Largo secures US$150M for Maracas

VANCOUVER — Largo Resources (LGO-V) has conditionally secured more than half the needed funds to develop its 76%-owned Maracas vanadium-platinum-group-metals project in Brazil’s Bahia state.

The company has arranged a non-binding term sheet for US$150 million in debt financing from Banco Itau, a Brazilian investment bank.

Largo still needs to raise an additional US$100 million to meet the US$215 million in capital costs and US$35 million in working capital needed to develop Maracas. Mark Brennan, president of Largo, however, says the funding situation is looking quite healthy.

It is an encouraging change for the company after being hit hard by the recession. Largo released a feasibility study with strong financials for its Maracas project in August 2008, but was unable to secure major funding until now.

The financing news comes shortly after Largo managed to increased its stake in Companhia de Maracas, which controls 95% of the Maracas project, by 33.5% to 80% after a payment of US$5 million plus interest to Odebrecht and Vale (VALE-N).

Largo initially had a deadline to buy the stake by late 2008, but was forced to extend the deal. The company has also extended the option to buy another 10% of the company from Odebrecht and Vale to June 30.

Brennan stated in a January press release that, “We are very appreciative to Odebrecht and Vale for their support and understanding over the past year. It has been an extremely volatile period but we are now very optimistic about the road ahead.”

Largo bills Maracas as the highest-grade vanadium deposit in the world. The project has a total resource estimate of 22.5 million indicated tonnes grading 1.26% vanadium oxide.

Brennan described Maracas as a “very rich and lucrative project.”

The feasibility study established a proven and probable reserve of 13.1 million tonnes grading 1.34% V2O5 and a higher average of 1.94% V2O5 during the first eight years of production.

Largo has engineered the mine as an open-pit operation for the first 13 years, followed by 10 years of processing stockpiled lower-grade material. The company expects mill throughput to be nearly 1,600 tonnes per day, producing 4,500 tonnes of vanadium per year for the first eight years.

The study estimated a payback period of less than two years, with after tax cash flows of $1.33 billion. Internal rate of return was set at 43.9% and the pre-tax net present value at $488.9 million, using a 10% discount rate and an assumed long-term price of US$8 per lb. V2O5.

The company has an off-take agreement with Glencore to purchase all material produced from the mill for the first six years, with an option to extend it for another six.

The property spans 2 sq. km and is located 50 km southwest of Maracas, the nearest town.

On the ground, the company is currently working on securing an installation license.

Brennan says he expects the company to submit a complete application by July, with the license finalized by November.

Once funding is secured the company estimates it will take 24 months to begin production.

At the company’s Campo Alegre de Lourdes project, another vanadium project in Bahia state, Largo is continuing with line cutting, a magnetic survey and other geological work. Brennan expects a resource estimate for the project in the next three or four months.

Largo’s share price kept steady on the financing news to close at 25¢. The company has a 52-week trading range of 7.5¢-34¢ and 220 million shares outstanding.

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