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Precious Metals Special Report
Outline:
... Part One: Overview
... Part Two: The Fundamentals
... Part Three: Overview
of Players, Two Majors
... Part Four: Profiles
of Sample Junior Players
... Part Five: Cortez
Trend Maps, Pictorial Overview
Part Two: The Fundamentals (2)
But is the Company "For Real"?
In the Enron Age, this is a very important question. Ideally, in order to
make a well-informed qualitative assessment of a company, the investor makes
an on site visit, talks to expert geologists, meets the management in person,
and reads all their financial and other public disclosure literature. We all
nod our heads in agreement that this is a great idea, but in the real world
most mutual fund managers and stock brokers are spread so thin even they can
hardly find the time to take these prudent steps.
I think that John Kaiser has developed one of the best systems I have seen
for screening and making an initial evaluation of junior mining companies.
A number of industry insiders I have met at precious metals trade shows share
this opinion. I provide his scoring system and summary comments regarding White
Knight Resources below as an example that pertains to a Cortez Trend exploration
company.
 |
| |
Factor |
Rank |
Avoid(0) |
Bad(1) |
So-So(2) |
Good(3) |
Excellent(4) |
| 1 |
Story - Target Size |
4 |
No Targets |
less than 500,000 |
500,000 -1,000,000 |
1M-5M |
more than 5,000,000 |
| 2 |
Story - Portfolio |
3 |
0 |
1 |
2-4 |
5-10 |
more than 10 |
| 3 |
Story - Frontier Bluesky |
2 |
None |
Well Explored Area |
New Model or Technology in Well Explored Area |
Under-explored |
Unexplored |
| 4 |
Story - Geodiversity |
2 |
None |
One Country/one property |
One country /several properties |
One Continent /several properties |
Several Continents /Several Properties |
| 5 |
Story - Political Risk |
4 |
No Project Focus |
Unstable |
Trending toward instability |
Trending toward stability |
Stable |
| 6 |
Story - Title Risk |
4 |
No Title |
Disputed or pending private vendor; Aboriginal land
claim or environmental permitting issues |
Uninvested or vested in third world from private vendor
or pending from third world government |
In N. America vested via private vendor or pending
via government or granted by 3rd world government |
Acquired directly from non third world government by
staking, permit, concession, etc. |
| 7 |
Asset - Working Capital |
2 |
Zero or less |
less than 10% |
10-50% |
50-100% |
more than 100% |
| 8 |
Asset - Non - Cash |
0 |
Non Non - Cash Hard Assets |
less than 10% |
10 -50% |
50-100% |
more than 100% |
| 9 |
Asset - Spec Premium |
2 |
100% |
more than 90% |
50-90% |
10-50% |
less than 10% |
| 10 |
Asset - Gold Oz Deficit |
3 |
more than 20,000,000 |
5,000,000-20,000,000 |
1,000,000-5,000,000 |
500,000-1,000,000 |
less than 500,000 |
| 11 |
Structure-Distribution |
3 |
Public owns more than 90% |
Insiders & institutions each less than 10% |
Insiders & institutions each less than 20% |
Insiders or institutions each more than 20% |
Insiders more than 30% & institutions less than
20% |
| 12 |
Structure - Chart Pattern |
2 |
Exponential Rocket Launch |
Long-term uptrend reversal or double top or head & shoulders |
Trough or long term downtrend or flags or pennants
or plateau |
Long-term downtrend reversal or Long-term uptrend or
Double bottom |
Emerging from lon g term bottom |
| 13 |
Structure-Breakdown Risk |
4 |
2 year Hi/Lo Ratio more than 10, price in upper 10%
of range |
2 year Hi/Lo ratio 5-10, price in upper 20% of range |
2 year Hi/Lo ratio 2-5, price in upper 20% of range |
Price in upper 50% of range but below upper 20% of
range |
Price in lower half of range or high/low ratio less
than 2 |
| 14 |
Structure - Shareholder Mood |
3 |
Class Action Lawsuits |
Hangover-liquidation |
Drunken Exuberance, Sobering Up, or Smug Satisfaction |
Tipsy about potential or gearing for comeback |
Just getting started |
| 15 |
Structure - Resale Timebombs |
3 |
more than 50% restricted for 1 year plus |
more than 30% restricted for more than 6 months |
