August 28, 2009
Ellis Martin:
Welcome to The Opportunity Show. I’m Ellis Martin.
Today we are talking about the possibility of making
real money at this time by investing in silver
stocks. Joining me is silver guru David Morgan of
silver-investor.com. Thanks for joining
us today again.
My indicator when buying a silver stock is getting
to know the people that run the company, perhaps
looking at the properties, the fundamentals, the
chart, and then plugging in intuitively which may or
may not be the best way to do it. What are some of
your indicators before selecting a company and a
stock for investment purposes?
David Morgan:
Well, I’m going to suppose that we are talking about
the junior mining areas, because in the senior
mining area you can look at the balance sheet and
income statement and make a fairly good
determination of a company’s value. As far as junior
miners, and explorers as well, what you said isn’t
far off. There isn’t any way to know in a lot of
these situations whether a company is going to make
a discovery. Some of it is intuition. It is always
best in my view to start out with as many facts as
possible. At times you can get a feel for the
management if they’ve done something worthwhile in
the exploration or small mining sector before.
It certainly gives you confidence if the management
of the stock you are interested in has found a good
mining property in the past. You also want to look
at what their cash flow is and what their cash
balance is. In other words, some of these
companies—as good as some of them are, with some
pretty good projects—will probably not continue,
because they might have half a million dollars in
the bank and their burn rate might be two hundred
thousand a month, and obviously within three months
they’re going to be broke. Unless they can finance.
And this has been very difficult, although recently
things have loosened up somewhat.
I said in a recent Morgan Report the best
question you can ask management is, “How much cash
do you have in the treasury and what’s your burn
rate?” This again applies to the junior mining
sector, although the principles certainly apply to
any size business. How long can you stay in business
if things don’t pick up soon?
Another key is to know that the project that they
have or the property that they have has potential.
That’s a real tough call. Normally, on any of the
juniors that we put into The Morgan Report,
we have somebody on the project. That doesn’t
guarantee it’s going to be a good one but it
certainly can get rid of ones that don’t have merit.
So, you might have a project that looks pretty good
on paper, but once you get down and walk the project
you can see what warts it has, meaning how the
terrain might lend itself to the overall project.
Let’s say it has fairly decent drill results
already, but because it’s in an area that is so
difficult to access, the infrastructure costs of
advancing this prospect into a mining situation are
so extraordinarily expensive that the economics just
don’t work out.
These are things you really can’t sit at a desk and
put in a computer model and say, “This project is
going to be profitable once silver hits 15.” Sure,
there are people who try to do that. And I have
nothing against mathematical tools; I love them, I
use them, but there’s nothing like walking a project
for a company to get a real flavor for what the
potential really is. Yet, in fact, I don’t do it on
every project. Someone who does research with me,
for me, alongside me goes to some of these projects.
Even doing all of that doesn’t guarantee anything,
but it certainly can get rid of situations that
again might look good on paper but in reality are
not.
Mr. Martin:
Well, if that infrastructure isn’t there and the
roads are not workable and you can’t move enough ore
out quick enough in any given day for instance, it
doesn’t matter what grade of silver, gold, or copper
you have; you may not necessarily have a viable
business where you have positive cash flow,
especially with a high burn rate and a small bank
account.
Mr. Morgan:
That’s precisely right, and I’ll give you a real
quick example. This major mining company has mines
all over the world. Primarily they wanted to be a
silver company although it’s basically half gold and
half silver. They mine almost as much gold on a cost
basis as silver. They have a mine in the southern
tip of Argentina that is extremely rich.
The cutoff grade for this project is very high. I
don’t remember what it is but for talking purposes
let’s call it seven ounces the ton. Which at 7 times
14, you’re looking at $98.00-an-ounce rock; that’s
pretty hefty dollars per ton. And in the right
location that would be very economic, but this mine
is so far out, the transportation costs are so
great, that the cutoff grade is high.
I want to make the point that grade is king, but
even grade as king doesn’t necessarily guarantee a
profit. We can do a coin example real quickly. Let’s
say you have pure silver bullion on the moon. You
don’t even have to refine it. It’s .9995 and there’s
25 million ounces of it. Is it worth going up there
to get it and bring it back? Is it economic? The
answer is of course not. I know it’s a corny
example. I’m trying to get people to think. I’m
trying to point out all of the factors that go into
analyzing a mining company that are not really
apparent to your average investor. Most of these
small companies are what I call story stocks.
