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Collective Mining Discovers Plutus, a New Major Porphyry Centre Located Five Hundred Metres East of the Apollo Porphyry System

  • Exploration fieldwork has discovered a new porphyry target located five hundred metres east of the high-grade Apollo Porphyry Deposit and referred to as the Plutus Porphyry Centre (“Plutus”).
  • To date, Plutus covers 1,000 metres by 720 metres in area and hosts multiple mineralization styles including porphyry veining, porphyry related breccia mineralization and late-stage carbonate base metal (‘CBM”) veins.
  • Within Plutus are two areas of interest:
  • Reconnaissance rock chip and shallow auger sampling of oxidized (leached) surface material at Plutus has yielded the following results:
  • Drilling is expected to commence at Plutus in August 2023. Four rigs are now operating at the project with eleven holes currently in the lab for analysis.  Additional assay results are expected in the near term from further drilling at Apollo and surrounding targets.

Ari Sussman, Executive Chairman commented: “The Guayabales project continues to demonstrate its remarkable geological endowment. Hard work by the technical team has outlined the Plutus Porphyry Centre, which is the largest target outlined to date at the project. Given the sheer scale of Plutus, three pads are being constructed ahead of drilling which is expected to commence in mid to late August. We will be aggressive in testing Plutus and are hopeful of making another discovery to rival the Apollo porphyry system.”

TORONTO, July 18, 2023 /CNW/ – Collective Mining Ltd. (TSXV: CNL) (OTCQX: CNLMF) (“Collective” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce assay results and field observations from recent reconnaissance exploration work undertaken in the new Plutus Porphyry Centre (“Plutus”), located 500 metres east of the Apollo porphyry system (“Apollo”) at the Guayabales project located in Caldas, Colombia.

Apollo is a high-grade, bulk tonnage copper-silver-gold system, which owes its excellent metal endowment to an older copper-silver and gold porphyry system being overprinted by younger precious metal rich, carbonate base metal vein systems (intermediate sulphidation porphyry veins) within a magmatic, hydrothermal inter-mineral breccia and diorite porphyry bodies currently measuring 455 metres x 395 metres x 915 metres and open for expansion.

To watch a short video of Richard Tosdal, renowned porphyry expert and Special Advisor to Collective Mining, review the Plutus discovery please click here.

Details (See Figures 1-3)

This press release outlines results from surface reconnaissance exploration work undertaken at the newly discovered Plutus Porphyry Centre (“Plutus”). Plutus is located 500 metres to the east of the Apollo Porphyry in an area with very sparse outcrop due to landslide and ash cover. Results and observations from Plutus are summarized below.

The Plutus porphyry centre measures 1,000 metres by 720 metres in area and is defined by a large porphyry intrusive in contact with breccia to its north-west. The intrusive body is outlined by soil anomalies of copper, molybdenum, gold, tungsten, tin and bismuth which are coincident with a magnetic susceptibility high. Soil copper values greater than 500 parts per million (“ppm”) and 30 ppm molybdenum with highest values up to 1,482 ppm copper and 127 ppm molybdenum define a 650-metre diameter area outlining the porphyry body. Surface geochemical soil, auger and rock sampling assay results from Plutus displays the following ranges of results:

Rock Chip

  • Gold rock chip values up to 4.90 g/t (range of 0.03 g/t to 4.90 g/t);
  • Silver rock chip values up to 100 g/t (range of 0.10 g/t to 100 g/t);
  • Copper rock chip values up to 1,290 ppm (56 ppm to 1,290 ppm);
  • Molybdenum rock chip values up to 102 ppm (0.2 ppm to 102 ppm).

Soil

  • Gold soil values up to 4.80 g/t (range of 0.03 g/t to 4.80 g/t);
  • Silver soil values up to 364 g/t (range of 0.10 g/t to 364 g/t);
  • Copper soil values up to 835 ppm (0.3 ppm to 835 ppm);
  • Molybdenum soil values up to 127 ppm (0.5 ppm to 127 ppm).

Auger

  • Gold auger values up to 3.72 g/t (range of 0.03 g/t to 3.72 g/t);
  • Silver auger values up to 56 g/t (range of 0.02 g/t to 56 g/t);
  • Copper auger values up to 1,482 ppm (69 ppm to 1,482 ppm);
  • Molybdenum auger values up to 113 ppm (1 ppm to 113 ppm).

The amount of rock and weathered exposures in the Plutus target area is limited to a few sparse outcrops due to vegetation, historical landslides, and volcanic ash cover.

Observations from surface mapping of the sparse outcrops and logging of auger drilling chips highlights the presence of porphyry-related mineralization, including magnetite veins as well as pyrite, chalcopyrite and molybdenite sulphide and quartz A, B, EB, and D type porphyry veins. The quartz diorite porphyry exhibits both potassic and sericite alteration.

A north-western breccia area with multiple outcrops is located contiguous with the porphyry intrusive body and includes the Donut Breccia discovery where previous drilling intercepts included 163 metres @ 1.3 g/t AuEq from surface in DOC-3 and 104 metres @ 1.3 g/t AuEq from surface in DOC-2 (see press release dated November 15, 2021 and October 18, 2021, respectfully). Follow up work in the breccia area has identified additional outcrops located to the west and east of the area previously drill tested with assay results pending from channel sampling of limited available exposures.

One rig will be mobilized to Plutus with drilling expected to commence in August 2023.

Apollo Drill Program Outline and Assay Update

The 2023 Phase II drilling program is advancing on schedule with 24 holes completed and results announced with an additional eleven holes awaiting assay results from the lab. The objective of the 2023 drilling program is to define high-grade near surface mineralization of the Apollo porphyry system, expand the size of the system through step-out and directional drilling and drill test multiple new targets generated through grassroots exploration. Since the announcement of the discovery hole at Apollo in June 2022, a total of 55 drill holes (approximately 23,907 metres) has been completed and assayed.

Figure 1: Location of Apollo and Plutus Porphyry Centres (CNW Group/Collective Mining Ltd.)
Figure 1: Location of Apollo and Plutus Porphyry Centres (CNW Group/Collective Mining Ltd.)
Figure 2A and 2B: Plutus Porphyry Centre as Outlined by Copper and Molybdenum in-Soil, Auger and Rock Chip Geochemistry, Superimposed on Magnetic Susceptibility Data - Copper (CNW Group/Collective Mining Ltd.)
Figure 2A and 2B: Plutus Porphyry Centre as Outlined by Copper and Molybdenum in-Soil, Auger and Rock Chip Geochemistry, Superimposed on Magnetic Susceptibility Data – Copper (CNW Group/Collective Mining Ltd.)
Figure 2A and 2B: Plutus Porphyry Centre as Outlined by Copper and Molybdenum in-Soil, Auger and Rock Chip Geochemistry, Superimposed on Magnetic Susceptibility Data - Molybdenum (CNW Group/Collective Mining Ltd.)
Figure 2A and 2B: Plutus Porphyry Centre as Outlined by Copper and Molybdenum in-Soil, Auger and Rock Chip Geochemistry, Superimposed on Magnetic Susceptibility Data – Molybdenum (CNW Group/Collective Mining Ltd.)
Figure 3: Plan View of the Guayabales Project Highlighting the Plutus Target (CNW Group/Collective Mining Ltd.)
Figure 3: Plan View of the Guayabales Project Highlighting the Plutus Target (CNW Group/Collective Mining Ltd.)

About Collective Mining Ltd.

To see our latest corporate presentation and related information, please visit www.collectivemining.com

Founded by the team that developed and sold Continental Gold Inc. to Zijin Mining for approximately $2 billion in enterprise value, Collective Mining is a copper, silver, and gold exploration company with projects in Caldas, Colombia. The Company has options to acquire 100% interests in two projects located directly within an established mining camp with ten fully permitted and operating mines.

The Company’s flagship project, Guayabales, is anchored by the Apollo target, which hosts the large-scale, bulk-tonnage and high-grade copper-silver-gold Apollo porphyry system. The Company’s near-term objective is to drill the shallow portion of the porphyry system, continue to expand the overall dimensions of the system through step out and direction drilling, which remains open in most directions and drill test multiple new targets generated through grassroots exploration.

Management, insiders and close family and friends own nearly 45% of the outstanding shares of the Company and as a result, are fully aligned with shareholders. The Company is listed on the TSXV under the trading symbol “CNL” and on the OTCQX under the trading symbol “CNLMF”.

Qualified Person (QP) and NI43-101 Disclosure

David J Reading is the designated Qualified Person for this news release within the meaning of National Instrument 43-101 (“NI 43-101”) and has reviewed and verified that the technical information contained herein is accurate and approves of the written disclosure of same. Mr. Reading has an MSc in Economic Geology and is a Fellow of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining and of the Society of Economic Geology (SEG).

Technical Information

Rock, soils and core samples have been prepared and analyzed at SGS laboratory facilities in Medellin, Colombia and Lima, Peru. Blanks, duplicates, and certified reference standards are inserted into the sample stream to monitor laboratory performance. Crush rejects and pulps are kept and stored in a secured storage facility for future assay verification. No capping has been applied to sample composites. The Company utilizes a rigorous, industry-standard QA/QC program.

Information Contact:

Follow Executive Chairman Ari Sussman (@Ariski73) and Collective Mining (@CollectiveMini1) on Twitter.

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This news release contains certain forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, statements about the drill programs, including timing of results, and Collective’s future and intentions. Wherever possible, words such as “may”, “will”, “should”, “could”, “expect”, “plan”, “intend”, “anticipate”, “believe”, “estimate”, “predict” or “potential” or the negative or other variations of these words, or similar words or phrases, have been used to identify these forward-looking statements. These statements reflect management’s current beliefs and are based on information currently available to management as at the date hereof.

Forward-looking statements involve significant risk, uncertainties, and assumptions. Many factors could cause actual results, performance, or achievements to differ materially from the results discussed or implied in the forward-looking statements. These factors should be considered carefully, and readers should not place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements. Although the forward-looking statements contained in this news release are based upon what management believes to be reasonable assumptions, Collective cannot assure readers that actual results will be consistent with these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this news release, and Collective assumes no obligation to update or revise them to reflect new events or circumstances, except as required by law.

Neither the TSXV nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSXV) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this news release.

SOURCE Collective Mining Ltd.

