Q3F2005
Page 3
Australian operations incurred capital expenditure of R151 million (A$32 million). The mill project at St Ives accounted for R7 million (A$2 million) of this expenditure as compared with R60 million (A$13 million) in the December quarter. Expenditure on the St Ives mill project should be completed during the June quarter with similar levels of expenditure as were incurred in the March quarter. Other major expenditure at St Ives was for development at Argo underground and Mars open pit; A$3 million at each project for the quarter. At Agnew R45 million (A$10 million) was spent on the Songvang open pit project. At the Ghanaian operations, capital expenditure amounted to R77 million (US$13 million). R12 million (US$2 million) was spent on the new mill and on the project to convert from contract mining to owner mining at Tarkwa. This compares with R78 million (US$13 million) in the previous quarter. Expenditure on these projects has now been finalised. Major projects are still forecast to be in line with approved votes.
Purchase of investments amounted to R130 million (US$21 million). All of this was for the acquisition of a 19.8 per cent interest in Comaplex Minerals Corp. A R133 million (US$22 million) Mvela loan repayment was made during the quarter.
Net cash outflow for the quarter was R214 million (US$40 million). After accounting for a positive translation adjustment for the quarter of R168 million (negative US$8 million) the cash balance at the end of the March quarter was R2,931 million (US$474 million), which has declined marginally from R2,978 million (US$522 million) at the end of December.
Detailed and Operational Review
G r o u p
o v e r v i e w
Attributable gold production for the March 2005 quarter increased 4 per cent to 1,088,000 ounces when compared with the December quarter. Production from the South African operations at 711,000 ounces accounted for 65 per cent of the Group’s total attributable production, compared with 726,000 ounces or 69 per cent last quarter.
At the South African operations, gold production decreased 2 per cent compared with the previous quarter. At Kloof, the decrease of 16,200 ounces was partly due to a fire at 2 sub- vertical shaft. At Beatrix, production decreased 4,100 ounces mainly due to the curtailment of loss making production, particularly at Beatrix 2 shaft (Beatrix South), where grades experienced at sections of this shaft are not economic at current rand gold prices. Affected crews are being redeployed to other parts of the mine (particularly Beatrix 4 shaft) and will help to replace the lost production over the next quarter at 2 shaft, as well as the lost production due to the stoppage of surface dump treatment at Beatrix number 2 plant. The declines at Kloof and Beatrix were partially offset by an increase at Driefontein of 5,800 ounces due to higher underground yields experienced at 5 shaft and on the west side of the mine. Operating profit at the South African operations decreased from R224 million (US$36 million) to R166 million (US$28 million), as a consequence of the lower rand gold price and the marginally lower gold production.
Production from the Australian operations increased 33 per cent to 206,900 ounces due to operating both the old and new mills at St Ives for the duration of the quarter, and increased production from the Songvang open pit at Agnew. Operating profit from the Australian operations increased quarter on quarter in rand terms from R108 million (A$23 million, US$18 million) to R120 million (A$26 million, US$20 million), primarily as a result of increased production. The
Ghanaian operations showed a 2 per cent increase in attributable gold production to 169,900 ounces. Tarkwa increased gold production by 10 per cent due to the first full quarter of production from the new mill at Tarkwa. Damang’s production was 19 per cent lower due to a planned reduction in high grade ore volumes from the Damang pit. Ghana contributed operating profit of R251 million (US$42 million).
The international operations contributed R371 million (US$62 million) or 69 per cent of the total operating profit of R537 million (US$90 million). This compares with R413 million (US$67 million) or 65 per cent of the total operating profit of R637 million (US$104 million) last quarter.
Group ore processed increased from 11.82 million tons to 12.79 million tons and overall yields were maintained at 2.9 grams per ton. As forecast, total cash costs in rand terms were virtually unchanged at R64,957 per kilogram, compared with R64,921 per kilogram in the December quarter. In US dollar terms, total cash costs increased 3 per cent to US$340 per ounce, compared with US$330 per ounce last quarter. This was due to the stronger rand. Operating cost per ton at R184 was 7 per cent below last quarter due to the increase in the surface tons at a lower average cost.
S o u t h
A f r i c a n
o p e r a t i o n s
During the September 2003 quarter management took a view that the South African currency would remain stronger for longer. As a result it was decided to reposition the South African operations. As previously reported this was presented as reverting from the “Wal-Mart” strategy (more volume at lower grade) to the “SAKS 5th Avenue” strategy (less volume at grades more in line with Life of Mine ore reserve values).
To support this switch in strategy in September 2003, management introduced an initiative called Project 500, which, in turn, was split into two sub-projects called: Project 100 and Project 400.
Project 100 targets reduced consumption of stoping, development and engineering materials, via improved benchmarks and standards at the South African operations. To December 2004, savings for the first half of the year amounted to R70 million. In the March quarter additional savings of R29 million were achieved at Driefontein, Kloof and Beatrix of R14 million, R10 million and R5 million respectively. Projected annual saving are estimated to be in the region of R140 million for the year, which is well above the R100 million first targeted. Savings were mainly achieved on explosives, underground support, drill steel and logistics i.e. underground and surface engineering.
Project Beyond is a procurement initiative targeting savings of up to 10 per cent on materials, services and capital expenditure in South Africa on which around R3 billion per annum is expended. The first phase of the project addresses spend of R1.1 billion in three distinct blocks. The first block, completed in December 2004, achieved contractual savings of R41 million from a spend of R345 million. These savings, on items such as grinding media, lubricants and transport, will be realised over the next 12 months as the new contract arrangements come into force. Work on the second block of commodities, including explosives, electric cable, engineering repairs and underground services, amounting to around R370 million, is almost complete. Savings are expected to exceed target levels of R37 million. The third and final block of phase one of the project, scheduled for the fourth quarter of F2005,