Simmer and Jack Mines Ltd. WKN ZAE000006722 SIM

  • Wayne McCurrie, a fund manager for ADvantage Asset Management, said that although the dispute was unfortunate for Simmers, the recent decline in the share price had created some value.


    "It went from 65c-odd to R2.40, R2.50, and it’s literally halved since then," McCurrie said.


    "Maybe at this price, if you are a bit of a punter, maybe it’s not a bad time to get in and actually buy it," McCurrie said.



    Gordon Miller, chief executive of Simmer & Jack
    By: Alec Hogg
    Posted: '20-MAR-06 09:10' GMT © Mineweb 1997-2004
    http://www.mineweb.net/radio/mineweb_radio/981774.htm

  • S.Africa's Simmers says 10 miners trapped


    Reuters
    Thursday, March 23, 2006; 8:02 AM


    JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's Simmer and Jack Mines Ltd. said on Thursday 10 miners were trapped underground at its Buffelsfontein gold mine after a fire and it was doing everything possible to reach the men.
    Weiter...

  • Kebble's dead hand


    ...


    Of relevance right now for thousands who bought Simmers shares on the JSE, is the battle between the management team and the Black-controlled Jaganda Consortium, put together by the Watsons are involved.


    In a nutshell, complex structures and close-to-the-wind deals, which resuscitated the Simmers Phoenix, have the hallmarks of devious Brett and his long-time corporate finance advisor Charles Turner.


    The Watsons and their partners in Jaganda believe they were duped, used and are now being cast aside. Simmers management say not.


    A critical issue for Simmers, though, is its failure to publicly disclose what happened at last week’s meeting with senior officials of the Department of Minerals and Energy (DME).


    Minutes of that meeting, penned by Simmers chairman Nigel Brunette, could hardly be more depressingly specific.


    The DME stated plainly that Simmers’ existing structures are not compliant with Black Economic Empowerment legislation. Also, that the company can forget securing the rights for the proposed Randfontein Shaft Four. It also introduces risk for existing operations whose licences can be revoked in the next few years.


    As the State controls South African mineral rights, the long-term implications of such damning statements from the DME is disturbing. As serious is the failure by Simmers to disclose the DME’s view to shareholders and the JSE.


    Given that the current scandal revolves around the company’s empowerment credentials, it is apparent what came out of the DME meeting with three Simmers directors, including its chairman, would be viewed by the JSE as price-sensitive information. And as a result, should have been disclosed to all shareholders.


    Simmers CEO Gordon Miller did his best to deflect the issue on Moneyweb Radio last night, arguing that the company disagrees with the DME’s view and is prepared to fight the State Department and other matters in court. ( Click here for the full interview)


    Miller also says he is negotiating with a couple of BEE groups who are keen to invest in Simmers and “have the cash” to buy their way in. This way, he adds, the letter of the BEE law will be met.


    Maybe yes, maybe no. What’s abundantly clear is this scrap is far from over. And given the history and hardened attitudes of the warring parties, the only certainty is the fight will be expensive.


    Distressing as this will be for Simmers shareholders, their options are now quite clear.


    They could figuratively store the stock in a bottom drawer and trust that, in time, the intrinsic value of the assets will be reflected in the share price. Or they can sell.


    Unfortunately, it’s something which afflicts virtually all shareholders in listed companies touched by the dead hand of Brett Kebble.
    http://www.moneyweb.co.za/shares/boardroom_talk/985598.htm

  • Happy ending


    Posted: Fri, 24 Mar 2006


    [miningmx.com] -- Ten miners who were trapped two kilometres underground in a burning mine shaft at Buffelsfontein gold mine in Stilfontein, North West have been found alive and brought to the surface.


    "Yes, they have been found. All they said was that they were very hungry," Simmer and Jack spokesperson Gail Strauss told Sapa.


    "They have received treatment," she said.


    The miners were trapped underground by a fire which blazed on a single stope in the number seven shaft for more than 20 hours, and fears had been expressed for their safety by the union Solidarity.
    ...
    http://www.miningmx.com/wts/986788.htm

  • Das ist eine wirklich gute Nachricht.

    Die Nord-West Tiefminen haben eine riesige Infrastruktur untertage.

    Es gibt z. B. zig km Eisenbahn in mehreren 1.000 m Tiefe.

    Unbegreiflich dass DRD alles für wertlos erachtet und

    in Konkurs hat gehen lassen.


    Aber Schweinchen Schlau goes Fiji

    [Blockierte Grafik: http://lulef.free.fr/assets/images/db_images/db_Yam1zoom056.jpg]

  • Simmers-Management und Vulisango haben sich geeinigt: Managementgruppe, darunter das Hippo, verläßt Jaganda und kriegt 100 Mio Simmersaktien im Wert von 188 Mio Rand. Für die Jagandabeteiligung waren ursprünglich von der Managementgruppe 13 Rand (yes, R13) bezahlt worden.


