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A good update from Capricorn Metals meeting guidance and one stage went above $5.
Also they expect an update from the referral submitted to the Department of Environment and Climate Change fairly soon on Mt Gibson.
I'm not sure what "controlled action" means. Seems like it needs more consultation before they can get approval.
FYI: Crimson Metals is a subsidiary of CMM.
Probably close to my sell price now. Not that keen on the Mt Gibson development when there is an endangered species involved. Already shopping for something else in the Strawman shortlist.
[held]
As referenced from the earlier comment in the Myles straw, Capricorn Metals had to submit a referral to the DCCEEW for Mt Gibson. I found out this is due to possible clearance of Malleefowl habitat for the future development of Mt Gibson Gold Project.
Link from the EPBC Portal website.
Interesting that there is no approval to mine despite previous mining activities
Malleefowl used to be more broadly distributed across Northern Australia but now only found in the southern regions so in fact their population has declined dramatically.
Here's some more info from the Department of Environment and Climate Change and also Bush Heritage for the uneducated
The impact though looks minimal with only two mounds active plus several inactive ones that will be removed. I believe the mounds are used to incubate the clutch of eggs which are vulnerable to predators especially foxes and feral cats. So although the impact appears small, it will still have a significant effect on the population of Malleefowl due to threats from nesting at ground level.
Learn so much from doing a bit of google searching once you persist long enough and hit the right keywords.
I guess impacts to environment is another factor to take into account (direct or indirect) for our investments.
But it is sad that perhaps some indirect actions such as land clearing have led to their decline and only now individuals and companies such as Capricorn have to take real responsibility to protect what is left. Kind of wish Capricorn fully disclosed the information above in the first place rather than stating the development has been referred to a govt department for further review.
In addition, we do not know which area of the project is affected - my guess is to protect those nesting sites. And there is no modelling to show what happens if the sites have to protected.
As a result of above, my valuation is now under review and shouldn't be relied on.
[held but weak hold[
Probably Capricorn should start a new education service on derivatives 101?
Still no word on Mt Gibson.
Bell Potter also updated with a price target of $6.50. But I always think Bell is trying to provide liquidity for their customers who may be holders wishing to exit.
Cannacord also has price target of $6.55
Unfortunately I don't have a recent report with commentary on Mt Gibson with the development being referred to the DCCEEW.
Given the increase in reserves and NPV to $898m, I think the 6.50 price targets are a bit premature. Better to wait for final decision from DCCEEW as any recommendation will have a bearing on mine development.
Meanwhile I will shop for something else instead of adding to the recent price weakness.
[held but still a weak hold]
It is June now and well overdue for an update on this news regarding Mt Gibson
I guess they must have found something on this list:
https://www.dcceew.gov.au/environment/epbc
https://www.dcceew.gov.au/environment/epbc/our-role/what-is-protected
This is becoming the next McPhillamys
Not sure if I'll be waiting around for Mt Gibson to be developed
[held but no conviction]
One of the most successful ASX listed gold miners of recent times has been Capricorn Metals Ltd (CMM).
5 years ago CMM had a share price of 30 cents and a market cap of $90m.
Shares are now trading at $4.90 and CMM has a market cap of $1.8b
Over this time management built a new mine producing around 110,000 ounces a year at Karlawinda in the Pilbara region of WA. Five years ago the area was just desert. Since then they have gone on to buy a collection of tenements called Mt Gibson in WA and carried out a large amount of exploration and intend to turn this into a mine similar to Karlawinda. A terrific achievement.
The success of CMM has not gone unnoticed and they are now one of the most expensive gold producers on the ASX. And the gold price will continue to do whatever it is going to do.
Three of the four directors are very competent ex Regis Resources staff. Back in 2019 they thought they might be better off doing all this gold digging stuff themselves, hence CMM.
At the beginning of this CMM journey, Director Myles Ertzen held 3,611,539 CMM shares and had not sold any shares up until the beginning of this month. Myles shareholding represented just under 1% of the total share count.
On the 4/5/24 Myles sold 2,011,539 of these shares for $4.90 each walking away with $9.9m.
If you are a CMM shareholder or thinking of becoming one, maybe you don’t need to know much more.
The info in this one was totally out of date, as was my previous low valuation from a few years back.
They don't look cheap up here, but they have an outstanding management team that are kicking goals and have been very good across all areas, especially with capital allocation decisions including M&A. CMM have outperformed even when many in the Aussie gold industry have underperformed.
Here's their Five Year Chart:
Source: Commsec.
