Morning, and I would like to welcome everyone to the Jupiter Mines Q3 call. Today we have Jupiter Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Brad Rogers, and Chief Financial Officer Melissa North to provide a brief update on the third quarter of the 2025 financial year, and then we will open up to questions from callers. Thanks, Brad. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much, and good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us. You will no doubt have seen our March quarterly activities report that was released to the market this morning. You'll see in that report that this is a business performing very well, and that's reflected in that quarterly activities report. As usual, I'll just give some overview comments touching on the key outcomes and themes that are summarized in that report, and then I'll turn the line over to any questions that you may wish to ask. Just starting with sales and production levels, sales were up 14% on last quarter, and overall, if we're looking at the financial year track, we're on track to deliver the 3.4 million tons for the full financial year that we typically seek to target.
Nine months in, we're on track for that, and that was supported by that strong sales quarter that we just delivered. Similarly, production was up 15% on last quarter, and that's enabled us to build quite strong stockpiles, more than three months of high-grade or abnormal sort of 3.4 million ton per annum run rate levels sitting in stockpile currently. Good sales, but even better production. Realized prices quarter on quarter were 8% higher, and I'll come back to what's going on with manganese prices and the market more generally later on in my comments. You'll also have noticed that cost of production decreased by 15% quarter on quarter, so that's quite material. Cost of $2.06 US per dmtu is much lower than we've seen for the last few quarters. What's going on there is mostly about strip ratio.
We're in a section of the pit that has a lower strip than what we've been in for the preceding quarters, and we expect to be in this section of the pit till at least the end of the June quarter. We should see lower than average levels of unit costs in the June quarter as well. The FX ratio helped a bit, so if we look at that, the US dollar cost of production was down about 15%. In Rand, we were down about 12.5%. There was a bit of assistance from the FX rate, but the underlying Rand costs were down in real terms as well. All of that, higher sales, improved pricing, and lower unit costs led to a very pleasing profit result. You'll see that EBITDA and NPAT were both up by about 65% on the prior quarter.
Mining during the quarter was impacted by wet weather. We flagged that in our last quarterly. It was not more than you would usually expect. It is the quarter of our financial year that is impacted by rain, and as you will note from my comments in relation to both production and sales and stockpiles, it will not impact our target for the full year. If you look at mining, both grade ore and waste mining were down 8% and 17% respectively on the previous quarter. If you compare to the preceding quarter, to make my point, rather than prior year comparative quarter, quarter three, FY 2024, the quarter just finished saw much higher mine volumes across both grade ore and waste volume.
Again, notwithstanding there were some wet weather impacts, there was still a strong quarter when you compare it to the most comparable quarter in the preceding financial year. As I mentioned in this detailed where we set out mining and production volume in further detail, high-grade ore processing was 15% higher than the previous quarter. Not surprisingly, there was no low-grade ore processed, although manganese prices came up a bit. That did not incentivize us to produce more low-grade. Notwithstanding, we have got some sitting on the stockpile, there was no low-grade produced or sold during the quarter. Logistics, not surprisingly, were stronger as well, up 26% on the last quarter where we saw a return of South African Road Haulage in order to meet the level of sales that we delivered in the quarter.
As we've already covered, export sales increased materially, and that was both an intention to remain on track for our full-year targeted sales volumes, but also to capitalize in quarter on some better manganese prices that we saw. In terms of cash, if you look at the total attributable cash, it was down slightly for two main reasons. Both of them were dividends. The chippy number is down because of the ZAR 300 million income dividend that was paid by chippy during the quarter. Jupiter's own cash is down slightly as well. Obviously, we had our normal operating costs, but we also, during the quarter, contributed some of our own cash, over AUD 2 million, to that interim dividend that was paid to shareholders during the quarter.
If you strip out the impact of that ZAR 300 million interim dividend that was paid by Tshipi, site-generated positive cash, net cash of ZAR 147 million. If you take out the impact of working capital, operating cash generation was quite strong at ZAR 564 million. If you look at the detail in our quarterly activities report, there was a working capital and an accounts receivable bill, and also an inventory bill for the reasons we mentioned before in the quarterly activities report. Notwithstanding, there was something of a working capital investment during the quarter and an interim dividend payment during the quarter, cash generation both operating cash and net cash. If you back out that interim dividend, it was quite strong.
