Chief Executive's statement
Octavio
Alvídrez
A
sound performance, with exciting projects on the
horizon
This year, our teams were again
challenged by a mix of external and internal factors. We worked
together with our stakeholders to deliver on our production
expectations while also making good progress in advancing our
pipeline of future projects.
We achieved a sound operating performance in
2023, despite headwinds which included inflation and an
unfavourable peso-dollar exchange rate.
Throughout, we remained extremely grateful to
our stakeholders, who continued to collaborate closely with our own
teams to build a sustainable future for our business, in line with
our Purpose. We recognise that Fresnillo thrives when our
stakeholder groups thrive, so working together to support our
people, suppliers, local communities and the Government is not only
the right thing to do - it is a commercial imperative. You can
discover more about how we have worked with our stakeholders in the
case studies throughout this report.
The year also saw us advance several exciting
projects that we expect to make further significant progress in the
months and years ahead.
Production
highlights and price review
In addition to external macro-economic
factors, we experienced minor operational setbacks with a delay to
the start-up of operations at the new Pyrites Plant at Fresnillo,
reduced availability of haulage equipment at San Julián and lower
than expected ore grades at Fresnillo that impacted the year's
performance. As a result, although gold production was in line with
guidance, silver production fell below our expectations.
Total silver production was 56.3 moz, up by
4.7% from 53.7 moz in 2022, with the ramp-up at Juanicipio,
together with higher ore grade at San Julián Veins, partially
offset by lower ore grades at San Julián DOB and
Fresnillo.
Gold production decreased to 610.6 koz, a
reduction of 4.0% from 635.9 koz in the previous year. This was
primarily due to lower production at Noche Buena as the mine
approached the end of its life.
Attributable by-product lead and zinc
production increased 9.2% and 8.6% to 57,833 tonnes and 107,705
tonnes respectively, primarily due to the increased contribution of
Juanicipio and higher ore grades and volumes of ore processed at
Saucito.
During 2023, the average realised silver price
was US$23.6 and that for gold US$1,957.7, an increase of 8.8% and
8.8% respectively. The average price for zinc decreased by 22.6%
while the average lead price remained broadly unchanged at US$0.95
per pound. With central banks around the world raising interest
levels to counter inflation, I believe that silver and gold prices
established a floor during the year. The fact that prices did not
fall below US$20 per ounce and US$1,800 per ounce for silver and
gold respectively shows the strength and long-term sustainability
of these metals, even through tough economic times.
While forecasting global economic conditions
is always difficult, I expect that falling interest rates and
increased demand for silver in particular - driven by the expansion
of green investments and specifically in solar panels, for which
silver is a key component - should strengthen prices in
2024.
Our strategy
in action
Our strategy is the engine that drives
Fresnillo plc forward. It comprises four strategic pillars and here
I report on how we have performed against each one.
Maximising the potential of
existing operations
Ensuring that our operational mines are
performing as efficiently as possible is our primary strategic
objective - and this is an area where we rely heavily on the skills
and availability of our people. Following the Mexican Government's
introduction of labour reforms in 2021, we initiated a series of
recruitment and training campaigns. These continue to be
successful, and all our mines were again fully staffed throughout
the year.
Across the portfolio, we are continuing to
address the ongoing impact of inflation and the revaluation of the
Mexican peso by investing in initiatives including the greater use
of technology and autonomous drilling. We are also launching
schemes to reduce haulage costs, which become more significant when
we work more distant seams that require greater haulage. At the
Fresnillo mine, for example, the deepened San Carlos shaft is set
to reduce distances, speed up haulage and cut costs. This is
expected to drive a marked improvement in our ability to
efficiently access seams which account for more than half of the
mine's reserves.
At Saucito, our initiatives include efforts to
stabilise areas of poor rock quality. New equipment was delivered
towards the end of the year, leading to development rates returning
to 3,000m per month in December, an achievement that sets us up
well for the year ahead.
We completed the safe ramp-up of our new
Juanicipio mine in the third quarter of 2023 and it is now running
at nameplate capacity in line with expectations. Juanicipio will
have a positive impact on both silver and gold production, helping
to offset the lower production at Noche Buena as it nears its end
of life, with higher production of both lead and zinc further
supporting our overall performance.
With recovery rates at the new Pyrites Plant
at Fresnillo initially falling short of anticipated levels, we
initiated some technical works and conducted tests to improve
performance. We subsequently took the decision to only process
historical tailings, as recovery rates improved significantly when
following this strategy, and we will continue on the same path in
2024. This means that volumes processed will inevitably be lower
than originally planned - although recovery rates and profitability
will be higher than would be the case if we processed both current
and historical tailings.
Delivering growth through
development projects
With our two most recent development projects
- the new mine at Juanicipio and Phase II of the Pyrites Plant at
Fresnillo - being commissioned and therefore moving into our
portfolio of existing operations, we are now focusing on enabling
potential new projects to flow from the pipeline and deliver
further growth.
We are continuing to concentrate on
identifying M&A targets, not only in Mexico but also in the
wider region. Establishing operations in different jurisdictions
will enable us to de-risk the business by reducing country
risk.
However, several of the projects I discuss
under the next strategic pillar are close to moving from the
pipeline and becoming standalone projects in their own right. Our
teams are now working to identify which are most suitable in terms
of operational and financial feasibility.
Once further exploration or metallurgical
studies have been completed, the project or projects identified as
holding the greatest potential will be presented to the Board for
approval, at which point capital expenditure will be granted and
construction work can commence.
This is a very exciting moment for everybody
at Fresnillo plc, as we work hard to define the next generation of
projects for the development stage. Seeing a project transform from
a possibility in the minds of our exploration experts through
feasibility stages and development before emerging as an
operational mine is something that galvanises each and every one of
us. We have high hopes that the projects currently under
consideration will play their part in boosting production,
generating long-term shareholder value, providing employment,
supporting communities, and delivering tax revenues that will
benefit Governments.
Extending the growth
pipeline
We have mining concessions and exploration
projects in Mexico, Peru and Chile. These include four advanced
exploration projects - Orisyvo, Rodeo, Guanajuato and Tajitos - as
well as a number of other long-term prospects.
A low strip ratio, open pit, heap leaching
disseminated gold project located in the Herradura Corridor of
north-western Sonora state, Tajitos is currently progressing along
our pipeline at a faster pace than other projects. We carried out
83,224 metres of core and reverse circulation drilling over 2023
and completed additional metallurgical investigations and
geotechnical studies towards the end of the year. The next step is
to produce a new preliminary economic study and to consider the
possibility of purchasing more land for mine
development.
Rodeo is following closely behind Tajitos.
Rodeo is an open pit, heap leaching gold project in central Durango
state, and we progressed several regional studies in 2023,
including hydrological, environmental, and social base lines along
with an analysis of power supply and infrastructure alternatives.
Our exploration teams have worked with the local Ejidos to discuss
land access agreements. Once these are concluded, we will commence
pre-feasibility to feasibility level exploration, engineering, and
development programmes.
Orisyvo is a world-class, high-sulphidation
epithermal disseminated gold deposit located in
the Sierra Madre mountains of Chihuahua state.
We updated the project's pre-feasibility study in 2023 and
strengthened our engagement with local communities. In addition,
detailed geotechnical studies have been completed. While Orisyvo
shows excellent production potential, there are challenges we need
to address around the resources and capex required to progress the
project.
At Guanajuato, a historic, world-class gold
and silver epithermal vein field stretching more
than 40 kilometres along the central Mexican
state of Guanajuato, we intensified our exploration activities
during the year, including the drilling of 83,576 metres which gave
good results. We have also completed a preliminary economic study,
and identified possibilities for conceptual mining and processing
scenarios.
Elsewhere, we advanced greenfield drill
programmes designed to test expansion targets at the Candameña and
San Juan projects in Mexico and Capricornio in Chile. In Peru, we
strengthened our engagement efforts with the local community and
Government, enabling the resumption of drilling at the Pilarica
project and the initiation of the programme at Santo
Domingo.
With regard to exploration prospects around
our existing operations, we have continued to investigate
opportunities at Juanicipio, which show good potential, in the
wider Fresnillo district and also at San Julián. In total, we
completed 933,185 metres of drilling during 2023, a decrease of
2.4% over 2022. Around 92% of this total was devoted to brownfield
targets.
Silver in consolidated overall mineral
resources remained broadly unchanged vs. 2022 at 2.2 bn oz as the
positive exploration results at the Guanajuato exploration project
and San Julián veins were offset by mining at the mine sites, and
higher costs and increased cut-off grades. Gold in consolidated
overall mineral resources decreased 3.1% vs. 2022 to 37.9 moz
primarily driven by extraction, and higher cost and cut-off grades
at Herradura, Saucito and Soledad and Dipolos (no mining), partly
mitigated by the positive exploration results and increased mineral
resources at Guanajuato and Centauro Profundo exploration projects
and the Ciénega mine.
Silver in consolidated overall ore reserves
decreased 10.0% to 356.6 moz mainly from mining depletion and
higher costs and cut-off grades at San Julián (DOB), Juanicipio and
Ciénega, partly offset by increased ore reserves at Fresnillo. Gold
in consolidated overall ore reserves decreased 13.7% to 7.1 moz
mostly as a result of extraction and higher costs and cut-off
grades at Herradura and Saucito and the end of the Noche Buena mine
life.
For 2024, the exploration budget will remain
broadly in line with that for 2023.
Advancing and enhancing the
sustainability of our operations
The wellbeing of our workforce is integral to
the sustainable mining of silver and gold. It forms an essential
component of our Purpose. It is one of the beacons that guide us in
everything we do: no amount of silver and gold production,
successful exploration, or other accomplishments can compensate for
any degree of harm befalling our people. Violations to our policies
or standards, and behaviours that could endanger our workforce,
will not be tolerated.
The tragic loss of four contractors' workers
in 2023, and one in early 2024, was not only unforeseen but also
profoundly distressing for everyone at Fresnillo plc. The long-term
trend of our health and safety metrics has shown continued
improvement over the years, with steady reductions in both the
Total Recordable Injury Frequency Rate (TRIFR) and the Lost Time
Injury Frequency Rate (LTIFR). However, recent events have cast a
shadow across our hard-earned reputation, with our TRIFR and LTIFR
rising to 12.08 and 7.40 respectively, focusing efforts like never
before.
The occupational health and well-being of our
people stand as our foremost priorities, and we are committed to
strengthening our culture of proactive risk prevention across the
organisation. Looking ahead, we have laid plans to intensify our
preventive efforts, reinforcing a safety-centric culture that
effectively manages high potential and critical risks. This
includes an even sharper focus on visible leadership and further
enhancing how we implement lessons learnt. This is a long journey
and there are no easy fixes, but we are resolute in our unyielding
pursuit of zero harm, ensuring that all our team members return
home safely. Anchored by the continuous evolution of our 'I Care,
We Care' programme, we are confident that these initiatives will
pave the way to safeguarding lives and preventing incidents - and
to firmly restoring our safety record on its intended
course.
From increasing productivity, embracing our
safety culture and driving innovation, our workforce plays an
important role in the delivery of our strategy. We continue to
maintain a close working relationship with both unionised and
non-unionised employees to build trust and mutual accountability.
These engagements have become increasingly relevant post the labour
and mining reforms. After several years without any labour
disputes, we experienced a temporary suspension of activities at
Herradura in the second quarter of the year. The illegal stoppage
by a very small group of unionised personnel was not approved by
the union and did not have a material impact on the operations at
Herradura. We will continue to have constructive dialogue with our
workforce to better understand their concerns and expectations in
these complex regulatory and economic environments.
Since our endorsement of the UN
Global Compact in 2009, our commitment to responsible business
practices has been a cornerstone of how we operate. Every year, we
communicate our progress and hold ourselves accountable to the
highest standards. Guided by our Purpose, our
commitment to sustainability was further demonstrated during 2023
through the strategic alignment with 11 of the UN's
Sustainable Development Goals across our four ESG pillars: doing
business ethically and responsibly; caring for our people;
protecting the environment; and partnering with our
communities.
Our achievements during 2023 - together with
our ongoing plans for future years - demonstrate good progress
against our ESG commitments.
For example, during the first half of the
year, the Board approved our new Tailings Policy. We have
successfully implemented our Tailings Storage Facilities (TSFs)
governance framework across our operations, and all mining units
are now subject to Dam Safety Inspections. We also commenced the
design stage of the TSF at Orisyvo. We developed a facility at
Ciénega that conforms to the guidelines of the Mining Association
of Canada (MAC), the International Commission on Large Dams (ICOLD)
and the Canadian Dam Association (CDA). Moving forward, we expect
to conclude Potential Failure Mode Assessments (PFMA) for each site
in 2024, enabling us to assess and pre-emptively manage major
risks, thereby optimising efficiency.
We continue to champion operational and energy
efficiency measures. The multimodal fuel station project that
supplies Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) and diesel in our Herradura mine
was finally approved by the Government during the period, allowing
better control and more efficient operation of our dual-motor
haulage fleet and the optimisation of the LNG-diesel substitution
ratio. We look forward to benefitting from lower costs and a
reduced carbon footprint in 2024.
We also continued to engage with the Mexican
Government to explore how we could increase the share of renewables
in our energy matrix. Following an administrative rearrangement of
our current energy portfolio, we sourced over 50% of our energy
needs from wind. This is similar to 2019 levels, and is
particularly noteworthy considering the increase in our overall
electricity consumption since then, due to our expanding
operations. By optimising our available renewable sources across
our facilities, we are confidently moving back on track to
achieving our ambitious goal of 75% renewables by 2030.
Regarding our climate change mitigation and
adaptation strategies, we have now harmonised our risk framework
with the central Enterprise Risk Framework (ERM), enabling us to
allocate divisional and site-level risks and controls to designated
risk owners, with the goal of further refining site-specific
nuances through a standardised methodology. At the same time, we
have satisfactorily concluded our regional climate modelling. This
has generated industry-valuable insights and enabled us to
undertake decarbonisation pathway analyses in two of our most
representative facilities. These analyses aim to identify feasible
decarbonisation technologies and scenarios, while providing further
crucial insights to guide our overall decarbonisation
journey.
Last year, I expressed disappointment that we
had been omitted from the FTSE4Good Index due to heightened climate
change requirements. Our commitment to reclaim our position in this
prestigious index remains a top priority for Fresnillo plc - and I
am confident that the work underway will pay dividends in the near
future, not only enhancing our reputation but, most importantly,
fortifying our risk management and operational resilience. As we
forge ahead, our institutional practices will continue to exemplify
our proactive stance in shaping a more sustainable future for our
business, our stakeholders and the planet.
We fully recognise the importance of close,
proactive working relationships with the Government in Mexico and
its departments, as well as with their equivalents in Peru and
Chile where we have exploration projects. Several changes to the
laws governing mining were approved in May 2023. While we do not
believe these will have any material impact on our current
operations or advanced exploration projects, certain aspects of the
new legislation are harmful to the industry. Others may require
additional clarifications, which have yet to be issued. We continue
to engage with the Government regarding these and other matters in
order to obtain a positive outcome for all - for the Government,
for the people of Mexico and for our business.
Looking
ahead
We expect the global economic landscape to
remain challenging, with greater uncertainty driven by geopolitical
tensions, faltering economies and destabilising events including
the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East. In Mexico, the forthcoming
election may bring a change of Government and a new set of
priorities. We will continue to work with the Government,
regardless of its political leanings, to make sure that the mining
industry in general and Fresnillo in particular can continue to
bring prosperity and jobs to the people of Mexico.
For our business, 2024 and the following two
to three years are about stable production and managing our costs
while at the same time developing projects that will form the basis
of future growth.
In addition to redoubling our efforts to
protect the health and safety of our people, we will strive to
mitigate the impact of inflation and exchange rates on our costs,
working with our internal teams and as well as suppliers to
identify efficiencies across the business which will enable us to
achieve more without increasing resources. We are well-positioned
from a financial standpoint with strong cash flow and a robust
balance sheet in place to ensure that we are able to seize
opportunities - whether for M&A or to develop new growth
projects - as they arise.
Our pipeline continues to be a major source of
optimism. Last year I reported that some potential projects could
shortly be making their way into our operational portfolio, and I
expect us to make further progress during the year
ahead.
When times are difficult, collaboration and
cooperation become more critical than ever. From the teams in our
mines, offices and Boardroom to suppliers, local communities,
Government officials and investors, we have worked together to
deliver a sound performance for the year, with the prospect of
better times in the long term. I would like to thank everybody
associated with Fresnillo for your unwavering support during the
year.
-Octavio Alvídrez
Chief Executive Officer
Financial review
The consolidated Financial
Statements of Fresnillo plc are prepared in accordance with
UK-adopted international accounting standards. This Financial
Review intends to explain the main factors affecting performance as
well as provide a detailed analysis of the financial results in
order to enhance the understanding of the Group's Financial
Statements. All comparisons refer to 2023 figures compared to 2022,
unless otherwise noted. The financial information and year-on-year
variations are presented in US dollars, except where otherwise
indicated.
The following report presents how
we have managed our financial resources.
Commentary on financial performance
The Group's financial performance
in 2023 reflects the operational challenges faced at the mines,
coupled with the adverse effects of the revaluation of the Mexican
peso vs. the US dollar and inflationary pressures across the cost
base.
Adjusted revenue1
increased 10.5% vs 2022 to US$2,869.1 million. This was primarily
due to the higher volumes of silver sold, and to a lesser extent,
the increase in volumes of lead and zinc sold, combined with the
higher gold and silver prices. Revenue increased 11.2% year-on-year
to US$2,705.1 million due to the increase in adjusted revenue,
partly offset by higher treatment and refining charges.
Adjusted production
costs 2 increased 12.3% vs 2022. This was primarily
driven by the adverse impact caused by the revaluation of the
Mexican peso/US dollar exchange rate which, on average, appreciated
11.7%, a 3.9% in cost inflation, the additional costs from the
start-up of the flotation plant and ramp up of the mine at
Juanicipio and the start-up of the pyrites plant at Fresnillo,
together with longer haulage distances, maintenance and contractors
at San Julián (DOB and Veins), Ciénega and Herradura.
As a result, gross profit and
EBITDA3 decreased to US$503.2 million and US$655.7
million, a 6.1% and 12.7% decrease vs 2022 respectively.
We maintained our strong financial
position, with US$534.6 million in cash and other liquid funds as
of 31 December 2023 notwithstanding paying dividends of US$108.4
million in accordance with our policy, investing US$483.4 million
in capex, repaying the US$317.9 million Senior Notes due in
November 2023, and spending US$182.4 million on exploration
expenses.
In early 2024, the Group signed a
five-year committed revolving line of credit for up to US$350
million. This facility is part of Fresnillo's strategy to maintain
a strong balance sheet and financial flexibility, which are core to
the Company's capital structure and investment case.
Income statement highlights
|
2023
US$
million
|
2022
US$
million
|
Amount
change US$ million
|
Change
%
|
Adjusted
revenue1
|
2,869.1
|
2,597.2
|
271.9
|
10.5
|
Total revenue
|
2,705.1
|
2,433.0
|
272.1
|
11.2
|
Cost of sales
|
(2,201.8)
|
(1,897.0)
|
(304.8)
|
16.1
|
Gross profit
|
503.2
|
536.0
|
(32.8)
|
(6.1)
|
Exploration expenses
|
182.4
|
165.8
|
16.6
|
10.0
|
Operating profit
|
142.5
|
283.6
|
(141.1)
|
(49.8)
|
EBITDA3
|
655.7
|
751.1
|
(95.4)
|
(12.7)
|
Tax income net of special mining
rights4
|
(174.3)
|
(59.7)
|
(114.6)
|
192.0
|
Profit for the period
|
288.3
|
308.3
|
(20.0)
|
(6.5)
|
Profit for the period, excluding
post-tax Silverstream effects
|
282.9
|
295.1
|
(12.2)
|
(4.1)
|
Basic and diluted earnings per
share (US$/share) 4
|
0.317
|
0.369
|
(0.052)
|
(14.1)
|
Basic and diluted earnings per
share, excluding post-tax Silverstream effects
(US$/share)
|
0.310
|
0.351
|
(0.041)
|
(11.7)
|
1
Adjusted revenue is revenue as disclosed in the income statement
adjusted to exclude treatment and refining charges and metals
prices hedging.
2
Adjusted production costs are calculated as cost of sales less
depreciation, profit sharing, hedging, change in inventories and
unproductive costs. The Company considers this a useful additional
measure to help understand underlying factors driving production
costs in terms of the different stages involved in the mining and
plant processes, including efficiencies and inefficiencies, as the
case may be, and other factors outside the Company's control such
as cost inflation or changes in accounting criteria.
3
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation
(EBITDA) is calculated as profit for the year from continuing
operations before income tax, less finance income, plus finance
costs, less foreign exchange gain/(loss), less revaluation effects
of the Silverstream contract and other operating income plus other
operating expenses and depreciation.
4
Tax income resulted from the favourable impact of the revaluation
of the Mexican peso vs. the US dollar.
5
The weighted average number of Ordinary Shares was 736,893,589 for
2023 and 2022. See note 18 to the consolidated financial
statements.
The Group's financial results are
largely determined by the performance of our operations. However,
other factors beyond of our control, including a number of
macroeconomic variables, affect our financial results. These
include:
Metals prices
The average realised silver price
increased 8.8% from US$21.7 per ounce in 2022 to US$23.6 per ounce
in 2023, while the average realised gold price rose 8.8% to
US$1,957.7 per ounce in 2023. The average realised zinc by-product
price decreased 22.6% to US$1.18 per pound, while the lead
by-product price decreased 1.4% vs 2022 to US$0.95 per
pound.
MX$/US$ exchange rate
The Mexican peso/US dollar spot
exchange rate at 31 December 2023 was $16.89 per US dollar,
compared to the exchange rate at 31 December 2022 of $19.36 per US
dollar. The 12.8% spot revaluation had a favourable effect on taxes
and mining rights.
The average spot Mexican peso/US
dollar exchange rate appreciated by 11.7% from $20.13 per US dollar
in 2022 to $17.77 per US dollar in 2023, thus having an adverse
effect of US$113.3 million on the Group's costs denominated in
Mexican pesos (approximately 45% of total costs) when converted to
US dollars.
Cost inflation
In 2023, cost inflation was 3.9%.
The main components driving our cost inflation are listed
below:
Labour
Unionised workers received on
average an 8.5% increase in wages in Mexican pesos, while
non-unionised employees received on average a 7.5% increase in
wages in Mexican pesos; when converted to US dollarsthis resulted
in a weighted average labour inflation of 22.5%.
Energy
Electricity
The weighted average cost of
electricity in US dollars increased 4.8% from US$9.26 cents per kW
in 2022 to US$9.70 cents per kW in 2023, due to the higher average
generating cost of the Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE), the
national utility.
Diesel
The weighted average cost of
diesel increased 17.0% in US dollars to 106.9 US cents per litre in
2023, compared to 91.4 US cents per litre in 2022. This was
primarily due to the increase in global oil prices and the gradual
lifting of the Mexican Government's fuel tax relief that subsidised
the cost of diesel and gasoline in Mexico.
Operating materials
|
Year-on-year change in unit price %
|
Lubricants
|
27.5
|
Other reagents
|
8.7
|
Steel for drilling
|
7.4
|
Tyres
|
5.0
|
Steel balls for milling
|
(3.4)
|
Explosives
|
(3.8)
|
Sodium cyanide
|
(5.9)
|
Weighted average of all operating materials
|
1.0
|
The weighted average unit prices
of all operating materials increased by 1.0% over the year as the
unit prices of lubricants and reagents continued to increase in US
dollar terms reflecting global inflationary pressures and supply
disruptions. This was partly offset by the decrease in the unit
price of sodium cyanide, explosives and steel balls for drilling.
There has been no significant impact on the unit cost of operating
materials from the revaluation of the Mexican peso/US dollar
exchange rate as the majority of these items are
dollar-denominated.
Contractors
Agreements are signed individually
with each contractor company and include specific terms and
conditions that cover not only labour, but also operating
materials, equipment, and maintenance, among others. Contractor
costs are mainly denominated in Mexican pesos and are an important
component of our total production costs. In 2023, increases per
unit (i.e. per metre developed/per tonne hauled) granted to
contractors whose agreements were due for review during the period,
resulted in a weighted average increase of approximately 14.4% in
US dollars, after considering the revaluation of the Mexican peso
vs the US dollar.
Maintenance
Unit prices of spare parts for
maintenance increased by 12.5% on average in US dollar
terms.
Other costs
Other cost components include
freight which increased by an estimated 26.6% in US dollars and
insurance costs which increased by 4.8% in US dollars, mainly due
to higher market premiums. The remaining cost inflation components
experienced an average inflation of 5.4% in US dollars vs
2022.
The effects of the above external
factors, combined with the Group's internal variables, are further
described below through the main line items of the
income statement.
Revenue
Consolidated revenue
|
2023
US$
million
|
2022
US$
million
|
Amount
US$
million
|
Change
%
|
Adjusted
revenue5
|
2,869.1
|
2,597.2
|
271.9
|
10.5
|
Metals prices hedging
|
0.0
|
(3.8)
|
3.8
|
0.0
|
Treatment and refining
charges
|
(164.0)
|
(160.5)
|
(3.5)
|
(2.2)
|
Total revenue
|
2,705.1
|
2,433.0
|
272.1
|
11.2
|
5
Adjusted revenue is revenue as disclosed in the income statement
adjusted to exclude treatment and refining charges and metals
prices hedging.
Adjusted revenue increased by
US$271.9 million primarily driven by the higher volumes of silver
sold, and to a lesser extent, of lead and zinc sold and the higher
gold and silver prices. Treatment and refining charges increased
2.2% as explained below. As a result, total revenue increased to
US$2,705.1 million, an 11.2% increase against 2022.
Adjusted revenue1 by metal
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
US$
million
|
%
contribution
|
US$
million
|
%
contribution
|
Volume
variance
US$
million
|
Price
variance
US$
million
|
Total
net
change
US$
million
|
Change
%
|
Gold
|
1,186.2
|
41.4
|
1,114.2
|
42.9
|
(27.8)
|
99.8
|
72.0
|
6.5
|
Silver
|
1,310.6
|
45.7
|
1,089.2
|
41.9
|
128.1
|
93.3
|
221.4
|
20.3
|
Lead
|
121.5
|
4.2
|
106.6
|
4.1
|
16.4
|
(1.6)
|
14.8
|
14.0
|
Zinc
|
250.8
|
8.7
|
287.2
|
11.1
|
32.6
|
(69.1)
|
(36.5)
|
(12.7)
|
Total adjusted revenue
|
2,869.1
|
100.0
|
2,597.2
|
100.0
|
149.4
|
122.4
|
271.9
|
10.5
|
The increase in volumes of silver
sold was primarily due to the ramp up of production at Juanicipio.
The volumes of gold sold decreased, mainly driven by the lower
production at Noche Buena as it approached the end of its mine
life. The volumes of lead and zinc sold benefitted from the higher
contribution from Juancipio and the higher volume of ore processed
and ore grade at Saucito (for further detail, see Review of
operations). The total sale volume effect (higher silver, zinc and
lead volumes sold partly offset by lower gold volumes sold),
resulted in a positive effect on adjusted revenues of US$149.4
million, representing 54.9% of the total variation. The remaining
45.1% of the increase in adjusted revenues was primarily explained
by the higher silver and gold prices, mitigated by the lower price
of zinc.
Changes in the contribution by
metal were the result of the relative changes in metals prices and
volumes produced. The contribution of silver to total adjusted
revenues increased from 41.9% in 2022 to 45.7% in 2023, while that
for gold decreased from 42.9% in 2022 to 41.4% in 2023.
Adjusted revenue by mine
Herradura continued to be the
greatest contributor to adjusted revenue, representing 24.7% (2022:
24.4%). Saucito's contribution remained relatively unchanged at
18.4%, whilst Juanicipio became the third most important
contributor to adjusted revenue, with its share increasing to 17.2%
(2022: 10.0%). Fresnillo's contribution decreased to 16.7% in 2023
(2022: 18.3%), albeit generating a similar level of adjusted
revenue year on year. San Julián's contribution to the
Group's adjusted revenue decreased
to 14.1% in 2023 (2022: 16.0%) primarily due to the lower volumes
of silver and gold sold. Ciénega's contribution to the Group's
adjusted revenue decreased to 5.9% (2022: 6.9%) as a result of the
lower volumes of all metals sold, mitigated by the higher gold and
silver price. Noche Buena's contribution to adjusted revenue
decreased to 3.0% in 2023 (5.5% in 2022).
