George Frangeskides, Exec-Chair at Alba Mineral Resources, discusses grades at the Clogau Gold Mine. Watch the full video here.
No problem at all Stokey12 and I want to thank you for all you provide for this BB. I do read them when I can but don't often get involved these days.
Island Magee is a nice headache to have but yes right now it is difficult to value. I have a previous HARL guidance figure of £35m in my head which could well become the reality if/when the judicial review completes in HARL's favour.
Right now I allow basically nothing because I am valuing the business purely on its revenues/debt position.
Every £10m we can add at 210m shares in issue would in theory add c. 4.8p to the valuation.
2/2
Especially when I consider that Island Magee could well be the surprise contender post a successful (we trust) judicial review outcome.
That's why I consider my numbers merely a point in time because they only capture a part of what we know to date. I really want to see the FSS numbers and a further business outlook update post the FSS c contract signing. After that it is all about the FY accounts.
This is a funny market. Trust is limited and more is expected of companies before true worth is accepted. But I still see HARL trading at +30p in fairly short order. Assuming the debt facility is closed out and is the focus on working capital going forwards. That should give the market more confidence around total shares in issue and the path to greater revenues which are in my view clearly now coming. Winning two major defence contracts within 3 years of its resurrection is some result and in my view reflects a management team that can repeat it over and over again.
I trust that helps. I am out for a few hours but will be around later if anyone wants to debate this through because it is a worthwhile exercise for us all.
1/2
Morning TeleTim65,
The approach I have employed is EV/EBITDA with a forward ratio of 8-10 based on expected 2024 earnings.
EBITDA is earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation. My assumption = £20m in EBITDA in 2024 which is conservative compared to the August 'aspiration' guidance from HARL. That will now need to be updated following the FSS contract win and that will naturally affect my figures.
EV = market cap + total debt - cash. My assumption allows for net debt of £80m by 2024. Again, I may well be being conservative here because the expectation is that HARL will recover a significant amount of Capex outlay through the FSS contract in 2023/24. my calls say all £90m of the new debt facility is employed but that the company will end with c. £10m cash on hand = Net debt of £80m.
That is conservative because it allows for c. £30-40m to be spent over 2023/24. 10m of this I expect to be due to 2023 being a (likely the last) loss-making year (c. £10m). Now it may well be that HARL recovers all other debt (Capex) outlay through the FSS contract. After all £77m has been assigned although some of this must be for the growth of the business. If so then that could well reduce net debt by up to £30m. That has a great deal of meaning because that would mean net debt at around £50m.
The effect of this would be to adjust my £160m valuation (8xEV/EBITDA) more to the equity side of the equation.
= £160m - £50m = £110m/210m shares in issue = 52p a share.
My assumptions are I believe (deliberately conservative) and really only capture a moment in time. There may well be brokers out there that are employing 2025 figures but for me, we need more info on FSS and other projects due to be won in 2023 to determine that.
The other important point to appreciate here is that HARL is now on its way. The FSS contract brings a great dal of focus and confidence for lenders, clients, regulators etc. What it also does is set a firm base for revenues going forwards. When we throw in what is now a solid ship repair business then base revenues start to look very solid.
Then we have the renewables sector and their exciting programmes. The lack of fabrication space in the UK + local content requirements + HARL coastal locations = a business that is going to be in high demand for work that helps outstrips the capacity of fabrication in the UK. So I am confident significant contracts are coming (starting 2023). When added to the base defence contract works the numbers begin to rise and the confidence in forward earnings increases and I adjust my target price further north.
In addition, we have the strong possibility of further defence subcontract work + significant contracts in what is now a trusted and growing ship repair business.
All of this gives HARL the potential to be a high-growth business that can surprise us at any time with major contract wins. That's very attractive to me.
Evening everyone,
Apologies my financial musings seem to have caused some unnecessary confusion. To establish the share price one must first of all deduct net debt. So at £160m (8xEV/EBITDA) one must subtract £80m of net debt = £80m/210m shares = 38p.
Please understand these are the numbers I ran based on my deliberately conservative parameters following a question I was asked on my Twitter feed. Numerous arguments can be made and as my range shows a move to a ratio of 10 immediately boosts the valuation to 57p. So it’s very broad.
