Barrick bietet 9.2 Mrd. $ für Placer Dome

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Ist natürlich schon ein "starkes Stück"!
    Aber bringt im richtigen Augenblick wieder Fantasie in diesen Sektor!


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

  • Scheint immer mehr zum Duell einbeiniger hundert Meter Läufer zu werden. Hedging may be toxic to your health - especially when you can't make a penny on producing the stuff.


    GG - könnte der grosse Gewinner sein... doch schaut mal was deren Ex-Chef macht ... Ha ... A ha und Nevada...

  • Zu Barrick & Placer Dome : beide mussten eine Verringerung ihrer Produktion hinnehmen. Im Vergleich der jeweils letzten 12-Monatensperiode mit der vorherigen : Bei Barrick Gold – 2.4 %, Silber
    – 9.1 % und bei Placer Dome ähnlich : Gold – 2.9 % und Silber – 9.2 %


    Wie bekannt, geht der Trend dahin, dass Produzenten sich mehr und mehr auf die sichere Seite der Produktion konzentrieren und die risikoreiche Suche nach neuen Lagerstätten den Explorern überlassen.
    Dies ergibt folgende Aspekte :


    1. Zwecks "Replacement of Reserves" wird die Übernahme anderer Lagerstätten bzw. Firmen zunehmen und in der Folge werden kleine Lagerstätten im Vergleich zu früher ebenfalls für die Minenkonzerne interessant.


    2. die Kosten der Übernahmen werden immer teurer, ausser es werden viele neue, besonders grosse und besonders metallreiche Lagerstätten entdeckt. Ob dies der Fall sein wird ?


    MfG - Austrian Explorer

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Im Goldsektor scheint sich derzeit eine gigantische Übernahme anzubahnen, die einen neuen Superproduzenten erschaffen wird. Barrick Gold, momentan der zweitgrößte Goldproduzent der Welt, hat bekannt gegeben, dass Placer Dome, der fünftgrößte Produzent für 9,2 Milliarden US Dollar in Cash plus Aktien übernommen werden soll. Die Aktionäre von Placer Dome bekommen pro Aktie 20,50$, die sich aus 0,7518 Aktien von Barrick und fünf zusätzlichen US Cents zusammen setzen. Damit liegt das Gebot um 24% über dem Schlusskurs von Freitag und 27% über dem Durchschnittspreis der letzten zehn Tage. Sobald die Übernahme abgeschlossen ist, ist Barrick der weltgrößte Produzent nach Output und Marktkapitalisierung. Die Goldreserven des Giganten werden sich auf knapp 150 Millionen Unzen erhöhen, während die Kupferreserven auf annähernd sieben Milliarden Pfund ansteigen. Der jährliche Output soll bei 8,4 Millionen Unzen Gold und 370 Millionen Pfund Kupfer liegen.
    Interessant ist, dass die kanadische Goldcorp ebenfalls an dem Deal beteiligt ist und 1,35 Milliarden Dollar beisteuern wird. Dafür bekommt der Produzent zwei kanadische sowie eine chilenische Mine von Placer Dome.


    Der US Dollar notiert heute wieder sehr stark und konnte die Marke von 1,20$ klar zurückerobern. Ein starkes US BIP von Freitag, welches bei 3,8% lag sowie ein sehr positiver Einkaufsmanagerindex halfen dem Greenback wieder auf die Sprünge. Der Goldpreis ist seit seinem Intraday High bei 473$ auf mittlerweile 465,50$ eingebrochen. Silber fiel ebenfalls stark zurück und notiert nur noch bei 7,61$. Einzig und allein Platin und Palladium halten sich relativ stabil.


    In den U.S.A. haben die Farmer derzeit mit extrem Dieselpreisen zu kämpfen, die die Margen der Landwirte stark beeinträchtigen. Momentan kostet eine Gallone Diesel über drei Dollar und damit einen Dollar mehr als normales Benzin in manchen Regionen. Des weiteren hat sich der Preis des Kraftstoffes seit Ende September um 36 US Cents erhöht. Im Vergleich zum Vorjahr beträgt der Anstieg sogar 1,10$. Am meisten sind von diesen Preisanstiegen die Produzenten der sogenannten Grains betroffen, da diese derzeit dabei sind ihr Erntetief zu finden.


