Crystallex International Corp. WKN 890 729 CA22942F1018 KRY

  • Crystallex Says Stress Due to Press as Announcements Loom


    By Gene Arensberg
    11 Nov 2005 at 02:17 PM EST



    HOUSTON (ResourceInvestor.com) -- I could be wrong, but I think Crystallex shareholders will find the quarterly financials and press release comforting in some respects. Added to the expected upcoming Venezuela mining policy announcement in about 12 days, this might give speculative short sellers a bit of an incentive to take profit (cover) if they haven't already. As of October, Crystallex had a short interest on the American Stock Exchange of just under seven million shares.


    According to BN Americas, “Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez will announce policies and guidelines for the mining sector on November 23.”


    The company maintains that the stress being endured today is due largely to the press and that it remains confident that Venezuela will honor its commitments. Still, Crystallex [AMEX:KRY; TSX:KRY] announced Thursday a Q3 net loss of U.S. $10.3 million (5 cents per share) and a net loss of $26.6 million (14 cents per share) for the first nine months of 2005.


    From the short seller’s point of view, there has been no definitive announcement from Venezuela which gives Crystallex an "all-clear" as of yet and some of the short interests may actually believe that the Chavez government is capable of a dishonorable taking of Crystallex' contract rights even though Crystallex was invited in under Chavez and the contract with Crystallex negotiated for Venezuela by long-time Chavez ally and now governor of Bolivar State General Francisco Rangel Gomez, and even while it is they, Venezuela, who have withheld permission for the company to begin construction. Nonetheless, even the short sellers who may still believe Venezuela will “stiff” Crystallex may not want to chance being short into such an event as the upcoming policy announcements. Why risk it?


    Of course, there is a chance that the policy announcements might not deal with Crystallex, but there is also a chance that an announcement about Crystallex might precede that policy event on November 23rd. I’m sure the short sellers probably noted that deputy mining minister Juangustavo Ovalles did say, “The president will make a series of announcements…”


    Crystallex CEO Todd Bruce’s comments in the press release regarding “some sectors” of the media being “all too successful” in their attempts at misrepresentation of Venezuela being intent on driving out foreign investors hit home with me personally. They are in line with the gist of my commentary on October 3.


    Deserved or not, Chavez and his administration are seen as anti-capitalist and antagonistic to international companies trying to bring that country jobs and infrastructure. And while we can argue whether or not that is actually the case, it is self-evident that the western press takes every opportunity to frame events and quotes in a way that supports that view. For KRY, the politically caused damage is unfortunate and could not have come at much worse of a time.


    KRY acted on the signals coming from the Chavez government in ordering the long lead-time plant equipment, fabrication of mill components, mining fleet, etc., much of which sits in storage on the docks at the port of Houston awaiting the final permit news for shipment to Puerto Ordaz and then Las Cristinas. Because it takes so much time to have those items built, in order not to lose valuable time in the construction schedule KRY ordered and arranged for financing of those long lead time items in advance of receipt of the permit to impact natural resources. At the time, over a year ago, the final permit was seen as a “bureaucratic formality” not just by the company but by the Venezuelans.


    Even as late as June of this year, MBIM minister Victor Alvarez said as much. We should also remember that he said at the time that Venezuela would be “going ahead with the Crystallex project.” It is really only since June that the political uncertainty has become what it is today.


    However, that political uncertainty came while Crystallex needed a permit to keep the considerable momentum they had going in June, going.


    Permit me a small tangent, so to speak. The world is separated into two distinct kinds of regimes. The ones that reward investment and the ones that discourage it. If one believes the reporting from Dow Jones, Reuters, et al, Venezuela under Chavez is rapidly moving strongly in the direction of the latter. But is it mostly real, or imagined?


    There is evidence that Chavez' reported rhetoric is worse than the eventual actions by his government. As Mr. Bruce said Thursday,


    “Additionally, in direct repudiation of the recently published media reports that Venezuela intends to drive out foreign investors, cancel contracts and nationalize the resource sector, the Venezuelan Government announced during the quarter that an Australian company had committed to investing in a major new aluminium production facility in Bolivar State, that new offshore gas leases had been awarded to a number of companies including the US company, Chevron, and that Bolivar Gold would receive its outstanding Exploitation Certificate for its Choco mining operation. In addition, Chevron announced that it was proposing a new 400,000 barrel per day heavy oil operation in conjunction with Spain’s Repsol YPF and the Venezuelan national oil company, PDVSA, which would see Venezuelan total heavy oil production increase from the current 600,000 barrels per day to almost 1,000,000 barrels per day.”