And here's how they've performed compared with a few gold ETFs, being the Van Eck Gold Miners ETF (GDX) and two physical gold bullion-backed ETFs, Perth Mint Gold (PMGOLD) and the Betashares currency hedged Gold Bullion ETF (QAU). Those 3 ETFs have returned between +49% and +97% over 5 years, but they look like they've flatlined compared to the +1,183% that Capricorn has provided.
Like I said, they don't look cheap up here, but they haven't looked cheap for a couple of years now, and they still keep rising. And the gold price isn't doing them any harm at all:
Source: https://goldprice.org/
The left side charts and tables are in US$ and the ones on the right are in Aussie Dollars.
Interesting that the returns over 4 of those 6 time periods there were better in A$ than they were in US$ - in percentage terms. Only the returns over 1 day and over 6 months have been better in US$. Over 30 days, 1 year, 5 years and over 20 years the returns have all been better in A$.
I like my Aussie gold miners. It's not the same as investing in physical gold; it can sometimes be even better, and CMM is a great example of that.
That said, I am not currently holding CMM, except here in my Strawman.com portfolio. I have held them in prior years in a real money portfolio, but do not hold them today. They remain on a watchlist. They've performed exceptionally well.
Obviously I wish I still held them in that real money portfolio, however you can't back every winner.
Have neglected posting updates here but I am still holding and letting this grow in a "quiet corner of the garden" so to speak.
Overall not much has really changed. Mark Clark and team quietly going about their job.
Probably the only concern is how Mt Gibson will pan out.
[held]
Despite the bad quarterly, Capricorn did something surprising which I didn't think was possible.
Capricorn bought put options to hedge their forward contracts used for development financing.
So if I'm not mistaken, instead of selling their gold at around $2247-2296 /oz on the forward, they sold instead at $2810 /oz via the put on the contract. Then used the funds to close the forward contract on delivery of the gold and pocketing the difference.
Derivatives 101? Quite interesting. Correct me if my explanation is incorrect but I'm going by my basic knowledge of derivatives and forward contracts.
Either way it seems like a well executed move by Capricorn. Again a great example of Mark Clark adding or preserving shareholder value for the firm.
Wonder if that's possible in hedging currency risk (ie: CSL)? Food for thought...
[held]
27/5/23: 4.40 to 5.14. See my Financials straw
January 2023: Median DCF valuation updated from 4.24 to 4.40 to account for the rise in gold price and increase in share count. As current price is now more than the median valuation for the last 2 months, I'm updating my bull case valuation to 5.56 which assumes a 20 year mine life at Karlawinda if resources are fully converted to reserves producing 2.56 million ounces during the full period (Karlawinda resource actually is 2.2m Oz). For simplicity, all AISC and price of gold is kept constant throughout the period.. I have not included Mt Gibson as it is too difficult to do any valuation while we wait for studies to complete. Already it looks like the market is giving a value of 60c per share for Mt Gibson. Seems overvalued now and part of the reason could be due to short covering.
December 2022: DCF Valuation updated from 3.94 to 4.24. Using current gold price 2645.98 and AISC 1166 for Q123 with a bit of production inc depletion of 1% for 12 years. Againi I've not included the Mt Gibson project so I'm being really conservative here.
September 2022: Updating my valuation based on updated information. Debt: 50m, Cash cost 1200 for 11 years at Karlawinda. Maintain annual production rate 120Koz. Bear case is 3.34. Median case around 3.94 if mine life can be extended over another year. Bull case is about 5.94 if mine life goes to 20 years (ie: 2m Oz can be converted to reserve). Haven't included Mt Gibson yet as too early to get figures right now. I've also gone big on my portfolio for CMM which is against strawman consensus as I can see CMM straws gets not many upvotes!
March 2022 (5.15): Since my last update, CMM has achieved steady state operations for the last 6 months and will achieve production at an average AISC of around AUD 1200 for 120000 Oz pa for 12 years at Karlawinda. Based on the figures after applying some rough DCF (rate 8%) and taking out the 75m debt, this give a share price of around $3.71 if AISC can be maintained throughout the 12 year period. However, if the whole 2M Oz resource can be converted to reserves, giving a mine life of 20 years, the valuation increases to around $5.15. I haven't included Mt Gibson project in these figures which is another 2M Oz of resources (still yet to be converted to reserves). I think the low AISC explains why the share price still increases vs the majors despite the volatility in the gold price. However this did not make it to the All ords index possibly due shares being very thinly traded.