    Quelle

  • frr


    Zitat

    GG - könnte der grosse Gewinner sein... doch schaut mal was deren Ex-Chef macht ... Ha ... A ha und Nevada...


    Ja Nevada und
    Mc Even (Rücktritt) verabschiedet sich von GG. Endgültig?


    Die Oberhedger machen Hochzeit und GG sichert sich einen Anteil mit cash. Das war dann wohl auch die Übernahme für den Herbst.


    Da es sich sehr ziehen könnte evtl doch noch ein kleine Übernahme seitens GG heuer?


    T.

  • NEW YORK -- A $9 billion deal that would create the world's largest
    gold company could ignite a rush of takeovers, as smaller companies
    struggle with high mining costs that eat into profit margins,
    analysts and industry observers said on Monday.


    "I expect this will continue as it's the best way for companies to
    build up reserves, by buying other mining companies," said Peter
    Schiff, chief executive of brokerage Euro Pacific Capital Inc. of
    Newport Beach, California.


    "I don't think this is the end of consolidation. Bigger companies
    will buy juniors; it's easier to buy reserves on Wall Street," said
    Schiff, who manages approximately $400 million of investments,
    including 10 percent in gold mining stocks.


    His comments came after Canada's Barrick Gold Corp. bid $9.2 billion
    in cash and stock to acquire another Canadian miner, Placer Dome
    Inc..


    Successful completion would catapult Barrick -- already Canada's
    biggest gold miner and the world's third largest -- ahead of Denver-
    based Newmont Mining Corp. and South Africa's AngloGold Ashanti Ltd.
    in world rankings. Placer is the world's No. 5.


    The announcement comes at a time when the industry is struggling
    with higher exploration and mining expenditures, brought on by sky-
    high energy costs. Meanwhile, the gold price hit an 18-year high
    around $480 per ounce earlier this month -- although it has slipped
    since, with the spot price in New York down below $466 from Friday's
    $473.


    Asked if the Barrick-Placer Dome deal would spark a wave of
    consolidation, Peter Spina, an industry observer who runs the
    precious metals Web site Goldseek.com, said: "Absolutely.


    "It's surprising there have not been more. I expect some other
    bidders to come into the picture," he said. "Big companies are
    looking to consolidate and there are not many big players."


    Both AngloGold and Newmont declined to comment on whether they were
    interested in Placer Dome or future acquisitions of smaller miners,
    the so-called "juniors."


    "Placer Dome has been a possible takeover target for some years; and
    I don't know whether Newmont or AngloGold will get into a battle,
    but there's certainly a possibility," said analyst David Davis at
    Andisa Securities in Johannesburg.


    "(But) Barrick will probably only keep the core assets it wants and
    spin off the rest of them."


    Before the deal was announced, Harmony Gold Mining Co. Ltd. Chief
    Executive Bernard Swanepoel commented on mergers in general. "The
    rate of depletion plus the rate of declassifying reserves back to
    resources far outstrips the rate of discovery.


    "For companies which all have to justify their share prices partly
    through being growth stories, to me it sounds inevitable that
    corporate activity will take place."


    Goldseek.com's Spina said the rising cost of mining the Earth's gold
    deposits was crucial. "Companies are forced to go after others to
    build their resource base.


    "If you look at the valuation of the juniors, they have been
    devastated in the last two years." Their market valuations are down
    as much as 90 percent, he said.


    "Also, in the gold market, the price has gone up, but so have costs.
    These companies have not been able to raise capital," said Spina. "I
    believe in the next year when the price heats up, there will be more
    interest. This market has more potential to the upside."


    "Most companies have not invested as much in exploration as they
    should because of (previously) low gold prices and the increased
    cost of mining," said Euro Pacific's Schiff. "Prices need to rise
    substantially, and in my mind will go a lot higher."


    Schiff, who owns some $600,000 of Barrick stock and $300,000 of
    Placer Dome shares, said he was talking about gold in the range of
    $2,000-$4,000 per ounce.


