Canadian Gold Hunter and Suramina merging

Vancouver – Two Lundin Group companies, Canadian Gold Hunter (CGH-V) and Suramina Resources (SAX-V), are officially combining forces now that shareholders have approved a merger.

There was virtually no opposition by voting shareholders to the merger that sees Gold Hunter issuing 0.7541 of its shares for every Suramina share.

Following completion of the transaction Suramina will become a subsidiary of Gold Hunter with Suramina’s shareholders controlling 47.3% of the combined company’s 110.3 million shares outstanding.

On news of the merger Suramina’s share-price dropped half a cent to 26.5¢ and Gold Hunter’s share-price fell 2.5¢ to 30.5¢.

In justifying the merger, the companies state that in the short term capital markets will prefer “stronger, larger, diversified exploration vehicles”; that a combined company will provide savings at its head-office; and that together the companies will have a more diversified portfolio of projects at varying stages of development.

The merger will bring Suramina’s South American properties and Gold Hunter’s North American assets under one roof. Suramina’s most advanced project is the Josemaria copper-gold project in San Juan province, Argentina, where it has calculated an inferred resource of 460 million tonnes grading 0.39% copper and 0.3 gram gold per tonne.

Suramina recently announced it and the Japan Oil Gas and Metals National Corporation (JOGMEC) had signed a letter of intent that allows JOGMEC to acquire a 40% interest in Josemaria so long as it spends $7 million on exploration over three years.

The joint-venture follows another Suramina entered into with JOGMEC. Known as the Vicuna joint-venture, the agreement encompasses three properties: Los Helados in Chile, Cerro Blanco in both Argentina and Chile and the Filo del Sol project in Argentina. JOGMEC has so far earned a 40% interest in the joint-venture.

As for Gold Hunter, its most advanced project is the GJ-Kinaskan project about 200 km north of Stewart, B.C., where it has calculated a measured and indicated resource of 153.3 million tonnes grading 0.321% copper and 0.369 gram gold. Gold Hunter owns 100% of the project.

At the Zymo property, 40 km west of Smithers, B.C., Gold Hunter can initially earn a 60% interest from Eastfield Resources (ETF-V) for $350,000 in cash, 50,000 shares and $4 million in exploration expenditures over five years. In 2008 Gold Hunter drilled as much as 75 metres in hole 9 grading 0.72% copper and 0.54 gram gold starting 15 metres downhole.

In Mexico, about 70 km north of Veracruz, Gold Hunter can earn a 70% interest in the Caballo Blanco gold project from Almaden Minerals so long as it spends US$12 million on exploration over six years. In 2006 a previous operator drilled as much as 230 metres grading 0.8 gram gold starting from surface.

As for plans in 2009, it is unclear how the merger will affect either company’s previously stated plans. Suramina has said in its 2008 annual report it intended to complete drill programs at Los Helados and Cerro Blanco and recommence exploration at Josemaria in the third quarter.

Gold Hunter has said it plans on drilling at Zymo, thereby fulfilling obligations under its option agreement, but that in 2009 it did not foresee conducting an exploration program at GJ-Kinaskan. Gold Hunter cited a desire to preserve cash for inactivity on the ground at GJ-Kinaskan.

As for working capital, as of Dec. 31, 2008, Suramina had $4 million and Gold Hunter, $6.7 million.

 

Print

Be the first to comment on "Canadian Gold Hunter and Suramina merging"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*


By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. To learn more, click more information

Dear user, please be aware that we use cookies to help users navigate our website content and to help us understand how we can improve the user experience. If you have ideas for how we can improve our services, we’d love to hear from you. Click here to email us. By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. Please see our Privacy & Cookie Usage Policy to learn more.

Close