I would like to borrow Daniel Major’s choice words, below, for my take on our second-week-of-July start to metals’ and miners’ %&^#*@)! prices.
That is, “not enough swear words” to cover my bases.
Spot and futures prices are losing 1% to 3% and most mining stocks as much and more. Here at home, tumbling miners get a checkbook look, as you all know.
I might not be as overjoyed as strategist and perennial metals investor Rick Rule, who is holding his annual Florida show this week; i.e., “I love days when everything falls. Do your due diligence.”
But for me, today and tumbling dice days are buying days. Primarily, this week, last week, today even (at $13.52 USD), I continue to add to our biggest holding, Ivanhoe Mines IVN IVPAF.
Ivanhoe’s second-quarter copper in concentrate logged 100,000 metric tons; that’s the start of a ramp-up that will bring the DRC Congo operation to as much as 490,000 tons for the year.
The company, which does not pay me to harp on Ivanhoe’s results or prospects, looks to boost yearly copper production capacity to more than 600,000 tonnes with its new concentrator and improved electricity sources. Click on links for releases please.
GoviEx Uranium
“There are not enough swear words to how I would describe the Ministry of Mines in Niger. The seizure is a travesty as they have not even followed their own rules.” — Daniel Major, GoviEx Uranium CEO More about the seizure in The Calandra Report.
Eagle Gold Mine
My view is the equity is cheap enough here at a $55 million CAD market value. — The Calandra Report
“Yukon perceptions for permitting and values — feels like much more fallout to come, as happened in B.C. with Mount Polley,” says John-Mark Staude, whose Riverside Resources RRI RVSDF is a $10 million market-cap. “Then, much of British Columbia was impacted for a long time about tailings approaches.”
Mount Polley was 2014. The copper mine tailing pond collapsed, releasing 25 million cubic meters of tailings and waste water into Quesnel Lake.
I added this to the latest VGCX reporting:
As to the matter of restructuring debt in the event the mine returns to production? Too many possibilities. A royalty company, Osisko Gold Royalties, put down $98 million CAD for Eagle in exchange for a 5% NSR in March 2018.
GRANT’S ON GOLD
“Gold overtook the Euro as the second- largest reserve currency behind the American dollar in 2023. The yellow metal reached 18% of total international reserves, up from 11% in 2008 vS. 16% for the euro.” — Grant’s Interest Rate Observer
“Central bankers added 1,037 tons to their balance sheets last year, the second-highest annual haul after the record 1,082 tons purchased in 2022. A spring World Gold Council survey shows one-third of the queried mandarins expected to add more bullion in the coming 12 months, the highest count since the council began collecting data in 2018.”
Draft Mode: Denver Gold Group‘s Tim Wood and I shared our thoughts about his 157-member trade group’s Americas Forum 25 and 20 years ago in downtown Denver and presently each September in Colorado Springs.
I am working on a piece that examines how capital markets, that is, available money, have shifted dramatically in two decades. Tim has 10 bullet points that deserve a look, and I will shout when this is available.
Denver Gold Group does not pay me for this extra-curricular report; neither does any other executive or group or company. I do this to put ordinary investors, individuals, on good ground for what I think will be a runaway interest in miners and their stocks and convertibles and placements and other investment vehicles. — Thom Calandra
— Thom Calandra [Please see TCR reporting on Victoria Gold, on uranium and of trading notes.]
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Thom Calandra is a writer and an investor. Research and material are meant as editorial opinion. He is not a professional investment adviser. Please do not consider his reporting as a recommendation to buy or sell securities.