Gold Medal - Maverick miner rubs some the wrong way, but his creativity usually pays off .MOST INNOVATIVE CEO - ROB McEWENUS GOLD CORP. (OTC: USGL) AGE: 56 | YEARS AT THE COMPANY: 1Goldcorp
Inc.'s friendly bid to acquire Glamis Gold Ltd., turning two mid-tier
players into the world's third largest gold' producer, may have
surprised some people when it was announced on Aug. 31. After all, the
$8.6-billion all-stock purchase would be the second-largest gold deal
ever, behind only Barrick Gold Corp.'s acquisition of Placer Dome Inc.
in March. And it comes less than two years after Glamis launched a
bitterly fought and ultimately unsuccessful hostile takeover bid
for-you guessed it - Goldcorp.
But no one should be surprised by
Rob McEwen's strong reaction. A5 founder and former chairman and CEO of
Goldcorp, it was McEwen who brazenly built the company out of next to
nothing through smart financial arrangements and innovative uses of
technology-not to mention staring down a union in a 46-month strike,
death threat included. In the process, McEwen turned the nearly
shuttered Red Lake gold mine into one of the industry's biggest success
stories and emerged as a prominent, often controversial figure in the
gold industry who blazes his own trail. And it doesn't often pay to put
a bee in his bonnet or make what he feels is an unsuitable offer for
his baby.
Even though McEwen stepped aside from Goldcorp in
200S, he's still the company's largest non-institutional shareholder,
with 1.5% of shares. And he's not happy about the Glamis deal-not with
the price, not with how Goldcorp shares have dropped 27.7% in the month
since the announcement and certainly not with how Goldcorp shareholders
won't get to vote on the deal. He argues the company has violated
Ontario corporate law, so he's busy drumming up enough support to force
the board to hold a meeting, and commencing an application with the
Superior Court of Justice (Ontario) for a compliance order. Goldcorp
intends, it says, to "vigorously defend" itself, but in short order,
McEwen has cast dark shadows of doubt over the deal.
Say this
much about Robert R. McEwen: he isn't timid. But his style sometimes
overshadows the fact that he is also on the cutting edge of the mining
industry - so much so that McEwen was selected Most Innovative
Executive by Canadian Business and a pane! of experts through an open
call for nominations last spring. As many surprising twists and turns
as his career has had - and continues to have - McEwen has consistently
proven to be a maverick. Whether he's busy challenging a merger deal,
using the web to find gold or founding a new exploration company that
within months launches four concurrent takeover bids, there is no doubt
that McEwen does it his way.
The gold industry is hardly the
first sector one thinks of when it comes to innovation. Mining is,
after all, a gritty business: an expensive, labour-intensive and
sometimes controversial pursuit of a malleable mineral buried deep in
rock. How antiquated. Even gold's status as a store of wealth is
waning. But that doesn't stop McEwen from playing the promoter, gladly
trying to make the gold industry relevant to today's investors. "People
probably aren't comfortable with the sector. They think it's an old
industry, that it's not exciting, that it doesn't incorporate the
technologies of the modern world," McEwen says. "In an industry that a
lot of investors view as very speculative or risky, the people.
operating in it tend to be very conservative-and overly conservative."
No
wonder McEwen stands out. He transformed Goldcorp from a moribund
investment fund into one of the world's most dynamic gold diggers. He
launched the Goldcorp Challenge, a now-famous online contest that
offered prize money to people who could help him find gold. His Red
Lake mine was the first to use a virtual reality lab so that engineers
and geologists could view three-dimensional renderings of the deposit.
McEwen's tactics are those of someone who isn't afraid to challenge
convention, in his pursuit of one of the most precious minerals on
earth.
Now 56, McEwen caught the gold bug as a teenager in the
1960s, listening to his father talk at the dining room table about his
travels around the world, a return to hard currency and his investments
in gold. McEwen followed his father into the investment industry, and
the two were briefly business partners running McEwen Easson, a small
securities firm that specialized in mining. But something was missing.
"The stock market is dealing with abstract concepts. You have paper.
And I wanted to see if I could build something. I wanted something
tangible," says McEwen. Although McEwen recognized that finding the
mother lode was highly unlikely, he was drawn to how it was possible.
"The type of return you could get in that industry could create
financial independence," he says. "When I stepped down from Goldcorp,
I'd met all of the objectives I'd set for myself in terms of financial
independence and building something."
