SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Dino's Bar & Grill -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Goose94 who wrote (54)10/9/2012 7:35:32 PM
From: Goose94Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 202922
 
Soltoro (SOL-V)
www.soltoro.com
59.3 million o/s
Insiders own 6.7%
Coeur d'Alene Mines 7.6%
Prinetree Capital own 7%

$3.7 million working capital

soltoro.com

Early juniors get low-hanging fruit in Jalisco

It’s not every day that primary silver deposits are found at the side of a road.

But that’s exactly what happened when Soltoro (SOL-V) identified a hematite-stained outcrop bursting with silver mineralization on the outskirts of Guachinango, a Mexican town of 3,000 people about 150 km southwest of Guadalajara and 250 km east of Puerto Vallarta in Jalisco state.

Steve Preismeyer, Soltoro’s vice president exploration, still shakes his head when asked why no one found it sooner.

“How many geologists have driven by that road cut and never looked at it — never sampled it — nothing,” he asks almost incredulously during a recent tour of the junior’s Mexican projects.

“Every time a geologist comes to look at the project I ask them if they’ve ever seen anything like it before and no one has,” he says of the aptly-named Highway Zone. “No one has ever seen a silver deposit with that much hematite before. It’s different. It’s not what you expect to see. It’s not what you look for.”

Much the same can be said of Soltoro’s nearby Las Bolas and La Soledad, two other deposits that together with the Highway Zone make up the company’s El Rayo project.

And that, says Preismeyer, is just one of the many reasons why this underexplored corner of southwestern Mexico presents such an exciting opportunity for exploration geologists.

Of course there are plenty of other reasons, too. Both El Rayo’s Las Bolas and La Soledad deposits, like the Highway Zone, are within minutes of paved roads on the outskirts of Guachinango, a pro-mining town that is also home to the offices of the Mexican Geological Survey. Drill rigs can be driven right onto the properties and are able to operate year-round. And all of El Rayo's ground is connected to the Mexican power grid.

“It’s easy to drill because the infrastructure is superb,” Priesmeyer says. “And they are pretty obvious drill targets so you can almost start in ore, or mineralization, from day one, so that’s a real advantage.”

Currently El Rayo has a measured and indicated in-pit resource of 77.4 million ounces of silver at a discovery cost of $7.5 million — or just 10¢ an ounce — and chief executive Andrew Thomson is confident the company can reach the 100-million-ounce mark. And unlike some chief executives in the industry he isn’t afraid to put his money where his mouth is. Thomson holds roughly 6% of Soltoro’s outstanding shares that are owned by company directors and management (6.7%). Other significant shareholders are Coeur d’Alene Mines (CDM-T, CDE-N) with 7.6% and Pinetree Capital with 7%.

Thomson’s financial stake in the company is something that appeals to shareholders like Dudley Baker, founder of Precious Metals Warrants, a web-based service where subscribers can track all of the warrants trading on resource shares. “On my service I religiously follow insider trading activity on hundreds of companies and Andrew Thomson has a large position and has been a consistent buyer on the open market,” Baker says. “I am biased as I own shares so perform your own due diligence but Soltoro should be of interest to many investors as a pure silver play in Mexico."

Thomson, the son of physicians, dropped out of university in his second year because he was far more interested in becoming an entrepreneur. He started poking around Mexico in the 1990s and is a huge fan of exploration in the country. “We’re within the first ten or fifteen years of companies really trying to drill 140 metres below the water table here,” he explains. “There is tremendous potential.”

“Ore models have not been looked at properly in Mexico,” he continues. “We’re seeing more and more companies coming down here, and with more and more of Latin America becoming increasingly socialist as you go south, Mexico has become even more attractive. A lot of the acquisitions in the M&A market I think are going to come from Mexico.”

On Mexico’s long list of attributes, Thomson adds is the fact that there is still opportunity for companies to stake ground rather than having to buy it. And that is precisely the model Soltoro has adopted from day one, with the exception of one or two inexpensive claims he says the company has had to acquire for strategic purposes. Since 2006, Soltoro has staked seven of the twelve known historic mine districts in the region, a large portion of which were released from the Federal Mine Reserve in the 1980s.

Thomson likens the current stage of exploration in Mexico, and particularly in Jalisco state, to a modern-age Robber Baron period. “You can come in here and your odds of finding something are fairly good,” he explains. “Mexico is very mineralized, and I don’t have any reason to believe that they can’t find very large deposits like they have in Peru and Chile.”

Other companies are being drawn to the area too, including Endeavour Silver (EDR-T, EXK-N), which has an option to purchase the San Sebastian silver-gold properties from Grupo Mexico, and Cayden Resources (CYD-V), which holds an option to acquire a 100% interest in Grupo Mexico’s Barqueno deposit.

