A Monday Morning Musing from
Mickey the Mercenary Geologist
(Data and Analysis Provided by
Cipher Research Ltd, Vancouver, B.C.)
This is the second in a series of musings and accompanying videos with
Vancouver-based Cipher Research Ltd, which evaluates exploration and mining
companies for investment. Once again, we assess a segment of the gold
resource sector.
Our first musing was posted in early February and titled The Real Cost of Mining Gold. It evaluated seven
major gold miners over the 11-year bull market from 2003-2013, showed how and
why they failed to profit and reward shareholders, and provided a solution
for the future, i.e., a value versus growth philosophy. Three short videos on
the subject can be accessed here: Mercenary
GeologistVideos.
Today, oursubjectis the value of an ounce of gold in the ground.
Venture always flows where potential reward is perceived to have the
lowest risk. In my opinion, advanced explorers and developers often offer the
best risk/reward profile in the junior resource market.
There is a plethora of companies to choose from in all segments of the
resource sector. For any speculator, the challenge is to separate the many
pretenders from the very few contenders. This is an especially daunting task
for the retail lay investor. In this musing, we provide insights based on
decades of experience evaluating companies and their projects.
We examine a 24-year takeover history of advanced gold explorers and
developers to determine the real value of gold in the ground and develop a
set of criteria for assessing any company and its flagship project for
investment. Analogous to the major miners, we find that the quality of
ounces of gold is far more important than the quantity of ounces.
All junior resource companies can be evaluated and ranked utilizing four
key criteria:
·Share structure: should be tightly held with significant holdings by
insiders and management.
·People: should have technical expertise and experience with past
successes and not a series of failures.
·Project: should have favorable geology and geopolitical jurisdiction with
an experienced and successful geological and engineering team.
·Working capital: should have significant cash on hand and/or the ability
to raise funds without severe dilution.
Many analysts, money managers, newsletter writers, and pundits promulgate
the idea that management is the most important criteria for speculation in a
junior resource company.
Cipher and I vociferously disagree. We cannot recall any advanced explorer
or developer taken over for the attributes of its management.
We submit that Project is King in evaluating any gold company for
speculation or acquisition.
An early-stage explorer has no tangible value. The company's market
capitalization is simply a speculative valuation based on investors'
perception of its management, projects, and potential for share price
increase.
The successful junior exploration company makes a gold discovery and
drills it in sufficient detail to table a mineral resource estimate. Once
there is an in-the-ground resource, an informed valuation can be assigned to
what has become an advanced explorer with a gold deposit.
To become a potential developer, the company performs engineering studies
on the resource to determine the amount of gold that can be converted into
economic reserves (ore). Once reserves are quantified and assigned an
economic value, the company can either raise money to build a mine or sell
the asset or a portion of it to another miner.
At any juncture in this process, the real value of said mining project is
derived solely from the level of confidence that it will produce a quantity
of ounces of gold at a profit in the future.
So how do we evaluate a gold project for possible investment?
Both Cipher Research and I employ a peer valuation model based on the
value of gold in the ground. My methodology is simpler than Cipher's, which
employs a detailed technical and financial analysis.
Here's the basic premise: An ounce of gold in hand is currently worth
about $1200. Gold contained in rock at concentrations or amounts not economic
to mine is worth zero dollars. It follows that an ounce of gold "in the
ground" is worth somewhere between nothing and the current spot price.
A gold project's value is then expressed by a simple formula: Value =
Quantity x Price, i.e., the number of ounces that can be potentially
extracted at a profit times the peer price of gold in the ground.
In my methodology, I assess the geology, deposit type, geological team,
land, access, infrastructure, and geopolitical and environmental
jurisdictions to determine if a project warrants further interest.
If it passes initial muster, the grade and tonnage of the resource and/or
reserve estimates allow me to assess potentially recoverable ounces of gold.
I then take the market capitalization of the company and divide by the number
of ounces to calculate a market value per ounce of gold in the ground.