    While it’s still no sure thing, I think it's more likely than not that Venezuela will end up honoring the agreement with Crystallex. But there can be no doubt that unless what is mentioned below occurs, KRY will not be able to achieve a valuation it once could have before President Chavez and his moving-target government undermined confidence in the companies attempting to play by the rules in Venezuela, ... even the ones which came in under his own umbrella so to speak, like Crystallex.


    That is not to say that Crystallex cannot achieve a multiple of where it is now ($1.50) should the political situation stabilize and the most recent fears be put aside. For Crystallex that means 1) obtaining the permit and 2) a clear indication from the government that it will honor its commitments. (As of now, thanks to the long delays, Chavez’ comments and the western press reporting of them, there is widespread doubt as to second item.)


    The permit alone is not enough long term. The commitment from Venezuela is, I believe, even more important for the simple reason that Crystallex needs to finance the remainder of the mine construction.


    In my opinion, once the permit is obtained, the company faces an uncertain prospect for financing of the build out of the mine unless the firmest assurances are tendered by the government that the contract will be honored. But should those assurances be given by the Chavez regime, I also think that the past several months will be largely forgotten in a matter of weeks or months. The prospect of twelve-plus million ounces of gold is the kind of motivation that can bring on political risk amnesia fairly rapidly.


    The above contains opinion and commentary of the author. Each person should study the issues carefully and, as always, make their own informed decisions. Disclosure: The author is currently a long shareholder in Crystallex International.

  • Venezuela's Bolivar State a Powder Keg? :(


    By Jon A. Nones
    16 Nov 2005 at 05:17 PM EST



    St. LOUIS (ResourceInvestor.com) – As the market awaits Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’s announcement scheduled for November 23, much of the media has quieted down on this front - overshadowed by news from the big guns: Barrick, Placer and Newmont. As such, it seems a little tidbit was overlooked last week concerning concessions in Bolivar State. Crystallex’s Lo Increible 4A and 4B concessions in Bolivar State have been revoked. 8o


    Last week, Venezuela’s Basic Industries and Mining Ministry (MIBAM) issued a Resolution setting aside more concessions for use by small miners. Several of these concessions had previously been granted to commercial mining companies – Crystallex is one of them.



    Yesterday, the National Assembly met to review last week’s report. As reported earlier, according to a BNamericas interview, Vice Minister Ovalles said President Chavez will make an announcement regarding the mining sector on November 23.


    “We believe that the Venezuelan government recognizes and values its contractual commitments and working relationships with international companies, like Crystallex, that have demonstrated both compliance and good corporate citizenship in their dealings with government,” Bruce said in the release.


    On top of this, Ministry of the Atmosphere and the Natural Resources (MARN) issued another Resolution yesterday protecting various species of tropical fern for three years - in the mining areas of Bolivar State. This could potentially impact environmental permits.


    “We have had extensive meetings with senior government representatives and, as a result of those meetings, remain confident that the permit which will allow Crystallex to commence construction at Las Cristinas will be successfully secured,” Bruce added.


    According to the Resolution, it is “prohibited in all the national territory by a lapse of three years, the extraction, transportation, commercialization, advantage and any other type of intervention of briofitos (dark brow, hepaticas and antoceros), of the arborescentes ferns (Families: Cyatheaceae, Dicksoniaceae, Lophosoriaceae, Metaxyaceae) and of the wood beard (Tillanddsia usniodes), in lands of the public or deprived dominion of the Nation and in lands of private property.”


    Although most of the areas that are currently being mined are well clear of foliage, there is bound to be at least some plant life in the Las Cristinas area. After all, it is rainforest.


    Furthermore, all of this is against the backdrop of comments by Venezuelan mining leader, Rafael Mogollón, saying the Bolivar State mining region is “a powder keg ready to explode.”


    In an announcement to Minister Victor Alvarez, Mogollón said a violent conflict could explode in different mining sectors in Bolivar State due to worker unrest. Mogollón’s alludes to promises made to small miners still unfulfilled by the government.


    “Our relatives are paying the consequences of the bureaucracy,” he said.


    Still, Crystallex remains confident of its situation in Bolivar State.


    “The company’s confidence in the Government of Venezuela is unchanged.... Consequently, the company has continued to advance the development of the Las Cristinas project,” Bruce concluded.


    Crystallex shares [AMEX:KRY; TSX:KRY] closed at $1.50 on AMEX, the same as yesterday’s close.