I trust that clears up any misunderstanding.
I would suggest watching the TGR FY Results Q&A from 11th Oct.
Q&A 8, 9, and 12 whilst not including current figures do directly and clearly, answer the question over expected profitability and how the next 54,000tpa will be financed. The plan is to employ cash flows and leverage them for debt.
The FY results themselves also give a good insight into ongoing overheads (which are expected to remain stable going forwards) and one can work out how many tons of sales are required at a 31% margin to achieve breakeven. The company is also very clear that it expects to return to the previous year's margins of +55%. now that costs associated with the disruptions are behind them. This will clearly substantially reduce the breakeven production point.
The info is all there but investors have to be willing to pull it all together.
https://www.investormeetcompany.com/investor/meeting/full-year-results-2022-forecast
@ThePublican777 i would encourage you to do a bit more digging. That 75.5% premium (A$0.60 a share) was only the first recommended bid.
The final price paid was A$1.075 a share.
Why? Because there was a bidding war.
@Smalleyus,
I started to put together a comprehensive answer to your last post but then realised it's really not worth it at this juncture.
As I said earlier I really am too busy to be playing games. If you have something you feel is worth sharing with the HMI investment community then I will happily read it and join in a debate around it but this whole I know something you don't is just childish and doesn't belong in what is a very serious business.
@Smalleyus
I didn't leave I just had other things that required my time more than being here. I hold multiple investments across several sectors and so must balance my time accordingly.
Before we go any further you appear to be misunderstanding my core reasons for employing Verde as a means to determine where HMI is heading.
To be clear my goal with Verde is/was to establish Brazilian demand and pricing direction only. So as to gain insight as to what Q3/Q4 could/should look like for HMI. Whilst doing that I have found that Verde produces very telling additional data that is of great use for my analysis of HMI. What I haven't attempted to do is treat any comparison as a like for like because that would be inappropriate.
I note that you feel that you have something interesting to share on the reasons why the CFEM was c. double in the 2021 accounts. I am happy to hear about it and perhaps even learn something but I really don't have time for games. My view is that this is a serious business and time is precious so by all means table what it is you feel is important to the investment case here or don't. What I will say is that attempting to play tease whilst sniping at those you would willingly discuss with isn't going to generate a healthy debate.
Sorry that should have read
$182,000-$97,200 (2%) = $84,800/2 = $42,400 x 100 = $4.24m
Great then if I have the two the wrong way around then I appreciate you clearing that up but it doesn't change the outcome.
Employing your understanding tells us that the NSR matched the revenues in 2021 and so supports the amount of booked revenue reported in that year. The same goes for 2020.
The produce doesn't have to leave the gate because this is an accounting measure only whereby the expense needs to be recognised only and it is clearly matched to sales recognition.
Again, the same goes for the CFEM. This is purely about accounting for the expense in the period being accounted for. So 1st Jan to 31st Dec. So the small difference as you call it would likely be due to each year containing Jan to Nov + Dec of the following year.
That then just leaves this "huge disparities between revenues and CFEM" question which you raised and I better understand now. In 2021 the CFEM figure as you state it to be, came in at $182,000 which is c. 3.75%.
The question of "has been invoiced with CFEM being paid, allowing to be shipped, but revenue has not been collected" we have discussed. As with Verde, customers collect product prior to paying for it but the revenue is booked in the accounts because the deposit has been paid. CFEM must be paid in order for the product to leave the mine gate. So it would run ahead of cash receipts but remain in line with revenues because they are booked prior to collection by the customer.
Whilst that doesn't answer the question in full what it does tell us is that it isn't a negative and I can live with unanswered positive outcomes.
As stated the sum represents c. 3.75% of 2021 revenues which means it cannot be about additional unbooked revenues because at 2% of revenues it would amount to c. $4.25m in unaccounted for revenues which simply isn't possible ($182,000/$97,200 (2%) = $84,800/2 = $42,400 x 100 = $4.24m.
So it must be booked in this manner for another reason which we may never know.