I'll also point out here that the chippy cash on hand 100% level is AUD 60 million better than at the same time last year. This is a site that is performing well, strong sales and production, unit costs were pleasing, all of that resulted in good profitability and cash for the quarter. If we turn to the manganese market, you'll see that at quarter end, the 31st of March, manganese prices were 10% higher than they were at the end of December. This is really reflective of, during the quarter, fairly moderated levels of delivered manganese ore from the supply side, and that was reflecting lower manganese prices at the back end of last calendar year that was subsequently selling and then delivering into the March quarter, fairly moderated levels of supply.
Demand through the March quarter was steady and maybe even a bit better than expected. Both of those factors combined to support the manganese price that was higher during the quarter on a realized basis and also resulted in stock at Chinese ports being very much lower than average levels. You will see that in the quarterly activities report as well. With higher manganese prices through the quarter, you have seen some elevated levels of manganese supply towards the back end of the quarter and into the current quarter that we are in currently, and that has resulted in a moderating of manganese prices to the level that you can see in the quarterly activities report, FOB, about $3.23 US per dmtu, and that is about 5% lower than full-year average level. Not great, but not bad. Really, this is a market today that is being driven by sentiment.
There's really no new factors. There's an absence of downstream momentum, but that's nothing new that's been prevailing for the last few years. There was elevated manganese supply, but not drastically so, not as high as it got to last year. Given where manganese prices have moderated to now, that supply will again moderate. That will be a fairly short-lived increase in manganese supply. Chinese stocks will come up a bit from the level that we reported at the end of April, 3.7 million tons. That's very significantly lower than the last few years' average of, call it, 5.7-5.8 million tons. There's a lot of headroom in that level there. Overall, it's a market that's sort of waiting for inspiration.
Stocks are low, demand is sideways, nothing new there, but it is a market that's obviously also impacted by sentiment around global trade wars and those sorts of things. Inside the manganese market, there are really similar factors driving the price that we would be used to and we would expect. Really, it's been all about manganese supply, and we could better continue to both support the manganese price in the short term given the manganese price has run off a little bit. During this period of time, freight rates have remained quite low compared to what we've seen over the last few years. They were marginally lower quarter on quarter, and they remain about that level today, around $21-$22 per tonne for the sort of shipping that chippy uses. In summary, from an operational perspective, this was an outstanding quarter in every respect.
Sales were up, production was up, unit costs were down, profit was significantly up, and cash generation from an operating perspective and also a net cash perspective backing out the dividend were all strong and better than run rate and expectation. Manganese prices during the quarter were up on a realized basis and quarter end to quarter end compared to the December quarter, and that was really supported by what was going on with manganese supply in the back end of last calendar year. Manganese supply was low. Conversely, manganese supply increasing a bit in response to those slightly elevated manganese prices has caused the manganese price to come down a bit, but Chinese stocks are still low. The level of manganese price today will mean that manganese supply should moderate again.
Notwithstanding, post-quarter end, the manganese price has reduced a bit to a level that's around 5% lower than last year's average. We think looking forward, we should expect to see support at around about these levels. We do expect GEMCO to come back in based on South32's comments ramping up through the coming quarters, but we think that that's largely priced into the market that we're seeing today. Hopefully that overview is helpful. I'm happy to turn the call over to any questions that might be out there.
Thank you. If you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. If you wish to cancel your request, please press star two. If you're on a speakerphone, please pick up the handset to ask your question. The first question comes from John Schultz from Argonaut.
Please go ahead.
Hi Brad, Jim. Good result, like where the EBITDA is going here, and obviously it plays as well for the dividend in the full-year result. Just a question on GEMCO and its impact. With it out to the market, I mean, we obviously would have seen an impact to that high-grade supply globally. Could you give some insight into where high-grade versus that mid-grade sits at the moment in terms of stocks and maybe demand in China and sort of what you see GEMCO doing over the next few periods and how that could impact the market?
