Gold News

Stock Picking on the TSX

Inside the Visual Capitalist's guide to gold and silver mining stock selection...
 
FOUNDER of Visual Capitalist, a popular investment website that focuses on precious metals and commodities, Jeff Desjardins believes in the fusion of information and design to give investors insight in ways never done before.
 
Rob Fuhrman, lead analyst at Visual Capitalist, is an energetic economist and trader specializing in Canadian and US stock markets. And now with over 1,700 precious metals mining companies listed on the Toronto exchanges, Visual Capitalist has developed Tickerscores, an empirical approach to scoring gold explorers, developers and producers. 
 
Here Jeff Desjardins and Rob Fuhrman talk to The Gold Report about their methodology for finding high-potential gold and silver mining investments.
 
The Gold Report: In a recent issue of Weekly Trends on Visual Capitalist, you discussed the "sell the news move" in the gold price as the US shutdown and debt-ceiling worries weighed heavily on the markets. Now that a debt-ceiling solution has been found temporarily, what do you expect from gold and silver prices through Q4/13 and into Q1/14?
 
Rob Fuhrman: We remain cautious over the next three months and through Q1/14. We anticipate a gold price range of $1250 per ounce to $1400.
 
TGR: China and Russia have called for a new global currency. Given the ongoing political climate in the US and economic issues related to the greenback, will those calls get louder?
 
Rob Fuhrman: Recent politics definitely suggest a call to action. It is a major problem that the world's current reserve currency is paired with a government that appears unable to get things done responsibly. I'm sure the conversations about an alternative currency will get louder, probably the next time the debt ceiling issue comes up.
 
TGR: Will gold play a role in a new global currency?
 
Rob Fuhrman: A role for gold in a new global currency would add a level of fiscal and monetary responsibility, which is something we haven't seen in a while. Adding legitimacy by using gold or commodities would be important. However, there are some limitations if the money supply becomes too fixed. At that point growth and innovation become more difficult because access to capital is limited.
 
TGR: What would the impact be on the gold price?
 
Rob Fuhrman: It would be extremely positive for gold, given its rarity and its nature as a safe-haven asset.
 
TGR: The biggest markets in Canada have, for the most part, underperformed in recent years, in particular the TSX Venture Exchange (TSX.V), which is home to most of the companies we discuss here at The Gold Report. The TSX.V index is at 950. In a recent edition of Market Intelligence on visualcapitalist.com/plus you posed the question, "Will the fourth quarter be one of tax-loss selling or will bargain hunting take over and propel the TSX Index above 975?" What's your best guess?
 
Rob Fuhrman: My best guess is that the TSX.V and the resource sector will become more of a stock-picker's market. We expect Q4/13 to go out with a whimper and not a bang. However, a handful of names will do well.
 
TGR: You cover about 350 companies on the TSX and the TSX.V. What is your standard vetting process for a typical gold exploration company?
 
Jeff Desjardins: Our current universe consists of 350 companies, but we are adding new companies every week. Our goal is to cover every precious metals company on the TSX and TSX.V.
 
TGR: How could you stay on top of all 1,700-odd mining companies listed on the TSX.V?
 
Jeff Desjardins: We are focusing only on precious metals mining companies: gold, silver and platinum group metals. That brings the number down to approximately 1,000 companies. We also expect to see a number of companies disappear off the exchange in the short term. As of right now, about 35% of the companies we cover have less than three months of cash left.
 
That still leaves a lot of companies and information to tackle. However, we have two full-time mining analysts and expect to scale up as we add companies to our coverage.
 
TGR: What is your methodology?
 
Jeff Desjardins: We separate companies into jurisdiction and then into three different stages depending on the extent of their progress: exploration, development and production. An exploration company is one that has not yet defined a resource. A development-stage company is one that has an NI-43-101-compliant resource. Lastly, a producer is one that is mining and producing ounces of a precious metal. For each, we look at about 20 metrics in four broad categories: financials, management, project and performance. The weightings of the categories are dynamic and based on current market conditions.
 
TGR: At the end of your analysis, you arrive at a Tickerscore on each company. Tell us about the weighting of the Tickerscore.
 
Jeff Desjardins: The first thing to note is that the weighting for each overall score depends on how far along a company is in developing its primary project. For example, the weightings for exploration companies are different than how we weigh development or producing companies.
 
TGR: Let's use a gold exploration company as an example. How would you typically weight those four factors?
 
Jeff Desjardins: Right now financials are weighted 54%, management is 20%, performance is 4% and the project score is 22%.
 
The financial score has the most weight because companies can only make discoveries if they are able to put money in the ground. Companies score well in this category if they have money in the treasury and can withstand tough market conditions over time.
 
For the management score, the important factors are management common share ownership, insider buying, fund and institutional ownership, merger and acquisition (M&A) experience, and the general and administrative (G&A) expense ratio. We want to see experienced, vested and disciplined teams that put shareholder money in the ground.
 
We also look at a company's performance against the TSX.V and companies of the same stage and jurisdiction. Lastly, we look at the project itself and the potential upside for discovery. The most important weight in the project score is our drill hole analysis.
 
