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Gold miners must invest in emerging markets for future -Randgold

By Susan Taylor

TORONTO, March 8 (Reuters) - The biggest risk facing the world's top gold producers is their reluctance to hunt for big new discoveries in emerging markets, with most sticking to so called safe jurisdictions, said the head of Randgold Resources Ltd on Wednesday.

The industry has since 2000 been mining gold at a faster rate than it finds new reserves and must intensify exploration and development in emerging markets to address supply problems, said Rangold Chief Executive Mark Bristow.

"What I'm preaching to the industry is the big guys have to go back to the emerging markets and invest long-term," he said, following an investor presentation in Toronto.

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"It's got to go beyond the comfort zone of the depleted and mature mining destinations of the past."

Randgold, which built and operates five mines in Mali, the Ivory Coast and the Democratic Republic of Congo, produced 1.25 million ounces of gold in 2016. Annual profit increased 38 percent over 2015, to $294.2 million, and production costs declined.

Global gold mine production is forecast to fall more than 7 percent between 2015, its peak year, and 2019, according to Thomson Reuters GFMS.

The scarcity of quality gold assets is the industry's top issue for 2017, Macquarie Research analysts say, given the "essentially bare" cupboard of large, new deposits.

Despite recent declines in mining equities, there is "a lot of money still wanting to be deployed in this sector," said Egizio Bianchini, the co-head of BMO's global metals and mining practice, at a Toronto mining conference.

"There is no shortage of money," he said, adding that "there is more capital than brains to deploy it."

For the past five years, the industry has discovered about 10 million ounces of gold annually, Bristow said, while producing 90 million ounces. To change that equation, miners must invest more in emerging countries, he added.

Miners must also shift their focus from short-term financial performance, measured and reported every three months, to sustained investments in partnerships and skills in host countries.

Bristow said gold mining was a key part of the global economy but the industry must make improvements to such areas as efficiency.

"We've got so much to do, I believe, to be able to play a proper role in the economy. And we have a real role to play given the outlook, the supply-demand equation with gold and the inherent risk the global currencies are facing," Bristow said. (Reporting by Susan Taylor; Editing by Andrew Hay)