As a contrarian, I am looking for companies that are unknown, unwanted,
and undervalued at any particular juncture. My trading philosophy, the Power
of Two, has been well-documented over the years. For those with further
interest, the detailed methodology is discussed in this musing (Mercenary
Musing, May 10, 2010).
By comparing a targeted project and company to a group of peers, I can
determine the ones whose ounces are drastically undervalued. Employing the
efficient market hypothesis, those few companies have potential for share
price doubles and are candidates worthy of speculative buys.
Cipher Research has a similar philosophy but employs a much more in-depth
analysis. While Cipher realizes that take-over is not the only option for
advanced explorers & developers, it is one that can be accurately
measured and provides a reliable benchmark price for an ounce of gold in-the-ground.
Therefore, the Cipher principals analyzed 253 take-overs in the gold
sector from 1990-2013 to determine the value range for an ounce of gold
in-the-ground.
Their method relies on the principle of substitution, i.e., the gold
deposit being valued is compared with the transaction value of similar
properties.
This chart shows the acquisition price per ounce of gold versus the gold
price for the companies in the 24-year study:
Note the vast majority of these transactions occurred below $90/oz Au
in-the-ground and, except for more outliers when the price went exponential
from 2005 to 2012, there is very little correlation with the price of gold.
In fact, the following chart shows that 56% of 253 takeovers occurred at a
value less than $45/oz Au and 80% were below $90/oz Au:
The following table shows that only a slight premium was paid for
pre-production or producing mines versus feasibility-stage and development
projects. There is a larger spread in valuations based on jurisdiction, with
deposits in Asia and Latin America commanding a premium over North America
and Africa and Europe in the mid-range. The reasons for this are unclear to
us.
Price Paid per Oz Au vs Stage
and Jurisdiction
|
|
All Deals
|
Feasibility or Development
|
Preproduction to Production
|
Africa
|
Asia
|
Europe
|
Latin Am
|
Canada/US
|
Median Price
|
$39
|
$34
|
$40
|
$34
|
$47
|
$39
|
$41
|
$31
|
Furthermore, this chart shows that the acquisition cost per ounce does not
correlate with the size of the resource:
Based on 253 gold deposits acquired from 1990-2013, Cipher calculated a
median benchmark value for an ounce of gold in the ground at about $40 and
established that 80% of the ounces were valued at less than $90.
Note that Cipher's treatment includes all categories of 43-101 qualified
resource estimates: measured, indicated, and inferred resources.
Measured and indicated resources can be economically evaluated and a
portion converted into proven and/or probable reserves; i.e.,
"ore", the part of a mineral deposit that is mineable at a profit (Mercenary Musing, August 25, 2008).
However, the confidence level of inferred resources is insufficient to
allow the application of technical and economic factors or enable an
evaluation of economic viability worthy of public disclosure (CIM
Standards on Mineral Resources and Reserves, 2000).
Simply put, not all ounces are created equal. At any given time, the level
of confidence that gold can be economically mined, processed, and refined
into pure gold bars and the projected profits from sale of said gold
determines the value of the ounces in the ground.
This is a part of what makes some gold deposits worth $90 an ounce while
others are valued at $10. However, there are many other variables that enter
into the equation.
Determining the confidence levels and projected margins of a gold project
requires studies by independent engineers and geologists, the "qualified
persons".
There are three types of engineering studies, listed in order of
increasing level of confidence: Preliminary Economic Assessment,
Pre-Feasibility Study, and Feasibility Study. Each report determines the
overall grade and tonnage of the mineral resource; the latter two also
determine the reserves that can be economically mined, processed, and
recovered. All studies require informed assumptions and estimates of many
technical and economic variables. Slight changes in any of these factors can
drastically affect the potential viability and economic value of a gold
deposit.
Some of the key inputs that are used in evaluating a gold project and
generating a financial model with projected cash flow, net present value, and
internal rate of return are briefly discussed below:
·The price of gold is the most critical variable. It affects not only cash
flow and profit margins but also the cut-off grade of the deposit.