Categories
Base Metals Diamcor Mining Precious Metals

Diamcor Deploys Additional Heavy Equipment to Support Bulk Sampling and Targeted Increases in Processing Volumes

KELOWNA, BC / ACCESSWIRE / July 18, 2023 / Diamcor Mining Inc. (TSXV.DMI)(OTCQB-DMIFF)(FRA:DC3A), (“Diamcor” or the “Company”), a Canadian diamond mining company with a well-established proven history in the mining, exploration, and sale of rough diamonds, announced today that in addition to the previously announced recent completion of the reconfiguration of generator systems to mitigate the limitations of increased power outages, it has also added another new large excavator to its heavy equipment fleet at its Krone-Endora at Venetia diamond mine project (the “Project”).

The Company is pleased to announce it completed the repayment of its current Caterpillar equipment fleet in July of 2023, and this additional large excavator will now provide the Company with the potential for additional processing volume capacities, diamond recoveries, and associated revenues moving forward.

“We are very pleased to have completed the final payments on our existing heavy equipment,” stated Mr. Dean H. Taylor Chief Executive Officer of Diamcor. “The addition of another large excavator provides our Company with redundancy and added capacity as we begin efforts on the previously announced bulk sampling efforts over the greater areas of the Project”.

About Diamcor Mining Inc.

Diamcor Mining Inc. is a fully reporting publicly traded Canadian diamond mining company with a well-established proven history in the mining, exploration, and sale of rough diamonds. The Company’s primary focus is on the mining and development of its Krone-Endora at Venetia Project which is co-located and directly adjacent to De Beers’ Venetia Diamond Mine in South Africa. The Venetia diamond mine is recognized as one of the world’s top diamond-producing mines, and the deposits which occur on Krone-Endora have been identified as being the result of shift and subsequent erosion of an estimated 50M tonnes of material from the higher grounds of Venetia to the lower surrounding areas in the direction of Krone and Endora. The Company focuses on the acquisition and development of mid-tier projects with near-term production capabilities and growth potential and uses unique approaches to mining that involves the use of advanced technology and techniques to extract diamonds in a safe, efficient, and environmentally responsible manner. The Company has a strong commitment to social responsibility, including supporting local communities and protecting the environment.

About the Tiffany & Co. Alliance

The Company has established a long-term strategic alliance and first right of refusal with Tiffany & Co. Canada, a subsidiary of world-famous New York based Tiffany & Co., to purchase up to 100% of the future production of rough diamonds from the Krone-Endora at Venetia Project at market prices. In conjunction with this first right of refusal, Tiffany & Co. Canada also provided the Company with financing in an effort to advance the Project as quickly as possible. Tiffany & Co. is now owned by Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE (LVMH), a publicly traded company which is listed on the Paris Stock Exchange (Euronext) under the symbol LVMH and on the OTC under the symbol LVMHF. For additional information on Tiffany & Co., please visit their website at www.tiffany.com.

About the Krone-Endora at Venetia Project

Diamcor acquired the Krone-Endora at Venetia Project from De Beers Consolidated Mines Limited, consisting of the prospecting rights over the farms Krone 104 and Endora 66, which represent a combined surface area of approximately 5,888 hectares directly adjacent to De Beers’ flagship Venetia Diamond Mine in South Africa. The Company subsequently announced that the South African Department of Mineral Resources had granted a Mining Right for the Krone-Endora at Venetia Project encompassing 657.71 hectares of the Project’s total area of 5,888 hectares. The Company has also submitted an application for a mining right over the remaining areas of the Project. The deposits which occur on the properties of Krone and Endora have been identified as a higher-grade “Alluvial” basal deposit which is covered by a lower-grade upper “Eluvial” deposit. These deposits are proposed to be the result of the direct-shift (in respect to the “Eluvial” deposit) and erosion (in respect to the “Alluvial” deposit) of an estimated 1,000 vertical meters of material from the higher grounds of the adjacent Venetia Kimberlite areas. The deposits on Krone-Endora occur with a maximum total depth of approximately 15.0 metres from surface to bedrock, allowing for a very low-cost mining operation to be employed with the potential for near-term diamond production from a known high-quality source. Krone-Endora also benefits from the significant development of infrastructure and services already in place due to its location directly adjacent to the Venetia Mine, which is widely recognised as one of the top producing diamond mines in the world.

Qualified Person Statement:

Mr. James P. Hawkins (B.Sc., P.Geo.), is Manager of Exploration & Special Projects for Diamcor Mining Inc., and the Qualified Person in accordance with National Instrument 43-101 responsible for overseeing the execution of Diamcor’s exploration programmes and a Member of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta (“APEGA”). Mr. Hawkins has reviewed this press release and approved of its contents.

On behalf of the Board of Directors:

Mr. Dean H. Taylor
President & CEO
Diamcor Mining Inc.
www.diamcormining.com

For further information contact:

Mr. Dean H. Taylor
Diamcor Mining Inc
DeanT@Diamcor.com
+1 250 862-3212

For Investor Relations contact:

Mr. Rich Matthews Mr. Neil Simon
Integrous Communications Investor Cubed Inc
rmatthews@integcom.us nsimon@investor3.ca
+1 (604) 355-7179 +1 (647) 258-3310

This press release contains certain forward-looking statements. While these forward-looking statements represent our best current judgement, they are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that are beyond the Company’s ability to control or predict and which could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those anticipated in such forward-looking statements. Further, the Company expressly disclaims any obligation to update any forward looking statements. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements.

WE SEEK SAFE HARBOUR

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

SOURCE: Diamcor Mining Inc.

Categories
Base Metals Energy Junior Mining Precious Metals Project Generators

Riverside Resources Recaps Mid-Year Milestones and Provides Outlook for Rest of 2023

Vancouver, British Columbia–(Newsfile Corp. – July 18, 2023) – Riverside Resources Inc. (TSXV: RRI) (OTCQB: RVSDF) (FSE: 5YY) (“Riverside” or the “Company”), is pleased to provide a summary of its ongoing strategic activities over the past six months and an outlook for the second half of the year. During this time, the Company has actively expanded in Canada, acquiring new projects and conducting target definition exploration work across its Canadian portfolio. These steps taken in the past six months have strengthened the Company’s move beyond Mexico, which has been progressing for the past two years. Riverside anticipates numerous new Canadian catalysts in the next half-year. With a commitment to advancing its diverse portfolio of mineral assets and leveraging strategic partnerships. To that effect, Riverside has made significant progress in its exploration endeavors, diversifying its commodity mix and expanding into new jurisdictions. In the coming six months, the Company plans to expand its projects beyond precious and base metals, incorporating more critical metal assets and royalties. The key mid-year developments are outlined below:

  • Ontario Canada additional projects and expansion at Pichette with high grade gold drill results.
  • Geophysics exploration funded through Riverside is advancing projects to drill and partnering stage at Duc project with targets expanded in scale by more than 4X.
  • Property consolidation at the high-grade Union Project in Sonora, Mexico and delivering up to 1 oz/ton Au assays in the now controlled mine area.
  • Royalty on Tajitos gold asset, and funds have been received from Fresnillo, who is advancing the asset.
  • Progress toward catalysts now lined up for second half of 2023 with partner deals, exploration results, quality project acquisitions, having strong cash position.

Continued Expansion in Ontario’s Geraldton and Porcupine Mining Districts

Riverside Resources continued to expand and advance its Canadian portfolio during the first half of 2023 by acquiring additional claims at the Pichette Project west of the Hardrock Gold Mine complex of Equinox Gold near Geraldton, Ontario. The Company also acquired the Duc Project in the Porcupine Mining District of northwestern Ontario. The Duc Project, spanning over 600 hectares, is strategically positioned west of the past producing Agrium Ltd. carbonatite phosphate mine with critical metal concentrations and within the highly prospective Wawa Subprovince for Rare Earth Elements (REE) and gold deposits. Riverside’s generative exploration approach using historic data, proprietary databases, and field experience, coupled with personal historic knowledge of the area, aims to unlock the full potential of the Duc Project through additional exploration and joint-venture partnerships. The presence of rare earth element occurrences and orogenic gold deposits within the Wawa Subprovince further enhances the prospectivity of the region as Riverside continues the strategy of generating and owning quality projects in Canada.

Completing a Helicopter Magnetics Survey in Northwestern Ontario

Riverside Resources completed an airborne geophysical helicopter magnetics survey on the Duc Project in northwestern Ontario, which provided greater context for existing data Riverside already defined multi-kilometer structural target prospective for gold and REE -critical metals that can now be progressed during the second half of 2023. This survey employed SHA Geophysics’ Heli-3G technology, offering cost-effective and high-quality results. The magnetic data interpretation revealed two major parallel shears that traverse the central part of the Duc Project, providing important geological boundary information and identifying direct structural zones which are consistent with the style of feature that hosts major gold deposits.

Union District, Sonora, Mexico Consolidation and Advancement

In a strategic move to consolidate the Union Project area, Riverside Resources signed an Option Agreement to acquire the past-producing Union Mine, situated within the Union District of Sonora, Mexico. This district boasts a rich history of high-grade zinc, gold, and silver production from carbonate replacement mines. By securing a 100% undivided right, title, and interest in the Union Mine, Riverside expands its district wide mineral concession coverage and a foothold in the region and establishes a clear path towards advancing exploration targets within this prospective land package.

Rule Symposium July 24-27

Riverside has been selected by Mr. Rick Rule to participate in the Rule Resources Symposium convention in Boca Raton, Florida starting on July 24th, 2023. The Rule Symposium is a sector leading natural resource investing event and an exhibitor by invitation only conference that Riverside has been chosen for again this year. Riverside’s CEO and VP Corporate Communications will attend in person to give presentations and meet investors. To that effect, please view Dr. John-Mark Staude’s (our CEO) pre-conference interview with Rick Rule at the following link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDj43hCJwgo&t=117s

Looking Ahead: Riverside’s Plans for the Next Six Months

Building on the accomplishments of the past six months, Riverside Resources is progressing a targeted agenda for the remainder of 2023. The Company plans to have catalysts on the following key initiatives:

  • Expand the generative portfolio with a low cost but high value in British Columbia, Canada quality projects in precious and critical metals. Assay results, mineral claims, mineralization zones all to be progressed during coming half year.
  • Progress exploration in Ontario including work up targets in the field and completing technical reports and documentation of the value so far created and now moving toward transactions.
  • Exploration and Joint-Venture Partnerships: Riverside’s robust portfolio of mineral assets and royalties in North America presents significant opportunities for strategic partnerships. The Company continues developing and progressing joint-venture and spin-out collaborations to accelerate the advancement of multiple assets simultaneously, fostering a greater chance of discovery leading to added shareholder value.
  • Royalty assets engage in potential value catalyst steps with the portfolio and now with Fresnillo progressing their development of the Tajitos district toward future open pit heap leach gold mining where Riverside has the 2% NSR on Tajitos and Tejo mineral concessions.
  • Continued Financial Prudence and Value Generation: Riverside Resources remains financially strong, with well over $7 million in cash and zero debt. The Company’s prudent financial management ensures sustainable exploration programs and underscores its commitment to generating value for shareholders.
  • Investor Engagement and Communication: Riverside Resources recognizes the importance of transparent and effective communication with its valued shareholders and the investment community. The Company will continue to provide timely updates, reports, and engagement opportunities to foster a strong and supportive investor base.

