Beiträge von Ulfur

    BERNARD SWANEPOEL: We’ve been invited to discussions with a liquidator, who obviously has requested us and AngloGold to consider assisting him in the cost of the pumping. We’ve obviously rejected it. Durban Deep continues to be a legal entity, and they simply can’t just dump all their sort of liabilities – you know, use one of their subsidiaries and file for bankruptcy and walk away from all of their liabilities. The water issues are complex. The mines are typically interlinked. Typically quite a few mines mine from a single water basin, and what is certainly not tenable is that the last man standing ends up paying for all the water. In Harmony we’ve had many experiences in the past at Grootvlei. You may recall on the East Rand the Grootvlei mine could have been a viable mine if it wasn’t that it ended up pumping all of the water on behalf of the whole East Rand basin. So these are real issues and certainly I think a multiparty get-together to come up with permanent solutions is required.
    Aus:
    http://www.mineweb.net/sections/gold_weekly/431127.htm


    >Der Konkursverwalter hat Harmony und Anglo um Mithilfe bei den Pumpkosten gebeten, was sie abgelehnt haben. Durban Deep könne nicht einfach vor der Verantwortung weglaufen. Typischerweise bauen die Minen in einem zusammenhängenden Wasserbecken ab und es könne nicht sein, daß der letzte alle Wasserkosten trage. Die Grootvlei Grube im East Rand hätte eine realisierbare Mine werden können, wenn es nicht das Wasser des gesamten East Rands Beckens hätte pumpen müssen. Alle Parteien müssen zusammenkommen und eine dauerhafte Lösung ist erforderlich<


    Leider wird nicht näher erläutert, wie die Situation der Grootvlei Mine genau war, ob dort ebenfalls andere Gruben aufgehört haben oder warum Swanepoel dies als Vergleich heranzieht.


    Die hätten mal früher zu den Wasserkosten beitragen sollen, dann hätte BGMC vielleicht nicht Konkurs anmelden müssen. Nun werden sie die Dinge nicht mit einem Griff nach dem Ringelschwänzchen aufhalten können.


    Zunächst hatte es geheissen, 20m Liter kämen aus Harties, 10m aus Stilfontein. Gestern wurde nun gesagt, das praktisch das ganze Wasser aus Stilfontein käme (..the Stilfontein mine makes a lot of water. It comes in from dolomite and it’s on the surface, and it's about 25, 26, 28, 30m litres a day. That’s an awful lot of water. ). Zwischen BGMC und Stilfontein gibts einen Vertrag aus Zeiten, als das Hippo noch in beiden Firmen das Sagen hatte, wonach BGMC das Wasser aus Stilfontein auf eigene Kosten absaugt. Wenn nun BGMC liquidiert wird, ist der Vertrag hinfällig. Dann wäre bestenfalls Stilfontein als eigentlicher Verursacher in der Pflicht.


    Aber wie auch immer, im Liquiditionsfalle wird keine der Geisterminen Stilfontein und Harties für Anglo die Wasserrechnung bezahlen.

    Posted to the web on: 08 April 2005
    NUM seeks help for shut mines
    John Fraser

    Resources Editor


    HARMONY CE Bernard Swanepoel said yesterday he had been asked by the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) to consider taking over the two DRDGOLD mines near Klerksdorp that were provisionally liquidated last month.


    Harmony has a track record in turning underproductive assets around, and the union clearly hopes to restore some of the 6500 jobs that were lost when the mines were closed .


    The liquidation of the North West mines of Hartebeesfontein and Buffelsfontein followed sustained losses due to the strong rand, damage to shafts from earthquakes and a warning by DRDGOLD’s auditors that the company’s future as a going concern was at risk.


    “We were asked by the NUM to look at the assets,” Swanepoel said.


    He said Harmony would be in a position to consider taking on the mines only if they were “assets unencumbered by all sorts of liabilities”.


