Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Corporate: Tin gets a new shine

The rise in tin prices signals a long-term recovery for the long-forgotten industry. The former CEO of Malaysia Smelting Corp explains what’s driving the new upcycle and what it will take for it to be sustainable.

Mohd Ajib Anuar looks tired and drained as he walks into the boardroom of Malaysia Smelting Corp (MSC). It is a muggy afternoon in Kuala Lumpur, and the Muslim fasting month has just started. But he snaps out of his languor as soon as he begins talking about tin, the metal that made fortunes for many Malaysian tycoons through most of the last century.

To be sure, the tin business has been viewed as something of a sunset industry since the mid-1980s. Yet, since the global financial crisis, tin prices have climbed steadily higher, amid a persistent supply deficit in the face of growing demand. Now, Mohd Ajib sees a new dawn breaking for the tin business. “Definitely. No question about it. The tin industry will grow into a more sustainable industry,” he tells The Edge Singapore.

Mohd Ajib, 64, has worked in the tin business for more than four decades. He was CEO of MSC from 1994 to 2013. The 127-year tin smelter is dual-listed in Singapore and Malaysia, and ranks as the world’s second largest producer of tin metal. It is controlled by The Straits Trading Company. Mohd Ajib isn’t planning to fade away into retirement, though. He has been appointed adviser to the board of MSC. He is also currently chairman of Malaysia’s Tin Industry Board, and continues to play an active role in a host of other tin industry organisations.

In fact, Mohd Ajib says he plans to remain active in the tin business for the next couple of decades, which he believes will be an exciting time for the industry. Specifically, he wants to help promising tin companies around the world realise their full potential, and hints that he is already working on “something big”.

His optimism is underpinned by the expanding uses of tin in recent years. Take the capsules on wine bottles for instance. The protective sleeves, which prevent the cork seals from being gnawed by rodents and other pests as they sit in cellars, were historically made of lead. But these were phased out due to fears of lead poisoning, and are now largely made of tin or aluminium.

In May, tin research promoter ITRI launched a committee to push for the use of pure tin capsules for premium wines at an exhibition in Hong Kong. “It’s the best capsule for the best wine. It’s non-toxic. The mechanical quality is good. The chemical quality is good. It looks very nice,” says Mohd Ajib, laughing at his own enthusiasm.

There are, of course, many other new and less mundane uses of tin. Notably, environmentally friendly uses of tin have been discovered through collaborative research by ITRI and companies such as Panasonic, Sony, Nokia and Motorola.

Today, tin chemicals are used in lithium ion batteries and modern fuel additives. According to Mohd Ajib, recent fuel additive trials in China and Peru achieved 10% to 15% energy savings for fishing boats and earth moving equipment, while carbon emissions were 20% to 30% lower. MSC’s own subsidiary Rahman Hydraulic Tin has been involved in work on tin-based fuel additives.

Riding new technologies

Tin has been in use for some 5,000 years, though it was first mined in large quantities in Cornwall, Britain in the 19th century. In the last few decades, the story of tin has been shaped by the ebb and flow of new technologies, and a succession of market crises.

In 1985, tin prices collapsed when the International Tin Council, which administers a buffer stock used to support prices, became insolvent. The council was borrowing heavily to keep prices high at a time when consumption was falling, which encouraged new producers such as Brazil and Bolivia to flood the market. Meanwhile, in Malaysia, production dried up as rich alluvial resources were exhausted. In 1995, global consumption was just 180,000 tonnes, driven mostly by tinplating. Tin prices at the time had declined to just US$5,000 a tonne.

Nearly 20 years on, consumption has doubled and the price of tin has risen to US$22,000 a tonne. In fact, tin prices have risen 100% in the last five years alone. One reason for this comeback was the switch by the electronics industry to lead-free solder following regulations in the European Union prohibiting hazardous wastes in 2002. Since then, the miniaturisation of devices such as computers and smartphones has resulted in less solder being used in the consumer electronics sector. Industries like healthcare and defence, however, are taking up some of the slack.

“The defence and medical sectors needed more time to establish the durability of the soldering materials. But now that it’s been confirmed by the consumer electronics sector, they are taking steps to convert to lead-free solders, and this is where we will see growth,” says Mohd Ajib. Even so, tin consumption last year was 350,000 tonnes, still below the peak of 370,000 tonnes in 2007, largely because of the global economic slowdown and the miniaturisation effect.

Looking ahead, Mohd Ajib figures demand for tin could keep growing as computers and electronic parts find their way into just about everything. The automobile sector, for instance, is increasingly using electronic parts in the vehicles it produces. “So, for tin to show further improvement in price, consumption and supply, it is not impossible. Some people say it will shoot up to US$40,000.” ITRI has forecast global tin consumption to rise at an annual rate of 2% over the next five to 10 years. Consumption is set to exceed 400,000 tonnes from around 2015.

Supply constraints

While demand for tin has been strong in recent years, supply has become more uncertain. For starters, China has turned from a net exporter to a net importer. That is significant as China is the world’s biggest producer and consumer of tin.

