Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

For the years ended December 31, 2014 and 2013

27. Financial instruments and related risk management

Cameco is exposed in varying degrees to a variety of risks from its use of financial instruments. Management and the board of directors, both separately and together, discuss the principal risks of our businesses. The board sets policies for the implementation of systems to manage, monitor and mitigate identifiable risks. Cameco’s risk management objective in relation to these instruments is to protect and minimize volatility in cash flow. The types of risks Cameco is exposed to, the source of risk exposure and how each is managed is outlined below.

Market risk

Market risk is the risk that changes in market prices, such as commodity prices, foreign currency exchange rates and interest rates, will affect the Company’s earnings or the fair value of its financial instruments. Cameco engages in various business activities which expose the Company to market risk. As part of its overall risk management strategy, Cameco uses derivatives to manage some of its exposures to market risk that result from these activities.

Derivative instruments may include financial and physical forward contracts. Such contracts may be used to establish a fixed price for a commodity, an interest-bearing obligation or a cash flow denominated in a foreign currency. Market risks are monitored regularly against defined risk limits and tolerances.

Cameco’s actual exposure to these market risks is constantly changing as the Company’s portfolios of foreign currency, interest rate and commodity contracts change.

The types of market risk exposure and the way in which such exposure is managed are as follows:

  • A. Commodity price risk

As a significant producer and supplier of uranium and nuclear fuel processing services, Cameco bears significant exposure to changes in prices for these products. A substantial change in prices will affect the Company’s net earnings and operating cash flows. Prices for Cameco’s products are volatile and are influenced by numerous factors beyond the Company’s control, such as supply and demand fundamentals and geopolitical events.

Cameco’s sales contracting strategy focuses on reducing the volatility in future earnings and cash flow, while providing both protection against decreases in market price and retention of exposure to future market price increases. To mitigate the risks associated with the fluctuations in the market price for uranium products, Cameco seeks to maintain a portfolio of uranium product sales contracts with a variety of delivery dates and pricing mechanisms that provide a degree of protection from pricing volatility.

Cameco does not hold any significant financial instruments that expose the Company to material commodity price risk as of the reporting date.

  • B. Foreign exchange risk

The relationship between the Canadian and US dollar affects financial results of the uranium business as well as the fuel services business. Sales of uranium product, conversion and fuel manufacturing services are routinely denominated in US dollars while production costs are largely denominated in Canadian dollars.

Cameco attempts to provide some protection against exchange rate fluctuations by planned hedging activity designed to smooth volatility. To mitigate risks associated with foreign currency, Cameco enters into forward sales and option contracts to establish a price for future delivery of the foreign currency. These foreign currency contracts are not designated as hedges and are recorded at fair value with changes in fair value recognized in earnings. Cameco also has a natural hedge against US currency fluctuations because a portion of its annual cash outlays, including purchases of uranium and conversion services, is denominated in US dollars.

Cameco holds a number of financial instruments denominated in foreign currencies that expose the Company to foreign exchange risk. Cameco measures its exposure to foreign exchange risk on financial instruments as the change in carrying values that would occur as a result of reasonably possible changes in foreign exchange rates, holding all other variables constant. As of the reporting date, the Company has determined its pre-tax exposure to foreign currency exchange risk on financial instruments to be as follows based on a 5% weakening of the Canadian dollar:

  Currency Carrying value 
(Cdn) 
Gain (loss) 
Cash and cash equivalents USD 123,089  6,154 
Accounts receivable USD 212,433  10,622 
Long-term receivables, investments and other USD 90,634  4,532 
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities USD (127,111) (6,356)
Net foreign currency derivatives USD (167,060) (87,746)

A 5% strengthening of the Canadian dollar against the currencies above at December 31, 2015 would have had an equal but opposite effect on the amounts shown above, assuming all other variables remained constant.

  • C. Interest rate risk

The Company has a strategy of minimizing its exposure to interest rate risk by maintaining target levels of fixed and variable rate borrowings. The proportions of outstanding debt carrying fixed and variable interest rates are reviewed by senior management to ensure that these levels are within approved policy limits. At December 31, 2015, the proportion of Cameco’s outstanding debt that carries fixed interest rates is 80% (2014 – 80%).

Cameco is exposed to interest rate risk through its interest rate swap contracts whereby fixed rate payments on a notional amount of $300,000,000 of the Series D senior unsecured debentures were swapped for variable rate payments. The swaps terminate on September 2, 2019. Under the terms of the swaps, Cameco makes interest payments based on the three-month Canada Dealer Offered Rate plus an average margin of 3.7% and receives fixed interest payments of 5.67%. At December 31, 2015, the fair value of Cameco’s interest rate swap assets was $10,783,000 (2014 – $2,978,000).

Cameco is also exposed to interest rate risk on its loan facility with Inkai and on NUKEM’s multicurrency revolving loan facility due to the variable nature of the interest rates contained in the terms therein.