    Harmony’s involvement would “depend on what the liquidators are selling. The liquidators must make clear where the pumping and past liabilities lie.” [Blockierte Grafik: http://download.smiliemania.de/smilies132/00000285.gif]


    He said environmental commitments and pumping liabilities would be two key areas of concern. [Blockierte Grafik: http://download.smiliemania.de/smilies132/00000285.gif]


    Swanepoel said that a Harmony official had been asked to contact the liquidator to establish “whether there is value in the assets — whether the liquidation process will strip it of historical liabilities, such as expectations about employment levels and environmental liabilities”.
    http://www.businessday.co.za/a…stories.aspx?ID=BD4A34524

    Gogh hat eben schon alle SA-Operationen rausgerechnet. [Blockierte Grafik: http://download.smiliemania.de/smilies132/00000285.gif]


    "Solange die Pumpen im Namen und für Rechnung von DRD laufen, kann DRD auf Weitermachen in Nordwest switchen."


    Die Pumpen laufen eben nicht auf DRD, sondern auf Buffelfontein Gold Mining Company. Wenn die 45 Tage um sind, wird der Konkursverwalter sagen, ob die Mine weitermachen kann. Wenn nicht, muß Anglo zahlen. Vielleicht kriegt auch das Hippo eine Chance. Dann wird es ebenfalls darauf bestehen, daß Anglo seine Minen leerpumpt. Eine Schlittenfahrt mit dem Hippo sollte Anglo erst gar nicht versuchen. :D


    Es erscheint absurd, damit zu rechnen, daß eine stillgelegte Mine (Hippo´s Stillfontein) oder liquidierte Minen (BGMC ) pumpen, nur damit Anglo größere Gewinne machen kann.

    Zitat

    Aber Wasserpumpen ad infinitum, das werden sie wohl machen müssen. Ohne Produktion wohlgemerkt.


    Das kostet und die 5 Mio Unzen Reserven müssen ausgebucht werden.


    Gogh wieder beim Kinder erschrecken :D


    Heute haben wir erfahren, daß der Großteil des Wassers gar nicht aus Harties stammt, sondern vom alten Hippo kommt. Soll er doch pumpen :P



    "Verkaufen werde ich nicht -zu stur-...."


    Zieh das Moped lieber schnell aus der Mine, einen Wassereinbruch könnte es übel nehmen.

    An In-The-Money Call On Silver Listed on AMEX


    By David J. DesLauriers
    07 Apr 2005 at 02:00 PM EDT


    TORONTO (ResourceInvestor.com) -- Mines Management [MGN] is the sole owner of a behemoth deposit in Montana comprising 260 million ounce of silver and 2 billion pounds of copper.


    The Montanore project was acquired in 2002 from previous operator Noranda [NRD]. Canada's largest mining company invested 14 years in Montanore, completing $125 million of development work on the site. Expenditure included 70,000 feet of diamond core drilling, a complete mine plan and feasibility study, a 14,000 ft evaluation adit, and a fully approved Environmental Impact Study. That's a wealth of information that to be tapped as MGN optimises a production plan.


    Mentioning mining hostile Montana to an investor can leave him queasy, but Montanore is planned to be an underground mine. That ensures it will not be caught up in the disastrous Initiative 147. More importantly, Noranda permitted the project with an EIS in 1993 and all of the nuisance suits brought by various green groups were rejected, such that there is now a Federal Court precedent in favour of Montanore. Not only that, the newly elected Governor of Montana, Bryan Schweitzer, a Democrat who made his living in natural resources, has publicly announced his support for the project which is located in a part of the State that currently suffers from 18% unemployment.


    Based on some of Noranda’s original work, the company has set a timeline for the project, and adumbrated the cost of mining. An updated feasibility study and re-permitting will take between 12-24 months to complete. With $6.4 million presently in the treasury, it is likely MGN may look to do a raising of $20-$40 million over the next 12-18 months. A TSX listing could also be in the cards to take advantage of the Canadian broker dealer network's fund-raising ability.


    Subsequent construction would take 24-30 months and the cost to enter production would be sizeable; somewhere in the range of $250-$350 million. As stated to Resource Investor, MGN is in a very good position to handle a financing of this magnitude through the skills of director Robert Russell, who once managed and oversaw an expansion of the goliath Grasberg Mine.


    Using $1.10 copper as a by-product credit, production costs are estimated to be $2.90 per ounce of silver produced. Production levels, using the base case scenario, would be 8 million ounces per year making Montanore the world’s sixth largest silver mine.