The contribution by metal and by
mine to adjusted revenues is expected to change further in the
future, as new projects are incorporated into the Group's
operations and as precious metals prices fluctuate.
|
|
|
|
|
(US$
million)
|
% contribution
|
(US$
million)
|
%
contribution
|
Change
%
|
Herradura
|
708.7
|
24.7
|
634.9
|
24.4
|
11.6
|
Saucito
|
527.8
|
18.4
|
485.9
|
18.7
|
8.6
|
Juanicipio
|
492.5
|
17.2
|
259.0
|
10.0
|
90.2
|
Fresnillo
|
479.6
|
16.7
|
475.8
|
18.3
|
0.8
|
San Julián (Veins)
|
205.1
|
7.1
|
175.1
|
6.7
|
17.1
|
San Julián (DOB)
|
201.3
|
7.0
|
242.5
|
9.3
|
(17.0)
|
Ciénega
|
169.3
|
5.9
|
180.3
|
6.9
|
(6.1)
|
Noche Buena
|
84.8
|
3.0
|
143.8
|
5.5
|
10.5
|
Total
|
2,869.1
|
100
|
2,597.2
|
100
|
11.6
|
16 Adjusted
revenue is revenue as disclosed in the income statement adjusted to
exclude treatment and refining charges and metals prices
hedging.
Volumes of metal sold
|
2023
|
% contribution of each
mine
|
2022
|
%
contribution of each mine
|
Change
%
|
Silver (koz)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Juanicipio
|
15,318
|
27.4
|
8,697
|
17.3
|
76.1
|
Fresnillo
|
11,535
|
20.7
|
12,222
|
24.4
|
(5.6)
|
Saucito
|
10,387
|
18.6
|
10,620
|
21.2
|
(2.2)
|
San Julián (DOB)
|
6,544
|
11.7
|
8,117
|
16.2
|
(19.4)
|
San Julián (Veins)
|
5,368
|
9.6
|
4,502
|
9.0
|
19.2
|
Ciénega
|
3,864
|
6.9
|
4,344
|
8.7
|
(11.0)
|
Pyrites plant at
Saucito
|
1,799
|
3.2
|
854
|
1.7
|
110.7
|
Herradura
|
615
|
1.1
|
777
|
1.5
|
(20.8)
|
Pyrites plant at
Fresnillo
|
378
|
0.7
|
0
|
0.0
|
100.0
|
Noche Buena
|
5
|
0.0
|
9
|
0.0
|
(44.4)
|
Total silver (koz)
|
55,813
|
|
50,142
|
|
11.3
|
Gold (oz)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Herradura
|
358,210
|
59.2
|
351,156
|
56.7
|
2.0
|
Saucito
|
64,507
|
10.7
|
65,689
|
10.6
|
(1.8)
|
San Julián (Veins)
|
40,253
|
6.7
|
42,516
|
6.9
|
(5.3)
|
Noche Buena
|
39,203
|
6.5
|
71,921
|
11.6
|
(45.5)
|
Ciénega
|
33,407
|
5.5
|
35,275
|
5.7
|
(5.3)
|
Juanicipio
|
31,803
|
5.3
|
20,268
|
3.3
|
56.9
|
Fresnillo
|
30,234
|
5.0
|
28,277
|
4.6
|
6.9
|
Pyrites plant at
Saucito
|
4,713
|
0.8
|
2,585
|
0.4
|
82.3
|
San Julián (DOB)
|
1,739
|
0.3
|
1,546
|
0.2
|
12.5
|
Pyrites plant at
Fresnillo
|
718
|
0.1
|
4
|
0.0
|
>100
|
Total gold (oz)
|
604,787
|
|
619,237
|
|
(2.3)
|
Lead (t)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fresnillo
|
19,441
|
33.5
|
19,667
|
39.2
|
(1.1)
|
Saucito
|
17,732
|
30.6
|
16,114
|
32.1
|
10.0
|
Juanicipio
|
11,783
|
20.3
|
4,487
|
8.9
|
162.6
|
San Julián (DOB)
|
6,363
|
11.0
|
6,677
|
13.3
|
(4.7)
|
Ciénega
|
2,682
|
4.6
|
3,267
|
6.5
|
(17.9)
|
Total lead (t)
|
58,001
|
|
50,212
|
|
15.5
|
Zinc (t)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fresnillo
|
37,636
|
39.0
|
35,890
|
41.9
|
4.9
|
Saucito
|
27,211
|
28.2
|
23,604
|
27.6
|
15.3
|
Juanicipio
|
16,796
|
17.4
|
6,758
|
7.9
|
148.5
|
San Julián (DOB)
|
11,929
|
12.4
|
14,771
|
17.3
|
(19.2)
|
Ciénega
|
2,989
|
3.1
|
4,564
|
5.3
|
(34.5)
|
Total zinc (t)
|
96,561
|
|
85,587
|
|
12.8
|
Treatment and refining charges
Treatment and refining
charges3 are reviewed annually using international
benchmarks. Treatment charges per tonne of zinc concentrate
increased in dollar terms by 4.9%, while treatment charge per tonne
of lead concentrate and silver refining charges decreased by 10.5%
and 41.2% vs 2022, respectively. The higher treatment charges per
tonne of zinc and increase in volumes of lead and zinc concentrates
shipped from our mines to Met-Mex, combined with the lower
treatment charges per tonne of lead and silver refining charges
resulted in a 2.2% increase in treatment and refining charges set
out in the income statement in absolute terms when compared to
2022.
Cost of sales
Concept
|
2023
US$
million
|
2022
US$
million
|
Amount
US$
million
|
Change
%
|
Adjusted production
costs4
|
1,624.1
|
1,445.8
|
178.3
|
12.3
|
Depreciation
|
497.3
|
500.6
|
(3.3)
|
(0.7)
|
Profit sharing
|
2.2
|
9.6
|
(7.4)
|
(77.1)
|
Hedging
|
(0.2)
|
0.0
|
(0.2)
|
(100.0)
|
Change in work in
progress
|
52.6
|
(61.6)
|
114.2
|
N/A
|
Unproductive costs including
inventory reversal and unabsorbed production
costs5
|
25.9
|
2.6
|
23.3
|
896.2
|
Cost of sales
|
2,201.8
|
1,897.0
|
304.8
|
16.1
|
Cost of sales increased 16.0% to
US$2,201.8 million in 2023. The US$304.8 million increase is due to
a combination of the following factors:
•
An increase in Adjusted production costs
(+US$178.3 million; +12.3%). I) the adverse effect of the 11.7%
average revaluation of Mexican peso vs. the US dollar (US$113.3
million); ii) underlying cost inflation excluding the revaluation
of the Mexican peso vs. US dollar (US$56.9 million) - these two
factors combined resulted in a cost inflation in US dollars of
12.4%, which increased adjusted production cost by US$170.2
million; iii) costs from the start-up of the beneficiation plant
and mine ramp up at Juanicipio (US$43.4 million); iv) others
(US$32.9 million); v) longer haulage distances and increase in
maintenance and contractors at San Julián (DOB and Veins), Ciénega
and Herradura (US$29.7 million); and vii) costs from the start-up
of the pyrites plant at Fresnillo (US$8.8 million). These adverse
effects were mitigated by: i) a decrease in mining costs as
depositing activities stopped at Noche Buena as part of the mine
closure process which started in May (-US$81.9 million) and cost
reductions due to economies of scale and operating efficiencies at
Saucito and Fresnillo (US$24.7 million).
•
The variation in the change in work in progress
had an adverse effect of US$114.2 million vs 2022. This resulted
mainly from the decrease in inventories of ore at Juanicipio, as
the flotation plant was commissioned and it ramped up to full
capacity, and the decrease of gold content on the leaching pads at
Noche Buena. In 2022, there was a positive effect in relation to
the increase in inventories of ore at Juanicipio and gold content
at the leaching pads at Herradura.
•
The variation in unproductive costs, which had an
unfavourable effect of (+US$23.3 million). In 2023, US$25.9 million
was registered as unproductive costs. These costs related mainly to
the temporary stoppage of activities at Herradura and fixed costs
incurred at Noche Buena from the conclusion of mining
activities.
These negative effects were
slightly mitigated mainly by:
•
Profit sharing (-US$7.4 million) mainly due to
lower profits.
•
Depreciation (-US$3.3 million). This is mainly
due to lower depreciation at Noche Buena - as it approaches the end
of its mine life and the majority of the assets have been fully
depreciated - and at San Julián due to a lower depletion factor.
This was partly offset by the higher depreciation at
Juanicipio.
3
Treatment and refining charges include the cost of treatment and
refining as well as the margin charged by the refiner.
4
Adjusted production costs are calculated as cost of sales less
depreciation, profit sharing, hedging, change in inventories and
unproductive costs. The Company considers this a useful additional
measure to help understand underlying factors driving production
costs in terms of the different stages involved in the mining and
plant processes, including efficiencies and inefficiencies, as the
case may be, and other factors outside the Company's control such
as cost inflation or changes in accounting criteria.
5
Unproductive costs primarily include unabsorbed production costs
such as non-productive costs from the temporary suspension of
activities at Herradura and non-productive fixed mine costs
incurred at Noche Buena from the finalisation of mining
activities.
6
Cost inflation would have been 7.9% excluding the effect of the
Mexican peso revaluation (0.8%).
Cost per tonne, cash cost per ounce and all-in sustaining
cost (AISC)
Cost per tonne is a key indicator
to measure the effects of changes in production costs and cost
control performance at each mine. This indicator is calculated as
total production costs, plus ordinary mining rights, less
depreciation, profit sharing and exchange rate hedging effects,
divided by total tonnage processed. We have included cost per tonne
hauled/moved as we believe it is a useful indicator to thoroughly
analyse cost performance for the open pit mines.
Cost per tonne
|
|
2023
|
2022
|
%
change
|
Fresnillo (standalone)
|
US$/tonne milled
|
97.8
|
91.5
|
6.9
|
Fresnillo pyrites
process
|
US$/tonne milled
|
3.3
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Fresnillo Total
|
US$/tonne milled
|
101.1
|
91.5
|
10.5
|
Saucito (standalone)
|
US$/tonne milled
|
122.0
|
113.3
|
7.7
|
Saucito pyrites process
|
US$/tonne milled
|
19.2
|
6.2
|
209.7
|
Saucito Total
|
US$/tonne milled
|
141.2
|
119.5
|
18.2
|
Juanicipio
|
US$/tonne milled
|
114.8
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
San Julián (Veins)
|
US$/tonne milled
|
109.0
|
91.0
|
19.8
|
San Julián (DOB)
|
US$/tonne milled
|
50.0
|
44.8
|
11.6
|
Ciénega
|
US$/tonne milled
|
135.8
|
116.3
|
16.8
|
Herradura
|
US$/tonne deposited
|
24.2
|
19.7
|
22.8
|
Herradura
|
US$/tonne hauled
|
5.4
|
4.7
|
14.9
|
Noche Buena
|
US$/tonne deposited
|
13.1
|
13.9
|
(5.8)
|
Noche Buena
|
US$/tonne hauled
|
3.9
|
3.9
|
0.0
|
Fresnillo: Cost per tonne increased 10.6% to
US$101.1 in 2023, primarily driven by the adverse effect of the
11.7% revaluation of the Mexican peso vs the US dollar and
underlying cost inflation. This was mitigated by the higher volume
of ore processed, as well as cost reductions due to economies of
scale and operating efficiencies.
Saucito: Cost per tonne increased
18.2% to US$141.2, mainly driven by
the adverse effect of the revaluation of the
Mexican peso vs. the US dollar, cost of raw material, underlying
cost inflation and the increased consumption of reagents at the
pyrites plant. This was partly mitigated by the increased volume of
ore processed.
San Julián Veins: Cost per tonne increased
19.8% to US$109.0, primarily driven by the adverse effect of the
revaluation of the Mexican peso vs. the US dollar, the underlying
cost inflation and an increase in the use of maintenance services
and infrastructure contractors.
San Julián DOB: Cost per tonne increased 11.6%
to US$50.0, mainly driven by the adverse effect of the revaluation
of the Mexican peso vs. the US dollar and cost
inflation.
Ciénega: Cost per tonne increased 16.8% to
US$135.8, driven by the revaluation of the Mexican peso vs. the US
dollar, underlying cost inflation and a lower volume of ore
processed, an increase in development and a greater use of
infrastructure contractors.
Herradura: Cost per tonne of ore hauled
increased 22.8%, primarily as a result of the longer haulage
distances and increase in maintenance, the adverse effect of the
revaluation of the Mexican peso vs. the US dollar, and underlying
cost inflation.
Noche Buena: Cost per tonne decreased to
US$13.1 in 2023, primarily driven by the lower mining costs
incurred as extraction ended in 2Q23, partly offset by the
revaluation of the Mexican peso vs. the US dollar and underlying
cost inflation.
Cash cost per ounce, calculated as
total cash cost (cost of sales plus treatment and refining charges,
less depreciation) less revenue from by-products divided by the
silver or gold ounces sold, when compared to the corresponding
metal price, is an indicator of the ability of the mine to generate
competitive profit margins.
Cash cost per ounce
|
|
2023
|
2022
|
%
change
|
Fresnillo
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
10.2
|
5.7
|
78.9
|
Saucito
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
8.7
|
4.5
|
93.3
|
Juanicipio
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
6.8
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
San Julián (Veins)
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
9.6
|
7.1
|
35.2
|
San Julián (DOB)
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
11.8
|
6.9
|
71.0
|
Ciénega
|
US$ per gold ounce
|
1,597.8
|
518.5
|
208.2
|
Herradura
|
US$ per gold ounce
|
1,378.8
|
1,155.5
|
19.3
|
Noche Buena
|
US$ per gold ounce
|
1,780.8
|
1,269.9
|
40.2
|
Fresnillo: Cash cost per silver
ounce increased to US$10.2 (2022: US$5.7) mainly due to the
increase in cost per tonne, the lower silver ore grade, an increase
in mining rights and the lower zinc by-product credits. Margin per
ounce decreased 16.3% to US$13.4 (2022: US$16.0). Expressed as a
percentage of the silver price, it decreased to 56.8% (2022:
73.7%).
Saucito: Cash cost per silver ounce increased to US$8.7 per ounce
(2022: US$4.5 per silver ounce) mainly as a result of a higher cost
per tonne, increased mining rights, and lower zinc by-product
credits per silver ounce. Margin per ounce decreased 13.1% to
US$14.9 in 2023 (2022: US$17.2). Expressed as a percentage of the
silver price, it decreased from 79.3% to 63.1%.
San Julián Veins: Cash cost per ounce of silver
increased to US$9.6 per ounce, mainly due to the higher cost per
tonne and lower gold by-product credits per silver ounce, and
increased mining rights, mitigated by a higher silver ore grade.
Margin per ounce decreased 4.8% to US$14.0 (2022: US$14.7), while
margin expressed as a percentage of the silver price decreased from
67.5% in 2022 to 59.3% in 2023.
San Julián DOB: Cash cost increased to US$11.8
per ounce of silver driven by a lower silver ore grade, the
increase in cost per tonne and lower zinc by-product credits per
silver ounce. Margin per ounce decreased 20.3% to US$11.8 (2022:
US$14.8), while margin expressed as a percentage of the silver
price decreased from 68.2% in 2022 to 50.0% in 2023.
Ciénega: The increase in cash cost per gold
ounce from US$518.5 in 2022 to US$1,597.8 in 2023 was primarily due
to a higher cost per tonne, increased mining rights and a decrease
in zinc and lead by-product credits per gold ounce. Margin
per ounce decreased 71.9% to US$359.9 in 2023 (2022: US$1,280.8).
Expressed as a percentage of the gold price, the margin decreased
to 18.4% (2022: 71.2%).
Herradura: Cash cost per gold ounce increased
to US$1,378.8 per ounce of gold, mainly due to the higher cost per
tonne. Margin per ounce decreased 5.6% from US$643.8 to US$578.9,
while margin expressed as a percentage of the gold price decreased
from 35.8% in 2022 to 29.6% in 2023.
Noche Buena: Cash cost per gold ounce increased
to US$1,780.8, mainly due to the consumption of inventories on the
leaching pads, and a lower gold ore grade, partly mitigated by a
lower cost per tonne. Margin per ounce decreased 66.6% to US$176.9
in 2023 (2022: US$529.4). Expressed as a percentage of the gold
price, it decreased from 29.4% to 9.0% in 2023.
In addition to the traditional
cash cost, the Group is reporting All-In Sustaining Cost (AISC) in
accordance with the guidelines issued by the World Gold
Council.
This cost metric is calculated as
traditional cash cost plus on-site general, corporate and
administrative costs, community costs related to current
operations, capitalised stripping and underground mine development,
sustaining capital expenditures and remediation
expenses.
We consider AISC to be a
reasonable indicator of a mine's ability to generate free cash flow
when compared with the corresponding metal price. We also believe
it is a means to monitor not only current production costs, but
also sustaining costs as it includes mine development costs
incurred to prepare the mine for future production, as well as
sustaining capex.
All-in sustaining cost (AISC)
AISC
|
|
2023
|
2022
|
%
change
|
Fresnillo
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
20.43
|
16.27
|
25.6
|
Saucito
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
21.63
|
16.8
|
28.8
|
Juanicipio
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
11.4
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
San Julián (Veins)
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
23.92
|
21.84
|
9.5
|
San Julián (DOB)
|
US$ per silver ounce
|
14.50
|
8.79
|
65.0
|
Ciénega
|
US$ per gold ounce
|
3,178.47
|
2,011.14
|
58.0
|
Herradura
|
US$ per gold ounce
|
1,608.67
|
1,527.36
|
5.3
|
Noche Buena
|
US$ per gold ounce
|
1,873.04
|
1,359.63
|
37.8
|
Fresnillo: All-in sustaining cost increased by
25.6% to US$20.4, explained by the higher cash cost and an increase
in capitalised development, partly mitigated by the lower
sustaining capex.
Saucito: All-in sustaining cost
increased 28.8% to US$21.6 per ounce due to the increase in cash
cost and higher sustaining capex per ounce, partly offset by a
decrease in capitalised mine development cost per ounce.
San Julián Veins: All in sustaining
cost increased 9.2% to US$23.9 per ounce due to the increased cash
cost and higher sustaining capex, partly mitigated by lower
capitalised mine development per ounce.
San Julián DOB: The
65.0% increase in all in sustaining cost was mainly driven by the
increase in cash cost, increased sustaining capex and a higher
capitalised development cost per ounce.
Ciénega: The US$1,167.4 per ounce increase in
all-in sustaining cost was primarily driven by the higher cash cost
and, to a lesser extent, an increase in mine development per ounce,
partly offset by the lower sustaining capex.
Herradura: All-in
sustaining cost increased 5.3% to US$1,608.7 per ounce, mainly due
to the higher cash cost.
Noche Buena: The 37.8% increase to US$1,873.0
per ounce in all-in sustaining cost was the result of higher cash
cost.
Gross profit
Gross profit, excluding hedging
gains and losses, is a key financial indicator of profitability at
each business unit and the Fresnillo Group as a whole.
Total gross profit, including
hedging gains and losses, decreased by 6.1% from US$536.0 million
in 2022 to US$503.2 million in 2023.
The US$32.8 million decrease in
gross profit was mainly due to: i) the
variation in change of inventories (-US$145.1 million); ii) the
MXP/USD revaluation effect (-$113.3 million); iii) the lower zinc
and lead prices (-US$70.4 million); iv) underlying cost inflation
of 3.9% (-$56.9 million); v) the decrease in silver equivalent
ounces produced (-US$24.3 million); vi) increase in unproductive
costs primarily from the illegal stoppage at Herradura and Noche
Buena (-US$19.0 million); vii) others (-US$17.3 million); and
viii) higher haulage distances and spare parts for maintenance at
Herradura (-US$16.5 million).These negative effects were mitigated
by: i) the start up of the beneficiation plant and ramp up of the
Juanicipio mine (US$206.2 million); ii) higher gold and silver
prices (US$192.9 million); and iii) the positive effect of the gold
inventory uplift at Herradura (US$30.9 million).
On a per mine basis, Juanicipio
became the largest contributor to the Group's consolidated gross
profit, reflecting the successful ramp up of production at the
flotation plant. Herradura dropped to second contributor,
decreasing its percentage share from 27.5% to 25.1%. The higher
costs at Saucito and Fresnillo significantly affected the gross
profit at both mines, which decreased by 18.4% and 41.6% vs 2022,
respectively, thus decreasing their contribution to the
consolidated gross profit. San Julián's contribution to the Group's
gross profit remained broadly unchanged at 11.4% in 2023, despite
the 6.6% decrease in gross profit. The decrease in production
volumes, together with the cost pressures, significantly affected
profitability at Ciénega and Noche Buena.
Contribution by mine to consolidated gross profit, excluding
hedging gains and losses
|
|
|
|
|
US$
million
|
%
contribution
|
US$
million
|
%
contribution
|
US$
million
|
%
|
Juanicipio
|
202.8
|
41.0
|
132.8
|
24.8
|
70.0
|
52.7
|
Herradura
|
124.2
|
25.1
|
147.1
|
27.5
|
(22.9)
|
(15.6)
|
Saucito
|
80.4
|
16.2
|
98.5
|
18.4
|
(18.1)
|
(18.4)
|
Fresnillo
|
61.2
|
12.4
|
104.8
|
19.6
|
(43.6)
|
(41.6)
|
San Julián
|
56.3
|
11.4
|
60.3
|
11.3
|
(4.0)
|
(6.6)
|
Noche Buena
|
(0.1)
|
0.0
|
3.3
|
0.6
|
(3.4)
|
(103.0)
|
Ciénega
|
(29.8)
|
(6.0)
|
(11.3)
|
(2.1)
|
(18.5)
|
163.7
|
Total for operating mines
|
495.0
|
100
|
535.5
|
100
|
(40.5)
|
(7.6)
|
Metal hedging and other
subsidiaries
|
8.2
|
|
0.5
|
|
7.7
|
>100.0
|
Total Fresnillo plc
|
503.2
|
|
536.0
|
|
(32.8)
|
(6.1)
|
Administrative and corporate expenses
Administrative and corporate
expenses increased 36.5% from US$94.1 million in 2022 to US$128.4
million in 2023, mainly due to the adverse effects of the
revaluation of the Mexican peso vs the US Dollar on administrative
expenses denominated in pesos, including personnel salaries, and
the increase resulting from the review of the Shared Services
Agreement with Peñoles in line with the increased services
provided.
Exploration expenses
Business unit/project (US$
million)
|
Exploration expenses
2023
|
Exploration expenses 2022
|
Capitalised expenses
2023
|
Capitalised expenses 2022
|
Fresnillo
|
22.9
|
12.3
|
-
|
-
|
San Julián
|
19.6
|
24.6
|
-
|
-
|
Saucito
|
13.5
|
12.0
|
-
|
-
|
Juanicipio
|
7.3
|
11.7
|
-
|
-
|
Ciénega
|
6.7
|
7.2
|
-
|
-
|
Herradura
|
5.7
|
4.8
|
-
|
-
|
Noche Buena
|
0.7
|
1.4
|
-
|
-
|
Guanajuato
|
18.6
|
11.6
|
1.6
|
1.0
|
Orisyvo
|
6.7
|
4.0
|
0.6
|
-
|
Valles (Herradura)
|
4.3
|
5.8
|
-
|
-
|
Centauro Deep
|
0.4
|
0.5
|
-
|
-
|
Others
|
76.1
|
69.9
|
1.3
|
0.8
|
Total
|
182.4
|
165.8
|
3.5
|
1.8
|
As expected, exploration expenses
increased by 10.1% from US$165.8 million in 2022 to US$182.4
million in 2023, in line with our strategy to focus exploration on
specific targets, mainly at the Fresnillo and San Julián districts.
The year-on-year increase of US$16.7 million was due to our
intensified exploration activities aimed at increasing the resource
base, converting resources into reserves and improving the
confidence of the grade distribution in reserves; together with the
adverse effect of the revaluation of the Mexican peso vs. the US
dollar. An additional US$3.5 million was capitalised, mainly
relating to exploration expenses at the Guanajuato project. As a
result, risk capital invested in exploration totalled US$185.9
million in 2023, compared to US$167.6 million in 2022 (of which
US$1.8 million was capitalised). This represents a year-on-year
increase of 11.0%.
EBITDA
|
2023
US$
million
|
2022
US$
million
|
Amount
US$
million
|
Change
%
|
Profit from continuing operations
before income tax
|
114.0
|
248.6
|
(134.6)
|
(54.1)
|
- Finance income
|
(50.6)
|
(26.5)
|
(24.1)
|
90.9
|
+ Finance costs
|
88.8
|
81.6
|
7.2
|
8.8
|
- Revaluation effects of
Silverstream contract
|
(7.7)
|
(18.8)
|
11.1
|
(59.0)
|
- Foreign exchange loss,
net
|
(2.0)
|
(1.4)
|
(0.6)
|
42.9
|
- Other operating
income
|
(35.3)
|
(71.9)
|
36.6
|
(50.9)
|
+ Other operating
expense
|
51.2
|
38.8
|
12.4
|
32.0
|
+ Depreciation
|
497.3
|
500.6
|
(3.3)
|
(0.7)
|
EBITDA
|
655.7
|
751.1
|
(95.4)
|
(12.7)
|
EBITDA margin
|
24.2
|
30.9
|
-
|
-
|
EBITDA is a gauge of the Group's
financial performance and a key indicator to measure debt capacity.
It is calculated as profit for the year from continuing operations
before income tax, less finance income, plus finance costs, less
foreign exchange gain/(loss), less the net Silverstream effects and
other operating income plus other operating expenses and
depreciation. In 2023, EBITDA decreased 12.7% to US$655.7 million
primarily driven by the lower gross profit and higher
administrative and exploration expenses. As a result, EBITDA margin
expressed as a percentage of revenue decreased, from 30.9% in 2022
to 24.2% in 2023.
Other operating income and expense
In 2023, a net loss of US$15.8
million was recognised in the income statement mainly as a result
of the illegal extraction of ore from the leaching pads at
Soledad-Dipolos by third parties. This compares unfavourably to the
net gain of US$33.1 million recognised in the income statement in
2022 which was mainly a result of the recognition of the layback
agreement granting Orla the right to expand the Camino Rojo pit
onto Fresnillo's mining concession.
Silverstream effects
The Silverstream contract is
accounted for as a derivative financial instrument carried at fair
value. The net Silverstream effect recorded in the 2023 income
statement was a gain of US$7.7 million (US$48.4 million
amortisation profit and US$40.7 million revaluation loss), which
compared negatively to the net gain of US$18.8 million registered
in 2022. The negative revaluation was mainly driven by a decrease
in the production plan following an update to the Sabinas silver
reserves and a lower inflation forecast.
Since the IPO, cumulative cash of
US$809.9 million has been received vs US$350 million initially paid
in 2007. The Group expects that further unrealised gains or losses
related to the valuation of the Silverstream contract will be taken
to the income statement in accordance with silver price cyclicality
or changes in the variables considered in valuing this contract.
Further information related to the Silverstream contract is
provided in the balance sheet section in notes 14 and 30 to the
consolidated financial statements.
Net finance costs
Net finance costs of US$38.2
million compared favourably to the US$55.2 million recorded in
2022. The US$17.7 million decrease was primarily due to the
positive effect of the increased interest gained in short term
deposits and investments. In addition, the 2023 net finance costs
mainly reflected: i) interest paid on the outstanding US$317.9
million from the US$800 million of 5.500% Senior Notes due 2023,
and ii) interest paid on the US$850 million principal amount of
4.250% Senior Notes due 2050. Detailed information is provided in
note 10 to the consolidated financial statements. A portion of the
interest from the Senior Notes is capitalised, hence not included
in finance costs. During the year ended 31 December 2023, the Group
capitalised US$2.1 million of borrowing costs (2022: US$8.5
million).
Foreign exchange
A foreign exchange gain of US$2.0
million was recorded in 2023, which compared favourably to the
US$1.4 million gain in 2022.