·The cut-off grade is the minimum grade of rock that can be mined,
processed, and produced at breakeven cost. Minor changes in cut-off grade can
result in huge changes in the size of resources and reserves.
·The mineable portions of a gold deposit are the ounces contained in the
reserves. Only the mineable ounces that can be produced at a profit have
actual value. Because of dilution and mining losses, reserves will always be
less than resources.The geometry of a gold deposit is a critical factor. For
example, mineralization outside or below the depth of a potential open-pit or
below the depth of a shaft has no actual value.
·The metallurgical process required to recover gold must be thoroughly
understood and tested. Many mines fail because of poorly designed or
underperforming mineral processing and recovery facilities.
·The operating expenses (OPEX) include all the direct costs of producing
an ounce of gold. OPEX is estimated from peer costs at similar mines
operating in similar jurisdictions.
·The capital expenditures (CAPEX) are the costs to build a mine, increase
production, or upgrade facilities. CAPEX is accounted for by spreading it out
over the life of the mine as a depreciated expense.Most of these expenditures
occur prior to the commencement of mining.
·Sustaining capital costs are expenditures to maintain levels of
production. Initial construction of a mineshaft and stripping of an open-pit
are examples of CAPEX while deepening a shaft or laying back a pit are
examples of sustaining costs.Companies and engineering firms may move costs
from CAPEX into sustaining capital in order to shorten the initial payback
period and make the economics of a deposit appear better.
Cipher Research critically examines all the assumptions and key variables
used in technical and engineering studies on a gold project. It often makes
adjustments to the company's resource model before running a detailed
financial analysis to determine the economic viability of the deposit.
To understand Cipher's process, let's look at a case study for an advanced
gold exploration and development company. It was spawned from a shell in 2005
and was acquired by a mid-tier gold miner in 2013 for $370 million. Net of
cash, the miner paid $300 million for the junior's gold project.
The company completed and published several resource estimates during its
history, culminating in a base case global mineral inventory of measured,
indicated, and inferred resources totaling 10.7 million ounces of gold at a
0.35 g/t Au cut-off grade. Note the gold price used for the estimate was
$1400/oz, which is too high for an economic evaluation today. Nevertheless, here
is the published resource at various cut-off grades:
CASE STUDY: RESOURCES
|
|
Measured & Indicated
|
Inferred
|
TOTAL GOLD
|
Cut-off (g/t)
|
Million Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
Au
M oz
|
Million Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
Au
M oz
|
Million Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
Au
M oz
|
0.1
|
524
|
0.54
|
9.2
|
1,228
|
0.23
|
9.1
|
1,752
|
0.32
|
18.2
|
0.2
|
362
|
0.72
|
8.4
|
390
|
0.44
|
5.5
|
752
|
0.57
|
13.9
|
0.3
|
251
|
0.93
|
7.5
|
203
|
0.62
|
4.0
|
454
|
0.79
|
11.6
|
0.35
|
214
|
1.03
|
7.1
|
162
|
0.69
|
3.6
|
376
|
0.88
|
10.7
|
0.4
|
184
|
1.14
|
6.8
|
125
|
0.78
|
3.1
|
310
|
1.00
|
9.9
|
0.5
|
142
|
1.35
|
6.1
|
81
|
0.97
|
2.5
|
223
|
1.21
|
8.7
|
0.6
|
113
|
1.55
|
5.6
|
55
|
1.17
|
2.1
|
168
|
1.42
|
7.7
|
0.7
|
92
|
1.76
|
5.2
|
36
|
1.43
|
1.7
|
129
|
1.66
|
6.9
|
0.8
|
77
|
1.96
|
4.8
|
28
|
1.64
|
1.5
|
105
|
1.87
|
6.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Comparing the resource at 0.35 g/t to the one at 0.50 g/t we see:
- Total tonnes decrease from 376 to 223 million tonnes or
41%.
- Grade increases from 0.88 g/t Au to 1.21 g/t Au but is
still well-above two times the cut-off grade.