    Frank Holmes, chairman and CEO of U.S. Global Investors, said the
    deal highlights mining companies combining to share costs. He cited
    the recent friendly deal in Canada in which Inco Ltd. agreed to
    acquire rival nickel miner Falconbridge Ltd..


    "Already we are seeing several mining companies sharing heavy
    equipment costs. Barrick could save $200 million, so there's
    probably a lot of synergies," said Holmes, whose $2.6 billion mutual
    fund in San Antonio, Texas, is approximately 20 percent invested in
    gold and mining stocks.


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


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  • and how the CB's figure to avoid a short squeeze - again via GATA:


    From: "cxpowell" <gatacomm@...>
    Date: Tue Nov 1, 2005 1:04 am
    Subject: Is Barrick's bid for Placer meant to turn another big hedge book 'evergreen'? cxpowell
    Offline
    Send Email


    7:57p ET Monday, October 31, 2005


    Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:


    The Reuters dispatch below seems to be the first news
    service story that recognizes the importance of hedging
    -- sales of borrowed gold -- in regard to Barrick Gold's
    proposal to acquire Placer Dome. But the Reuters story
    doesn't quite reach the insight about the proposal that
    was offered tonight by GATA Chairman Bill Murphy in his
    "Midas" commentary at LeMetropoleCafe.com and by Tan
    Range Exploration CEO Jim Sinclair in his commentary at
    his Internet site, JSMineset.com.


    While Barrick's bid for Placer Dome is said to be
    unsolicited or hostile, Placer Dome is, like Barrick, a
    major hedger, except that it lacks what Barrick has called
    its own "evergreen" gold hedging arrangements. That is,
    Barrick has boasted of its ability to borrow virtually
    unlimited amounts of gold inexpensively for 15-year terms
    that can be renewed every year so that, in effect, the
    gold never really has to be repaid.


    Like Blanchard & Co., whose lawsuit in U.S. District Court
    in New Orleans has charged Barrick with rigging the gold
    market, GATA has surmised that Barrick's virtually infinite
    supplies of gold come from central banks via Barrick's
    bullion bank, J.P. Morgan Chase. (For who else but central
    banks has that much gold to "lend"?) Indeed, seeking
    dismissal of the Blanchard lawsuit, Barrick filed a motion
    in court confirming as much -- claiming, in effect, that
    it is the agent of the central banks in regulating the gold
    price, and that, since the central banks have sovereign
    immunity against suit, that immunity should extend to
    Barrick itself as their agent:


    http://www.lemetropolecafe.com…03/memoformotiontodis.pdf


    If Barrick acquires Placer Dome, presumably Placer's
    hedging liabilities will be covered by the "evergreen"
    provisions of Barrick's hedging arrangements with the
    central banks via Morgan Chase, and thus the danger of
    a short squeeze against Placer's hedging will be
    eliminated.


    Like the Bank of England's series of gold sales begun
    in 1999 and the Washington Agreement on Gold signed
    by the European central banks that year and renewed
    this year, Barrick's acquisition of Placer Dome can
    be seen as part of a central bank scheme to rescue
    all large private parties that are short gold, a
    scheme accomplished at a heavy public cost -- the
    discounted dishoarding of the various national
    patrimonies.


    If this indeed is the central bank scheme, it means
    that the gold price is not likely to rise abruptly or
    rapidly, as many gold bugs dream -- and, indeed, the
    gold price has not done so. But it also would mean
    that the central banks are attempting a controlled
    retreat with gold, and a retreat that is not without
    danger.


    The five-year chart of the gold price that is
    accessible on the link displayed halfway down the
    right side of the home page at Kitco --


    http://www.kitco.com/


    -- tends to confirm this. For the chart shows a rising
    30-degree angle and an average annual gain for gold
    of about 15 percent over five years.


    As with everything else really important done by
    central banking, no one is supposed to notice this,
    for once the central banks' scheme is understood,
    the market may become less cooperative with their
    market rigging; the market may rediscover the only
    sure thing: gold.


    So GATA will continue to try to help people notice.


    CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
    Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.


