Mexico’s new president, Manual Lopez Obrador (AMLO), hasn’t taken office yet but his administration is already making waves.
First, he mothballed the under-construction new airport for Mexico City, a massive infrastructure project that many of the country’s biggest companies were working on. Next, he proposed a bill to change how banks can charge clients, to target the fee gouging that is rampant in Mexico. Immediately, Mexican banks collectively lost billions in market value.
I’m writing about AMLO because his party is also taking aim at the mining sector. A new bill before the senate would make significant changes to Mexico’s mining laws, including allowing the Energy Secretary to declare certain areas off limits for social or environmental reasons and requiring consent from indigenous communities before mining concessions are granted on their lands.
Indigenous consent is supposed to be required already, as the Mexican government signed an International Labor Organization agreement 30 years ago committing to consulting indigenous populations on projects that could impact them. But in reality, Mexico has only applied that fiverequirement to energy projects, and even with those the government has turned a blind eye to companies exerting extreme pressure on local populations to agree.
AMLO’s government has also suggested repeatedly that it might hike mining taxes. In September, the incoming minister of Economy, Graciela Marquez Colin, said “mining companies should pay an extraction levy, which would be used to mitigate the sector’s externalities.” It is true that Mexico’s mining taxes are below average, with taxation income amounting to 0.2% of GDP. That’s half the average across Latin America, even though Mexico generates 20% of the region’s mining exports. A better capture of the importance of mining to Mexico: mining represents 2.5% of GDP and employs more than 2 million people and the country received more than US$1 billion in mining foreign direct investment in 2017.
So how significant are these potential changes? So far it’s hard to know. AMLO took office Dec. 1. One of AMLO’s key economic advisers, when asked about the proposal, noted that it needs to be discussed. Another senator from the same party has spoken out against the changes. He called on his colleague to “think one, two, three times about what this would bring up because it will impact the country’s economic activity as well as Mexican and foreign investments.” He is lobbying other senators to reject the proposal, saying the government should not be “changing laws just for the sake of it.”
The market is already punishing miners with significant Mexican exposure – Fresnillo PLC (LON:FRES), for instance, lost 18% in two days on the news, while Industrias Penoles Sab De CV (MX:PENOLES) fell 15%. The reaction suggests that the changes are a done deal – but they are far from it.
Rather, the proposal has to be presented, debated, accepted or rejected, adapted, debated again, and so on. Since there is opposition even within the ruling party, the proposal will almost certainly be modified (diluted down) from its current state.
So are Mexican miners oversold? Probably – but this is not a buying opportunity. It will take time for this to all play out; during that time the only certainty will be uncertainty and the market never bets optimistically when faced with uncertainty. In addition, since mining is so important to Mexico the issue will grab lots of attention the entire time. That means news headlines will probably cause volatility in Mexican mining stocks for some time.
At the end of the day I bet permitting will slow for explorers and miners in Mexico as consultation requirements strengthen. And taxes could well increase, though probably not dramatically and an increase would bring taxation levels up to regional averages.
The changes will probably not be particularly significant for Mexican operators, which means they are oversold, but the timeline and headlines from here mean I don’t see this as an opportunity.