The Group also enters into certain
exchange rate derivative instruments as part of a program to manage
its exposure to foreign exchange risk associated with the purchase
of equipment denominated in Euro (EUR). As of December 31st 2023,
the total EUR outstanding net forward position was EUR 5.08 million
with maturity dates through September 2024. Volumes that expired
during the second half of 2023 were EUR 7.07 million with a
weighted average strike of 1.1043 USD/EUR, which have generated a
marginal result in the period of -US$0.163 million.
Taxation
Tax income for the period was
US$205.0 million, which compared favourably to the US$67.4 million
tax income in 2022. The effective tax rate, excluding the special
mining rights, was -179.8%, compared to the 30% statutory tax rate.
The reason for the unusual positive effective tax rate was the
significant permanent differences between the tax and the
accounting treatment related mainly to: i) the effect of the 12.8%
revaluation of the Mexican peso/US dollar spot exchange rate in
2023 versus the 5.9% revaluation in 2022 on the tax value of assets
and liabilities (-US$214.5 million); and ii) the inflation rate
(Mexican Consumer Price Index), which impacted the inflationary
uplift of the tax base for assets and liabilities (-US$54.8
million).
The reason for the positive
effective tax rate in 2022 was the significant permanent
differences between the tax and the accounting treatment related
mainly to: i) the effect of the 5.9% revaluation of the Mexican
peso/US dollar spot exchange rate in 2022 on the tax value of
assets and liabilities (-US$72.9 million); ii) the inflation rate
(Mexican Consumer Price Index), which impacted the inflationary
uplift of the tax base for assets and liabilities (-US$62.7
million); and iii) the benefit from the lower border zone tax which
applied to Herradura and Noche Buena operations (-US$17.5
million).
Mining rights in 2023 was US$30.8
million compared to mining rights of US$7.7 million charged in
2022.
Profit for the period
Profit for the period decreased
from US$308.3 million in 2022 to US$288.3 million in 2023, a 6.5%
decrease year-on-year as a result of the factors
described above.
Excluding the effects of the
Silverstream contract, profit for the year decreased from US$295.1
million to US$282.9 million, a 4.1% decrease.
Profit due to non-controlling
interests increased from US$36.4 million in 2022 to US$54.4 million
in 2023 reflecting the higher profit generated at Juanicipio, where
MAG Silver owns 44% of the outstanding shares.
Profit attributable to equity
shareholders of the Group decreased from US$271.9 million in 2022
to US$233.9 million in 2023, down 14.0%.
Cash flow
A summary of the key items from
the cash flow statement is set out below:
|
2023
US$
million
|
2022
US$
million
|
Amount
US$
million
|
Change
%
|
Cash generated by operations
before changes in working capital
|
649.3
|
743.1
|
(93.8)
|
(12.6)
|
Decrease/increase in working
capital
|
20.6
|
(66.1)
|
86.7
|
(131.2)
|
Taxes and employee profit sharing
paid
|
(244.0)
|
(174.7)
|
(69.3)
|
39.7
|
Net cash from operating
activities
|
425.9
|
502.2
|
(76.3)
|
(15.2)
|
Silverstream contract
|
40.2
|
33.4
|
6.8
|
20.4
|
Capital contributions and loans by
minority shareholders
|
(0.6)
|
8.3
|
(8.8)
|
N/A
|
Proceeds from the layback
agreement
|
22.8
|
15.0
|
7.8
|
52.0
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
(483.4)
|
(592.1)
|
108.7.
|
(18.4)
|
Repayment of interest-bearing
loans
|
(317.9)
|
-
|
(317.9)
|
100.0
|
Dividends paid to shareholders of
the Company
|
(108.4)
|
(202.0)
|
93.6
|
(46.3)
|
Financial expenses and foreign
exchange effects
|
(6.4)
|
(27.2)
|
20.8
|
(76.5)
|
Net (decrease)/increase in cash
during the period after foreign exchange differences
|
(434.5)
|
(266.2)
|
(168.3)
|
63.2
|
Cash and other liquid funds at 31
December1
|
534.6
|
969.1
|
(434.5)
|
(44.8)
|
Cash generated by operations
before changes in working capital decreased by 12.6% to US$649.3
million, primarily due to the lower profits generated in the year.
Working capital decreased US$20.6 million, mainly due to: i) a
decrease in ore inventories of US$54.6 million; and ii) a US$10.4
million decrease in prepayments mainly to contractors. This was
partly offset by a US$45.6 million increase in trade receivables
from related parties.
Taxes and employee profit sharing
paid increased 39.7% vs 2022 to US$244.0 million mainly due to an
increase in provisional tax payments paid in 2023; and the higher
final income tax paid in 2023, net of provisional taxes paid,
corresponding to the 2022 tax fiscal year. This was partially
offset by a decrease in mining rights payments and lower profit
sharing paid.
As a result of the above factors,
net cash from operating activities decreased 15.2% from US$502.2
million in 2022 to US$425.9 million in 2023.
The Group received other sources
of cash, including: i) the proceeds of the Silverstream contract of
US$40.2 million; and ii) proceeds from the layback agreement
granting Orla the right to expand the Camino Rojo oxide pit onto
Fresnillo's mineral concession of US$22.8 million (See note 2 to
the consolidated financial statements).
Main uses of funds
were:
i) the purchase of
property, plant and equipment for a total of US$483.4 million.
Capital expenditures for 2023 are described below:
Purchase of property, plant and equipment
|
2023
US$
million
|
|
Saucito mine
|
125.1
|
Mine development, purchase of
in-mine equipment, deepening of the Jarillas shaft and tailings
dam.
|
Fresnillo mine
|
97.8
|
Mine development and mining works,
purchase of in-mine equipment, deepening of the San Carlos shaft
and tailings dam.
|
Juanicipio mine
|
82.2
|
Mine development and
equipment.
|
San Julián Veins and
DOB
|
74.8
|
Mining works, tailings dam and
purchase of in-mine equipment.
|
Herradura mine
|
56.9
|
Stripping, carbon in column
project and purchase of in-mine equipment.
|
Ciénega mine
|
43.8
|
Mining works, purchase of in-mine
equipment and construction of tailings dam.
|
Other
|
2.8
|
Minera Bermejal.
|
Total purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
483.4
|
|
ii) Dividends paid to
shareholders of the Group in 2023 totalled US$108.4 million, a
46.3% decrease vs 2022, in line with our dividend policy which
includes a consideration of profits generated in the year. The 2023
payment included the 2022 final dividend of 13.3 cents per share
paid in May 2023, totalling US$98.0 million, and the 2023 interim
dividend paid in September of US$10.3 million.
iii) Financial expenses and
foreign exchange effects of US$6.4 million, a decrease of 76.5% vs
2022. Financial expenses in 2023 and 2022 included: i) interest
paid on the US$317.9 million from the US$800 million 5.500% Senior
Notes due November 2023; and ii) interest paid on the 4.250% Senior
Notes due 2050. In addition, financial expenses in 2022 included
the interests paid in relation to the voluntary amendment to the
income tax and mining rights' treatment of the stripping costs and
the deduction of exploration expenses.
The sources and uses of funds
described above resulted in a decrease in net cash of US$434.5
million (net decrease in cash and other liquid assets), which
combined with the US$969.1 million balance at the beginning of the
year resulted in cash and other liquid assets of US$534.6 million
at the end of December 2023.
Balance sheet
Fresnillo plc continued to
maintain a solid financial position during the period with cash and
other liquid funds1 of US$534.6 million as of 31
December 2023, despite decreasing 44.8% vs 31 December 2022. Taking
into account the cash and other liquid funds of US$534.6 million
and the US$839.0 million outstanding Senior Notes, Fresnillo plc's
net debt was US$304.4 million as of 31 December 2023. This compares
to the net debt of US$198.7 million as of 31 December 2022.
Considering these variations, the balance sheet at 31 December 2023
remains strong, with a net debt/EBITDA ratio of
0.46x2.
Inventories decreased 9.3% to
US$532.7 million mainly due to the decrease of inventories of gold
content, at the leaching pads and to be processed at the dynamic
leaching plants at Herradura, as well as the decreased inventories
at Juanicipio, partly offset by increased inventories of operating
materials and spare parts.
Trade and other receivables
increased 19.3% to US$482.4 million as a result of an increase in
receivables to Met-Mex and in value added tax
receivables.
The change in the value of the
Silverstream derivative from US$511.5 million at the end of 2022 to
US$482.3 million as of 31 December 2023 reflects proceeds
of US$36.9 million corresponding to 2023 (US$31.8 million in cash
and US$5.1 million in accounts receivables) and the Silverstream
effect in the income statement of US$7.7 million.
The net book value of property,
plant and equipment remained broadly stable at US$2,860.9 million
at 31 December 2023.
The Group's total equity was
US$4,067.2 million as of 31 December 2023, a 3.8% increase vs 31
December 2022. This was mainly explained by the increase in
retained earnings, reflecting the 2023 profit.
Dividends
Based on the Group's 2023
performance, the Directors have recommended a final dividend of
4.20 US cents per Ordinary Share, which will be paid on 29 May 2024
to shareholders on the register on 19 April 2024. The dividend will
be paid in UK pounds sterling unless shareholders elect to be paid
in US dollars. This is in addition to the interim dividend of 1.40
US cents per share amounting to US$10.3 million. This final
dividend is lower than the previous year due to the decrease in
profits in 2023. It remains in line with the Group's dividend
policy to pay out 33-50% of the profit attributable to equity
shareholders of the company after making certain adjustments to
exclude extraordinary non-cash effects in the income statement,
which this year in particular included taking out the income tax
benefit resulting from the effect of the revaluation of the Mexican
peso on the tax value of assets and liabilities, which increases in
dollar terms the deduction of future depreciation expenses (in peso
terms, which is used for Mexican tax purposes, there is no impact).
However, this favourable effect in dollar terms could be reversed
in the future if the Mexican peso devalues.
As disclosed in previous reports,
the corporate income tax reform introduced in Mexico in 2014
created a withholding tax obligation of 10% relating to the payment
of dividends, including to foreign nationals. The 2023 final
dividend will be subject to this withholding obligation.
2
Net debt is calculated as debt at 31 December 2023 less Cash and
other liquid funds at 31 December 2023 divided by the EBITDA
generated in the last 12 months.
|
|
|
|
Attributable to the equity
holders of the Company
|
|
|
Notes
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
|
Capital
reserve
|
Hedging
reserve
|
Cost of hedging
reserve
|
Fair value reserve of
financial assets at FVOCI
|
Foreign currency translation
reserve
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
Total
equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
US$
thousands
|
Balance at 1 January 2022
|
|
368,546
|
1,153,817
|
(526,910)
|
(2,042)
|
(38)
|
83,784
|
(2,120)
|
2,543,087
|
3,618,124
|
184,548
|
3,802,672
|
Profit for the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
271,897
|
271,897
|
36,394
|
308,291
|
Other comprehensive income, net of
tax
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,169
|
38
|
(3,998)
|
234
|
(606)
|
(3,163)
|
(1,981)
|
(5,144)
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,169
|
38
|
(3,998)
|
234
|
271,291
|
268,734
|
34,413
|
303,147
|
Hedging loss transferred to the
carrying value of PPE purchased during the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
782
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
782
|
2,102
|
2,884
|
Capital contribution
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
10,143
|
10,143
|
Dividends declared and
paid
|
19
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(201,909)
|
(201,909)
|
-
|
(201,909)
|
Balance at 31 December 2022
|
|
368,546
|
1,153,817
|
(526,910)
|
(91)
|
-
|
79,786
|
(1,886)
|
2,612,469
|
3,685,731
|
231,206
|
3,916,937
|
Profit for the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
233,909
|
233,909
|
54,391
|
288,300
|
Other comprehensive income, net of
tax
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
173
|
-
|
(37,195)
|
(2,318)
|
(93)
|
(39,433)
|
131
|
(39,302)
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
173
|
-
|
(37,195)
|
(2,318)
|
233,816
|
194,476
|
54,522
|
248,998
|
Hedging loss transferred to the
carrying value of PPE purchased during the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(32)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(32)
|
(50)
|
(82)
|
Capital contribution
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
9,667
|
9,667
|
Dividends declared and
paid
|
19
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(108,323)
|
(108,323)
|
-
|
(108,323)
|
Balance at 31 December 2023
|
|
368,546
|
1,153,817
|
(526,910)
|
50
|
-
|
42,591
|
(4,204)
|
2,737,962
|
3,771,852
|
295,345
|
4,067,197
|
1. Corporate
information
Fresnillo plc. ("the Company") is
a public limited company and registered in England and Wales with
registered number 6344120 and is the holding company for the
Fresnillo subsidiaries detailed in note 5 of the Parent Company
accounts ('the Group').
Industrias Peñoles S.A.B. de C.V.
('Peñoles') currently owns 75 percent of the shares of the Company
and the ultimate controlling party of the Company is the Baillères
family, whose beneficial interest is held through Peñoles. The
registered address of Peñoles is Calzada Legaria 549, Mexico City
11250. Copies of Peñoles' accounts can be obtained
from www.penoles.com.mx. Further information on related party balances and
transactions with Peñoles' group companies is disclosed in note
27.
The financial information for the
year ended 31 December 2023 and 2022 contained in this document
does not constitute statutory accounts as defined in section 435 of
the Companies Act 2006. The financial information for the years
ended 31 December 2023 and 2022 have been extracted from the
consolidated financial statements of Fresnillo plc for the year
ended 31 December 2023 which have been approved by the directors on
4 March 2024 and will be delivered to the Registrar of Companies in
due course. The auditor's report on those financial statements was
unqualified and did not contain a statement under section 498 of
the Companies Act 2006. The Group's principal business is the
mining and beneficiation of non-ferrous minerals, and the sale of
related production. The primary contents of this production
are silver, gold, lead and zinc. During 2023 99.9% of the
production were sold to Peñoles' metallurgical complex, Met-Mex
(2022: all the production), for smelting and refining. Further
information about the Group operating mines and its principal
activities is disclosed in note 3.
2. Significant accounting
policies
(a) Basis of preparation and
consolidation, and statement of compliance
Basis of preparation and statement of
compliance
The Group consolidated financial
statements have been prepared in accordance with UK-adopted
international accounting standards sand in accordance with the
provisions of the Companies Act 2006.
The consolidated financial
statements have been prepared on a historical cost basis, except
for trade receivables, derivative financial instruments, equity
securities and defined benefit pension scheme assets which have
been measured at fair value.
The consolidated financial
statements are presented in dollars of the United States of America
(US dollars or US$) and all values are rounded
to the nearest thousand ($000) except when otherwise
indicated.
Going concern
The Group's business
activities, together with the factors likely to affect its future
development, performance and position are set out above in the
Strategic Review. The financial position of the Group, its cash
flows and liquidity position are described in the Financial Review.
In addition, note 31 to the financial statements includes the
Group's objectives, policies and processes for managing its
capital; its financial risk management objectives; details of its
financial instruments and hedging activities; and its exposures to
credit risk and liquidity risk.
In making their assessment of the
Group's ability to manage its future cash requirements, the
Directors have considered the Company and Group budgets and the
cash flow forecasts for the period to 31 December 2025 (the 'going
concern period'). The Directors have also considered the cash
position as of 31 December 2023 (US$534.6 million) and the net
current asset position (US$1,167.0 million). In addition, they
reviewed a more conservative cash flow scenario with reduced silver
and gold prices of US$22.8/ounce and US$1,793/ounce respectively
throughout the going concern's period, whilst maintaining current
budgeted expenditure while only considering projects approved by
the Executive Committee. This resulted in a lower cash position,
but still increase the cash balance year on year, maintaining
sufficient liquidity throughout the period. Finally, to maintain a
strong liquidity, during January 2024, the Company entered into a
committed syndicated revolving credit facility ("the facility")
with a maximum amount available of US$350.0 million. The terms of
this facility include financial covenants related to leverage and
interest cover ratios and the facility is available for a period of
5 years. Under all going concern scenarios modelled, management
forecasts compliance with such covenants.
The Directors have further
calculated prices (US$19.7/ounce and US$1,579/ounce for silver and
gold respectively), which should they prevail to the end of 2025
would result in cash balances decreasing to minimal levels by the
end of 2025, without applying mitigations.
Should metal prices remain below
the stressed prices above for an extended period, management have
identified specific elements of capital and exploration
expenditures which could be deferred without adversely affecting
production profiles throughout the period. On the other hand,
management could amend the mining plans to concentrate on
production with a higher margin in order to accelerate cash
generation without affecting the integrity of the mine
plans.
After reviewing all of the above
considerations, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that
management have sufficient flexibility in adverse circumstances to
maintain adequate resources to continue in operational existence
for the foreseeable future. The Directors, therefore, continue to
adopt the going concern basis of accounting in preparing the annual
financial statements.
Basis of consolidation
The consolidated financial
statements set out the Group's financial position as of 31 December
2023 and 2022, and the results of operations and cash flows for the
years then ended.
Entities that constitute the Group
are those enterprises controlled by the Group regardless of the
number of shares owned by the Group. The Group controls an entity
when it is exposed to, or has the right to, variable returns from
its involvement with the entity and has the ability to affect those
returns through its power over the entity. Entities are
consolidated from the date on which control is transferred to the
Group and cease to be consolidated from the date on which control
is transferred out of the Group. The Group applies the acquisition
method to account for business combinations in accordance with IFRS
3.
All intra-group balances,
transactions, income and expenses and profits and losses, including
unrealised profits arising from intra-group transactions, have been
eliminated on consolidation. Unrealised losses are eliminated in
the same way as unrealised gains except that they are only
eliminated to the extent that there is no evidence of
impairment.
Non-controlling interests in the
net assets of consolidated subsidiaries are identified separately
from the Group's equity therein. The interest of non-controlling
shareholders may be initially measured either at fair value or at
the non-controlling interest's proportionate share of the
acquiree's identifiable net assets. The choice of measurement basis
is made on an acquisition by-acquisition basis. Subsequent to
acquisition, non-controlling interests consist of the amount
attributed to such interests at initial recognition and the
non-controlling interest's share of changes in equity since the
date of the combination. Any losses of a subsidiary are
attributed to the non-controlling interests even if that results in
a deficit balance.
Transactions with non-controlling
interests that do not result in loss of control are accounted for
as equity transactions - that is, a transaction with the owners in
their capacity as owners. The difference between fair value of any
consideration paid and the relevant share acquired of the carrying
value of net assets of the subsidiary is recorded in equity. Gains
or losses on disposals to non-controlling interest are also
recorded in equity.
(b) Changes in accounting policies
and disclosures
The accounting policies adopted in
the preparation of the consolidated financial statements are
consistent with those applied in the preparation of the
consolidated financial statements for the year ended 31 December
2022.
New standards, interpretations and amendments (new standards)
adopted by the Group
A number of new or amended
standards (the Standards) became applicable for the current
reporting period. The adoption of these Standards did not have any
impact on the accounting policies, financial position or
performance of the Group.
The Group has evaluated the
applicability of Pillar II rules considering that the Parent
Company and the main subsidiaries of the Group are tax resident in
Mexico, management also assessed the status of the Pillar II
legislation in the country, however no laws or regulations have
been enacted to the date of this report.
Standards, interpretations and amendments issued but not yet
effective
The International Accounting
Standards Board (IASB) has issued other amendments resulting from
improvements to IFRSs that management considers do not have any
impact on the financial position or performance of the Group. The
Group has not early adopted any standard, interpretation or
amendment that was issued but is not yet effective.
(c) Significant accounting
judgements, estimates and assumptions
The preparation of the Group's
consolidated financial statements in conformity with IFRS requires
management to make judgements, estimates and assumptions that
affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities and contingent
liabilities at the date of the consolidated financial statements
and reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting
period. These judgements and estimates are based on management's
best knowledge of the relevant facts and circumstances, with regard
to prior experience, but actual results may differ from the amounts
included in the consolidated financial statements.
Information about such judgements and estimates is contained in the
accounting policies and/or the notes to the consolidated
financial statements.
Judgements
Areas of judgement, apart from
those involving estimations, that have the most significant effect
on the amounts recognised in the consolidated financial statements
for the year ended 31 December 2023 are:
Recoverability of Soledad and
Dipolos assets:
In 2009, five members of the El
Bajio agrarian community in the state of Sonora, who claimed rights
over certain surface land in the proximity of the operations of
Minera Penmont ('Penmont'), submitted a legal claim before the
Unitarian Agrarian Court (Tribunal Unitario Agrario) of Hermosillo,
Sonora, to have Penmont vacate an area of this surface land. The
land in dispute encompassed a portion of surface area where part of
the operations of the Soledad & Dipolos mine are located. The
litigation resulted in a definitive court order, with which Penmont
complied by vacating 1,824 hectares of land in 2013, resulting in
the suspension of operations at Soledad & Dipolos. Whilst the
claim and the definitive court order did not affect the Group's
legal title over the mining concession or the ore currently held in
leaching pads near the mine site, land access at the mine site is
required to further exploit the concession at Soledad &
Dipolos.
Penmont is the legal and
registered owner of the land where the leaching pads are located
but has not yet been able to gain physical access to these pads due
to opposition by certain local individuals. This land was purchased
by Penmont from the Federal Government of Mexico in accordance with
legal procedures. The Group has a reasonable expectation that
Penmont will eventually regain access to the Soledad & Dipolos
assets and process the ore content in the Soledad & Dipolos
leaching pads. This expectation considers different scenarios,
including but not limited to the different legal proceedings that
Minera Penmont has presented in order to regain access to the land,
and other proceedings that members of the El Bajío agrarian
community have presented seeking the cancellation of Penmont's
property deed over this area, which proceedings are pending final
resolution. Therefore, the Group continues to recognise property,
plant & equipment and inventory related to Soledad &
Dipolos, as disclosed in note 13 and note 15, respectively. Due to
the fact that it is not yet certain when access may be granted so
that the inventory can be processed, this inventory is classified
as a non-current asset.
In regard to the inventory, during
the first half of the year the Company identified certain suspected
illegal extraction of gold content at its Soledad-Dipolos leaching
pads. The Company estimates a loss of approximately 20,000 ounces
of gold content and consequently recognised a write off of US$21.9
million regarding the Soledad-Dipolos gold contents in inventory,
which has been presented as other expenses in the Consolidated
Income Statement. The Company took relevant actions with the
support of diverse authorities to stop the illegal extraction.
During the second half of the year, a procedural visit by
authorities took place. During the visit of the authorities to the
mine site it was confirmed there were no personnel carrying out any
illegal mining activities at Soledad & Dipolos leaching pads.
Thus, the Company does not currently expect any further losses of
this inventory.
The inventory write-off considered
both the estimation of recoverable amount of gold existing at the
leaching pad, and potential volume of solution being irrigated on
the area that is believed to have been leached to date. However,
the nature of estimation means that actual outcome may differ from
those estimates.
Furthermore, claimants from the El
Bajío community also presented claims against occupation agreements
they entered into with Penmont, covering land parcels other than
the surface land where Soledad & Dipolos is located. Penmont
has had no significant mining operations or specific geological
interest in the affected parcels and these lands are therefore not
considered strategic for Penmont. The Agrarian Court has issued
rulings declaring such occupation agreements over those land
parcels to be null and void and that Penmont must remediate such
lands to the state that they were in before Penmont's occupation as
well as returning any minerals extracted from this area. The case
relating to the claims over these land parcels remains subject to
final conclusion, as appeals are progressing as expected. However,
given that Penmont has not conducted significant mining operations
or had specific geological interest in these land parcels, any
contingencies relating to such land parcels are not considered
material by the Group. There are no material assets recognised in
respect of these land parcels at 31 December 2023.
Layback Agreement:
In December 2020, the Group
entered into multiple contracts with Orla Mining Ltd. and its
Mexican Subsidiary, Minera Camino Rojo, S.A. de C.V. (together
herein referred to as "Orla"), granting Orla the right to expand
the Camino Rojo oxide pit onto Fresnillo's "Guachichil D1" mineral
concession. Based on the terms of the contracts, the Group will
transfer the legal rights to access and mine the mineral concession
to Orla.
The effectiveness of the agreement
was subject to the approval of the Mexican Federal Competition
Commission (COFECE), which was granted in February 2021. The
consideration includes three payments: US$25.0 million that was
received upon the approval of COFECE, US$15.0 million that was
received in November 2022 and US$22.8 million that was received in
November 2023.
Due to the fact that the contracts
were negotiated together, the Group considered the layback
contracts as a single agreement (Layback Agreement) for the purpose
of determining the accounting implications of the transaction. The
Group determined that the transaction should be accounted for as
the sale of a single intangible asset. As such, it was relevant to
consider the point at which control transfers in accordance with
the requirements of IFRS 15 regarding when a performance obligation
is satisfied and in light of the continuing performance obligations
on the part of the Group. In December 2022 the Group successfully
provided the required support to Orla with respect to the
negotiations relevant to the acquisition of the rights to access
from the local ejido, which was a performance obligation in
accordance to the Layback Agreement. Thus, the Company considered
at that point that all the obligations established in the Layback
Agreement to have been completed and recognised the total value of
the agreement (US$67.2 million) in profit or loss as other
income.
Juanicipio project:
Commercial production is the term
used for the point at which a mining operation is available for use
and capable of operating in the manner intended by management. This
generally means that the operation can produce its intended output
at stable and sustainable levels. The determination of when a mine
reaches commercial production can be complex and judgemental. The
Group considered a number of factors when making this judgement,
including completion of substantially all construction development
activities in accordance with design, a production ramp up period
which achieved an average throughput of 70% of mill nameplate
capacity, grades in line with mine plan and recoveries consistent
with design.
The Group assessed the production
start date for the mine and the plant separately. The Group had
determined that the Juanicipio mine started operations from 1
January 2022. After connecting the plant to the national
electricity grid, the Group has concluded Juanicipio plant has
reached commercial production on 1 June 2023 following a successful
commissioning period of the plant and facilities. As commercial
production has been achieved, the Group has started to depreciate
all the plant assets and recognised the corresponding charge as
production cost.
Climate change:
In the climate disclosure in the
Strategic Report, the Group's set out its assessment of climate
risks and opportunities (CROs). The Group recognises that there may
be potential financial statement implications in the future in
respect of the mitigation and adaptation measures to the physical
and transition risks. The potential effect of climate change
would be in respect of assets and liabilities that are measured
based on an estimate of future cash flows. The Group specifically
considered the effect of climate change on the valuation of
property, plant and equipment, deferred tax assets, the
Silverstream contract, and the provision for mine closure cost. The
Group does not have any assets or liabilities for which measurement
is directly linked to climate change performance (for example:
Sustainability-Linked Bonds).
The main ways in which climate has
affected the preparation of the financial statements
are:
• The Group has already made
certain climate-related strategic decisions, such as to focus on
decarbonisation and to increase the use of wind energy. Where
decisions have been approved by the Board, the effects were
considered in the preparation of these financial statements by way
of inclusion in future cash flow projections underpinning the
estimation of the recoverable amount of property, plant and
equipment and deferred tax assets, as relevant.
• As described in Note 14, the
costs inherent in the Silverstream contract are determined based on
the provisions of that contract. This reduces the exposure of the
valuation of the asset to the effect of any cost implications
related to CROs.
• Further information about the
potential effect of CROs on the provision for mine closure cost is
set out in Note 21.
The Group's strategy consists of
mitigation and adaptation measures. To mitigate the impacts by and
on climate change the Company relies on renewable electricity, fuel
replacement and efficiency opportunities to reduce the carbon
footprint. The approach to adaptation measures is based on climate
models to produce actionable information for the design,
construction, operation and closure of its mining assets,
considering climate change. In addition, societal expectations are
driving government action that may impose further requirements and
cost on companies in the future. Future changes to the Group's
climate change strategy, global decarbonisation signposts and
regulation may impact the Group's significant judgements and key
estimates and result in material changes to financial results and
the carrying values of certain assets and liabilities in future
reporting periods. However, as at the balance sheet date the Group
believes there is no material impact on balance sheet carrying
values of assets or liabilities. Although this is an estimate, it
is not considered a critical estimate.