Where I would be concerned is if any of these two figures were less than 2% of the total revenues for the period which isn't the case. So the royalties and CFEM are a red herring and only further support that the revenue figure is correct and that the sales cycle is trustworthy along with the average realised price for 2021.
Great discussion. Have a lovely weekend everyone.
Sorry, my statement that Verde's gap is closing is misleading. I meant that cash receipts are expanding and so it becomes less noticeable.
HMI is on a very steep growth path at c. 57% in 2021 and likely 135% in 2022. Therefore, the cash receipts out way out of kilter with the revenues and so understandably questioned. This is where investigation and research can really help us get an advantage because when one appreciates it, it becomes much easier to understand what a cash cow HMI is becoming and act prior to the pack who will want to see the figures first.
As I said earlier the CEO clearly explained the sales methodology in an investor call. Prior to this, I was struggling to trust the revenue figures because I didn't know at which point it was booked. Therefore, I employed cash receipts/trade debtors instead which came out at about the same figure as revenues. Thus giving me a cross-check.
The FY accounts are fully audited and so the invoices will have been comprehensively checked. If we are to doubt the figures then we must question the auditors as well. After all, this is not a complicated sales and delivery process for HMI.
The FY accounts allow $97,214 for the 2% net smelting return. That reflects 2% of the total sales of $4,860,679. So correct.
Where I was scratching my head was on the 2% previous owner's royalty which I deem to be "royalty expense" in the accounts. It is much higher than 2% but this may be down to how regular the payment is made i.e. backdated. That said the CFEM percentage looks correct to me and as they are fully audited accounts the total yearly average price of $57/t can in my view be trusted.
I would certainly place revenues and booked sales ahead of any ex-owner royalty expense. Be it that I appreciate that you have only stated CFEM.
As for revenue collected HMI's sales cycle is no different to Verde. The only difference is that Verde employ Canadian accounting methods (revenues booked upon delivery) whilst HMI book revenues when the 10% deposit is taken. However, both companies have long feed through times between revenues booked and invoice paid.
Verde's gap is closing somewhat now because their sales cycle has become more established. i.e. stronger regular sales through 2021 but it is still easy to see the sizeable gap between revenues and cash received.
So with all due respect I do feel I have a very good handle on this. I like you couldn't completely buy into the revenues booked until I understood how they were booked. Something I see as poor HMI communication in earlier days as opposed to devious actions.
After finding out the exact method by which sales are booked in the investor call it became clear that the audited HMI accounts give us all we need to work it out.
HMI book full sales post a credit check/10% deposit being taken. Be it that like Verde actual cash collection runs on a longer cycle.
Therefore an analysis of H1 and FY 2021 revenue vs sales figures enables us to determine the average selling prices over each 6-month period.
H1 2021 was particularly low at c. $29/t but H2 then pushed much higher to around c. $69.80/t which then gives us a c. $57/t average selling price for the year. A price that rises to $62/t when adjusted for the average 2022 exchange rate YTD.
I have no beef with Smalleyus. I welcome any negative findings I may have missed. We should be grateful that he/she is prepared to question the negative elements of the investment case so thoroughly. It is something we are all often guilty of falling short on.
If as investors in HMI we can all accept or discount all that is highlighted. If it doesn't undermine the risk/reward too much then it goes a long way to prove that the investment case is solid. So it actually has a lot of worth be it the motives are unknown.
@gotabesirius
The average freight price per ton of imported fertiliser to Brazil as of July was US$100/t. That's c. R524/t which converts to AUD$145/t and that only gets it as far as the port.
That alone remains c. AUD$45 per ton higher than even the best outcomes you will find talked about on Twitter and demonstrates why local plays with guaranteed supply can demand very high prices in 2022.
https://twitter.com/BigBiteNow/status/1547120519396397056?s=20&t=BlKD2TSVz8sVnPfH5WxmKw
https://www.thescottishfarmer.co.uk/news/20264145.brazil-buying-cheap-sanctioned-russian-fertiliser/
To be clear that $50/t vs $57/t is all in AUD. Verde CAD average ex-freight sale price in 2021 was $47. The exchange rate was 1.06.
So that 'dust' sold for more than Verde's average product range in 2021.