At the same time, supply from Indonesia, which is the world’s leading exporter of tin, has become more unpredictable. Small, artisanal miners account for more than 80% of tin produced in Indonesia. The Indonesian government has been trying to set standards in the industry, such as requiring that smelters produce 99.9% pure tin. It has also mandated that exports be made through the Indonesia Commodity and Derivatives Exchange. On top of that, the Indonesian government has tried to control the price of the metal.

The result of all this is that tin exports from Indonesia have become erratic. “Stocks held at LME [London Metal Exchange] and by consumers are at historical lows,” Mohd Ajib says. “So, with Indonesian supply declining and China becoming a net importer, the market is going to move into greater deficit within the next two to three years.”

While that could be good news for speculators, it isn’t really healthy for the tin industry over the longer term, according to Mohd Ajib. To foster higher consumption of tin over the long term, supply has to be sustainable and prices need to be steady. How can that be achieved? Mohd Ajib says the key is an industry-wide consolidation.

“Today, you have to buy from small-scale miners… but the global tin industry will undergo a major shift, transforming the supply structure from small-scale to more structured producers and a more sustainable way of production,” he says. The reason is that a significant amount of capital will be needed to create sufficient supply around the world, perhaps as much as US$3 billion ($3.7 billion) over the next five years. And, it is the largest tin companies that will be able to channel this capital efficiently into proper exploration and mining schemes and environmental programmes.

“It’s going to be more orderly. Of course, the cost will be higher, but the electronics industry will be happy to see sustainability on the supply side,” Mohd Ajib says. In fact, Mohd Ajib figures the price of tin will have to be higher than where it is today — perhaps US$30,000 per tonne — to sustain production at the level of demand. At current prices, only a handful of exploratory projects might be feasible, he says.

According to Mohd Ajib, among the companies that are best positioned to increase tin supply is Kasbah Resources, which has a project in Morocco. Other promising players are Australia’s Stellar Resources and Consolidated Tin Mines. Yet, it will take these projects three years to prove their reserves before they can start developing the mines. Amid continued supply constraints, ITRI has forecast a rise in tin prices to a cyclical peak of US$35,000 to US$40,000 between 2015 and 2017.

Growing interest

Mohd Ajib began his career at a Malaysian unit of Anglo American. He later worked for several years at Malaysia Mining Corp, which was involved in tin, diamond and gold mining. As he tells it, he entered the tin industry at the bottom of the cycle, when everyone else was trying to get out. And, it is not that he lacked alternatives, as he was offered jobs at big Malaysian government-linked companies such as Petroliam Nasional and Perbadanan Nasional during his early years. “But I stuck to tin,” he says.

What was the attraction? Mohd Ajib says the tin industry is small yet very global, and it put him in touch with people all over the world. “I just like this industry,” he says. “After 43 years, whether I am in Japan, Korea or the US, I have a lot of friends.” Now, Mohd Ajib is leveraging some of those global connections and becoming a dealmaker of sorts, bringing companies that need capital for expansion to investors. “I am working on something big. I have lots of friends all over the world. In London, I know all the big brokers,” he says.

Will some of the companies he’s dealing with come to Singapore to raise capital? For the moment, Mohd Ajib is keeping his cards close to his chest. Yet, Singapore is a natural hub for tin producers. More than 70% of Indonesia’s tin exports are sent here for warehousing and redistribution. Meanwhile, MSC itself counts several thousand retail investors in Singapore.

Yet, Hong Kong appears to have had the edge in attracting huge mining companies. In recent years, it has trumped Singapore by winning over the likes of United Company ­RUSAL, Glencore and Kazakhmys. Mohd Ajib says if Singapore is to become a listing venue for big resources companies, a lot more work has to be done to educate investors. “The resources business, whether it is tin or gold, is a long-term business,” he says. “The lead time to develop resources can vary from five to 15 years. So, for investors to go into resources, they have to take a long-term view. Otherwise, it gets too speculative.

Malaysia Smelting may reinstate dividend on improving earnings, but risks remain

Malaysia Smelting Corp’s facility in Penang sits on what could well be prime seafront land one day. Hidden behind concrete walls topped with barbed wire, and located close to the Penang Bridge, it started out more than a century ago processing tin ore from mines in Perak and Selangor. These days, MSC has a much wider global network. On a sunny afternoon in June, bags of tin ore from mines in Congo, Rwanda, Bolivia, Myanmar, China and Mongolia were piled chest high on the floor of the plant. Out in the yard, neat stacks of shiny tin ingots waiting to be shipped out gleamed in the sunlight.

Chua Cheong Yong, CEO of MSC, says the company’s financial results are regaining their shine too, thanks to a sharper focus on its traditional tin smelting business in the last couple of years. However, growing that business over the long term is becoming more difficult, because of the increasingly limited supply of tin ore.