Yeah. I'll answer your first question last if that's okay, John. I think the most relevant thing for us is what the reintroduction of GEMCO supply does to the manganese prices that we're selling to.
My view is that we're sitting today at demand that's unexciting, that it's been unexciting, that's status quo for the last few years, and hopefully that changes at some point in time. We've been in this sort of sideways demand situation for the last few years, and we're sitting slightly below average manganese prices that we've seen for the last few years. For most of those last few years, GEMCO has been producing and supplying into the market. That is what I mean when I say I personally think that GEMCO is priced into the current market, which is being driven by sentiment, manganese supply going up and down on a prospective expected basis. We've seen that moving the market from South African ore volumes. We think that GEMCO is priced in, but we'll see.
The last simple question about what we've seen in the last few years and what supply and demand side of the manganese market has learned about high-grade versus semi-carbonate and chippy type ore. There traditionally is a grade premium of about $0.50 per dmtu between 36.5% benchmark semi-carbonate ore and the high-grade ore that Eramet, GEMCO, and some others sell into. That in the early days of the GEMCO disruption widened, and that's not surprising. Obviously, that was the tighter section of the market, and so we saw the grade premiums blow out. Subsequently, something interesting happened, which was Chinese alloy plants and traders being nimble and responding to that shortage. In part, that benefited semi-carbonate ore.
They increased the usage from what they would ordinarily do of chippy type ores, but they also processed high-grade ore slag that was in China already, so waste essentially containing manganese, and increased the use of some ores like guanine ores that typically don't go into the seaborne steel market. They would go into the production of electrolytic manganese metal, for example. That actually resulted in a narrowing of that premium, and we've now seen sort of a moderation back to more normal type premium levels, John. It is something where I think the market's demonstrated that it can respond to high-grade ore shortages, and in part, that benefits demand for our ore. I think, though, there are trade-offs in terms of that substitution, in terms of what it costs to produce alloys, and the market would prefer while it's available to use GEMCO type ore.
I think that premium probably goes back to about where it was, and we're seeing indications of that now, John.
Thanks for that. Maybe just one more in the Kalahari, how we've seen the M&A and consolidation of chippy, maybe what's happening with Anglo and South32 next year, what's happening up the road with some of the other operations, and is Exxaro still knocking on the door of everybody? Maybe you can give some insight into that.
Good question. Obviously, difficult to answer that given kind of what we're working on. Obviously, it's part of a public strategy that we're interested in driving value, and we believe that there is value to be driven through consolidation within the Kalahari for all the reasons that are set out in our strategy. That's ongoing work from Jupiter, and there are many aspects to that.
Yes, there are parties who are interested given the quality of these assets, including chippy, in getting involved in that consolidation. The strategy of consolidation and the idea that it will drive incremental value through being able to operate and grow these assets more efficiently than you can under joint control structures is common logic. You can see from the quarterly result we reported today how valuable chippy is as we think the best asset in the Kalahari. That is a very roundabout way of answering your question without really answering it, John. There is confidential work going on. We are very focused on that as part of our strategy.
I think South32 and Anglo have both made somewhat public comments about their intentions for their assets there, but I'd say everyone, including all of those parties, believe that consolidated ownership of these assets so that they can be operated and controlled in a more direct and efficient way will be a better answer than how they're set up currently. There is work going on with different parties involved, involving different assets, I'm sure, and Jupiter's part of that in terms of our own scope of influence.
Excellent. Thanks for that. Looking forward to updates. I'll pass it on.
Thank you. Once again, if you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone. Your next question comes from Mark Fisher from Foster Stockbroking. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, Brad. Just a question on the low-grade ore.
What price would you need the high-grade manganese price to be for you to contemplate starting shipping low-grade ore?
Yeah. Thanks, Mark. Overall, what we're trying to do is hit 3.4 million tons and maximize the proportion of high-grade within that 3.4 million tons. It is not as simple as saying at a certain price we're looking to put low-grade out if we've got good stockpiles, and we do want to maintain at least three months' worth of high-grade ore in stockpile. At the moment, we've got more than that, then we'll look at maximizing the amount of high-grade ore we're putting out even if we've got some low-grade.