more than 30% restricted for 3-6 months |
more than 70% free within 3 months |
100% free |
| 16 |
People-Technical |
4 |
Blackbox specialists |
No geological or geographical |
Average geological & limited geographical |
Average geological and geographical |
Top-notch geological & geographical |
| 17 |
People-Funding strategy |
2 |
Public Offerings |
Retail: brokered or private |
Institutional: brokered |
Farm-outs or sophisticated |
Deep-pocketed insiders |
| 18 |
People - Funding History |
4 |
Zero $ |
less than $1M |
$1-5M |
$5-10M |
more than $10M |
| 19 |
People - Mgmt Priority |
4 |
Rollback Plan |
Failed promotion |
On the shelf |
Second String |
Flagship |
| 20 |
People - Stable Size |
3 |
More than ten |
Six to ten |
Four-six |
Two-three |
One |
| |
Story |
Summary: White Knight has been focused on Nevada
since the mid-nineties when John and Gordon Leask recruited Pat Cavanaugh
to run the company. Cavanaugh was the geological brains behind the discovery
of the Pipeline deposit in the Cortez Trend. He brought Robert Cuffney
on board as vice president of exploration in 1997, but he himself departed
in 2001 when the realities of the resource sector bear market caught
up with White Knight. His business plan was to generate conceptual projects
and use his vast network of industry contacts to farm the projects out
to others. By 2001 the low gold price had annihilated the field of partners
and the business model was dead. The gold bear market took a devastating
toll of small producers, two of whom, Atlas Minerals Inc and Alta Gold
Company, filed for bankruptcy. White Knight managed to acquire for $4,000
a database Atlas had spent $20 million to generate. Cuffney recruited
Greg French, a refugee from bankrupt Atlas, and together they sifted
through the data, particularly that which pertained to the Cortez Trend.
The bear market caused much of the land to come open as landholders went
bankrupt, and many prospectors and ranchers found their properties handed
back to them. The enthusiasm by the majors for the Cortez Trend created
by Pipeline also lost momentum when Placer made the ET Blue discovery,
a property that Cavanaugh had at one stage optioned on behalf of White
Knight, but had been unable to fund. The ET Blue discovery caused Placer
to think in terms of east-west structures, and it was not until the 2003
discovery of Cortez Hills that Placer's thinking returned to the north-south
structural model. During that period the USGS had released the results
of a magnetotelluric survey of the region which the majors had ignored,
but which was closely studied by White Knight in attempt to understand
the structural controls of the Cortez Trend. White Knight realized that
the Cortez Trend was the axis of an ancient deep-seated crustal fault
that been reactivated many times. So while companies abandoned their
claims and the majors snoozed White Knight started to acquire claims
along the north-south Cortez fault where nothing had been available on
reasonable terms during the nineties. White Knight's speculation was
that the Cortez Trend was a 1-3 mile wide corridor of structural traps
associated with horsted blocks very similar in manner to the Carlin Trend,
which hosts nearly 200 million ounces of gold. As a result of its geological
sleuthing and willingness to "bottom-fish" for land during the gold bear
market, White Knight has ended up with a very strategic land position
within the Cortez Trend. There is no discovery yet on any of the properties,
but their potential is attracting a growing audience among both majors
and speculators. |
| [Source for chart and commentary: Kaiser Bottom Fish © 2004
John Kaiser. Please go to www.kaiserbottomfish.com for
additional information, to include a free trial subscription] |
After the reader considers the descriptions of other junior mining companies
involved in the Cortez Trend portrayed in Part
Four, and considers various geological theories illustrated in Part
Five, he will be able to draw some of his own conclusions regarding Mr.