Previous update: Near term gold producer in WA and on track for Q1 2021. Karlawinda is their main gold project with estimated 12 year mine life. New team who have worked at large companies such as Regis Resources and Equigold. Although there is risk as highlighted earlier, I do think the new board is a good team with lots of experience so good chance of success with commissioning scheduled this year. There was also a failed takeover bid by Regis couple of years ago. In addition, they also have a large unexplored tenement package nearby which I assume will be drilled once production starts and shows that the company is well managed.
Finally it is out!
Need some time to go through the lengthy document though. Look like an 8-9 year mine life on 150KOz PA production on reserves alone.
Markets were indifferent on the announcement and price not going anywhere.
Mt Gibson Gold Project Prefeasibility Study Confirms Ore Reserve Of 1.45 Million Ounces 152,000 Ounces PA Production
Pre-feasibility study (PFS) delivers a compelling case for development of Capricorn’s second mining operation at the Mt Gibson Gold Project (MGGP) in Western Australia.
▪ Maiden Ore Reserve estimate of 48.7 million tonnes at 0.9g/t Au for 1.45 million ounces of gold.
▪ A gold price of A$1,900 per ounce was used in the estimation of the Ore Reserve.
▪ Reserve pits have a shallow average depth of 140 metres, a maximum depth of 245 metres and operating strip ratio (w:o) of 4.2.
▪ The maiden MGGP reserve increases Capricorn's group gold reserves to 2.8 million ounces.
▪ Ranks Capricorn as 7th largest “Australia only" reserve base amongst ASX listed gold companies.
▪ MGGP average annual gold production of 152,000 ounces pa for the first 7.5 years of mine life at an all in sustaining costs (AISC) of A$1,420 per ounce.
▪ With the established gold production at Karlawinda Gold Project (KGP), this has the potential to lift Capricorn to circa 270,000 ounces per annum production1, in the lowest quartile of Australian gold industry AISC.
▪ Production of 270,000 ounces would rank Capricorn in the 10 largest ASX listed gold producers.
▪ Rare growth opportunity amongst Australian mid-tier gold industry.
▪ Wholly owned project of scale and quality in tier one jurisdiction.
▪ Project located on a granted mining lease, less than 300 kilometres from Perth and has exceptional access to infrastructure and services.
▪ Underpins Capricorn’s growth to a small group of mid-tier gold companies with >250kozpa of gold production and >2.5Moz of reserves
[held]
Bullish video on Capricorn Metals and why it trades at such a high premium
Money and Mine - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggZuOjW9iuY
Starts at 4:42
Thought the podcast was quite funny how they poke fun at Capricorn's nineties-styled website, presentations built with Office 95 and minimal investor relations.
But they do give some serious commentary on Capricorn Metals and the importance of management adding shareholder value which is something that is hard to find in other listed companies out there in general.
Worth a listen just to hear what they say about management.
[held]
As expected.
However, we really need an updated reserve estimate soon on Karlawinda otherwise share price will stay around $4.
So only a hold for me until we wait on Mt Gibson or upgraded reserve estimate for Karlawinda.
[held]
Finally got our quarterly. I guess it was late so they can squeeze in the drill results.
Numbers look good. Capricorn managed to reduce the strip ratio and waste mined. Apart from the unfortunate worker fatality which caused production to temporarily halt, the quarter performed as expected.
[held]
Drill results announced for Mt Gibson and areas outside the Karlawinda operations. Some of the drill results from Karlawinda seem average but I'm no expert and some results are still pending.
Mt Gibson reserve estimate due in March 2023 Quarter (it was due later this quarter so a bit of slippage)
Still no quarterly update yet while NST, S32 and FMG updates already published.
I'm hoping the quarterly from Capricorn will be a good one but the delay is a bit of a concern.
Not the strongest announcement from Capricorn - shares sliding today.
[held]
Ann below:
https://capmetals.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/2022.01.16-Jan-Exploration-Update.pdf
Highlights
Mt Gibson Gold Project (MGGP)
• A total of 115,139 metres (727 holes) of RC resource definition and extension drilling completed in the 12 months ending 31 December 2022.
• Assays received from 160 holes since the last update continue to return exceptional results within and extensional to the current Mineral Resource Estimate (MRE) including:
Outside current MRE
• 9 metres @ 4.69g/t from 279 to 288m • 10 metres @ 5.21g/t from 226 to 236m
• 8 metres @ 4.1g/t from 153 to 161m • 22 metres @ 2.69g/t from 187 to 209m
• 6 metres @ 12.77g/t from 187 to 240m • 13 metres @ 1.25g/t from 243 to 256m
Within current MRE
• 50 metres @ 2.01g/t from 136 to 186m • 11 metres @ 5.94g/t from 212 to 223m
• 8 metres @ 14.51g/t from 203 to 211m • 11 metres @ 6.07g/t from 150 to 161m
• 18 metres @ 4.16g/t from 198 to 116m • 19 metres @ 4.30g/t from 220 to 239m
• 17 metres @ 9.16g/t from 228 to 245m • 12 metres @ 5.30g/t from 111 to 123m
• Drilling on the unmined Saratoga, Lexington Waste Dump and Orion North trends (on the eastern margin of the main Gibson trend) continues to define zones of high-grade within and extensional to the current resource shell.
