by 68Camaro » Thu May 15, 2014 11:06 am
On production cost, from what I've read its easy to end up with apples to oranges depending on who wants to make what point for what reason, and at our level the truth can appear a bit murky.
It is true that there are completely different costs for different mines of different types in different parts of the world with different primary objectives. Sorting that out is hard.
I do believe the average cost of an ounce from new mines is *well* over $20/oz. That gives you an idea of what amount of mining expansion is likely to occur, which is not much at this price.
From existing mines, I tend to believe the global production cost of a given new new ounce (not necesarily counting cost of capital, profit, M&R, etc) and mixing high-yield mines with low-yield mines, and mixing PM primary mines with base metal mines (that have silver byproduct) with is probably less than $10. But much of that yield is from already expensed capital and the big mines are wearing out and/or dependent on a base metal market (the silver yield from these goes to zero if the need for base metals goes away). And based on the number of mining companies with marginal profits at the current price, I suspect by the time you burden the cost per ounce with the reality of running a corporation that the actual delivered cost is higher than $10/oz. Note that miners will want to publicize low costs per ounce to make themeslves look good to the investor, so silver institute data on this could be suspect.
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