Malaysia’s tin mining business pretty much died in the mid-1980s, amid a slump in tin prices just as the country’s once-rich alluvial deposits were almost exhausted. A decade ago, MSC began trying to move upstream to secure its own supply of tin ore. In 2002, it took a 75% stake in Indonesia’s PT Koba Tin, which has a mine on Bangka Island. Two years later, in 2004, it acquired Rahman Hydraulic Tin, which operates Malaysia’s largest open-pit alluvial tin mine.

MSC also made a bid to expand into other commodities. In 2007, it bought stakes in mines in Australia, Canada, Indonesia and the Philippines that produce copper, gold, zinc, silver, nickel and coal. Its timing couldn’t have been worse. The following year, commodity prices collapsed in the wake of the global financial crisis. In addition, the family of the late Tan Chin Tuan tightened their grip on The Straits Trading Company, which controls MSC, and embarked on a strategic review of the whole group.

MSC was directed to focus on tin, and it promptly began offloading the non-tin mining assets it had only just acquired. Then, in 2012, PT Koba Tin ran into trouble when it failed to extend its contract for work, in spite of renewal guarantees. The Indonesian government also hiked export duties on tin ore from 5% to 30%. MSC decided it wasn’t worth hanging on to PT Koba Tin, and sold its stake in June.

The silver lining is that the string of impairment losses that MSC suffered over the last few years will finally come to an end. “By June, we would have taken out most of the hit,” Chua tells The Edge Singapore. “Now, operations will be very much driven by smelting, marketing and trading and [tin] mines, which have shown resilience in riding the downturn. We need to build up confidence again.”

In 1Q2014, MSC reported a 2% decline in earnings to RM14.7 million on a 2% rise in revenue to RM429 million. The company hasn’t declared a dividend since 2012, but that could change soon. “We are looking to distribute dividends again,” says Chua. “In the short to medium term, we are looking to stabilisation. In the mid to long term, there is potential to develop.”

Expansion plans

How does Chua plan to grow the company? One idea is to broaden MSC’s business to include tantalum and tungsten, which are related to tin. “The market for tantalum and tungsten is one third or a quarter the size of tin, but their valuation is good. They occur together and share the same supply network. There is nothing to stop us from trading tantalum and tungsten since we have a strong marketing network in the Asia-Pacific,” he says. “They will support our mid- to long-term growth.”

Chua also wants to expand MSC’s tin mining operations. However, after its unpleasant experience in Indonesia, he says MSC will focus on Malaysia and “regionally accessible and more-friendly countries”. Notably, it has carefully nurtured Rahman Hydraulic Tin into a money spinner. The 107-year-old mine was losing money when MSC bought it a decade ago. Last year, it made RM34 million ($13.3 million) before tax, up 17%. Now, it is poised to grow bigger. In March, Rahman Hydraulic Tin acquired an 80% stake in SL Tin, which holds a mining concession in the state of Pahang.

MSC has also been laying the ground to secure mining concessions in the strife-torn Republic of Congo. While the United Nations has introduced sanctions to cut off funding to rebels fighting the government, MSC has initiated a scheme to certify non-conflict tin from the country. According to Chua, tin produced in Congo is now traceable each step of the way from source to smelter. MSC itself has been audited three times, the last audit being in May. MSC also owns a 40% stake in a smelting plant in Lubumbashi.

Much of Congo’s tin is produced by artisanal miners, who lack the resources to make big investments to increase production in an environmentally sustainable way. However, Chua is hoping the day will come when the Congo government allows big mining companies to gain access to its mineral resources. “Africa has huge potential if we get our strategy right and the government does not sway away from development,” he says.

Long-term risks

Chua joined MSC right out of university some 30 years ago. Among his earliest tasks at the company was buying tin ore from miners in Taiping, in the state of Perak. He worked his way up the ranks, and was appointed CEO on Dec 31 last year.

Looking ahead, Chua is candid about the risks MSC faces. While the company is working to secure as much supply of tin ore as possible, he says tin producing countries will eventually want to set up their own smelters and take control of their mines. “Resource nationalism is very real today,” Chua says. “We have to take a view on tin price and sovereign risk before we go into a project.”

Some market watchers also fear that MSC’s controlling shareholder has little appetite to fund major acquisitions. They point out that Australia-listed Kasbah Resources, which has the most advanced of tin projects in the pipeline, is currently trying to raise some US$100 million ($124.5 million) but failed to get MSC to come in as an investor. Kasbah Resources’ shareholders include International Finance Corp, Toyota Tsusho and Thai smelter Thaisarco.

When approached for comment, however, a spokeswoman for Straits Trading says the group wants to see MSC grow. “Straits Trading will support MSC in any initiatives that will create value for shareholders,” she tells The Edge Singapore. “Straits Trading will be supportive of MSC in its quest to enhance its position in the tin industry.”

Whatever the case, with MSC on the road to profitability and likely to reinstate its dividend, its shareholders are likely to see better times ahead. And, even if the company’s tin business doesn’t grow much, the land it occupies in Penang will certainly rise in value over time.


The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd

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