds Deputy President Mbeki's vision of an African Renaissance and believes that South Africa and South African companies - particularly De Beers, with its close historic links and expanding investment in so many African countries - can and must play a key role in contributing to that renaissance and, indeed, in helping to bring it about. That commitment, together with a determination to retain and build on the greatness of an already great company, will be the guiding ambition of my chairmanship. Nicky Oppenheimer 25 March 1998 |