Sean K
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- 21 April 2006
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Needless to say it was a disappointing March Quarterly report, I could only bear to skim it.
They've maintained annual guidance, so are confident of a stronger June Qtr
price drops anomalous to most other goldies against a rising $A gold price, hmm what could it have been?
Hit a 52 week low of 20.5.DCN crunched again over past few days. preliminary annual out today.
The good news.
AISC is down.
The hedge book has been reduced significantly so average gold price up, and should continue to improve.
Westralia mine may restart in 2022.
Group debt down from 64 to 16 million.
Bad news.
Everything else.
Production down, grades down, last years net profit turned into a loss, cash and bullion on hand down,
Still 22mill options to be exercised at 27 cents.
At least 1,25 options expired out of the money this year.
Stuff still to be analysed.
The merger with NTM.
DCN has done some drilling on the NTM tenements to "advance the project."
I guess we will not know how good or bad the NTM tenements were/are until further drilling.
As they say in the classics, jury still out on this one, though market seems to have made its intentions known.
Mick
A niggling feeling I should be averaging down from my buy price. The chart is decelerating and weekly close peeked above downtrend - could be a bullish break from a falling wedge? Volume isn't strong yet.
maybe Anglo Gold which as about 50 kms away.
maybe goldfields which has the granny smith mine at laverton.
Anybody will do.
Mick
Your point is reinforced in an article in this mornings OZ.@kennas DGO Dold (DGO) owns 64m shares of Dacian from its earlier investment in NTM Gold which merged with Dacian. DGO also has 22m options ex 0.27 in Dacian. Without checking I believe that Ed Eshuys is executive chair of DGO Gold. He is these days a non executive director of Dacian after being a director of NTM Gold
Staff that transferred to Dacian were exploration staff from NTM Gold
From the Nov merger announcement:
NTM’s exploration personnel will transition to the Merged Group, maintaining a continued and comprehensive knowledge base on the Redcliffe Gold Project.
I still think that the best argument for increasing my heavily losing investment in DCN is the increasingly valuable plant and mine infrastructure (increasingly valuable in today's replacement terms, not booked asset terms which are reduced from depreciation and amortisation adjustments and were cheaper to build than today)
From a recent presentation:
Large, operating mill provides for central processing operation giving economies of scale. Mt Morgans hard-rock processing plant is the only operating mill of size in the Laverton region not in the hands of a major.
The cost of the infrastructure is going up big time, and the cost of getting the skilled manpower to build and operate them is also going up.The deepening skills crisis in Western Australia is helping reshape the state’s junior mining sector, with the fight for control over struggling gold miner Gascoyne Resources a key sign of the value of infrastructure built before construction costs surged out of control.
A new wave of consolidation is under way in WA’s mining sector as its skills shortage pushes up the cost of building new mines and infrastructure, forcing would-be miners to reconsider plans to become producers in their own right.
Explorer Bardoc Gold put itself on the market in late September after feasibility studies showed it’s the capital costs at its 3 million ounce gold project in the Goldfields had blown out from a $177m estimate delivered in March to $232m by September – and likely substantially beyond that by the time construction began.
That puts a premium on companies with existing infrastructure, such as Gascoyne Resources.
Only a year after it returned trading on the ASX from administration, and after posting a $44.1m financial year loss on the production of only 77,278 ounces of gold, Gascoyne is now at the centre of a pitched battle involving a mystery German fund manager and some of Australia’s most experienced and colourful corporate identities.
This also puts into some doubt the reality of capex forecasts for companies such as De Grey mining and their planned mill and plant.
Mick
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