Freeport-McMoRan Copper and Gold (NYSE: FCX)
is back. Effective with the report of its third-quarter
results on Wednesday, there's very little doubt that the
company has returned to its impressive form of a couple of
years ago.
The company chalked up third-quarter net income of $925
million, or $2.07 per share, compared to earnings of $523
million, or $1.31 per share, for the comparable quarter of
2008. Revenues were $4.14 billion, versus $4.62 billion a
year earlier. The Wall Street operatives who follow the
company had anticipated a per-share number of $1.34.
The company benefited from a combination of 40% cost
reductions and steadily increasing copper and gold prices
over the prior quarter. Copper in particular has climbed to
$3.00 a pound, after sliding below $1.50 earlier in the year.
Freeport's average realized price for the red metal during
the quarter was $2.75, as developing nations again became
buyers. However, it is still below last year's price of $3.14
a pound.
At the same time, gold sales climbed to 706,000 ounces
from 307,000 ounces in the third quarter of 2008. Its average
price was $987 per ounce versus last year's $869. But the
world's largest molybdenum producer saw an average price of
$13.95 per pound, significantly below the year earlier
$32.11.
Also as a result of the strengthened copper picture, the
company has decided to proceed with three copper mining
projects, one each in Arizona, Peru, and Chile. And Freeport
also is reinstating its $0.60 annual stock dividend.
But like bigger miners --
BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP),
Rio Tinto (NYSE: RTP), and
Vale (NYSE: VALE) -- Freeport is not immune
to
potential geopolitical difficulties. Just this year, the
company opened a huge copper and cobalt mine in the
Democratic Congo. It now seems that the authorities in
Kinshasa are conducting a "contract review" at the big Tenke
Fungurume mine, along with several other facilities in the
country.
When asked about the situation during the company's
conference call, CEO Richard Adkerson responded, "There's not
much to say other than we are continuing discussion." In this
age of resource nationalism, it would appear that those talks
could lead to nothing or they could be costly to
Freeport.
So we're working our way through the U.S.-based metals
companies, starting with
Alcoa (NYSE: AA)
breaking its slump, stopping at Freeport, and heading
toward
U.S. Steel (NYSE: X) next week. As to
Freeport specifically, my advice to Fools is to keep this
very solid company clearly in your sights.Â
Freeport-McMoRan is rated a four-star company by
Motley Fool CAPSplayers.
After
its latest
results, would you agree?
This article was originally published as
Freeport's Back! (And So Is Its Dividend)on
Fool.com
Copyright © 2009 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights
reserved.
|