Estimates and assumptions
Significant areas of estimation
uncertainty considered by management in preparing the consolidated
financial statements include:
Estimated recoverable ore reserves
and mineral resources, note 2(e):
Ore reserves are estimates of the
amount of ore that can be economically and legally extracted from
the Group's mining properties. Mineral resources are an identified
mineral occurrence with reasonable prospects for eventual economic
extraction. The Group estimates its ore reserves and mineral
resources based on information compiled by appropriately qualified
persons relating to the geological and technical data on the size,
depth, shape and grade of the ore body and suitable production
techniques and recovery rates, in conformity with the Joint Ore
Reserves Committee (JORC) code 2012. Such an analysis requires
complex geological judgements to interpret the data. The estimation
of recoverable ore reserves and mineral resources is based upon
factors such as geological assumptions and judgements made in
estimating the size and grade of the ore body, estimates of
commodity prices, foreign exchange rates, future capital
requirements and production costs.
As additional geological
information is produced during the operation of a mine, the
economic assumptions used and the estimates of ore reserves and
mineral resources may change. Such changes may impact the Group's
reported balance sheet and income statement including:
· The
carrying value of property, plant and equipment and mining
properties may be affected due to changes in the recoverable
amount, which consider both ore reserves and mineral resources,
refer to note 13;
· Depreciation and amortisation charges in the income statement
may change where such charges are determined using the
unit-of-production method based on ore reserves, refer to note
13;
· Stripping costs capitalised in the balance sheet, either as
part of mine properties or inventory, or charged to profit or loss
may change due to changes in stripping ratios, refer to note
13;
· Provisions for mine closure costs may change where changes to
the ore reserve and resources estimates affect expectations about
when such activities will occur, refer to note 21;
· The
recognition and carrying value of deferred income tax assets may
change due to changes regarding the existence of such assets and in
estimates of the likely recovery of such assets, refer to note
11.
Estimate of recoverable ore on
leaching pads, note 15:
In the Group's open pit mines,
certain mined ore is placed on leaching pads where a solution is
applied to the surface of the heap to dissolve the gold and enable
extraction. The determination of the amount of recoverable gold
requires estimation with consideration of the quantities of ore
placed on the pads, the grade of the ore (based on assay data) and
the estimated recovery percentage (based on metallurgical studies
and current technology).
The grades of ore placed on pads
are regularly compared to the quantities of metal recovered through
the leaching process to evaluate the appropriateness of the
estimated recovery (metallurgical balancing). The Group monitors
the results of the metallurgical balancing process and recovery
estimates are refined based on actual results over time and when
new information becomes available.
The Group monitors the
metallurgical balances to confirm the grade and recovery of the ore
in inventories. Based on new technical information and the
reconsideration of actual recovery grades and updated leaching
targets, the Group updated its estimate of gold content in leaching
pads increasing this by 30.7 thousand ounces of gold as at 1
January 2023.
This change in estimation was
incorporated prospectively in inventory from 1 January 2023. The
increase in the number of ounces reduced the weighted average cost
of inventory. Had the estimation not changed, production cost
during 2023 would have been US$30.9 million higher, with an
offsetting impact against the work-in-progress inventory balance as
of 31 December 2023.
Silverstream, note 14:
The valuation of the Silverstream
contract as a derivative financial instrument requires estimation
by management. The term of the derivative is based on the Sabinas
life of mine and the value of this derivative is determined using a
number of estimates, including the estimated recoverable ore
reserves and a portion of mineral resources considering the
expected rate of conversion to reserves and future production
profile of the Sabinas mine on the same
basis a market participant would consider, the estimated recoveries
of silver from ore mined, estimates of the future price of silver
and the discount rate used to discount future cash flows. Further
detail on the inputs that have a significant effect on the
fair value of this derivative, and the impact of changes in key
assumptions are included in note 14.
Income tax, notes 2 (q) and
11:
The recognition of deferred tax
assets, including those arising from un-utilised tax losses,
requires management to assess the likelihood that the Group will
generate taxable earnings in future periods, in order
to utilise recognised deferred tax assets. Estimates of future
taxable income are based on forecast cash flows from operations and
the application of existing tax laws in each jurisdiction.
Estimated cash flows are not significantly sensitive to reasonable
possible changes to key assumptions on which management bases the
recoverable value calculations. The carrying value of deferred tax
assets is disclosed in note 11.
(d) Foreign currency
translation
The Group's consolidated financial
statements are presented in US dollars, which is the Parent
Company's functional currency. The functional currency for each
entity in the Group is determined by the currency of the primary
economic environment in which it operates. The determination of
functional currency requires management judgement, particularly
where there may be more than one currency in which transactions are
undertaken and which impact the economic environment in which the
entity operates. For all operating entities, this is US
dollars.
Transactions denominated in
currencies other than the functional currency of the entity are
translated at the exchange rate ruling at the date of
the transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated
in foreign currencies are re-translated at the rate of exchange
ruling at the balance sheet date. All differences that arise are
recorded in the income statement. Non-monetary items that are
measured in terms of historical cost in a foreign currency are
translated using the exchange rates as at the dates of the initial
transactions. Non-monetary items measured at fair value in a
foreign currency are translated into US dollars using the exchange
rate at the date when the fair value is determined.
For entities with functional
currencies other than US dollars as at the reporting date, assets
and liabilities are translated into the reporting currency of the
Group by applying the exchange rate at the balance sheet date and
the income statement is translated at the average exchange rate for
the year. The resulting difference on exchange is included as a
cumulative translation adjustment in other comprehensive income. On
disposal of an entity, the deferred cumulative amount recognised in
other comprehensive income relating to that operation is recognised
in the income statement.
(e) Property, plant and
equipment
Property, plant and equipment is
stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment, if
any. Cost comprises the purchase price and any costs directly
attributable to bringing the asset into working condition for its
intended use. The cost of self-constructed assets includes the cost
of materials, direct labour and an appropriate proportion of
production overheads.
The cost less the residual value
of each item of property, plant and equipment is depreciated over
its useful life. Each item's estimated useful life has been
assessed with regard to both its own physical life limitations and
the present assessment of economically recoverable reserves of the
mine property at which the item is located. Estimates of remaining
useful lives are made on a regular basis for all mine buildings,
machinery and equipment, with annual reassessments for major items.
Depreciation is charged to cost of sales on a unit-of-production
(UOP) basis for mine buildings and installations, plant and
equipment used in the mine production process (except mobile
equipment) or on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful
life of the individual asset that are not related to the mine
production process. Changes in estimates, which mainly affect
unit-of-production calculations, are accounted
for prospectively. Depreciation commences when assets are
available for use. Land is not depreciated.
The average expected useful lives
based on actual life of mines are as follows:
|
Years
|
Buildings
|
6
|
Plant and equipment
|
10
|
Mining properties and development
costs1
|
10
|
Other assets
|
5
|
1 Depreciation of mining
properties and development cost are determined using the
unit-of-production method.
An item of property, plant and
equipment is de-recognised upon disposal or when no future economic
benefits are expected from its use or disposal. Any gain or loss
arising at de-recognition of the asset (calculated as the
difference between the net disposal proceeds and the carrying
amount of the asset) is included in the income statement
in the year that the asset is de-recognised.
Non-current assets or disposal
groups are classified as held for sale when it is expected that the
carrying amount of the asset will be recovered principally through
sale rather than through continuing use. Assets are not depreciated
when classified as held for sale.
Disposal of assets
Gains or losses from the disposal
of assets are recognised in the income statement when all
significant risks and rewards of ownership are transferred to the
customer, usually when title has been passed.
Mining properties and development costs
Payments for mining concessions
are expensed during the exploration phase of a prospect and
capitalised during the development of the project when
incurred.
Purchased rights to ore reserves
and mineral resources are recognised as assets at their cost of
acquisition or at fair value if purchased as part
of a business combination.
Mining concessions, when
capitalised, are amortised on a straight-line basis over the period
of time in which benefits are expected to be obtained from that
specific concession.
Mine development costs are
capitalised as part of property, plant and equipment. Mine
development activities commence once a feasibility study
has been performed for the specific project. When an
exploration prospect has entered into the advanced exploration
phase and sufficient evidence of the probability of the existence
of economically recoverable minerals has been obtained
pre-operative expenses relating to mine preparation works are also
capitalised as a mine development cost.
The initial cost of a mining
property comprises its construction cost, any costs directly
attributable to bringing the mining property into operation, the
initial estimate of the provision for mine closure cost, and, for
qualifying assets, borrowing costs. The Group cease the
capitalisation of borrowing cost when the physical construction of
the asset is complete and is ready for its intended use.
Ore generated as part of the
development stage may be processed and sold, giving rise to revenue
before the commencement of commercial production. Where such
processing is necessary to bring mining assets into the condition
required for their intended use (for example, in testing the plants
at the mining unit in development), revenues from metals recovered
from such activities are recognised in profit or loss.
Upon commencement of production,
capitalised expenditure is depreciated using the unit-of-production
method based on the estimated economically proven and probable
reserves to which they relate.
Mining properties and mine
development are stated at cost, less accumulated depreciation and
impairment in value, if any.
Construction in progress
Assets in the course of
construction are capitalised as a separate component of property,
plant and equipment. On completion, the cost of construction is
transferred to the appropriate category of property, plant and
equipment. The cost of construction in progress is not
depreciated.
Subsequent expenditures
All subsequent expenditure on
property, plant and equipment is capitalised if it meets the
recognition criteria, and the carrying amount of those
parts that are replaced, is de-recognised. All other
expenditure including repairs and maintenance expenditure is
recognised in the income statement as incurred.
Stripping costs
In a surface mine operation, it is
necessary to remove overburden and other waste material in order to
gain access to the ore bodies (stripping activity). During
development and pre-production phases, the stripping activity costs
are capitalised as part of the initial cost of development and
construction of the mine (the stripping activity asset) and charged
as depreciation or depletion to cost of sales, in the income
statement, based on the mine's units of production once commercial
operations begin.
Removal of waste material normally
continues throughout the life of a surface mine. At the time that
saleable material begins to be extracted from the surface mine the
activity is referred to as production stripping.
Production stripping cost is
capitalised only if the following criteria are met:
· It
is probable that the future economic benefits (improved access to
an ore body) associated with the stripping activity will flow to
the Group;
· The
Group can identify the component of an ore body for which access
has been improved; and
· The
costs relating to the improved access to that component can be
measured reliably.
If not all of the criteria are
met, the production stripping costs are charged to the income
statement as operating costs as they are incurred.
Stripping activity costs
associated with such development activities are capitalised into
existing mining development assets, as mining properties and
development cost, within property, plant and equipment, using a
measure that considers the volume of waste extracted compared with
expected volume, for a given volume of ore production. This measure
is known as "component stripping ratio", which is revised annually
in accordance with the mine plan. The amount capitalised is
subsequently depreciated over the expected useful life of the
identified component of the ore body related to the stripping
activity asset, by using the units of production method. The
identification of components and the expected useful lives of those
components are evaluated as new information of reserves and
resources is available.
The capitalised stripping activity
asset is carried at cost less accumulated depletion/depreciation,
less impairment, if any. Cost includes the accumulation of costs
directly incurred to perform the stripping activity that improves
access to the identified component of ore, plus an allocation of
directly attributable overhead costs. The costs associated with
incidental operations are excluded from the cost of the stripping
activity asset.
(f) Impairment of non-financial
assets
The carrying amounts of
non-financial assets are reviewed for impairment if events or
changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying value may not
be recoverable. At each reporting date, an assessment is made to
determine whether there are any indicators of impairment. If there
are indicators of impairment, an exercise is undertaken to
determine whether carrying values are in excess of their
recoverable amount. Such reviews are undertaken on an asset by
asset basis, except where such assets do not generate cash flows
independent of those from other assets or groups of assets,
and then the review is undertaken at the cash generating unit
level.
If the carrying amount of an asset
or its cash generating unit exceeds the recoverable amount, a
provision is recorded to reflect the asset at the recoverable
amount in the balance sheet. Impairment losses are recognised in
the income statement.
The recoverable amount of an asset
The recoverable amount of an asset
is the greater of its value in use and fair value less costs of
disposal. In assessing value in use, estimated future cash flows
are discounted to their present value using a pre-tax discount rate
that reflects current market assessments of the time value of money
and the risks specific to the asset. The cash flows used to
determine the recoverable amount of mining assets are based on the
mine plan for each mine. The mine plan is determined based on the
estimated and economically proven and probable reserves, as well as
certain other resources that are assessed as highly likely to be
converted into reserves. Fair value less cost of disposal is based
on an estimate of the amount that the Group may obtain in an
orderly sale transaction between market participants. For an asset
that does not generate cash inflows largely independently of those
from other assets, or groups of assets, the recoverable amount is
determined for the cash generating unit to which the asset belongs.
The Group's cash generating units are the smallest identifiable
groups of assets that generate cash inflows that are largely
independent of the cash inflows from other assets or groups of
assets.
Reversal of impairment
An assessment is made each
reporting date as to whether there is any indication that
previously recognised impairment losses may no longer exist or may
have decreased. If such an indication exists, the Group makes an
estimate of the recoverable amount. A previously recognised
impairment loss is reversed only if there has been a change in
estimates used to determine the asset's recoverable amount since
the impairment loss was recognised. If that is the case, the
carrying amount of the asset is increased to the recoverable
amount. That increased amount cannot exceed the carrying amount
that would have been determined, net of depreciation, had no
impairment loss been recognised in previous years. Such impairment
loss reversal is recognised in the income statement.
(g) Financial assets and
liabilities
Financial assets
The Group classifies its financial
assets in the following measurement categories:
· those to be measured at amortised cost.
· those to be measured subsequently at FVOCI, and.
· those to be measured subsequently at fair value through
profit or loss.
The classification depends on the
Group's business model for managing the financial assets and the
contractual terms of the cash flows.
For assets measured at fair value,
gains and losses will either be recorded in profit or loss or OCI.
For investments in equity instruments that are not held for
trading, this will depend on whether the group has made an
irrevocable election at the time of initial recognition to account
for the equity investment at FVOCI.
The Group reclassifies debt
investments when and only when its business model for managing
those assets changes.
Purchases or sales of financial
assets that require delivery of assets within a time frame
established by regulation or convention in the market place
(regular way trades) are recognised on the trade date, i.e., the
date that the Group commits to purchase or sell the
asset.
At initial recognition, the Group
measures a financial asset at its fair value plus, in the case of a
financial asset not at fair value through profit or loss (FVPL),
transaction costs that are directly attributable to the acquisition
of the financial asset. Transaction costs of financial assets
carried at FVPL are expensed in profit or loss.
Financial assets with embedded
derivatives are considered in their entirety when determining
whether their cash flows are solely payment of principal and
interest.
Subsequent measurement of debt
instruments depends on the Group's business model for managing the
asset and the cash flow characteristics of the asset.
Classification
The Group holds the following
financial assets:
Amortised cost
Assets that are held for
collection of contractual cash flows where those cash flows
represent solely payments of principal and interest are measured at
amortised cost. Interest income from these financial assets is
included in finance income using the effective interest rate
method. Gains and losses are recognised in profit or loss when the
asset is derecognised, modified or impaired..
The Group's financial assets at
amortised cost include receivables (other than trade
receivables which are measured at fair
value through profit and loss).
Equity instruments designated as fair value through other
comprehensive income
Upon initial recognition, the
Group can elect to classify irrevocably its equity investments as
equity instruments designated at fair value through OCI when they
meet the definition of equity under IAS 32 Financial Instruments:
Presentation and are not held for trading. The classification is
determined on an instrument-by-instrument basis.
Gains and losses on these
financial assets are never recycled to profit or loss. Dividends
are recognised as other income in the statement of profit or loss
when the right of payment has been established, except when the
Group benefits from such proceeds as a recovery of part of the cost
of the financial asset, in which case, such gains are recorded in
OCI. Equity instruments designated at fair value through OCI are
not subject to impairment assessment.
The Group elected to classify
irrevocably its listed equity investments under this
category.
Fair value through profit or loss
Assets that do not meet the
criteria for amortised cost or FVOCI are measured at FVPL. A gain
or loss on a debt investment that is subsequently measured at FVPL
is recognised in profit or loss and presented net within other
gains/(losses) in the period in which it arises.
Changes in the fair value of
financial assets at FVPL are recognised in other gains/(losses) in
the statement of profit or loss as applicable.
The Group's trade receivables and
derivative financial instruments, including the Silverstream
contract, are classified as fair value through profit or
loss.
De-recognition of financial assets
Financial assets are derecognised
when the rights to receive cash flows from the financial assets
have expired or have been transferred and the Group has transferred
substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership.
Impairment of financial assets
The Group assesses on a
forward-looking basis the expected credit losses associated with
its debt instruments carried at amortised cost and FVOCI. The
impairment methodology applied depends on whether there has been a
significant increase in credit risk.
For receivables (other than trade
receivables which are measured at FVPL), the Group applies the
simplified approach permitted by IFRS 9, which requires expected
lifetime losses to be recognised from initial recognition of the
receivables.
Financial liabilities
The Group classifies its financial
liabilities as follows:
Financial liabilities are
classified, at initial recognition, as financial liabilities at
fair value through profit or loss, loans and borrowings, payables,
or as derivatives designated as hedging instruments in an effective
hedge, as appropriate.
All financial liabilities are
recognised initially at fair value and, in the case of loans and
borrowings and payables, net of directly attributable transaction
costs.
The Group's financial liabilities
include trade and other payables, loans and borrowings and
derivative financial instruments.
Classification
For purposes of subsequent
measurement, financial liabilities held by the Group are classified
as financial liabilities as amortised cost.
After initial recognition,
interest-bearing loans and borrowings are subsequently measured at
amortised cost using the effective interest rate (EIR) method.
Gains and losses are recognised in profit or loss when the
liabilities are derecognised as well as through the EIR
amortisation process.
Amortised cost is calculated by
considering any discount or premium on acquisition and fees or
costs that are an integral part of the EIR. The EIR amortisation is
included as finance costs in the statement of profit or
loss.
De-recognition of financial liabilities
A financial liability is
derecognised when the obligation under the liability is discharged
or cancelled or expires. When an existing financial liability is
replaced by another from the same lender on substantially different
terms, or the terms of an existing liability are substantially
modified, such an exchange or modification is treated as the
derecognition of the original liability and the recognition of a
new liability. The difference in the respective carrying amounts is
recognised in the statement of profit or loss.
(h) Inventories
Finished goods, work in progress
and ore stockpile inventories are measured at the lower of cost and
net realisable value. Cost is determined using the weighted average
cost method based on cost of production which excludes borrowing
costs.
For this purpose, the costs of
production include:
- personnel expenses,
which include employee profit sharing;
- materials and
contractor expenses which are directly attributable to the
extraction and processing of ore;
- the depreciation of
property, plant and equipment used in the extraction and processing
of ore; and
- related production
overheads (based on normal operating capacity).
Work in progress inventory
comprises ore in leaching pads as processing is required to extract
benefit from the ore. The recovery of gold is achieved through the
heap leaching process. The leaching process may take months to
obtain the expected metal recovery and mainly depends on the
continuity of the leaching process. When the ore in leaching pads
is in active leaching, it is classified as current. When the
leaching process has stopped and not expected to restart within
twelve months, ore in the leaching pads affected is classified as
non-current.
Operating materials and spare
parts are valued at the lower of cost or net realisable value. An
allowance for obsolete and slow-moving inventories is determined by
reference to specific items of stock. A regular review is
undertaken by management to determine the extent of such an
allowance.
Net realisable value is the
estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business less any
further costs expected to be incurred to completion and
disposal.
(i) Cash and cash
equivalents
For the purposes of the balance
sheet, cash and cash equivalents comprise cash at bank, cash on
hand and short-term deposits held with banks that are readily
convertible into known amounts of cash and which are subject to
insignificant risk of changes in value. Short-term deposits earn
interest at the respective short-term deposit rates between one day
and three months.
(j) Provisions
Mine closure cost
A provision for mine closure cost
is made in respect of the estimated future costs of closure,
restoration and for environmental rehabilitation costs (which
include the dismantling and demolition of infrastructure, removal
of residual materials and remediation of disturbed areas) based on
a mine closure plan, in the accounting period when the related
environmental disturbance occurs. The provision is discounted and
the unwinding of the discount is included within finance costs. At
the time of establishing the provision, a corresponding asset is
capitalised where it gives rise to a future economic benefit and is
depreciated over future production considering proven and probable
reserves from the mine to which it relates. The provision is
reviewed on an annual basis by the Group for changes in cost
estimates, discount rates or life of operations based on the
estimated mine production which includes ore reserves and a certain
amount of mineral resources. Changes to estimated future costs are
recognised in the balance sheet by adjusting the mine closure cost
liability and the related asset originally recognised. If, for
mature mines, the revised mine assets net of mine closure cost
provisions exceed the recoverable value, the portion of the
increase is charged directly as an expense. For closed sites,
changes to estimated costs are recognised immediately in profit or
loss.
(k) Employee benefits
The Group operates the following
plans for its employees based on Mexico:
Defined benefit pension plan
This funded plan is based on each
employee's earnings and years of service. This plan was open to all
employees in Mexico until it was closed to new entrants on 1 July
2007. The plan is denominated in Mexican Pesos. For members as at
30 June 2007, benefits were frozen at that date subject to
indexation with reference to the Mexican National Consumer Price
Index (NCPI).
The present value of defined
benefit obligations under the plan is determined using the
projected unit credit actuarial valuation method and prepared
by an external actuarial firm as at each year-end balance
sheet date. The discount rate is the yield on bonds that have
maturity dates approximating the terms of the Group's obligations
and that are denominated in the same currency in which the benefits
are expected to be paid. Actuarial gains or losses are recognised
in OCI and permanently excluded from profit or loss.
Past service costs are recognised
when the plan amendment or curtailment occurs and when the entity
recognises related restructuring costs or termination
benefits.
The defined benefit asset or
liability comprises the present value of the defined benefit
obligation less the fair value of plan assets out of which
the obligations are to be settled directly. The value of any
asset is restricted to the present value of any economic benefits
available in the form of refunds from the plan or reductions
in the future contributions to the plan.
Net interest cost is recognised
within finance cost and return on plan assets (other than amounts
reflected in net interest cost) is recognised in OCI and
permanently excluded from profit or loss.
Defined contribution pension plan
A defined contribution plan is a
post-employment benefit plan under which the Group pays fixed
contributions into a separate entity and has no legal or
constructive obligation to pay further amounts. Obligations for
contributions to defined contribution pension plans are recognised
as an employee benefit expense in profit or loss when they are due.
The contributions are based on the employee's salary.
This plan started on 1 July 2007
and it is voluntary for all employees to join this
scheme.
Seniority premium for voluntary separation
This unfunded plan corresponds to
an additional payment over the legal seniority premium equivalent
to approximately 12 days of salary per year for those
unionised workers who have more than 15 years of service.
Non-unionised employees with more than 15 years of service have the
right to a payment equivalent to 12 days for each year of
service. For both cases, the payment is based on the legal current
minimum salary.
The cost of providing benefits for
the seniority premium for voluntary separation is determined using
the projected unit credit actuarial valuation method and prepared
by an external actuarial firm as at each year-end balance sheet
date. Actuarial gains or losses are recognised as income
or expense in the period in which they occur.
Other
Benefits for death and disability
are covered through insurance policies.
Termination payments for
involuntary retirement (dismissals) are charged to the income
statement, when incurred.
(l) Employee profit
sharing
In accordance with the Mexican
legislation, companies in Mexico are subject to pay for employee
profit sharing ('PTU') equivalent to ten percent of the
taxable income of each fiscal year capped to three months of salary
or average of the profit sharing paid in the last three
years.
PTU is accounted for as employee
benefits and is calculated based on the services rendered by
employees during the year, considering their most recent salaries.
The liability is recognised as it accrues and is charged to the
income statement. PTU, paid in each fiscal year, is deductible for
income tax purposes.
(m) Leases
Group as a lessee
The Group assesses at contract
inception whether a contract is, or contains, a lease. That is, if
the contract conveys the right to control the use of an identified
asset for a period of time in exchange for
consideration.
Assets and liabilities arising
from a lease are initially measured on a present value basis. Lease
liabilities include the net present value of the following lease
payments:
- fixed payments
(including in-substance fixed payments), less any lease incentives
receivable variable lease payment that are based on an index or a
rate;
- amounts expected to
be payable by the lessee under residual value
guarantees;
- the exercise price
of a purchase option if the lessee is reasonably certain to
exercise that option; and
- payments of
penalties for terminating the lease, if the lease term reflects the
lessee exercising that option.
The lease payments are discounted
using the interest rate implicit in the lease. If that rate cannot
be determined, the lessee's incremental borrowing rate is used,
being the rate that the lessee would have to pay to borrow the
funds necessary to obtain an asset of similar value in a similar
economic environment with similar terms and conditions.
Right-of-use assets are measured
at cost comprising the following:
- the amount of the
initial measurement of lease liability;
- any lease payments
made at or before the commencement date less any lease incentives
received;
- any initial direct
costs; and
- restoration
costs.
Each lease payment is allocated
between the liability and finance cost. The finance cost is charged
to profit or loss over the lease period so as to produce a constant
periodic rate of interest on the remaining balance of the liability
for each period. The right-of-use asset is depreciated over the
shorter of the asset's useful life and the lease term on a
straight-line basis.
The Group is exposed to potential
future increases in variable lease payments based on an index or
rate, which are not included in the lease liability until they take
effect. When adjustments to lease payments based on an index or
rate take effect, the lease liability is reassessed and adjusted
against the right-of-use asset.
Variable lease payments that are
not linked to price changes due to changes in a market rate or the
value of an index and are linked to future performance or use of an
underlying asset are not included in the measurement of the lease
liability. Such costs are recognized in profit and loss as
incurred.
Payments associated with
short-term leases and leases of low-value assets are recognised on
a straight-line basis as an expense in profit or loss. Short-term
leases are leases with a lease term of 12 months or less. Low-value
assets comprise IT-equipment.
(n) Revenue from contracts with
customers
Revenue is recognised when control
of goods or services transfers to the customers based on the
performance obligations settle in the contracts with
customers.
Sale of goods
Revenue associated with the sale
of concentrates, doré, slag, precipitates and activated carbon (the
products) is recognised when control of the asset sold is
transferred to the customers. Indicators of control transferring
include an unconditional obligation to pay, legal title, physical
possession, transfer of risk and rewards and customers acceptance.
This generally occurs when the goods are delivered to the
customer's smelter or refinery agreed with the buyer; at which
point the buyer controls the goods. Inventory in transit to the
smelter or refinery does not represent a significant proportion of
total revenue at the end of the reporting period given the distance
to the mine units.
The revenue is measured at the
amount to which the Group expects to be entitled, being the
estimate of the price expected to be received in the expected month
of settlement and the Group's estimate of metal quantities based on
assay data, and a corresponding trade receivable is recognised. Any
future changes that occur before settlement are embedded within the
provisionally priced trade receivables and are, therefore, within
the scope of IFRS 9 and not within the scope of IFRS 15.
Given the exposure to the
commodity price, these provisionally priced trade receivables will
fail the cash flow characteristics test within IFRS 9 and will be
required to be measured at fair value through profit or loss up
from initial recognition and until the date of settlement. These
subsequent changes in fair value are recognised in revenue but
separately from revenue from contracts with customers.
Invoiced revenues to our customers
for products other than refined silver and gold, are derived from
the value of metal content which is determined by commodity market
prices and adjusted for the treatment and refining charges to be
incurred by the metallurgical complex of our customers. Refining
and treatment charges represent an element of the cost that will be
incurred by our customers in processing the products further to
extract the metal content for onward sale to its customers (See
note 5(c)).
(o) Exploration
expenses
Exploration activity involves the
search for mineral resources, the determination of technical
feasibility and the assessment of commercial viability of an
identified resource.
Exploration expenses are charged
to the income statement as incurred and are recorded in the
following captions:
Cost of sales: costs relating to
in-mine exploration, that ensure continuous extraction quality and
extend mine life, and
Exploration expenses:
- Costs incurred in
geographical proximity to existing mines in order to replenish or
increase reserves, and
- Costs incurred in
regional exploration with the objective of locating new ore
deposits, which are identified by project, in areas where the
Group carriers out exploration activity. Currently the Group
carries out exploration activities in Mexico and Latin
America.
- Costs incurred are
charged to the income statement until there is sufficient
probability of the existence of economically recoverable minerals
and a feasibility study has been performed for the specific project
from which time further expenses are capitalised as exploration
costs on balance sheet as Property, plant and equipment.