- Total gold decreases 19% from 10.7 to 8.7 million ounces
The company completed two Preliminary Economic Assessments (PEAs) on this
resource. Using the 0.35 g/t Au cut-off and a gold price of $1250/oz, the
last one generated an after-tax NPV at 5% discount of $452 million.
This table shows the pit-constrained resource in the second PEA study:
CASE STUDY: PIT-CONTRAINED
RESOURCES
|
|
Measured & Indicated
|
Inferred
|
TOTAL GOLD
|
|
M Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
M oz
|
M Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
M oz
|
M Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
M oz
|
Global Resource
|
214
|
1.03
|
7.1
|
162
|
0.69
|
3.6
|
376
|
0.88
|
10.7
|
Mineable Resource
|
150
|
1.17
|
5.7
|
88
|
0.78
|
2.2
|
239
|
1.03
|
7.9
|
Change
|
-30%
|
13%
|
-20%
|
-46%
|
13%
|
-38%
|
-36%
|
16%
|
-26%
|
Total tonnes decreased by 36% from 376 to 239 million tonnes and total
gold decreased by 26% from 10.7 to 7.9 million ounces.
Shortly before the takeover announcement, the company published a
Feasibility Study using the same gold price and cut-off grade as the PEA. It
showed an after-tax NPV at 5% discount of $931 million. This study also
provided a sensitivity analysis using $1250/oz that had an after-tax NPV at
5% of $721 million.
The following table shows the proven and probable reserves. As documented
previously, feasibility-level studies do not include inferred resources
because they cannot be valued economically. Therefore, only the measured and
indicated resources can be converted into reserves:
Case Study: Resources and Mineable Reserves
|
|
Measured
|
Indicated
|
Measured & Indicated
|
|
|
M Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
M oz
|
M Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
M oz
|
M Tonnes
|
Au (g/t)
|
M oz
|
|
Global Resource
|
23.7
|
1.29
|
1.0
|
190.0
|
1.00
|
6.1
|
213.7
|
1.03
|
7.1
|
|
|
Proven
|
Probable
|
Proven & Probable
|
|
Mineable Reserve
|
27.7
|
1.14
|
1.0
|
88.6
|
1.06
|
3.0
|
116.3
|
1.08
|
4.0
|
|
Change
|
17%
|
-12%
|
0%
|
-53%
|
6%
|
-51%
|
-46%
|
5%
|
-43%
|
|
Note that total tonnes decreased 46% from 214 to 116 million tonnes and
total gold decreased 43% from 7.1 to 4.0 million ounces.
This table shows the actual takeover price, the size of the various
resources published by the company, and the calculated value per ounce for
each:
Takeover Price:$300,000, 000
|
Size
|
Takeover Price
per Oz
|
Global Resources
|
10.7 M oz
|
$28
|
PEA Mineable Resources(base-case)
|
7.9 M oz
|
$38
|
Feasibility Reserves(base case)
|
4.0 M oz
|
$75
|
Since engineering studies calculate Net Present Values for a project, we
can evaluate the sensitivity to factors such as gold price, discount rate,
operating costs, and other key variables.
Here we compare the actual takeover price with values calculated from the
various published studies and Cipher's resource model:
|
Value
|
Takeover Price - net of cash
|
$300 million
|
Global Resource- 10.7 M ozx $40/oz (median in-situ value)
|
$428 million
|
PEA Study base-case - $1250 Au at 5% discount rate
|
$608 million
|
PEA Study sensitivity case - $1250 Au at 10% discount rate
|
$325 million
|
Feasibility Study base case -$1400 Au at 5% discount rate
|
$931 million
|
Feasibility Study sensitivity case - $1250 Au at 10% discount rate
|
$385 million
|
Cipher's adjusted value from Feasibility Study
|
$370 million
|
Key points to take from the above analysis are:
- Only 4.0 million ounces of the original 10.7 million
ounces resource were converted into proven and probable reserves, a
decrease of 63%.
