2014年1月2日星期四

Platinum Group Metals closes $175 million public offering


Vancouver-based Platinum Group Metals (TSX:PTM) announced December 31 it had closed a substantial public offering of $175.2 million.
On December 9, the company issued 148,500,000 shares at $1.18 a piece.
A consortium of underwriters – BMO Capital Markets, GMP Securities L.P., CIBC World Markets, RBC Dominion Securities, Barclays Capital Canada, PI Financial Corp., Raymond James and Dundee Securities – bought the shares.
The company’s stock jumped $0.10 to $1.27 after opening at $1.17.
Platinum Group Metals plans to use the proceeds to fund its projects in South Africa, including the second phase of development of its Western Bushveld mine and  exploration work at the Waterberg joint venture development and the Waterberg Extension project.
The Western Bushveld mine is a large-scale platinum, palladium, rhodium and gold development. Phase one of the project contains 275,000 ounces of platinum, palladium, rhodium and gold and is forecasted to have a 20-year mine life.
The Waterberg joint venture is an exploration project located on the northern tip of the Bushveld Complex, the same region that the Western Bushveld mine is located. The Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation owns a 37% stake in the project.
The Waterberg extension is another exploration venture located north of the Waterberg joint venture. South Africa-based Mnombo Wethu Consultants own a 26% stake.
For previous BIV coverage on Platinum Group Metals and the platinum and palladium markets, click here.

2013年12月29日星期日

Uranium miners outperforming in 2013; look at Athabasca Basin in 2014


At the end of 2012, the investment community laughed at my prediction that 2013 will produce phenomenal gains in the uranium miners (URA).  Read my interview with The Energy Report at the end of 2012 which may have signaled the bottom in the uranium miners. 
In 2013, our uranium bellwethers Areva (ARVCF) and Cameco (CCJ) have significantly outperformed the S&P 500 (SPY) by a significant margin.  The uranium price has been making a very bullish turnaround since early November.  Cameco is on the verge of a breakout at $22 and we may soon witness a golden crossover of the 50 and 200 day moving average.  Now those who ridiculed me claiming uranium was dead are now coming to the realization that the uranium sector which was reviled by investors a year ago is now coming back in favor.  Areva and Cameco are significant outperformers in 2013 as well as the small nuclear modular reactor manufacturers such as Babcock and Wilcox (BWC) and Fluor (FLR) which I have highlighted over this past year.  
For years I have predicted that the recent low price in uranium which hit 8 year lows in 2013 may actually be the catalyst to look for higher grade and more economic uranium deposits particularly in the Athabasca Basin in mining friendly Saskatchewan and in low cost in situ uranium operators in the United States as the Russian Megatons to Megawatts expired in 2013.  This low uranium spot price may actually be causing a uranium rush for these lower cost production capabilities.  Higher cost uranium mines are being shut down or delayed all over the world.  However new uranium discoveries are receiving a lot of attention especially in the Athabasca Basin which is the highest grade uranium mining district in the world.  Some of the older mines such as Rio Tinto’s low grade Rossing and Ranger Mine have been facing technical challenges.
This low price in uranium is possibly the reason why Cameco (CCJ), Rio Tinto (RIO) and Denison (DNN) have been buying junior uranium explorers in the Athabasca Basin trading at bargains due to the weak resource sector. These assets are high grade meaning potentially lower production costs in a stable jurisdiction.  Smart money knows nuclear power is here to stay as there are more reactors operating and under construction now post-Fukushima than from before the once in a millennium natural disaster.
Even after Fukushima, the Athabasca Basin has been the one bright light in a resource sector covered with darkness.  Right after Fukushima, Cameco and Rio Tinto, both with billions of dollars of market cap went into a bidding war over Hathor.  Rio won with a bid of $642 million.  Eventually, Denison bought out Fission for their J-Zone asset next door to Roughrider making themselves a target for either Cameco or Rio.
Now, Fission’s new spin out is buying Alpha for $180 million for the new Patterson Lake South Discovery.  What does all this M&A activity in Athabasca uranium miners mean in a bear market in the resource sector?   Smart money is telling us that the Athabasca Basin represents one of the great areas to make wealth in discovery of uranium.  Companies can go from a  $3 million market cap to a $180 million if a new discovery is made.
Look at the Athabasca Basin bellwethers such as Cameco, Rio and Areva whose share price has moved significantly higher to pay top dollar for the best discoveries in the Basin. The Athabasca Basin is attracting capital that is looking for 10-20 fold increases. The key to invest in early stage exploration is to find the right people. Look for the best personnel who have proven track records of success in this area with this commodity.
Jody Dahrouge was instrumental in the discovery of Fission’s J-Zone Discovery which was bought by Denison and the Patterson Lake Properties where Fission and Alpha have made a massive discovery.
Jody is now the exploration manager for Lakeland Resources (LK.V).  Lakeland just announced an option agreement with another junior.  This junior is well financed with an experience technical team.  They announced a partnership that increases the probability of a discovery without major dilution as the partner will spend $1.2 million over the next 12 months and $6.5 million over 48 months.  This will make Lakeland one of the more aggressive explorers in the Athabasca Basin with anticipated drilling beginning in the first quarter of 2014.
Lakeland’s share structure may be one of the best in the Athabasca Basin with close to 30 million shares outstanding. Close to 40% is owned by management and institutions. There is a very small float for retail investors.
When everyone was looking at the Eastern part of the Basin, Jody suggested to look west which was underexplored and Patterson Lake was discovered. Now Jody is telling Lakeland to go to the northern part of the basin for the next major discovery as this area has been totally neglected by explorers.
Lakeland has acquired a large land package across the Northern part of the Basin. Lakeland just announced that exploration is active on the Riou Lake Uranium Property located in the Northern Part of the Basin. They are doing the initial work for a winter drilling program for the first quarter of 2014, which I am very excited about.
Lakeland believes there will be strong news flow over the coming several months that could build significant value in this early stage situation. Although this is early-stage and ground floor, this company has the people, the properties and the share structure to potentially create a lot of wealth for early stage uranium exploration investors. Look for a cup and handle breakout at $.15 which could lead to a major move.