And then some. Goldcorp
was originally a closed-ended investment fund that McEwen's father
started in 1983 to hold shares in gold mining companies and bullion.
McEwen gained control of the fund upon his father's death in 1986. The
next year, the fund's market value had fallen to where it was trading
at roughly a 50% discount of its net asset value, and shareholders
wanted to break it up. Instead, McEwen set about turning Goldcorp into
an operating company. First step: remove the prohibitions on debt and
constraints on owning companies. Step o. 2: wait for the right
opportunity.
In 1989, he spotted Dickinson Mines, whose major
holding was the Red Lake Mine in northwestern Ontario. It was a
high-cost operation, about 45 years old, saddled with labour woes. Most
in the industry expected it to close down within a few years. McEwen
wasn't one of them. The mine was adjacent to Placer Dome's Campbell
Mine, where some $100 million had been spent on exploration and capital
investment in the previous 15 years. Dickinson hadn't spent anything at
Red Lake, even though it sat on the same deposit. All it needed was a
complete financial overhaul, a large infusion of cash and all new
technology. After a contentious court fight with a rival investor,
McEwen acquired Dickinson Mines.
After a battle to reconstitute
the board, McEwen cleaned house, and then put more than just a
financial stake in the industry: he became a mining executive. Coming
from the fast-paced investment world, the mining industry seemed to
operate at a glacial pace, but McEwen moved swiftly. By 2000, he had
consolidated five companies into one, Goldcorp, and eliminated a
multiple-voting share structure that had given him ownership control
but weighed down the stock. By getting rid of that protection, he also
got around a Toronto Stock Exchange rule that kept him from leveraging
all of his assets. "The whole purpose;" he says, "was to concentrate
value in one company." He'd also financially restructured the former
Dickinson Mines, eliminating $50 million in debt, tightening its cost
controls and finally putting it in a position to go drilling for more
gold - just as the only geologist on his board was advising him to dump
the Red Lake mine.
In March 1995, his geologists started finding
gold-at 30 times the concentration of what they were currently mining.
It breathed new life into Red Lake. But a year later, the union,
represented by United Steelworkers, went on strike. At the time, the
price of gold was about $380. Red Lake's cost of production was $360.
Within a few months, the price of gold fell below that economic
threshold, and the well-timed strike bought the time McEwen needed to
remake the mine.
During the 46-month strike, McEwen accelerated
exploration and pushed his management to lose their pessimism, think
big and take control of their own destiny. Despite gold's steadily
falling price, Goldcorp's stock kept going up because of its
discoveries. In 1999, while workers watched from the picket line, part
of the old Red Lake mine was torn down, and construction began on a
new, state-of-the-art mine, full of the latest technologies to keep the
cost of production low.
So far, so good. But McEwen was about to turn the industry on its ear.
The best ideas don't solve one problem-they solve many problems at once.
McEwen
had a big problem on his hands in 1999: Placer Dome was watching
Goldcorp with interest. With its Campbell Mine right next door to Red
Lake, it intimately knew about the deposit both mines sat on. McEwen
sensed that a takeover might be in the offing. But instead of tidying
things up, he accelerated exploration to keep the share price tracking
up. He gathered all of his geologists together for a two-day
brainstorming session, and they revisited every idea that had been shot
down or not shared. McEwen insisted on an open format-no hierarchies,
no titles, no seniority. "We came away with a lot of really good
ideas;' recalls McEwen. "Everybody was charged up and went off with a
new sense of vigour and purpose. And I walked away thinking, How do we
do that on a larger scale?"
Not long after, he attended a
weeklong session at Massachusetts Institute of Technology that served
as a crash course on the future of information technology - something
that McEwen knew the mining industry sorely lacked. On the third day,
he was listening to a presentation about Linux and the open-source
model for developing operating system software, when he had his eureka
moment. "All of a sudden," he recalls, "there was this explosion that
went off in my head. There's the template I'm looking for!"
McEwen's
brainwave? The Goldcorp Challenge, the now-famous contest launched in
March 2000 with US$575,000 in prize money: the company posted all its
proprietary mining data on a website and asked the world to help them
find Red Lake's next six million ounces of gold. His managers and
geologists were wary. The mining industry thought it was not only
childish but foolhardy, like laying down a welcome mat for a takeover.
McEwen thought otherwise. Placer Dome likely already knew as well as he
did what Goldcorp was sitting on. By giving away his database, everyone
in the industry would be right up to speed should Placer Dome make a
bid. In other words, it snatched away any competitive advantage.
