Taseko Mines revenue suffers due to copper price drop in 2022

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Taseko Mines Ltd on Wednesday said revenue was down, as copper prices and rising fuel costs impacted earnings.

The Vancouver-based mining company mainly focused in North America reported revenue for 2022 was $391.6 million, down 9.6% from 433.3 million in 2021. Revenue for the three months to December 31 was $100.6 million, down just 2.3% from the previous year.

The company said earnings were affected by lower average copper prices, at $3.99 per pound, compared to $4.23 per pound in 2021, and higher production costs due to an increase in fuel costs.

The revenue increase in the fourth quarter was due to an upwards move in copper and molybdenum prices, according to President and Chief Financial Officer Stuart McDonald.

The company posted a net loss of $26.0 million, swinging from a net income of $36.5 million the year before.

Basic earnings per share also swung to a loss of $0.09, from $0.13 the year prior.

‘We are very excited about the long-term fundamentals of our North American copper business. Improved copper production from Gibraltar and continued robust copper pricing is setting Taseko up for a year of strong financial returns,’ McDonald commented.

During 2022, the company milled 30.3 million tonnes of copper at its Gibraltar project in British Columbia, increasing 3.8% from 29.2 million tonnes in 2021.

Sales decreased marginally to 101.3 million pounds of copper, 3.4% less than 104.9 million tonnes a year ago.

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