  • Bin jetzt wieder mit meiner Stueckzahl soweit wie vor dem grossen Sturz.
    Nur das ich fast gleich mit dem jetzigen Kurs bin anstatt bei 2.70 USD.
    Ich habe das Geld fuer etwas solides genommen und BG sowie CCJ als strategischer Anlage heute gekauft. Das erste mal das ich an Edelmetallen auch nun Uranium und Soya mit im Programm habe. Beide Firmen sind die groessten in der Branche und somit ist das Risiko mit Chaves geringer geworden. Ich halte zum selben Depoanteil noch Bolivar und Gold Reserve neben Salsa Cristina. Mal ein anderer Schachzug, mal schaun ob daraus was wird. :rolleyes:



    Gruss


    XAX

  • Bunge ist ja nicht nur Soya...


    Aber was ist CC????? Circuit City stores


    Ein gelungener schachzug mit Chrystallex. Der 23.11. wird wichtig.
    Mir bindet es Geld, aber wenn sie die Konzes kriegen, dann sind mal schnelle 30% minimum drin.
    Zur Zeit schaut es eher nicht so aus.


    T.


    Ahhh, jetzt hast korrigiert auf CCJ. Alles klar.

    "Confusion is a word we have invented for an order which is not understood." Henry Miller

    Einmal editiert, zuletzt von Tschonko ()

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Aladin


    Nun nur noch etwas Öl zu Soja,dann strahlt das Depot bald noch mehr!


    Wenn schon die PM verwässert bzw. verstrahlt worden sind. :))


    Einige von uns lassen diesbezüglich grüssen. ;)


    E.

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Aladin


    Will damit sagen:mit meinen Öl- und Uranwerten,ca 20% des Gesamtdepots,
    kam ich sehr ruhig durch die heftigen Bewegungen der PM.


    Halte insofern Deine Strategie natürlich auch für gut und richtig.


    Grüsse

  • Sobald es geht und Moss da ist liebaeugle ich noch mit FAL KEP CHA VE PD RTP.... Edelman.


    Nestle , Roche weiss ich was noch. :D


    Ich hab mich damit noch richtig befasst und bin Euch dankbar fuer weitere Tipps fuer Langfrist Shares in der Art.


    Alle zusammen mit ca. 10% Depotgewicht, das wuerde gut tun als Langzeitinvestment wo man schlafen kann dabei. 8)


    First the Gold und Silbertrain ! ;)


    Cheers


    XAX

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Wenns denn soweit mal ist,gerne. Dann Signal setzen.


    Tschonko und valueman zB. haben damit ebensoviel Erfahrung,
    wenn Du gelegentlich über die PM´s hinaus schautest.


    Grüsse

  • Press Release Source: Bolivar Gold Corp.; Gold Fields Limited


    Ab ins Ausland, besser Hugo Chaves :D


    Gold Fields To Combine Bolivar Gold With Its International Asset


    PortfolioMonday November 21, 8:18 am ET



    JOHANNESBURG, TORONTO, Nov. 21 /CNW/ - Gold Fields Limited (Gold Fields) (NYSE and JSE: GFI) and Bolivar Gold Corp. (Bolivar) (TSX: BGC - News) today entered into an agreement by which Gold Fields will combine, through a court approved plan of arrangement, all of the outstanding securities of Bolivar with its international asset portfolio for a total cash consideration of approximately US$330 million (approximately ZAR 2.2 billion).
    Bolivar shareholders will receive C$3.00 per common share. This consideration equates to a premium of 40.9% over the volume weighted average trading price of Bolivar over the prior 30 trading days and a premium of 18.6% on the closing price on Friday, November 18, 2005.


    Kann man Ian nicht uebel nehmen sich in Venezuela einzukaufen, Oder ??


    Lustig so kommt man wieder auf GFI.

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Da fällt mir gerade noch ein:
    Der Craton Fonds hatte unbeirrt an BGC festgehalten.


    Die wußten bestimmt früher etwas.


    Das hab ich glatt übersehen,dh.nicht genutzt. X(

  • Der Salsa Tanzkurs hat sich bezahlt gemacht fuer mich. :]


    Es war eine Freude mit Goldreserve,Bolivar und Cristina zu tanzen.


    Ich halte den Rest , der Mut hat sich gelohnt.


    GFI weiss warum sie auch dabei sein wollen.


    Im eigenen Kafferland gibt es nicht mehr viel zu holen bei den Randpreis.


    Vivir !


    XAX

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von Aladin
    Es war eine Freude mit Goldreserve,Bolivar und Cristina zu tanzen.


    Ich halte den Rest , der Mut hat sich gelohnt.