·The global resource is mildly sensitive to changes in cut-off grade, with
the total gold resource decreasing by 19% between 0.35 g/t and 0.5 g/t
cut-offs. The overall grades are significantly more than two times the
various cut-offs, indicating a robust deposit.
·The global resource was valued at $28 an ounce in the takeover,
well-below the median benchmark price of $40 for gold in the ground for 253
takeovers.
·The base-case value for the PEA was over twice the actual takeover price.
·The base-case NPV for the Feasibility Study was well-over three times the
actual takeover. Note that a base-case supposedly has the highest level of
confidence in an engineering study.
·The sensitivity case for the PEA using $1250 and a 10% discount is
closest value to the actual take-over price. However, that study used 7.9
million ounces, almost double the feasibility reserves.
·The sensitivity for the Feasibility using $1250 and 10% is the most
reasonable NPV approximation, but it is still 35% above the takeover price.
·Cipher's adjusted NPV of $370 million is still too high but is better
than the company's engineering study in matching the eventual takeover price.
In this case study, the discrepancies between the actual takeover price
and published engineering values illustrate the necessity for careful due
diligence when evaluating gold projects. Unsupported and unrealistic
assumptions and variables are commonly used by consulting engineering firms
when calculating future cash flows.
Now that the real value of this gold project is established, let's compare
it to the company's share price and market valuation over an eight-year
history as it raised funds via a series of private placements to explore and
engineer the project.
The junior company started as a shell that acquired a project with
mineralized drill intercepts and a well-defined target area. It did a 4:1
stock split at the end of Q3 2004 to have 14.0 million shares outstanding and
then completed a reverse takeover. The stock began trading in 2005 with a
private placement at 25 cents that raised $3.4 million and positioned
insiders, pros, friends, and family. This was soon followed by a raise for
$2.0 million at 63 cents that again placed those closely connected with the
company.
In 2006, the company delivered encouraging drill results and completed a
large brokered raise at $1.17 for $14.5 million. At that point, it had 43.3
million shares outstanding and had raised $20.0 million in the public markets
for an average price of 46 cents.
Subsequently,the company raised $300 million by issuing a total of 56.7
million shares at an average price of $5.31.
The financings included a $75 million bought deal at $12.80 during the top
of the gold market in late 2011. It was led by two of Canada's largest
brokerage firms.
Here is a history from year-end financial statements of the share capital
and moneys raised:
Date
|
Share O/S
|
Share Capital
|
Shares Issued
|
Ave Price
|
$ Raised
|
30-Sep-04
|
3,251,619
|
$4,743,033
|
3,251,619
|
$0.00
|
$0
|
30-Sep-04
|
13,981,466
|
$4,743,033
|
10,729,847
|
$0.00
|
$0
|
30-Sep-05
|
27,673,378
|
$8,179,403
|
13,691,912
|
$0.25
|
$3,436,370
|
31-Dec-05
|
30,815,253
|
$10,154,798
|
3,141,875
|
$0.63
|
$1,975,395
|
30-Sep-06
|
43,261,828
|
$24,703,421
|
12,446,575
|
$1.17
|
$14,548,623
|
30-Sep-07
|
54,740,238
|
$61,772,099
|
11,478,410
|
$3.23
|
$37,068,678
|
31-Dec-09
|
57,161,890
|
$70,354,790
|
2,421,652
|
$3.54
|
$8,582,691
|
31-Dec-10
|
75,219,349
|
$143,960,232
|
18,057,459
|
$4.08
|
$73,605,442
|
31-Dec-11
|
84,016,582
|
$235,034,032
|
8,797,233
|
$10.35
|
$91,073,800
|
31-Dec-12
|
99,904,050
|
$325,566,869
|
15,887,468
|
$5.70
|
$90,532,837
|
31-May-13
|
99,973,216
|
$325,828,861
|
69,166
|
$3.79
|
$261,992
|
The gold deposit was ultimately acquired by a mid-tier mining company for
a total price of $370 million, or $300 million net of the $70 million cash on
hand. During its lifespan, the junior had raised $320 million, giving a total
return of 13.5%. It had spent $250 million to acquire, explore, and engineer
the project and sell-out to a miner.