Riverside Resources remains focused on its mission to generate value and continue work towards mineral discoveries while adhering to very thorough environmental standards and social responsibility. Riverside has a strong upcoming set of catalysts with results from Canada and Mexico. To that effect, with its current sector leading gold portfolio in Ontario and now expanding into strong projects in British Columbia, the Company believes that it’s on the right path in progressing towards an exciting second half of 2023.

About Riverside Resources Inc.:

Riverside is a well-funded exploration company driven by value generation and discovery. The Company has a strong cash position, no debt and less than 75M shares outstanding with a quality portfolio of gold-silver and copper assets, along with royalties in North America. Riverside has extensive experience and knowledge in operating in Canada and Mexico, while leveraging its large databases to generate a portfolio of prospective mineral properties. In addition to Riverside’s own exploration spending, the Company also strives to diversify risk by securing joint-venture and spin-out partnerships to advance multiple assets simultaneously and create more chances for discovery. Riverside has properties available for option, with information available on the Company’s website at www.rivres.com.

ON BEHALF OF RIVERSIDE RESOURCES INC.

“John-Mark Staude”

Dr. John-Mark Staude, President & CEO

For additional information contact:

John-Mark Staude
President, CEO
Riverside Resources Inc.
info@rivres.com
Phone: (778) 327-6671
Fax: (778) 327-6675
Web: www.rivres.com

Mehran Bagherzadeh
Corporate Communications
Riverside Resources Inc.
Phone: (778) 327-6671
TF: (877) RIV-RES1
Web: www.rivres.com

Certain statements in this press release may be considered forward-looking information. These statements can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology (e.g., “expect”,” estimates”, “intends”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “plans”). Such information involves known and unknown risks — including the availability of funds, the results of financing and exploration activities, the interpretation of exploration results and other geological data, or unanticipated costs and expenses and other risks identified by Riverside in its public securities filings that may cause actual events to differ materially from current expectations. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this press release.

Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Categories
Base Metals Junior Mining Precious Metals

Gold vs. Gold Stocks, An Unresolved Incongruity

Since 2000, the dawn of radical monetary policy, gold has outperformed the major asset classes, as depicted in Figure 1. In the first decade of the gold bull market, mining equities significantly outperformed bullion. However, following gold’s August 2011 peak, gold mining equities have significantly underperformed the metal’s price, as shown in Figure 2. There are several possible explanations for this incongruity, many of which are already reflected in the ultra-low valuations of gold mining stocks. These reasons will be reviewed and discussed in the following paragraphs.

Of the several reasons for underperformance, the most significant impediment to higher gold stock valuations, in our opinion, is the implicit consensus that gold priced in the current neighborhood of $2,000 per ounce is not sustainable. We believe the notion that gold mining stocks offer perpetual optionality and leverage to still higher gold prices is heavily discounted, even dismissed when weighing their pros and cons. Currently, physical gold is trading a few percentage points below its all-time highs (~$2,075 in August 2020). In our view, there is realistic potential for a mean reversion trade in which a small percentage gain in the gold price above its previous peak may lead to outsized returns for gold mining equities.

Figure 1. Gold’s Long-Term Outperformance vs. U.S. Stocks & Bonds, USD (2000-2023)

Figure 1. Gold’s Long-Term Outperformance vs. U.S. Stocks & Bonds, USD (2000-2023)

Source: Bloomberg. Period from 12/31/1999 to 6/30/2023. Gold is measured by GOLDS Comdty Spot Price;  S&P 500 TR is measured by the SPX; US Agg Bond Index is measured by the Bloomberg Barclays US Agg Total Return Value Unhedged USD (LBUSTRUU Index); and the U.S. Dollar is measured by DXY Curncy. You cannot invest directly in an index. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Figure 2. Gold Mining Stocks Have Underperformed Physical Gold (2011-2023)

Figure 2. Gold Mining Stocks Have Underperformed Physical Gold (2011-2023)

Source: Bloomberg. Data as of 7/11/2023. Gold is measured by GOLDS Comdty Spot Price; Gold Equities are measured by VanEck Gold Miners ETF.1 Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Gold Mining Equity Underperformance: Unpacking the Reasons

A. Dilution

In our opinion, share issuance is one of the major reasons for the disconnect between the gold price and mining equities. Share issuance has often been a necessary but justifiable evil to finance capital projects. However, in all too many instances, share issuance has resulted from poor capital discipline, ill-advised M&A (mergers and acquisitions) and disregard of per-share metrics concerning reserve and production ounces, cash flow and earnings. Few corporate websites or investor presentations display these per-share metrics, depriving investors of a clear and accessible method to analyze management performance. Although the impact of equity dilution is disclosed in financial statements and is routinely researched by the Sprott investment team, deciphering the debilitating effect of serial dilution is a laborious task that most generalist investors may be reluctant to undertake.

B. Subpar Return on Equity (ROE) or Misallocation of Capital

Figure 3 illustrates how the 2011 gold price peak triggered a CapEx (capital expenditures) surge in 2012 and 2013. The drop in the gold price after 2011 doomed the industry to subpar returns on capital for the next five years.

Following the 2012-2013 CapEx binge, the gold mining industry drastically cut expenditures from 2015 to 2021, in response to declining gold prices and profits. Although CapEx spending began to recover in 2022, the level (not inflation-adjusted) still fell far short of the peak 10 years prior, despite current global mine production being ~20% greater than a decade ago. We believe that this CapEx drought means that capacity added during the industry’s nuclear winter (2013-2020) translates into unrecognized scarcity value. In all probability, the replacement cost of existing capacity markedly exceeds the stated book value. The hurdle rate to build new mines will most likely require significantly higher metal prices.

Figure 3. Gold Miners CapEx Spending in US$ Billions (2007-2023)

Gold Miners Annual CapEx Spending

Source: Bloomberg. Data as of 6/30/2023. Based on the NYSE Arca Gold BUGS Index (HUI), a modified equal dollar-weighted index of companies involved in gold mining. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Figure 4. The Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) of Gold Producers (2005-2022)

Figure 4. The Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) of Gold Producers (2005-2022)

Source: BMO. Data as of 12/31/2022. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

C. Jurisdictional Risk

The spread of resource nationalism to many developing countries, which host otherwise attractive gold deposits, has escalated the risk premium for large new capital projects. In our ongoing internal assessment of geopolitical risk, we’ve seen a significant contraction in the map of favorable jurisdictions over the past decade. We perceive the rule of law to be compromised in many jurisdictions across Latin American, Asian and African nations. Political risk has resulted in a difficult-to-overcome valuation discount for companies with production weighted to certain regions. To address this jurisdictional valuation handicap, many companies are acquiring assets in politically “safe” locales, mainly in North America and Australia. As a result, we’re seeing a rise in M&A activity driven by a desire to alter the geographical footprint.

D. A Decade of Margin Erosion

In 2013, the average AISC (all-in-sustaining costs) for gold production was $1,100 per ounce. Today, it stands at roughly $1,250, representing an increase of 13.6%. The yearly average gold price is shown in Figure 5. Using estimates from BMO Capital Markets, the AISC, including growth capital, has risen over the past decade from $1,484 to $1,612 per ounce. The potential for margin improvement, which started in 2019, has been overshadowed by the escalating cost of production and the capital expenditure required to replace existing capacity and reserves. However, we believe that the trend of margin-eroding cost inflation is beginning to plateau and may soon be a thing of the past. If bullion prices stabilize at current levels, the prospects for industry-wide margin expansion could be excellent.

Figure 5. Yearly Average Gold Price (2013-2022)

Figure 5. Yearly Average Gold Price (2013-2022)

Source: BMO Capital Markets; Company Reports. Data as of 12/31/2022. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

E. CapEx Bloat/Timeline Stretch

The timeline for constructing new mining and processing capacity has lengthened over the last decade. One major reason for this is the increasingly stringent permitting requirements related to environmental and social factors. The time gap between the discovery of a significant new ore body and cash generation now easily exceeds 10 years compared to 6 years only a decade ago. This increased timeline translates into capital being tied up without returns for prolonged periods, leading to higher interest burdens and heightened susceptibility to various risks, including supply chain disruptions, weather events and political changes in host countries. Particularly vulnerable are mine developers with single or few assets, as they often face unavoidable and unanticipated dilutive financings.

Launch of GLD and other Gold Bullion ETFs

Prior to the launch of SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) in 2004, equity investors bullish on the gold price had no alternative but to invest in gold mining shares. The overwhelming success of GLD and other instruments backed by or closely tied to the physical metal has cannibalized demand for gold mining shares. In 2010, the aggregate market capitalization of gold mining equities stood at roughly $300 billion. By the end of 2022, this figure had dwindled to approximately $260 billion. In contrast, gold-backed ETFs had accumulated assets totaling nearly $180 billion by the end of 2022. Gold exposure for equity investors, once the exclusive realm of mining shares, is now shared with highly liquid gold surrogates traded worldwide. An obvious question arises: What role do gold mining stocks play in constructing investment strategy? The subsequent paragraphs will aim to provide an answer.

Mean Regression Ahead?

Gold mining stocks are inextricably connected to the price behavior of gold bullion. In our view, a bullish outlook for the metal far outweighs any other rationale for owning them. As we have seen, the response of gold mining equities to the bull market in bullion has been disappointing.

What appears to be lacking is a decisive bullion price breakout that leaves the psychological $2,000 per ounce threshold in the rearview mirror. We anticipate that such a breakout is on the horizon, potentially in the not-so-distant future. However, until it materializes, it remains a macroeconomic speculation entertained by few. Our speculative reasoning can be explored further in previous commentaries (Is My Money Safe?, Connecting a Few Dots and The Dollar, Safe Haven or Leaky Lifeboat?). Perhaps the gold price needs a period of further consolidation to digest its ~6% year-to-date gain and the ~60% increase since the August 2018 low. In our view, any further period of uncertainty regarding the potential upside in the gold price provides the last opportunity to allocate into this neglected sector at highly advantageous valuations.

