Political differences are one thing, life is another. Wishing you a speedy recovery, Nestor.
Update: It sounds like he's out of danger now. Good, we can get back to calling him names.
Latin America stocks, economics, politics and stuff like that
We must pray for Bolivia. The president does daily animal sacrifices in the Palace and he has had the Constitution re-written in a very socialistic manner. He is pushing a communist agenda and there is a lot of uncertainty about the future of the evangelical church.Look, we can argue the toss about "communist agenda". Also the constitution indeed has beeen re-written recently (and approved by the vast majority of Bolivians in a free democratic vote that got the full approval of international observers.....but lets not confuse the Briles too much with long sentences) and it does have a more social flavour.
Overall I found the people to be more reserved than most Latinos. They have a long history of witchcraft and pagan rituals that is intertwined and accepted in all society. For example, everyday the miners do an animal sacrifice to satan as permission to mine the silver. Also before construction of any structure begins there must be a sacrifice. The larger the building, the larger the sacrifice, up to and including human sacrifice.
1) the quality of information you receive on Bolivia (and South America in general) is rather shaky sometimes, and the mere fact that somebody visits a country does not make him an expert.Evangelical minister, missionary and self-important follower of Christ Chris Briles is a liar. As simple as that.
2) I really, really don't understand why people preaching the truth resort to outright lies and brainwashing propaganda to try and further their cause. The utter balderdash written by Chris Briles is a great example, but there are mountains of others from these people and from the history books back to (and probably beyond) the Inquisition period.
"Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, so that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord."Sins blotted out....and bullshit lies in blog posts, too.
Thanks to reader 'NK' for the headsup on this one.

"Saying you are digging around for lithium or rare earth elements is one thing, but actually turning the search into a mine is completely different."For sure there are plenty of people who read IKN that will treat that as just another No-Shit-Sherlock moment, but all the same it's true. However the second quote from the report is a classic. It comes from Michel Lemay, president of a bullshit Li junior known as Stelmine (STH.v) who says,
"It is impossible to increase share prices by drilling because the stock market decides what prices will be."WTF? That's the most ridiculous statement so far this year from a junior miner, folks (and there's a lot of competition for that prize, believe me). Allow me to translate Lemay's thoughts into plain English: "We mining people think that the general public are morons and so we'll tell them any old shit to keep our scams going." I mean, you wouldn't buy a used car from shady operators, so why do you insist on buying worthless stock of worthless companies from the same level of businessperson?
Thanks due to reader 'S' for the link-o to this report out of Correo de Caroní today.
I don't care what you say, this is a great song.