Southern Silver Exploration (SSV-V) is not too far away, working on its Minas de Ameca project, while Riverside Resources (RRI-V) and Cliffs Natural Resources (CLF-N) are examining iron oxide copper-gold (IOCG) targets in the neighbourhood.

It all adds up to an exciting time to be active in the region, Thomson argues, and the company has amassed 100% ownership of over 100 sq. km in the Guachinango district and partial ownership of some 55,000 hectares.

“Proximity-wise most of the stuff that is close to the U.S. has been looked at and anything that is 5 km from the railroad that runs from Arizona down to our area has been looked at, but the rest of Mexico is wide open,” he says. “And if you look at Penasquito as being something they found that was basically a small knob sticking out of the ground, it shows that Mexico has a lot of potential and that it’s very early in the exploration cycle here versus some of the other countries in the world, and I do believe it’s the cheapest in many ways.”

Recently Soltoro has been busy monetizing assets in the region and signed option agreements with Gold Reserve (GRZ-V, GRZ-X) and Argentum Silver (ASL-V).

In May Soltoro granted Gold Reserve the right to earn a 51% interest in its La Tortuga property, 4.5 km south of El Rayo. At La Tortuga, an 11,562-hectare property with road access and power, copper and gold mineralization has been traced over 49 sq km.

Soltoro also signed a letter of intent in March with Argentum giving it the right to earn a 100% interest in two of its drill-ready silver-gold projects: Victoria and Coyote. Victoria is 25 km west of Guachinango and Coyote about 55 km to the southwest. In August Argentum acquired 100% of both projects. Soltoro took a 14.5% stake in Argentum and has a 3% net smelter return royalty (NSR) on both properties.

At its flagship El Rayo project, Soltoro has completed a total of 51,200 metres or 306 holes since drilling began in 2007 and has also covered virtually the entire property with ground magnetics. The Las Bolas structure strikes to the northeast and dips to the northwest, the El Rayo structure strikes to the northwest and dips to the northeast, and the high-grade La Soledad structure trends east-west.

The bulk of the resource so far has been identified at the Los Bolas structure. The seven mineralized zones that make up Las Bolas range in width from 20 metres to 300 metres, extending up to 1,200 metres along strike. Mineralization is open at depth and further drilling is planned to expand the deposit at depth and to the northeast.

Recently Soltoro has discovered mineralization at Piedras Amarillas, about 1,500 metres east of Las Bolas, with anomalous silver values from trenching including 238 grams silver over 1.5 metres. Two drill holes returned intercepts of 38 grams silver over 10.5 metres and 151 grams silver over 1.5 metres. What excites Thomson the most about Piedras Amarillas, however, is that its footprint is about the same size as the entire Las Bolas deposit.

At the historic Catarina silver mine, Soltoro has identified high-grade silver ore shoots that were not included in its National Instrument 43-101 resource calculation for El Rayo. In 1982, the Mexican government drilled 42 holes into Catarina and defined a historic resource of 5 million oz. silver. Soltoro has drilled a total of 20 holes so far with the best intercept returning 46 metres grading 115 grams silver. The company believes gold values increase at depth and Catarina remains an underground target for future exploration.

The near surface high-grade silver deposit at La Soledad, however, is probably generating the most enthusiasm. Discovery hole 11-60 returned 21.6 metres averaging 388 grams silver including 7 metres of 1,010 grams silver and 6.9 metres of 527 grams silver. And the company has recently identified another shoot to the west that has returned 16.8 metres of 565 grams silver in drill hole 11-133 and 9.2 metres of 192 grams silver including 3.2 metres of 492 grams silver in drill hole 12-142.

So far this year Soltoro has drilled about 13,000 metres of a planned 20,000-metre program, at a cost of about US$200 per metre (all-in, including assays). Three drill rigs were turning at the beginning of the summer but have been shut down in recent months due to market conditions and because the company wants to preserve working capital. Thomson forecasts the company will complete a total of 15,000 metres of drilling by year-end and has applied for new drill permits that should be ready in the next month.

Christina McCarthy, a geologist and mining specialist at Euro Pacific Canada in Toronto, who has visited the project several times, says she is optimistic enough to believe that Soltoro will reach the 100 million oz. silver threshold by early next year and targets open-pit heap leaching from the higher grade zones beginning in 2016.

“Soltoro has a near-surface silver deposit amenable for open-pit mining in a region with over fifteen former silver mines,” she says, adding that Soltoro also has significant exploration upside given that it has only explored about 30% of its property to date.

“It's a great story — they have achieved a high-grade silver discovery zone," adds Mexico-focused newsletter writer Mike Kachanovsky, who also attended the recent property tour. "The overall deposit is growing. And the stock trades at a low multiple relative to the silver ounces outlined so far.”