(p) Selling expenses
The Group recognises in selling
expenses a levy in respect of the Extraordinary Mining Right as
sales of gold and silver are recognised. The Extraordinary Mining Right consists of a 0.5% rate,
applicable to the owners of mining titles. The payment must be
calculated over the total sales of all mining concessions. The
payment of this mining right must be remitted no later than the
last business day of March of the following year and can be
credited against corporate income tax.
The Group also recognises in
selling expenses a discovery premium royalty equivalent to 1% of
the value of the mineral extracted and sold during the year from
certain mining titles granted by the Mexican Geological Survey
(SGM) in the San Julian mine. The premium is settled to SGM on a
quarterly basis.
(q) Taxation
Current income tax
Current income tax assets and
liabilities for the current and prior periods are measured at the
amount expected to be recovered from or paid to the taxation
authorities. The tax rates and tax laws used to compute the amount
are those that are enacted or substantively enacted, at the
reporting date in the country the Group operates.
Deferred income tax
Deferred income tax is provided
using the liability method on temporary differences at the balance
sheet date between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and
their carrying amounts for financial reporting purposes.
Deferred income tax liabilities
are recognised for all taxable temporary differences,
except:
·
where the deferred income tax liability arises
from the initial recognition of goodwill or of an asset or
liability in a transaction that is not a business combination and,
at the time of transaction, affects neither the accounting profit
nor taxable profit loss; and
·
in respect of taxable temporary differences
associated with investments in subsidiaries, associates and
interests in joint ventures, where the timing of the reversal
of the temporary differences can be controlled and it is probable
that the temporary differences will not reverse in the foreseeable
future.
Deferred income tax assets are
recognised for all deductible temporary differences, carry forward
of unused tax credits and unused tax losses, to the extent
that it is probable that taxable profit will be available against
which the deductible temporary differences, and the carry forward
of unused tax credits and unused tax losses can be utilised,
except:
·
where the deferred income tax asset relating to
deductible temporary differences arise from the initial recognition
of an asset or liability in a transaction that is not a business
combination and, at the time of the transaction, affects neither
the accounting profit nor taxable profit or loss; and in respect of
deductible temporary differences associated with investments in
subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures, deferred
income tax assets are recognised only to the extent that it is
probable that the temporary differences will reverse in the
foreseeable future and taxable profit will be available
against which the temporary differences can be utilised.
The carrying amount of deferred
income tax assets is reviewed at each balance sheet date and
reduced to the extent that it is no longer probable
that sufficient taxable profit will be available to allow all
or part of the deferred income tax asset to be utilised.
Unrecognised deferred income tax
assets are reassessed at each balance sheet date and are recognised
to the extent that it has become probable that future taxable
profit will allow the deferred tax asset to be
recovered.
Deferred income tax assets and
liabilities are measured at the tax rates that are expected to
apply to the year when the asset is realised or the liability is
settled, based on tax rates (and tax laws) that have been enacted
or substantively enacted at the balance sheet date.
Deferred income tax relating to
items recognised directly in other comprehensive income is
recognised in equity and not in the income statement.
Deferred income tax assets and
deferred income tax liabilities are offset, if a legally
enforceable right exists to set off current tax assets against
current income tax liabilities and the deferred income taxes relate
to the same taxable entity and the same taxation
authority.
Mining Rights
The Special Mining Right is
considered an income tax under IFRS and states that the owners of
mining titles and concessions are subject to pay an annual mining
right of 7.5% of the profit derived from the extractive activities
(note 11 (e)). The Group recognises deferred tax assets and
liabilities on temporary differences arising in the determination
of the Special Mining Right (See note 11).
Sales tax
Expenses and assets are recognised
net of the amount of sales tax, except when the sales tax incurred
on a purchase of assets or services is not recoverable from the
taxation authority, in which case, the sales tax is recognised as
part of the cost of acquisition of the asset or as part of the
expense item. The net amount of sales tax recoverable from, or
payable to, the taxation authority is included as part of
receivables or payables in the balance sheet.
(r) Derivative financial
instruments and hedging
The Group uses derivatives to
reduce certain market risks derived from changes in foreign
exchange and commodities price which impact its financial and
business transactions. Hedges are designed to protect the value of
expected production against the dynamic market
conditions.
Such derivative financial
instruments are initially recognised at fair value on the date on
which a derivative contract is entered into and are subsequently
remeasured at fair value. Derivatives are carried as assets when
the fair value is positive and as liabilities when the fair value
is negative. The full fair value of a derivative is classified as
non-current asset or liability if the remaining maturity of the
item is more than 12 months.
Any gains or losses arising from
changes in fair value on derivatives during the year that do not
qualify for hedge accounting are taken directly to the income
statement as finance income or finance cost
respectively.
Derivatives are valued using
valuation approaches and methodologies (such as Black Scholes and
Net Present Value) applicable to the specific type
of derivative instrument. The fair value of forward currency
and commodity contracts is calculated by reference to current
forward exchange rates for contracts with similar maturity
profiles, European foreign exchange and commodity options are
valued using the Black Scholes model. The Silverstream contract is
valued using a Net Present Value valuation approach.
The documentation includes
identification of the hedging instrument, the hedged item, the
nature of the risk being hedged and how the Group will assess
whether the hedging relationship meets the hedge effectiveness
requirements (including the analysis of sources of hedge
ineffectiveness and how the hedge ratio is determined). A hedging
relationship qualifies for hedge accounting if it meets all of the
following effectiveness requirements:
• There is 'an economic
relationship' between the hedged item and the hedging
instrument.
• The effect of credit risk does
not 'dominate the value changes' that result from that economic
relationship.
• The hedge ratio of the hedging
relationship is the same as that resulting from the quantity of the
hedged item that the Group actually hedges and the quantity of the
hedging instrument that the Group actually uses to hedge that
quantity of hedged item.
Hedges which meet the criteria for
hedge accounting are accounted for as cash flow hedges.
For derivatives that are
designated and qualify as cash flow hedges, the effective portion
of changes in the fair value of derivative instruments is recorded
as in other comprehensive income and are transferred to the income
statement when the hedged transaction affects profit or loss, such
as when a forecast sale or purchase occurs. For gains or
losses related to the hedging of foreign exchange risk these are
included, in the line item in which the hedged costs are reflected.
Where the hedged item is the cost of a non-financial asset or
liability, the amounts recognised in other comprehensive income are
transferred to the initial carrying amount of the non-financial
asset or liability. This is not a reclassification adjustment and
will not be recognised in OCI for the period. The ineffective
portion of changes in the fair value of cash flow hedges is
recognised directly as finance costs, in the income statement of
the related period.
If the hedging instrument expires
or is sold, terminated or exercised without replacement or
rollover, or if its designation as a hedge is revoked, any
cumulative gain or loss recognised directly in other comprehensive
income from the period that the hedge was effective remains
separately in other comprehensive income until the forecast
transaction occurs, when it is recognised in the income statement.
When a forecast transaction is no longer expected to occur, the
cumulative gain or loss that was reported in other comprehensive
income is immediately transferred to the income
statement.
When hedging with options, the
Group designates only the intrinsic value movement of the hedging
option within the hedge relationship. The time value of the option
contracts is therefore excluded from the hedge designation. In such
cases, changes in the time value of options are initially
recognised in OCI as a cost of hedging. Where the hedged item
is transaction related, amounts initially recognised in OCI related
to the change in the time value of options are reclassified to
profit or loss or as a basis adjustment to non-financial assets or
liabilities upon maturity of the hedged item, or, in the case of a
hedged item that realises over time, the amounts initially
recognised in OCI are amortised to profit or loss on a systematic
and rational basis over the life of the hedged item.
When hedging with forward
contracts, the forward element is included in the designation of
the financial instrument. Therefore, there is no cost of hedging in
relation to forward contracts.
(s) Borrowing costs
Borrowing costs directly
attributable to the acquisition, construction or production of an
asset that necessarily takes 12 or more months to get ready for its
intended use or sale (a qualifying asset) are capitalised as part
of the cost of the respective asset. Borrowing costs consist of
interest and other costs that an entity incurs in connection with
the borrowing of funds.
Where funds are borrowed
specifically to finance a project, the amount capitalised
represents the actual borrowing costs incurred. Where surplus funds
are available for a short term from funds borrowed specifically to
finance a project, the income generated from the temporary
investment of such amounts is also capitalised and deducted from
the total capitalised borrowing cost. Where the funds used to
finance a project form part of general borrowings, the amount
capitalised is calculated using a weighted average of rates
applicable to relevant general borrowings of the Group during the
period.
All other borrowing costs are
recognised in the income statement in the period in which they are
incurred.
(t) Fair value
measurement
The Group measures financial
instruments at fair value at each balance sheet date. Fair values
of financial instruments measured at amortised cost are disclosed
in note 30(b).
Fair value is the price that would
be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an
orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement
date. The fair value measurement is based on the presumption that
the transaction to sell the asset or transfer the liability takes
place either:
In the principal market for the
asset or liability, or;
In the absence of a principal
market, in the most advantageous market for the asset or
liability.
The principal or the most
advantageous market must be accessible to the Group.
The fair value of an asset or a
liability is measured using the assumptions that market
participants would use when pricing the asset or liability,
assuming that market participants act in their economic best
interest.
A fair value measurement of a
non-financial asset takes into account a market participant's
ability to generate economic benefits by using the asset in its
highest and best use or by selling it to another market participant
that would use the asset in its highest and best use.
The Group uses valuation
techniques that are appropriate in the circumstances and for which
sufficient data are available to measure fair value, maximising the
use of relevant observable inputs and minimising the use of
unobservable inputs.
All assets and liabilities for
which fair value is measured or disclosed in the financial
statements are categorised within the fair value hierarchy,
described as follows, based on the lowest level input that is
significant to the fair value measurement as a whole:
Level 1 - Quoted (unadjusted)
market prices in active markets for identical assets or
liabilities
Level 2 - Valuation techniques for
which the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement is directly or indirectly observable
Level 3 - Valuation techniques for
which the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement is unobservable
For assets and liabilities that
are recognised in the financial statements on a recurring basis,
the Group determines whether transfers have occurred between levels
in the hierarchy by re-assessing categorisation (based on the
lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement as a whole) at the end of each reporting
period.
For the purpose of fair value
disclosures, the Group has determined classes of assets and
liabilities based on the nature, characteristics and risks of the
asset or liability and the level of the fair value hierarchy as
explained above. Further information on fair values is described in
note 30.
(u) Dividend
distribution
Dividends on the Company's
ordinary shares are recognised when they have been appropriately
authorised and are no longer at the Company's discretion.
Accordingly, interim dividends are recognised when they are paid
and final dividends are recognised when they are declared following
approval by shareholders at the Company's Annual General
Meeting.
3. Segment reporting
For management purposes, the Group
is organised into operating segments based on producing
mines.
At 31 December 2023, the Group has
seven reportable operating segments as follows:
The Fresnillo mine, located in the
state of Zacatecas, an underground silver mine;
The Saucito mine, located in the
state of Zacatecas, an underground silver mine;
The Cienega mine, located in the
state of Durango, an underground silver-gold mine;
The Herradura mine, located in the
state of Sonora, a surface gold mine;
The Noche Buena mine, located in
state of Sonora, a surface gold mine;
The San Julian mine, located on
the border of Chihuahua / Durango states, an underground
silver-gold mine, and
The Juanicipio mine, in the State
of Zacatecas, an underground silver mine.
The operating performance and
financial results for each of these mines are reviewed by
management. As the Group´s chief operating decision maker (CODM)
does not review segment assets and liabilities, the Group has not
disclosed this information.
Management monitors the results of
its operating segments separately for the purpose of performance
assessment and making decisions about resource allocation. Segment
performance is evaluated without taking into account certain
adjustments included in Revenue as reported in the consolidated
income statement, and certain costs included within Cost of sales
and Gross profit which are considered to be outside of the control
of the operating management of the mines. The table below
provides a reconciliation from segment profit to Gross profit as
per the consolidated income statement. Administrative expenses,
Exploration expenses, Selling expenses, and Other income and
expenses not related to production activities included in the
consolidated income statement are not allocated to operating
segments. Also, the Group's financing (including finance cost and
finance income) and income taxes are managed on a Group basis and
are not allocated to operating segments. Transactions between
reportable segments are accounted for on an arm's length basis
similar to transactions with third parties.
In 2023 99.9% of revenue was
derived from customers based in Mexico (2022: all revenue was
derived from customers based in Mexico)
Operating segments
The following tables present
revenue and profit information regarding the Group's operating
segments for the year ended 31 December 2023 and 2022,
respectively. Revenues for the year ended 31 December 2023 and 2022
include those derived from contracts with customers and other
revenues, as showed in note 5.
Year ended 31 December
2023
|
US$ thousands
|
Fresnillo
|
Herradura
|
Cienega
|
Saucito
|
Noche
Buena
|
San Julian
|
Juanicipio4
|
Other5
|
Adjustments and
eliminations
|
Total
|
Revenues:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Third party1
|
422,963
|
708,242
|
162,013
|
590,269
|
84,210
|
385,469
|
351,920
|
-
|
-
|
2,705,086
|
Inter-segment
|
4,254
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
90,368
|
52,287
|
(146,909)
|
-
|
|
Segment revenues
|
427,217
|
708,242
|
162,013
|
590,269
|
84,210
|
385,469
|
442,288
|
52,287
|
(146,909)
|
2,705,086
|
Segment profit2
|
156,849
|
157,233
|
18,926
|
185,995
|
5,632
|
158,663
|
271,558
|
33,602
|
14,312
|
1,002,770
|
Depreciation and amortisation in
cost of sales
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(497,303)
|
|
Employee profit sharing in cost of
sales
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(2,229)
|
|
Gross profit as per the income statement
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
503,238
|
|
Capital
expenditure3
|
97,809
|
56,923
|
43,841
|
125,052
|
52
|
74,824
|
82,167
|
2,741
|
-
|
483,409
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
1 During 2023 all segment
revenues were derived from Met-Mex, except in Juanicipio which
includes sales to another customer of US$0.6
million.
2 The Group's CODM primarily
uses this measure to monitor the operating results directly related
to the production of its business units separately to make
decisions about resource allocation and performance assessment.
Segment profit excluding foreign exchange hedging gains,
depreciation and amortisation and employee profit sharing. Segment
profit for Fresnillo and Saucito considers the sales and the
corresponding processing cost of the ore from
Juanicipio.
3 Capital expenditure
represents the cash outflow including interest capitalised in
respect of additions to property, plant and equipment, such as mine
development, construction of leaching pads, and purchase of mine
equipment, excluding additions relating to changes in the mine
closure provision. Significant additions include stripping cost at
Herradura mine and the construction of tailing damns at San Julian
and Saucito mines.
4 Some of the ore production
of Juanicipio mine has been processed through Fresnillo and Saucito
facilities.
5 Other
inter-segment revenue
corresponds to leasing services
provided by Minera Bermejal, S.A. de
C.V; capital expenditure mainly
corresponds to Minera Bermejal,
S. de R.L. de C.V.
Year ended 31 December
2022
|
US$ thousands
|
Fresnillo
|
Herradura
|
Cienega
|
Saucito
|
Noche
Buena
|
San Julian
|
Juanicipio4
|
Other5
|
Adjustments and
eliminations
|
Total
|
Revenues:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Third party1
|
503,759
|
634,438
|
169,504
|
594,250
|
142,733
|
392,084
|
-
|
-
|
(3,778)
|
2,432,990
|
Inter-segment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
215,736
|
148,362
|
(364,098)
|
-
|
|
Segment revenues
|
503,759
|
634,438
|
169,504
|
594,250
|
142,733
|
392,084
|
215,736
|
148,362
|
(367,876)
|
2,432,990
|
Segment profit2
|
197,043
|
127,919
|
39,551
|
197,791
|
44,436
|
190,842
|
154,544
|
106,275
|
(12,203)
|
1,046,198
|
Depreciation and amortisation in
cost of sales
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(500,569)
|
|
Employee profit sharing in cost of
sales
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(9,609)
|
|
Gross profit as per the income statement
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
536,020
|
|
Capital
expenditure3
|
106,579
|
105,322
|
47,019
|
117,989
|
424
|
64,490
|
149,629
|
677
|
-
|
592,129
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
1 Adjustments and
eliminations correspond to hedging loss (note 5).
2 The Group's CODM primarily
uses this measure to monitor the operating results directly related
to the production of its business units separately to make
decisions about resource allocation and performance assessment.
Segment profit excluding foreign exchange hedging gains,
depreciation and amortisation and employee profit sharing. Segment
profit for Fresnillo and Saucito considers the sales and the
corresponding processing cost of the ore from
Juanicipio.
3 Capital expenditure
represents the cash outflow including interest capitalised in
respect of additions to property, plant and equipment, such as mine
development, construction of leaching pads, and purchase of mine
equipment, excluding additions relating to changes in the mine
closure provision. Significant additions include stripping cost at
Herradura mine and purchase of mobile equipment at Juanicipio and
Saucito mines.
4 The ore production of
Juanicipio mine has been processed through Fresnillo and Saucito
facilities.
5 Other
inter-segment revenue
corresponds to leasing services
provided by Minera Bermejal, S.A. de
C.V; capital expenditure mainly
corresponds to Minera Bermejal,
S. de R.L. de C.V.
4. Group information
The list of the Company's
subsidiaries included in the consolidated financial statements and
its principal activities are shown in Note 5 on the Parent
Company's separate financial statements. The country of
incorporation or registration is also their principal place of
business.
(a) Material partly-owned
subsidiaries
The table below shows the detail
of non-wholly owned subsidiaries of the Group that have
non-controlling interests:
|
Portion
of ownership interest held by non-controlling interest
|
Profit
(loss) allocated to non-controlling interest
|
Accumulated non-controlling interest
|
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
Minera Juanicipio, S. A. de
C.V.
|
44%
|
44%
|
35,853
|
31,398
|
195,991
|
160,046
|
Equipos Chaparral, S. A. de
C.V.
|
44%
|
44%
|
18,311
|
5,105
|
97,377
|
69,561
|
Other subsidiaries with
non-controlling interests not considered to be material
|
-
|
-
|
227
|
(109)
|
1,977
|
1,599
|
Set out below is the summarised
financial information for each subsidiary that has non-controlling
interests that are material to the Group. Figures are presented in
thousands of US dollars unless otherwise indicated.
Summarised income statement for the year ended 31 December
2023 and 2022
|
Minera
Juanicipio, S. A. de C.V.
|
Equipos
Chaparral, S. A. de C.V.
|
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
Revenue
|
442,288
|
215,736
|
-
|
-
|
Profit before income
tax
|
102,447
|
100,635
|
45,412
|
5,390
|
Income tax
(charge)/credit
|
(20,962)
|
(29,277)
|
(3,797)
|
6,212
|
Profit for the year
|
81,485
|
71,358
|
41,615
|
11,602
|
Other comprehensive
gain/(loss)
|
31
|
(248)
|
8
|
31
|
Total comprehensive
income
|
81,516
|
71,110
|
41,623
|
11,633
|
Attributable to non-controlling
interests
|
35,867
|
31,288
|
18,314
|
5,119
|
Dividends paid to non-controlling
interests
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Summarised statement of financial position as at 31 December
2023 and 2022
|
Minera
Juanicipio, S. A. de C.V.
|
Equipos
Chaparral, S. A. de C.V.
|
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
Current
|
|
|
|
|
Assets
|
120,396
|
77,596
|
34,990
|
13,226
|
Liabilities
|
(197,260)
|
(80,984)
|
(35,708)
|
(31,299)
|
Total current net
liabilities
|
(76,864)
|
(3,388)
|
(718)
|
(18,073)
|
Non-current
|
|
|
|
|
Assets
|
776,156
|
630,418
|
222,030
|
202,263
|
Liabilities
|
(253,858)
|
(263,290)
|
-
|
(26,097)
|
Total non-current net
assets
|
522,298
|
367,128
|
222,030
|
176,166
|
Net assets
|
445,434
|
363,740
|
221,312
|
158,093
|
Attributable to:
|
|
|
|
|
Equity holders of
parent
|
249,443
|
203,694
|
123,935
|
88,532
|
Non-controlling
interest
|
195,991
|
160,046
|
97,377
|
69,561
|
Summarised cash flow information for the year ended 31
December 2023 and 2022
|
Minera
Juanicipio, S. A. de C.V.
|
Equipos
Chaparral, S. A. de C.V.
|
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
31-Dec-23
|
31-Dec-22
|
Operating
|
133,299
|
127,113
|
(33,126)
|
(28,354)
|
Investing
|
(48,936)
|
(115,961)
|
340
|
261
|
Financing
|
(57,448)
|
(24,777)
|
509
|
23,663
|
Net increase/(decrease) in cash
and cash equivalents
|
26,915
|
(13,625)
|
(32,277)
|
(4,430)
|
5. Revenues
Revenues reflect the sale of
goods, being concentrates, doré, slag, precipitates and activated
carbon of which the primary contents are silver, gold lead and
zinc.
(a) Revenues by source
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Revenues from contracts with
customers
|
2,706,292
|
2,440,063
|
Revenues from other
sources:
|
|
|
Provisional pricing
adjustment on products sold
|
(1,206)
|
(3,302)
|
Hedging loss on
sales
|
-
|
(3,771)
|
|
2,705,086
|
2,432,990
|
(b) Revenues by product
sold
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Lead concentrates (containing
silver, gold, lead and by-products)
|
1,320,155
|
1,090,735
|
Doré and slag (containing gold,
silver and by-products)
|
708,036
|
648,002
|
Zinc concentrates (containing
zinc, silver and by-products)
|
290,138
|
326,912
|
Precipitates (containing gold and
silver)
|
301,707
|
238,171
|
Activated carbon (containing gold,
silver and by-products)
|
84,416
|
129,170
|
Iron concentrates (containing
silver, gold, lead and by-products)
|
634
|
-
|
|
2,705,086
|
2,432,990
|
|
|
|
(c) Value of metal content in
products sold
Invoiced revenues are derived from
the value of metal content which is determined by commodity market
prices and adjusted for the treatment and refining charges to be
incurred by the metallurgical complex of our customer. The value of
the metal content of the products sold, before treatment and
refining charges is considered as an alternative performance
measure for the Group. The Group considers this a useful additional
measure to help understand underlying factors driving revenue in
terms of volumes sold and realised prices. The value of production
sold by metal is as follows:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Silver
|
1,319,423
|
1,089,189
|
Gold
|
1,177,386
|
1,114,168
|
Zinc
|
250,782
|
283,453
|
Lead
|
121,483
|
106,640
|
Value of metal content in products
sold
|
2,869,074
|
2,593,450
|
Refining and treatment
charges1
|
(163,988)
|
(160,460)
|
Total revenues2,
|
2,705,086
|
2,432,990
|
|
|
|
1 The methodology to
determine the refining and treatment charges takes into account
industry benchmark charges and adjustments to reflect ore
composition and transport costs (refer to note
27(b).
2 Includes provisional price
adjustments which represent changes in the fair value of trade
receivables resulting in a loss of US$1.2 million (2022: loss of
US$3.3 million) and hedging
loss of US$ nil million (2022: loss of US$3.8 million). For further
detail, refer to note 2(n).
The average realised prices for
the gold and silver content of products sold, prior to the
deduction of treatment and refining charges, were:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ per ounce
|
2022
US$ per ounce
|
Gold2
|
1,957.72
|
1,799.26
|
Silver2
|
23.64
|
21.72
|
2 For the purpose of the
calculation, revenue by content of products sold does not include
the results from hedging.
6. Cost of sales
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Depreciation and
amortisation
|
497,303
|
500,569
|
Contractors
|
393,997
|
367,003
|
Energy
|
256,507
|
231,505
|
Operating materials
|
292,450
|
269,720
|
Maintenance and repairs
|
299,924
|
252,907
|
Personnel expenses
|
210,583
|
175,508
|
Mine equipment leased
1
|
69,754
|
48,991
|
Mining concession rights and
contributions
|
23,045
|
22,044
|
Surveillance
|
23,983
|
18,741
|
Insurance
|
12,056
|
11,069
|
Freight
|
9,365
|
11,843
|
IT services
|
11,464
|
11,401
|
Other
|
23,154
|
34,675
|
Cost of production
|
2,123,585
|
1,955,976
|
Unabsorbed production
costs2
|
25,920
|
2,592
|
Gain on foreign currency
hedges
|
(232)
|
-
|
Change in work in progress and
finished goods (ore inventories) 3
|
52,575
|
(61,598)
|
|
2,201,848
|
1,896,970
|
1 Corresponds to mine
equipment leased to contractors, the lease payments are based on a
variable rate linked to the usage of the assets.
2 Corresponds to cost
incurred during the testing period at Juanicipio plant and
Fresnillo's pyrites plant as a result of the delays to the
commencement of production of US$3.9 million and US$3.0 million
respectively, non-productive cost for the temporary stoppage of
activities in Penmont US$10.2 million and non-productive fixed mine
cost incurred in Noche Buena resulting from finalisation of mining
activities US$8.7 million (2022: Corresponds to costs incurred in
Juanicipio plant activities (note 2 (c))).
3 Refer to note 2 (c) for
more detail related to change in work in progress inventories for
the year ended 31 December 2023 following a change in
estimation.
7. Exploration expenses
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Contractors
|
122,973
|
111,981
|
Mining concession rights and
contributions
|
28,777
|
25,570
|
Personnel expenses (note
8(a))
|
13,315
|
10,779
|
Assays
|
8,950
|
6,269
|
Administrative services
|
2,057
|
2,086
|
Rentals
|
570
|
603
|
Other
|
5,805
|
8,502
|
|
182,447
|
165,790
|
|
|
|
These exploration expenses were
mainly incurred in the operating mines located in Mexico;
the Guanajuato, Orisyvo and Valles
projects; and the
Tajitos prospect. Exploration expenses of
US$14.1 million (2022: US$17.9 million) were incurred in the year
on projects located in Peru and Chile.
Cash flows relating to exploration
activities are as follows:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Operating cash out flows related
to exploration activities
|
182,359
|
166,068
|
8. Personnel expenses
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Salaries and wages
|
109,470
|
87,534
|
Statutory healthcare and housing
contributions
|
42,393
|
32,856
|
Other benefits
|
28,414
|
26,458
|
Bonuses
|
34,099
|
19,752
|
Employees' profit
sharing
|
2,390
|
9,841
|
Post-employment
benefits
|
12,799
|
8,792
|
Vacations and vacations
bonus
|
6,541
|
5,448
|
Legal contributions
|
6,104
|
4,202
|
Training
|
2,532
|
3,749
|
Other
|
5,313
|
3,708
|
|
250,055
|
202,340
|
(a) Personnel expenses are
reflected in the following line items:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Cost of sales (note
6)1
|
215,952
|
175,508
|
Administrative expenses
|
20,788
|
16,053
|
Exploration expenses (note
7)
|
13,315
|
10,779
|
|
250,055
|
202,340
|
1 Includes amounts recognised
as unabsorbed production cost amounting US$5.4 million (2022: US$
nil).
(b) The monthly average number of
employees during the year was as follows:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
No.
|
2022
No.
|
Mining
|
3,497
|
3,967
|
Plant
|
1,091
|
1,074
|
Exploration
|
270
|
265
|
Maintenance
|
1,327
|
1,382
|
Administration and
other
|
1,118
|
1,237
|
Total
|
7,303
|
7,925
|
9. Other operating income and
expenses
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Other income:
|
|
|
Reversal of
accruals1
|
25,793
|
-
|
Recovery of personnel
expenses
|
4,156
|
-
|
Gain on sale of property, plant
and equipment and other assets
|
882
|
-
|
Layback Agreement (note 2
(c))
|
-
|
67,182
|
Rentals
|
35
|
767
|
Other
|
4,458
|
3,911
|
|
35,324
|
71,860
|
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Other expenses:
|
|
|
Write-off of inventories (note 2
(c))
|
21,861
|
-
|
Cost subject to insurance
claims
|
8,349
|
4,246
|
Environmental
activities2
|
3,963
|
2,997
|
Maintenance3
|
3,477
|
2,939
|
Change in mine closure cost
provision 4
|
3,226
|
-
|
Write-off of PPE
assets5
|
1,920
|
11,315
|
Donations
|
1,685
|
8,794
|
Consumption tax
expensed
|
943
|
2,073
|
Other
|
5,745
|
6,391
|
|
51,169
|
38,755
|
1 The Group has reversed the
accrued energy costs recognised since July 2020, following the
favourable ruling in favour of its related parties Termóelectrica
Peñoles, S.A. de C.V. and Eólica de Coahuila, S.A. de C.V, filed
against the Mexican Government regarding an increase of energy
supply costs required to be recharged to its
customers.
