When gold stock companies fail to meet analyst earnings, the share price usually drops and life moves on after investors reevaluate their investment decisions. This is the normal procedure for companies that seem to rely on the gold price as a main source of revenue. How then, one must ask, did Yamana report net earnings of $9.6 million, or $0.01 per share and not get its share price butchered. This is significantly lower than earnings of $42 million, or $0.06 per share, for the second quarter of 2008. Earnings represent a 77% drop!
The reason is simple: forecasts and unique conditions. Let us begin with the first reason of the future of the company. With a high gold price that seems to have no ceiling, the company’s revenues are expected to be quite strong in the near future. Also, the company reported production of 289,574 gold equivalent ounces at cash costs of $387 per gold equivalent ounce. The company also mined 35.6 million pounds of copper at a cost of roughly $0.91 per pound. The quarter’s production totals were lower than analyst expectations by about 30,000 gold ounces. In the next quarter Yamana will most likely make up for this downward bias in its production. Continue reading ‘Gold Stock Earnings and the Effects of a Booming Gold Price’ »