    * * *


    Barrick Bid Seen Bullish for Gold Price


    By Zach Howard
    Reuters
    Monday, October 31, 2005


    http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/051031…ls_gold_barrick.html?.v=1


    NEW YORK -- A potential deal combining Barrick Gold with Canadian
    competitor Placer Dome may offer support to gold prices due to
    increased de-hedging and it should not dramatically affect the
    outlook for production, metals analysts said on Monday.


    Gold sources felt that joining the two firms who have long used
    forward sales and/or options to lock in prices of unmined gold would
    probably mean a bit less hedging in the market.


    The combined firm likely would have more cash flow and would better
    be able to more aggressively roll out of the hedges they have, which
    could lift gold's price, the analysts said.


    "It could potentially have a small, short-term impact on gold,
    depending on what they decide to do with the hedging within Placer
    Dome," said Victor Flores, a mining analyst at HSBC in New York.


    "That should be positive for prices because I don't think Placer
    Dome has been very pro-active on the de-hedging front," said another
    gold analyst, based in Canada, who declined to be named.


    Hedging protects producers in times of low gold prices as they lock
    in better prices for their metal, but it prevents those miners from
    fully enjoying a rally if contracted prices are cheap relative to
    current prices.


    Barrick, recently the owner of the industry's biggest gold hedge
    book, said Monday it began an unsolicited $9.2 billion bid for
    Placer Dome -- historically also a large hedger -- in a deal that
    would create the world's biggest gold miner.


    The announcement was notable as gold holds near a recent 18-year
    high due to strong investment and jewelry demand.


    It also comes at a time when the industry is struggling with higher
    exploration and mining expenditures, brought on by lofty energy
    costs.


    A successful takeover would boost Barrick -- already Canada's
    biggest gold miner and the world's No. 3 -- ahead of U.S.-based
    Newmont Mining Corp. and South Africa's AngloGold Ashanti Ltd.
    (ANGJ.J) in world rankings. Placer is the world's No. 5.


    Barrick said a deal with Placer Dome would produce 8.3 million to
    8.4 million ounces of gold a year, and would mean spinning off a
    sale of several mines to fellow miner Goldcorp.


    One market watcher said the Barrick/Placer news was bullish for
    gold, in part because it seemed to show Barrick was betting the
    metal's price would remain strong.


    Barrick offered $20.50 a share for Placer, a 24 percent premium over
    the prior closing price in New York on Friday.


    "With gold still around an 18-year high, Barrick offering a 24-
    percent premium for Placer Dome is definitely a bullish indicator
    that the price is going to continue to rise," said Emanuel Balarie,
    senior market strategist at Wisdom Financial Inc. in Newport Beach,
    California.


    If the Barrick/Placer deal goes through, production plans of the two
    miners probably would not be sharply affected by the consolidation,
    however, the analysts said.


    "It could mean a little bit of a slowdown of the expansion of growth
    production because you'd have one management moving those projects
    forward rather than two," said Jeffrey Christian, managing director
    of precious metals consultant CPM Group. "But I'm not even sure that
    you'd see that.


    "I think those two companies have relatively like-minded management,
    so my thinking would be that there would be little change -- less
    change between those two companies than there would be with others,"
    he said.


    Last year, the world's sixth biggest producer, Harmony Gold,
    launched a hostile takeover bid for rival Gold Fields but the offer
    failed.


    Traders said on Monday they initially thought gold might jump up on
    the news, but fund selling later hit the market on concerns about it
    being steeply overbought at current levels.


    Benchmark gold futures in New York ultimately ended 1.7 percent
    lower at $466.90 an ounce on Monday.


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


    Ich meine was immer Barrick angreift hinterlässt einen bitteren, üblen Nachgeschmack! Es ist schon seit langem klar, dass Barrick von JPMC im Sinne der CB's und anderer Bullion Banken kontrolliert wird. Quasi eine Versicherung gegen explosivem Goldpreis. Barrick und nun auch Placer sind anti Gold. Fehlt nur noch Anglo zum dreckigem Viertel-Dutzend.


    Grüsse

  • Hallo frr,


    Nachfolgendes Zitat stammt aus aus einem der von Dir geposteten Artikel :


    "If you look at the valuation of the juniors, they have been
    devastated in the last two years." Their market valuations are down
    as much as 90 percent," he said.