....LME copper inventories.
It's gone up, up and up some more, but in the last couple of weeks there have been plenty of down days chopping in with the up days. That's the first time for a long time and for me is marking the top in Cu warehouse levels (on a there-or-thereabouts level).The increase of exchange inventories over the past 6–7 months at a time when metal prices have trended higher has been a source of concern for many market watchers. This is especially true for copper (still perceived as the market leader). We should point out that copper inventories are still at historical lows, both in terms of weeks of consumption (current reported inventories represent 2.9 weeks of consumption compared with ‘normal’ levels of 6 weeks) and tonnage.
Furthermore, we are entering a period when inventories fall seasonally, ie exchange inventories tend to be drawn down during the 1H of the year—
There appears to be two reasons why inventories and prices have risen in tandem. Firstly, producers have stored metal in Asia in anticipation of a ‘pick-up’ in regional demand in 2010. We note that the copper inventory held at the LME warehouse in
Busan (South Korea) has increased from 1.0 KMT in mid-July 2009 to 99 KMT at present. Provided Asian demand picks up, particularly after the New Year holidays in mid-February, inventories in the region should start to fall. However, North America also holds a ‘key’ to the puzzle. Since mid-2009, worldwide LME and Comex exchange copper inventories have risen by 306 KMT or 96% to 626 KMT. Roughly 150 KMT (approximately half) of this increase has been metal entering North American warehouses. Of the 626 KMT currently held by the exchanges, 391 KMT is held in North America.
We understand that several market players believe the vast majority of metal entering the exchange warehouses in North America comes from producers—and particularly consumers—destocking their own inventory. This would make sense, given the collapse of copper demand in the US. We estimate US copper demand fell 24% last year to 1.57 MMT, the lowest level in decades. Furthermore, prices remained at historically high levels, placing further pressure on consumers/producers to run down their own inventory. Apparently, some market players are speculating that once it is clear that the US economy has stabilized and is on the road to improvement, consumers/producers will have to replenish their own inventory—driving down LME/Comex stocks and pushing prices higher. Consequently, in our view, for sustained high metal prices, there must be stabilization in the North American economy (at the very least) in addition to steady economic growth in China.
Look at Hugo Chavez in Venezuela as opposed to Álvaro Uribe in Colombia. Chavez destroyed Venezuela's economy and judicial system to maintain his power. Bolivia is heading in the same direction, but Colombia and Panama are booming. Policies in those two countries are completely different from Venezuela's.
Good morning, 11:16am, a little under two hours after the opening bell.
The FVI.to bought deal
Last night after the close, Fortuna Silver (FVI.to) announced it was raising $30m via a bought deal, with CIBC and Canaccord as the lead houses. Here's the news release. There is also a 15% over-option that would bring the total proceeds to $35m and shares sold to a touch over 15m if fully taken. Here are some thoughts:
1) I did expect a financing like this to happen, but I did not know what the timing would be. I refer readers to the section of the IKN37 NOBS report pasted at the bottom of this mail.
2) All things considered, it's a good enough deal. Particularly interesting is the low commission on the deal being charged by the brokerages, which I understand is 5%. A deal such as this would normally carry an 8% commission or even higher (if memory serves, EDR.to paid 11% commish on its last round). This is indicative of the strong institutional demand for FVI shares previously mooted.
3) Unless the bottom truly falls out of the market (and by that I mean mid-2008 style, not the blip we're experiencing today) we can fully expect the over-allotment to be taken up. This would take proceeds to a touch over $34.5m (after the 5% rake, around $32.8m) and would take shares outstanding to 110m when all done and dusted. In the IKN37 NOBS report I assumed S/O at 105m, so my guesstimate missed by 5m share. Bite me.
4) Note that it's a bought deal with no type of warrant attached. This means that dilution is kept to a minimum and that even in an extremis situation where the bottom does fall out the market, FVI gets the $30m.
Assuming full take-up of the over-allotment (I repeat, this is a near certainty) this would leave FVI with the following cash resources:
Approx $31m treasury
$32.8m from this financing
The previously arranged $20m revolving credit facility
The quick math gives us $83.8m, which is more than enough to pay for the $70m (NOBS contingency $75m) to construct San José and bring it into production. Note that this $70m/$75m budget estimate covers all expenses, including necessary drill work at San José to firm up the resource, etc etc. The whole shebang.
We can also add a conservative $5/qtr in free cash flow from Caylloma (minus any new drilling programs at the mine that did not go into the original 2010 budget)
5) The numbers work and as long as Caylloma behaves itself and silver remains profitable, it will be without the need for a 'top up' financing later (though that depends on whether they acquire something in the meantime, as mentioned in IKN37).
6) Next, CEO Ganoza is a conservative player and I understand where he's coming from by locking in the $$ for the gig now. We might be able to argue the toss over whether the financing should have been pitched at (let's say) $2.50, but in the end the difference would be 1m to the shares out column. Not a gamebreaker either way. We could also argue about whether it would have been tactically better to wait a while and try for a $3-handle on the financing, but knowing CEO Ganoza as a conservative, bird-in-the-hand type of person the deal struck yesterday makes sense.
7) Finally, the share price action today sees the PPS at a few pennies under the bought deal price. This makes sense when the downspike in silver (and all metals) is taken into consideration. For the duration of the bought deal raise, I'd expect FVI stock to tread water somewhat, either below, at, or a little above the bought deal price. Worth noting that if the stock stays where it is the mkt is saying "yes, they pitched $2.30 correctly". I have no issue with the deal at all. Good for the company and good for the long-term investment policy we have as regards FVI.
We reiterate our buy call on FVI.to. I now leave you with the paste of that section from the IKN37 NOBS report.
Best, O
A possible equity placement
The ballpark numbers run through above regarding the capex needed for the San José expansion show that FVI does not need to run an extra equity financing to get to production day one. However, at this juncture I would not be at all surprised if FVI goes to market and places shares. For one thing, it would likely get the pick of terms and from several sources, as institutional interest in the stock has grown considerably in the last six to twelve months and there would likely be plenty of buyers for a large chunk of shares. This would mean there would be little need to sweeten any pots via an attached half warrant, for example. But more importantly, a well-timed placement would give FVI a cash cushion that would a) bolster the books b) provide contingency to any glitches in the San José construction stage and c) provide a small warchest that would allow the company to go out and buy its next project.
At this point in time, I have allowed for a modest share dilution of 10m shares in the earnings model that adds $25m to the company cash position by end 2010. However this is more of a personal guesstimate than anything else and it remains to be seen what tactical path FVI takes on its financing.
Creston Moly (CMS.v) decides that the best thing to do with its patently uneconomic 'Creston' project in Mexico, that has been picked over for 40 years and never taken to production, is to make like they're busy people and add a few more holes to the 116 that have already been drilled there.......y'know...just in case they find something different. The most important word to take away from that previous sentence is 'never'.
Rio Cristal (RCZ.v) issues a 43-101 report on its zinc asset that has nice grades and stuff. Unfortunately it's slap bang in the middle of the Peruvian Amazon jungle so has about as much chance of becoming a mine as Tiger Woods has of scoring with Naomi Klein.
Victoria Gold (VIT.v) tells us all about its great idea for a fast start-up gold mine with 87k oz annual gold production. Never mind that at $1,100/oz Au the pre-tax NPV for the thing is $146m and the current mkt cap is nearly $220m. And never mind that the resource is only inferred at present and it'll need a whole bunch of dollars thrown at it before the plan moves ahead. And never mind the clear front-running the market saw yesterday.....these people have YOUR interests at heart.
Of the U$2.502Bn of goods exported by Peru, only 26% weren't metals or oil/gas. Can we stop all this Peru miracle economy nonsense and see it for what it is one time? Over half of everything exported by a whole country is either copper or gold (and nearly all the gold goes straight to Switzerland to be locked in the bankers' vaults there, too).1) Non-exec chairman of Apex Silver. Result? Bankrupt.But they still believe his spiel and still get dollar signs in their eyes when his Ecometals starts wagging on about being 'the next Aurelian'...and how things are different now and yadayada. But when push comes to shove the scumball leopard will never get rid of those blotches on his coat. Let's check the latest filings from this charlatan:
2) Director Gabriel Resources . Result? Enviro trainwreck.
| Insider name: Hulley, Keith Robert | |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -116,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -3,500 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -500 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -4,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -46,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -10,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -30,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -9,300 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -8,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -23,700 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -20,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -9,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -10,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -5,400 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -15,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -4,500 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -9,800 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -100 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -200 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -10,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -20,000 |
| 10 - Acquisition or disposition in the public market | -13,400 |
A 39% loss in this scam so far this year? Cue owly:
This part intrigued me. It is very vague, but seems to indicate reduced environmental water-borne pollution going offsite when it states "The grey water treatment facility constructed by the Company supplies all the water used at the plant. Water that is required is diverted before entering the local river untreated, purified and used in the operation of the plant." Have they actually reduced or better yet eliminated pollution or are they playing smoke and mirror games that not only damage the environment, but later require massive governmental funds to clean up later.The idea of using 'grey water' at a mining production facility is an environmentally sound one. The technical details run into 150 page reports, but we can sum it up in the following way:
Are there proprietary ways of mining without polluting they employ that others can't? Brainiacs or rockheads???
TIA,,,locoto
1) Water from the local sewage system or water previously used by other artisanal miners is piped to the plant. It's dirty and needs treatment before it can be used.
2) The mining company cleans up the water and then uses it for its own purposes
3) The water is then filtered again by the company before leaving the facility and put back into the local water system.
I picked a hi-resolution photo, so if you were planning to go this year you
"Watching the GSR is a good way of noting fear versus greed...to a certain extent that is. Basically, the more nervous people get, the more they'll prefer to hold gold over silver. This is because gold is money, gold is the long-standing store of wealth, gold is the safe haven metal etc etc.
And silver is......well, it's silver. The pretend precious metal. The one that claims brotherhood with gold but is mostly produced as a by-product of base metals (zinc and lead, usually). Neither fish nor fowl, silver maintains a positive beta relationship to gold.
When times are good, silver will appreciate faster than gold as people buy into the precious metals side of the metal. When times are nervy, silver exasperates its fan club (the dreaded silverbugs; people that make goldbugs look normal) and sells off at a faster rate than gold (supposedly due to Goldman Sachs using massive put positions on Comex and despite being the metal about to be used in the new Mexican currency, or the Amero, or whatever other tinfoilhat theory is fashionable).
All this can be summed up in one simple phrase: People trust gold more than silver.
...and so far February isnt helping much, either.
Salvador spots a Canadian equities analyst in the crowd