    Warum "war"?
    Wahrscheinlich gehts jetzt erst los.
    Auf zum Tanz! :]


    Wenn ich nicht schon fast zu viel KRY hätte,
    4,5% der PM!!,auch mit Mumm angelacht,
    käme ich nun auf die Idee,noch nachzulegen.


    Grüsse

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Venezuelan hat dance
    Brendan Ryan
    Gold Fields' decision to buy Bolivar Gold for US$330m (R2,2bn) in cash has flouted conventional North American investment thinking on Venezuela.


    The reason is the unpopularity of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, described as "Mugabe with money" by one US fund manager at the Denver Gold Forum held recently in Colorado.


    Chavez is particularly disliked in the US because of his public tirades against President George W Bush and because Venezuela's surging "petrodollar" oil revenues mean that he cannot easily be pressured financially or politically. The negative publicity in the US media has hammered share prices of mining companies operating there.


    Shares in Bolivar jumped 14,6% to close at C$2,90 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Monday. Right behind it was Crystallex, another Canadian junior with heavy exposure to Venezuela.


    Crystallex - whose CEO is former Anglo Platinum executive Todd Bruce - closed 9% up at C$2,04 on Monday and had earlier traded as high as C$2,10. Crystallex shares had previously slumped from a high of C$5,60 to a low of C$1,17 in a matter of months, because of negative perceptions about Venezuela, before recovering.


    What Bolivar and Crystallex both hold are large gold deposits in prospective geological regions. The critical issue for large gold groups is to get access to such deposits to maintain and possibly grow their annual production.
    Gold Fields CEO Ian Cockerill says: "This was not an impulsive buy. We have been associated with Bolivar for the past two years. We see considerable potential to push production from the new mine from the initial 140 000 oz/year to around 400 000 oz/year over time."


    Cockerill adds: "Despite the negative perceptions from some quarters, we believe that Venezuela is a country that is open for business. After holding discussions at ministerial level, we believe Gold Fields is the kind of company the Venezuelan government would like to encourage to invest in the country. We have voted with our cheque book after doing thorough research." :))


    Cockerill adds: "The situation in Venezuela is similar to SA regarding use it or lose it' requirements on mineral rights." He says the "political rhetoric" is aimed at companies sitting on mining assets, not at groups like Bolivar that are developing new mines.


    Last week, Harmony sold off the remaining 26,5m Gold Fields shares it had acquired through the bid, bringing to around R4,6bn the total amount realised from the sale of the 11,5% of Gold Fields it had acquired.


    The net cost to Harmony of this drawn-out exercise is around R20m, taking into account the shares it issued plus the legal and other costs associated with the bid.


    Financial mail
    25 November 2005

  • Hier ein paar news wenn ihr welche lesen wollt. ;)


    Bolivar under significant pressure due to perceptions of political turmoil


    Business iAfrica.com Justin Brown: The offer by world number four gold miner Gold Fields to the shareholders of Canadian listed Bolivar Gold was full and fair, a Gold Fields spokesperson said Thursday.


    On Monday, Gold Fields announced that it would seek to buy the 89% of Bolivar Gold it did not already own for C$3.00.


    Bolivar Gold's share closed on the Toronto Stock Exchange at C$2.85 on Wednesday.


    Late on Wednesday, Canadian company Scion Capital, as the investment adviser to two investment funds that own in the aggregate 14.46% of Bolivar Gold, said that the offer of C$3.00 did not represent fair value for Bolivar.


    Gold Fields said in its statement that its consideration of C$3.00 was a premium of 40.9% over the volume weighted average trading price of Bolivar over the prior 30 trading days and a premium of 18.6% on the closing price on November 18.
    "That position on valuation premium is very misleading and somewhat deceptive. Shares of Bolivar have been under significant pressure since mid-September due to market perceptions of political turmoil affecting Venezuelan mining operations, and yet you know as well as I that these concerns were not valid with respect to Bolivar," Scion Capital said.
    ---------------------------------------------------
    Hecla Mining's Venezuelan Isidora gold project advancing ahead of schedule


    BNamericas.com Harvey Beltran writes: Idaho-based Hecla Mining's Isidora gold project in Venezuela "is advancing ahead of schedule," Hecla Venezuela's advisor Luis Rojas told BNamericas.


    "Leasing of Block B [where the mine is located] has been a success for the company, which has been able to capitalize on the situation and make an early development decision when people thought it was not possible," he said.


    Venezuelan state gold miner Minerven leased Block B to Hecla, where production is estimated at 100,000oz/y from the four mines that make up the project: La Laguna, Santa Rita, Panama and Isidora itself.


    The company estimates investment of US$25 million is needed to develop the project.