    With only 13.3 million shares fully diluted, MGN’s present market capitalization net of cash is $65 million, suggesting that the market is currently valuing their silver at about $0.25 per ounce. This is a fraction of its peer group which includes companies such as Apex Silver [AMEX:SIL], Western Silver [AMEX:WTZ] and Silver Standard [NasdaqNM:SSRI].


    The point that the market seems to be overlooking is that unlike some of its competitors, Mines Management’s ounces are all in the money. They are not simply hoarding ounces that will be feasible (hopefully) north of $10 silver. Nor is it the case with MGN, as with some others that their ounces are scattered over the globe, their eventual economic viability difficult to measure.


    Production may be five years away but in the meantime, the company’s shares will act as a leveraged proxy for silver, representing one of the few in-the money calls that can also boast economically viable ounces.
    http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=9064

    OhneRente,


    verstehe nicht ganz, was Du meinst.


    Die Gruben von Stilfontein Gold Mining und Harties liegen oberhalb von Anglos Minen. Der Wasserfluß ist so, daß 10 Megaliter von Stilfontein nach Harties flössen und dort mit weiteren 20 Megalitern zusammen in Anglos Gruben.


    Weder Stilfontein noch Harties sind von Wasser aus Anglos Gruben betroffen. So mein jetziger Kenntnisstand.

    AngloGold Says DRDGOLD Still on Hook to Avoid Flood


    By Tim Wood
    06 Apr 2005 at 07:26 PM EDT


    NEW YORK (ResourceInvestor.com) -- AngloGold Ashanti [AU] has issued a stern warning to DRDGold [DROOY] that it cannot presume that the liquidation of its Hartebeestfontein and Buffelsfontein operations releases it from its obligation to pump water to prevent flooding of down-dip mines.


    Pumping disputes are likely to increase as more mines struggle with rampant cost inflation and currency weakened revenues that have sent margins to the basement; lower in some cases.


    In early 2003 Harmony Gold [HMY] threatened to cease pumping 60 megaliters a day of groundwater at its Randfontein No. 4 Shaft. That posed a flooding threat to the South Deep joint venture owned by Placer Dome [PDG] and Western Areas [WAR]. They had previously picked up the pumping costs which ran as high as $800,000 a month, and ultimately agreed to resume responsibility.


    Pumping is not the only problem. Fewer mines in a weaker financial condition are bearing the burden of water quality management programmes on all the major gold and coal fields. There is quite severe contamination after a century and a quarter of acid mine drainage. It will get significantly worse if marginal shafts are left to the elements.


    AngloGold was at pains to lay out the regulatory and common law burden that remains with DRDGOLD to keep pumping water from its mines that have just been placed in liquidation. AngloGold doesn’t see the irony in DRDGOLD 00literally walking away and leaving the problem in the hands of the recently appointed liquidators.


    It costs an estimated $1.1 million per month to pump 30 megaliters of water per day to keep DRDGOLD’s defunct mines dry, as well as all the downdip operations that include AngloGold’s Great Noligwa, Kopanang and the new Moab Khotsong operations.


    In a clear message that AngloGold is likely to pursue DRDGOLD in the courts, the senior producer said in a statement, “AngloGold Ashanti takes the view that an act of liquidation cannot be utilised to avoid statutory obligations.”


    That’s a blow to DRDGOLD stockholders who were hoping that the liquidation would have no encumbrances as the company seeks to remake itself without the dead weight of its rand damaged mines. It also casts a shadow over DRDGOLD’s just announced $29 million stock issue, suggesting this may not be the last near-term call on the markets.
    http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=9056


    >In einem ähnlichen Fall, als 2003 Hamony das Abpumpen einstellen wollte, waren WAR und Placer Dome gezwungen, die Aufgabe zu übernehmen. [Na also. :)) ]


    Schätzungsweise 1,1 Mio USD kostet das Abpumpen im Monat.


    Klare Nachricht von Anglo, DRD gerichtlich verfolgen zu wollen, da Anglo´s Ansicht: Konkurs zur Vermeidung von gesetzlichen Pflichten nicht mißbrauchbar.


