PROFIT & LOSS

Rising costs tarnish Vale's record EBITDA

Rising costs have taken the shine off Brazil-based miner Vale's record adjusted EBITDA of US$11.2 billion for the second quarter which was boosted by higher iron ore prices and sales volumes.

Staff reporter
 Vale’s Gongo Soco mine in Brazil’s Minas Gerais

Vale’s Gongo Soco mine in Brazil’s Minas Gerais

However this missed the $12 billion average estimate among analysts, Bloomberg reported.

Vale said its iron ore fines and pellets EBITDA breakeven cost was US$44.50 per tonne, $8.3/t higher than in the first quarter.

It said the $4.70/t rise in C1 costs was mainly due to higher third party purchases, inflation and demurrage costs and $1.9/t higher freight costs.

"We now expect C1 costs ex-third-party purchases for 4Q21 (vs 2Q21) to decrease around $1.50/t, mainly due to higher dilution of fixed costs and normalization of demurrage costs," Vale said.

BMO Capital Markets analysts said looking ahead, higher costs would likely continue, "although in our view not enough to derail the overall high FCF/low EV/EBITDA multiple (at meaningfully lower than current iron ore price assumptions) positive thesis".

Vale's average CFR reference price was $202/t, $30.90/t more than in the first quarter.

The company reached 330Mt per annum capacity in the June quarter.

Its base metals business was impacted by the ongoing strike at its Sudbury operation in Canada.

Nickel unit EBITDA was down $212 million from the first quarter to $430 million.

Vale's net income for the first half was up 964% from a year earlier to $13.1 billion.

"Following our shareholder remuneration policy, a minimum of $5.3 billion will be distributed in September based on the results for the first half of the year, with the final amount to be discussed and approved by the board of directors in due time," Vale said.

It ended the quarter with gross debt of $12.1 billion, in line with the March quarter.

"With elevated confidence, Vale remains on track in its de-risking, reshaping and re-rating strategy," CEO Eduardo Bartolomeo said.

BMO has a rating of outperform and a price target of $29, compared with Vale's close of $22.94 in New York.

In Brazil, Vale gained 2.7% to BRL117.3 before the release of its results after market close.

The company is trading near an all-time high and is valued about BRL620 billion (US$121 billion).

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Kondinin team.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Kondinin team.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence Investor Sentiment Report 2024

Survey revealing the plans, priorities, and preferences of 120+ mining investors and their expectations for the sector in 2024.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence Mining Equities Report 2023

Access an exclusive, inside look on the quarterly mining IPOs and secondary raisings data and mining equities performance tables with an annual Stock Exchange Comparisons supplement.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence World Risk Report 2023 (feat. MineHutte ratings)

A detailed analysis of mining investment risks across 121 jurisdictions globally, built on 11 ‘hard risk’ metrics and an industrywide survey.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence Global Leadership Report 2023: Social licence

Gain insights into social licence trends and best practices from interviews with 20+ top mining company executives and an industrywide survey.