Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Gold on front page of New York Times
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EconProf.
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June 13, 2010 at 11:23 AM #564917June 13, 2010 at 12:16 PM #563996
gandalf
ParticipantDoes anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?
June 13, 2010 at 12:16 PM #564092gandalf
ParticipantDoes anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?
June 13, 2010 at 12:16 PM #564592gandalf
ParticipantDoes anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?
June 13, 2010 at 12:16 PM #564695gandalf
ParticipantDoes anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?
June 13, 2010 at 12:16 PM #564980gandalf
ParticipantDoes anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?
June 13, 2010 at 7:04 PM #564243scaredyclassic
ParticipantI think 600 or 700 bucks. Problem is those bucks are kind of amorphous at the moment.
June 13, 2010 at 7:04 PM #564339scaredyclassic
ParticipantI think 600 or 700 bucks. Problem is those bucks are kind of amorphous at the moment.
June 13, 2010 at 7:04 PM #564837scaredyclassic
ParticipantI think 600 or 700 bucks. Problem is those bucks are kind of amorphous at the moment.
June 13, 2010 at 7:04 PM #564943scaredyclassic
ParticipantI think 600 or 700 bucks. Problem is those bucks are kind of amorphous at the moment.
June 13, 2010 at 7:04 PM #565227scaredyclassic
ParticipantI think 600 or 700 bucks. Problem is those bucks are kind of amorphous at the moment.
June 13, 2010 at 8:42 PM #564308davelj
Participant[quote=gandalf]Does anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?[/quote]
I haven’t looked at gold mining companies in many years (and didn’t understand them well in the first place) so I’m going to get part of this wrong, but… there is not a straightforward answer principally because most gold miners actually mine more copper than gold in volume terms, and the gold is generally a byproduct (but the more valuable of the two, obviously) of copper mining. So, the miners tend to have a line item of how much it costs to mine each ounce of gold (in gross terms) and it’s netted out for monies they receive for the copper (and sometimes silver and other metals). But I believe that after netting out this other revenue and taking into account all of the costs, the range is about $300-$450/oz. if memory serves. And, obviously, it depends on how rich in gold (versus copper and other metals) the area is that’s being mined. So, it can be a very wide range. I believe that the cost of production (with all of the offsets) information is in every publicly-traded miner’s 10K, so it’s not a secret. I’m too lazy to look it up though. Understanding metals mining accounting is going down a bit of a rabbit hole – not nearly as bad as financials, but more complicated than the average company for sure.
June 13, 2010 at 8:42 PM #564403davelj
Participant[quote=gandalf]Does anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?[/quote]
I haven’t looked at gold mining companies in many years (and didn’t understand them well in the first place) so I’m going to get part of this wrong, but… there is not a straightforward answer principally because most gold miners actually mine more copper than gold in volume terms, and the gold is generally a byproduct (but the more valuable of the two, obviously) of copper mining. So, the miners tend to have a line item of how much it costs to mine each ounce of gold (in gross terms) and it’s netted out for monies they receive for the copper (and sometimes silver and other metals). But I believe that after netting out this other revenue and taking into account all of the costs, the range is about $300-$450/oz. if memory serves. And, obviously, it depends on how rich in gold (versus copper and other metals) the area is that’s being mined. So, it can be a very wide range. I believe that the cost of production (with all of the offsets) information is in every publicly-traded miner’s 10K, so it’s not a secret. I’m too lazy to look it up though. Understanding metals mining accounting is going down a bit of a rabbit hole – not nearly as bad as financials, but more complicated than the average company for sure.
June 13, 2010 at 8:42 PM #564901davelj
Participant[quote=gandalf]Does anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?[/quote]
I haven’t looked at gold mining companies in many years (and didn’t understand them well in the first place) so I’m going to get part of this wrong, but… there is not a straightforward answer principally because most gold miners actually mine more copper than gold in volume terms, and the gold is generally a byproduct (but the more valuable of the two, obviously) of copper mining. So, the miners tend to have a line item of how much it costs to mine each ounce of gold (in gross terms) and it’s netted out for monies they receive for the copper (and sometimes silver and other metals). But I believe that after netting out this other revenue and taking into account all of the costs, the range is about $300-$450/oz. if memory serves. And, obviously, it depends on how rich in gold (versus copper and other metals) the area is that’s being mined. So, it can be a very wide range. I believe that the cost of production (with all of the offsets) information is in every publicly-traded miner’s 10K, so it’s not a secret. I’m too lazy to look it up though. Understanding metals mining accounting is going down a bit of a rabbit hole – not nearly as bad as financials, but more complicated than the average company for sure.
June 13, 2010 at 8:42 PM #565007davelj
Participant[quote=gandalf]Does anybody know, what’s the approximate production cost of mining an ounce of gold?[/quote]
I haven’t looked at gold mining companies in many years (and didn’t understand them well in the first place) so I’m going to get part of this wrong, but… there is not a straightforward answer principally because most gold miners actually mine more copper than gold in volume terms, and the gold is generally a byproduct (but the more valuable of the two, obviously) of copper mining. So, the miners tend to have a line item of how much it costs to mine each ounce of gold (in gross terms) and it’s netted out for monies they receive for the copper (and sometimes silver and other metals). But I believe that after netting out this other revenue and taking into account all of the costs, the range is about $300-$450/oz. if memory serves. And, obviously, it depends on how rich in gold (versus copper and other metals) the area is that’s being mined. So, it can be a very wide range. I believe that the cost of production (with all of the offsets) information is in every publicly-traded miner’s 10K, so it’s not a secret. I’m too lazy to look it up though. Understanding metals mining accounting is going down a bit of a rabbit hole – not nearly as bad as financials, but more complicated than the average company for sure.
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