    Rückschlag für DRD´s Aktionäre, Schatten über jüngste Kapitalerhöhung, möglich, daß die nächste bald bevorsteht<


    Harmonys Fall bestätigt DRD´s Ansicht. Anglo´s Statements waren zu erwarten, begründen aber nicht, warum DRD für BGMC haften soll. Die gesetzlichen Regelungen mögen BGMC verpflichten, weiter zu pumpen.
    Aber Schweinchen Schlau sieht sich nur in der Rolle eines Aktionärs von BGMC (Graulich: ... DRDGOLD was a shareholder of the mining company...)


    Soll BGMC versuchen, daß Hippo für 10 Megaliter aus Stilfontein zahlen zu lassen. Aber wenn BGMC aufgelöst wird, sieht´s schlecht mit Anglo´s Forderungen aus.
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.international-money-research.de/images/geld_7.jpg]

    Harties pumpt in Kebbles stillgelegter Stilfontein Goldmine das Wasser ab, damit es nicht in die eigene Grube läuft. Warum tut Harties das und noch auf eigene Kosten?


    Wäre es nicht Sache des Hippos, die Pumpen in Stilfontein weiterlaufen zu lassen, damit Harties nicht absäuft, selbst wenn Stilfontein nicht mehr fördert?


    20 Megaliter Wasser dräuen von Harties, 10 Megaliter von Stilfontein in Anglos Gruben zu laufen. (Wieviele Badewannen sind das?)


    Wird "the old mining dog" (mineweb) die Abpumperei Stilfonteins nun selber zahlen, damit das Wasser nicht über Harties in Anglos Gruben gluckert? ?(

    SOUTH AFRICA: Miners face a hopeless future
    05 Apr 2005 17:56:21 GMT


    Source: IRIN

    STILFONTEIN, 5 April (IRIN) - For six years Elvis Dlamani worked as an electrician at one of the many gold mines that dot the landscape of South Africa's North West province. Eighteen months ago he was among 3,000 workers retrenched from two mines in the area that closed down.


    Dlamani's R4,000 (US $666) severance payment is long gone and his attempts to find another mining job, or indeed, any job, have been unsuccessful. He sells sweets when he has money to buy them, and relies on his brother and girlfriend to help him pay the rent for his one-roomed township home.


    When asked about his future, 32-year-old Dlamani shook his head, stared at the floor and said, "Just to suffer."


    Following the closure of the two mines, owned by DRDGold, 6,513 workers faced unemployment and a future as uncertain as Dlamani's. The outlook for the nearby town of Stilfontein and its neighbouring township of Khuma, where the mines and related businesses were the principle employers, is even bleaker.


    If the closure turns out to be permanent, said Nelson Notununu, an employee at one of the mines and local secretary of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), "Stilfontein will become a ghost town - it will be a disaster."


    Gold has played a vital role in South Africa's history and its growth into a major economic force on the continent. The city of Johannesburg was formed after vast gold deposits were discovered in the Witwatersrand area, of which North West province forms part.


    More than 100 years and 41,000 tonnes of gold later, the Witwatersrand reef system is still the largest source of unmined gold in the world and South Africa remains the world's largest gold producer.


    "The ore body that is here is a lot," insisted Charles Botha, a metallurgical supervisor who is among those in Stilfontein facing retrenchment after 25 years with the mines. "It is a shame that some of the shafts are out of action."


    Although Stilfontein has substantial gold reserves, they have become increasingly difficult and expensive to mine.


    Like most of South Africa's gold mines, the depth of operations rules out mechanisation, making the process of extracting the ore extremely labour intensive. According to DRD, labour accounts for 58 percent of its operational costs in the North West.


    South Africa's high steel prices, rising water costs and rail tariffs have contributed to production costs that are unsustainable against the backdrop of the slump in the gold price, explained Lesego Mncwango, spokesman for the Chamber of Mines of South Africa.


    But the current strength of the rand against the dollar has driven the final nail in the coffin for mines like those at Stilfontein, where profit margins were already slim. Nationally, the number of people employed by gold mines in the last decade has dropped from about 530,000 to just 187,000.


    Days after DRD had given the required 60 days' notice of its intention to retrench the entire workforce at Stilfontein, an earthquake struck the area, killing one miner and wounding four others.


    The natural disaster sped up the human disaster that began with the 2003 retrenchments. Two weeks after the earthquake, and well before the 60 days' notice expired, DRD applied for liquidation.


