Rio caps 8216 extreme phase 8217 with a flourish

Rio Tinto edges ahead its investment case among London’s global base metals miners with an impressive set of 2016 results, including a surprise dividend hike and confirmation of a share buyback throughout 2017.


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By :  ,  Financial Analyst

Rio Tinto edges ahead its investment case among London’s global base metals miners with an impressive set of 2016 results, including a surprise dividend hike and confirmation of a share buyback throughout 2017.

Clearly though, Rio does not intend to repeat the return of 70% of a year’s underlying earnings ($3.6bn) in the foreseeable future, after projecting free cash flow growth of $1bn a year till 2022.

And the tardy share price reaction in Australian trading—just 0.8% higher—and only somewhat better applause in London—already slipping off a 3.3% initial rise—also has an eye to increasing likelihood of a strike at the world’s biggest copper mine, Escondida, in Chile. The anxieties have placed a floor under price of the metal as it consolidates off January’s 18-month high, but a production delay (strike leaders suggest “practically zero” output) will be a setback.

The group realises that brutally slimmed-down production assets are already running at close to best capacity. That partly explains the three major growth projects in development for this year in bauxite, aluminium and copper. Furthermore, output of the latter saw the second fastest ramp in the year to end-Q4, up 20%. That acceleration came on the back of an 11% rise at Escondida in the quarter. But it was not sufficient to offset an overall Escondida decline of 12% in 2016.

So, a stoppage in Chile could make for an awkward start to an ambitious year for the group, during which it will need to manage expectations about production and cash flow generation, as the mineral price outlook suggests consolidation for the medium term. For instance, the forward curve of Nymex’s 62% China Iron Ore futures points to a price around $60/mt, down a quarter against the spot.

This year’s largesse to Rio shareholders may begin to look even more strategic if, as we suspect, the ‘extreme phase’ of global miners’ cost rationalisation and leverage reduction does indeed turn out to be over. Rio presented a net debt slashed by 30% with a justifiable flourish on Wednesday, but consensus forecasts point to a reduction of less than half that in 2017, at 12%.

Clearing industrial action cloud cover might encourage a sunnier share price reaction in the near term though. Rio’s 120% climb since January 2016 to date lags its closest match BHP Billiton by 17 percentage points. A year of firing on most cylinders, financially and operationally, suggests the disparity no longer makes sense.

Fundamentally too, Rio’s 2016 leaves it poised to benefit even if the pace of cyclical commodity recovery moderates significantly.


 

On the charts our main focus in RIO currently is the stock’s advance back to highs between 4000p-4029p last seen 5 years ago. There was no return even during the rather irrational exuberance in the sector in 2014, when Rio jumped 20% one day that October, amid implausible takeover overtures from Glencore and peaking Chinese demand.

Cost and debt reduction and cash flow generation have played far better with mining investors more recently and the stock has advanced in orderly fashion ever since creating a clear bottom at 1570p in the week ending on 22nd January 2016. A further consolidative floor is visible over the 2270s before the cleanest weekly rising channel in the name since 2008.

The weekly view shows the clearest signpost on the horizon is a band of resistance created by a severe reversal that can actually be seen from space (OK, metaphorically) in February 2012. An attempt to take back that ground a year later, signally failed.

Just over a year after that, another RIO rebound reversed at 3680p, some 8% away from prices at the time of writing.

Our view is that whilst the commodity complex is certainly volatile enough to stymie a further approach of shares to the target resistance zone, fundamentals and technical factors are now more aligned than they have been for half a decade.

A breach of the challenging resistance zone would indeed be a significant inflection point for the stock–Afterwards, RIO can be expected to accelerate sharply towards the next most important upside area around 4717p.

However, a weekly momentum study (Slow Stochastic Oscillator) together with a rather emphatic tag, pass and swing last month away from the 2014 high (3680p) reveal that some wariness about RIO’s ascent remains.

We expect longer-term shareholders, who are clearly driving the shares at present judging by reduced volatility, to corroborate the strength of a robust c. 12% advance during the second week of January. The move closed on that Friday at 3417p, having been as low as 3094p.

 

WEEKLY CHART: RIO TINTO

RIO TINTO WEEKLY 8TH FEBRUARY 2017

 

Source: Thomson Reuters / please click image to enlarge

 

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