Tag Archives: Kinross Gold Corp

Kinross Gold Ex-Dividend Reminder

By DividendChannel.com

Looking at the universe of stocks we cover at Dividend Channel, on 3/19/13, Kinross Gold Corp. (NYSE: KGC) will trade ex-dividend, for its semi-annual dividend of $0.08, payable on 3/28/13. As a percentage of KGC‘s recent stock price of $8.04, this dividend works out to approximately 1.00%, so look for shares of Kinross Gold Corp. to trade 1.00% lower ? all else being equal ? when KGC shares open for trading on 3/19/13.
Click here to learn which 25 S.A.F.E. dividend stocks should be on your radar screen » or click here to find out which 9 other stocks going ex-dividend you should know about, at DividendChannel.com » …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Markets

Kinross Gold About To Put More Money In Your Pocket

By DividendChannel.com

On 3/19/13, Kinross Gold Corp. (Toronto: K) will trade ex-dividend, for its semi-annual dividend of $0.08, payable on 3/28/13. As a percentage of K’s recent stock price of $8.16, this dividend works out to approximately 0.98%, so look for shares of Kinross Gold Corp. to trade 0.98% lower ? all else being equal ? when K shares open for trading on 3/19/13.
Click here to find out which 9 other Canadian stocks going ex-dividend you should know about, at DividendChannel.com » …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Markets

Commodity Alchemy: Turning Gold into Lead

By 24/7 Wall St.

close-up of red hot iron beams

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When the commodity traders at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE: GS) say that commodities may be oversold right now they exclude gold from the rest of the asset class. In the near term, the Goldman analysts think that commodities will rise 2% to 6% although the firm remains neutral on commodities’ 12-month outlook, expecting a return of 3%.

We’ve already gone over some of the issues with investing in gold, either in mining companies like Barrick Gold Corp. (NYSE: ABX) and Kinross Gold Corp. (NYSE: KGC) or in ETFs like the SPDR Gold Trust (NYSEMKT: GLD). Goldman thinks that petroleum and copper are the short-term winners. Petroleum due to the lack of spare capacity and increased demand from emerging markets, and copper because the pull back in pricing last year was driven by concerns about China that no longer apply.

To which we say, “Maybe.” Petroleum, at least in the form of crude oil, costs more on the spot market now than it does on the futures market. That backwardation could be a buying opportunity if the global economy is in fact accelerating and will continue to do so in the second half of this year. The suggestion is that a “buy and hold” strategy will pay off because crude oil supplies will come under pressure.

That’s what happened (to some extent) in 2008 when crude went to $147 a barrel. How well do the conditions from 2008 fit the conditions of the crude market in 2013? Perhaps not all that well.

As for copper, the Chinese government has recently said it will soak up some of the liquidity in the country’s banks in an effort to keep inflation under control. New rules related to real estate and housing could cool some of the exuberance in the construction sector in China, too. On one hand, we could be in for a repeat of 2008 when commodity prices went on an upward tear. On the other hand, commodity producers will continue to overproduce, keeping prices low.

Where does this leave the big banks like Goldman, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), all of which reported double-digit declines in their commodities business last year? Lower market volatility plus restrictions imposed on trading by the Dodd-Frank Act have hit the banks’ trading operations hard. The banks could try to divest their commodity arms or spin them off into separate companies, but none has said much at all about its plans.

And that lead into gold bit? Last year Glencore International plc and Trafigura, two of the world’s largest commodities trading houses, kept large supplies of lead in storage and off the market in an effort to raise the price, which had fallen to a 52-week low of around $0.72 a pound. Today lead sells for about $1.00 a pound. Gold is up about 3% in the same period.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, China, Commodities & Metals Tagged: ABX, GLD, GS, JPM, KGC, MS<p style="clear: both;padding: …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Glencore Follows Other Big Miners to Lower Profits

By 24/7 Wall St.

mining

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London-traded Glencore International has been making news for more than a year now for its takeover of Xstrata, a mining company of which Glencore already owns about 40%. The company is awaiting approval from Chinese regulators and now expects the deal to be done by mid-April.

In the meantime, Glencore reported preliminary results this morning for its 2012 fiscal year. Like BHP Billiton Ltd. (NYSE: BHP), Rio Tinto PLC (NYSE: RIO), Anglo American, Barrick Gold Corp. (NYSE: ABX), Kinross Gold Corp. (NYSE: KGC) and Newmont Mining Corp. (NYSE: NEM), Glencore took a big write-down on a mining property: a $1.2 billion impairment charge on a reclassification of an earlier charge for the company’s investment in Russian aluminum giant Rusal. All told, Glencore wrote down $1.65 billion in impairment charges last year.

The company’s commodity trading business helped offset the weakness in commodity prices, and Glencore managed to post an adjusted profit that was 25% lower than profit in 2011, but that exceeded an analysts’ forecast for a drop of 37%. Operating profit in the company’s trading division rose 11% and fell 27% in its industrial division.

For Glencore, only gold showed a positive commodity price change in 2012, up 6%. The largest negative changes were visited on nickel and iron ore, both down 23%. And Glencore nearly doubled its production of iron ore, while gold production fell by 1%.

Glencore’s report is available here.

Shares in London are trading up about 3.1% this morning, at 381.45 pence.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Commodities & Metals, Earnings, International Markets Tagged: ABX, BHP, KGC, NEM, RIO

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Kinross Gold Dividend Yield Pushes Past 2%

By DividendChannel.com

In trading on Friday, shares of Kinross Gold Corp. (Toronto: K) were yielding above the 2% mark based on its semi-annual dividend (annualized to $0.1605), with the stock changing hands as low as $7.99 on the day. Dividends are particularly important for investors to consider, because historically speaking dividends have provided a considerable share of the stock market‘s total return. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Markets