    The fate of the mine workers and the town now lies in the hands of the liquidators, who have 45 days to decide whether the mine's liabilities really outweigh its still considerable assets.


    Botha is among several mine workers IRIN spoke to who believed the liquidators will find that, with good management, the company's problems are not insurmountable.


    "My heart tells me we are not going to close," he said, adding that DRD has lacked consistent leadership since it acquired the business in 1999. Botha shares NUM's view that another company should take over the mines.


    Ilja Graulich, a DRD spokesman, defended his company's record, saying it had spent R300 million ($48.3 million) last year alone to try to keep the North West mines operational.


    "We have spent a lot of time and effort in trying to find the right management ... we were losing R25 million to R30 million ($4 million to $4.8 million) a month," he said, adding that the workers had refused to make financial sacrifices to keep the operations afloat.


    A spokesperson for the Department of Minerals and Energy told IRIN his office could only ensure that DRD provided severance packages and training to retrenched workers in need of new skills. The industry standard is one or two weeks' pay for each year of service.


    For skilled white-collar workers like Botha, who live in comfortable homes with well-kept lawns in Stilfontein's pleasant residential neighbourhoods, retrenchment is a major setback; for workers like Elvis Dlamani it can mean the difference between getting by and becoming destitute.


    Reint Dykema, a spokesman for the trade union, Solidarity, estimates that each mineworker supports an average of 10 dependents. The closure of the two DRD mines and the announcement last week that another gold-mining company, Harmony, intends to lay off 4,900 of its workers could leave at least 120,000 people without jobs in the next few months.


    The impact of the closures will be felt beyond South Africa's borders. Gold mines have a long tradition of employing workers from neighbouring countries like Mozambique, Swaziland, Lesotho and Botswana.


    More than 50 percent of the workers facing retrenchment from DRD are migrant labourers who live in single-sex hostels close to the shafts and support families in their home countries.


    Moses Sephachane left his hometown of Berea in Lesotho in 1991 and has been employed as a miner at Stilfontein ever since. His $400 monthly salary feeds his wife, mother and six children back in Berea, whom he visits about once every six months.


    Since operations came to a halt two weeks ago there has been little for Sephachane to do, other than sit around the room he shares with seven other men, speculating about their future.


    "We're just talking and talking," he said, speaking through a translator. "I am too worried because I am just eating and not working".


    Frances Mashale, a Mozambican, has a wife and three children in the capital, Maputo, who rely on his earnings. He said he left Mozambique for South Africa in 1992 because there were no jobs in his country. There are still no jobs there, Mashale said, and besides, he knows "only how to use the shovel".


    In the nearby township of Khuma, idle mine workers killing time outside a bottle store express suspicions about DRD's "real reasons" for the closures, and bitterness about its lack of investment in the community since taking over the mines six years ago.


    "DRD does nothing for the community - there is no relationship - they are just eating money", said Daniel Mabunda, a widower with two young daughters who has been with the company for four years. He hopes to receive some retraining so he can move to Johannesburg and try his luck as a boilermaker.


    For his part, Dlamani said, he has received no support from either the government or DRD since being retrenched. His forecast for other mineworkers about to join the ranks of the unemployed is gloomy: "We are all going to become smugglers and criminals."
    http://www.alertnet.org/thenew…420e3fc92febad76bd33c.htm

    frr,


    danke für die ausführliche Stellungnahme.


    Werde mich entgegen Embry´s Empfehlung doch einseitig auf IMA positionieren. Falls AQI´s Blackmailversuch im wesentlichen scheitert, dürfte dies auch dem Aktienkurs schaden, so daß das Hedgen über AQI auch einiges kostet.