    Jaganda ist jetzt 100% BEE und hält über 26% von Simmers, die sich nun wieder um Randfontein Schacht 4 bewerben können.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.ksmaniak.com/IMAGES/LOGO/HAPPY%20HIPPO%2088.gif]


    Simmers bosses cash in
    http://www.mineweb.net/sections/junior_mining/362387.htm

  • MINEWEB: Yes. So they put in R13 or a nominal amount, and they’re getting 100m shares, which are worth R188m. That’s nice work if you can get it.
    ...
    BARRY SERGEANT:...An enormous amount of money has been made at 188c a share. But who knows, the stock could go to R5....


    NIGEL BRUNETTE: Yes, I imagine it is an enormous reward.....We all believe there’s a lot more money to be made, that 188c is not enough.
    Aus:
    Nigel Brunette: Chairman, Simmer & Jack
    http://www.mineweb.net/radio/mineweb_radio/366727.htm

  • Simmers up 20% on mine rights news


    By Justin Brown


    Shares in junior gold miner Simmer and Jack mines (Simmers, SIM) on Monday soared as much as 20% on the company's announcement that the Department of Minerals and Energy had approved the company's application for mining rights in respect of Randfontein 4 shaft near Johannesburg.

    The approval followed the settlement of the dispute between the shareholders of Jaganda, which holds at 44% stake in Simmers, the company said.

    At 15:30, Simmers' shares on the JSE were quoted up 19% or 39 cents at 244 cents.

    "Simmers shares are up as they got their mining rights. After settling their dispute with their empowerment partners they were allocated their
    rights," a Johannesburg equities broker said.


    I-Net Bridge
    29/05/2006 Source: I-Net Bridge

  • Simmers to raise uranium funds this year


    By: Gareth Tredway
    Posted: '13-JUN-06 06:55' GMT © Mineweb 1997-2004


    JOHANNESBURG (Mineweb.com) -- Gordon Miller, chief executive of Simmer & Jack, says his company will look to raise the required funds for its uranium ambitions this year and that it will be producing by 2008.


    Production would come from the dumps at the company’s Buffels operations and from the Middel Elsburg mine at its Ezulwini operation according to Miller at a presentation at the JSE on Monday.


    A bankable feasibility for the Buffels uranium will be complete by the end of July and one for the Ezulwini uranium should be complete by September according to Monday’s presentation. Earlier gold production hopes have not been achieved, so some investors are taking the uranium projections with a pinch of salt.


    Previously, Miller has told Mineweb that so as not to dilute its empowerment shareholding the company would look at listing separate projects and raising the funds required at that level.


    According to a production schedule displayed on Monday, the two operations could be producing in excess of 1.5 million pounds of uranium in 2009.


    Gold


    Higher gold prices have also helped Simmers’s Buffels mine start to generate positive cash flow. The company bought the project out of liquidation last year.


    A June production target of 581kg per month, announced in November last year has not been reached, and the latest numbers being thrown out are of 530kg plus per month, by the first quarter of 2007.


    At the old Randfondtein four shaft at Ezulwini, a shaft pillar extraction project is being prepared. Miller says it will take a year to prepare the shaft for pillar extraction.


    By 2010, the project should be producing just below 300,000oz per annum according to the presentation.


    Miller also said the company was still looking for further opportunities for acquisitions in South Africa’s gold mining industry.
    http://www.mineweb.net/sections/energy/536020.htm



    Neue PowerPoint Präsentation (4MB)
    http://www.simmers.co.za/asp/i…0%20Website%20edition.ppt

  • >Abgesehen von einem Kollaps des Goldpreises, scheint Simmer und Jack sich langsam zu erholen. Aktienpreis hat sich dieses Jahr fast verdoppelt.
    Das Leben hat sich verbessert.< =)


    Simmers sets 800 000 oz/year target
    David McKay
    Posted: Tue, 20 Jun 2006


    [miningmx.com] -- BARRING a collapse in the gold price – which can never be completely discounted – Simmer & Jack Mines (Simmers) appears to be a company on the mend. The share price has nearly doubled this year and was last trading at R2.25. Life is improved.


    This follows a bruising and often confusing battle involving Simmers management, including CEO Gordon Miller, and the company’s empowerment interest, Vulisango.


    The outcome, however, is that Simmers is 26% controlled by Vulisango, and the much sought-after mining license has been awarded for Simmers’ important gold and uranium project, Ezulwini. In the words of Richard III, Shakespeare’s villain, stern alarums have been replaced by merry meetings. “It’s been a turbulent time. But we’re a lot stronger as a company and management group,” says Miller.