• Drilling programmes for water exploration and sterilisation for project infrastructure now completed.
• First pass regional exploration east of the Mt Gibson trend provides encouraging results including:
• 8 metres @ 4.70g/t from 84 to 92m • 4 metres @ 2.73g/t from 32 to 36m
• 4 metres @ 2.80g/t from 153 to 161m
• First pass regional AC and RC drilling programmes across a number of high priority target areas commenced in early January 2023.
• Results from 2022 drilling programme resulted in a 32% increase in the MRE in November 2022 from 2,083,000 ounces to 2,755,000 ounces with maiden Ore Reserve Estimate (ORE) expected in the March 2023 quarter.
Karlawinda Gold Project (KGP)
• Drilling continued on near mine prospect Carnoustie with 10 RC holes (2,148 metres) and 31 Aircore holes (2,072 metres) drilled in the December 2022 quarter, assay results expected in the March 2023 quarter.
• Encouraging 1m split gold results from previous near mine drilling at the Muirfield and newly identified Vedas prospect received since the last update including
Muirfield
• 2 metres @ 15.25g/t from 117 to 119m • 1 metre @ 17.96/t from 79 to 80m Vedas
• 13 metres @ 2.19g/t from 140 to 153m • 2 metres @ 13.37/t from 96 to 98m
• Multiple regional exploration projects advanced during the quarter. Project areas are situated proximal to either the Nanjilgardy Fault or the Sylvania Inlier and Pilbara Craton margin with 268 Aircore holes drilled (9,132m) within the Jamie Well and Forfar project areas.
To get a estimate of Mt Gibson, I thought I'd go back to 2019 during the years when Mark Clark took over and was scaling up Karlawinda.
Using my own very crude multiples estimate, if we take that 1.52M Oz resource estimate of Karlawinda highlighted above with resource of 0.89M Oz and Capricorn at 167.2M then maybe Mt Gibson would be 167.2 * (2.8/1.52) = 308M. That's assuming we get 50% reserve figure from the resource similar to Karlawinda in 2019.
If current base dcf valuation at 4.40 and current share price is 5.20, then we have Mt Gibson at 0.8*370= 296M. And that is without a defined reserve.
Have a feeling that now buyers are buying for the management. As a reminder, both the CEO and Chairman grew Regis and Equigold from less than 100m to billion dollar plus market caps before they joined Capricorn. Very hard to find anyone on the ASX who has this sort of track record of growing a company to a billion dollars.
Just an fyi, I have held Capricorn since 1.35 (when it was less than 300m market cap) as this still represents a small proportion of my real life portfolio.
But I sold a small portion today in Strawman as it indeed has got quite big and looking at other opps.
[held]
Sorry I have to say it.
But the most despised of all the goldies has reached a 52 week high! Think the other would be DeGrey Mining
I'll do a updated valuation soon including a bull case valuation.
[held]
Possible short covering might explain the rally. Still 5.2m shares short sold.
Not sure why anyone would sell short on a company with top performing management and creating price distortions.
[held]
Few price targets
$4.00 - Macquarie
$4.10 - Bell Potter
Karlawinda mine life extended from 10 to 12 years and reserves increased to 1.3m Oz (see 27-oct Ann) which may add a few cents on top of my current SM valuation. As reserve is over 2m Oz there is still room for further expansion.
[held]
Mt Gibson Mineral Resources Increase to 2.8 Million Ounces
Another MRE update in another few months.
Not sure if this updated warranted 9% increase. But good to see goldies NST and CMM giving my portfolio an unexpected lift for a change.
[held]
01-July-2021: First Gold Poured at Karlawinda
[Disclosure: CMM are in my Strawman.com virtual portfolio, but I do not currently hold any CMM shares IRL. Also, in August last year, Capricorn (CMM) awarded MACA (MLD) a five-year contract for open pit mining services at Karlawinda. I do hold MLD shares.]
