Best Copper Stocks of 2020 on the TSX



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to read the previous best TSX copper stocks article.


After a turbulent first half of the year, with COVID-19 disrupting supply and demand around the world, copper was able to recover lost ground in Q3.


Copper prices

trended upward for most of the third quarter, with the red metal reaching a quarterly high of US$6,837 per tonne on September 21.

Despite the current volatile environment, many analysts and companies expect copper to boom in the coming years, with electrification and electric vehicles growing in popularity and subsequently increasing the world’s appetite for copper.

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Some of the top copper stocks on the TSX have seen over 600 percent year-to-date gains, which you can find on the list below. This list was generated on October 15, 2020, using TradingView’s

stock screener

, and only companies with market capitalizations greater than C$50 million are included.

1. Aura Minerals (TSX:

ORA

)


Current price: C$13.55, year-to-date gain: 688.40 percent

Focused on copper and

gold

, Aura Minerals is a mid-tier producer working on multiple projects in Mexico, where its Aranzazu copper-gold-

silver

mine is located, as well as Honduras, Colombia and Brazil.

On March 3, Aura released

updated resources and reserves estimates

for its projects. Aranzuzu currently holds total proven reserves of 1,494,000 tonnes of copper grading 1.6 percent, and measured

resources

of 3,249,000 tonnes of copper grading 1.71 percent.

Earlier this year, the company

announced

an initial public offering in Brazil, but plans were postponed due to the impact of COVID-19 on market conditions. The company

resumed the process

on June 1, giving

more details

on June 24; it finally

announced

on July 2 that the price per BDR, which represents one share, was set at R$820.

The company had a busy third quarter, releasing its

Q2 results

in July. Production in the second quarter fell by 7 percent compared to Q1, and by 10 percent compared to the same period in 2019, due to COVID-19 challenges. In September, the company announced the

first gold shipment

from Gold Road.

2. Northern Dynasty Minerals (TSX:

NDM

)


Current price: C$1.43, year-to-date gain: 155.36 percent

Northern Dynasty Minerals is focused on developing the Pebble project in Alaska, which according to the company holds the world’s largest undeveloped copper-gold-

molybdenum

-silver resource.

In February, the company made news headlines when a draft environmental impact

statement

for the project started to circulate. The company said the information it had seen in a leaked copy of the executive summary was positive and appeared to support the issuance of a permit for construction.

On March 26, Northern Dynasty

released a statement

saying it had been able to continue to advance its project despite taking COVID-19 precautions. In April, a US federal district court

rejected a litigation

filed by Pebble opponents, and later in the second quarter, the company

published a letter

issued by the US Environmental Protection Agency confirming that the environmental impact statement process being conducted for Pebble by the US Army Corps of Engineers was proceeding well.

However, the third quarter was full of challenges for the company, creating additional delays and controversy for Pebble. The Trump administration

proposed to approve the project

in July, but ultimately environmental concerns prevented that from happening.

Early in September, short seller J Capital Research said Northern Dynasty

management was “gaslighting investors,”

adding that the project will lose money, that capital costs have been underestimated and that the project’s proposed mining plan intentionally targets low-grade portions of the deposit. The company responded saying the comments were “self serving.”

Later in September, Pebble Partnership CEO

Tom Collier resigned

after conversations with Collier, as well as others with Northern Dynasty President and CEO Ron Thiessen, were secretly videotaped by two unknown individuals posing as representatives of a Hong Kong-based investment firm with links to a Chinese state-owned enterprise.

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3. Taseko Mines (TSX:

TKO

)


Current price: C$1.41, year-to-date gain: 123.81 percent

Headquartered in Vancouver, Taseko Mines operates the Gibraltar mine, the second largest copper mine in Canada; it produces an average of 140 million pounds of copper and 2.5 million pounds of molybdenum per year. The company also holds the Florence, Yellowhead and Aley projects.

Q1 saw Taseko Mines

achieve its 2019 guidelines

at Gibraltar, with total production for the year reaching 126 million pounds of copper and 2.7 million pounds of molybdenum, both slightly higher than in 2018. In January, the company also updated its resource estimate for Yellowhead, resulting in a

22 percent increase

in recoverable copper reserves and significantly improved project economics.

During the second quarter,

the company reported

Q1 cash flows from operations at $17.7 million and adjusted EBITDA at $5.3 million, impacted by COVID-19. Its

second quarter results

, released in August, show that Gibraltar produced 36.8 million pounds of copper, a 14 percent increase over the first quarter. In August, the company also

confirmed

that the draft aquifer protection permit for its Florence project had been issued by the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality.

4. Marimaca Copper (TSX:

MARI

)


Current price: C$3.48, year-to-date gain: 114.15 percent

Formerly Coro Mining, Marimaca Copper

announced

its name change on May 27. The company name now aligns with its flagship development asset in Chile, the Marimaca project, which is one of the largest copper discoveries in Northern Chile.

In January,

the company provided

an updated and expanded mineral resource estimate for the asset. On June 1, Maricama published the results of a

detailed

trade-off analysis, conducted by independent consultant Gestion y Economia Minera Limitada for the development of its flagship.

The most significant news in the third quarter came in August, when the company

published results

of a preliminary economic assessment, showing average annual steady state copper production over the first six years of close to 40,000 tonnes of cathode.

5. Capstone Mining (TSX:

CS

)


Current price: C$1.54, year-to-date gain: 102.63 percent

Capstone Mining is a

base metals

-focused company with two producing copper mines: Pinto Valley in the US and Cozamin in Mexico. In addition, Capstone has the large-scale, 70 percent owned copper-

iron

Santo Domingo development project in Region III, Chile, in partnership with Korea Resources. The company also holds a portfolio of exploration properties.

In January, Capstone released its 2019 actual

production results

, which were above the midpoint guidance range of 145 million to 160 million pounds of copper for the year; actual costs were below the bottom end of the guidance range of US$1.80 to US$2 per pound of payable copper.

Due to COVID-19 challenges, the first quarter of the year saw Capstone

report a net loss

of $21.9 million, with copper production reaching 35.5 million pounds. The second quarter of the year saw the company take a turn and

report net income

of $4.3 million and copper production of 38.5 million pounds despite COVID-19-related production limitations at Cozamin.

In September, the company

released an updated technical report

for Cozamin, showing that proven and probable mineral reserves had increased by 97 percent.


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Securities Disclosure: I, Priscila Barrera, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

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