
The story of South Africa’s modern economy cannot be told without Anglo American, the giant mining conglomerate that also owns De Beers.
It was the Kimberley diamond rush in 1867 and the Witwatersrand gold stampede in 1886 that forcefully pulled South Africa into the global economy and financial markets.
The dark side of rapid development and industrialisation was the exploitation of black workers from across southern Africa, planting the seeds of the apartheid system.
Anglo American’s name points to its origins and global links, started in South Africa in 1917 by a German Jewish immigrant, Ernst Oppenheimer, with funding from American and British investors and lenders.
It became a major mining conglomerate, but by the 1980s, capital controls meant its profits were trapped domestically, and it ended up as a sprawling domestic business empire, owning everything from banks to wine farms.
In the post-apartheid era, it returned to focusing purely on mining, listing in London to raise capital for its global ambitions. The fact that it is now widely seen as a takeover target or a candidate for restructuring suggests that this goal was achieved only with mixed success.
Without getting into the merits of BHP’s unsolicited bid for Anglo American, which the latter has already rejected, or the many complexities associated with such a transaction, or speculating too much on Anglo’s future, there are at least three notable elements worth exploring.
Firstly, what does it tell us about the global mining cycle? Secondly, what does it tell us about South Africa’s mining climate? Thirdly, what will it mean for the JSE if a stalwart share disappears?
Dr Copper
BHP is primarily interested in Anglo’s South American copper mines. Copper remains the best metal for conducting electricity, and therefore has a major role to play in electrification of energy supplies and the green transition. A battery-powered electric vehicle requires about three times more copper than a traditional internal combustion car, for instance.
Even if elements of the green transition end up lagging expectations — electric vehicle sales have recently lost momentum internationally though production has been ramping up in China — the artificial intelligence boom will put great strain on electrical grids.
As much as we think of AI as existing somewhere “in the cloud”, it very much has a physical presence in data centres and needs consistent electricity supplies.
All this will require copper. For instance, last week Microsoft announced a $10 billion deal with Brookfield to purchase 10GW electricity to power its data centres. That is enough electricity for 1.8 million homes.
Global copper production seems unlikely to keep pace with this demand, based on the mines that are operating today.
Future mines might, but they still need to be developed, a complex process that takes a decade or more from start to finish due. Regulatory hurdles are often a bigger challenge than the engineering ones.
Indeed, the reason there are always big commodity cycles is because of the long lags between demand rising and supply responding. Often, by the time supply responds, demand has turned and prices slump.
Anglo learned this lesson the hard way. In 2008, at the peak of the commodity boom, it paid $5 billion for Minas Rio, a Brazilian iron ore project under construction.
When the mine finally started producing iron ore in 2014, market dynamics were very different and the iron ore price about 40percent lower.
The debt associated with this project (and others) posed an existential risk to Anglo in 2015 and before commodity prices turned somewhat.
Other miners experienced something similar, and the result has been a sector that has been very disciplined in terms of capex spending on new projects.
Adjusted for inflation, capex spending by listed mining companies remains stuck at 2009 levels.
Global real capital expenditure by listed general mining companies
When commodity demand does decisively turn, supply shortages could well be the order of the day.
BHP’s bid is a powerful signal that the mining houses themselves are starting to position their businesses for such an outcome. Investors are starting to take note.
The biggest copper producing country by far is Chile, which produces as much as number two and three, Peru and the DRC, combined.
But mining production volumes in Chile have barely grown over the past decade. Elsewhere in the world, it is also slow going, less than 2 percent per year according to the International Copper Study Group.
The industry was particularly spooked last year when protests against a copper mine in Panama — one of the largest in the world — led to the government withdrawing the licence of its Canadian operator, First Quantum.
One of the factors behind the unhappiness of the Panamanians is simply that people don’t like mines in their backyards. This is one of the reasons why it can take years to get all the necessary approvals.
None of the above is to suggest that it will be a straight line up for copper or any metals related to the green transition.
Market participants have long known copper or ‘‘Dr Copper’’ for its ability to diagnose the health of the global economy. Since copper is used almost exclusively in industrial applications, it is a useful cyclical barometer.
In the short term, it could still come under pressure from overcapacity in China, the leading smelter of the metal, for instance.
However, short-term price fluctuations are not the story here, the long-term outlook is. While the copper price is already near record levels in nominal terms, adjusting it for inflation shows that it is not historically stretched by any means.
One unfortunate side-effect of this bullish outlook: theft of copper cable, already a scourge in South Africa, could become a global problem.
No country for old mines
The second question relates to South Africa’s deteriorating reputation as a mining jurisdiction. BHP’s bid pointedly excludes Anglo’s South African operations in iron ore and platinum.
Partly, this is simply because the copper assets are in Chile and Peru, not here. Other potential suitors such as Glencore might be keener on the local operations. While BHP has denied it is shunning South Africa, it spun off its South African businesses into South32 in 2015.
However, it is hard to escape the fact that South Africa is viewed as an unattractive mining country. The challenges are massive, including volatile labour relations, disputes with surrounding communities, organised crime, regulatory uncertainty, unreasonable delays in processing applications and infrastructure bottlenecks.
The Fraser Institute, based in Canada, conducts an annual survey on the attractiveness of different countries as mining jurisdictions. These days South Africa ranks in the bottom 10 least attractive mining destinations.
The financial ecosystem that supported junior miners in years gone by has also largely disappeared.
Local investors have limited appetite for supporting early-stage mining companies these days, and global investors have little appetite for any investments in South Africa. Precious little exploration is done, despite geologists estimating that a rich natural bounty remains.
The evidence is in the form of mining production — the volume of stuff pulled out of the ground — that has declined over the past 20 years.
Excluding gold, which is arguably largely mined out, makes the picture somewhat better, but not much. In contrast, Australia, not facing the same physical and institutional bottlenecks as on this side of the Indian Ocean, has managed to steadily double output over this period.
Real fixed investment spending (gross fixed capital formation) in the mining sector was almost 20 percent lower in 2023 compared to the 2013 peak. Similarly, mining employment is lower than the 2015 peak of 481 000.
And unlike other sectors, Covid cannot be blamed. Covid and its immediate aftermath (and the Russian invasion of Ukraine) saw commodity prices jump.
Mining is still big business in South Africa, and the main source of export revenues. But if output volumes don’t grow, we are entirely reliant on higher prices or a weaker rand for growing export income.
And these prices are inherently volatile.
These are glimmers of hope. The relationship between the mining industry and government is better now than in the past 15 years, which can clear some of the regulatory blockages. Mines are now able to diversify electricity supplies away from Eskom and will eventually be able to use trains run by companies other than Transnet.
A long-overdue new cadastral system is being procured that should facilitate exploration activity by making it easier to see who owns what mining rights where, speeding up the application process. Many other challenges remain, however.
The shrinking JSE
What about the dwindling list of companies listed on the JSE? The local bourse started life as a way for gold mining companies to raise capital. Today, it obviously caters to companies from a broad range of sectors, but the basic principle remains.
If companies don’t need to raise funding for growth — and in South Africa’s sluggish economy, few do — new listings will be scarce.
Since mines remain very capital-intensive compared to other industries, a subdued mining industry as described above is a particularly big constraint.
Izak Odendaal is an investment strategist at Old Mutual Wealth.