Gold bullion has unequivocally demonstrated its long-term value as a risk diversifier. The notion that it deserves to be positioned as a defensive anchor in a balanced equity investment strategy (and perhaps in a more meaningful ratio than fixed income) is gaining traction. Yet, the broad acceptance of this notion has not sparked significant investment flows. Given escalating macroeconomic risks, the fact that gold remains under-owned appears as incongruous as the disconnect between the metal and its related mining shares this sector at highly advantageous valuations.

Figures 6A and 6B attest to the sparsity of gold ownership by investment managers in Western capital markets.

Figure 6A. Market Vane Sentiment Index & Gold Price (2006-2023)

Source: Bloomberg and Market Vane. Data as of 6/30/2023. You cannot invest directly in an index. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Figure 6B.

Value of Gold ETF Holdings

Source: World Gold Council. Data as of 6/30/2023. You cannot invest directly in an index. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Gold Acts as a Portfolio Risk Diversifier and Safe Haven Asset

The investment rationale for gold is easily summarized as a risk diversifier and a safe haven asset without parallel. The argument has been set forth in clinical and academic terms by many credible proponents. Convincing discussion of its benefits in terms of efficient frontier analysis can be found (see World Gold Council: The Case for a Strategic Allocation to Gold). More controversial and less clinical is the idea that gold mining stocks might add tactical investment performance that could far outsize investment performance benefits from the plain vanilla prospects for the metal.

The time for accumulation is now, not after the investment case becomes obvious based on a new gold price paradigm that $2,000 is the floor, not the ceiling. A major barrier to the mean reversion thesis for mining stocks is the confusion between nominal and inflation-adjusted prices. Based on recent history, the superficial view is that when the metal price approaches the magic number of $2,000 per ounce, the potential for further upside is exhausted and a signal to initiate short positions. On an inflation-adjusted basis, today’s $2,000 gold price is ~30% below the peak in 2011 and ~50% below the peak of $800 in 1980. Fixation on nominal prices ignores the fact that macroeconomic realities in favor of gold have improved significantly since previous peaks.

The total market cap of all precious metal mining equities traded on developed markets is ~$260 billion today, slightly more than the market cap of Bank of America. The total market cap of the combined five largest precious metal mining companies is nearly $150 billion, leaving a mere $120 billion for all remaining precious metal mining equities. Imagine the scramble if pension funds like CalPERS or Ontario Teachers were to decide to invest just 1% of their assets into precious metal equities. This is not an outlandish thought. Pension funds in developed markets like Canada are benchmarked against indices with higher weighting in precious metal miners than in the U.S.

Gold Stock Undervaluation

Gold mining stocks are undervalued on a relative and absolute basis. Gold mining equities are trading multiples lower than the S&P 500 Index and with greater profitability and lower leverage.

Figure 7. Gold Miners Present Attractive Relative Value and Fundamentals

Figure 7. Gold Miners Present Attractive Relative Value and Fundamentals

Source: Bloomberg as of 3/31/2023. Gold Miners (GDM) represents the NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index (GDM INDEX). EBITDA refers to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. S&P 500 is measured by the SPX Index. You cannot invest directly in an index. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

A decade of subpar investment returns has put a squeeze on exploration expenditures. We estimated that the cost of discovering new ounces has risen over 100% over the past decade. As already discussed, the barriers to building new mines have increased significantly due to geopolitical and permitting issues. These three factors suggest that the value of existing mines is extremely understated on industry balance sheets. The replacement cost of the current mining infrastructure is potentially 30% to 100% higher than that represented by financial statements and the amount of depreciation that has been added due to the age of the project in question.

Systematic Undervaluation of Mining Equities

The conventional valuation methodology for gold miners is based on discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis. The three inputs for the calculation are existing reserves, the cost of producing those reserves and the future gold price. After discounting future cash flows at a uniform time value of money, the DCF analysis arrives at a net asset value (NAV) and, when compared to the enterprise value of any given company, provides a premium or discount to NAV. Only the first factor is objective, while the second requires expert analysis of the particulars of a company’s producing assets. The third and most critical factor is the future gold price.

The conventional practice to model future cash flows, among almost all highly influential brokerage analysts, is to employ spot metal prices for the current and following year, after which a secular decline in the price is imposed. As noted by Michael Solomon, discounting the future gold price arbitrarily impairs valuation and contravenes gold’s historical annual appreciation rate of 8% in USD terms since 1971. Moreover, Solomon notes: “A DCF analysis of any typical company would value the first five to ten years of estimated free cash flows and would calculate a terminal value on the assumption that the business is a going concern.” One method would be to apply a multiple to the final year and discount that back to the present. Solomon goes on to say: “Yet, gold mining analysts assume no terminal value for a mining company. … The assumptions underlying the discounted cash flow analysis are far from realistic, and it becomes punitive.”

One could argue that even a flawed valuation methodology, if applied consistently, at least enables an effective ranking of different company fundamentals. To this we say that comparative analysis aside, the depiction of valuation through a negatively biased lens affects the appraisals and impressions of generalist investors who might be investigating the gold mining sector for the first time. It can be none other than off-putting.

In addition, the auto bearish framework corrupts the thinking of gold mining managements resulting in underinvestment. This can be seen in the already depicted secular decline of exploration expenditures and a long-term constriction on future global production. Given the ever-increasing lead times between discovery and new mine completion, further contraction in reserve-to-production ratios is inevitable. It can be seen in Figure 8 that global gold production is beginning to flatten out:

Figure 8. Annual Gold Production (2010-2022)

Figure 8. Annual Gold Production (2010-2022)

Source: World Gold Council, S&P Global Market Intelligence. Based on data available as of 3/31/2023. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

A consequence of underinvestment in future gold production will be increased M&A activity when major producers have little alternative but to take out smaller producers at substantial premiums. As noted by Solomon, the growing wave of M&A within the gold mining industry can be seen as a “Darwinian response to extinction.”

The prioritization of discounted cash flow (DCF) models to evaluate projects by company managements and equities by investment analysts is harmful both to capital allocation decisions and the appraisal of company valuations. Seymour Schulich, founder of Franco-Nevada Mining Corporation and one of the keenest minds in the mining industry, explained this to me over 20 years ago during a site visit. At the June 15 RBC Capital Markets Global Mining & Materials Conference, mining impresario Robert Friedland describes DCF valuation methodology as “idiotic”: “The management of these banks that allow analysts to create these absurd models, they should just change their minds. Because the real-world value of a Tier 1 mine is much more than an NPV model, and NPV modeling is not the only way to model a mine.” DCF overvalues a dollar of cash generation today relative to the dollars generated 10 years in the future. Such Mr. Magoo-like near-sighted thinking also distorts analysis by managements and investment bankers of prospective M&A transactions.

Overweighting the consideration of near-term cash flows against the possibilities for game-changing future cash flows is, in many cases, just an indication of ground-hugging (CYA) risk adversity and a recipe for corporate shrinkage. Producers have little appetite to displease shareholders by acquiring non-producing assets. This has resulted in a wide disparity between large- and small-cap gold mining equity valuations.

Exploration and development stage gold mining companies routinely trade at extreme discounts to their producing counterparts. Speaking as experienced (and appropriately bruised) investors in precious metals mining equities, we have seen cycles like this play out before. Mid- to smaller-cap equities can be highly sensitive to the dynamic of value creation through the process of discovery and mine-building. On the other hand, that dynamic rarely moves the needle in the larger-cap sector. While the potential for mean regression exists across the sector, we believe the opportunity is greatest among mid- to small-cap securities.

Figure 9. Junior Miners Inexpensive Relative to Senior Miners (2001-2023)

Figure 9. Junior Miners Inexpensive Relative to Senior Miners (2001-2023)

Source: BMO Capital Markets, FactSet. Data as of 4/19/2023. “Junior” gold mining companies generally have market capitalizations under $500 million and are considered riskier than larger, “senior” gold mining companies, which generally have market capitalizations greater than $500 million. You cannot invest directly in an index. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Potential for Mean Regression Trade

Gold is considered a safe haven asset; it may protect capital but does not provide investment opportunity. By contrast, gold mining stocks are not considered safe assets as they incorporate risk, but they offer the potential for building significant capital. Gold and related mining stocks are joined at the hip. One cannot invest in the latter without having a point of view on the former. The key judgment is whether the metal is correctly priced in nominal currency terms. That requires judgment on the quality of the currency in which it is priced. Gold has risen against all paper currencies, including the USD. We believe the notion that a strong U.S. dollar is negative for gold is laughable. While the U.S. dollar might look “strong” against other paper currencies from time to time, relative performance does not equate to inherent strength. The dollar has been persistently weak against gold since 1971. Since the last remnant of gold backing was removed by Nixon over 50 years ago, there has been no such thing as an inherently strong dollar on a sustained basis.

Gold mining equities have two things going for them. First, they have quietly become very cheap stocks, are seriously unloved and represent a contrarian’s delight. Second, they offer low-risk exposure to what we regard as the very likely prospect of the continuing and possibly accelerating downgrade of the USD. A reversion to inflation-adjusted 2011 levels would see the GDX and GDXJ rally over 110% and 300% respectively. Our expectation is for small and mid-cap companies to rally harder than their larger-cap peers.

Uncritical acceptance of the pricing of real assets in nominal dollars signifies the nearly universal brainwashing of establishment economists, investment thought leaders and policymakers. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) reported monthly is widely accepted as an accurate gauge of inflation and, by inference, the integrity of the U.S. dollar as a store of value. Since 1983, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which oversees the calculation of the CPI index, has “updated” its methodology 25 times. (Grant’s 1/27/23-Inflation for the Long Run). In 21 out of 25 of those instances, the adjustments caused the reported level of inflation to be lower than previously stated. A sign of market distrust of the CPI inflation measure is the divergence between TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protection Securities) and the price of gold. Between 2007 and 2021, the correlation between TIPS and the price of gold was 90%. The breakdown is depicted in Figure 10.