    The mine is expected to take two years to develop, which is "something uncommon nowadays, [where] the mining cycle takes much longer than that," Rojas said.


    Isidora is scheduled to reach full production in mid-2006, Hecla investor relations VP Vicki Veltkamp told BNamericas recently.
    The project -- in the Guayana region of the southeast state of Bolivar -- contains some 350,000oz of proven and probable gold reserves, Hecla said.


    Isidora mine advancing ahead of schedule - Venezuela


    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Published: Thursday, November 24, 2005
    Bylined to: David Coleman



    Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez Frias scheduled to make mining announcement


    VHeadline.com mining & resources correspondent David Coleman writes: Basic Industry & Mining Ministry (Mibam) officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, have told VHeadline.com that the much-awaited announcement on the policy and infrastructure of the new National Mining Corporation is provisionally scheduled for December 2 ... just two days before nationwide elections to the National Assembly (AN).


    While the date is not carved in granite, it is understood that President Hugo Chavez Frias will take time out of his busy schedule to make the announcement during a pre-election speech next Friday, leaving the nitty-gritty details to Mibam Minister and CVG president Victor Alvarez who is heading a major infrastructure redevelopment of Venezuela's iron & steel and bauxite & aluminum industries as well as burgeoning mine operations for gold and precious stones from the Guiana Shield area of southeastern Venezuela bordering on Venezuela's Amazon frontiers with Guyana and Brazil.
    Although Venezuela's congress (AN) will rise for protracted Christmas festivities ... continuing through New Year and traditional Three Kings holidays ... President Hugo Chavez Frias has given orders to his ministerial team to curtail any plans they might have had to spend the holidays abroad.


    As in previous years, he says he wants to see them make the fullest 24/7 use of their ministerial portfolios to help him tackle decades of government malfeasance and corruption which has served as a millstone around the neck of Venezuela's steady progress back from the brink of 1994-1998 bankruptcy under the Caldera administration.


    Basic Industries & Mining (Mibam) Ministry officials and departmental lawyers have completed a review of the legal status of several hundred mining concessions and contracts awarded (often illegally) by previous governments. Where such contracts and/or concessions are found to be lacking, they will be declared illegal and revoked under due process of law while the government has already stated that all legally existing contracts and concessions will be recognized and will proceed to the benefit of the Venezuelan government and the Venezuelan people.


    The clean-up of Venezuela's notoriously corrupt mining & resources sector has been dictated by the Chavez government's necessity to fuel the nation's economic recovery and to provide jobs, education and health care for the Venezuelan population, more than 80% of whom have suffered greatly through the last more than forty years of government indolence and sweetheart deals with international profiteers.
    -------------------------------------------------


    Published: Wednesday, November 23, 2005
    Bylined to: David Coleman



    Venezuela's new mining policies scheduled for Basic Industries & Mining (MIBAM) forum in Puerto Ordaz


    VHeadline.com mining & resource correspondent David Coleman writes: Venezuela's new mining policies are scheduled to be discussed during a forum entitled "New Policies at the Ministry of Basic Industries & Mining (MIBAM)" being held at the Bolivarian University in Puerto Ordaz today.


    MIBAM Minister Victor Alvarez, Deputy Minister Juangustavo Ovalles, the regional director of the Venezuelan IRS/Seniat Felix Johan Molina, and the president of Ingepmin, Avilio Lavarca are listed among the speakers who will outline new regulations aimed at returning Venezuela's mining sector to some semblance of government control after decades of indolence and corrupt practices.


    International observers are gathering in the expectation of clarity being given to the government's move which has seen a controversial shake-up of the mining industry. hundreds of mining concessions and contracts have been reviewed in recent months and a substantial number of them have been found lacking in terms of legality and benefit to the national economy.


    President Hugo Chavez Frias has vowed to rid the sector of endemic corruption and to kick-start mining operations under the mantle of a National Mining Corporation modeled on the well-proven infrastructure of Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), the state-owned oil corporation.


    MIBAM Minister Victor Alvarez has already headed off fears that legally constituted mining contracts and concessions are endangered in the mining sector reform. He has assured that those organizations -- both domestic and international -- that stand the test of legality and proven benefit to the Venezuelan economy (i.e. those that have paid taxes and contribute to the generation of employment throughout the underdeveloped Guayana region) will be welcomed with open arms to participate in the government's efforts to finally get Venezuela's mining industry focused on a productive future.



    .....Ich glaub das reicht mal, oder ?????
    Noch was, Spanien verkauft Venezuela Waffen und das stinkt Bush.


    Schaut unter Mining und Resources da findet ihr die latest news. ;)


    http://www.vheadline.com/main.asp

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