    >Eine Möglichkeit für die „Kriegskasse“ ist die Schließung von Blyvoor 8o . Bei 86.000 Rand/kg sagte die Firma, Blyvoor sei beim Breakeven, nun ist der Goldpreis bei 84.316 R/kg.
    Potentielle Akquisitionen: Nicht auf Australasien beschränkt, alles innerhalb einer 4-Stunden Flugzeit von Johannesburg möglich. „Es gibt eine Menge Zeug, was unsere Jungs interessiert“.
    Aktienverwässerung: Von 1997 mit 30 Mio Aktien eine Verzehnfachung nach neuer Kapitalerhöhung auf 300 Mio.
    Erntezeit bei Blyvoor: Ein JP Morgan Analyst am 1. April über Blyvoor: Reserven werden möglicherweise 4mal so schnell verbraucht, wie neue entwickelt. Kosten für das Halbjahr waren geringer als bei einer angemesseneren Entwicklungsrate.
    Zum möglichen Weggang aus SA: CFO Murray: Der Markt belohnt Gewinnmargen mehr als Optionen.Dies bezieht sich auf die Goldreserven, die geopfert würden, wenn DRD die restlichen SA-Operationen schließen würde.
    JPMorgan Analyst zur möglichen Blyvoor-Schließung: Dies bedeutete einen Verlust an Möglichkeiten, aber befreit DRD von qualitativ niedrigen SA-Gruben und erhöht die Gelegenheit, daß die Gruppe in eine höher bewertete globale Vergleichsgruppe vorstößt.<


    Sieht also so aus, daß meine Vermutung, das Gerede von der neu gewonnenen Profitabilität von Blyvoor sei nicht ganz ernstzunehmen, gar nicht so abwegig ist.


    DRDGOLD to raise $30m ‘warchest’
    David McKay
    Posted: Tue, 05 Apr 2005


    -- DRDGOLD today unveiled terms of a $30m (R180m) share issue the aim of which was to pay for acquisitions and further restructuring. Ian Murray, DRDGOLD financial director, said there was “no immediate” destination for the funds which would be held as “a warchest”.


    One possible implication of the share issue, however, is that the group would be well positioned to rapidly shut Blyvooruitzicht, its only 100% owned operating asset in South Africa. Murray said the mine was at break-even at a rand gold price of R86,000/kg. The rand gold price is currently at R84,316/kg.
    Some 30 million shares would be issued half of which would be bought by Baker Steel Capital Managers (BSCM), a UK based hedge fund. Owing to BSCM's status as a related party, a shareholder vote would be needed to clear this transaction, Murray said.


    The balance of the funds would be placed by means of a claw-back rights issue. In this transaction, funds would be provided to DRDGOLD which the gold company would then recoup through a general rights offer to shareholders.


    Commenting on potential acquisitions, Murray said the group would not restrict itself to Australasia and was considering buying mines in southern Africa.


    “There’s no need to limit ourselves. We will consider anything in Africa within a four hour flight time radius to Johannesburg,” Murray said. “There’s alot of stuff that has our guys interested,” he added.


    DRDGOLD shareholders have seen shares in issue balloon to 264 million from 30 million in 1997, the year in which DRDGOLD consolidated its various assets under a single entity. Including today’s proposed transaction, shares in issue would have increased 10-fold to 300 million in the last eight years, an average of 33 million shares per year.


    Steve Shepherd, an analyst for JP Morgan, said in a report dated April 1 that DRDGOLD could be in “harvest mode” at Blyvoor. “Firstly ... ore reserves are possibly being consumed at least four times faster than they are being developed. And secondly, that costs reported for the half year were lower than they might have been had the appropriate development rate been maintained,” he said.


    Commenting on the possibility that DRDGOLD was positioning itself to depart from South Africa, Murray said: “The market is rewarding margin over optionality”. This refers to the gold ore reserves that DRDGOLD would sacrifice were it to shut its remaining South African operations.


    Without any South African mines, South Africa would decline to 2.5 million oz from its current 7.4 million oz. Following the liquidation of its North West province mines last week, gold ore reserves fell from 12.4 million oz.
    Writing on the closure of Blyvoor, Shepherd wrote: “This implies a loss of optionality, but liberates DRDGOLD form low quality South African mining assets, and possibly raises the opportunity for the group to move into a more highly rated global peer grouping”.
    http://www.miningmx.com/gold_silver/430173.htm

    Aktienangebot von Metorex für das Kongovorhaben mehr als zweifach überzeichnet. Für das Ruashiprojekt werden 83,3 Mio Aktien zu 3 Rand angeboten, um 250 Mio Rand zu erzielen.


