Sibanye Stillwater's Q2 2025: Contradictions Emerge on South African Gold Production, Capital Allocation, and Uranium Strategy

Generated by AI AgentEarnings Decrypt
Friday, Aug 29, 2025 6:01 am ET3min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- Sibanye Stillwater reported 51% higher adjusted EBITDA (ZAR 10B) driven by higher basket prices and cost cuts post-restructuring.

- Strategic focus on lithium/PGMs and Keliber project (EUR 300M capex) aims to strengthen long-term value amid critical mineral demand.

- Management targets dividend resumption by year-end if prices hold, with $45X tax credits expected to generate $285M cash in 2026.

- Gold operations face challenges (Kloof review, SA production cut to 15-16 tonnes) but remain 48% of Q2 EBITDA despite impairments.

- Cost-cutting plans include mechanized mining, debottlenecking, and phased Keliber startup to minimize losses amid volatile commodity prices.

The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call

Date of Call: August 28, 2025

Financials Results

  • Revenue: ZAR 54.8B, down 1% YOY
  • EPS: ZAR 1.90 headline EPS, up from ZAR 0.10 prior year (19x)

Guidance:

  • SA Gold FY25 production revised to 15–16 tonnes; AISC ZAR 1.45–1.55M/kg; Kloof under review.
  • SA PGMs: guidance unchanged; positive H2 with inventory release and stronger basket prices.
  • U.S. PGMs: multi-year plan to reduce costs to <$1,000/2E oz in 2–3 years; 45X cash inflows expected in 2026 from 2023–24 filings; trade case prelim duties in 3–5 months.
  • Keliber: construction completion targeted H1 2026; 2025 capex guidance EUR 300M; evaluating phased/slow ramp to minimize losses.
  • Dividend: no interim; board to reassess at year-end—management expects to be back in dividend-paying territory if prices hold.
  • Debt: plan to refinance 2026 notes with ~US$500M issuance in H1 2026; focus on reducing gross debt.

Business Commentary:

* Operational and Financial Turnaround: - Stillwater reported a significant improvement in adjusted EBITDA, which increased by 51% year-on-year to ZAR 10 billion. - This turnaround was driven by increased basket prices and reduced costs following restructuring efforts.

  • Sustainability and Energy Initiatives:
  • The company's renewable energy initiatives have contributed to significant cost savings, with Castle wind farm already reducing energy costs by ZAR 21.6 million.
  • These initiatives are part of the broader strategy to reduce emissions and lower operational costs.

  • Strategic Positioning in Critical Minerals:

  • Sibanye Stillwater is positioned in ecosystems to deliver into long-strengthening markets, with a focus on lithium and PGMs.
  • This strategy is supported by investments in critical projects like Keliber and the Section 45x credits, which are expected to contribute significantly to the company's value.

  • Gold Operations and Strategic Realignment:

  • The gold operations, despite operational challenges, remain strategic to the company's portfolio, contributing 48% to group adjusted EBITDA in Q2.
  • The company is reassessing the Kloof operations to optimize long-term sustainability and commercial viability.

  • Technological Advancements and Cost Reduction:

  • The Montana PGM operations have seen a 41% decrease in all-in sustaining costs compared to pre-restructuring levels.
  • Investments in technology like the electric furnace commissioning and debottlenecking efforts are aimed at further lowering operating costs and enhancing efficiency.

Sentiment Analysis:

  • Management reported adjusted EBITDA up 120% YOY (60% normalized), net debt/EBITDA at 0.89x, most assets within guidance, and an “extremely positive” H2 outlook. They expect to re-enter dividend-paying territory by year-end if prices hold, and anticipate 45X cash in 2026. Offsets: SA gold guidance cut and noncash impairments led to a reported loss.

Q&A:

  • Question from Arnold Van Graan (Nedbank): Have SA gold ops stabilized, and what is the 2–3 year production/CapEx outlook?
    Response: Beatrix and Driefontein have stabilized; Kloof likely halves due to seismicity and constraints; expect ~475–480koz/yr from underground; sustaining capex ~ZAR 3.5B p.a. unchanged.
  • Question from René Hochreiter (Unspecified): How will Stillwater reduce costs below $1,000/oz?
    Response: No silver bullet—mechanize bolting, increase sublevel extraction, debottleneck ore handling/tailings, and optimize mine cycles; trajectory over 2–3 years.
  • Question from Lorenzo Parisi (JPMorgan): Confidence in ~$285M 45X cash next year, future credits, capex and FCF outlook?
    Response: 45X is legislated; submissions in H2; cash expected in 2026; more credits accrue beyond; capex guidance to come; positive cash flow timing depends on prices and ongoing cost reductions.
  • Question from Nkateko Mathonsi (Unspecified): Life-of-mine for Bathopele and tailings capacity; plans for surface ops?
    Response: Bathopele has ~4–5 years; surface reserves ~2 years with larger surface resource strategy in progress; ample tailings capacity for current LoM.
  • Question from ING Bank (Unspecified): What does a ‘responsible’ Keliber start mean—mine or refinery?
    Response: Keliber is integrated; given low prices, start-up may be phased/slower to avoid losses while exploring supportive revenue options.
  • Question from Alexandra Symeonidi (William Blair): Expected Keliber production cost and cost-curve position?
    Response: About $12,000–$12,500/t currently, placing it in the fourth quartile today; expected to be more competitive on the future cost curve.
  • Question from Adrian Spencer Hammond (SBG Securities): Why change FCF definition, and how much deferred revenue is in EBITDA and net debt/EBITDA?
    Response: Definition aligned cash inflow/outflow matching; ~ZAR 1B deferred revenue in H1 EBITDA; net debt and EBITDA both reflect deferred revenue for consistency.
  • Question from Christopher Nicholson (Morgan Stanley): 45X cash vs tax offset; recycling entitlement; and PGM processing if Valterra toll ends?
    Response: Early years are cash; later transferable credits monetizable at ~90–95%; recycling customers can’t claim 45X; Rustenburg/Kroondal can be processed in-house if needed.
  • Question from Dmitriy Dyachenko (Investment Capital Ukraine): What drives the Burnstone restart decision—price or geology?
    Response: Project is technically sound; decision hinges on capital allocation, funding options, and near-term cash profile rather than geology or gold price.
  • Question from Siphelele Mdudu (Matrix Fund Managers): Will H2 inventory releases pressure PGM prices?
    Response: No; releases are limited and gradual—recent price strength is mainly investment demand and China buying, while primary supply trends are declining.
  • Question from Lorenzo Parisi (JPMorgan): Will you call the 2028 convertible soon?
    Response: No; it’s not callable before December 19, 2026 despite trading in the money.
  • Question from Robert Sennott (Seaver Hill Capital): Why not add silver for diversification?
    Response: The group already has meaningful silver exposure via recycling (≈2Moz/year), with diversification pursued primarily through the recycling platform.

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