Figure 10. Gold vs. 10-YR U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) (2006-2023)

Source: U.S. Treasury and World Gold Council. You cannot invest directly in an index. Included for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

It is in the self-interest of the political and financial establishment to portray a sanguine economic picture. Years of “sly cheating” that “continues apace” by the makers of monetary and fiscal policy (Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, 6/2/23) condition the investment consensus into uncritical acceptance of an alternate reality. Economic indicators are routinely tweaked and massaged for mass consumption. For example, both Non-Farm Payrolls and retail sales reports, both widely followed and capable of moving markets, are frequently distorted, whenever necessary, by seasonal adjustment factors arbitrarily tweaked for cosmetic purposes. The line between propagators and consumers of misinformation is indistinguishable. Perpetuation of distorted information is mutually convenient.

Issuance of new rounds of government debt seems overly dependent on the suspension of critical thinking. With government activity now comprising 27% of GDP, the inability to finance would crush economic activity. Post the recent debt ceiling deal, as noted by Meridian Macro Research, “public debt soared more than $1 trillion, the biggest non-crisis debt monthly increase on record.” Trust that the U.S. dollar will remain a viable global reserve asset is vital. Absent this delusion, damage to U.S. credit would be irreparable.

It would seem that the gravitational limits of credulity are being probed. Based on our expectation for spreading skepticism, we believe that gold will break out to new all-time highs in inflation-adjusted terms. That would translate into a gain of roughly 30% in nominal dollars, or $2,500-$2,600, simply to square with the fundamental forces that have been gathering since the previous nominal peak of $1,920 a decade ago. Should gold do so, the death of the U.S. dollar as a safe asset would become manifest. Mean regression based on our analysis could equate to 50% to 150% upside for precious metals equities versus gold itself with smaller, more overlooked stocks having the potential to benefit by an even larger degree. Gold mining stocks might once again bask in the sunshine of a decade ago.

Original Source: https://sprott.com/insights/sprott-gold-report-gold-vs-gold-stocks-an-unresolved-incongruity/?_cldee=iyr6f9KTGvkvr-APWHu_PzciVLbyXE-q8uffffdzX8qQqQD5DGpCiLUoGb37nCmn&recipientid=lead-cb8b11b52df9ea11a815000d3a0c86a9-4f32f7c20e6d4785871888b923656bfb&esid=93097331-a724-ee11-9965-0022483d058c

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2023 Rule Symposium Preview – John-Mark Staude, CEO of Riverside Resources Inc.

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Energy Junior Mining Lion One Metals Precious Metals

Lion One Reports Robust Gold Grades from Tuvatu Mine in Fiji

Face Sampling Returns 19.91 g/t Au over 35 m, Peak Value of 246 g/t Au

North Vancouver, British Columbia–(Newsfile Corp. – July 13, 2023) – Lion One Metals Limited (TSXV: LIO) (OTCQX: LOMLF) (ASX: LLO) (“Lion One” or the “Company”) is pleased to report successful mining results and better than expected grades from underground developments at its 100% owned Tuvatu Alkaline Gold Project in Fiji.

Face sampling on the URW1a lode returned 19.91 g/t Au over the first 35 m of mining, while face sampling on the URW1b lode returned 9.60 g/t Au over the first 22.5 m of mining. The URW1 lode system was originally modelled as a single lode with average grade of 14.05 g/t Au. The grade from the URW1a lode is therefore stronger than anticipated while the grade from the URW1b lode represents additional upside.

Highlights of Face Sampling Results:

  • 43.49 g/t Au over 2.1 m (including 61.67 g/t Au over 1.40m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_17)
  • 34.33 g/t Au over 2.4 m (including 56.56 g/t Au over 1.10m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_12)
  • 37.00 g/t Au over 2.0 m (including 56.01 g/t Au over 1.32m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_11)
  • 31.62 g/t Au over 2.33 m (including 50.88 g/t Au over 0.63m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_16)
  • 34.61 g/t Au over 2.1 m (including 52.81 g/t Au over 1.30m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_13)
  • 31.52 g/t Au over 2.0 m (including 246.79 g/t Au over 0.23m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_02)
  • 31.90 g/t Au over 1.9 m (including 60.23 g/t Au over 0.50m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_08)
  • 25.61 g/t Au over 2.0 m (including 66.4 g/t Au over 0.75m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_01)
  • 17.32 g/t Au over 1.96 m (including 25.42 g/t Au over 0.31m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_07)
  • 16.09 g/t Au over 2.0 m (including 35.20 g/t Au over 0.52m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_11)
  • 12.41 g/t Au over 2.2 m (including 30.50 g/t Au over 0.60m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_15)
  • 15.77 g/t Au over 1.73 m (including 48.51 g/t Au over 0.36m) (1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_17)

Lion One Chairman and CEO Walter Berukoff commented: “We’re very pleased with the results from our face sampling program on the URW1a and URW1b lodes at Tuvatu. Face samples are collected directly from the mining drive and as such they provide the most accurate representation of the grade of the material that we’re mining, and the results to date are much greater than expected. These results provide the first comprehensive view of the grade distribution within these lodes. Tuvatu has once again outperformed and as underground developments progress we’re beginning to see the true potential of the system.”

Face Sampling

Table 1. Highlights of Face Sampling from the URW1a and URW1b lodes

Face IDFromToInterval (m)Au (g/t)
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_020.671.350.6888.58
including0.670.900.23246.79
and0.901.350.457.71
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_010.000.750.7566.40
including0.000.560.5651.20
and0.560.750.19111.20
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_170.702.101.4061.67
including0.701.350.6533.47
and1.352.100.7586.11
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_110.682.001.3256.01
including0.681.200.5275.53
and1.201.700.5036.21
and1.702.000.3055.19
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_130.802.101.3052.81
including0.801.600.8045.19
and1.602.100.5065.01
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_121.302.401.1056.56
including1.301.900.6064.92
and1.902.400.5046.52
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_160.761.931.1737.21
including0.761.390.6350.88
and1.391.860.4713.08
and1.861.930.0776.15
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_081.101.900.8037.07
including1.101.500.4043.56
and1.501.900.4030.57
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_110.001.001.0027.87
including0.000.480.4819.94
and0.480.870.3923.62
0.871.000.1369.93
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_070.000.760.7625.59
including0.000.450.4525.70
and0.450.760.3125.42

Figure 1. Location of the URW1a and URW1b lodes in relation to the Tuvatu system. Mining is progressing north along both the URW1a lode (modelled in purple) and the URW1b lode (modelled in green). Inset image shows the location of the URW1a and URW1b lodes in relation to the Tuvatu system, with all other lodes shown in pale grey. Underground developments are shown in red. The dashed black square is the area highlighted in Figure 2. The URW1 mineralized trend has a N-S strike length of approximately 300 m and a vertical extent also of approximately 300 m. The URW1a and URW1b lodes occupy approximately 75m of this mineralized strike length. Extensional drilling is ongoing.

To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/2178/173370_9cc80cc694a50a8e_001full.jpg

Figure 2. Plan map showing the location and face grades returned from face sampling in URW1a and URW1b. The URW1a mining drive is on the left and the URW1b mining drive is on the right. Face grades in g/t Au and their corresponding sample numbers are shown in white. The locations of the face samples are indicated by the sub-horizontal lines. Grid lines are 10 m apart. Mining is ongoing and progressing to the north.

To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/2178/173370_figure2.jpg

Mining of the URW1 lodes has been ongoing since May 18th, 2023, and is being conducted through the use of airleg mining. Mining is progressing in a step-wise fashion with the mining drives advancing in increments of 2 m. Prior to blasting, a face sample is collected across the face of the advancing drive, with the sample being oriented approximately perpendicular to the strike of the mineralized lode (Figure 3). These samples lines are typically around 2 m in length and traverse the entire width of the drive such that they represent all the material mined and not just the main lode. The face samples are therefore considered representative of the grade at the face of the advancing drive and provide an indication of the grade of the material extracted with each blast. The series of face samples collected progressively along the strike of the lode provide an estimate of the grade of the material mined from the lode to date. Due to the nature of mineralization at Tuvatu there is local variation in gold grades, and the more extensive the systematic sampling is the more accurate the depiction of the overall grade and gold content of each lode will be. For a description of the geology and mineralization of the URW1 lodes, see the Lion One news release dated April 25th, 2023.

Figure 3. Face sampling methodology, URW1a. Photo of the face and sample grades for the 1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_12 face of the URW1a lode. Samples are marked with red paint with red numbers indicating sample interval boundaries in meters. Gold grades are indicated in white. The main lode is visible on the right side of the face and is highlighted by the yellow dashed lines. In this case the lode is trending towards the east (to the right side of the photo), and the miners will start mining in that direction with the next blast, as is seen in Figure 2 above at sample 1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_12. Sample bags are visible towards the bottom of the image, with 4 samples taken across the face and an additional duplicate sample taken at the location of the main lode. Bag numbers are visible in the face photos as a QAQC measure. Samples are collected by chipping material off the face rock equally along the length of the sample line.

To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/2178/173370_9cc80cc694a50a8e_057full.jpg

Figure 4. Examples of visible gold identified during sampling. Scratcher pen used for scale in top two images. Width of sampled in bottom image is 4.5 cm.

To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/2178/173370_9cc80cc694a50a8e_058full.jpg

About Tuvatu
The Tuvatu Alkaline Gold Project is located on the island of Viti Levu in Fiji. The January 2018 mineral resource for Tuvatu as disclosed in the technical report “Technical Report and Preliminary Economic Assessment for the Tuvatu Gold Project, Republic of Fiji”, dated September 25, 2020, and prepared by Mining Associates Pty Ltd of Brisbane Qld, comprises 1,007,000 tonnes indicated at 8.50 g/t Au (274,600 oz. Au) and 1,325,000 tonnes inferred at 9.0 g/t Au (384,000 oz. Au) at a cut-off grade of 3.0 g/t Au. The technical report is available on the Lion One website at www.liononemetals.com and on the SEDAR website at www.sedar.com.

Qualified Person
In accordance with National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects (“NI 43- 101”), Sergio Cattalani, P.Geo, Senior Vice President Exploration, is the Qualified Person for the Company and has reviewed and is responsible for the technical and scientific content of this news release.