In analyzing its history, the insiders and other early investors acquired
43% of the company at an average price of $0.46 per share.If they had held
onto all of their shares until the takeover occurred, returns on investment
would have been over 700%.
Investment bankers and brokers would have collected fees in cash and
broker warrants on the $300 million worth of private placements and public
offerings; corporate finance fees would also have been paid on the $370
million takeover.Assuming industry average rates for these fees, investment
bankers and brokers would have made over $35 million and likely closer to $50
million during the company's life.
The investors who bought in for $300 million or 94% of the total money
raised and acquired 57% of the shares at an average price of $5.31 did not
fare well at all. On average, they lost over 30% of their investment.
And pity the poor souls who were part of that $12.80 private placement on
a gold deposit whose real in-the -ground value was never worth more than its
acquisition price of $3.70 per share.
Let's explore that idea in more detail using Cipher Research's proprietary
time-value modeling, shown in the chart below:
·The blue line is the actual share price of the target company.
·The first three green Xsare the unadjusted resource values per
share for three published resource estimates. They are calculated by
multiplying the number of ounces in the global resource times $90 per ounce
then dividing by the number of shares outstanding at the time.
·The second three green Xs are the unadjusted resource
values per share for three engineered resources studies (two PEAs and the
Feasibility). They are equal to the NPVs divided by the number of shares
outstanding at the time.
·The red Xs represent Cipher Research's per share valuation
after adjustments were made for project stage, various economic factors, and
future dilution required to finance the company to its next milestone.
Note that the unadjusted resource values (green Xs) represent the project
value as it commonly would have been perceived by the market. Most investors
routinely assume that resource estimates and/or NPVs published by an
independent engineering firm are an accurate representation of a project's
value.
This is often not the case. Because the consulting engineering firms
operate in a highly competitive business environment, they are hired with the
expectation of tailoring technical reports to the client's needs and desires.
As an aside, have you ever come across a negative feasibility
study? Remember folks, for every failed mine, there was a positive feasibility
study.
For this reason, investors must scrutinize engineering reports carefully.
It is often necessary to make adjustments to the assumptions and key
variables to arrive at a more realistic project value at any point in time.
The Cipher Resources value model represents the upper limit of what it
deems a company's intrinsic value to be. A company is considered a
"buy" when trading below this level; a "hold" when at or
slightly above; and a "sell" when significantly above.
This case study shows that for almost its entire history the company was
trading at or well above its intrinsic resource value. Therefore, it would
not have met Cipher's criteria for investment.
Likewise, the company never made it onto my radar screen. By the time I
was aware of the gold discovery in 2006, it was already overbought and
overvalued. When I visited an adjoining property in June 2007, its stock was
trading above $5.00 a share.
Because the company was never undervalued with respect to its peers, it
never gained my interest.
Determining the real value of an ounce of gold in the ground is the most
important criteria in evaluating an advanced exploration or development
company for potential investment/
That said, it is beyond the ability and experience level of most retail
lay investors to perform such a task correctly and efficiently. Therefore,
laymen must rely on experts to provide analyses and stock recommendations.
A technical or financial mining industry background and years of
experience evaluating projects and companies are, if not necessary, certainly
invaluable in this endeavor.
Too often we find the so-called "experts" that lay investors
choose to rely upon are not experts at all. Instead they are brokers,
investment bankers, or in-house promoters whose primary interest is in
collecting commissions or fees for selling stock, deals, and private
placements, or earning consulting fees from the company.
Folks, please make sure that you understand the motivations of any expert,
analyst, broker, promoter, writer, or talking head whose advice you choose to
follow.
Here are a few questions you can ask that will afford valuable insight
into this matter:
·Does he own shares in the company and at what price?
·Is he participating in the deal or placement with his own personal funds?
·Will he collect a commission or fees for selling you the stock or deal?