Cameco measures its exposure to interest rate risk as the change in cash flows that would occur as a result of reasonably possible changes in interest rates, holding all other variables constant. As of the reporting date, the Company has determined the impact on earnings of a 1% increase in interest rate on variable rate financial instruments to be as follows:

  Gain (loss) 
Interest rate contracts $(3,029)
Advances receivable from Inkai 794 

No amounts were withdrawn against NUKEM’s revolving load facility as of December 31, 2015.

Counterparty credit risk

Counterparty credit risk is associated with the ability of counterparties to satisfy their contractual obligations to Cameco, including both payment and performance. Cameco’s sales of uranium product, conversion and fuel manufacturing services expose the Company to the risk of non-payment.

Cameco manages the risk of non-payment by monitoring the credit worthiness of its customers and seeking pre-payment or other forms of payment security from customers with an unacceptable level of credit risk. To mitigate risks associated with certain financial assets, Cameco will hold positions with a variety of large creditworthy institutions.

The maximum exposure to credit risk, as represented by the carrying amount of the financial assets, at December 31 was:

  2015 2014
Cash and cash equivalents $458,604 $566,583
Accounts receivable 240,626 435,479
Advances receivable from Inkai [note 32] 87,188 91,672
Derivative assets 11,143 3,889
Other 3,446

At December 31, 2015, there were no significant concentrations of credit risk and no amounts were held as collateral. Historically, Cameco has experienced minimal customer defaults and, as a result, considers the credit quality of its accounts receivable to be high. All accounts receivable at the reporting date are neither past due nor impaired.

Cameco has established programs for sales without recourse of trade accounts receivable to financial institutions. Through these programs, the Company surrenders the control, risks and benefits associated with the accounts receivable sold. The amount of receivables sold is recorded as a sale of financial assets and the balances are removed from the consolidated statement of financial position at the time of sale. The total amount of receivables sold under these programs and derecognized in accordance with IAS 39 during 2015 was $201,992,000 ($152,410,000 (USD)) (2014 ’ $145,477,000 ($130,295,000 (USD)).

Liquidity risk

Financial liquidity represents Cameco’s ability to fund future operating activities and investments. Cameco ensures that there is sufficient capital in order to meet short-term business requirements, after taking into account cash flows from operations and the Company’s holdings of cash and cash equivalents. The Company believes that these sources will be sufficient to cover the likely short-term and long-term cash requirements.

The table below outlines the Company’s available debt facilities at December 31, 2015:

  Total amount Outstanding and committed Amount available
Unsecured revolving credit facility $1,250,000 $ — $1,250,000
Letter of credit facilities 1,490,809 1,384,061 106,748
NUKEM multicurrency revolving loan facility 112,718 562 112,156

The tables below present a maturity analysis of Cameco’s financial liabilities, including principal and interest, based on the expected cash flows from the reporting date to the contractual maturity date:

  Carrying amount Contractual cash flows Due in less than 1 year Due in 1-3 years Due in 3-5 years Due after 5 years
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities $317,856 $317,856 $317,856 $ — $ — $ —
Dividends payable $39,579 $39,579 $39,579 $ — $ — $ —
Long-term debt 1,492,237 1,500,000 500,000 1,000,000
Foreign currency contracts 167,420 167,420 167,420
Other derivative liabilities 816 816 816
Total contractual repayments $2,017,908 $2,025,671 $525,671 $ — $500,000 $1,000,000
  Total Due in less than 1 year Due in 1-3 years Due in 3-5 years Due after 5 years
Total interest payments on long-term debt $544,380 $69,390 $138,780 $110,430 $225,780

Measurement of fair values

  • A. Accounting classifications and fair values

The following tables summarize the carrying amounts and accounting classifications of Cameco’s financial instruments at the reporting date:

As at December 31, 2015
  Fair value 
through 
profit 
or loss 
Loans and receivables Available for sale Other 
financial 
liabilities 
Total 
Financial assets          
Cash and cash equivalents $ —  $458,604 $ — $ —  $458,604 
Accounts receivable [note 7] —  246,865 —  246,865 
Derivative assets [note 11]          
Foreign currency contracts 360  —  360 
Interest rate contracts 10,783  —  10,783 
Investments in equity securities [note 11] —  938 —  938 
Advances receivable from Inkai [note 32] —  87,188 —  87,188 
Other —  3,446 —  3,446 
  $11,143  $796,103 $938 $ —  $808,184 
Financial liabilities          
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities [note 13] $ —  $ — $ — $317,856  $317,856 
Derivative payable —  39,579  39,579 
Derivative liabilities [note 16]          
Foreign currency contracts 167,420  —  167,420 
Other 816  —  816 
Long-term debt [note 15] —  1,492,237  1,492,237 
  168,236  1,849,672  2,017,908 
Net $(157,093) $796,103 $938 $(1,849,672) $(1,209,724)
As at December 31, 2014
  Fair value
through
profit
or loss 
Loans and receivables Available for sale Other 
financial 
liabilities 
Total 
Financial assets          
Cash and cash equivalents $ —  $566,583 $ — $ —  $566,583 
Accounts receivable [note 7] —  455,002 —  455,002 
Derivative assets [note 11]          
Foreign currency contracts 911  —  911 
Interest rate contracts 2,978  —  2,978 
Investments in equity securities [note 11] —  6,601 —  6,601 
Advances receivable from Inkai [note 32] —  91,672 —  91,672 
  $3,889  $1,113,257 $6,601 $ —  $1,123,747 
Financial liabilities          
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities [note 13] $ —  $ — $ — $316,258  $316,258 
Dividends payable —  39,579  39,579 
Derivative liabilities [note 16]          
Foreign currency contracts 67,916  —  67,916 
Long-term debt [note 15] —  1,491,198  1,491,198 
  67,916  1,847,035  1,914,951 
Net $(64,027) $1,113,257 $6,601 $(1,847,035) $(791,204)