Doorway to opportunity: B.C. coal town hopes for revival


Inside the Dinosaur Discovery Gallery in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., a set of two large doors symbolize past pain and future optimism for the coal industry in northeastern British Columbia and the region’s ties to Asia.
After years in storage, the doors finally went on display this past summer, with the entrance handles together forming the Quintette coal project’s logo. The Quintette mine opened in 1982 and supplied Japanese steel mills, but it closed in 2000 amid low coal prices.
The local economy seemed so depressed that the mine’s owner, Vancouver-based Teck Resources Ltd., donated the doors for museum purposes because the company’s executives thought the closing would be permanent and no longer needed for the glass office building on Quintette’s sprawling site near Tumbler Ridge.
“These doors originally were worth roughly $100,000 and they are quite heavy,” said Richard McCrea, curator at the Peace Region Paleontology Research Centre, which houses the gallery. He marvels at the thick aluminum doors, featuring a pewter exterior with artwork that depicts trucks at an open-pit mine in British Columbia and blast furnaces used for steel making in Asia.
Local leaders admit the historic exhibit is a painful reminder of dashed dreams in the past, but they quickly add that they see hope for the future and a fresh opportunity to restart Quintette and increase coal exports to Asia from nearby mines.
While the coal market has been in a slump for the past couple of years, prices are still much healthier than a decade ago. Vancouver-based Teck believes the economics might make sense to breathe new life into the old Quintette project and create 2,000 construction jobs and 500 full-time mining jobs.
But first, the company is waiting for prices to strengthen for metallurgical (or coking) coal – used in the production of steel. There is excitement in Tumbler Ridge over the prospect that Teck could revive Quintette through an $860-million mining project, located about 700 kilometres northeast of Vancouver.
“We are continuing to proceed with detailed engineering work at the Quintette project so that if market conditions are favourable, we will be in a position in early 2014 to decide to proceed with the reopening, which could result in commercial production in mid-2015,” Teck spokesman Chris Stannell said. A subsidiary of China Investment Corp. has held a 17-per-cent stake in Teck since 2009.
Coal projects seemed to be an endangered species in northeastern British Columbia after Quintette closed in 2000 and the nearby Bullmoose mine shut down in 2003. The coal industry is intertwined with Tumbler Ridge, an instant community of modern homes carved out of the forest in the early 1980s.
“Coal mines are one of my favourite places to be. I wouldn’t get to see the dinosaur tracks if it weren’t for the mines,” Mr. McCrea said.
Tumbler Ridge, after almost becoming a ghost town a decade ago, has proven to be resilient. The community’s roots trace back three decades to development spurred by $1.5-billion in rail and other infrastructure subsidies from the B.C. and federal governments. It is a case study in the benefits and risks for the private and public sectors when making massive investments to pursue regional development. It hasn’t been easy creating an industry and community out of the remote, forested foothill wilderness.
While the governments’ investment seemed wasted after Bullmoose closed in 2003, new projects such as Anglo American PLC’s nearby Trend project emerged in subsequent years as coal prices slowly recovered. In 2011, coal prices soared to $300 (U.S.) a tonne. For Tumbler Ridge, the rally added insult to injury from Teck’s bleak decision to close Quintette.
Benchmark prices for metallurgical coal have since tumbled to about $150 a tonne. Even with recent depressed prices, however, the market is still much stronger than in 2000, when prices dipped to $40 a tonne.
Far from panicking about coal markets, Tumbler Ridge Mayor Darwin Wren believes that the community will survive, mature and come of age, though it won’t likely become a boom town again like it was in the 1980s. “Three-quarters of the housing in town is from the 1980s,” he said. “We know we’re here to stay.”
He expects the municipality of more than 3,300 residents to thrive in the long term. “For a single-family dwelling, houses start at $200,000 [Canadian] and go up beyond $400,000. Prices have definitely gone up in the past dozen years,” Mr. Wren said in an interview in his office.
