2nd UPDATE: ERA Cuts 2010 Output Guidance; Says Profit Will Be Hit
October 13 2010 - 1:11AM
Dow Jones News
Uranium miner Energy Resources of Australia Ltd. (ERA.AU) on
Wednesday downgraded its annual production guidance for the second
time this year, and said a strong Australian dollar is hurting its
bottom line.
The production shortfall means ERA will have to cover some
supply requirements with purchases, further eroding its earnings
and combining with the currency exposure to set it up for a sharp
fall in 2010 full year profit.
The Rio Tinto Ltd. (RIO.AU) subsidiary and owner of the world's
second biggest uranium mine by production in 2009, Ranger, said the
fall in output was caused by disappointing ore grades.
Without expansions, Ranger's ore body is due to run out by 2012
so ERA is getting close to the bottom of the pit.
Ranger, which produced 9% of the world's uranium oxide in 2009,
is located in Australia's Northern Territory, where operations can
be subdued by heavy rains during the traditional wet season.
ERA downgraded its output guidance on July 13 after encountering
lower-grade yellow cake when seasonal rains dried up and it
overcame stability problems with the south wall of the pit. Chief
Executive Rob Atkinson said at the time that the company was just
beginning to see better grades and forecast a stronger second half
for the group.
Output for the three months to Sept. 30, however, was only 911
metric tons, up 10% from the June quarter but down 35% from a year
earlier.
The Darwin-based company, 68%-owned by Rio Tinto, cut its annual
production forecast to 3,900 tons from 4,300-4,700 tons, meaning it
will fall well short of its 5,000 ton supply requirement. At the
start of the year, ERA was forecasting about 5,240 tons of annual
production.
Selling purchased product is expected to adversely impact ERA's
earnings because the small margin earned from selling external
material is more than offset by the company's ongoing costs of
operation.
Atkinson told Dow Jones Newswires that ERA still expects to
spend more money in 2010 than in 2009, partly on examining
expansion options for Ranger, and that the strong Australian dollar
"will undoubtedly hurt us".
"With it coming close to U.S. dollar parity, it has a very
significant effect on our business," he said.
On the positive side, Atkinson said ERA still expects to achieve
similar prices for its products this year to what it got in 2009
despite subdued uranium spot prices.
"ERA sells is material on long term contracts so we have locked
in those prices well in advance," he said, adding that some old
contracts struck at lower prices have recently expired.
Persistent lower grades have prompted ERA to launch an extra
drilling program in the current pit to improve its confidence about
the quality and volume of ore for the remainder of the mine's
life.
ERA has extended its life to at least 2012, after which it plans
to sell stockpiled ore until 2020.
The company is considering an expansion in which it would
plunder an untapped 30,000-40,000 metric ton resource in the Ranger
3 Deeps mineral deposit. It reiterated Wednesday that it is
finalizing studies on whether to build a 'decline'--a tunnel bored
through the resource to facilitate closely spaced drilling and a
geotechnical assessment--and expects to make a final decision on
the decline "in the coming months".
ERA also said Wednesday that it continues to prepare a draft
environmental impact statement for its proposed heap leach
facility, adding that the formal assessment process by regulators
is likely to be completed in the 2011 first half. Heap leaching
uses acid filtration to extract minerals from poor quality ore.
ERA in July reported an 82% plunge in first half net profit to
A$22.7 million, largely thanks to the lower ore grades. Its shares
fell 6.4% on Wednesday compared with a flat broader market.
-By Ross Kelly, Dow Jones Newswires; 61-2-8272-4692;
Ross.Kelly@dowjones.com
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