    Nach der Gewinnplanung wird sich Metorex´ Gewinn verdreifachen, wenn Ruashi in Gang kommt. Für das Geschäftsjahr bis Juni 05 wird ein Gewinn pro Aktie von 0,165 Rand erwartet, für 2006 ein Gewinn pro Aktie von 0,547 Rand ( bei R 6,42 zum Dollar in 2005 und 7 in 2006; Kupferpreis 2005 2834 $/t und 2006 2567 $/t )


    Metorex gets subscriptions for double the shares on offer
    By: Gareth Tredway
    Posted: '03-APR-05 16:00' GMT © Mineweb 1997-2004
    http://www.mineweb.net/sections/junior_mining/429372.htm

    CIBS Update: Kursziel von 5,5 auf 5 Dollar herabgesetzt, weiterhin Sektor Outperformer, spekulativ


    - In Kürze soll Bankmachbarkeitsstudie fertig sein [ Corriente hat wiederum den Termin 1.Quartal 05 nicht eingehalten! X( ]. Positive Änderungen erwartet (höhere Produktion) und negative (höhere Kapitalkosten)
    - Bleibt nach CIBS ein robustes Projekt, daß Corriente als neuer, kleiner Produzent selbst aufziehen könnte mit Grubenbetrieb Anfang 2007
    - die große Kupferressource könnte auch einen etablierten Produzent anziehen, mit Joint Venture, Kauf oder Firmenübernahme später im Jahr


    Bankmachbarkeitsstudie wird auf Reservenbasis von 100-125 Mio Tonnen mit 0,80% Kupfer und 0,20g/t Gold (cut-off 0,5%)basieren, mit einem Durchsatz von 25.000 t pro Tag.


    Totale Mirador-Ressource mit 500 Mio Tonnen erheblich größer, 7 Mrd. lb Kupfer und 3 Mio Unzen Gold. Firma wird Durchsatz mit 75.000 t/Tag überprüfen, dies würde aber Kapitalkosten verursachen, die Corriente vermutlich alleine nicht tragen kann.


    Analyse:Corriente Resources Inc.
    Risk-Reward Favours Investing Ahead Of Feasibility Study
    http://www.goldinvest.de/publi…ts/901020050405180447.pdf

    >Für 180 Mio Rand (23 Mio €) neue Aktien( 32,8 Mio), um flüssig zu bleiben. Aktien werden zu 0,69€ erstmal an Baker Steel Capital Managers verkauft, von denen die Aktionäre für je 100 Aktien, die sie halten, 6 neue Aktien zu 0,69€ kaufen können.<


    DRDGOLD issuing more shares for R180 million
    Jim Jones
    '05-APR-05 14:00'


    JOHANNESBURG (Mineweb.com) -- DRDGOLD, the troubled South African gold junior, is to raise R180 million from its shareholders and fund manager Baker Steel Capital Managers (BSCM)to keep itself afloat. The fund-raising comes in the wake of the auditor’s concern about DRDGOLD’s ability to continue as a going concern.


    “The main purpose of the capital raising is to address KPMG’s concerns, and redress the balance between current assets and current liabilities,” the company says.


    BSCM will buy 32.8 million shares at R5.50 apiece. But shareholders will be entitled, should they wish, to “claw back” from BSCM six shares for every 100 held, again at R5.50 apiece. DRDGOLD spokesman Ilja Graulich says that this financing method is less expensive than a normal underwritten rights issue. The issue price is about 8% less than the share’s recent trading averages on NASDAQ.


    At end-December, DRDGOLD’s consolidated balance sheet disclosed current assets of R331 million and current liabilities of R396 million – giving net current liabilities of R65 million. The company had suffered losses during the six months to December. Since then, the company has received R38 million from JCI in terms of a court order and has walked away from its loss-making North West mines which the company has placed in voluntary liquidation.


    When that was announced, the North West mines owed employees R130 million for wages and benefits, another R120 million was owed for electricity and other consumables, R1 billion to DRDGOLD itself and an unspecified amount for the cost of restoring environmental damage. Graulich said at the time of the liquidation announcement that this latter environmental amount would be covered largely by moneys already specifically put aside.


