5 reasons China is coming to buy your gold mine

Chinese companies like Zijin Mining Group and Zhaojin Mining Industry Co are in a good position to to take a bite out of struggling North American and European-based producers because:

  • Chinese gold demand is soaring and at 1,000 tonnes will overtake Indian purchases this year, but domestic deposits are less than 5% of the global total.
  • Targets are cheap – the S&P/TSX Global Gold Index of the globe's 49 biggest gold companies are down 31% this year alone.
  • Domestic Chinese producers enjoy some of the lowest cash costs – Zhaojin manages $549/oz, compared with a global average of $831/oz
  • Chinese and Hong Kong companies have access to cheap capital – Zijin got $4.9 billion in soft loans from a state bank for M&A
  • The majors are actively looking to sell as debt levels increase and high-cost mines are mothballed – Barrick could dump as many as 12 of its mines.

Possible targets include:

  • Australia's Mali-focused Papillion Resources ($390 million)
  • Toronto-based Iamgold ($2.5 billion)
  • Amara Mining active in West Africa ($48 million)
  • Perseus Mining ($325 million) with producing mines in Ghana and Cote d'Ivoire

While these companies are looking to get rid of a number of mines:

  • Barrick Gold
  • Newmont Mining Corp
  • Gold Fields
  • Alacer Gold Corp

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