Why heavy metals continue to strike a chord with investors

Russ Mould
13 May 2021

“The Federal Reserve continues to insist that inflation is only transitory and will quickly fade as the base for comparison gets tougher from now onwards, especially when it comes to important inputs such as oil, but markets are clearly not convinced, especially in light of Wednesday’s 4.2% inflation reading in the US,” says AJ Bell Investment Director, Russ Mould. “The Industrial Metals and Mining sector is the top performer within the FTSE 350 this year and even Precious Metals and Mining ranks ninth out of forty, even if gold and silver are getting little attention right now.

“Industrial Metals and Mining is also the leading sector on a three- and five-year view. That may lead some investors to wonder if they have missed the boat. If the Fed is right, then the answer may be ‘yes’. But if inflation grabs hold, or we simply get a rip-roaring economic recovery, or commodities are in the early stages of a new ‘super-cycle,’ as some are suggesting, then miners could yet offer some of the treasure that portfolio builders are seeking.

FTSE 350 sector indices, best performers, by capital return

 

2021 to date

 

 

1 year

Industrial Metals & Mining

43.7%

 

Industrial Metals & Mining

166.0%

Industrial Transportation

36.3%

 

Industrial Transportation

143.0%

Banks

22.8%

 

Leisure Goods

81.0%

Telecoms Services

20.4%

 

Autos & Parts

72.2%

Life Insurance

17.0%

 

Precious Metals & Mining

67.1%

Construction & Materials

16.9%

 

Industrial Engineering

50.2%

Oil, Gas & Coal

14.5%

 

Retailers

49.3%

Chemicals

14.2%

 

Consumer Services

48.9%

Precious Metals & Mining

13.6%

 

Chemicals

48.3%

Beverages

13.2%

 

Construction & Materials

47.3%

 

 

 

 

 

 

3 years

 

 

5 years

Leisure Goods

341.0%

 

Industrial Metals & Mining

541.0%

Technology Hardware

86.9%

 

Leisure Goods

381.0%

Electronic & Electrical Equipment

54.9%

 

Precious Metals & Mining

179.0%

Industrial Metals & Mining

47.5%

 

Electronic & Electrical Equipment

151.0%

Support Services

36.7%

 

Industrial Engineering

103.0%

Closed End Investments

33.6%

 

Closed End Investments

78.6%

Precious Metals & Mining

28.0%

 

Personal Care, Drug and Grocery

67.2%

Beverages

20.5%

 

Support Services

65.2%

Pharma & Biotech

20.1%

 

Technology Hardware

64.3%

Industrial Engineering

19.9%

 

Beverages

63.0%

Source: Sharepad

“The Fed may be calm but central banks in Brazil and Russia are now hiking interest rates, the Norwegian one is promising higher borrowing costs in the second half, the Bank of England is gently slowing the rate at which it is buying Gilts under its Quantitative Easing (QE) scheme and the Bank of Canada is actively reducing the scope of its equivalent programme. 

“Economists are starting to fret, too. Usually, price rises start with commodity prices first, then they seep into factory gate (or producer) prices are companies see their input costs rise and then you get those very same firms jacking up their prices to preserve margins and that’s when consumers start to feel the pinch. It is not hard to make case that the first two phases may already be underway, even if headline consumer price indices remain relatively subdued.

 
Source: Refinitiv data

“No wonder stock markets are beginning to take note. 

“However, for all that miners’ share prices have been motoring, analysts’ earnings estimates look pretty conservative compared to the sector’s cyclical peaks of 2006-07 and 2011-12, at least on the basis of aggregate consensus forecast for the seven miners which currently reside within the FTSE 100 – Anglo American, Antofagasta, BHP, Fresnillo, Glencore, Polymetal and Rio Tinto.

“Their aggregate operating profit peaked at $65 billion in 2011, although return on sales peaked at 36% in 2010. 

“Yet analysts seem to think that the mining sector’s operating margin will peak this year at just 23%, despite years of cost control and the current boom in prices. Granted, that equates to $88 billion of operating profit, a new all-time high, but analysts expect that to ebb to $71 billion in 2022 and $61 billion in 2023, in the view that the initial post-pandemic surge of activity runs out of steam. 

 
Source: Company accounts, Marketscreener, consensus analysts’ forecasts

“In the event of an inflationary recovery, or maybe even stagflation, that could yet look conservative, especially as sustained increases in raw materials do not always require rampant demand growth. In fact, quite the opposite. Commodity bull markets often result from supply-side constraints that are the result of the bust (and hangover) that followed the preceding boom, as miners cancel projects and rein in capita investment to shake off the excesses of the last upcycle.

“This building block seems to be in place. 

“The FTSE 100 miners’ capital investment peaked at 18% of sales in 2009, two years before the profit peak, and at $51 billion in 2013, no less than two years after it, as a dash to increase output undid the very boom it was looking to support. Investment subsequently slumped to just 5% of sales, or $16 billion, in 2017. Spending is ticking up but to nothing like the highs seen in 2009-11 and nor are miners splashing the cash on big acquisitions. Largesse is out and fiscal probity is (still) in. Mines cannot just be switched on in a flash. 

 
Source: Company accounts, Marketscreener, Refinitiv data

“If demand really does pick up and raw material prices start to run, it could take some while for supply to catch up, especially Government spending plans for infrastructure around the globe suggest that demand for commodities could be strong. 

“A ‘green’ future based on renewable energy may also lean heavily on copper, cobalt, rare earths, platinum, palladium and other metals and resources (wind turbines are made of steel and the manufacturing process needs iron ore). 

“A debt-laden slump may snuff out the bull case, but heavy metal could continue to strike a chord with investors if we get a strong recovery, inflation, or both.”

Russ Mould
Investment Director

Russ Mould’s long experience of the capital markets began in 1991 when he became a Fund Manager at a leading provider of life insurance, pensions and asset management services. In 1993, he joined a prestigious investment bank, working as an Equity Analyst covering the technology sector for 12 years. Russ eventually joined Shares magazine in November 2005 as Technology Correspondent and became Editor of the magazine in July 2008. Following the acquisition of Shares' parent company, MSM Media, by AJ Bell Group, he was appointed as AJ Bell’s Investment Director in summer 2013.

Contact details

Mobile: 07710 356 331
Email: russ.mould@ajbell.co.uk

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