    Miller is now applying the jumper leads to Simmers’ strategy which involved listing its uranium assets – to be called Uranium One – on the Toronto Stock Exchange, before the year-end. The listing might involve raising $50m to $70m which would be deployed to mine its 280 million pound uranium resource trapped in slimes dams owned by gold mine, Buffelsfontein.


    A more surprising development, however, is Miller is also considering listing Ezulwini (formerly owned by Harmony Gold and known as Randfontein 4 shaft) on the JSE.


    Ezulwini would be a gold and uranium play with plans to increase gold output from 60,000 oz/year in 2007 to 300,000 oz in 2012. Uranium One would also produce gold as a by-product, about 125,000 oz/year in its second year of operation.


    All in all, Miller hopes Simmers will be a company producing 800,000 oz/year of gold from all its sources, including gold from the ancient TGME assets in Pilgrims Rest, and production from Buffelsfontein, the mine it bought from DRDGOLD last year.


    If this sounds a slightly ambitious, it’s worth remembering the context in which investors find themselves. Finweek calculates that at least two new gold listings are likely on the JSE before the year-end (Great Basin Gold and Central African Gold). Business development director at the JSE, Noah Greenhill, also proved the point last week by packing the bourse’s auditorium with investors in a two-day mining showcase.


    For uranium specifically, a chronic shortage of uranium oxide is persuading a number of mining firms with access to the mineral to consider listing. In Toronto, Simmers’ ambition is not unusual.


    “Uranium is an issue very much market driven,” says Miller. “It has different fundamentals to gold and we’re seeing long-term contracts running higher than spot (backwardation),” he says.


    According to British stockbroker HargreaveHale in a report published in April, total world reactor uranium oxide requirements totalled 172 million pounds compared to primary supply of 104 million pounds.
    http://www.miningmx.com/gold_silver/565042.htm

  • Vorläufiges Ergebnis für Geschäftsjahr endend 31.03.06:


    Im positiven Bereich durch einmaligen Sonderertrag.


    Posted: Fri, 30 Jun 2006


    [miningmx.com] -- SOUTH African junior miner Simmer & Jack said on Thursday it expected to trim its annual headline loss by 20-30%. Its earnings per share are likely to move slightly into a profit from a loss last year, due to an unrealised gain from its acquisition of the Buffelsfontein mine, the firm said in a trading statement.


    Simmers posted a headline loss per share, stripping out non-trading, capital and some extraordinary items, for the 12 months to March 2005 of 12.8 cents.


    The company said in a trading statement that EPS was due to rise by 100-110%. Last year the firm posted a loss per share of 19.9 cents.


    The firm's financial director Gerhard Jacobs told Reuters that when calculating a percentage change from loss to a profit, a 100% rise meant a move to zero.
    http://www.miningmx.com/wts/632543.htm

  • Aberdeen receives Simmers royal payment
    ==================================


    2006-07-31 08:22 ET - News Release


    Mr. George Faught reports


    ABERDEEN RECEIVES INCREASED SECOND QUARTER ROYALTY


    PAYMENT FROM SIMMERS


    Aberdeen International Inc. has received payment from the $10-million


    (U.S.) royalty loan facility with Simmers & Jack Mines Ltd., based on the


    second-quarter 2006 gold production from Simmers's Buffelsfontein mine (Buffels).



    Simmers produced nearly 34,000 ounces of gold from its South African


    Buffels mine in the second quarter of 2006. Based on the average gold


    price in the second quarter ($627 (U.S.) per ounce), the royalty rate was


    3.45 per cent of gold produced by Simmers, providing Aberdeen with a


    gold royalty equivalent of $796,600 (U.S.) for the second quarter. This


    compares favourably with the first-quarter royalty payment of $606,600


    (U.S.). The graduated nature of the royalty loan facility has responded


    favourably to the rising gold price increasing from a rate of 2.75 per cent


    in the first quarter to 3.45 per cent in the second quarter and will reach


    4.75 per cent when the gold price is $750 (U.S.) per ounce or higher.

  • Hier mal eine Grafik über die Kursentwicklung von Simmers im Vergleich zu unserem Flatliner.


    500% in einem Jahr ist schon ein Wort; seit Threaderöffnung immerhin noch 140%. Nicht schlecht für einen Thread mit zwei Stinkefingern! :D


    Wollte eigentlich mal die Cashkosten von Blyvoor ( 542 $ ) mit Buffels vergleichen. Gerechnet hatte Simmers mit 459$, habe aber noch keine aktuelle Zahl gesehen. :rolleyes:


    Vielleicht sollte sich Roger mal bei DRD bewerben. MWW wollte doch frisches Blut (it's time for some new blood ) sehen. Und wo bleibt DRD´s Kursfeuerwerk nach MWW´s Rücktrittverheißung? ?(

  • Johann de Bruijn, SIM portfolio manager


    In an interview on ClassicFM @ 18:00 on Friday, 24 November 2006


    [miningmx.com] -- INVESTORS should consider adding rand hedge stocks to their portfolio including counters such as Eland Platinum and Simmer & Jack Mines (Simmers), said Johann de Bruijn, a portfolio manager at Sanlam Investment Management.