Cameco does not have any financial instruments classified as held-for-trading, or held-to-maturity as of the reporting date.

The following tables summarize the carrying amounts and fair values of Cameco’s financial instruments that are measured at fair value, including their levels in the fair value hierarchy:

As at December 31, 2015
    Fair value
  Carrying value  Level 1 Level 2  Total 
Derivative assets [note 11]        
Foreign currency contracts $360  $ — $360  $360 
Interest rate contracts 10,783  10,783  10,783 
Investments in equity securities [note 11] 938  938 —  938 
Derivative liabilities [note 16]        
Foreign currency contracts (167,420) (167,420) (167,420)
Other (816) (816) (816)
Long-term debt [note 15] (1,492,237) (1,786,567) (1,786,567)
Net $(1,648,392) $938 $(1,943,660) $(1,942,722)
As at December 31, 2014
    Fair value
  Carrying value  Level 1 Level 2  Total 
Derivative assets [note 11]        
Foreign currency contracts $911  $ — $911  $911 
Interest rate contracts 2,978  2,978  2,978 
Investments in equity securities [note 11] 6,601  6,601 —  6,601 
Derivative liabilities [note 16]        
Foreign currency contracts (67,916) (67,916) (67,916)
Long-term debt [note 15] (1,491,198) (1,765,178) (1,765,178)
Net $(1,548,624) $6,601 $(1,829,205) $(1,822,604)

The preceding tables exclude fair value information for financial instruments whose carrying amounts are a reasonable approximation of fair value.

There were no transfers between level 1 and level 2 during the period. Cameco does not have any financial instruments that are classified as level 3 as of the reporting date.

  • B. Financial instruments measured at fair value

Cameco measures its derivative financial instruments, material investments in equity securities and long-term debt at fair value. Investments in publicly held equity securities are classified as a recurring level 1 fair value measurement while derivative financial instruments and long-term debt are classified as a recurring level 2 fair value measurement.

The fair value of investments in equity securities is determined using quoted share prices observed in the principal market for the securities as of the reporting date. The fair value of Cameco’s long-term debt is determined using quoted market yields as of the reporting date, which ranged from 0.6% to 2.2% (2014 – 1.2% to 2.3%).

Foreign currency derivatives consist of foreign currency forward contracts, options and swaps. The fair value of foreign currency options is measured based on the Black Scholes option-pricing model. The fair value of foreign currency forward contracts and swaps is measured using a market approach, based on the difference between contracted foreign exchange rates and quoted forward exchange rates as of the reporting date.

Interest rate derivatives consist of interest rate swap contracts. The fair value of interest rate swaps is determined by discounting expected future cash flows from the contracts. The future cash flows are determined by measuring the difference between fixed interest payments to be received and floating interest payments to be made to the counterparty based on Canada Dealer Offer Rate forward interest rate curves.

Where applicable, the fair value of the derivatives reflects the credit risk of the instrument and includes adjustments to take into account the credit risk of the Company and counterparty. These adjustments are based on credit ratings and yield curves observed in active markets at the reporting date.

  • C. Financial instruments not measured at fair value

The carrying value of Cameco’s cash and cash equivalents, accounts receivable and accounts payable and accrued liabilities approximates its fair value as a result of the short-term nature of the instruments.

Derivatives

The following table summarizes the fair value of derivatives and classification on the consolidated statements of financial position:

  2015  2014 
Non-hedge derivatives:    
Foreign currency contracts $(167,060) $(67,005)
Interest rate contracts 10,783  2,978 
Other (816) — 
Net $(157,093) $(64,027)
Classification:    
Current portion of long-term receivables, investments and other [note 11] $3,823  $500 
Long-term receivables, investments and other [note 11] 7,320  3,389 
Current portion of other liabilities [note 16] (168,236) (53,873)
Other liabilities [note 16] —  (14,043)
Net $(157,093) $(64,027)

The following table summarizes the different components of the losses on derivatives included in net earnings:

  2015  2014 
Non-hedge derivatives:    
Foreign currency contracts $(292,039) $(126,069)
Interest rate contracts 10,708  4,893 
Share purchase options 721  16 
Net $(280,610) $(121,160)