He moved from Fort Nelson, B.C., to Tumbler Ridge in 2001, when he bought his home for $28,000 – one of hundreds of spacious homes on large lots that sold for less than $35,000 in 2000 and 2001. Mr. Wren, who has been mayor since 2008, keeps a hard hat and steel-toed boots close by, in case he ever has to drop by a mine or local construction site.
The vision three decades ago by the public and private sector was to mine coal in northeastern British Columbia while sparking the economy in the northwest part of the province, where the Port of Prince Rupert would serve as a crucial gateway to Asia. Only in recent years has the port started to fulfill some of its promise, notably with coal and grain exports, but also imports of consumer goods in containers from Asia finding their way onto Canadian National Railway Co.’s tracks to the U.S. Midwest.
One of the sources of coal shipped from the port to steel mills in Japan, South Korea and China, is the Anglo American Trend mine, where large trucks are loaded up with metallurgical coal.
On a recent chilly day, an employee driving around the sprawling property points out that just one tire on a massive truck costs more than $10,000, underscoring the enormous capital costs required for mining.
“For every eight trucks of rocks, there is one truck hauling coal,” said Jackie Caldwell, an environmental technician at Anglo American. Her pickup is dwarfed by the huge vehicles that go back and forth on the Trend mine’s long and winding roads.
Anglo American has started a $200-million expansion project that will effectively broaden its mining territory by nearly 500 hectares and provide job security for the current work force of 420 employees.
London-based Anglo American’s current output is 1.5 million tonnes of coal a year at its existing Trend operation, but after finishing the Roman mine expansion this spring, it forecasts that production will climb to a rate of 2.5 million tonnes a year.
Near Anglo American’s property, HD Mining International Ltd. is considering plans for a $300-million coal venture.
Another company, Walter Energy Inc., has suspended its Willow Creek mine, but remains a major coal producer in the area through two other mines, Brule and Wolverine.

2013年12月18日星期三

Coal to fire NewLead

NewLead Holdings of Greece has added to its burgeoning commodities portfolio after finalising a deal for a coal wash plant in Kentucky.

The struggling New York-listed owner said the purchase, which it first flagged in September, will provide earnings with a much needed shot in the arm.
Despite securing a recent debt-for-equity deal, the company has warned investors over its cash position and raised doubts over its ability to remain a going concern.
The plant has a contract in place to process up to 150,000 tonnes of coal per month until 2016 though it has only averaged 59,000 monthly since April 2011.
Michael Zolotas-led NewLead did not put a final price on the transaction but three months ago it said it would invest a total of $68m in two mines and the coal wash facility.
"The completion of the acquisition of the wash plant is an important step in developing our vertically integrated shipping and commodity model,” Zolotas said in an exchange filing.
"The acquisition.....greatly enhances NewLead's commodity arm because it is a vital part of coal production process.
"It ameliorates the quality of the coal produced and it produces profits from washing coal for third parties.”
The plant is serviced by a rail road allowing delivery of the coal direct to market, reducing the cost of transportation and giving NewLead a competitive advantage, Zolotas added.
Situation still precarious
NewLead continues to invest in new assets despite the precariousness of its financial position.
New York’s supreme court approved a debt-for-equity swap earlier this month that saw the Magna Group investment fund take a 9.92% stake.
However, just days later, NewLead raised a red flag over its ability to remain a going concern for much longer without improving its cash flow.
In addition to the new plant the company has purchased stakes in several US mines and recently returned to the sale and purchase market for a handysize newbuilding.
The 35,000-dwt eco-type vessel is due for delivery from an unnamed yard in the third quarter of next year, suggesting a resale.  