24-June-2021: Ore Processing Commenced at Karlawinda
The board of Capricorn Metals Ltd (CMM) is pleased to advise that it has completed construction of its wholly owned Karlawinda Gold Project and has started continuous ore processing.
Commissioning activities were completed to plan over the last three weeks and culminated in the ball mill and crushing circuit being ready for full operations in the last week.
Processing has commenced with low grade ore and will transition to run of mine grade ore over the next week as the operation moves to steady state. The project is now building gold in circuit and is expected to pour first gold in around one week.
Capricorn Executive Chairman Mark Clark commented:
“The commencement of continuous ore processing at the Karlawinda Gold Project is a significant milestone for Capricorn. It is the culmination of a huge effort from our construction team and key contractors. We now look forward to transitioning to full steady state operations and turning the project in to a profitable, long life business.”
--- for the full announcement, click on the link above ---
[I do not currently hold CMM shares, however they are in my Strawman.com portfolio and I do follow them closely because of the pedigree of their board members and senior management - most of them being ex-Regis Resources (RRL) and Equigold (which merged with Lihir Gold in 2008 in a transaction worth $1.2 billion, and Lihir was subsequently taken over by Newcrest Mining, Australia's largest gold miner (NCM).]
The following is an OLD (2018) straw, however I've just added a heap of new stuff to the end of it.
24-Sep-2018: Capricorn Metals (CMM) is now in play. Regis Resources (RRL) has made a takeover offer priced at 11.4c/share. CMM closed on Friday at 5.9c, so the offer is 93% higher than Friday's close. Understandably CMM is rocketing up today.
Please note that while the offer is currently unanimously supported by the CMM board, it is still subject to shareholder approval, including CMM's substantial shareholders. Therefore, this deal may or may not proceed, and if it doesn't - there could well be downside from here.
See CMM's announcement here.
And RRL's announcement here.
Regis reserve the right to terminate discussions (and withdraw their offer) if they can not secure the support of Hawke's Point, who own 18.9% of CMM. Hawke's Point are not currently supporting Regis' proposal.
For CMM's latest corporate presentation (at the Precious Metals Summit in Beaver Creek, Colorado, last week), see here.
Disclosure: I do not currently hold any CMM shares, and after looking at these announcements, I decided to stay on the sidelines with this one. By the time I read them, CMM had already risen 50% today, and there is downside from here if RRL can not get Hawke's Point onside. Read the RRL announcement for further details. I do hold RRL shares.
16-Oct-2018: Update: On October 1st, CMM announced that Regis had not been able to secure the support of CMM's largest shareholder, Hawke's Point Holdings (who own 18.93% of Capricorn Metals) and had decided to withdraw their takeover proposal and cease discussions with CMM. That announcement can be viewed here.
The accompanying announcement by RRL (Regis Resources) can be viewed here.
On October 3rd, CMM announced that Heath Hellewell had stepped down as their board Chairman but would continue as Managing Director of CMM. Ms Debra Bakker who was an independent Non-Executive Director of Capricorn has assumed the role of Non-Executive Chairperson. That sounds like a better arrangement. It is usually better to have an independent Chair rather than have the MD also chairing the board.
22-Mar-19: Update: The CMM board has now been rolled and the MD has quit. So has the CFO (Chief Financial Officer) - see here for that 6-Mar-19 announcement. One week later (on March 13th - 9 days ago) their new management released a "Company Update" which suggests to me they would like to sell Karlawinda, or the whole company, rather than proceed with the development themselves. (I still don't hold CMM).
05-Apr-2021: Update: I just came across this "stale" straw from September 2018 originally. Hawke's Point (CMM's largest shareholder at that time) blocked the Regis (RRL) takeover of Capricorn (CMM) by refusing to sell their CMM shares to Regis, so Regis withdrew and have never made a subsequent offer for CMM, despite the fact that Karlawinda would have been a nice bolt-on asset for Regis. My own thoughts were that it was a value play for Regis back in 2018 and they saw upside in developing the project themselves, and now that the KGP processing plant has been modified (greater ore throughput capacity but at a much higher construction cost) and the share price has appreciated so much, it's not attractive to them any more, or not attractive enough.
Hawke's Point later mounted their own takeover campaign for Capricorn Metals (CMM) at LOWER price than what Regis (RLL) had offered. Understandably, that lower offer was rejected by the CMM board, especially after Hawke's Point had been the one and only reason why the earlier offer (from RRL - at a higher price - which at the time had been unanimously supported by the CMM Board) had fallen over.