The
high-profile contest did much more, too. When the 400-megabyte file was
released, it was tile largest publicly available database of its kind
on a current gold discovery. But it also marked tile first time that
Goldcorp had all of the deposit's data in one place. Previously, data
was split into three separate databases for the top, middle and bottom
portions of the deposit. The contest proved to be a catalyst toward
integrating those databases, and that effort later enabled the mine to
use visualization tools and computer graphics. Red Lake became the
first mine to use a virtual-reality lab (a concept borrowed from the
oil-and-gas industry), so that mining engineers and geologists could
view 3-D renderings of the deposit on a 24-foot-wide screen.
In
all, 1,400 people from 50 countries downloaded the file. Of the 110
submissions that were viewed as semi-finalists, 50% of the targets were
brand new to Goldcorp-and they had an 80% success rate. "We found the
six in ill ion ounces we were looking for;' says McEwen. "It changed
the mindset of the people working for the company. It was a
breakthrough and showed what was possible." When the strike began, the
mine was producing 53,000 ounces of gold a year, at a cost of $ 360 an
ounce. In 2000, after the strike was settled and the first full year of
production, Red Lake produced just over 500,000 ounces, and at a cost
of $60 per ounce - a 10-fold increase in production at one-sixth the
cost.
As fondly as McEwen remembers his hard-fought successes at
Red Lake and Goldcorp, he doesn't regret his decision to step aside
from the company in 2005. And he's adamant that his current opposition
to Goldcorp's acquisition of Glamis has nothing to do with his past
run-ins with the latter company. "It's all about value," he says. "The
last time Glamis came along, they offered us [Goldcorp] a 22% premium.
But here you have Goldcorp turning around and offering a 30% premium,
and thee only thing that's changed in Glamis is that they've acquired a
silver deposit that isn't permitted yet. And that's made it attractive
enough for it to swing 50% in value?"
Despite McEwen's current
campaign to halt the Glamis deal, Goldcorp is largely in his past. He
has plenty of other potential nuggets to mine. In 2003, he and his
wife, Cheryl, established the McEwen Centre for Regenerative Medicine,
which will officially open its doors in Toronto this month, to fund
research into treatments based on a patient's own tissues, cells and
DNA. It's an exciting field, and has introduced McEwen to the biotech
industry, where he sees tantalizing similarities to gold mining:
probabilities of success are low, lead times are long, it's expensive
and, as he says, "you can hit some pretty good home runs there."
McEwen's
not done with gold, either. His current passion: Nevada's Cortez Trend,
a hotbed of speculative gold exploration by both juniors and industry
giants such as Newmont Mining Corp. and Barrick. (In fact, McEwen
figures that about half the price Barrick paid for Placer Dome earlier
this year was for its Nevada properties.) McEwen's own fledgling US
Gold Corp. is a Colorado-based exploration company he bought a third of
in July 2005. McEwen is trying to structure his new company as
something of a hybrid: the land package and aggressive exploration
budget of a senior, the treasury and market capitalization of an
intermediate and the potential pop of a junior-should it strike gold.
"One of the joys of running a company is the liberty to experiment, and
to test ideas," he says. "When you do it once and it works, you're
encouraged to do it again. And then you pick up the pace."
Consider
McEwen's approach with US Gold. It owns the Tonkin Springs
property-smack dab in the middle of the Cortez Trend. It's surrounded
by stakes owned by four Canadian juniors: Nevada Pacific Gold Ltd.,
White Knight Resources Ltd., Tone Resources Ltd. and Coral Gold
Resources Ltd. In March, McEwen made a characteristically bold move: he
launched concurrent takeover bids for all four. "Bidding for one
company is sometimes complicated," he says. "Bidding for two is
problematic. But going for four - I haven't seen consolidation like
that before. But I just looked at it and went, Well, I don't want to do
it sequentially, it will take too long. Let's get it done and get our
base, and then we can go from there. To me, if you want to build a
company, let's start now."
It hasn't all gone according to plan,
with McEwen blaming some faulty legal advice about cross-border
securities regulations for why the deals aren't done yet. McEwen, as
always, remains undeterred. "I don't like standing in line," he says.
"I know if I step into the line, I'm only going to get to my
destination as fast as the person in front of me. Whenever I've stepped
out of line, I've gotten to the front of the line well before the
people I would've stood behind. You have to change, you have to take
positions that are controversial. Otherwise, what differentiates you in
the market?"
Author: Andrew Wahl
- Download
Article
-