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, Feb 02, 2010 Dynasty Metals & Mining Inc. (TSX: DMM) ("Dynasty" or the "Company") provides the following update to shareholders regarding the development of its Zaruma Gold plant and mining operations in southern Ecuador.
At present, the Company has approximately 33 kilograms of gold and 190 kilograms of silver contained in dory bars and circuitry at the Zaruma Gold plant. For the past month the processing plant has been, and continues to be, operating twenty four hours a day processing material extracted during the construction of three declines (see below).
Robert Washer, the Company's President and Chief Executive Officer, commented: "We have faced, and substantially overcome, many adversities over the last two years since the introduction of the Mining Mandate in Ecuador. We have built a world class production facility at a significantly lower cost than similar plants recently constructed elsewhere, created a school of mining and trained a local work force to operate modern mining machinery, developed a self sufficient enterprise in a country that has no mining infrastructure or support and successfully safeguarded our assets in a dynamic legislative environment. Despite these many adversities and the resulting delays we continue to work hard each day towards our primary objective of delivering shareholder value and are close to reaching our first mining target. I wish to thank each of our shareholders for their continued support."
Zaruma Gold Production and Plant Operations
Throughout the fourth quarter of 2009, the Company made a number of significant and minor refinements to the Zaruma gold plant, ran a series of stress tests to optimize future operations, implemented appropriate maintenance scheduling and trained a local workforce. The refinements include (continues here)
...gold futures the 60min candle and the daily candle varieties. This one says......


...and subscribers know why. My only comment before hitting the sack is....
.....I hope you own some.

Just for a day this time though. Not out of interwebnetpipes radar zones either, so posting will be light but not invisible.
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