    SOFERNE diese Aussage richtig ist, kann es nur bedeuten, dass in den entlegenen Explorationsgebieten nur in wenigen Fällen aussichtsreiche Lagerstätten aufgefunden wurden.
    Es genügt also auf keinen Fall, branchenerfahrene Experten in der Firma zu haben, die irgendwann woanders erfolgreich waren. Voraussetzung für den Erfolg ist das tatsächliche Auffinden und Erbohren einer metallreichen Lagerstätte tunlichst nicht zu weit weg von vorhandener Infrastruktur - oder der Kauf einer solchen.


    Ob nochmals eine Riesenlagerstätte wie Cannington-AUS oder Grasberg in Indonesien gefunden wird, wäre eine Sensation.. Dies
    erscheint mir, wenn überhaupt, nur noch in geologisch relativ unbekannten Gebieten möglich. Aber z.B. in gewisse Teile von Afrika zu investieren ist nicht jedermanns Sache..


    Die gestiegen Explorationskosten beruhen auch darauf, weil die Explorationsbudgets von 2004 von $ 3.8 billions auf 5.1 billions in 2005 gestiegen sind. Dies brachte eine plötzliche hohe Nachfrage nach Explorerteams. Diese nutzten die "Gunst der Stunde" und deren Preise stiegen heuer um 25 - 50 % !!!!. Und Anreise/Aufenthalt für sehr entlegene Gebiete bedingen einen zusätzlichen Zeitaufwand bzw. weitere Kosten..


    Sobald die weltweiten Explorationsbudgets sinken oder die Explorerexpertenteams, voran die Geophysiker genügend Personal und Equipment aufbauen, werden die Aufsuchungskosten sinken. Allerdings werden die Kosten nur dann geringer, wenn das "Aufsuchen" in lagerstättenfreien Zonen aufhört. Aber dies weis man erst nachher.


    All diese Umsatände sind ein Vorteil für jene Grassroots oder Juniorexplorer, die bereits Zugriff auf eine wirklich aussichtsreiche Lagerstätte besitzen.


    MfG - Austrian Explorer

  • Barrick ist der bittere Geschmack nach dem Kotzen.
    JPMC steht unter den weiten Schwingen der FED.


    Würde mich nicht wundern, wenn da im Hintergrund schon Bernanke die Fäden gezogen hat.
    Der wird ja als Lachnummer gehandelt.
    Ein schwerer Fehler, der ist nicht ohne.
    Sage nur: study the enemy......


    Egal, in weitere Artikel zu dem Thema.



    Goldcorp Just Keeps Getting Better


    By Michael J. DesLauriers
    31 Oct 2005 at 04:20 PM EST



    TORONTO (ResourceInvestor.com) -- Since the early days of Wheaton River three or four years ago, Goldcorp’s [NYSE:GG; TSX:G] current management team has stood out for two main reasons: they understand what the market wants, and they have taken the right bets on the right commodities at the right time.


    When Wheaton River went after the Bajo de la Alumbrera mine in early 2003, they were heavily criticized for taking on significant exposure to copper. At the time of the acquisition copper prices were still under $1/lb. Today copper is trading north of $1.80/lb on the spot market. Alumbrera, it turns out, was a cash flow machine and worth the acquisition price several times over. In fact, Alumbrera is a large part of the reason Goldcorp has more cash flow and income than any of the other senior producers on a standalone basis. The earlier Luismin acquisition was also a lay-up for investors.





    Today, Goldcorp is easily the most attractive of the senior producers and the mid-tiers, and it’s thanks to the Wheaton River model and the Wheaton River people. If fund managers and self-important analysts missed the boat before it’s time to wake up and smell the cash flow, because this story still has legs.


    The latest acquisition, which will position Goldcorp as the third largest producer of the major North American listed gold miners, is another good example of just how on the ball these guys are. Any fund manager that would buy Glamis over Goldcorp should be out of a job. If the deal with Placer goes through, Goldcorp will have accomplished several meaningful goals including further leverage to gold prices both with producing ounces and reserve ounces, all without issuing any new paper.


