Foreign investors are starting to show serious interest in the junior mining sector as the Africa Mining Index steadily grows
South Africa’s junior mining sector has proved its viability by surviving the market collapse and flight from high-risk and illiquid investments of 2008.
The continued vibrancy of the sector is evident in the fact that the Nedbank South African Junior Mining and Exploration Index, an instrument tracking the performance of junior miners operating in South Africa, has shown a slow but steady recovery since it dropped to an all-time low toward the end of 2008.
Nerina Visser, quantitative analyst of Nedbank Capital, says the incidents of junior mining companies going out of business when the global economic crisis hit the resources sector in 2008 can be likened to the shaking of bad apples from a tree.
Although the crisis caused the junior mining sector to drop by nearly half, from 8% of listed mining companies on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange to 5%, this is not an indication of the viability of the sector.
“A good number of companies are still around; there are many junior mining operations and corporate action taking place in the sector,” says Visser.
Steady recovery
The junior mining sector in South Africa was born of new legislation in the form of the Mining and Petroleum Resources Development Act of 2006. The Act enforced a “use it or lose it” principle, stipulating that mining rights not used by mining companies to exploit minerals in the ground would revert to the state.
The legislation gave rise to the development of the junior mining sector in South Africa. Unused mining rights held by mining groups, but not used for years, were awarded to newly established junior companies that often showed themselves to be true mining entrepreneurs.
The advent of the legislation saw the launch of the Nedbank South Africa Junior Mining and Exploration Index in the same year, with the aim of raising the profile of the sector, which had been dominated by certain major mining houses for more than a century.
The dominance of the majors, including BHP Billiton, Anglo American, Impala Platinum, AngloGold Ashanti, Anglo Platinum, Gold Fields, Sasol and Harmony and Kumba, is still reflected in the resources sector of the JSE. The top 13 companies by size constitute over 95% of the total market capitalisation of all listed mining companies.
The Junior Mining and Exploration Index, comprising 38 mid- and small-cap miners such as Aquarius Platinum, Uranium One, Wesizwe and Platmin and Great Basin Gold, reached a market capitalisation high of R130 395 602 (about US$18.3 million) on 6 March 2008 and a low R43 555 730 (about $6.1m) on 3 February 2009.
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However, the index has recovered from the low of 931.89 points on 21 November 2008, soaring to 1 602.28 on 15 September this year, which points to a steady recovery in the smaller sector.
Visser adds that the high of R130m reached in March 2008 could be construed as a “bubble” or overvaluation of the sector during that phase, as the rapid growth that took place from 2005 to early 2008 was spurred by an excessive risk appetite in the market, and was essentially unsustainable.
Interest from foreign investors
Visser says the viability of the junior mining sector is further underlined by interest from foreign investors who are showing increasing interest in all mining investments.
The global financial crisis further has caused a sifting, leaving behind the more serious investor who is prepared for the long haul.
“Many investors are looking at the Chinese and interpreting the fact that they are coming into Africa to exploit resources as a long-term uptrend for mining on the continent,” says Visser.
The Nedbank Junior Mining and Exploration Index shows that the junior sector has delivered average annual returns of 4.2447% to investors since 2006. The returns exclude the performance of dual-listed companies, as South Africa’s exchange control regulations prohibit trade of derivative instruments over inward dual-listed shares.
In August 2010, the Index was made up of junior miners in platinum (44%), gold miners (16%), non-ferrous metals (3%), diamond companies (1%), coal (1%) and general mining groups (35%).
The largest constituents of the Index by market capital include Aquarius Platinum, Uranium One, Assore, Northam Platinum, Great Basin Gold as well as Eastern Platinum.
As the individual stories of the junior miners show, some of these companies have built value for shareholders by growing into successful producers of metals and minerals, while others became great takeover targets.
African Mining Index
Junior mining is a feature of the strong, continued move of the global mining sector into the African continent. Mining companies are moving into Africa through both organic and acquisitional growth, as the continent shows the best growth potential, says Visser.
This investment trend has given rise to the Nedbank African Mining Indices, a series of ratings that measures the performance of energy, metals and mining producers that operate primarily in Africa.
The series includes an index for junior producers in Africa.
Visser says it was necessary to establish the African Mining Indices to tell the African mining story, as so many mining companies working on the continent are listed in Australia, London and Canada because they require access to huge amounts of capital needed for their African operations.
The Nedbank African Mining Index for All Commodities – Junior Producers has a 17% exposure to the JSE in terms of market capital, which compares well with a 30% exposure to the Toronto Stock Exchange, 31% exposure to the Australian Stock Exchange and 17% exposure to the London Stock Exchange.
In terms of commodity exposure, gold leads at 27%, diversified mining follows at 23%, base metals at 19%, energy at 18%, platinum group metals at 6%, while other commodities make up 7% of the index.
The returns of the index covering junior producers in Africa for the year to date stood at 5.2% in August.
Tessa Kruger
MediaClubSouthAfrica

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