(Repeats story originally published on Friday)
By Susan Taylor and Rod Nickel
TORONTO, March 3 (Reuters) - As mineral and metal prices
have rebounded from a slump, so have the fortunes of small
miners, and some industry experts are predicting even better
times, ahead of the industry's biggest conference for explorers
and developers.
Brighter prospects will be in focus at the Prospectors and
Developers Association of Canada's conference in Toronto, Sunday
through Wednesday.
The world's top miners are increasingly investing in
exploration companies early on, taking "toehold" minority stakes
to boost their odds of success.
"Majors have gutted their own exploration departments," said
Theophile Yameogo, mining and metals advisory leader at
consultant EY Canada. "They don't want to do leap-of-faith
drilling."
After three years of declines, the world's junior miners
showed a 7.4 percent uptick in equity financing to $7.29 billion
in 2016, according to Thomson Reuters data.
They raised another $1.25 billion in January and February,
well above $466.6 million a year earlier.
Supply constraints and healthy demand have lifted prices for
several base metals. Copper, for example, touched a 20-month
high of $6,204 a tonne in February, while zinc jumped from below
$1,600 a tonne to $2,860 over the last year. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL4N1FY2VG
urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL5N1GE631
Political and economic uncertainty has helped support gold
prices. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL5N1F24M2
"I believe the industry has seen its darkest days and is
soon to be way up," said Richard Schodde, managing director of
exploration adviser MinEx Consulting.
Goldcorp G.TO , the world's No. 3 gold miner, acquired
stakes of 12.5 percent in Auryn Resources AUG.TO and 19.9
percent in Independence Gold IGO.V in the past year.
Major Drilling MDI.TO , the second-biggest provider of
drilling services to miners, told analysts on a recent
conference call that customer inquiries were increasing
alongside industry demand.
But even as the outlook improves for junior miners, Canada
is losing its status as the preferred exploration destination,
said the Mining Association of Canada, which points to
regulatory delays, inadequate infrastructure and the recent
elimination of tax incentives.
Australia took top prize as the world's best country for
mining investment for the second consecutive year in 2016, based
on policy and mineral potential, according to the Fraser
Institute's annual survey of 2,700 miners. Canada dropped to
second place, followed by the United States.
Australia's share of the global gold exploration budget grew
by 4.3 percentage points, to 15.5 percent, from 2011 to 2016.
Meanwhile, Canada's fell to 14.8 percent from 20.6 percent, data
from S&P Global Market Intelligence's SNL Metals & Mining unit
shows.
Both countries have lost market share to the rest of the
world, and Canada is simply feeling the pain ahead of Australia,
Schodde said.
"Canada was earlier to peak than Australia," he said. "So
the gas tank is a little more empty in Canada."
(Reporting by Susan Taylor in Toronto, Rod Nickel in Winnipeg
and Nicole Mordant in Vancouver; Editing by Denny Thomas and
Lisa Von Ahn)
((susan.taylor1@thomsonreuters.com; +1 416 941 8083; Reuters
Messaging: susan.taylor1.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
Keywords: MINING CONFERENCE/