My last update above (on 22-Mar-2019) mentioned that the new CMM Board in March 2019 was keen to sell the project, or the whole company. They wasted about 4 months going down that road, paying Macquarie (MQG) millions in fees to try to find a suitable buyer, but none emerged during that time. Meanwhile, CMM had to renegotiate a new $100m debt and bank guarantee package with MQG after the previous agreement was allowed to lapse during the period in which the old board and management either walked out or were replaced when the remaining board members were rolled (and the lack of progress achieved on the KGP during that period). It was not a happy time to be a CMM shareholder - and I was not one. So much promise, and so little progress!
And then, on July 3rd 2019 the CMM Board released an announcement to the ASX saying that they had listened to shareholder feedback and now agreed that the best course of action was for CMM to go ahead and develop the KGP (Karlawinda Gold Project) themselves. This happened to coincide with a number of ex-Regis Resources (RRL) people joining the board and management at CMM (further details of that below).
During this time, GR Engineering Services (GNG) were quietly dropped as the designated EPC (engineer, procure, construct) contractors for Karlawinda, and the new CMM Board expanded the capacity of the plant, at a significantly higher construction cost, and they raised fresh capital, a number of times.
The MQG $100m facility was dependent on CMM raising the rest of the KGP construction costs themselves, so they did, over a number of raisings with mixed success, and existing shareholders (again, I was not one of them) were dilluted, as usually happens, as well as being asked to tip in more money themselves via a 1:5 (one share for every 5 shares held) retail entitlement offer in April/May 2019 which was 33% undersubscribed (they raised A$4.6m of the A$6.9m total they were aiming for). The outcome for CMM of the institutional component of that entitlement offer was even worse - they only raised A$3.18m, a rather pitiful response really, considering the shares were offered at only 6.5 cents ($0.065) each and the share price had been over 8c and up to 9c during and just prior to the offer period.
Capricorn (CMM) did a 1 for 5 (1:5) share consolidation in late 2019, so their share price chart will show that their share price was up to 46 cents during that entitlement offer period in late April and early May 2019, but it was actually one fifth of that at the time because the chart has been adjusted for that 1:5 consolidation.
After that very poor result from the entitlement offer, they went on to raise $18.26m in July 2019 from two placements, and one of those was to Hawke's Point again, and at 6.5cps again, being a 27% discount to the last traded price of Capricorn shares at the time of that announcement (and a 24.5% discount to the 5-day volume weighted average market price of CMM shares at the time). That's what I mean about ordinary retail shareholders getting severely dilluted.
They also added two ex-RRL Marks to their Board in July 2019. The first was Mark Clark, with 28 years’ experience in corporate advisory and public company management. He was a director of successful Australian gold miner Equigold from April 2003 and was their Managing Director from December 2005 until Equigold’s $1.2 billion merger with Lihir Gold in June 2008. Lihir was subsequently acquired by Newcrest (NCM). He was closely involved in the development and operation of Equigold’s gold mines in both Australia and Ivory Coast. Mark was appointed Managing Director of Regis Resources in May 2009 and became RRL's Executive Chairman in November 2016. He retired as an executive of Regis in October 2018. Mark oversaw the development of Regis’ three operating gold mines at the Duketon Gold Project, which culminated in the project producing well over 300,000 ounces of gold per annum. In Mark’s time at Regis, the company grew from a small explorer with a market capitalisation of around $40 million to the significant gold producer it is today with a market capitalisation in the order of $2.5 billion (that was in July 2019, RRL's m/cap today is closer to $1.5 billion). Mark is well known in the industry for his strong financial stewardship and focus on delivering shareholder returns. Mark Clark is now CMM's Executive Chairman and an executive director of the company.
The second addition to the CMM Board in July 2019 was Mark Okeby, who began his career in the resources industry in the 1980s as a corporate lawyer advising companies on resource project acquisitions, financing and development. He has a Masters of Law (LLM) and over 30 years’ experience as a director of ASX listed mining and exploration companies. At the time of his appointment to the CMM Board in July 2019 Mark was also a director of Red Hill Iron Ltd (appointed in 2016) and previously has been a director of Hill 50 Ltd, Abelle Ltd, Metals X Limited, Westgold Resources Ltd, Lynas Corporation Ltd and Regis Resources Ltd. Mark joined the board of Regis Resources in July 2009 as a non-executive director and was a major contributor on the board that transformed Regis from a small gold explorer to one of Australia’s largest gold producers. Mark has a deep knowledge of the Australian resources landscape and the regulatory regimes around mine development and operation. He also has significant experience in the commercial and legal aspects of project development, financing and corporate transactions.