QAQC Procedures
Lion One adheres to rigorous QAQC procedures above and beyond basic regulatory guidelines in conducting its sampling, drilling, testing, and analyses. The Company utilizes its own fleet of diamond drill rigs, using PQ, HQ and NQ sized drill core rods. Drill core is logged and split by Lion One personnel on site. Samples are delivered to and analyzed at the Company’s geochemical and metallurgical laboratory in Fiji. Duplicates of all samples with grades above 0.5 g/t Au are both re-assayed at Lion One’s lab and delivered to ALS Global Laboratories in Australia (ALS) for check assay determinations. All samples for all high-grade intercepts are sent to ALS for check assays. All samples are pulverized to 85% passing through 75 microns. Gold analysis is carried out using fire assay with an AA finish. Samples that have returned grades greater than 10.00 g/t Au are then re-analyzed by gravimetric method. For samples that return greater than 0.50 g/t Au, repeat fire assay runs are carried out and repeated until a result is obtained that is within 10% of the original fire assay run. Lion One’s laboratory can also assay for a range of 71 other elements through Inductively Coupled Plasma Optical Emission Spectrometry (ICP-OES), but currently focuses on a suite of 9 important pathfinder elements. All duplicate anomalous samples are sent to ALS labs in Townsville QLD and are analyzed by the same methods (Au-AA26, and Au-GRA22 where applicable). ALS also analyses 33 pathfinder elements by HF-HNO3-HClO4 acid digestion, HCl leach and ICP-AES (method ME-ICP61).

About Lion One Metals Limited
Lion One’s flagship asset is 100% owned, fully permitted high grade Tuvatu Alkaline Gold Project, located on the island of Viti Levu in Fiji. Lion One envisions a low-cost high-grade underground gold mining operation at Tuvatu coupled with exciting exploration upside inside its tenements covering the entire Navilawa Caldera, an underexplored yet highly prospective 7km diameter alkaline gold system. Lion One’s CEO Walter Berukoff leads an experienced team of explorers and mine builders and has owned or operated over 20 mines in 7 countries. As the founder and former CEO of Miramar Mines, Northern Orion, and La Mancha Resources, Walter is credited with building over $3 billion of value for shareholders.

On behalf of the Board of Directors of
Lion One Metals Limited
Walter Berukoff“, Chairman and CEO

Contact Investor Relations
Toll Free (North America) Tel: 1-855-805-1250
Email: info@liononemetals.com
Website: www.liononemetals.com

Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Service Provider
accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release

This press release may contain statements that may be deemed to be “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, included herein are forward-looking information. Generally, forward-looking information may be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “plans”, “expects” or “does not expect”, “proposed”, “is expected”, “budget”, “scheduled”, “estimates”, “forecasts”, “intends”, “anticipates” or “does not anticipate”, or “believes”, or variations of such words and phrases, or by the use of words or phrases which state that certain actions, events or results may, could, would, or might occur or be achieved. This forward-looking information reflects Lion One Metals Limited’s current beliefs and is based on information currently available to Lion One Metals Limited and on assumptions Lion One Metals Limited believes are reasonable. These assumptions include, but are not limited to, the actual results of exploration projects being equivalent to or better than estimated results in technical reports, assessment reports, and other geological reports or prior exploration results. Forward-looking information is subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, level of activity, performance or achievements of Lion One Metals Limited or its subsidiaries to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking information. Such risks and other factors may include, but are not limited to: the stage development of Lion One Metals Limited, general business, economic, competitive, political and social uncertainties; the actual results of current research and development or operational activities; competition; uncertainty as to patent applications and intellectual property rights; product liability and lack of insurance; delay or failure to receive board or regulatory approvals; changes in legislation, including environmental legislation, affecting mining, timing and availability of external financing on acceptable terms; not realizing on the potential benefits of technology; conclusions of economic evaluations; and lack of qualified, skilled labour or loss of key individuals. Although Lion One Metals Limited has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in forward-looking information, there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking information. Lion One Metals Limited does not undertake to update any forward-looking information, except in accordance with applicable securities laws.

Appendix 1: Complete Face Sample Results and Location Information

Table 2. Face Grade and Sample results from the URW1a lode (face grade >0.5 g/t Au)

Face IDFace Sample InformationTotal Sample Length (m)Face Grade (Au g/t)
FromToInterval (m)Au (g/t)
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0100.560.5651.202.0025.61
0.560.750.19111.20
0.751.200.452.69
1.202.000.800.25
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0200.670.672.962.0031.52
0.670.900.23246.79
0.901.350.457.71
1.352.000.651.27
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0300.500.509.242.0012.12
0.500.860.366.52
0.860.900.0426.12
0.901.360.461.45
1.362.000.6424.30
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0400.510.512.811.706.54
0.510.710.2014.37
0.711.220.517.88
1.221.700.485.83
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0600.470.473.672.005.86
0.470.600.133.86
0.601.000.400.06
1.001.310.310.05
1.312.000.6913.69
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0700.700.7034.752.2012.01
0.700.960.264.46
0.961.550.590.20
1.552.200.651.27
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0800.500.5060.231.9031.90
0.501.100.601.41
1.101.500.4043.56
1.501.900.4030.57
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0900.550.550.802.106.25
0.551.100.550.26
1.101.800.7016.67
1.802.100.302.89
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1000.830.8320.991.9217.15
0.831.530.7015.26
1.531.920.3912.37
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1100.680.680.082.0037.00
0.681.200.5275.53
1.201.700.5036.21
1.702.000.3055.19
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1200.600.6015.532.4034.33
0.601.300.7015.50
1.301.900.6064.92
1.902.400.5046.52
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1300.800.805.022.1034.61
0.801.600.8045.19
1.602.100.5065.01
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1500.480.480.011.821.16
0.481.040.562.80
1.041.420.380.86
1.421.820.400.52
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1600.760.760.072.3331.62
0.761.390.6350.88
1.391.860.4713.08
1.861.930.0776.15
1.932.330.4075.20
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1700.700.707.142.1043.49
0.701.350.6533.47
1.352.100.7586.11
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1800.700.706.842.302.40
0.701.230.530.02
1.232.000.770.15
2.002.300.301.99
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1900.740.741.842.404.91
0.741.390.654.61
1.391.860.471.67
1.862.400.5412.30

Table 3. Face Grade and Sample results from the URW1b lode (face grade >0.5 g/t Au)

Face IDFace Sample InformationTotal Sample Length (m)Face Grade (Au g/t)
FromToInterval (m)Au (g/t)
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_0200.500.500.562.002.75
0.501.200.700.61
1.201.560.362.22
1.562.000.449.09
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_0700.450.4525.701.9617.32
0.450.760.3125.42
0.760.910.155.81
0.911.130.2213.70
1.131.960.8312.79
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_0800.470.477.931.706.31
0.470.700.2314.04
0.701.200.503.18
1.201.700.504.37
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_0900.500.500.601.952.01
0.501.000.500.13
1.001.500.506.82
1.501.950.450.33
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1000.450.4510.692.105.7
0.470.860.392.24
0.861.100.2422.56
1.102.101.000.76
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1100.480.4819.942.0016.09
0.480.870.3923.62
0.871.000.1369.93
1.002.001.004.30
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1200.750.756.483.3010.76
0.751.400.654.61
1.402.000.600.48
2.002.700.7011.66
2.703.300.6031.98
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1300.600.600.011.700.01
0.601.110.510.01
1.111.500.390.01
1.501.700.200.01
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1500.700.702.902.2012.41
0.701.300.6030.50
1.301.500.2010.13
1.502.200.707.06
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1700.700.702.871.7315.77
0.701.060.3648.51
1.061.420.3611.90
1.421.730.3111.36

Table 4. Coordinates for face sample lines reported in this release, using the end of the sample line as the reference point. Coordinates are in Fiji map grid.

Face IDEastingNorthingElevation
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0118763363920736141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0218763363920738141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0318763363920739141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0418763363920741141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0618763363920743141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0718763353920745141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0818763353920747141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_0918763353920750141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1018763353920752141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1118763353920754142
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1218763353920756142
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1318763363920758142
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1518763373920762141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1618763383920764141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1718763383920765141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1818763393920766141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-A_1918763403920768141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_0218763493920738144
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_0718763493920744142
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_0818763483920745141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_0918763483920748141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1018763483920749141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1118763493920752141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1218763493920754141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1518763493920759141
1140.URW1.NTH.OD-B_1718763493920762141
Categories
Base Metals

Base Metals: A Decade of Shortages Ahead

The article below is an excerpt from our Q4 2022 commentary.

“The Decade of Shortages” was the unofficial theme for our investor day, held on November 3rd, 2022. Our audience heard presentations from five guest speakers and the two eponymous partners, outlining fundamental trends in various commodity markets that confirm our thesis. We discussed how we believe the shortages in the first two years of this decade were destined to be repeated multiple times in different commodity markets as we progressed through the remaining years. ESG pressures have forced significant redirection of capital spending away from extraction industries to renewable projects, shifts in global power from unipolar to multipolar, war, supply-chain breakdowns, changing weather patterns, and under-appreciated shifts taking place in the geology or extractive industries — all were discussed as well their supply impacts on various commodities.

What was not discussed at our conference is a great shortage we believe is in the making. 

Although the global mining industry, over the last decade, has been able to side-step most of the negative publicity that has engulfed the world oil and gas industry, ESG pressures have placed substantial downward pressures on global mining industry capital expenditures in the last ten years. Environmental and related permitting issues have made both greenfield and brownfield mine development projects extremely difficult to bring into production. Given the vast ESG–related restrictions put on mining projects today, it is not uncommon that significant, economically robust discoveries made over 20 years ago are still not in production today. In a world where metal demand is already beginning to see substantial accelerations—ironically because of ESG-inspired environmental pressure – mine supply has, for many years, started to fall behind demand. If metal demand exceeds supply on a sustained basis, then metal held in quickly mobilized inventory should decline, which has transpired. Below is a chart showing the base metals inventories held at the three big metal trading exchanges: the London Metals Exchange (LME), the New York Metals Exchange (COMEX), and the Shanghai Metal Exchange. 


Since peaking at 9 mm tonnes of inventory in Q1 2013, base metals inventories have drawn steadily and are down 90% today. Today, exchange inventories have fallen below 1 mm tonnes and are dangerously low. Adjusted for days of consumption, inventories have never been lower. In Q4 2022, exchange metal inventory covered daily consumption by only 2.7 days, surpassing 45% of the lows seen in 2005-2006 of approximately five days and reaching the lows seen 35 years ago back in 1988-1989.