·Does he get paid to promote the company via fees, stock, and/or options?
·Is he or his firm underwriting the deal for a fee, commission, and/or
warrants?
·Will he give you a full disclosure statement regarding his financial
relationship with the company and/or project?
We urge you to follow only those experts who you know and trust. Be certain
they have your best interests in mind before investing your hard-earned
dollars into any speculative resource stock.
Doing this simple task diligently can prevent you from being in that group
of uninformed or perhaps misinformed "investors" who so many
brokers and bankers prey upon; e.g., those who bought the aforementioned
$3.70 deal for $12.80.
I always fully disclose my financial involvement with any company that I
write or speak about (e.g., stock position at, below, or above the current
trading range; website sponsorship; consulting agreement; etc.).Realize also
that I am talking my own book when presenting stock picks; but note I always
put my mercenary money where my mouth is.
I trust this musing has afforded insight into the concept and process of
determining the real value of gold in the ground and that understanding a
project's intrinsic value can make you a better investor.
For further insight, we kindly suggest you view our three short videos on
this subject. Over the course of the next week, they will be syndicated
exclusively to GoldSeek.com,
and will also be available on my website, MercenaryGeologist.com,
and Cipher's website, CipherResearch.com.
May you live well and prosper in your speculations and investments.
Ciao for now,
Mickey Fulp
Mercenary Geologist
Acknowledgment: I thank Rod Husband and Elena Tanzola of Cipher Research
Ltd, Vancouver, B.C. for confidential access to a white paper that forms the
basis of this musing and permission to publish. For additional information on
Cipher's research and analytical services to the commodity and financial
investment markets, please contact info@cipherresearch.com.
Gwen Preston is the editor of MercenaryGeologist.com.
The Mercenary
Geologist Michael S. "Mickey" Fulp is a Certified
Professional Geologist
with a B.Sc. Earth Sciences with honor from the University of Tulsa, and
M.Sc. Geology from the University of New Mexico. Mickey has 35 years
experience as an exploration geologist and analyst searching for economic
deposits of base and precious metals, industrial minerals, uranium, coal, oil
and gas, and water in North and South America, Europe, and Asia.
Mickey worked for junior explorers, major mining companies, private
companies, and investors as a consulting economic geologist for over 20
years, specializing in geological mapping, property evaluation, and business
development.In addition to Mickey's professional credentials and experience,
he is high-altitude proficient, and is bilingual in English and Spanish. From
2003 to 2006, he made four outcrop ore discoveries in Peru, Nevada, Chile,
and British Columbia.
Mickey is well-known and highly respected throughout the mining and
exploration community due to his ongoing work as an analyst, writer, and
speaker.
Contact: Contact@MercenaryGeologist.com
Disclaimer and Notice: I am not a certified financial analyst,
broker, or professional qualified to offer investment advice. Nothing in any
report, commentary, this website, interview, and other content constitutes or
can be construed as investment advice or an offer or solicitation or advice
to buy or sell stock or any asset or investment. All of my presentations
should be considered an opinion and my opinions may be based upon information
obtained from research of public documents and content available on the
company's website, regulatory filings, various stock exchange websites, and
stock information services, through discussions with company representatives,
agents, other professionals and investors, and field visits. My opinions are
based upon information believed to be accurate and reliable, but my opinions
are not guaranteed or implied to be so. The opinions presented may not be
complete or correct; all information is provided without any legal
responsibility or obligation to provide future updates. I accept no responsibility
and no liability, whatsoever, for any direct, indirect, special, punitive, or
consequential damages or loss arising from the use of my opinions or
information. The information contained in a report, commentary, this website,
interview, and other content is subject to change without notice, may become
outdated, and may not be updated. A report, commentary, this website,
interview, and other content reflect my personal opinions and views and
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copyright protection and no part or portion of this website, report,
commentary, interview, and other content may be altered, reproduced, copied,
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consent of Michael S. (Mickey) Fulp, MercenaryGeologist.com LLC.
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