Kaiser's qualitative assessment of White Knight depicted above.
Other Observations
Just as the research and development process in high tech industries involves
converting intangible theoretical insights into tangible prototypes ready for
production, the junior mining company exploration process involves converting
intangible geological concepts and sample drilling results into a producing
mine.
Garbage in, garbage out applies here as well. Expected value
analysis is a terrific tool, but it has to be applied with heavy doses of common
sense and also combined with substantial background research on qualitative
factors to be effective. I have seen spread sheet and expected value analyses
abused in the real estate and oil and gas industries in addition to the mining
industry. Just because something looks like it is very rational on the surface
may not prevent it from generating foolishness if false assumptions are cranked
into the model.
General market behavior can change state under certain circumstances
similar to the way water turns into ice. A major Achilles Heel
of rational models takes place if commodities prices start plummeting,
as they did in the late 1990's. Then fear takes over, and investor behavior
can radically shift. A junior mining company may no longer be worth the
expected value of all of its many projects combined, but only the expected
value of its strongest flagship project, and if that does not work out,
then game over. An analogous fear factor, incidentally, caused the derivatives
markets to go haywire following the Russian Default and Asian Crisis in
1998 and led to the melt down of the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management.
However, when I use the word "melt down," I would like to restate my opinion
that the days of serious gold price suppression are very likely behind us,
and if anything, the coming general capital market disruptions, hyperinflation,
and interest rate increases prophesied by such sources as James Puplava's Perfect
Storm series will, if anything, tend to create an explosive gold price
and junior mining company share price melt up.
Not all ounces are created equal. Another important issue, particularly
in regard to my discussion of Cortez Trend companies in Parts Three and Four,
involves making the distinction between "inferred and indicated" ounces and "proven
and probable" ounces. These two categories are also known as "resource" as
opposed to "reserve" ounces respectively.
When we go from "resource" to "reserve" ounces, we are moving along a scale
of declining risk that the ounces in the ground do in fact exist as part of
a continuous deposit and that they are economically mineable. Canada's National
Instrument 43-101 requires Canadian companies to file technical reports
and report "resource" as well as "reserve" ounces. In contrast the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) does not recognize "resource" ounces. The savvy
investor needs to know the difference.
Placer Dome is a Canadian company based in Vancouver, B.C. Most of the junior
mining companies active on the Cortez Trend are also Canadian. Hence, they
all talk about "resource" ounces in addition to "reserve" ounces.
It is often best to go straight to the source. Going along the spectrum from
the lowest to the highest levels of certainty, some definitions related
to NI 43-101 are as follows:
Inferred Mineral Resource An 'Inferred Mineral Resource' is that
part of a Mineral Resource for which quantity and grade or quality can be
estimated on the basis of geological evidence and limited sampling and reasonably
assumed, but not verified, geological and grade continuity.
Indicated Mineral Resource An 'Indicated Mineral Resource' is that
part of a Mineral Resource for which quantity, grade or quality, densities,
shape and physical characteristics, can be estimated with a level of confidence
sufficient to allow the appropriate application of technical and economic
parameters, to support mine planning and evaluation of the economic viability
of the deposit.
Measured Mineral Resource A 'Measured Mineral Resource' is that part
of a Mineral Resource for which quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape,
and physical characteristics are so well established that they can be estimated
with confidence sufficient to allow the appropriate application of technical
and economic parameters, to support production planning and evaluation of
the economic viability of the deposit.
A Mineral Reserve is the economically mineable part of a Measured
or Indicated Mineral Resource demonstrated by at least a Preliminary Feasibility
Study.
A 'Probable Mineral Reserve' is the economically mineable part of
an Indicated, and in some circumstances a Measured Mineral Resource demonstrated
by at least a Preliminary Feasibility Study.
A 'Proven Mineral Reserve' is the economically mineable part of a
Measured Mineral Resource demonstrated by at least a Preliminary Feasibility
Study.