The late 1980s saw robust base metals demand as the global economy boomed and Japan seemed destined for world economic domination. In response to inventory tightness, from 1988 to 1990, zinc prices surged 230%, copper rose 175%, and nickel prices skyrocketed 700%. However, the tightness in base metals inventories and the enormous upward pressure in prices were short-lived. The implosion of the Former Soviet Union (FSU) began in 1990, which significantly impacted the base metals supply fundamentals for over a decade. The FSU’s military-industrial complex, an incredibly intense and inefficient user of base metal, collapsed post-1990, flooding the West with new supply. After 70 years of communism, the FSU had become a massive base metals junkyard, and all this scrap added to the flood of supply headed west. Also contributing to the global inventory build post-1990 in base metals was the “popping” of the Japanese financial bubble. Japan became one of the world’s largest consumers of base metals from 1960 through 1980. The economic crisis, which eventually produced Japan’s lost decade, severely impacted their metals demand.

The flood of excess FSU supply and the easing of Japanese demand can be seen in the chart above. By 1993-1994, the days of demand cover of exchange inventories had soared to almost 5 mm tonnes, representing nearly 40 days of consumption, a level never seen since. Excess base metals inventories significantly contributed to the second leg of the significant commodity price bear market, stretching 20 years—from 1980 to 2000.  

It took the next 15 years to work this excess inventory off, but surging China metal demand by the mid-2000s again drew base metal inventory levels back to dangerously low levels. In 2006 exchange inventories fell to briefly 1 mm tonnes, and when adjusted by days of consumption, inventories had fallen to less than five days of consumption—the lowest levels since 1990. And just like in the late 1980s, base metals prices experienced a massive surge. From the end of 2004 to the beginning of 2006, copper, nickel, lead, and zinc prices surged between 300% and 400%.

High base metal prices kicked off a new mine investment cycle. The increase in base metal mine supply, combined with the 2008-2009 financial crisis and slower increases in Chinese base metals demand, caused the inventory pressure in base metals markets to increase markedly. Between 2010 and 2015, exchange inventories, when adjusted for consumption, had risen to levels not seen since the early 1990s.  

Today with exchange inventories sitting slightly below 1 mm tonnes, these inventories cover only 2.7 days of consumption.

In global base metals markets, we are well past the former tightness levels experienced in 2005 and 2006. Given the strength of worldwide demand and supply constraints, we believe it’s only a matter of time before shortages in various metals reach detectable levels, with potentially tremendous resulting upward price pressure.

Investors over the last year have become convinced the world will become gripped by several global recessions, driven by rising interest rates and continued real estate-related problems in China—both of which will produce noticeable impacts on global base metals demand. However, investors are missing the vast new sources of demand now embedded in international base metals demand figures.

In previous letters, we have stressed how metal intensive the coming renewable power investment cycle will be. Last summer, S&P Global’s Commodity Insights paper “The Future of Copper: Will the looming supply gap short-circuit the energy transition?” received significant press attention. The study warned of an “unprecedented and untenable” copper shortfall of 10 mm tonnes as suppliers grapple with copper demand that will double by 2035. We believe even S&P’s “pessimistic” copper supply outlook is still too optimistic.

For years, we have been warning that copper was slipping into a “structural deficit.” The S&P study confirms this—including the under-appreciated copper metal intensity of renewable investment. Given that inventory of exchange copper adjusted for consumption has now reached the record low levels of 1990 and 2005 and that we are only now seeing the structural gap emerge between copper demand and supply, we believe that the copper market will become the first base metals market to display severe shortage characteristics.

We believe this is going to be the decade of shortage across multiple commodity markets. Base metals markets give investors a great example of what a looming base metals shortage looks like. We find it fascinating that investors are paying no attention to base metals inventories that have reached record lows.

Intrigued? We invite you to download or revisit our entire Q4 2022 research letter, available below.   

Q4 2022 Research: The End of Abundant Energy: Shale Production and Hubbert's Peak

Registration with the SEC should not be construed as an endorsement or an indicator of investment skill, acumen or experience. Investments in securities are not insured, protected or guaranteed and may result in loss of income and/or principal. Historical performance is not indicative of any specific investment or future results. Investment process, strategies, philosophies, portfolio composition and allocations, security selection criteria and other parameters are current as of the date indicated and are subject to change without prior notice. This communication is distributed for informational purposes, and it is not to be construed as an offer, solicitation, recommendation, or endorsement of any particular security, products, or services. Nothing in this communication is intended to be or should be construed as individualized investment advice. All content is of a general nature and solely for educational, informational and illustrative purposes. This communication may include opinions and forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical fact are opinions and/or forward-looking statements (including words such as “believe,” “estimate,” “anticipate,” “may,” “will,” “should,” and “expect”). Although we believe that the beliefs and expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are reasonable, we can give no assurance that such beliefs and expectations will prove to be correct. Various factors could cause actual results or performance to differ materially from those discussed in such forward-looking statements. All expressions of opinion are subject to change. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. Any dated information is published as of its date only. Dated and forward-looking statements speak only as of the date on which they are made. We undertake no obligation to update publicly or revise any dated or forward-looking statements. Any references to outside data, opinions or content are listed for informational purposes only and have not been independently verified for accuracy by the Adviser. Third-party views, opinions or forecasts do not necessarily reflect those of the Adviser or its employees. Unless stated otherwise, any mention of specific securities or investments is for illustrative purposes only. Adviser’s clients may or may not hold the securities discussed in their portfolios. Adviser makes no representations that any of the securities discussed have been or will be profitable. Indices are not available for direct investment. Their performance does not reflect the expenses associated with the management of an actual portfolio.

Original Source: https://blog.gorozen.com/blog/base-metals-a-decade-of-shortages-ahead

Categories
Junior Mining

Doug Casey on China’s Dominance of Crucial Rare Earth Elements and What Comes Next

nternational Man: What are Rare Earth Elements (REEs), and why are they so important?

Doug Casey: The REEs are a group of 17 elements that you may recall from your high school chemistry class. They take up two rows in the periodic table, sitting by themselves at the bottom of the chart. They’re chemically similar to each other.

REEs are widely dispersed on the Earth’s surface. They aren’t “rare” per se, but since they’re not generally concentrated, you only rarely find deposits that are rich enough to qualify as a mine for elements like germanium, gadolinium, ytterbium, yttrium, or 14 others with exotic and obscure names. They’re basically all minor byproducts of mines for other elements—largely aluminum or zinc. They’ve only recently found significant uses with the development of high-tech, especially electronics and magnets. Fifty years ago, they were basically just chemical curiosities.

The US has one pure REE mine, the Mountain Pass, in the California desert near Nevada. In fact, it’s the only one in the Western hemisphere. Now owned by MP Materials (MP: NYSE $25), I have no opinion on the operation. It went bankrupt under its last owner—perhaps it will do better this time around.

International Man: Former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping once said, “The Middle East has oil. China has rare Earth.”

Today, China dominates the production and processing of REEs.

Why is that?

How likely is it that the US or someone else will be able to break China’s stranglehold soon?

Doug Casey: Deng wasn’t entirely right when he said that. China’s strength in this area isn’t so much in the mining of these things as it is in their processing. Mining any kind of ore is messy and dirty. But processing can be even worse. Smelting takes huge amounts of heat, makes a lot of nasty smoke, and leaves kilotons of toxic waste. Then refining it further takes more of the same, usually plus nasty acids. The Greenies hate mining and refining and try to make them impossible in most places. That’s why so much of it happens in China.

You might say that the immense political and media power of the Greens and eco-warriors is the real reason the West relies on China for REEs.

That’s compounded by the US provoking China with its sanctions, like the recent embargo of chips. So the Chinese, in a tit-for-tat move—which is good game theory, incidentally—decided that they would embargo gallium and germanium. In addition to being important for high-tech and military applications, you need them for wind power, solar power, and electronic vehicles.

It’s quite perverse, actually. The mania for wind, solar, and EVs to save the world from demon oil has resulted in the West shooting itself in the foot by trying to go to so-called renewable power. If the wind, solar, and EV manias went away, we really wouldn’t need a lot of REEs.

It’s especially ironic because giant windmills and giant solar farms are not only highly uneconomic and unreliable but very un-green. These people not only don’t look at the immense mining, refining, and manufacturing costs of making these artifacts but haven’t even started to consider the costs of disposing of them at the end of their useful lives in 10-20 years. The indirect and delayed consequences of the trillion-dollar ideological statements that they’re making are huge.

Can we mine more REEs—as well as millions of tons of nickel, copper, lithium, and other bulk elements needed for an all-electric world—in the US? Absolutely—even though the idea is idiotic. Up until 1980, rare earth elements were produced mainly in the US. It’s only been since 1980 that China has taken over. Meanwhile, the US production has dropped to almost nothing.

The fact of the matter, as has been the case for two generations, is that very few students in the US take degrees in things like geochemistry, geology, and mining engineering. But huge numbers do in China. As a result, there’s going to be even more mining, development, and production in China and a lot less in the US.

International Man: What is your take on the geopolitical significance of China’s rise and the decline of the US?

In other words, could the US ever accept being #2?

Doug Casey: Unfortunately, at this point, the US is only number one in dissipation, wokeism, and consumerism.

When it comes to mining, including the rare earth elements, it typically takes at least ten years from the time you make a discovery to even start production. That’s apart from the fact that discovering an economic deposit in any mineral is unusual. Even after you make this discovery, typically at great expense, it’ll take another ten years to finance it and get regulatory approvals to put it into production. That’s a very risky process because anything could happen in 10 years. It’s actually a fool’s game in today’s world—and I speak as someone who’d been doing it for most of my adult life.

The US has gone downhill radically in regard to producing real goods over the last 40 years, and it’s likely to continue its decline. It’s become a so-called “service” economy. To use an accurate, though politically incorrect, aphorism, the US has transformed itself into a society where we’re all Chinese, taking in each other’s laundry.

It wasn’t so long ago that American wannabe Masters of the Universe liked to say, “We think they work.” Well, the problem is that most of the things that we think about aren’t productive. In fact, they’re delusional and destructive. It’s no accident that actual production has migrated out of the US, which has become a high-tax, high-regulation environment compared to other places in the world.

China’s got lots of problems, and they could undergo their own collapse as well, albeit for different reasons. But they’ve been doing very well, and I expect that trend will continue.

International Man: In 2010, China abruptly cut off global exports of REEs amid a dispute with Japan. The average price of REEs skyrocketed by over 20 times.

Could something like that happen again?

Doug Casey: Absolutely. China totally dominates this industry.

If the US provokes China by taking actions in the South China Sea or by supporting Taiwan, the Chinese could counter by completely cutting off these elements. That would be very bad for US high-tech industries.

On the other hand, there are plenty of all the rare earth elements in the US, Canada, and the Western Hemisphere. It’s just a question of the economics, politics, and time.