TGR: Who does the analysis? After all, good drill results don't mean that the deposit is mineable.
 
Rob Fuhrman: Our team uses a formula that analyzes the economics of drill holes by using metrics such as interval length, grade, the number of holes drilled and the average scores of other drill holes in the region. The remainder of the project score depends on other factors, such as the proximity to infrastructure, power and water. If a project has great drill holes, but is on the side of a mountain in the middle of nowhere, the score in this section would be lower.
 
We obtain this information from technical reports the companies put out. We also look at the jurisdiction ranking, using the Fraser Institute rankings that examine political climate, tax regime and mineral policy potential.
 
TGR: How accurate have your Tickerscores proven to be?
 
Jeff Desjardins: If we analyze baskets of companies based on their overall Tickerscores, the performance is exactly what one would expect. On average, companies that have high scores have outperformed the market. Conversely, low scores underperform the market. For some context on the distribution of scores: the lowest score is a 2, the average is 45 and the highest is an 85.
 
More specifically, we found that companies with scores above 70 have averaged a return of 14.2%. Companies that scored below 20 ended up losing 10.37% of their value. Over the same period of time, the TSX.V went down 0.9%.
 
Also noteworthy is the fact that the five stocks with the highest scores over the summer averaged a return of 25.3% during that time.
 
TGR: That's noteworthy. The producers are at the opposite end of the scale from the explorers. You spent a lot of time on all-in cash costs. Tell us a little bit how you account for those in the Tickerscore for a producing company.
 
Rob Fuhrman: All-in cash cost has been a buzzword in the industry lately. It's essentially a non-GAAP or IFRS way of measuring the actual cost of producing an ounce of gold. The World Gold Council has worked with several major producers to come up with a standardized method to calculate all-in cash cost, but it's not an accounting procedure.
 
We've done our best to arrive at the actual cost of producing an ounce of gold or silver. Along with everyday production costs at the mine, we account for exploration expenditures, sustainability costs and the G&A. The all-in cost has a fairly large weighting on the production score.
 
TGR: How is the weighting different for a producing company?
 
Rob Fuhrman: For a producer, how a company is performing is our most important metric, valued at about 40%. This is where we look at the all-in cash cost, revenue growth and the growth forecast.
 
Management is 22% because we feel a strong management team is needed to keep production in line.
 
Financials come in at 18%. Finally, performance and valuation is worth 20%. That includes enterprise price value per ounce, book value per share and such. At this point, we're looking for a company that may have underperformed, but has high potential to increase in value.
 
TGR: What are the weightings for development names?
 
Rob Fuhrman: As you might expect, they are in between. Financials are rated at 27%, management 22%. The project itself is 46% and the valuation is 5%. Within that are several sub-variables, such as proximity to infrastructure and the project economics. The internal rate of return (IRR) is the most important weighting in the project section. We also look at the actual overall resource, enterprise value per ounce and performance compared to peers in the area.
 
TGR: How does this type of analysis serve investors compared to standard analyst reports or even pundit commentary?
 
Jeff Desjardins: From the perspective of a retail investor, the difference is that analysts typically cover a select few stories in great depth. Uniquely, we use an independent, empirical platform that scores every company and allows investors to compare stocks based on a set of universal criteria.
 
There are several benefits to this approach. First, we create context among the thousands of exploration companies out there. This makes it easier for investors to navigate the market as a whole. Second, by using categories to group companies based on the stage and jurisdiction of their major project, we make it easier for investors to compare apples with apples. We cover every company in each jurisdiction, good or bad. Because every metric we use is empirical and quantitative, our analysis is 100% independent and unbiased. No company can pay to get a higher score and investors can see the breakdown of all our metrics to see what is going on behind the scenes.
 
TGR: Companies don't pay you for this information; your revenue model is strictly subscriber based?
 
Jeff Desjardins: Correct.
 
TGR: Have companies complained or disagreed with your analysis?
 
Jeff Desjardins: We use an empirical process that pulls numbers from company-approved financials and technical reports, so it's hard for companies to disagree with the data itself. Subscribers can open up our worksheets and see all of the metrics that we use and it's completely transparent in that sense.
 
It is true that companies or investors may disagree on the specific weightings of a particular variable. This is a fair criticism. In the near future, we plan on making the system dynamic so that investors can enter their own personalized criteria and all scores will be adjusted accordingly on the front end.
 
We have received some fan and hate mail on Tickerscores but that is the nature of the beast. We welcome all constructive feedback from companies as well as investors so that we can put together something that ultimately everyone can benefit from.
 
TGR: Do you have any parting thoughts on strategies for investors as 2013 wraps up?
 
Jeff Desjardins: The work we've been doing has uncovered good companies with excellent projects that are feasible even in these market conditions. We also found many that investors should avoid.
 
Rob Fuhrman: Precious metals investors have learned some hard lessons by taking on too much risk in companies with projects that may not be feasible.
 
Companies that are doing well in a down market are the ones that will rise to the top and perform well, but it will continue to be a stock-picker's market.
 
TGR: Jeff, Rob, thanks for your time and your insights.

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