2 Main activities were
related with improvement in tailing dams in Fresnillo and Cienega
(2022: Main activities were related with the evaluation of
improvement in tailing dams in Fresnillo and Cienega and closure
activities in the San Ramon satellite mine (closed at the end of
2020)).
3 Costs relating to the
rehabilitation of the facilities of Compañía Minera las Torres,
S.A. de C.V. (a closed mine).
4 Relates to changes in
estimates after the completion of mining
activities.
5 Mainly correspond to mobile
equipment damaged (2022: mobile equipment damaged and mining works
collapsed).
10. Finance income and finance
costs
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Finance income:
|
|
|
Interest on short-term deposits
and investments
|
47,592
|
20,956
|
Interest on tax
receivables
|
2,479
|
4,507
|
Other
|
552
|
997
|
|
50,623
|
26,460
|
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Finance costs:
|
|
|
Interest on interest-bearing
loans and notes payables
|
60,741
|
51,395
|
Unwinding of discount on
provisions (note 21)
|
22,578
|
15,243
|
Interest on tax
amendment
|
-
|
11,519
|
Interest on lease liabilities
(note 25(a))
|
1,220
|
720
|
Other
|
4,307
|
2,744
|
|
88,846
|
81,621
|
11. Income tax expense
a) Major components of income tax
expense:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Consolidated income statement:
|
|
|
Corporate income tax
|
|
|
Current:
|
|
|
Income tax charge
|
80,769
|
134,896
|
Amounts under/ (over) provided in
previous years
|
4,235
|
(1,710)
|
|
85,004
|
133,186
|
Deferred:
|
|
|
Origination and reversal of
temporary differences
|
(292,371)
|
(206,196)
|
Revaluation effects of
Silverstream contract
|
2,320
|
5,636
|
|
(290,051)
|
(200,560)
|
Corporate income tax
|
(205,047)
|
(67,374)
|
Special mining right
|
|
|
Current:
|
|
|
Special mining right charge (note
11 (e))
|
22,708
|
38,230
|
Amounts under provided in previous
years
|
1,686
|
1,954
|
|
24,394
|
40,184
|
Deferred:
|
|
|
Origination and reversal of
temporary differences
|
6,371
|
(32,530)
|
Special mining right
|
30,765
|
7,654
|
Income tax expense reported in the income
statement
|
(174,282)
|
(59,720)
|
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Consolidated statement of comprehensive
income:
|
|
|
Deferred income tax (charge)/credit related to items
recognised directly in other comprehensive
income:
|
|
|
Gain on cash flow hedges recycled
to income statement
|
-
|
(1,131)
|
Changes in fair value of cash flow
hedges
|
(135)
|
(184)
|
Changes in the fair value of cost
of hedges
|
-
|
414
|
Changes in fair value of equity
investments at FVOCI
|
15,941
|
1,714
|
Remeasurement losses on defined
benefit plans
|
20
|
114
|
Income tax effect reported in other comprehensive
income
|
15,826
|
927
|
During 2022, following
conversations held by the Company with the Servicio de
Admnistracion Tributario (SAT) regarding its income tax audits for
the years 2014, 2015 and 2016 at Desarrollos Mineros Fresne, the
Group decided to voluntarily amend the income tax and mining
right´s treatment of: (i) the stripping costs, and (ii) the
deduction of exploration expenses.
These amendments were applied to
tax returns from 2014 to 2021 (for the year 2021 the amendment also
included Minera Penmont as the merging entity of Desarrollos
Mineros Fresne) and resulted in an increase in the current
corporate income tax charge of US$ 3.2 million and current special
mining right charge of US$2.7 million and a recoverable income tax
balance of US$ 3.2 million. This effect was offset by a decrease in
deferred corporate income tax of US$3.4 million. The amendment also
resulted in US$11.5 million of interest and surcharges presented in
finance costs.
(b) Reconciliation of the income
tax expense at the Group's statutory income rate to income tax
expense at the Group's effective income tax rate:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Accounting profit before income tax
|
114,018
|
248,571
|
Tax at the Group's statutory
corporate income tax rate 30.0%
|
34,205
|
74,571
|
Exchange rate effect on tax value
of assets and liabilities1
|
(214,521)
|
(72,888)
|
Inflationary uplift of the tax
base of assets and liabilities
|
(54,763)
|
(62,666)
|
Incentive for Northern Border
Zone
|
1,760
|
(17,491)
|
Deferred tax asset not
recognised
|
11,688
|
7,893
|
Expenses not deductible for tax
purposes
|
14,277
|
7,045
|
Inflationary uplift of tax
losses
|
(5,361)
|
(7,843)
|
Current income tax underprovided
in previous years
|
2,137
|
3,107
|
Non-taxable/non-deductible foreign
exchange effects
|
16,689
|
1,167
|
Inflationary uplift on tax
refunds
|
(744)
|
(1,352)
|
Special mining right deductible
for corporate income tax
|
(9,230)
|
(2,296)
|
Other
|
(1,184)
|
3,379
|
Corporate income tax at the effective tax rate of (179.8%)
(2022: (27.1%))
|
(205,047)
|
(67,374)
|
Special mining right
|
30,765
|
7,654
|
Tax at the effective income tax rate of (152.9%) (2022:
(24.02%))
|
(174,282)
|
(59,720)
|
1 Mainly derived from the tax
value of property, plant and equipment.
The most significant items
reducing the effect of effective tax rate are inflation effects,
exchange rate and the incentive for Norther Border Zone. The future
effects of inflation and exchange rate will depend on future market
conditions.
(c) Movements in deferred income
tax liabilities and assets:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Opening net
assets/(liability)
|
232,568
|
(1,445)
|
Income statement credit arising on
corporate income tax
|
290,051
|
200,560
|
Income statement credit arising on
special mining right
|
(6,371)
|
32,530
|
Exchange difference
|
26
|
(4)
|
Net charge related to items
directly charged to other comprehensive income
|
15,826
|
927
|
Closing net asset
|
532,100
|
232,568
|
The amounts of deferred income tax
assets and liabilities as at 31 December 2023 and 2022, considering
the nature of the related temporary differences, are as
follows:
|
Consolidated balance sheet
|
|
Consolidated income statement
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$
thousands
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Related party
receivables
|
(181,236)
|
(158,797)
|
|
22,439
|
5,095
|
Other receivables
|
(6,233)
|
(3,974)
|
|
2,259
|
727
|
Inventories
|
152,378
|
115,383
|
|
(36,995)
|
(18,213)
|
Prepayments
|
(3,499)
|
(2,423)
|
|
1,076
|
(449)
|
Derivative financial instruments
including Silverstream contract
|
(138,171)
|
(147,887)
|
|
(9,852)
|
(6,125)
|
Property, plant and equipment
arising from corporate income tax
|
366,694
|
142,241
|
|
(224,453)
|
(192,396)
|
Exploration expenses and operating
liabilities
|
107,711
|
91,265
|
|
(16,446)
|
19,724
|
Other payables and
provisions
|
87,705
|
74,162
|
|
(13,543)
|
3,930
|
Losses carried forward
|
141,091
|
117,689
|
|
(23,402)
|
(27,250)
|
Post-employment
benefits
|
2,100
|
1,504
|
|
(576)
|
(356)
|
Deductible profit
sharing
|
852
|
3,095
|
|
2,243
|
1,842
|
Special mining right deductible
for corporate income tax
|
7,445
|
10,738
|
|
3,293
|
12,954
|
Equity investments at
FVOCI
|
1,368
|
(16,937)
|
|
(2,364)
|
(1,903)
|
Other
|
(17,416)
|
(11,172)
|
|
6,270
|
1,860
|
Net deferred tax asset related to corporate income
tax
|
520,789
|
214,887
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax credit related to
corporate income tax
|
|
|
|
(290,051)
|
(200,560)
|
Related party receivables arising
from special mining right
|
(44,963)
|
(39,541)
|
|
5,422
|
1,391
|
Inventories arising from special
mining right
|
37,124
|
28,685
|
|
(8,439)
|
(7,353)
|
Property plant and equipment
arising from special mining right
|
(11,689)
|
7,887
|
|
19,576
|
(27,185)
|
Other
|
30,839
|
20,650
|
|
(10,188)
|
617
|
Net deferred tax liability related to special mining
rights
|
11,311
|
17,681
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax credit
|
|
|
|
(283,680)
|
(233,090)
|
Reflected in the statement of
financial position as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax assets
|
665,302
|
343,688
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax
liabilities
|
(133,202)
|
(111,120)
|
|
|
|
Net deferred tax asset
|
532,100
|
232,568
|
|
|
|
Deferred income tax assets and
liabilities are offset when there is a legally enforceable right to
offset current tax assets against current tax liabilities and when
the deferred income tax assets and liabilities relate to the same
fiscal authority.
Based on management's internal
forecast, a deferred tax asset of US$141.1 million (2022: US$117.7
million) has been recognised in respect of tax losses amounting to
US$470.3 million (2022: US$391.6 million). If not utilised, US$7.1
million (2022: US$33.2 million) will expire within five years and
US$463.2 million (2022: US$358.4 million) will expire between six
and ten years. Of the total deferred tax asset related to losses,
US$69.4 million (2022: US$34.4 million) is covered by the
existence of taxable temporary differences, the remaining US$71.7
million (2022: US$83.3 million) corresponds to Fresnillo plc which
maintained a deferred net asset position. Despite the accounting
loss in the Parent Company in the current and prior periods,
management has considered the taxable profit generated in the
current year of US$91.3 million and based on a consideration of
this, combined with future financial and tax projections, considers
that there is evidence that sufficient taxable profits will be
available against which these unused tax losses can be
utilised.
The Group has also performed an
assessment of the recoverability of tax losses from mining entities
based on financial projections that are consistent with the Group's
impairment assessment (refer to note 13), together with relevant
tax projections which consider the amount and timing of certain tax
deductions. Based on those assumptions, the Group expects to fully
utilise its recognised losses.
The Group has further tax losses
and other similar attributes carried forward of US$112.3 million
(2022: US$91.9 million) on which no deferred tax is recognised due
to insufficient certainty regarding the availability of appropriate
future taxable profits. Based on the applicable tax legislation the
tax losses are not subject to expiry.
(d) Unrecognised deferred tax on
investments in subsidiaries
The Group has not recognised all
of the deferred tax liability in respect of distributable reserves
of its subsidiaries because it controls them and only part of the
temporary differences is expected to reverse in the foreseeable
future. The temporary differences for which a deferred tax
liability has not been recognised aggregate to US$1,015 million
(2022: US$1,006 million).
(e) Corporate Income Tax
('Impuesto Sobre la Renta' or 'ISR') and Special Mining Right
("SMR")
The Group's principal operating
subsidiaries are Mexican residents for taxation purposes. The rate
of current corporate income tax is 30%.
On 30 December 2018, the Decree of
tax incentives for the northern border region of Mexico was
published in the Official Gazette, which provided a reduction of
income tax by a third and also a reduction of 50% of the value
added tax rate, for taxpayers that produce income from business
activities carried out within the northern border region. The tax
incentives were applicable since 1 January 2019 and remained in
force until 31 December 2020. On 30 December 2020 and extension of
the Decree was published in the Official Gazette which remains in
force until 31 December 2024. Some of the Group companies which
produce income from business activities carried out within Caborca,
Sonora, which is considered for purposes of the Decree as northern
border region, applied for this Decree tax incentives before the
Mexican tax authorities, and were granted authorization for income
tax and value added tax purposes.
The special mining right "SMR"
states that the owners of mining titles and concessions are subject
to pay an annual mining right of 7.5% of the profit derived from
the extractive activities and is considered as income tax under
IFRS. The 7.5% tax applies to a base of income before interest,
annual inflation adjustment, taxes paid on the regular activity,
depreciation and amortization, as defined by the new ISR. This SMR
can be credited against the corporate income tax of the same fiscal
year and its payment must be remitted no later than the last
business day of March of the following year.
12. Earnings per share
Earnings per share ('EPS') is
calculated by dividing profit for the year attributable to equity
shareholders of the Company by the weighted average number of
Ordinary Shares in issue during the period.
The Company has no dilutive
potential Ordinary Shares.
As of 31 December 2023 and 2022,
earnings per share have been calculated as follows:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Earnings:
|
|
|
Profit attributable to equity
holders of the Company
|
233,909
|
271,897
|
Adjusted profit attributable to
equity holders of the Company
|
228,497
|
258,747
|
|
|
|
Adjusted profit is profit as
disclosed in the Consolidated Income Statement adjusted to exclude
revaluation effects of the Silverstream contract of US$7.7 million
gain (US$5.4 million net of tax) (2022: US$18.8 million gain
(US$13.2 million net of tax)).
Adjusted earnings per share have
been provided in order to provide a measure of the underlying
performance of the Group, prior to the revaluation effects of the
Silverstream contract, a derivative financial
instrument.
|
2023
thousands
|
2022
thousands
|
Number of shares:
|
|
|
Weighted average number of
Ordinary Shares in issue
|
736,894
|
736,894
|
|
2023
US$
|
2022
US$
|
Earnings per share:
|
|
|
Basic and diluted earnings per
share
|
0.317
|
0.369
|
Adjusted basic and diluted
earnings per Ordinary Share
|
0.310
|
0.351
|
|
|
|
13. Property, plant and
equipment
|
Year ended 31 December
20233
|
|
Land and
buildings
|
Plant and
equipment4
|
Mining properties and
development costs
|
Other
assets2
|
Construction in
progress
|
Total
|
|
US$
thousands
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
412,984
|
2,828,920
|
3,001,661
|
377,813
|
461,490
|
7,082,868
|
Additions
|
903
|
103,835
|
5,428
|
37,839
|
358,579
|
506,584
|
Disposals5
|
(308)
|
(26,480)
|
(2,763)
|
(12,345)
|
-
|
(41,896)
|
Transfers and other
movements
|
22,305
|
226,170
|
236,380
|
49,741
|
(534,596)
|
-
|
At 31 December 2023
|
435,884
|
3,132,445
|
3,240,706
|
453,048
|
285,473
|
7,547,556
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
(222,166)
|
(1,810,484)
|
(1,947,868)
|
(239,786)
|
-
|
(4,220,304)
|
Depreciation for the
year1
|
(24,837)
|
(205,238)
|
(240,595)
|
(30,276)
|
-
|
(500,946)
|
Disposals5
|
290
|
24,627
|
2,763
|
6,930
|
-
|
34,610
|
At 31 December 2023
|
(246,713)
|
(1,991,095)
|
(2,185,700)
|
(263,132)
|
-
|
(4,686,640)
|
Net book amount at 31 December 2023
|
189,171
|
1,141,350
|
1,055,006
|
189,916
|
285,473
|
2,860,916
|
1 Depreciation for the year
includes US$498.5 million recognised as an expense in the income
statement and US$2.5 million capitalised as part of construction in
progress.
2 From the additions in
"other assets" category US$28.1 million corresponds to the
reassessment of mine closure rehabilitations costs, see note
21.
3 Amounts include
Right-of-use assets as described in note 25
4 The amount of Property,
plant and equipment related to Soledad & Dipolos at 31 December
2023 is US$37.2 million and reflects capitalised mining works and
the amount recognised in the cost of Property plant and equipment
related to estimated remediation and closure
activities.
5 From the total net amount
of disposals, US$1.9 million correspond to a write off of assets as
disclosed in note 9.
|
Year ended 31 December
20223
|
|
Land and
buildings
|
Plant and
equipment4
|
Mining properties and
development costs
|
Other
assets2
|
Construction in
progress
|
Total
|
|
US$
thousands
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
354,605
|
2,641,444
|
2,457,292
|
374,211
|
804,650
|
6,632,202
|
Additions
|
2,971
|
30,249
|
11,750
|
(16,947)
|
556,509
|
584,532
|
Disposals5
|
(224)
|
(104,445)
|
(21,999)
|
(7,198)
|
-
|
(133,866)
|
Transfers and other
movements
|
55,632
|
261,672
|
554,618
|
27,747
|
(899,669)
|
-
|
At 31 December 2022
|
412,984
|
2,828,920
|
3,001,661
|
377,813
|
461,490
|
7,082,868
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
(198,653)
|
(1,730,511)
|
(1,692,189)
|
(211,774)
|
-
|
(3,833,127)
|
Depreciation for the
year1
|
(23,647)
|
(176,445)
|
(271,552)
|
(34,861)
|
-
|
(506,505)
|
Disposals5
|
134
|
96,472
|
15,873
|
6,849
|
-
|
119,328
|
At 31 December 2022
|
(222,166)
|
(1,810,484)
|
(1,947,868)
|
(239,786)
|
-
|
(4,220,304)
|
Net book amount at 31 December 2022
|
190,818
|
1,018,436
|
1,053,793
|
138,027
|
461,490
|
2,862,564
|
1 Depreciation for the year
includes US$501.8 million recognised as an expense in the income
statement and US$4.7 million, capitalised as part of construction
in progress.
2 From the additions in
"other assets" category US$(27.3) million corresponds to the
reassessment of mine closure rehabilitations costs, see note
21.
3 Amounts include
Right-of-use assets as described in note 25
4 The amount of Property,
plant and equipment related to Soledad & Dipolos at 31 December
2022 is US$35.6 million and reflects capitalised mining works and
the amount recognised in the cost of Property plant and equipment
related to estimated remediation and closure
activities.
5 From the total net amount
of disposals, US$11.3 million correspond to a write of assets as
disclosed in note 9.
The table below details
construction in progress by operating mine and development
projects
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Fresnillo
|
73,761
|
186,666
|
Saucito
|
94,092
|
80,566
|
Juanicipio
|
29,028
|
67,228
|
Cienega
|
13,432
|
53,204
|
San Julian
|
56,938
|
34,203
|
Herradura
|
13,307
|
27,208
|
Noche Buena
|
-
|
9,583
|
Other1
|
4,914
|
2,832
|
|
285,472
|
461,490
|
1
Mainly corresponds to Minera Bermejal, S.A. de C.V. (2022: Minera
Bermejal, S.A. de C.V.).
During the year ended 31 December
2023, the Group capitalised US$2.1 million of borrowing costs paid
within construction in progress (2022: US$8.6 million). Borrowing
costs were capitalised at the rate of 5.02% (2022:
5.02%).
Sensitivity analysis
As disclosed in note 2(f)
management performs at each reporting date an assessment to
determine whether there are any indicators of impairment. As at 31
December 2023, the carrying amounts of mining assets is supported
by their recoverable values.
The key assumptions on which
management bases the recoverable value calculations of the mining
assets are commodity prices, future capital requirements,
production costs, reserves and resources volumes (reflected in
production volumes) and discount rate.
The models are most sensitive to
changes in commodity price assumptions, operating costs and
production volumes.
Other than as disclosed below,
management has considered no reasonably possible change in any
other key assumption above would cause the carrying value of any of
its mining assets to exceed its recoverable amount.
In the absence of any changes to
any of the other key assumptions, a change in the below assumptions
would have the following impact as at 31 December 2023:
· A
decrease of 10% in gold and silver prices would result in an
impairment charge of US$228.7 million.
· An
increase of 10% in operating costs would result in an impairment
charge of US$ million 116.1 million.
· A
decrease of 5% in the forecasted volume of gold and silver produced
would result in an impairment charge of US$92.2 million.
14. Silverstream
contract
On 31 December 2007, the Group
entered into an agreement with Peñoles through which the Group is
entitled to receive the proceeds received by the Peñoles Group in
respect of the refined silver sold from the Sabinas Mine
('Sabinas'), a base-metals mine owned and operated by the Peñoles
Group. The agreement required an upfront payment of US$350 million
by Fresnillo. In addition, a per ounce cash payment of $2.00 in
years one to five and $5.00 thereafter (subject to an inflationary
adjustment that commenced from 31 December 2013) is payable to
Peñoles. The cash payment to Peñoles per ounce of silver for the
year ended 31 December 2023 was $5.65 per ounce (2022: $5.54 per
ounce). Under the contract, the Group has the option to receive a
net cash settlement from Peñoles attributable to the silver
produced and sold from Sabinas, to take delivery of an equivalent
amount of refined silver or to receive settlement in the form of
both cash and silver. If, by 31 December 2032, the amount of silver
produced by Sabinas is less than 60 million ounces, a further
payment is due from Peñoles to the Group of US$1 per ounce of
shortfall.
The Silverstream contract
represents a derivative financial instrument which has been
recorded at FVPL and classified within non-current and current
assets as appropriate. The term of the derivative is based on
Sabinas' life of mine which is currently 24 years considering ore
reserves and certain mineral resources based on the expected
conversion rate to reserves. Changes in the contract's fair value,
other than those represented by the realisation of the asset
through the receipt of either cash or refined silver, are charged
or credited to the income statement. In the year ended 31 December
2023 total proceeds received in cash were US$40.2 million (2022:
US$33.4 million) of which, US$8.3 million was in respect of
proceeds receivable as at 31 December 2022 (2022: US$4.8 million in
respect of proceeds receivable as at 31 December 2021). Cash
received in respect of the year of US$31.8 million (2022: US$28.5
million) corresponds to 2.29 million ounces of payable silver
(2022: 2.06 million ounces). As at 31 December 2023, a further
US$5.1 million (2022: US$8.3 million) of cash receivable
corresponding to 278,342 ounces of silver is due (2022: 453,158
ounces).
A reconciliation of the beginning
balance to the ending balance is shown below:
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Balance at 1 January
|
511,474
|
529,544
|
Cash received in respect of the
year
|
(31,816)
|
(28,513)
|
Cash receivable
|
(5,050)
|
(8,342)
|
Remeasurement gains recognised in
profit and loss
|
7,732
|
18,785
|
Balance at 31 December
|
482,340
|
511,474
|
Less - Current portion
|
35,802
|
36,218
|
Non-current portion
|
446,538
|
475,256
|
The US$7.7 million unrealised gain
recorded in the income statement (31 December 2022: US$18.8 million
loss) resulted mainly from the financial profit obtained from the
contract amortisation, which was partially compensated with lower
reserves considered in the production mine plan and a lower
inflation rate expected.
Significant assumptions used in
the valuation of the Silverstream contract are as
follows:
-
Forecasted volumes (millions of ounces/moz)
- Silver
to be produced and sold over the life of mine 82.8 moz (2022: 103.2
moz)
- Average
annual silver to be produced and sold 3.5moz (2022: 4.0
moz)
- Weighted
average discount rate 9.79% (2022: 9.82%)
- Future
silver prices (US$ per ounce)
Year ended 31 December
|
Year
1
|
Year
2
|
Year
3
|
Year
4
|
Year
5
|
Long-term
|
2023
|
24.41
|
25.44
|
26.43
|
26.64
|
26.85
|
19.58
|
2022
|
24.45
|
25.53
|
26.22
|
27.12
|
27.33
|
18.81
|
The fair value of the Silverstream
contract is determined using a valuation model including
unobservable inputs (Level 3). This derivative has a term of 24
years and the valuation model utilises several inputs that are not
based on observable market data due to the nature of these inputs
and/or the duration of the contract. Inputs that have a significant
effect on the recorded fair value are the volume of silver that
will be produced and sold from the Sabinas mine over the contract
life, the future price of silver, future inflation and the discount
rate used to discount future cash flows. In line with a market
participant would consider, the model includes the proportion of
resources that are expected to be converted into reserves. Out of
the 82.8m ounces included in the model, 56% relates to reserves and
44% relates to resources (which were adjusted by a conversion
factor of 50%). (2022: 55% and 45% respectively). For purposes of
the fair value measurement, those resources are assumed to be mined
once reserves are exhausted. This approach has been applied
consistently in both 2023 and 2022.
The estimate of the volume of
silver that will be produced and sold from the Sabinas mine
requires estimates of the recoverable silver reserves and
resources, the related production profile based on the Sabinas mine
plan and the expected recovery of silver from ore mined. The
estimation of these inputs is subject to a range of operating
assumptions and may change over time. Estimates of reserves and
resources are updated annually by Peñoles, the operator and sole
interest holder in the Sabinas mine and provided to the Company.
The production profile and estimated payable silver that will be
recovered from ore mined is based on the operational mine plan,
with certain amendments to reflect a basis that a market
participant would consider, that is provided to the Company by
Peñoles. The inputs assume no interruption in production over the
life of the Silverstream contract and production levels which are
consistent with those achieved in recent years.
Management regularly assesses a
range of reasonably possible alternatives for those significant
unobservable inputs described above and determines their impact on
the total fair value. The fair value of the Silverstream contract
is significantly sensitive to a reasonably possible change in
future silver price, the discount rate used to discount future cash
flows and total recoverable reserves and resources over the life of
mine. The sensitivity of these key inputs is as follows:
|
Commodity
price
|
Discount
rate
|
Volumes
produced
|
Year ended 31 December
|
Increase/
(decrease) in
silver price
|
Effect
on profit before tax: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
Basis
point increase/
(decrease)
in interest rate
|
Effect
on profit before tax: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
Increase/
(decrease)
in reserves and resources
|
Effect
on profit before tax: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
2023
|
10%
|
63,222
|
-
|
-
|
10%
|
48,141
|
|
(10%)
|
(63,222)
|
(75)
|
27,473
|
(10%)
|
(48,141)
|
2022
|
20%
|
133,736
|
100
|
(41,860)
|
6%
|
30,600
|
|
(15%)
|
(100,302)
|
(25)
|
11,452
|
(6%)
|
(30,600)
|
Management considers that an
appropriate sensitivity for volumes produced and sold is on the
total recoverable reserve and resource quantities over the contract
term rather than annual production volumes over the mine
life.
The significant unobservable
inputs are not interrelated. The Sabinas mine is a polymetallic
mine that contains copper, lead and zinc as well as silver, which
is produced as a by-product. Therefore, changes to base metals
prices (rather than the price of silver) are most relevant to the
Sabinas mine production plans and the overall economic assessment
of the mine.
The effects on profit before tax
and equity of reasonably possible changes to the inflation rates
and the US dollar exchange rate compared to the Mexican peso on the
Silverstream contract are not material. The Group's exposure to
reasonably possible changes in other currencies is not
material.
15. Inventories
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Finished goods1
|
34,212
|
27,257
|
Work in progress2
|
314,802
|
375,603
|
Ore stockpile3
|
4,779
|
26,020
|
Operating materials and spare
parts
|
185,624
|
163,947
|
|
539,417
|
592,827
|
Allowance for obsolete and
slow-moving inventories
|
(6,684)
|
(5,463)
|
Balance as 31 December
|
532,733
|
587,364
|
Less - Current portion
|
462,973
|
495,744
|
Non-current portion4
|
69,760
|
91,620
|
1 Finished goods include
metals contained in concentrates and doré bars on hand or in
transit to a smelter or refinery.
2 Work in progress includes
metals contained in ores on leaching pads for an amount of US$292.7
million (2022: US$307.6 million) and in stockpiles US$22.1 million
(2022: US$58.8 million) that will be processed in dynamic leaching
plants (note 2(c)).
3 As at 31 December 2022 ore
stockpile included ore mineral obtained during the development
phase at Juanicipio which has been processed during
2023.
4 Non-current inventories
relate to ore in leaching pads where the leaching process has
stopped and is not expected to restart within twelve months. As at
31 December 2023 and 2022 non-current inventories corresponds to
Soledad & Dipolos mine unit (note 2 (c)).
Concentrates are a product
containing sulphides with variable content of precious and base
metals and are sold to smelters and/or refineries. Doré is an alloy
containing a variable mixture of gold and silver that is delivered
in bar form to refineries. Activated carbon is a product containing
variable mixture of gold and silver that is delivered in small
particles.
The amount of inventories
recognised as an expense in the year was US$2,201.8 million (2022:
US$1,906.8 million). During 2023 and 2022, there was no adjustment
to net realisable value allowance against work-in-progress
inventory. The adjustment to the allowance for obsolete and
slow-moving inventory recognised as an expense was US$1.2 million
(2022: US$2.6 million).