International Man: What are the investment implications of everything we discussed?

How would you speculate on the situation?

Doug Casey: As I said, the problem is quite soluble. I expect that the price of rare earths and other so-called strategic minerals can only go higher at this point. Higher prices are always the solution to shortages. If prices are high enough, that can even overcome regulatory hurdles, one way or another.

How to speculate on the situation? There aren’t futures contracts available on the exotic metals. As a practical matter, you can’t really buy the physicals. You can really only speculate on them by buying the shares of companies that mine them. But which ones?

It’s a very volatile and risky area for lots of different reasons I won’t go into here. Your best bet is probably the shares of Rio Tinto or BHP, which are the world’s largest diversified miners. REEs will never have a meaningful effect on their earnings, but another REE mania may take their share prices higher.

In any event, they have respectable dividend yields and are selling pretty far off their previous highs. Most important, they’re in the right business. It’s a generally crappy business most of the time, but I think things look good for the foreseeable future.

Chinese mining companies? The Chinese will continue to eat the US and Western mining companies’ lunch. The Chinese are, for instance, taking over mining in the Third World. That’s because the long arm of the US government makes it extremely hard for Western companies to deal with the foreign governments who control these deposits. It’s almost impossible to get anything done unless you—dare I use the word—bribe local officials. The Chinese, unlike Americans, aren’t afraid to do that. So US companies will continue to be squeezed out in the search for not just rare earths but almost anything outside of North America.

There are publicly traded mining companies in China, but it’s too risky to invest in them. The US government could as easily sanction them as they did Russian companies.

Editor’s Note: It’s clear there are some ominous social, political, cultural, and economic trends playing out right now. Many of which seem to point to an unfortunate decline of the West.

That’s precisely why legendary speculator Doug Casey and his team just released this free report, which shows you exactly what’s happening and what you can do about it. Click here to download it now.

Original Source: https://internationalman.com/articles/doug-casey-on-chinas-dominance-of-crucial-rare-earth-elements-and-what-comes-next/

Categories
Base Metals Breaking Energy Precious Metals

The American banking landscape is on the cusp of a seismic shift. Expect more pain to come

KEY POINTS

  • Rising interest rates, losses on commercial real estate and heightened regulatory scrutiny will pressure regional and midsized banks, leading to a wave of mergers, sources told CNBC.
  • Some of those pressures will be visible as regional banks disclose second-quarter results this month. Firms including Zions and KeyCorp already have warned of sinking revenues.
  • Half the country’s banks will likely be swallowed by competitors in the next decade, according to Fitch analyst Chris Wolfe.
  • “Some of these banks will survive by being the buyer rather than the target,” said incoming Lazard CEO Peter Orszag. “We could see over time fewer, larger regionals.”

The whirlwind weekend in late April that saw the country’s biggest bank take over its most troubled regional lender marked the end of one wave of problems — and the start of another.

After emerging with the winning bid for First Republic, a lender to rich coastal families that had $229 billion in assets, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon delivered the soothing words craved by investors after weeks of stomach-churning volatility: “This part of the crisis is over.”

But even as the dust settles from a string of government seizures of failed midsized banks, the forces that sparked the regional banking crisis in March are still at play.

Rising interest rates will deepen losses on securities held by banks and motivate savers to pull cash from accounts, squeezing the main way these companies make money. Losses on commercial real estate and other loans have just begun to register for banks, further shrinking their bottom lines. Regulators will turn their sights on midsized institutions after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank exposed supervisory lapses.  

What is coming will likely be the most significant shift in the American banking landscape since the 2008 financial crisis. Many of the country’s 4,672 lenders will be forced into the arms of stronger banks over the next few years, either by market forces or regulators, according to a dozen executives, advisors and investment bankers who spoke with CNBC.

“You’re going to have a massive wave of M&A among smaller banks because they need to get bigger,” said the co-president of a top six U.S. bank who declined to be identified speaking candidly about industry consolidation. “We’re the only country in the world that has this many banks.”

How’d we get here?

To understand the roots of the regional bank crisis, it helps to look back to the turmoil of 2008, caused by irresponsible lending that fueled a housing bubble whose collapse nearly toppled the global economy.

The aftermath of that earlier crisis brought scrutiny on the world’s biggest banks, which needed bailouts to avert disaster. As a result, it was ultimately institutions with $250 billion or more in assets that saw the most changes, including annual stress tests and stiffer rules governing how much loss-absorbing capital they had to keep on their balance sheets.

Non-giant banks, meanwhile, were viewed as safer and skirted by with less federal oversight. In the years after 2008, regional and small banks often traded for a premium to their bigger peers, and banks that showed steady growth by catering to wealthy homeowners or startup investors, like First Republic and SVB, were rewarded with rising stock prices. But while they were less complex than the giant banks, they were not necessarily less risky.

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The sudden collapse of SVB in March showed how quickly a bank could unravel, dispelling one of the core assumptions of the industry: the so-called stickiness of deposits. Low interest rates and bond-purchasing programs that defined the post-2008 years flooded banks with a cheap source of funding and lulled depositors into leaving cash parked at accounts that paid negligible rates.

“For at least 15 years, banks have been awash in deposits and with low rates, it cost them nothing,” said Brian Graham, a banking veteran and co-founder of advisory firm Klaros Group. “That’s clearly changed.”

‘Under stress’

After 10 straight rate hikes and with banks making headline news again this year, depositors have moved funds in search of higher yields or greater perceived safety. Now it’s the too-big-to-fail banks, with their implicit government backstop, that are seen as the safest places to park money. Big bank stocks have outperformed regionals. JPMorgan shares are up 7.6% this year, while the KBW Regional Banking Index is down more than 20%.

That illustrates one of the lessons of March’s tumult. Online tools have made moving money easier, and social media platforms have led to coordinated fears over lenders. Deposits that in the past were considered “sticky,” or unlikely to move, have suddenly become slippery. The industry’s funding is more expensive as a result, especially for smaller banks with a higher percentage of uninsured deposits. But even the megabanks have been forced to pay higher rates to retain deposits.

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Some of those pressures will be visible as regional banks disclose second-quarter results this month. Banks including Zions and KeyCorp told investors last month that interest revenue was coming in lower than expected, and Deutsche Bank analyst Matt O’Connor warned that regional banks may begin slashing dividend payouts.

JPMorgan kicks off bank earnings Friday.

“The fundamental issue with the regional banking system is the underlying business model is under stress,” said incoming Lazard CEO Peter Orszag. “Some of these banks will survive by being the buyer rather than the target. We could see over time fewer, larger regionals.”

Walking wounded

Compounding the industry’s dilemma is the expectation that regulators will tighten oversight of banks, particularly those in the $100 billion to $250 billion asset range, which is where First Republic and SVB slotted.

“There’s going to be a lot more costs coming down the pipe that’s going to depress returns and pressure earnings,” said Chris Wolfe, a Fitch banking analyst who previously worked at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

“Higher fixed costs require greater scale, whether you’re in steel manufacturing or banking,” he said. “The incentives for banks to get bigger have just gone up materially.”

Half of the country’s banks will likely be swallowed by competitors in the next decade, said Wolfe.

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While SVB and First Republic saw the greatest exodus of deposits in March, other banks were wounded in that chaotic period, according to a top investment banker who advises financial institutions. Most banks saw a drop in first-quarter deposits below about 10%, but those that lost more than that may be troubled, the banker said.

“If you happen to be one of the banks that lost 10% to 20% of deposits, you’ve got problems,” said the banker, who declined to be identified speaking about potential clients. “You’ve got to either go raise capital and bleed your balance sheet or you’ve got to sell yourself” to alleviate the pressure.

A third option is to simply wait until the bonds that are underwater eventually mature and roll off banks’ balance sheets – or until falling interest rates ease the losses.

But that could take years to play out, and it exposes banks to the risk that something else goes wrong, such as rising defaults on office loans. That could put some banks into a precarious position of not having enough capital.

‘False calm’

In the meantime, banks are already seeking to unload assets and businesses to boost capital, according to another veteran financials banker and former Goldman Sachs partner. They are weighing sales of payments, asset management and fintech operations, this banker said.

“A fair number of them are looking at their balance sheet and trying to figure out, `What do I have that I can sell and get an attractive price for?'” the banker said.

Banks are in a bind, however, because the market isn’t open for fresh sales of lenders’ stock, despite their depressed valuations, according to Lazard’s Orszag. Institutional investors are staying away because further rate increases could cause another leg down for the sector, he said.

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Orszag referred to the last few weeks as a “false calm” that could be shattered when banks post second-quarter results. The industry still faces the risk that the negative feedback loop of falling stock prices and deposit runs could return, he said.

“All you need is one or two banks to say, ‘Deposits are down another 20%’ and all of a sudden, you will be back to similar scenarios,” Orszag said. “Pounding on equity prices, which then feeds into deposit flight, which then feeds back on the equity prices.”

Deals on the horizon

It will take perhaps a year or longer for mergers to ramp up, multiple bankers said. That’s because acquirers would absorb hits to their own capital when taking over competitors with underwater bonds. Executives are also looking for the “all clear” signal from regulators on consolidation after several deals have been scuttled in recent years.

While Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has signaled an openness to bank mergers, recent remarks from the Justice Department indicate greater deal scrutiny on antitrust concerns, and influential lawmakers including Sen. Elizabeth Warren oppose more banking consolidation.

When the logjam does break, deals will likely cluster in several brackets as banks seek to optimize their size in the new regime.

Banks that once benefited from being below $250 billion in assets may find those advantages gone, leading to more deals among midsized lenders. Other deals will create bulked-up entities below the $100 billion and $10 billion asset levels, which are likely regulatory thresholds, according to Klaros co-founder Graham.

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Bigger banks have more resources to adhere to coming regulations and consumers’ technology demands, advantages that have helped financial giants including JPMorgan steadily grow earnings despite higher capital requirements. Still, the process isn’t likely to be a comfortable one for sellers.

But distress for one bank means opportunity for another. Amalgamated Bank, a New York-based institution with $7.8 billion in assets that caters to unions and nonprofits, will consider acquisitions after its stock price recovers, according to CFO Jason Darby.

“Once our currency returns to a place where we feel it’s more appropriate, we’ll take a look at our ability to roll up,” Darby said. “I do think you’ll see more and more banks raising their hands and saying, `We’re looking for strategic partners’ as the future unfolds.”

Original Source: https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2023/07/10/american-banks-face-more-pain-huge-shift.html