    However, neighbouring mines dispute DRDGOLD’s right simply to walk away from the mines even if they had been owned by a subsidiary. The likely outcome remains far from clear. It is also not clear whether government will allow DRDGOLD to walk away from the mines’ longer-term water-pumping responsibilities.


    Apart from restoring working capital, DRDGOLD says that the R180 million now being raised will be used to restructure operations to acquire other “synergistic assets” in South Africa and /or to fund necessary capital expenditure.


    Though DRDGOLD's other South African operations are reported to be profitable, the company's longer-term aim is to shift operations offshore, particularly to Papua New Guinea, Fiji and Australia.
    http://www.mineweb.net/sections/gold_silver/430190.htm

    Unfaßbar, schreckt Gogh jetzt nicht einmal davor zurück, Märchen zu fälschen! X(


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.trinitatis-kirche.de/bilder/dks3.jpg]


    Schweinchen Schlau baut kein Strohhaus :D


    Um dem bösen Wolf zu entkommen, baut jedes der drei kleinen Schweinchen ein Haus. Schweinchen Fiedler baut sein Haus aus Stroh. Doch der böse Wolf pustet sein Haus einfach weg. Schweinchen Pfeiffer hält sich schlauer: Er baut sein Haus aus Holz. Aber auch das kann den Wolf mit seinen kräftigen Lungen nicht aufhalten. Nur Schweinchen Schlau findet die Lösung und schichtet Stein um Stein, bis sein Haus steht. Dann haben sich Schweinchen Pfeiffer und Schweinchen Fiedler bei ihm versteckt und das Haus hat natürlich gehalten.
    s.a.http://www.trinitatis-kirche.d…e/predigten/20020414.html


    Stefan Raab´s Topbuch: "Das hat mir mit auf den Weg gegeben: Wenn du was machst, mach es anständig! Deshalb ist es für mich das Top-Buch aller Zeiten." :(


    Also: Droopy braucht keine Angst vor dem bösen Wolf zu haben. :))

    Zitat

    Da wird blödsinnig Kredit/Goodwill zerstört.


    Wer sagt, daß er Nordwest dichtmacht, nimmt


    5 Mio Reserven als Kreditgrundlage weg.


    Nach der going-concern Klausel der Wirtschaftsprüfer hat DRD ohnehin keinen Goodwill mehr.


    Vermutlich ziehen die Banken bei der Amputation mit, da sie wissen, daß sonst der ganze Körper gefährdet ist.


    Beim jetzigen Rand läuft die Zeit gegen DRD: langwierige Retrenchmentprozeße, gucken, ob´s dann läuft und wiederum nachbessern, weil die Kosten dann immer noch zu hoch sind, diese Zeit hat DRD ev. nicht mehr.


    5 Mio Reserven tief unten, die über 5 Mio Unzen kosten, um sie rauszuholen, interessieren nicht.

    Für sorgloses Handeln gibt´s also tatsächlich auch in SA eine Durchgriffshaftung.


    Allerdings müßte die Nichtbeachtung einer kaufmännischen Sorgfaltspflicht auch erst einmal bewiesen werden:
    If a director can show he honestly believed that the company would in future be able to pay its creditors, then he cannot be regarded as reckless.


    Es wäre verwunderlich, wenn unser Schweinchen Schlau nicht durch dieses Scheunentor hindurch käme. Sicherlich glaubte das DRD Management felsenfest, daß die NW-Gruben wieder wirtschaftlich arbeiten würden. Sonst hätte man die früheren Retrenchment Maßnahmen auch nicht gemacht, sondern gleich verkauft oder stillgelegt. Für die Annahme, daß der Rand nur vorübergehend stark sein würde, lassen sich sicherlich jede Menge Aussagen seriöser Wirtschaftsexperten heranziehen.


    Und das Erdbeben konnte MWW wirklich nicht vorhersehen!


    Also gemach. Schweinchen Schlau wird sich durch juristische Nachhutgefechte nicht stoppen lassen.
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.kabeleins.de/php-bin/scripts/cgalerie/content/k1_trick_de_schweinchen_dick/01.jpg]


    Im schlimmsten Falle gibt´s doch noch Nachzahlungen für Löhne. Jedoch, und dies ist die wichtigste Nachricht, ab 1. April verursachen Buffels und Harties keine Kosten mehr.