McIlvenna Bay keeps growing for Foran

An aerial view of the exploration camp at Foran Mining's McIlvenna Bay zinc-copper-gold-silver project in Saskatchewan. Source: Foran Mining An aerial view of the exploration camp at Foran Mining's McIlvenna Bay zinc-copper-gold-silver project in Saskatchewan. Source: Foran Mining

Foran Mining (FOM-V) has bulked up resources at the Mc­Ilvenna Bay zinc-copper-gold-silver volcanogenic massive
sulphide (VMS) deposit in east-central Saskatchewan, with increases of 15% and 18% in indicated and inferred tonnage.

Indicated resources equal 13.9 million grading 1.28% copper, 2.67% zinc, 0.49 gram gold and 17 grams silver per tonne, while inferred resources stand at 11.3 million tonnes of 1.32% copper, 2.97% zinc, 0.43 gram gold and 17 grams silver.

The Vancouver-based explorer, led by Patrick Soares, has consolidated resource estimates on different zones completed in 2006 and 2011 to unveil a “slightly larger global resource with better copper and gold grades,” Stifel Nicolaus analyst George Topping writes. Topping has a “buy” recommendation and a $1.50 target price on Foran.

Global resources stand at 25 million tonnes grading 1.3% copper, 2.8% zinc, 18 grams silver and 0.46 gram gold compared to the earlier 22 million tonnes of 1.1% copper, 3.8% zinc, 19 grams silver and 0.2 gram gold, Topping says, commenting that the better copper and gold grades make up for the lower zinc values.

Contained global metal equals 719 million lb. copper, 1.5 billion lb. zinc, 377,000 oz. gold and 14 million oz. silver.

The updated resource for Mc­Ilvenna Bay shows a 35% increase in contained copper, while zinc has declined by 13% (from 1.7 billion to 1.5 billion lb.), “but netting that with increase in copper and higher gold credits suggests an overall metal increase on a copper or zinc equivalent basis of 27% (from 1.1 billion lb. copper equivalent to 1.4 billion lb., and from 4.3 billion lb. zinc equivalent to 5.5 billion lb.),” Fraser Mackenzie analyst Aleksandra Bukacheva writes in an email. Bukacheva has a $1.30 target price and a “buy” recommendation on the stock. 

The new resource is largely contained in the Main Lens and Copper Stockwork zone (CSZ), and to a lesser extent in Lens 3.

The Main Lens hosts large massive to semi-massive sulphide mineralization in two distinct zones: the copper-gold rich Upper West zone and the primarily zinc-silver Zone 2. The copper-gold-dominant CSZ lies directly below the Main Lens, while Lens 3 sits in the hangingwall of the Main Lens.

The 2013 resource is based on 178 diamond holes and a net smelter return of US$60 per tonne, using long-term metal prices of US$3.25 per lb. copper, US$1.10 per lb. zinc, US$1,400 per oz. gold and US$25 per oz. silver.

The McIlvenna Bay deposit sits in the heart of the 203 sq. km McIlvenna Bay property in the famed Flin Flon greenstone belt from Manitoba to Saskatchewan. It starts 35 metres below surface and extends 2 km down-plunge, and remains open for further growth. 

Topping notes that the project is an hour’s drive from Hudbay Minerals’ (HBM-T, HBM-N) Flin Flon concentrator and zinc plant, which he says makes it a good acquisition target.

“While development of Mc­Ilvenna is only likely in 2015, we believe such a deposit should be acquired before construction,” he says.  

Analysts say Hudbay might pursue McIlvenna, as the mid-tier producer already operates several mines exploiting large VMS deposits — such as the 777, Trout Lake and Lalor mines — in the Flin Flon and Snow Lake camps of Manitoba.

“You’ve got Hudbay active in the region. They are starting up Lalor right now. But at some point they are going to be thinking about the next one, and this is a big next one, potentially,” Haywood Securities analyst Stefan Ioannou says. He doesn’t formally cover Foran, but he’s visited the site and is watching the company’s progress.

“The bottom line is that it’s a big deposit, it’s got good grade and it is in an established mining camp,” Ioannou explains, pointing out that a lot of the nearby projects are jointly owned by Hudbay, “whereas this one is still 100% Foran, and they are in the driver’s seat from a negotiation point of view down the road, if Hudbay gets interested,” he says.

Fiona Childe, Foran’s vice-president of corporate development, says the company is evaluating interest expressed in the project by various groups. Meanwhile, it will keep advancing McIlvenna Bay towards production.

The junior is wrapping up its first-quarter 2013 program, where it drilled the deposit and tested regional targets on the surrounding 270 sq. km land package. Regional drilling focused on the 7 km corridor between McIlvenna Bay and Balsam, a smaller VMS deposit with a historic resource. Results from the program should be out shortly.  

Foran is also completing engineering and environmental studies for an upcoming preliminary economic assessment (PEA) on McIlvenna Bay. While it hasn’t released a timeline for the PEA, Bukacheva at Fraser Mackenzie believes the junior is well funded to complete the engineering studies for the PEA before year-end.

Debt-free Foran exited 2012 with $8.7 million in its treasury. Its shares recently closed at 39.5¢, within a 52-week trading range of 36¢ to $1.08.

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