    Critical Mass


    As reported by RI in an exclusive interview with Goldcorp CEO Ian Telfer at the Denver Gold Forum in late September, the goal for Goldcorp going forward was clearly to try to build critical mass. By establishing a number of producing assets in Ontario, the company offers investors the comfort of production from a politically safe address (unlike Glamis with Marlin), and Goldcorp should be able to achieve significant synergies to further sweeten the deal. The Campbell mine is clearly the cornerstone of today’s deal and makes for an even larger, concentrated world-class asset.


    Accretive By Every Metric


    Once again the Wheaton people have managed to increase cash flow, earnings, reserves, resources and production per share, while simultaneously increasing their gold percentage of production. Goldcorp will also be well ahead of schedule in breaking the 2 million-ounce/year production marker, and is projected to achieve this as an annualized 2006 number if all goes as planned.


    Even though the company is spending $370/oz all in (projected) and taking on much higher cost operations, all institutions see is the blended total production cost number which still looks great under $150/oz and continues to leave the competition in the dust.


    In the Pipeline


    Going forward, the company will have the huge Pueblo Viejo still in front of them as a large development project, and they may take a second look at Cerro Casale. Put together, these two mammoth projects would give Goldcorp a renewed and substantial organic growth pipeline.


    Conclusion


    It would not be particularly surprising to see something approaching 3 million ounces of annualized production for 2008 with little or no dilution, as this group continues to make deals.


    Clearly at some point the process of building critical mass will move to Mexico, and Goldcorp should be able get their hands on Teck’s portion of El Limon. At the same time, Kinross’ stakes in La Coipa, Porcupine and Musselwhite could potentially be rationalized. Add on whatever other deals remain in the company’s future, and the promise of growth remains front and centre.


    Investors should just keep their fingers crossed and hope that this doesn’t turn into a replay of the Iamgold debacle, and get dragged out or scuppered by a rival bidder(s).

  • @auatrian Explorer,
    und kannst du da ein paar nennen, nur dass der nebel etwas gelichtet wird.


    Weil es halten sehr viele sehr viele Explorer für sehr aussichtsreich.


    Unter deinen parametern.....


    Grüße
    Tschonko

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Goldcorp ist eindeutig die beste Wahl unter den Seniors.


    Siehe die letzten Beiträge,zuletzt von heute,im Thread Goldcorp. ;)
    Zumal die ein Sahnestück nach dem anderen einverleiben.


    Grüsse


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

  • Is This Really The End Of The Road For Placer Dome?

    The era of consolidation is well and truly upon us with Barrick making an offer to acquire all the outstanding shares of Placer Dome for approximately US$9.2 billion in shares and cash. Barrick and Goldcorp have entered into a separate agreement pursuant to which Goldcorp will acquire, for approximately US$1.35 billion in cash, certain of Placer Dome’s Canadian assets, including the Campbell mine in Ontario and a portfolio of producing and development assets with significant exploration potential.


    Back in November 2002 Minesite published an article entitled The Best Brains In The Gold Industry Are Grappling With A Break-up Plan For Placer Dome. It was based on some thoughts from David Hutchins, our chairman who is also fund manager for Resources Investment Trust and Ocean Resources. Clearly this theory was lodged in his brain as he repeated the possibility of Placer Dome being bid for in his introduction to our first Minesite Mining Forum of 2005.


    This is an excerpt from the original article. ‘The North American major Placer Dome may find itself on the end of a bid before long. That is certainly the word going round the houses and there is a certain amount of evidence to back it. Not long ago it was rumoured that Rob McEwen of Goldcorp was going to have a go, and certainly he acquired a 4 per cent holding at a price of C$130 million earlier this year. There was a logic in such a move as Placer Dome owns the Campbell mine which is next door to Goldcorp’s highly profitable and low cost Red Lake mine and has long been coveted by McEwen. Interestingly Minews ran into him in London today as he is over for yet another Canadian mining seminar, and he said, “ In the end we decided to take a profit as a deal of that sort is very complicated even if you get the support of some other majors. In fact we bought the shares cheaply as Placer Dome had just fallen out of an index and there was a lot of stock flowing back from Australia. Now it is looking a lot more expensive, but that could change.”.’