16. Trade and other
receivables
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Trade receivables from related
parties (note 27)
|
306,668
|
275,844
|
Value Added Tax
receivable
|
93,010
|
85,979
|
Other receivables from related
parties (note 27a)
|
11,509
|
8,377
|
Other receivables from
contractors
|
2,662
|
52
|
Other receivables
|
6,170
|
8,697
|
Other receivables arising from the
Layback Agreement (note 2 (c))
|
-
|
25,994
|
|
420,019
|
404,943
|
Expected credit loss of 'Other
receivables'
|
(353)
|
(444)
|
Trade and other receivables
classified as current assets
|
419,666
|
404,499
|
Other receivables classified as
non-current assets:
|
|
|
Other receivable from
contractors
|
773
|
1,638
|
Value Added Tax
receivable
|
42,755
|
36,820
|
Trade and other receivables
classified as non-current assets
|
43,528
|
38,458
|
Total trade and other
receivables
|
463,194
|
442,957
|
Trade receivables are shown net of
any corresponding advances, are non-interest bearing and generally
have payment terms of 46 to 60 days.
The total receivables denominated
in US$ were US$316.3 million (2022: US$311.7 million), and in
Mexican pesos US$147.6 million (2022: US$131.2 million)
Balances corresponding to Value
Added Tax receivables and US$6.2 million within Other receivables
(2022: US$8.7 million) are not financial assets.
As of 31 December for each year
presented, except for 'other receivables' in the table above, all
trade and other receivables were neither past due nor
credit-impaired. The amount past due and considered as
credit-impaired as of 31 December 2023 is US$0.4 million (2022:
US$0.4 million). Trade receivables from related parties and other
receivables from related parties (see note 14) are classified as
financial assets at FVTPL and are therefore not considered in the
expected credit loss analysis. In determining the recoverability of
receivables, the Group performs a risk analysis considering the
type and age of the outstanding receivable and the credit
worthiness of the counterparty, see note 31(b).
17. Cash and cash
equivalents
The Group considers cash and cash
equivalents when planning its operations and in order to achieve
its treasury objectives.
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Cash at bank and on
hand
|
3,556
|
2,516
|
Short-term deposits
|
531,024
|
966,544
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
534,580
|
969,060
|
Cash at bank earns interest at
floating rates based on daily bank deposits. Short-term deposits
are made for varying periods of between one day and three months,
depending on the immediate cash requirements of the Group, and earn
interest at the respective short-term deposit rates. Short-term
deposits can be withdrawn at short notice without any penalty or
loss in value.
18. Equity
Share capital and share
premium
Authorised share capital of the
Company is as follows:
|
|
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
|
|
2022
|
Class of share
|
Number
|
Amount
|
|
Number
|
Amount
|
Ordinary Shares each of
US$0.50
|
1,000,000,000
|
$500,000,000
|
|
1,000,000,000
|
$500,000,000
|
Sterling Deferred Ordinary Shares
each of £1.00
|
50,000
|
£50,000
|
|
50,000
|
£50,000
|
Issued share capital of the
Company is as follows:
|
Ordinary Shares
|
|
Sterling Deferred Ordinary Shares
|
|
Number
|
US$
|
|
Number
|
£
|
At 1 January 2022
|
736,893,589
|
$368,545,586
|
|
50,000
|
£50,000
|
At 31 December 2022
|
736,893,589
|
$368,545,586
|
|
50,000
|
£50,000
|
At 31 December 2023
|
736,893,589
|
$368,545,586
|
|
50,000
|
£50,000
|
As at 31 December 2023 and 2022,
all issued shares with a par value of US$0.50 each are fully paid.
The rights and obligations attached to these shares are governed by
law and the Company's Articles of Association. Ordinary
shareholders are entitled to receive notice and to attend and speak
at any general meeting of the Company. There are no restrictions on
the transfer of the Ordinary shares.
The Sterling Deferred Ordinary
Shares only entitle the shareholder on winding up or on a return of
capital to payment of the amount paid up after repayment to
Ordinary Shareholders. The Sterling Deferred Ordinary Shares do not
entitle the holder to payment of any dividend, or to receive notice
or to attend and speak at any general meeting of the Company. The
Company may also at its option redeem the Sterling Deferred
Ordinary Shares at a price of £1.00 or, as custodian, purchase
or cancel the Sterling Deferred Ordinary Shares or require the
holder to transfer the Sterling Deferred Ordinary Shares. Except at
the option of the Company, the Sterling Deferred Ordinary Shares
are not transferrable.
Reserves
Share premium
This reserve records the
consideration premium for shares issued at a value that exceeds
their nominal value.
Capital reserve
The capital reserve arose as a
consequence of the Pre-IPO Reorganisation as a result of using the
pooling of interest method.
Hedging reserve
This reserve records the portion
of the gain or loss on a hedging instrument in a cash flow hedge
that is determined to be an effective hedge, net of tax. When the
hedged transaction occurs, the gain or the loss is transferred out
of equity to the income statement or the value of other
assets.
Cost of hedging reserve
The changes in the time value of
option contracts are accumulated in the costs of hedging reserve.
These deferred costs of hedging are either reclassified to profit
or loss or recognised as a basis adjustment to non-financial assets
or liabilities upon maturity of the hedged item, or, in the case of
a hedge item that realises over time, amortised on a systematic and
rational basis over the life of the hedged item.
Fair value reserve of financial assets at
FVOCI
The Group has elected to recognise
changes in the fair value of certain investments in equity
securities in OCI, as explained in note 2(g) . These changes are
accumulated within the FVOCI reserve within equity. The Group
transfers amounts from this reserve to retained earnings when the
relevant equity securities are derecognised.
Foreign currency translation reserve
The foreign currency translation
reserve is used to record exchange differences arising from the
translation of the financial information of entities with a
functional currency different to that of the presentational
currency of the Group.
Retained earnings
This reserve records the
accumulated results of the Group, less any distributions and
dividends paid.
19. Dividends declared and
paid
The dividends declared and paid
during the years ended 31 December 2023 and 2022 are as
follows:
|
US cents
per
Ordinary Share
|
Amount
US$ thousands
|
Year ended 31 December 2023
|
|
|
Final dividend for 2022 declared
and paid during the year1
|
13.3
|
98,007
|
Interim dividend for 2023 declared
and paid during the year2
|
1.4
|
10,317
|
|
14.7
|
108,324
|
Year ended 31 December 2022
|
|
|
Final dividend for 2021 declared
and paid during the year3
|
24.00
|
176,855
|
Interim dividend for 2022 declared
and paid during the year4
|
3.40
|
25,054
|
|
27.4
|
201,909
|
|
|
|
1 This dividend was approved
by the Shareholders on 23 May 2023 and paid on 26 May
2023.
2 This dividend was approved
by the Board of Directors on 31 July 2023 and paid 14 September
2023
3 This dividend was approved
by the Shareholders on 17 May 2022 and paid on 27 May
2022
4 This dividend was approved
by the Board of Directors on 1 August 2022 and paid 14 September
2022
A reconciliation between dividend
declared, dividends affected to retained earnings and dividend
presented in the cash flow statements is as follows:
|
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Dividends declared
|
|
108,324
|
201,909
|
Foreign exchange effect
|
|
(1)
|
-
|
Dividends recognised in retained earnings
|
|
108,323
|
201,909
|
Foreign exchange and hedging
effect
|
|
28
|
41
|
Dividends paid
|
|
108,351
|
201,950
|
The directors have proposed a
final dividend of US$4.2 cents per share, which is subject to
approval at the annual general meeting and is not recognised as a
liability as at 31 December 2023. Dividends paid from the profits
generated from 1 January 2014 to residents in Mexico and to
non-resident shareholders may be subject to an additional tax of up
to 10%, which will be withheld by the Group.
20. Interest-bearing
loans
Senior Notes
On 13 November 2013, the Group
completed its offering of US$800 million aggregate principal amount
of 5.500% Senior Notes due November 2023 (the 5.500% Notes).
On 29 September 2020, the Group repurchased certain of its 5.500%
Notes that had a carrying value of US$482.1 million for a
consideration of US$543.0 million.
On 2 October 2020, the Group
completed its offering of US$850 million aggregate principal amount
of 4.250% Senior Notes due 2050 in the Irish Stock Exchange. The
proceeds were partially used to finance the repurchase mentioned
above.
On 13 November 2023, the Company
paid the outstanding amount of the 5.500% Notes at its maturity
date including due interest for a total of US$326.6
million.
Movements in the year in the debt
recognised in the balance sheet are as follows:
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
US$
thousands
|
2022
US$
thousands
|
Opening balance
|
1,158,557
|
1,157,545
|
Payments of 5.500%
Notes
|
(317,879)
|
-
|
Accrued interest
|
53,919
|
56,475
|
Interest
paid1
|
(56,371)
|
(56,371)
|
Amortisation of discount and
transaction costs
|
776
|
908
|
Closing balance
|
839,002
|
1,158,557
|
Less - Current portion
|
-
|
317,879
|
Non-current portion
|
839,002
|
840,678
|
1 Interest was payable
semi-annually on 13 May and 13 November for 5.500% senior notes and
is payable semi-annually on 2 April and 2 October for 4.250% senior
notes.
The Group has the following
restrictions derived from the issuance of all outstanding Senior
Notes:
Change of control:
Should the rating of the senior
notes be downgraded as a result of a change of control (defined as
the sale or transfer of 35% or more of the common shares; the
transfer of all or substantially all the assets of the Group;
starting a dissolution or liquidation process; or the loss of the
majority in the board of directors) the Group is obligated to
repurchase the notes at an equivalent price of 101% of their
nominal value plus the interest earned at the repurchase date, if
requested to do so by any creditor.
Pledge on assets:
The Group shall not pledge or
allow a pledge on any property that may have a material impact on
business performance (key assets). Nevertheless, the Group may
pledge the aforementioned properties provided that the repayment of
the Notes keeps the same level of priority as the pledge on those
assets.
21. Provision for mine closure
cost
The provision represents the
discounted values of the risk-adjusted estimated cost to
decommission and rehabilitate the mines at the estimated date of
depletion of mine deposits. Uncertainties in estimating these costs
include potential changes in regulatory requirements,
decommissioning, dismantling and reclamation alternatives, timing;
the effects of climate change, and the discount, foreign exchange
and inflation rates applied. Closure provisions are typically based
on conceptual level studies that are refreshed at least every three
years. As these studies are renewed, they incorporate greater
consideration of forecast climate conditions at closure.
The Group has performed separate
calculations of the provision by currency, discounting at
corresponding rates. As at 31 December 2023, the discount rates
used in the calculation of the parts of the provision that relate
to Mexican pesos range from 9.87% to 11.19% (2022: range from
10.08% to 10.62%). The range for the current year parts that relate
to US dollars range from 3.70% to 4.68% (2022: range from 3.08% to
4.44%).
Mexican regulations regarding the
decommissioning and rehabilitation of mines are limited and less
developed in comparison to regulations in many other jurisdictions.
It is the Group's intention to rehabilitate the mines beyond the
requirements of Mexican law, and estimated costs reflect this level
of expense. The Group intends to fully rehabilitate the affected
areas at the end of the lives of the mines.
The provision is expected to
become payable at the end of the production life of each mine,
based on the estimation of reserves and resources, which
ranges from 2 to 21 years from 31 December 2023 after the ending of mine
operation at Noche Buena mine (1 to 22 years from 31 December
2022). As at 31 December 2023 the weighted average term of the
provision is 10 years (2022: 12 years).
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Opening balance
|
247,207
|
260,307
|
(Decrease) increase to existing
provision
|
(2,111)
|
23,757
|
Effect of changes in discount
rate
|
1,436
|
(63,061)
|
Unwinding of discount
rate
|
22,578
|
15,243
|
Payments
|
(4,376)
|
(1,085)
|
Foreign exchange
|
27,582
|
12,046
|
Closing balance
|
292,316
|
247,207
|
Less - Current portion
|
11,849
|
4,827
|
Non-current portion
|
280,467
|
242,380
|
The provision is sensitive to a
reasonably possible change in discount rates, exchange rate US
Dollar compared to Mexican peso, and change in future costs. The
sensitivity of these key inputs is as follows:
|
Discount
rate
|
Foreign
currency
|
Estimated
costs
|
Year ended 31 December
|
Basis
point increase/
(decrease)
in interest rate
|
Effect
on provision: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
Strengthening/
(weakening)
of US dollar
|
Effect
on provision: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
Increase/
(decrease)
in estimated costs
|
Effect
on provision: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
2023
|
50
|
11,710
|
10%
|
(21,990)
|
5%
|
14,616
|
|
(50)
|
(24,205)
|
(5%)
|
12,731
|
(5%)
|
(14,616)
|
2022
|
50
|
12,030
|
5%
|
(8,679)
|
5%
|
12,360
|
|
(50)
|
(13,110)
|
(5%)
|
9,593
|
(5%)
|
(12,360)
|
Change on the provision would be
principally offset by a change to the value of the associated asset
unless the asset is fully depreciated, in which case the change in
estimate is recognised directly within the income
statement.
22. Pensions and other
post-employment benefit plans
The Group has a defined
contribution plan and a defined benefit plan.
The defined contribution plan was
established as from 1 July 2007 and consists of periodic
contributions made by each Mexican non-unionised worker and
contributions made by the Group to the fund matching workers'
contributions, capped at 8% of the employee's annual
salary.
The defined benefit plan provides
pension benefits based on each worker's earnings and years of
services provided by personnel hired up to 30 June 2007 as well as
statutory seniority premiums for both unionised and non-unionised
workers.
The overall investment policy and
strategy for the Group's defined benefit plan is guided by the
objective of achieving an investment return which, together with
contributions, ensures that there will be sufficient assets to pay
pension benefits and statutory seniority premiums for non-unionised
workers as they fall due while also mitigating the various risks of
the plan. However, the portion of the plan related to statutory
seniority premiums for unionised workers is not funded. The
investment strategies for the plan are generally managed under
local laws and regulations. The actual asset allocation is
determined by current and expected economic and market conditions
and in consideration of specific asset class risk in the risk
profile. Within this framework, the Group ensures that the trustees
consider how the asset investment strategy correlates with the
maturity profile of the plan liabilities and the respective
potential impact on the funded status of the plan, including
potential short-term liquidity requirements.
Death and disability benefits are
covered through insurance policies.
The following tables provide
information relating to changes in the defined benefit obligation
and the fair value of plan assets:
|
|
Pension
cost charge to income statement
|
|
Remeasurement gains/(losses) in OCI
|
|
|
|
Balance
at
1
January
2023
|
Service
cost
|
Net
interest
|
Foreign
exchange
|
Sub-total recognised
in the
year
|
Benefits
paid
|
Return
on plan assets (excluding amounts included
in
net
interest
|
Actuarial changes arising from changes in financial
assumptions
|
Sub-total included
in
OCI1
|
Contributions by employer
|
Defined
benefit decrease due to personnel transfer
|
Balance
at
31
December
2023
|
|
US$
thousands
|
Defined benefit
obligation
|
(26,014)
|
(1,797)
|
(2,559)
|
(3,952)
|
(8,308)
|
2,133
|
|
(457)
|
(457)
|
|
(25)
|
(32,671)
|
|
Fair value of plan
assets
|
16,552
|
|
1,871
|
2,527
|
4,398
|
(2,133)
|
331
|
|
331
|
332
|
(20)
|
19,460
|
|
Net benefit liability
|
(9,462)
|
(1,797)
|
(688)
|
(1,425)
|
(3,910)
|
-
|
331
|
(457)
|
(126)
|
332
|
(45)
|
(13,211)
|
|
|
|
Pension
cost charge to income statement
|
|
Remeasurement gains/(losses) in OCI
|
|
|
|
Balance
at
1
January
2022
|
Service
cost
|
Net
interest
|
Foreign
exchange
|
Sub-total recognised
in the
year
|
Benefits
paid
|
Return
on plan assets (excluding amounts included
in
net
interest
|
Actuarial changes arising from changes in financial
assumptions
|
Sub-total included
in
OCI1
|
Contributions by employer
|
Defined
benefit decrease due to personnel transfer
|
Balance
at
31
December
2022
|
|
US$
thousands
|
Defined benefit
obligation
|
(25,673)
|
(1,260)
|
(1,826)
|
(1,651)
|
(4,737)
|
2,065
|
|
1,894
|
1,894
|
|
437
|
(26,014)
|
|
Fair value of plan
assets
|
19,167
|
|
1,333
|
1,160
|
2,493
|
(2,065)
|
(2,615)
|
|
(2,615)
|
-
|
(428)
|
16,552
|
|
Net benefit liability
|
(6,506)
|
(1,260)
|
(493)
|
(491)
|
(2,244)
|
-
|
(2,615)
|
1,894
|
(721)
|
|
9
|
(9,462)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
1 The effect corresponding to
partially-owned subsidiaries has been allocated in the
non-controlling interest of the year.
Of the total defined benefit
obligation, US$13.9 million (2022: US$10.7 million) relates to
statutory seniority premiums for unionised workers which are not
funded. The expected contributions to the plan for the next annual
reporting period are nil. The principal assumptions used in
determining pension and other post-employment benefit obligations
for the Group's plans are shown below:
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
%
|
2022
%
|
Discount rate
|
10.08
|
10.23
|
Future salary increases (National
Consumer Price Index)
|
5.25
|
5.25
|
The life expectancy of current and
future pensioners, men and women aged 65 and older will live on
average for a further 23.2 and 26.0 years respectively (2022: 23.9
years for men and 26.7 for women). The weighted average duration of
the defined benefit obligation is 8.7 years (2022: 10.8
years).
The fair values of the plan assets
were as follows:
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
State owned companies
|
337
|
-
|
Mutual funds (fixed
rates)
|
19,123
|
16,552
|
|
19,460
|
16,552
|
As at 31 December 2023 and 2022,
all the funds were invested in quoted debt instruments.
The pension plan has not invested
in any of the Group's own financial instruments nor in properties
or assets used by the Group.
A quantitative sensitivity
analysis for significant assumptions as at 31 December 2023 is as
shown below:
Assumptions
|
|
Discount rate
|
Future
salary increases
(NCPI)
|
Life
expectancy of pensioners
|
Sensitivity Level
|
|
0.5%
Increase
|
0.5%
Decrease
|
0.5%
increase
|
0.5%
decrease
|
+
1
Increase
|
Year ended 31 December 2023
(Decrease)/increase to the net
defined benefit obligation (US$ thousands)
|
|
(1,152)
|
1,243
|
215
|
(226)
|
289
|
Year ended 31 December 2022
(Decrease)/increase to the net
defined benefit obligation (US$ thousands)
|
|
(967)
|
1,044
|
176
|
(174)
|
145
|
The sensitivity analysis above has
been determined based on a method that extrapolates the impact on
net defined benefit obligation as a result of reasonable changes in
key assumptions occurring at the end of the reporting period. The
pension plan is not sensitive to future changes in salaries other
than in respect of inflation.
23. Trade and other
payables
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Trade payables
|
118,110
|
140,297
|
Other payables to related parties
(note 27(a))
|
56,434
|
35,969
|
Accrued expenses
|
54,749
|
60,321
|
Other taxes and
contributions
|
28,812
|
22,280
|
|
258,105
|
258,867
|
Trade payables are mainly for the
acquisition of materials, supplies and contractor services. These
payables do not accrue interest and no guarantees have been
granted. The fair value of trade and other payables approximate
their book values.
Balances corresponding to Accrued
expenses and Other taxes and contributions are not financial
liabilities.
The Group's exposure to currency
and liquidity risk related to trade and other payables is disclosed
in note 31.
24. Commitments
A summary of capital expenditure
commitments by operating mines and development project is as
follows:
|
As at 31
December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Saucito
|
30,761
|
33,980
|
Fresnillo
|
26,503
|
48,629
|
San Julian
|
14,655
|
9,745
|
Juanicipio
|
12,246
|
47,809
|
Herradura
|
6,610
|
11,024
|
Cienega
|
2,984
|
10,753
|
Noche Buena
|
206
|
227
|
Other1
|
4,040
|
414
|
|
98,005
|
162,581
|
1 Mainly corresponds to
Minera el Bermejal, S. de R.L. de C.V.
25. Leases
(a) The Group as lessee
The Group leases various offices,
buildings, plant and equipment and IT equipment. The resulting
lease liability is as follows:
|
As
at
|
|
31 December 2023
US$ thousands
|
31
December 2022
US$ thousands
|
IT equipment
|
10,387
|
10,914
|
Plant and
equipment
|
3,501
|
3,776
|
Buildings
|
702
|
439
|
Total lease liability
|
14,590
|
15,129
|
Less - Current portion
|
4,813
|
5,209
|
Non-current portion
|
9,777
|
9,920
|
The total cash outflow for leases
for the year ended 31 December 2023, except short term and low
value leases, amounts to US$7.3 million (2022: US$5.8 million), including finance costs of US$1.2 million
(2022: US$0.7 million). The table below details right-of-use assets
included as property plant and equipment in note 13.
|
|
Year ended 31 December
2023
|
|
Buildings
|
Computer
equipment
|
Plant and
Equipment
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
US$
thousands
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
4,620
|
21,284
|
3,933
|
29,837
|
Additions
|
723
|
4,286
|
123
|
5,132
|
Disposals
|
(308)
|
(6,291)
|
-
|
(6,599)
|
At 31 December 2023
|
5,035
|
19,279
|
4,056
|
28,370
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
(2,585)
|
(12,394)
|
(234)
|
(15,213)
|
Depreciation for the
year
|
(739)
|
(4,880)
|
(567)
|
(6,186)
|
Disposals
|
290
|
6,119
|
-
|
6,409
|
At 31 December 2023
|
(3,034)
|
(11,155)
|
(801)
|
(14,990)
|
Net book amount at 31 December 2023
|
2,001
|
8,124
|
3,255
|
13,380
|
|
|
Year ended 31 December
2022
|
|
Buildings
|
Computer
equipment
|
Plant and
Equipment
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
US$
thousands
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
4,332
|
15,704
|
-
|
20,036
|
Additions
|
288
|
5,580
|
3,933
|
9,801
|
At 31 December 2022
|
4,620
|
21,284
|
3,933
|
29,837
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
(1,786)
|
(7,719)
|
-
|
(9,505)
|
Depreciation for the
year
|
(799)
|
(4,675)
|
(234)
|
(5,708)
|
At 31 December 2022
|
(2,585)
|
(12,394)
|
(234)
|
(15,213)
|
Net book amount at 31 December 2022
|
2,035
|
8,890
|
3,699
|
14,624
|
Amounts recognised in profit and
loss for the year, additional to depreciation of right-of-use
assets, included US$1.2 million (2022: US$0.7 million) relating to
interest expense, US$73.7 million (2022: US$60.4 million) on
relating variable lease payments (note 6) of which US$4.2 million
(2022: US$11.4 million) were capitalised as a part of stripping
cost, US$0.9 million (2022: US$0.8 million) relating to short-term
leases and US$2.9 million (2022:US$3.3 million) relating to
low-value assets.
(b) The Group as a
lessor
Operating leases, in which the
Group is the lessor, relate to mobile equipment owned by the Group
with lease terms of between 12 to 36 months. All operating lease
contracts contain market review clauses in the event that the
lessee exercises its option to renew. The lessee does not have an
option to purchase the equipment at the expiry of the lease period.
The Group's leases as a lessor are not material.
26. Contingencies
As of 31 December 2023, the Group
has the following contingencies:
- The
Group is subject to various laws and regulations which, if not
observed, could give rise to penalties.
- Tax
periods remain open to review by the Mexican tax authorities (SAT,
by its Spanish acronym) in respect of income taxes for five years
following the date of the filing of corporate income tax returns,
during which time the authorities have the right to raise
additional tax assessments including penalties and interest. Under
certain circumstances, the reviews may cover longer periods. As
such, there is a risk that transactions, and in particular related
party transactions, that have not been challenged in the past by
the authorities, may be challenged by them in the
future.
It is not practical to determine
the amount of any potential claims or the likelihood of any
unfavourable outcome arising from this or any future inspections
that may be initiated. However, management believes that its
interpretation of the relevant legislation is appropriate and that
the Group has complied with all regulations and paid or accrued all
taxes and withholdings that are applicable.
- On 8
May 2008, the Company and Peñoles entered into the Separation
Agreement (the 'Separation Agreement'). This agreement relates to
the separation of the Group and the Peñoles Group and governs
certain aspects of the relationship between the Fresnillo Group and
the Peñoles Group following the initial public offering in May 2008
('Admission'). The Separation Agreement provides for
cross-indemnities between the Company and Peñoles so that, in the
case of Peñoles, it is held harmless against losses, claims and
liabilities (including tax liabilities) properly attributable to
the precious metals business of the Group and, in the case of the
Company, it is held harmless by Peñoles against losses, claims and
liabilities which are not properly attributable to the precious
metals business. Save for any liability arising in connection with
tax, the aggregate liability of either party under the indemnities
shall not exceed US$250 million in aggregate.
- On
24 March 2022, the SAT initiated an audit of the income tax
computation of Comercializadora de Metales Fresnillo for the year
2016. Findings were shared by the SAT on 22 March 2023, which
mainly relate to the tax treatment of the Silverstream transaction.
The Company responded on 20 April 2023 and began a Conclusive
Agreement procedure before the Mexican tax ombudsman (PRODECON). On
16 June 2023 and on 5 July 2023, the Company provided additional
documentation and information to the SAT through PRODECON. On
January 31st 2024, the PRODECON closed the Conclusive Agreement
procedure as no agreement was reached between the company and the
SAT. It is expected that the SAT´s final conclusion on the matter
will be notified to the Company no later than May 2024. The
Directors believe that management´s interpretation of the relevant
legislation and assessment of taxation is appropriate. Also, the
Directors consider that no tax liability is required to be
recognised in respect of these claims or risks as the SAT´s final
conclusion is yet to be determined.
- In
2011, flooding occurred in the Saucito mine, following which the
Group filed an insurance claim in respect of the damage caused (and
in respect of business interruption). This insurance claim was
rejected by the insurance provider. In early 2018, after the matter
had been taken to mutually agreed arbitration, the insurance claim
was declared valid; however, there is disagreement about the
appropriate amount to be paid. In October 2018 the Group received
US$13.6 million in respect of the insurance claim, however this
does not constitute a final settlement and management continues to
pursue a higher insurance payment. Due to the fact that
negotiations are on-going and there is uncertainty regarding the
timing and amount involved in reaching a final settlement with the
insurer, it is currently not practicable to determine the total
amount expected to be recovered.
- It is probable that
interest income will be earned on the Group's outstanding income
and value added tax receivable balances; however, there is no
certainty that this interest will be realised until the underlying
balance is recovered. Due to that uncertainty, it is also not
practicable to estimate the amount of interest income earned but
not recovered to date.
27. Related party balances and
transactions
The Group had the following
related party transactions during the years ended 31 December 2023
and 2022 and balances as at 31 December 2023 and 2022.
Related parties are those entities
owned or controlled by the ultimate controlling party, as well as
those who have a minority participation in Group companies and key
management personnel of the Group.
(a) Related party
balances
|
Accounts
receivable
|
|
Accounts
payable
|
|
|
As at 31
December
|
|
As at 31
December
|
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Trade:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Metalúrgica Met-Mex Peñoles, S.A.
de C.V.
|
306,668
|
275,844
|
|
5,840
|
421
|
Other:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Industrias Peñoles, S.A.B. de
C.V.1
|
5,050
|
8,342
|
|
-
|
-
|
Metalúrgica Met-Mex Peñoles, S.A.
de C.V.
|
261
|
-
|
|
739
|
-
|
Servicios Administrativos Peñoles,
S.A. de C.V.
|
-
|
-
|
|
24,486
|
4,630
|
Servicios Especializados Peñoles,
S.A. de C.V.
|
-
|
-
|
|
7,147
|
8,964
|
Fuentes de Energía Peñoles, S.A.
de C.V.
|
-
|
-
|
|
6,239
|
1,062
|
Termoeléctrica Peñoles, S. de R.L.
de C.V.
|
-
|
-
|
|
3,362
|
3,206
|
Peñoles Tecnología, S.A. de
C.V.
|
-
|
-
|
|
1,261
|
490
|
Eólica de Coahuila S.A. de
C.V.
|
-
|
-
|
|
2,986
|
13,466
|
Minera Capela, S.A. de
C.V.
|
-
|
-
|
|
9
|
-
|
Grupo Nacional Provincial, S.A. B.
de C.V.2
|
5,715
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
Other
|
483
|
35
|
|
4,365
|
3,730
|
Sub-total
|
318,177
|
284,221
|
|
56,434
|
35,969
|
Less-current portion
|
318,177
|
284,221
|
|
56,434
|
35,969
|
Non-current portion
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
1 This balance corresponds to
the cash receivable related to the Silverstream contract, see note
14.