This is exactly why I pointed that out when posting about it on my Twitter feed and stated a probable 30% figure for freight (Q1 2022 was 25% of the total $101/t sales price).
At 30% the sales price is still AUD$210/t. Are we to place no value on this because we (nor you) first of all subtracted the freight costs. Have you considered the other side of the coin? HMI sells KP Fertil at the mine gate. Customers, therefore, pick up bulk deliveries with their own transport with the majority of sales aimed at a 300km radius. An argument can be made that this reduces this overall freight cost and allows stronger product pricing to be maintained. Verde on the other hand potentially needs to discount their sales price in order to attract buyers from further away. Bear in mind all we have from Verde is their average sales price per ton and nothing more. It is not geographically broken down so we don't know what their Minas Gerai price is.
This is perhaps why in 2021 Verde's ex-freight achieved price was just $50/t (when adjusted for the 2021 average CAD/AUD exchange rate) vs HMI at $57/t.
Yes, Verde's higher value BAKs sales were lower then and so an allowance must be made for this when available but still in 2021 HMI on average sold its product for more than Verde.
This is a very good example of why it can be very complicated and not all data can be explained so easily first time around.
https://twitter.com/BigBiteNow/status/1555460979345039360?s=20&t=BlKD2TSVz8sVnPfH5WxmKw
For the record, there is no "backtracking" on my part.
I simply believe that whether we are bullish or bearish we all have a responsibility to present the information we find fairly, in a manner that does not 'overstate its worth and in a form that can be double-checked by others.
I also believe Verde is a fantastic read across for HMI but I recognise that it isn't an exact art and so it warrants pointing that out. Otherwise reading that Verde currently sells for AUD$300 risks becoming something it is not. Be it that it is still a wonderful read across to an HMI who sold its product for c. AUD$57 in 2021.
If I really went there I could easily pump the expected HMI sales and such prices far higher without any care for downside risk or those that read it. But such methods come with consequences. Somewhere out there someone gets hurt or loses unnecessarily and that is to be avoided where possible. Investing should be about applying facts and balance. If we lose that then we cannot hope to be successful over the longer term.
In the end, it is the numbers that will do far more talking than we ever can.
This is not about establishing an exact read across for HMI pricing. It is about the general direction of prices/demand and confidence in their strength and that what is very achievable isn't priced into the current valuation.
There are certainly elements/factors of the Verde product makeup and sales approach which adjust achievable prices and so must be respected but there is enough evidence to say that even with a big discount prices and demand are far higher than the current MC currently respects.
Especially when the Verde CEO is quoting CAD $200/t (AUD $223/T) as current prices on 1st July. That does not mean HMI is getting anywhere near that but nor does it say they are standing still at AUD $60-$65/t either.
https://twitter.com/BigBiteNow/status/1555182180028092417?s=20&t=llZBGDiKRzr-yhyWJGCjEA
Verde released revised guidance in May 2022 with the following easily calculable sales prices for each quarter,
Q1 = (CAD) $101,20 (Achieved)
Q2 = $114.50
Q3 = $113.40
Q4 = $103.90
So no indicated discount in Q3 but a c. 8.4% reduction in prices in Q4. That's not significant given the level of achieved pricing and the fact that the plant expansion will be complete by that point.
As for the Baks Transition comment, I don't really see how this applies. Nor really does the reference to 'dust.' HMI has proven that sales in H1 2022 increased significantly compared to the same period in 2021 whatever the content of its product. The read across from Verde is that this should continue in Q3/Q4 and that substantial price rises compared to 2021 are being achieved locally. What the product is really isn't what is important. What's key is does it create sufficient demand and sell for a price that achieves high margins that are relevant enough for the current market cap? The answer to date in 2022 is a resounding yes.
The Verde data indicates demand and price pressures are there such that whilst money has been seemingly wasted on other opportunities it does not impact cash generation enough at this sort of valuation to remove the investment case. Contributors can talk about it until they are blue in the face but it isn't central to what is important when a producing asset is doing so well.
My opinion only.
https://investor.verde.ag/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Q1-2022-Results-Presentation-Verde-AgriTech.pdf