Gold News

Gold Stocks: A Book-Value Bargain

Gold mining stocks don't get this cheap to book value. Except when they do...
 
INVESTORS in gold mining stocks have been pummeled, including myself, writes Jeff Clark at Casey Research, preparing the next issue of The International Speculator.
 
Worse, we've had to hear "I told you so" from all the gold haters in the media.
 
There are a few commentators expressing mild interest in gold at these levels, but one thing I haven't heard any of them talk about is a metric that gold analysts are rarely able to use, because gold stocks just don't get this undervalued.
 
Mainstream analysts sometimes talk about book value, especially when a stock appears cheap. Book value is a metric that, in essence, sets the floor for a stock price in a worst-case scenario. It is equal to stockholders' equity on the balance sheet, and is the theoretical value of a company's assets minus liabilities – sometimes you'll hear this called "net asset value" (NAV).
 
So when a stock price yields a market capitalization (share price x number of shares outstanding) equal to book value, the investor has a degree of safety. Because if it dropped lower, a buyer could theoretically come in, buy up all shares, liquidate the company's assets, and pocket the difference.
 
Price to book value (P/BV) shows the stock price in relation to the company's book value. A stock can be considered "cheap" when it is trading at a historically low P/BV. Or, even better, it can be considered objectively "undervalued" when it is trading below book value.
 
Given the renewed selloff in the gold market, I wanted to see if gold mining stocks were getting close to book values. Not just because it would point to opportunity, but also because of the margin of safety it would imply.
 
We analyzed the book value of all publicly traded gold mining producers with a market cap of $1 billion or more. The final list comprised 31 companies. We then charted book values from 1 January 2007 through last Thursday 27 June, index equally weighted [ Ed: and book values presumably as last reported, rather than adjusted for lower gold prices]. Here's what we found.
 
 
This chart makes clear the current dramatic undervaluation of gold stocks.
 
As a group, gold producers are now selling below their book value. In fact, based on this metric, gold stocks are now cheaper than they were at the depths of the 2008 waterfall selloff. The chart doesn't show it, but gold stocks were trading above book value (about 1.1x) when gold bottomed at $255.95 on April 2, 2001, which was the beginning of the bull market.
 
Here's an even more dramatic fact...
 
We went back as far as 1997 and could not find one episode where gold producers as a group traded below book value – and the late '90s was known as the "nuclear winter" for the gold mining industry!
 
Needless to say, we're in rare territory. So does this mean we should buy now?
 
To be sure, book values fall when precious metals prices decline, and costs have risen substantially since 2001 as well. So it's possible values could fall further. But in that scenario the relationship between stock prices and book value would remain in rarified territory, making the anomaly even more appealing to a contrarian investor.
 
While the waterfall decline in gold stocks is painful for those of us already invested, the reality is that this is a setup we get a shot at only a few times in our investing life. It's a cruel irony that those who are fully invested are now faced with the buying opportunity of a lifetime; however, it would be a shame for anyone to miss this blood-in-the-streets opportunity. Our future profits should be higher by an order of magnitude, when the market does turn around.
 
It's times like these when I remember what Doug Casey told me the first time I interviewed him:
"You don't make money buying when you're optimistic. You have to actually run completely counter to your own emotional psychology."
The extent to which each of us is able to take advantage of the opportunity shaping up is of course dependent upon our personal set of circumstances. For some, this might mean doing nothing; for others, it might mean being bold for the first time in their life. I suspect most readers fall somewhere in between.
 
Either way, the opportunity is clear: book values for gold stocks are at rarely seen levels. Gold stocks may not reverse tomorrow or could get even cheaper when producers start reporting this quarters financial results, but history shows this opportunity will not last forever. It will probably never occur again in this cycle once gold turns – and it should be fantastically profitable.

JEFF CLARK is editor and lead writer of BIG GOLD, the monthly gold-investment newsletter from Doug Casey's Casey Research. Having worked on his family's gold claims in California and Arizona, and analyzing the big trends in gold's bull market, Jeff and his team aim to highlight safe and profitable ways for the prudent investor to capitalize on today's long-term rise.

See full archive of Jeff Clark.

Please Note: All articles published here are to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it. Please review our Terms & Conditions for accessing Gold News.

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