Capricorn’s Non-Executive Chairman, Mr Doug Jendry, said: “The board recognises the very strong feedback from shareholders in recent times that in the current gold price environment the best prospect for Capricorn to deliver maximum shareholder value is for the Company to develop the Karlawinda Gold Project itself. To this end we are very pleased to have attracted two highly credentialed mining executives in Messrs Clark and Okeby to join the board and drive the development of the project. The funding secured through the placement also further bolsters Capricorn’s cash position and will allow the company to expedite the work required to progress towards development.”
They went on to raise another $65 million in August 2019 via a share placement at 16 cents per share (also pre-1:5-share-consolidation, so equivalent to 80 cps now). The issue price of 16.0 cps represented a discount of 15.8% to the last closing price of 19.0 cps on 9 August 2019 and an 11.9% discount to the 5-day VWAP of 18.2 cps. The placement was cornerstoned by two of Capricorn’s substantial shareholders at that time (Paradice Investment Management Pty Ltd and Hawke’s Point once again) and several Australian institutional investors who had been long term supporters of the (new) management team. Also, several of the founders of Equigold, three of whom have also previously been directors and shareholders of Regis Resources Ltd, subscribed for a total of $10 million.
That August 2019 equity raising enabled Capricorn to satisfy a key condition to enable finalisation of the previous (lapsed) offer of $107 million debt and gold hedging facility from Macquarie Bank Limited (MQG) for the development of Karlawinda.
The following day (14-August-2019), CMM announced that they had secured 200,000 ounces of gold hedging with a 31 December 2019 maturity and a price of A$2,249 per ounce. My understanding is that this hedging has been subsequently rolled into further hedging with a later maturity date.
On 16-Sep-2019, CMM announced another 4 Management and Board appointments that were all ex-Regis Resources people:
At this point (September 2019), while Regis Resources had failed in their 2018 attempt to takeover Capricorn Metals (CMM), CMM was now completely loaded with Executives and Board Members who were all ex-Regis Resources (RRL).
In mid-October 2019 CMM announced that they were consolidating their shares on a 1:5 (one for five) basis, which became effective in November, effectively driving their share price up by a factor of 5 (from around 20c to 24cps to $1 to $1.20/share). Obviously all shareholders at the time also had their holdings reduced by 80%, for example: If you held 100,000 CMM shares worth 20c each (worth $20,000) pre-consolidation, that became 20,000 shares worth $1 each (still $20,000) post-consolidation.
On 15-Nov-2019 they announced that Ms Tammie Dixon was their new Chief Financial Officer CFO) and Joint Company Secretary. She had held senior management roles with several ASX listed companies, including Regis Resources, Equigold and Hardman Resources. They were REALLY getting the old team back together, eh!?! The other company secretary later left the company (in late Feb 2020) leaving Ms Dixon as the sole Company Secretary and the CFO. Tammie Dixon herself gave notice as CFO and Company Secretary of CMM in early March 2021, but she agreed to continue to assist the Company as required on a contract basis for 12 months. CMM's CEO Kim Massey will oversee the Company’s financial functions and perform the role of Company Secretary on an interim basis until a permanent replacement for Tammie is appointed. Tammie is still listed on the CMM website as being their CFO and Company Secretary, but on the ASX and CommSec sites, Kim Massey is listed as being both the CMM CEO and their Company Secretary. I assume Tammie is continuing to perform the role on a contract basis (from her home or other place of business) until at least March 2022 however Kim has assumed the official "Company Secretary" title and the responsibility that goes with it with regard to the ASX and ASIC.
On 17-Apr-2020 CMM announced:
With their vast experience in new gold mine and gold processing plant construction and optimisation, it appears that Capricorn's Board and Management are pretty much building Karlawinda themselves, hence why GR Engineering (GNG, who did the original PFS and DFS for the KGP for the previous management at CMM) were dropped when all of the ex-RRL guys took over at CMM. They don't believe they need to pay another company to manage the process when they can do it themselves.
Further Reading:
27-July-2020: Project Update and Upscale of Process Plant Throughput
29-July-2020: $32.3m Capital Raising
27-Aug-2020: MACA Ltd Selected as Preferred Mining Contractor [MACA (ASX:MLD) do all of the open pit (OP) gold mining for Regis Resources]
13-Oct-2020: Diggers and Dealers Presentation
20-Oct-2020: Karlawinda development progressing on time & budget
18-Nov-2020: Further significant milestones on Karlawinda development
[On 18-Nov-2020 Mark Clark (CMM's Executive Chairman) bought another $73K worth of CMM shares on-market at between $1.66 and $1.67/share.]