2 This balance corresponds to
excess payments to the defined contribution plan which will be
refunded.
Related party accounts receivable
and payable will be settled in cash.
Other balances with related
parties:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Silverstream contract:
|
|
|
Industrias Peñoles, S.A.B. de
C.V.
|
482,340
|
511,474
|
The Silverstream contract can be
settled in either silver or cash. Details of the Silverstream
contract are provided in note 14.
(b) Principal transactions with
affiliates, including Industrias Peñoles S.A.B de C.V., the
Company's parent, are as follows:
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Income:
|
|
|
Sales:1
|
|
|
Metalúrgica Met-Mex Peñoles, S.A.
de C.V. 2
|
2,704,452
|
2,436,761
|
Insurance recovery
|
|
|
Grupo Nacional Provincial, S.A. B.
de C.V.
|
241
|
606
|
Other income
|
4,012
|
4,959
|
Total income
|
2,708,705
|
2,442,326
|
1 Figures do not include the
effects of hedging as the derivative transactions are not
undertaken with related parties.
2 Invoiced revenues are
derived from the value of metal content which is determined by
commodity market prices and adjusted for the treatment and refining
charges to be incurred by the metallurgical complex (refer to note
5(c)).
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Expenses:
|
|
|
Administrative services:
|
|
|
Servicios Administrativos Peñoles,
S.A. de C.V. 2
|
56,636
|
34,755
|
Servicios Especializados Peñoles,
S.A. de C.V. 3
|
26,626
|
24,558
|
Peñoles Tecnología, S.A. de
C.V.
|
5,343
|
4,356
|
|
88,605
|
63,669
|
Energy:
|
|
|
Termoeléctrica Peñoles, S. de R.L.
de C.V.
|
28,454
|
20,630
|
Fuentes de Energía Peñoles, S.A.
de C.V.
|
15,945
|
3,259
|
Eólica de Coahuila S.A. de
C.V.
|
33,563
|
31,031
|
|
77,962
|
54,920
|
Operating materials and spare parts:
|
|
|
Wideco Inc
|
5,383
|
6,610
|
Metalúrgica Met-Mex Peñoles, S.A.
de C.V.
|
35,551
|
9,694
|
|
40,934
|
16,304
|
Equipment repair and administrative
services:
|
|
|
Serviminas, S.A. de
C.V.
|
10,068
|
7,492
|
Insurance premiums:
|
|
|
Grupo Nacional Provincial, S.A. B.
de C.V.
|
18,909
|
16,443
|
Other expenses:
|
3,960
|
4,395
|
Total expenses
|
240,438
|
163,223
|
2 Includes US$0.6 million
(2022: US$0.8 million) corresponding to expenses
reimbursed.
3 Includes US$9.6 (2022: US$
nil) relating to engineering costs that were
capitalised.
(c) Compensation of key management
personnel of the Group
Key management personnel include
the members of the Board of Directors and the Executive
Committee.
|
Year
ended 31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Salaries and bonuses
|
3,412
|
2,792
|
Post-employment
benefits
|
290
|
244
|
Other benefits
|
435
|
316
|
Total compensation paid in respect
of key management personnel
|
4,137
|
3,352
|
|
As at
31 December
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Accumulated accrued defined
benefit pension entitlement
|
5,035
|
4,035
|
This compensation includes amounts
paid to directors disclosed in the Directors' Remuneration
Report.
The accumulated accrued defined
pension entitlement represents benefits accrued at the time the
benefits were frozen. There are no further benefits accruing under
the defined benefit scheme in respect of current
services.
28. Auditor's
remuneration
Fees due by the Group to its
auditor during the year ended 31 December 2023 and 2022 are as
follows:
|
Year ended 31 December
|
Class of services
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Fees payable to the Group's
auditor for the audit of the Group's annual accounts
|
1,616
|
1,879
|
Fees payable to the Group's
auditor and its associates for other services as
follows:
|
|
|
The audit of the Company's
subsidiaries pursuant to legislation
|
650
|
316
|
Audit-related assurance
services1
|
773
|
437
|
Total
|
3,039
|
2,632
|
1 Includes US$0.6 million
(2022: US$0.4 million) for the limited review of the Half Yearly
financial report, US$0.1 million (2022: US$
nil) for the limited assurance services over certain GHG's KPIs and
US$0.1 (2022: US$0.1 million) for the Mexican tax audit
opinions.
29. Notes to the consolidated
statement of cash flows
|
Notes
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Reconciliation of profit for the year to net cash generated
from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Profit for the year
|
|
288,300
|
308,291
|
Adjustments to reconcile profit for the period to net cash
inflows from operating activities:
|
|
|
|
Depreciation and
amortisation
|
13
|
498,469
|
501,769
|
Employee profit sharing
|
8
|
2,390
|
9,841
|
Deferred income tax
credit
|
11
|
(283,680)
|
(233,090)
|
Current income tax
expense
|
11
|
109,398
|
173,370
|
Write-off of assets
|
9
|
1,920
|
11,315
|
(Gain)/loss on the sale of
property, plant and equipment and other assets
|
|
(882)
|
305
|
Net finance costs
|
|
36,974
|
55,148
|
Foreign exchange
(gain)/loss
|
|
(1,142)
|
823
|
Difference between pension
contributions paid and amounts recognised in the income
statement
|
|
2,061
|
1,259
|
Non-cash movement on
derivatives
|
|
(2)
|
-
|
Layback agreement
|
2
(c)
|
-
|
(67,182)
|
Changes in fair value of
Silverstream
|
14
|
(7,732)
|
(18,785)
|
Change in mine closure cost
provision
|
9
|
3,226
|
-
|
Other
|
|
38
|
-
|
Working capital adjustments
|
|
|
|
(Increase)/decrease in trade and
other receivables
|
|
(45,597)
|
7,199
|
Decrease/(increase) in prepayments
and other assets
|
|
10,396
|
(14,064)
|
Decrease/(increase) in
inventories
|
|
54,631
|
(99,562)
|
Increase in trade and other
payables
|
|
1,196
|
40,282
|
Cash generated from operations
|
|
669,964
|
676,919
|
Income tax
paid1
|
|
(233,060)
|
(158,343)
|
Employee profit sharing
paid
|
|
(10,982)
|
(16,391)
|
Net cash from operating activities
|
|
425,922
|
502,185
|
1
Income tax paid includes US$187.0 million
corresponding to corporate income tax (2022: US$116.1 million) and
US$46 million corresponding to special mining right (2022: US$53.3
million), for further information refer to note
11.
30. Financial
instruments
(a) Fair value category
As at 31
December 2023
|
US$
thousands
|
Financial assets:
|
|
Amortized
cost
|
Fair
value through OCI
|
Fair
value (hedging instruments)
|
Fair
value through profit or loss
|
|
Trade and other
receivables1
|
|
9,894
|
-
|
-
|
311,718
|
|
Equity instruments at
FVOCI
|
|
-
|
107,991
|
-
|
-
|
|
Silverstream contract (note
14)
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
482,340
|
|
Derivative financial
instruments
|
|
-
|
-
|
79
|
-
|
|
Financial liabilities:
|
|
|
Amortized
cost
|
Fair
value (hedging instruments)
|
Fair
value through profit or loss
|
|
Interest-bearing loans (note
20)
|
|
|
839,002
|
-
|
-
|
|
Notes
payable2
|
|
|
95,360
|
-
|
-
|
|
Trade and other payables (note
23)
|
|
|
174,544
|
-
|
-
|
|
As at 31
December 2022
|
US$
thousands
|
Financial assets:
|
|
Amortized
cost
|
Fair
value through OCI
|
Fair
value (hedging instruments)
|
Fair
value through profit or loss
|
|
Trade and other
receivables1
|
|
27,719
|
-
|
-
|
284,186
|
|
Equity instruments at
FVOCI
|
|
-
|
158,813
|
-
|
-
|
|
Silverstream contract (note
14)
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
511,474
|
|
Derivative financial
instruments
|
|
-
|
-
|
231
|
-
|
|
Financial liabilities:
|
|
|
Amortized
cost
|
Fair
value (hedging instruments)
|
Fair
value through profit or loss
|
|
Interest-bearing loans (note
20)
|
|
|
1,158,557
|
-
|
-
|
|
Notes
payable2
|
|
|
104,962
|
-
|
-
|
|
Trade and other payables (note
23)
|
|
|
176,266
|
-
|
-
|
|
Derivative financial
instruments
|
|
|
-
|
487
|
-
|
|
1 Trade and other receivables
and embedded derivative within sales contracts are presented net in
Trade and other receivables in the balance sheet.
2 Corresponds to
interest-bearing notes payable received from Minera los Lagartos,
S.A. de C.V. which holds a non-controlling interest in Juanicipio
project. The notes are denominated in US Dollars and bear interest
at a rate that ranges between 6.72% to 7.36% with a maturity of
nine to eighteen months US$72.6 million short-term and US$22.7
million long-term (2022: nine to eighteen months US$9.1 million
short-term and US$95.8 million long-term,). During the year,
proceeds and payments from these Notes amounted to US$22.7 million
and US$33.0 million respectively (2022: US$8.1 million and US$10.0
million). Interest paid amount US$7.6 million (2022: US$4.2
million).
(b) Fair value
measurement
The value of financial assets and
liabilities other than those measured at fair value are as
follows:
|
|
|
As at 31
December
|
|
|
Carrying
amount
|
|
Fair
value
|
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Financial assets:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
9,894
|
27,719
|
|
9,894
|
27,719
|
Financial liabilities:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest-bearing
loans1 (note 20)
|
839,002
|
1,158,557
|
|
645,745
|
990,588
|
Trade and other
payables
|
174,544
|
176,266
|
|
174,544
|
176,266
|
Notes payable
|
95,360
|
104,962
|
|
95,324
|
104,962
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
1 Interest-bearing loans are
categorised in Level 1 of the fair value
hierarchy.
The financial assets and
liabilities measured at fair value are categorised into the fair
value hierarchy as at 31 December as follows:
As of 31 December
2023
|
Fair value measure
using
|
|
|
Quoted prices in active
markets Level 1
US$ thousands
|
|
Significant observable
Level 2
US$ thousands
|
|
Significant unobservable
Level 3
US$ thousands
|
|
Total
US$ thousands
|
Financial assets:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
306,668
|
|
306,668
|
Other receivables from related
parties1
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
5,050
|
|
5,050
|
Derivative financial
instruments:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Option and forward foreign
exchange contracts
|
|
|
-
|
79
|
|
-
|
|
79
|
Silverstream
contract
|
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
482,340
|
|
482,340
|
Other financial assets:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity instruments at
FVOCI
|
|
107,991
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
107,991
|
|
|
107,991
|
|
79
|
|
794,058
|
|
902,128
|
1 This balance corresponds to
the cash receivable related to the Silverstream contract, see note
14.
As of 31 December
2022
|
Fair value measure
using
|
|
|
Quoted prices in active
markets Level 1
US$ thousands
|
|
Significant observable
Level 2
US$ thousands
|
|
Significant unobservable
Level 3
US$ thousands
|
|
Total
US$ thousands
|
Financial assets:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
275,844
|
|
275,844
|
Other receivables from related
parties1
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
8,342
|
|
8,342
|
Derivative financial
instruments:
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
Option and forward foreign
exchange contracts
|
|
-
|
|
231
|
|
-
|
|
231
|
Silverstream
contract
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
511,474
|
|
511,474
|
Other financial assets:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity instruments at
FVOCI
|
|
158,813
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
158,813
|
|
|
158,813
|
|
231
|
|
795,660
|
|
954,704
|
Financial liabilities:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Derivative financial
instruments:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Option and forward foreign
exchange contracts
|
|
-
|
|
487
|
|
-
|
|
487
|
|
|
-
|
|
487
|
|
-
|
|
487
|
1 This balance corresponds to
the cash receivable related to the Silverstream contract, see note
14.
There have been no transfers
between Level 1 and Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy, and no
transfers into and out of Level 3 fair value
measurements.
A reconciliation of the opening
balance to the closing balance for Level 3 financial instruments
other than Silverstream (which is disclosed in note 14) is shown
below:
|
2023
US$ thousands
|
2022
US$ thousands
|
Balance at 1 January:
|
275,844
|
265,473
|
Sales
|
2,706,292
|
2,440,063
|
Cash collection
|
(2,674,262)
|
(2,426,390)
|
Changes in fair value
|
27,034
|
(20,178)
|
Realised embedded derivatives
during the year
|
(28,240)
|
16,876
|
Balance at 31 December
|
306,668
|
275,844
|
The fair value of financial assets
and liabilities is included at reflects the amount at which the
instrument could be exchanged in a current transaction between
willing parties, other than in a forced or liquidation
sale.
The following valuation techniques
were used to estimate the fair values:
Option and forward foreign exchange
contracts
The Group enters into derivative
financial instruments with various counterparties, principally
financial institutions with investment grade credit ratings. The
foreign currency forward (Level 2) contracts are measured based on
observable spot exchange rates, the yield curves of the respective
currencies as well as the currency basis spreads between the
respective currencies. The foreign currency option contracts are
valued using the Black Scholes model, the significant inputs to
which include observable spot exchange rates, interest rates and
the volatility of the currency.
Option commodity contracts
The Group enters into derivative
financial instruments with various counterparties, principally
financial institutions with investment grade credit ratings. The
option commodity (Level 2) contracts are measured based on
observable spot commodity prices, the yield curves of the
respective commodity as well as the commodity basis spreads between
the respective commodities. The option commodity contracts are
valued using the Black Scholes model, the significant inputs to
which include observable spot commodities price, interest rates and
the volatility of the commodity.
Silverstream contract
For further information relating
to the valuation techniques were used to estimate the fair value of
the Silverstream contract as well as the sensitivity of the
valuation to the key inputs are disclosed in note 14.
Equity investments:
The fair value of equity
investments is derived from quoted market prices in active markets
(Level 1). These investments were irrevocably designated at fair
value through OCI as the Group considers these investments to be
strategic in nature. As of 31 December 2023, approximately 89.8% of
the investments correspond to 9,314,877 shares (2022: 9,314,877
shares) of Mag Silver, Corp. for an amount of US$96.9 million
(2022: US$145.5 million) and 5.1% of Endeavor Silver Corp.
represented by 2,800,000 (2022: 2,800,000 shares) shares for an
amount of US$5.5 million (2022: US$9.1 million). These equity
investments are listed on the Toronto stock Exchange. The prices
per share as 31 December 2023 were US$10.41 (2022: US$15.62) and
US$1.96 (2022: US$3.24), respectively. During the year the Group
purchased 1,000,000 shares of Osisko Mining Inc., a Canadian
exploration company, for a total consideration of US$2.3
million.
Interest-bearing loans
The fair value of the Group's
interest-bearing loan is derived from quoted market prices in
active markets (Level 1).
Trade receivables:
Sales of concentrates,
precipitates doré bars and activated carbon are 'provisionally
priced' and revenue is initially recognised using this provisional
price and the Group's best estimate of the contained metal. Revenue
is subject to final price and metal content adjustments subsequent
to the date of delivery (see note 2 (n)). This price exposure is
considered to be an embedded derivative and therefore the entire
related trade receivable is measured at fair value.
At each reporting date, the
provisionally priced metal content is revalued based on the forward
selling price for the quotational period stipulated in the relevant
sales contract. The selling price of metals can be reliably
measured as these metals are actively traded on international
exchanges but the estimated metal content is a non-observable input
to this valuation.
31. Financial risk
management
Overview
The Group's principal financial
assets and liabilities, other than derivatives, comprise trade and
other receivables, cash, equity instruments at FVOCI,
interest-bearing loans, notes payable
and trade payables.
The Group has exposure to the
following risks from its use of financial instruments:
- Market
risk, including foreign currency, commodity price, interest rate
and equity price risks
- Credit
risk
-
Liquidity risk
This note presents information
about the Group's exposure to each of the above risks and the
Group's objectives, policies and processes for assessing and
managing risk. Further quantitative disclosures are included
throughout the financial statements.
The Board of Directors has overall
responsibility for the establishment and oversight of the Group's
risk management framework.
The Group's risk management
policies are established to identify and analyse the risks faced by
the Group, to set appropriate risk limits and controls, and to
monitor risks and adherence to limits. Risk management policies and
systems are reviewed regularly to reflect changes in market
conditions and the Group's activities. The Group, through its
training and management standards and procedures, aims to develop a
disciplined and constructive control environment in which all
employees understand their roles and obligations.
The Fresnillo Audit Committee has
responsibility for overseeing how management monitors compliance
with the Group's risk management policies and procedures and
reviews the adequacy of the risk management framework in relation
to the risks faced by the Group. The Audit Committee is assisted in
its oversight role by Internal Audit, which undertakes both regular
and ad hoc reviews of risk management controls and procedures, the
results of which are reported to the Audit Committee.
(a) Market risk
Market risk is the risk that
changes in market factors, such as foreign exchange rates,
commodity prices or interest rates will affect the Group's income
or the value of its financial instruments.
The objective of market risk
management is to manage and control market risk exposures within
acceptable parameters, while optimising the return on
risk.
In the following tables, the
effect on equity excludes the changes in retained earnings as a
direct result of changes in profit before tax.
Foreign currency risk
The Group has financial
instruments that are denominated in Mexican peso and other foreign
currencies which are exposed to foreign currency risk. Transactions
in currencies other than the US dollar include the purchase of
services, fixed assets, spare parts and the payment of
dividends. As a result, the Group has financial assets and
liabilities denominated in currencies other than functional
currency and holds cash and cash equivalents in Mexican
peso.
In order to manage the Group's
exposure to foreign currency risk on expenditure denominated in
currencies other than the US dollar, the Group has entered into
certain forward and option derivative contracts.
The following table demonstrates
the sensitivity of cash and cash equivalents, trade and other
receivables, trade and other payables and derivatives financial
instruments (excluding Silverstream which impact is disclosed in
note 14) to a reasonably possible change in the US dollar exchange
rate compared to the Mexican peso, reflecting the impact on the
Group's profit before tax and equity, with all other variables held
constant. It is assumed that the same percentage change in exchange
rates is applied to all applicable periods for the purposes of
calculating the sensitivity with relation to derivative
financial instruments.
Year ended 31 December
|
Strengthening/
(weakening)
of US dollar
|
Effect
on
profit before tax: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
Effect
on equity:
increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
2023
|
10%
|
(1,504)
|
(275)
|
|
(5%)
|
871
|
276
|
2022
|
5%
|
742
|
1,120
|
|
(5%)
|
(820)
|
3,610
|
The Group's exposure to reasonably
possible changes in other currencies is not material.
Commodity risk
The Group has exposure to changes
in metals prices (specifically silver, gold, lead and zinc) which
have a significant effect on the Group's results. These prices are
subject to global economic conditions and industry-related
cycles.
The Group uses derivative
instruments to hedge against an element of gold, zinc and lead
price.
The table below reflects the
aggregate sensitivity of financial assets and liabilities
(excluding Silverstream which impact is disclosed in note 14) to a
reasonably possible change in commodities prices, reflecting the
impact on the Group's profit before tax with all other variables
held constant.
The sensitivity shown in the table
below relates to changes in fair value of commodity derivatives
financial instruments contracts (excluding Silverstream) and
embedded derivatives in sales.
Year ended 31 December
|
Increase/(decrease) in commodity prices
|
Effect
on
profit before tax: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
Effect
on equity:
increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
Gold
|
Silver
|
Zinc
|
Lead
|
2023
|
10%
|
10%
|
10%
|
10%
|
26,375
|
-
|
|
(10%)
|
(10%)
|
(10%)
|
(10%)
|
(26,375)
|
-
|
2022
|
10%
|
20%
|
20%
|
15%
|
31,529
|
-
|
|
(10%)
|
(15%)
|
(15%)
|
(15%)
|
(27,660)
|
-
|
Interest rate risk
The Group is exposed to interest
rate risk from the possibility that changes in interest rates will
affect future cash flows or the fair values of its financial
instruments, principally relating to the cash balances and the
Silverstream contract held at the balance sheet date as explained
in note 14. Interest-bearing loans and notes payable are at a fixed
rate, therefore the possibility of a change in interest rate only
impacts its fair value but not its carrying amount. Therefore,
interest-bearing loans, notes payable and loans from related
parties are excluded from the table below.
The following table demonstrates
the sensitivity of financial assets and financial liabilities
(excluding Silverstream which impact is disclosed in note 14) to a
reasonably possible change in interest rate applied to a full year
from the balance sheet date. There is no impact on the Group's
equity other than the equivalent change in retained
earnings.
Year ended 31 December
|
Basis
point increase/
(decrease)
in interest rate
|
Effect
on profit before tax: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
20231
|
-
|
-
|
|
(75)
|
(3,307)
|
2022
|
100
|
8,667
|
|
(25)
|
(2,167)
|
The sensitivity shown in the table
above primarily relates to the full year of interest on cash
balances held as at the year end.
1 Based on actual market
conditions management considers an increase in interest rates is
likely remote.
Equity price risk
The Group has exposure to changes
in the price of equity instruments that it holds as equity
investments at FVOCI.
The following table demonstrates
the sensitivity of equity investments at FVOCI to a reasonably
possible change in market price of these equity instruments,
reflecting the effect on the Group's profit before tax and
equity:
Year ended 31 December
|
Increase/
(decrease)
in equity price
|
Effect
on
profit before tax: increase/
(decrease)
(US$ thousands)
|
Effect
on equity: increase/
(decrease)
US$ thousands
|
2023
|
40%
|
-
|
43,196
|
|
(45%)
|
-
|
(48,596)
|
2022
|
10%
|
-
|
15,881
|
|
(25%)
|
-
|
(39,703)
|
(b) Credit risk
Exposure to credit risk arises as
a result of transactions in the Group's ordinary course of business
and is applicable to trade and other receivables, cash and cash
equivalents, the Silverstream contract and derivative financial
instruments.
The Group's policies are aimed at
minimising losses as a result of counterparties' failure to honour
their obligations. Individual exposures are monitored with
customers subject to credit limits to ensure that the Group's
exposure to bad debts is not significant. The Group's exposure to
credit risk is influenced mainly by the individual characteristics
of each counter party. The Group's financial assets are with
counterparties with what the Group considers to have an appropriate
credit rating. As disclosed in note 27, the counterparties to a
significant proportion of these financial assets are related
parties. At each balance sheet date, the Group's financial assets
were neither credit-impaired nor past due, other than 'Other
receivables' as disclosed in note 16. The Group's policies are
aimed at minimising losses from foreign currency hedging contracts.
The Company's foreign currency hedging contracts are entered into
with large financial institutions with strong credit
ratings.
The Group has a high concentration
of trade receivables with one counterparty Met-Mex Peñoles, the
Group's sole customer throughout 2023 and 2022. A further
concentration of credit risk arises from the Silverstream contract.
Both Met-Mex and the counterparty to the Silverstream contract are
subsidiaries in the Peñoles group which currently owns 75 per cent
of the shares of the Company and is considered by management to be
of appropriate credit rating.
The Group's surplus funds are
managed by Servicios Administrativos Fresnillo, S.A. de C.V., which
manages cash and cash equivalents, including short-term investments
investing in several financial institutions. Accordingly, on an
ongoing basis the Group deposits surplus funds with a range of
financial institutions, depending on market conditions. In order to
minimise exposure to credit risk, the Group only deposits surplus
funds with financial institutions with a credit rating of MX-1
(Moody´s) and mxA-1+ (Standard and Poor's) and above. As at
31 December 2023, the Group had concentrations of credit risk
as 35 percent of surplus funds were deposited with one financial
institution of which the total investment was held in short term
deposits.
The maximum credit exposure at the
reporting date of each category of financial asset above is the
carrying value as detailed in the relevant notes. See note 17 for
the maximum credit exposure to cash and cash equivalents note 16
for other receivables and note 27 for related party trade and other
receivables. The maximum credit exposure with relation to the
Silverstream contract is the value of the derivative as at
31 December 2023, being US$482.3 million (2022: US$511.5
million).
(c) Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that
the Group will not be able to meet its financial obligations as
they fall due.
The Group monitors its risk of a
shortage of funds using projected cash flows from operations and by
monitoring the maturity of both its financial assets and
liabilities.
The table below summarises the
maturity profile of the Group's financial liabilities based on
contractual undiscounted payments.
|
US$
thousands
|
|
|
Within 1
year
|
|
2-3 years
|
|
3-5 years
|
|
> 5
years
|
|
Total
|
As at 31 December 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest-bearing loans
|
37,986
|
|
75,973
|
|
75,973
|
|
1,685,699
|
|
1,875,631
|
Trade and other
payables
|
180,565
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
180,565
|
Notes payable
|
72,634
|
|
22,726
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
95,360
|
Lease liabilities
|
5,944
|
|
7,502
|
|
2,829
|
|
494
|
|
16,769
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
US$
thousands
|
|
|
Within 1
year
|
|
2-3 years
|
|
3-5 years
|
|
> 5
years
|
|
Total
|
As at 31 December 2022
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest-bearing loans
|
374,249
|
|
75,973
|
|
75,973
|
|
1,723,686
|
|
2,249,881
|
Trade and other
payables
|
176,266
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
176,266
|
Note payable
|
9,109
|
|
95,853
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
104,962
|
Lease liabilities
|
6,055
|
|
6,933
|
|
3,129
|
|
1,620
|
|
17,737
|
Derivative financial instruments -
liabilities
|
487
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
487
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
The payments for financial
derivative instruments are the gross undiscounted cash flows.
However, those amounts may be settled gross or net. The
following table shows the corresponding estimated inflows based on
the contractual terms:
|
US$
thousands
|
|
|
Within 1
year
|
|
2-3 years
|
|
3-5 years
|
|
> 5
years
|
|
Total
|
As at 31 December 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Inflows
|
5,777
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
5,777
|
|
Outflows
|
(5,587)
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
(5,587)
|
|
Net
|
190
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
190
|
|
|
US$
thousands
|
|
|
Within 1
year
|
|
2-3 years
|
|
3-5 years
|
|
> 5
years
|
|
Total
|
As at 31 December 2022
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Inflows
|
13,319
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
13,319
|
|
Outflows
|
(13,322)
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
(13,322)
|
|
Net
|
(3)
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
(3)
|
|
The above liquidity tables include
expected inflows and outflows from currency option contracts which
the Group expects to be exercised during 2024 as at 31 December
2023 and during 2023 as at 31 December 2022, either by the Group or
counterparty.
Management considers that the
Group has adequate current assets and forecast cash from operations
to manage liquidity risks arising from current liabilities and
non-current liabilities.
Capital management
The primary objective of the
Group's capital management is to ensure that it maintains a strong
credit rating and healthy capital ratios that support its business
and maximise shareholder value. Management considers capital to
consist of equity and interest-bearing loans, excluding net
unrealised gains or losses on revaluation of derivatives financial
instruments and Equity instruments at FVOCI. Refer to notes 18, 20
and 30 respectively for a quantitative summary of these
items.
In order to ensure an appropriate
return for shareholder's capital invested in the Group management
thoroughly evaluates all material projects and potential
acquisitions and approves them at its Executive Committee before
submission to the Board for ultimate approval, where applicable.
The Group's dividend policy is based on the profitability of the
business and underlying growth in earnings of the Group, as well as
its capital requirements and cash flows, including cash flows from
the Silverstream.
One of the Group's metrics of
capital is cash and other liquid assets which in 2023 and 2022
consisted of only cash and cash equivalents, which details are
disclosed in note 17.
32. Subsequent events
During January 2024 the Company
entered into a syndicated revolving credit facility ("the
facility") with a term from January 2024 to January 2029. The
maximum amount available under the facility is US$350.0 million.
The facility is unsecured and has an interest rate on drawn amounts
of SOFR plus an interest margin of 1.15%. The terms of this
facility include financial covenants related to leverage and
interest cover ratios. No amounts have been drawn from the facility
to date.