Tertiary Minerals up after encouraging fluorspar drilling results

Tertiary Minerals' (LON:TYM) shares rose after it reported that early results from drilling at the MB fluorspar project in Nevada were highly encouraging, particularly the regular occurrence of thick intervals containing more than 10% fluorspar. 

The results were for the first 13 of 22 holes drilled in Phase 2 of its first drill programme.

Highlights at the Southern Area included:

- Results from first 10 holes drilled in Southern Area confirm potential for definition of open-pit mineable fluorspar resource.

- Thick zones of mineralisation intersected between surface and the maximum depth of drilling (125m) - all holes end in mineralisation. 

- Mineralisation remains open in all directions so far (over 300m x 400m area). 

Highlights at the Central Area included:

- Results from 5 wide spaced holes are awaited.

- Significant results expected based on sample logging. 

Tertiary Minerals added that the drill permit has been modified to allow further drilling between Southern and Central areas, which may connect in undrilled areas.

EMED Mining Public Limited (LON:EMED) has conditionally raised £5.5m, before expenses, through a private placement of 68,750,000 new ordinary shares at 8p apiece in the UK and Canada. 

This includes the issue of placing shares to Orion Mine Finance Fund I LP (formerly Red Kite Mine Finance (Master Fund) II LP) who wished to maintain its pro-rata shareholding of 5.4%.

The net proceeds of the placing will be largely applied in funding engineering and related works in connection with the re-start of the Rio Tinto copper project and for general working capital.

Stratex International (LON:STI) reports very positive intersections from the first phase of the follow-up diamond and reverse circulation drill programme of the Faré South prospect at the Dalafin project in Senegal.

"These are excellent results from the second phase of our drill campaign, which is focusing on the multiple gold occurrences identified by the 33,000 metre RAB drilling programme completed earlier this year," said CEO Bob Foster in a statement.

"We are extremely encouraged by these initial results from what is the first RAB target to be drilled. We await further assays results from the remaining one RC and five diamond drillholes and these will be released in due course. 

"We also intend to evaluate the very high-grade RC intersection further by twinning with a diamond drillhole as a priority.

"It is particularly exciting to note that the high-grade zone was intersected in an area where the near-surface RAB drilling had only returned intersections of 7 m @ 0.11 g/t Au and 4 m @ 0.14 g/t Au."

Highlights included:

- RC drillhole FARC-07 returns 7 m @ 86.39 g/t Au from 19 m and 1 m @ 10.19 g/t Au from 36 m

- Other RC drill intercepts from Faré South include: 10 m @ 2.34 g/t Au from 50 m (FARC-01); 1 m @ 22.15 g/t Au from 46 m (FARC-04); 1 m @ 10.19 g/t Au from 36 m (FARC-07); 4 m @ 0.49 g/t Au from 56 m (FARC-07); 3 m @ 0.94 g/t Au from 26 m (FARC-08)

- Diamond drillhole FADD-01 returned the following: 4.5 m @ 0.85 g/t Au from 8.6 m; 19.0 m @ 2.20 g/t Au from 68.6 m. 

Centamin (LON:CEY) issued an update to its resources and reserves for the Sukari gold mine.

The total measured and indicated resource has increased to 13.4 million ounces (Moz) (previously 13.1Moz) comprising open pit resource of 12.6Moz and underground resource of 0.8Moz.

The total combined open pit and underground reserve at 8.2Moz, is down 19% from 10.1Moz at 31 December 2011 due to mining depletion and increased mining and processing costs associated with a change from subsidised to international fuel prices.

Chairman Josef El-Raghy said: "As expected there has been some impact on the overall reserve from the higher international fuel price environment that Sukari has operated under since Q1 2012.

"However, it is pleasing to note that the underground drilling campaign, which has escalated steadily during 2013, has started to outline substantial regions of high grade ore. 

"It is our expectation that this trend will continue as underground development is expanded and the multiple high-grade drill targets at Sukari are tested and defined over the coming months and years."

Jubilee Platinum (LON:JLP) has received formal approval to start trading on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange's Alternative Exchange with effect from tomorrow (19 December). 

This move is in-line with the company's current trading history with the majority of trades occurring on the London AIM market and allowing the London AIM exchange to become the company's primary listing. 