20-Nov-2020: 2020 AGM Presentation
20-Jan-2021: Strategic Investment in DiscovEx Resources Ltd
01-Apr-2021: Quarterly Activities Report
Home | Capricorn Metals (capmetals.com.au)
Analyst Coverage | Capricorn Metals (capmetals.com.au)
KGP (Karlawinda Gold Project) Overview Video
Karlawinda remains on track for first gold pour in the current (June 2021) quarter.
I am not currently holding CMM shares, but I'm thinking about it. I consider this a risky point in their history, with possible cost blowouts and possible commissioning issues, however if the ex-Regis guys now running Capricorn are as good as their reputations and track records suggest they are, then they might sail through this quarter smoothly and get a positive rerating by the market when they announce they are now producing gold at Karlawinda at the plant's nameplate capacity. They are not there yet however, and a lot can go wrong, so for now I'm just on the sidelines watching closely.
They certainly have the potential to become a strong up-and-coming gold producer, with excellent near-mine exploration potential. And they will be first cab off the rank in terms of first gold pour - before Calidus Resources (CAI) with Warrawoona - their first gold pour is expected during H1 of CY 2022, and Bellevue Gold (BGL) who are targeting first gold production towards the end of 2022. Capricorn (CMM) is therefore the potential big 2021 gold story, if everything goes to plan.
Disclosure: Of the companies I have mentioned in this straw, I currently (as at 05-Apr-2021) hold shares in RRL, GNG and BGL. CAI and CMM are both on my watchlist.
01-Jun-2020: Capricorn released this Corporate/Investor Presentation back on May 12, but I missed it. It presents a good overview of the company. I don't hold shares in them currently, but they're on my Strawman.com scorecard. They are a gold project developer, so no income yet, and still very speculative.
31-March-2020: CCZ Equities Research: Capricorn Metals Ltd (CMM): Funded, first gold from Karlawinda due in 1Q 2021
CCZ’s call on CMM is “Hold” (upgraded from “Sell”), with a 95 cps PT (up from 90 cps).
CMM have to be regarded as speculative because they’re building a gold processing plant and won’t have any regular income until that plant has been completed and commissioned. It won’t be substantially de-risked (in my view) until it’s running at or above nameplate capacity, particularly because the CMM board and management have all changed, and so has the EPC contractor (who is building the plant) and so has the plant design (from the original design by GR Engineering – GNG). GNG don’t have any involvement in Karlawinda now – since the Capricorn (CMM) board got rolled and the previous management all quit, and the new team decided to go in a different direction, so while I do hope that Karlawinda will be successful, there are also a few seeds of doubt there (or reasons to be cautious).
Recent reports and presentations from Capricorn Metals (CMM):
31-Jan-2020: Quarterly Activities and Cashflow Report for the December 2019 Qtr
18-Dec-2019: Debt Financing Completed & Project Update
20-Nov-2019: Share Consolidation Update
20-Nov-2019: AGM Presentation
Disclosure: As discussed in my valuation update, I don't hold CMM shares, and I had previously considered my exposure to CMM's Karlawinda gold project would come via my holdings in GR Engineering Services (GRES, ASX:GNG), but it seems that CMM's new board and management are happy to build Karlawinda without GNG now. Karlawinda looks to have favourable economics and they're in the right place (Australia) at the right time (record A$ gold prices), but much can go wrong during this development/construction phase, and can also go wrong during the commissioning and ramp-up phases next year. We don't need to look far to see where things have gone badly wrong - Gascoyne Resources' (GCY's) Dalgaranga gold project, Heron's (HRR's) Woodlawn zinc project, there are plenty more examples of where there are either serious cost blowouts and/or construction delays and/or actual production doesn't achieve anything near what had been projected (in terms of grades and recoveries) due to a variety of factors. Dacian Gold (DCN) also recently had what many would have considered a near-death experience (again caused by lower grades and recoveries than they had expected resulting in much higher costs than they had anticipated), but DCN look to be pulling through that phase on the back of further high-to-reasonable-grade gold discoveries within a reasonable distance of their existing plant. It can be a roller-coaster ride, and should be considered very high risk until these developers actually do become producers with track records of consistently profitable production, which obviously takes years. There's money to be made if you jump on the good ones early, but there's also plenty of money to be lost if you don't pick the eventual winners. Much like horse racing.
My plan now is to stick with the proven producers (like NST, EVN, SAR, SBM) for the most part, and to only gamble on junior developers with money I can afford to lose. Consequently, I'm not currently "invested" in any junior precious metals or base metals explorers or developers, preferring to stick with the proven producers.