    De Bruijn said he considered platinum to have good prospects. Although uranium had performed well, he was nonetheless slightly more cautious about the metal. De Bruijn was speaking on Classic Business.


    ...


    Simmer & Jack (Simmers) gives a nice gold exposure ... It has some good gold assets, and there’s the uranium story," he said.


    Simmers was trading at about 95c a year ago and was now trading at just under R5/share.[anfangs zitiertes Kursziel damit bald erreicht ! =) ]


    "One needs to treat the uranium story with a little bit of caution, but at this stage their uranium prospects look very good. A high quality rand hedge stock," said De Bruijn.
    http://www.miningmx.com/radio/

  • 2 wochen alter Artikel.

    Die idiotische Überschrift ist original


    Gogh




    Quelle MONEYWEB Thu, 23 Nov 2006



    Brett Kebble’s little Van Goghs
    ========================



    Siviwe Mapisa, brother-in-law to safety and security minister Charles Nqakula, is worth around R100m, thanks to rags-to-riches Simmer & Jack.



    Barry Sergeant
    Posted: Thu, 23 Nov 2006 08:00 | © Moneyweb Holdings Limited, 1997-2006


    Much media attention has been paid overnight to the fact that Siviwe Mapisa, brother of home affairs minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula who, in turn, is wife to safety and security minister Charles Nqakula, “benefited” from a rags-to-riches creation of the late Brett Kebble.


    Nothing could be closer to the truth. At the core of the story is JSE-listed Simmer & Jack, founded in 1924. Kebble first became involved with a then-rag eared Simmers in 1997. He made half-hearted, but costly, attempts to resuscitate a beaten up gold mine near Pilgrim’s Rest.


    Kebble funded Simmers by way of loans from CMMS, the key slush fund operated by his key public company, JCI. Early last year a decision (of unknown and disputed origin) was made to recapitalise Simmers, which owed nearly R80m to JCI and its proxies.


    A cash-starved Simmers issued 378m shares to settle its loan, but Kebble placed these into an entity named Jaganda, which issued in turn 378m shares to JCI and its proxies. A BEE entity, Richtrau No. 47, which changed its name to Msobomvu Mining and finally to Vulisango, was put in place, holding 51% of Jaganda. The entry cost nothing. For a few million rand, management bought the balance. After a huge row earlier this year, management exited the Jaganda structure by accepting 100m new Simmers shares.


    To cut a long story short, by unravelling in the background the complex capital structures behind Jaganda, JCI’s holding in Jaganda is currently worth R434m. Jaganda’s stake in Simmers, after deducting what’s owed to JCI, is worth a massive R1,4bn. The management stake is worth nearly R500m.


    These mind-boggling figures follow the simple fact that the value of Jaganda is 100% tied to the value of the Simmers stock price, which has risen by close to 2000% since the beginning of last year. Management must be credited, but so too, the runaway uranium price, higher gold price, and weaker rand.


    The individual shareholders in Vulisango (now the same as Jaganda from an economic substance viewpoint) are each worth R100m, or more, depending on the broad-based BEE shareholding in Vulisango, which has never been publicly defined.


    The individual Vulisango shareholders include Archie Mkele (former national South African rugby player), Zola Yeye (Springbok team manager), Siviwe Mapisa (of course),
    Bulewa Jeanie “Baba” Njenje (wife of Gibson Njenje, a director of Western Areas, another Kebble entity, in 1998 and 2000; Njenje Investment Holdings is also a significant shareholder in Matodzi, a JCI subsidiary), Margaret Ndlovu, Nozuko Pikoli (wife of Vusi Pikoli, national director of the National Prosecuting Authority), Ayanda Sisulu, and Valence Watson.


    The management stake was and is held in equal stakes by Roger Kebble, Gordon Miller (a director of Western Areas in 1998 and 2003, and, more famously, a director of Randgold & Exploration from 18 November 2003 to 6 May 2005), John Berry, Graham Wanblad (a Western Areas director up to 1998) and Ronnie Watson.


    Valens and Ronnie Watson are brothers and members of the well-known Eastern Cape rugby-playing family. Ronnie previously served high up in the ANC intelligence structures, and was employed for a period by the Kebbles as a labour consultant.

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