Jon Case
Victoria Resource Corp
VIT-X
WAIT
Jul 26, 2016
This is a developer. If you are going to own a developer this has a deposit in the Yukon with 2.2 million ounces’ reserves, quite low grade at .8 g per ton. According to the engineering study they put out, it still looks like it will be a decent project with a good rate of return. What is interesting with this, is that when you have a low grade project and can make a go of it, and you find a little bit of high-grade, it goes quite a long way towards increasing the rate of return. This has happened in this case making it a potential acquisition. The stock price has been pushed up to what he considers unjustifiable levels. Wait for the euphoria to die off before stepping in.
A gold developer in the Yukon. Exploration has been cut in half over the last decade. These development projects will be picked off and acquired at some point. It is shovel ready and waiting for permits. It is a good project, but it does not fit what he looks for because of no free cash flow.
Location of their deposit is remote though politically secure. Not impressed with their feasibility study (low cash flow relative to capex), and is extremely leveraged to higher gold prices. Perhaps investors who want a company to own Canadian assets may consider buying this.
It is a very junior play. They may well have a small discovery that is interesting. It is a purely speculative play based on what might be in the ground. They have no revenue. Gold will break out in the next year or two.
They are into the early production stage. It seems very interesting. Anything like this is extremely leveraged to the price of gold, which he thinks will go up. He prefers ZJG-T rather than trying to pick the best one.
It is a startup / new asset in Canada. There was a lot of technical work done on their mine. But they built up the mine with debt. There are a lot of warrants out there. He sees caps on the share price.
They're financed to build their Eagle project in the Yukon, but it's low-grade. His exit strategy is for someone to take them out, but doubts it'll happen at current low gold prices. Brent Cook: Doesn't see anyone buying a modest-grade project like this.
They just partnered with a private equity group. The company is now 45% owned by private equity. They completed their first pour in the Yukon and are moving towards commercial production. The problem is the private equity partner will have a lot of say in the operations. This will keep him out as an investor.
Your Watchlist
Add stocks to watchlist to monitor them daily and get important alerts.
This is a developer. If you are going to own a developer this has a deposit in the Yukon with 2.2 million ounces’ reserves, quite low grade at .8 g per ton. According to the engineering study they put out, it still looks like it will be a decent project with a good rate of return. What is interesting with this, is that when you have a low grade project and can make a go of it, and you find a little bit of high-grade, it goes quite a long way towards increasing the rate of return. This has happened in this case making it a potential acquisition. The stock price has been pushed up to what he considers unjustifiable levels. Wait for the euphoria to die off before stepping in.