    It has taken a long time, but some things do not change. Two days before the announcement of the deal Rob McEwen resigned as chairman and a director of Goldcorp. The company says nothing much should be read into this and his reasons were as follows “Since giving up the CEO role in February 2005 following the merger with Wheaton River, I have been actively investigating new business endeavours and have assumed the role of Chairman & CEO of two junior exploration companies. Today, I am actively engaged in the progress of building these companies along with the McEwen Centre for Regenerative Medicine at the University Health Network in Toronto.”


    No doubt that it true, but the thought lingers on that he could have been over-ruled by his board on this one and decided to accelerate his departure. If the deal was complicated three years ago, it will hardly have got simpler three years later with two companies picking over the body of Placer Dome. Yes, Goldcorp will get its hands on the Campbell mine which will allow it to consolidate its position in Canada’s leading mining district and provides the potential to extract significant synergies given Goldcorp’s adjacent Red Lake mine. And yes, it is claimed that the consummation of this transaction would increase Goldcorp’s annual gold production by approximately 50 per cent to more than 2 million ounces at a total cash cost of less than US$150/oz. But it will also cause an immense drain on management time and energy when the total annual synergies are only reckoned to be US$30 - US$40 million.


    As we pointed out when Oxus Gold withdrew its bid for the gold assets of Eurogold, it is not over until the fat lady sings. In the meantime , however, there is speculation in London that Barrick will now carry out a review of its non-core assets and this could mean the sales of its holdings in two AIM companies, Highland Gold and Celtic Resources. This would be very short sighted as all major producers need to have their hands on big deposits if they are to maintain production in the years ahead. Celtic is involved in the 29 million oz Nezhdaninskoye gold mine and Highland Gold provides access to the resources of the giant 30 million oz Mayscoye gold deposit. Both are in Russia and that is where the big deposits are to be found, not in the more mature gold regions of North America.


    Hedging is the other question. Last month analyst Stephen Walker at RBC Capital Markets suggested that investors should be concerned with the state of Barricks’ gold hedge book, which had an estimated mark-to-market value of negative US$2.32 billion using the Comex quarter-end gold price of US$469 per oz. This compares with a negative US$1.90 billion at the end of the previous quarter when the gold price was US$437/oz “In a rising gold price environment,” wrote Mr Walker “we become increasingly concerned with Barrick’s ability to manage a gold hedge book with a large negative mark-to-market and realized gold prices well below the current forward gold curve.”


    Shareholders in Placer Dome should take this on board when considering the shares aspect of the proposed offer. Their own company had already been winged by Clive Johnson of Bema Gold with threats of a legal battle over the development of Cerro Casale when Barrick took its shot, and its defence is unlikely to be strong. A white knight looks the best option, but they are few and far between. Just a thought, however, Chris Thomson seems to be at a loose end after leaving Gold Fields recently. Maybe he and his old mate Pierre Lassonde, who now runs Newmont Mining and took over from him earlier this year as chairman of the World Gold Council, could come up with an alternative strategy for Placer Dome.

  • bringt Newmont ins Spiel via vis Placer Übernahme. Kann mir nicht vorstellen, dass Lassonde ein Hedgebuch von Placers Grössenordnung übernimmt. hatten dieses Problem schon einmal mit Newcrest.All Eyes on Newmont in Latest Gold Rush


    By Andy Hoffman
    The Globe and Mail, Toronto
    Wednesday, November 2, 2005


    http://www.theglobeandmail.com…leNews/TPStory/LAC/200511
    02/RNEWMONT02/TPBusiness/Canadian


    Newmont Mining Corp.'s next move may very well depend on how much
    size matters to its Canadian-born president, Pierre Lassonde.


    If successful, Barrick Gold Corp.'s $9.2-billion (U.S.) hostile bid
    for Vancouver's Placer Dome Inc. would topple Denver-based Newmont's
    hold on the title of world's top gold producer.


    Analysts say it's a mantle Newmont and Mr. Lassonde may not want to
    give up.


    "It's kind of the industry's dirty little secret," said Victor
    Flores, an analyst with HSBC Securities. "They all talk about
    wanting to be the most profitable, but boy, do they all want to be
    the biggest."