If you're in a market like we were in briefly last year, June, July, where the market was hungry for more material, everyone knows we've got low-grade ore on stockpiles, and that certainly does incentivize putting some low-grade ore out there. We have, at other times, also put some low-grade into the market just to generate a bit of cash notwithstanding it was just basically washing its face and sitting there on stockpile. We've got several million tons of that material, and clearing a bit of stockpile space and generating a bit of cash notwithstanding at not very exciting prices is something we can occasionally do. If you look at the prices that prevailed through the March quarter, given everything I've just said, that did not kind of incentivize to put any low-grade ore out there.
I'd say somewhere between where we were in March and where we got to in June, July last year, all other things being equal, would be thinking about low-grade. There is demand out there for that material even in sort of more moderated markets that we've seen, but we also want to be thoughtful around supporting the high-grade ore price and not putting low-grade ore in unless there's a really good return in doing it, particularly if we can hit our run rates as we have done through the March quarter with 100% high-grade ore.
Okay. Thanks. Just a final question. Just on the high-purity manganese sulphate study, I understand you're looking to complete the PFS this year. How's that progressing, I guess, in light of also the demand for critical minerals, especially in the U.S.? Thanks.
Thanks, Mark. Yeah. We are progressing there.
The work that we're doing in relation to the PFS is focused on the technical side of that PFS study and the customer side. We think that that's proven in a situation we have, which is that battery makers and vehicle makers are still doing their work in relation to the future that they see for electric vehicles. One of the biggest drivers across the supply chain is reducing the cost of electric vehicle batteries, and manganese has a really important role to play in that because it's cheaper and more available than other cathode battery metals.
That is why, regardless of whether it is LFP looking to move to LFMP, the sort of more typical Chinese cathode chemistries that we think will become more prevalent in the world, or other NMC and LNO, Western-type cathode chemistries looking to either introduce or increase the amount of manganese, that is an ongoing trend. We believe in the thematic, and that is why we are continuing to do the work. The way that we are doing the work is to focus on what we think will benefit from effort right now, and that is building a pilot plant, sharing some material with customers. All of that goes to proving up off-take demand, and that is what is important before we will move into the definitive feasibility study phase. That phase will cost more money.
Ultimately, what we need to do, what we think is important and prudent, is to get to a stage where we can underwrite through committed off-takes 100,000 tons per annum of HPMSM demand for at least five and ideally seven years. The payback in our study is about three and a half, four years. What we are looking to do is de-risk the capital investment, and we think that will place us in quite a strong investable position. The market is not there yet. Notwithstanding, this is a growing market, and we can see real moves towards greater manganese use, as I mentioned. If you go out to non-Chinese buyers of HPMSM today and ask them to commit to a number that they will put in writing both price and volume in, and call it 2028, they cannot do it yet.
They'll say, "Keep talking to us." This is a market that is going to grow rapidly. Yes, if you look at our strategy update, we say, "PFS this year, BFS next year." That is kind of a square bracketed intention. If we get to the stage of being able to move into a BFS, but we still do not see the market there ready to stand behind the volumes in terms of the people we are talking to, then we will keep talking to them because while the returns are attractive and we believe in the thematic and there are many ways to monetize this opportunity, and we think Jupiter is competitively well-positioned, we do not think it is prudent to move ahead of where the customer market is, and we do not think it is prudent for Jupiter to take volume risk on this very new market.
Okay. Thanks.
Thank you.
Once again, if you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone. We'll now pause a moment to allow for any final questions to register. There are no further questions at this time. I'll now hand back to Brad for closing remarks.
Okay. Great. Thank you very much for joining the call today. I hope you had time to read the quarterly, but if not, I've provided the key comments here today and just leaving you with the key takeaways, which was sites performing well, sales, production, unit costs, earnings, cash generation, all strong and above trend in a market where we saw improved manganese prices and towards the tail end some moderation there.
We think the kind of risks that have driven that moderation of price in manganese supply should pull back a bit, and that should support prices around current levels and hopefully a bit better through the coming quarter. Thanks again for your time, and look forward to talking to you next quarter.
Thank you. That does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.