We also see a category called 'historical ounces" frequently mentioned
in mining literature, but not covered by NI 43-101. This usually means ounces
once identified by an old abandoned mining operation whose methods are considered
too loose or unscientific by modern standards to be officially acceptable today.
Another interesting term is "contained" ounces" which typically means
all ounces historically mined out of in an area plus remaining current
reserves in the ground.
To summarize, "measured and indicated" or "inferred" or "resource" ounces,
a) do not have enough drilling to be sufficiently defined as a continuous deposit or b)
are not economically mineable at the current gold price, but may be economically
mineable at an above market gold price. An advantage of stating "resource" ounces
is that a mining company can peg them to a certain gold price and keep them
there regardless of market fluctuations.
"Proven and probable" or "reserve" ounces means that the surmised ounces are "real" because
a) there is overwhelming drilling evidence regarding a continuous and definable
shape of the deposit and b) it is economically feasible to mine at current
gold prices. If the price of gold slips significantly, this will usually force
gold mining companies to recalculate a smaller reserve base.
At one extreme, "resource" ounces can be a complete joke when they are claimed
by certain cash-desperate junior mining companies with shaky track records
in exotic Third World locations where mining has never been performed before.
At the other extreme, Placer Dome's "measured and indicated" or "resource" ounces
in the middle of the Cortez Trend are in my opinion very serious numbers. The
deposits were found next door to major mining infrastructure with a long production
history. The resource data was developed by some of the best professional geological
talent in the gold mining industry. Lastly, Placer Dome is a financially solid
major gold mining company that can easily survive disappointments and the truth.
Mining still suffers from an English-Metric multiple personality. As
you look at land positions and assay data in Parts Three, Four,
and Five, it
helps to be aware of some conversion information. If you need to go beyond
the information provided below, you can easily transition between the modern
scientific community and medieval England by typing in "feet per meter" or "grams
per ounce" and other desired conversion factors into Google.
"Bonanza" Gold: more than 34 grams of gold per tonne or more than
one troy ounce of gold per ton. (American
Bonanza definition)
"High Grade" Gold: About .3 ounce per tonne and above.
Land size: One claim is 600 feet by 1500 feet or 20.67 acres. There are
640 acres per square mile. One square mile = 2.59 square kilometers
Weights: 1 Ounce = 28.3495231 grams. 1 Troy ounce = 1.09714286 ounces
or 31.1 grams
Length: 3.28 feet per meter. (The "Googled" answer)
End of Part Two: The Fundamentals
Back to: Part One:
Overview
Back to: Part Two:
The Fundamentals (1)
Forward to:
... Part Three: Overview
of Players, Two Majors
... Part Four: Profiles
of Sample Junior Players
... Part Five: Cortez
Trend Maps, Pictorial Overview
|
Bill Fox
America First Trust
Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of William
Fox, and may not be those of Sammons Securities Company, LLC. This report is
for research/informational purposes only, and should not be construed as a
recommendation of any security. Information contained herein has been compiled
from sources believed to be reliable. There is however, no guarantee of its
accuracy or completeness.
Bill Fox is VP/Investment Strategist and private client
money manager, America First Trust. Bill welcomes phone calls and responses
to this article. His web site: www.amfir.com. Address: VP, America First
Trust, Reg. Rep., Sammons Securities Co., LLC P.O. Box 820669, Vancouver,
WA 98682, telephone: 360-882-5369, toll free: 866-945-5369 (866-WILL FOX),
email: wfox@sammonsrep.com. Securities offered through Sammons Securities
Co LLC, member NASD and SIPC.
Securities offered through Sammons Securities Co. LLC,
Member NASD and SIPC. Investment advisory services offered through
Sigma Planning Corporation, a registered investment advisor. Views and opinions
expressed are not necessarily those of Sammons Securities or Sigma Planning
Corporation. Sometimes William Fox offers viewpoints that are not necessarily
his own to provide additional perspectives. Please see additional disclaimer
on Broker-Dealer/Sammons page.
Copyright © 2004-2005 William Fox
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