Gold Fields Limited is soaring high this year on the back of a favourable gold pricing environment that has sent the stock soaring towards gains of more than 50%. However, Gold Fields stock has started pulling back of late in a surprising move. The company seems to be making the right moves from a financial perspective, but that has not deterred investors from sending the stock lower.
Gold Fields delivered a profit of $71 million, or $0.09 per share in the first half of 2019. This was a massive improvement over the prior-year period’s loss of $367 million, or $0.45 per share. The company also posted a normalized profit of $126 million for the first half of the year as compared to $43 million in the year-ago period.
Gold Fields reported revenue of $1.35 billion for the first half of the year, an increase of 2% over the prior-year period’s figure. But at the same time, the company exercised cost control that allowed it to deliver a strong bottom-line performance.
More specifically, Gold Fields’ all-in costs for the first half of the year came in at $1,106 an ounce, which was 5% lower than the year-ago period’s figure of $1,169 an ounce. The company’s output for the first half of 2019 increased 9% to 1.08 million ounces.
A combination of higher production and low costs allowed Gold Fields to deliver net cash flow of $49 million during the period. A year ago, the company had incurred a net cash outflow of $79 million. So, Gold Fields is making the right moves from a financial perspective, and it should keep getting better in light of the guidance it issued and the favourable pricing scenario.
Gold Fields is on track to achieve its full-year guidance. The company anticipates production between 2.13 million ounces and 2.18 million ounces of gold. Its all-in sustaining costs are expected between $980 an ounce to $995 an ounce.
This should allow Gold Fields to deliver a strong bottom-line performance on account of favourable gold margins because of the yellow metal’s spot price. Gold is currently at more than $1,500 an ounce and it has the potential to move higher on account of the U.S.-China trade war.
Not surprisingly, the company is expected to deliver almost 10% revenue growth in 2019 and 2020, though it could do better if the favourable environment continues. But more importantly, the company’s bottom-line growth is expected to increase significantly. Its earnings are expected to more than triple in 2019 to $0.23 per share, and then increase to $0.39 per share in 2020.
As such, Gold Fields should be able to boost its cash flow further and also pay a nice dividend. All of this tells us that investors should buy more of Gold Fields stock as it has the potential to deliver more upside.
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