    Newmont became the world's biggest gold company in 2001 with a $4.2-
    billion, three-way merger between Australia's Normandy Mining Ltd.
    and Canada's Franco-Nevada Mining Corp. Mr. Lassonde co-founded
    Franco-Nevada with long-time business partner Seymour Schulich in
    1982.


    Mr. Schulich has stepped away from day-to-day operations of the
    company but remains on Newmont's board. Mr. Lassonde, meanwhile, is
    responsible for much of its strategy and operations along with
    chairman and chief executive officer Wayne Murdy.


    Sources say the company has hired investment bankers to explore the
    possibility of a bid. Calls to Mr. Lassonde's officer in Denver were
    not returned. A company official said the company does not comment
    on merger and acquisition activity in the sector.


    "I think Newmont is probably bothered a bit because they enjoyed
    being at the front of the line," said John Embry, Sprott Securities'
    chief investment strategist.


    Gold industry players point to Newmont as the most likely company to
    step up with a counter-bid for Placer. They say it could achieve
    cost savings similar to the ones expected by Barrick by combining
    Newmont's existing operations in Nevada and Australia with Placer's.


    Newmont, however, is unlikely to be interested in all of Placer's
    operations, particularly those in Africa. If Newmont were to decide
    to launch a competing bid, analysts said it would likely be done in
    conjunction with other producers, such as Kinross Gold Corp. of
    Toronto and South Africa's Gold Fields Ltd. "I suspect they might
    need some help," said Michael Fowler, an analyst at Desjardins
    Securities.


    Barrick's offer contains a similar arrangement. Toronto-based
    Goldcorp Inc. has agreed to pay Barrick $1.35-billion in cash for
    several of Placer's mining assets if Barrick succeeds in its
    takeover bid.


    J.P. Morgan analyst John Bridges said Newmont is "the obvious and
    quite possibly the only company that could take on the
    [Barrick/Goldcorp] group."


    He also suggested a Newmont counter-bid would likely include side
    deals to sell some Placer assets. Mr. Bridges pointed to Kinross,
    AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. of South Africa, or BHP Billiton Ltd. of
    Australia as possible Newmont partners.


    "[Newmont's] management group in Nevada could probably take control
    of Placer's Nevada assets without pausing for breath. The Australian
    assets could be a useful fit. But Newmont would probably be less
    interested in the East and South African assets."


    Analysts doubted Newmont would have trouble raising capital.


    "I think they could draw on the market if they wanted to," said Mark
    Smith of Dundee Securities. He said a Newmont bid would likely
    include a stock and cash component, similar to the Barrick offer.


    "They are larger than Barrick and they certainly have the financial
    means to take on Barrick," Mr. Flores said, adding that Newmont was
    sitting on roughly $2-billion in cash and liquid assets at the end
    of the third quarter.


    With the bidding starting at $9.2-billion for Placer, some industry
    players question whether Newmont could achieve enough cost savings
    to make a bid worthwhile.


    "I don't think they'd do anything stupid," Mr. Embry said. "One
    thing about Pierre and Seymour -- they made their living by buying
    smart. They like to buy assets on the cheap."

  • Tschonko


    Meine Investments liegen längere Zeit zurück und sind teilweise nicht mehr aktuell. Durch meine damaligen Kontakte zu Sterling MIning
    (Ray de Motte) hatte ich unverschämtes Glück und habe um 0.60 gekauft und um 7,60 liquidiert.


    Ich investiere jeweils nur alle 1 - 3 Jahre einmal. Mein letztes Investment war Mindoro Res. um 0.21 (heute 0.57). Zurzeit bin ich nicht sehr informiert über das was sich weltweit tut, weil mein Geld steckt in
    einem Projekt, dass erst 1in 1 - 2 Jahren ein Private Placement machen wird.


    Durch meine Kenntnisse in Lagerstättenkunde und Geophysik etc
    und all dem ganzen Explorationsumfeld hoffe ich, weiterhin richtige
    Entscheidungen zu treffen. bzw. Fehlentscheidungen zu vermeiden. Wie gesagt, derzeit meinerseits kein Beadrf an Investionen und daher derzeit keine Analysen meinerseits.


    Für Deine Anlagen drücke ich Dir gerne die Daumen :)


    Viele Grüsse - Austrian Explorer

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