Ncondezi Energy (LON:NCCL) has raised aggregate gross proceeds of about £3.03 million through an open offer and placing.

It received valid acceptances for 18,516,087 offer shares from qualifying participants, or 30.58% of the offer shares.

In addition, Ncondezi confirm that the remaining 42,041,753 new shares not taken up by qualifying participants, or 69.42%, were placed at the offer price to new and existing investors.

The sector's biggest riser was Bisichi Mining (LON:BISI) - up by 15% - while the biggest faller was Eurasia Mining (LON:EUA) - down by more than 9.5% in late afternoon trading. 

2013年12月15日星期日

Uranium Energy Reports Progress at Goliad Project


Uranium Energy Corp. (NYSEMKT:UEC) reported progress on its fully-permitted Goliad ISR Project where construction continues as planned, and the previously ordered processing equipment has arrived on schedule.
As quoted in the press release:
The Ion Exchange (IX) vessels were received in late November, and the material to construct the IX pipe and valve system has been ordered and received. The recovery of uranium is set to be available to come online in fiscal 2014.
… As noted in the Company’s quarterly report, the EPA had earlier filed a Motion to Remand without Vacatur with the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals (the “Fifth Circuit”). Without vacatur simply means that the EPA-approved AE remains in force. The EPA’s stated purpose was to supplement the record in response to the opponent’s prior complaints. In requesting the remand without vacatur, the EPA denied the existence of legal error and stated that it was unaware of any additional information that would merit reversal. Consistent with the EPA and the TCEQ, the Company is not aware of any new information that would change the current AE approval.
Uranium Energy Corp. President and CEO, Amir Adnani said:
The Company’s scalable hub-and-spoke strategy, a proven model for increasing uranium extraction and maintaining a low-cost profile, will continue as planned and production at Goliad will be available to come online in fiscal 2014. We are executing on this plan with the Company’s Goliad, Burke Hollow, and Palangana projects.

The US considers change to crude oil export policy


Signalling a possible break with 40 years of energy policy, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz has suggested it may be time for the Obama administration to reconsider the United States' ban on exporting crude oil.

Congress made most oil exports without a licence illegal in the 1970s to conserve supplies at a time when Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries embargoes produced long lines at petrol stations and threatened the US economy. But over the past five years, a frenzy of oil drilling in shale rock formations in Texas and North Dakota have produced a glut of crude in the Midwest and Gulf of Mexico states.

''Those restrictions on exports were born, as was the Department of Energy and the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, from oil disruptions,'' Dr Moniz said on Thursday. ''Lots of energy issues deserve new analysis and examination in the context of what is now an energy world that is no longer like the 1970s.''

The Energy Department does not have the power to relax restrictions on exports, but Dr Moniz said that it would be willing to produce technical analysis on the issue for the Commerce Department, which issues the export licences.
Oil companies are lobbying to allow exports, arguing that the US could substantially increase export earnings from selling high-quality crudes abroad. That type of crude oil is not easily refined by US refineries that were outfitted for processing lower-quality crudes imported from Mexico, Venezuela and the Middle East.

The lobbyists argue that such exports could lower global oil prices, which would bring relief for US consumers. But others, including influential members of Congress, say that oil exports would actually raise domestic petrol prices and threaten domestic oil supplies at times of crisis in the Middle East or Africa.

''If the Department of Energy and others push on Commerce, then maybe they can get it over the hump,'' said Chip Johnson, president of Carrizo Oil & Gas, a midsize Texas oil company active in the shale oil fields. ''I think we should keep national security first, but we should export oil just like anything else.''

Oil companies are already beginning to export more oil to Canada because those export licences are relatively easy to obtain. Canada is the largest exporter of oil to the US, but because many grades of US oil are selling at a discount to global benchmarks, eastern Canadian refiners are buying US crude to process into diesel and petrol.
In the first 10 months of the year, the US exported an average of 95,000 barrels of crude oil a day, mostly to Canada. Over the same period in 2012, the US exported an average of 67,000 barrels a day and 23,000 barrels a day in 2007, when US oil production began its expansion.

Some analysts predict that exports to Canada will soon approach 200,000 barrels a day.
But some Democratic lawmakers are already voicing concerns about exports.
''The growing chorus from the oil industry to change long-standing US law to permit the export of American crude oil is a disturbing trend,'' Senator Edward Markey said. ''This oil should be kept here in America, to benefit our consumers and to reduce our dependence on imports from the Middle East.''