They’ve got a great promoter who tells them the
story. The story is sexy. It sounds good. It really
is enticing. It’s a great conversation piece at
lunch or at the cocktail party or at the golf
course. But most of them just end up being stories.
Mr. Martin:
So they’re never going to go into production and
that’s why they haven’t in the two to five years
that they’ve been around.
Mr. Morgan:
Well it takes usually at least five years to get a
company into production. That’s after feasibility
study and everything else that goes with it. So a
lot of these companies are probably well meaning but
they turn out to be nothing more than promotions. I
don’t like saying that but that’s the eventual
reality.
However, this is tricky! I know of one instance
where a company basically went in with an attitude
to fleece the mining investor and ended up making a
great discovery and made lots of money for
themselves and the investors, although that was not
their original intent. And there have been others
that have been as sincere as can be and don’t come
out with anything and basically lose all the money
that they’ve acquired from the investing public. So
it’s a real tough call. Even if you know who the
good or bad guys are, to really know what’s going to
happen is still a bit of a guess, because no one
knows . . . when you’re looking for something
underneath the ground, anything can happen.
Mr. Martin:
But the geologist basically is the person I tend
to like to hang out with as well to get the truth
about what is going on in the ground. Unless they
are promoters, they are pretty much going to be
truthful with you, especially if they have a great
reputation. Do you speak with a lot of geologists in
your travels?
Mr. Morgan:
Oh absolutely. I always speak with the geologist
on the project, especially if I’m doing a mining
tour or the analyst tour. What I’m interested in is
a geologist who is independent; I talk to two or
three of them and ask them about the district or
whatever. Most geologists are there to find
something—that’s why they’re on the project—and they
have to use some imagination on what kind of a
deposit could be under the ground. They drill holes
they try to make a model and when they model these
things, they normally do it on a best-efforts basis,
but they are looking at an optimistic perspective
most of the time, and you’ve got to remember that
when you’re thinking this through.
If you have enough good drill results to get to a
feasibility study, you’re going to have to have
drilled that thing like Swiss cheese in some cases
and then you’re going to have to get a bank to look
it over with their analysts and say, “You know what?
This thing does make sense, let’s put in a bunch
more money and let a mining engineer figure out
what’s economic here and what isn’t.” In other
words, a lot of money goes into holes in the ground
before that thing ever becomes a producing mine. And
even doing that, sometimes they fail. That’s rare
but it does happen. So it’s a tough, tough business
as well as a very exciting business. There are very
few “investments” that you can make (and I used
quotation marks because really they’re speculations)
where you can put in a few dollars and come out
making a lot of dollars. The problem is you have so
many to choose from. There are more than 4,000 of
them and most of them never materialize. The odds
are probably 2,000 to 1 that something you buy
actually becomes a mining project. So a tough game,
an exciting game, one in which I teach to “bet a
little to win a lot.” These are situations where you
know you want to put in a small amount of money and
if it hits it’s going to make you a significant
amount of money. But you don’t want to put a
significant amount of money into a junior mining
company, in my opinion anyway.
You should never spend any money that you are going
to need. So that’s a warning and a very sincere one
for you and anyone else. If you do have some risk
capital, is now a good time to get into the junior
mining sector? I’d say yes but have a long-term
perspective, because I think we’re going to be in a
wide trading range through the summer. You want to
really do your research carefully and you want to
buy a select handful of junior mining prospects.
Mr. Martin:
Thank you, David, for this interview on the
theopportunityshow.com. I’m Ellis Martin,
executive producer. David Morgan of The Morgan
Report is one of the most preeminent experts in
silver, gold, and precious metals. He hosts a
subscription-based Web site,
silver-investor.com. David is also an author,
having penned the book Get the Skinny on Silver
Investing, available on
amazon.com. He’s a teacher, lecturer, world
traveler, and once again we are pleased to have him
here on The Opportunity Show. David, thanks for
joining us today
It is an honor to be.
Sincerely,
David Morgan
Mr. Morgan has followed the silver market for more
than thirty years. He wrote the book,
Get the Skinny on Silver Investing. Much of his
Web site,
Silver-Investor.com,
is devoted to education about the precious metals,
it is both a free site and does have a members only
section. To receive full access to
The Morgan Report click the hyperlink.
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