Thomson admits he has signed a handful of confidentiality agreements and notes that Mexico has seen a number of buyouts of Mexico-focused companies and deposits over the last year. In January Pan American Silver (PAA-T, PAAS-Q) bought Minefinders and its producing Dolores gold mine in northern Mexico for $1.5 billion. In April, First Majestic Silver Corp. (FR-T, AG-N), which has three producing silver mines in Mexico, announced that it was acquiring SilverMex Resources and its La Guitarra mine, 30 km southwest of Mexico City, in a deal valuing SilverMex at about $175 million. And in July Endeavour completed its 100% acquisition of AuRico Gold’s (AUQ-T, AUX-N) El Cubo silver-gold mine in Guanajuato state and its Guadalupe y Calvo silver-gold exploration project in Chihuahua in a cash and share deal worth US$200 million.

Last year Agnico-Eagle Mines (AEM-T, AEM-N) announced a $275-million acquisition of Grayd Resource Corp., which held a 100% interest in the La India project, about 70 km northwest of Agnico’s Pinos Altos gold mine in Sonora.

Jamie Levy, a Toronto-based veteran of the mine finance industry who attended Soltoro’s site visit in September, believes Soltoro has a bright future.

“The senior silver companies will need to grow their silver resources organically or they will need to acquire primary silver plays to justify their depleting resources,” he reasons. “They should take advantage of their increasing market caps of the past couple months and cashed-up balance sheets with no debt. I think they should acquire companies with low cap-ex where they can put something into production quickly to achieve cash flow at today’s high silver prices. There will be lots of M&A in the silver and gold sector as the market cap of the juniors is cheaper then it is to build a silver resource organically, and Soltoro's El Rayo project is one of the few primary silver plays in Latin America with incredible infrastructure to fit that profile.”

Soltoro went public in 2005 and currently has just under 60 million shares outstanding. Working capital in mid-September stood at $3.7 million.

At presstime Soltoro was trading at 56¢ within a 52-week range of 35¢-$1.03.

Christos Doulis, a mining analyst at Stonecap Securities in Toronto, has an "outperform" rating on the stock and a 12-month target price of $1.90 per share.

Euro Pacific Canada has a $1.40 per share target price and a "buy" rating on the stock.



To: Goose94 who wrote (54)10/13/2012 2:46:57 PM
From: Goose94Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 202922
 
Argentum Silver (ASL-V) cherry picks in Jalisco

It took just over a year for the management team at Argentum Silver (ASL-V) to decide whether it wanted to go all the way with the Coyote project — a land package in Mexico it optioned from Soltoro (SOL-V) in the spring of 2011 — and the answer was a resounding yes. Clinching the decision were intercepts of 1,470 grams silver per tonne over 4 metres including 2 metres of 2,745 grams silver; 180 grams silver over 2.8 metres; 312 grams silver over 3 metres; and 438 grams silver over 5.3 metres in the first-phase, 2,700-metre drill program, in which twenty of twenty-five holes to depths of only 80 metres from surface struck mineralization.

Chief executive Warren McIntyre is convinced there is a whole lot more to be found at Coyote, where artisanal miners worked the historic El Tajo mine prior to the Mexican civil war. The Coyote property lies in the San Miguel de la Sierra mining district, where over 100 historic workings and prospects were explored and partially developed through the early 1900s, but where production only extracted material with bonanza silver grades above the water table.

“If we went hiking in these hills right now I’m sure we’d find tons of old workings that have never been touched,” McIntyre said during a tour of the property last month. “There is so much more to explore and so much that hasn’t been touched ... Canadian and American companies that come in here are just cherry-picking the easiest ones at this point ... I think the most exciting thing for us is that we’re getting good early results; we've only drilled 400 linear metres of an identified 6,000-metre vein system so the potential for growth is obvious.”

Jamie Levy, a veteran of the mine finance industry who participated on the property tour describes Argentum as one of the best new high-grade silver companies that he has seen in some time and one with an extremely low market capitalization of just under $7 million to boot.

“Argentum achieved significant silver-gold results in its first round of drilling at Coyote that mirrored Endeavour Silver’s drill results at San Sebastian to the north,” Levy says. “The first round of step-out holes at El Tajo look very promising, and lead me to believe the company’s short timeframe in acquiring its 100% interest was a very sensible decision in a market that seems to only care about well-mineralized precious metal intercepts that could quickly lead to mineable cash flow. At current grades, it would take very little tonnage to justify a silver mine.”

The Coyote property contains dozens of individual low-sulfidation epithermal silver-gold veins and stockworks with vein widths typically ranging from 1 metre to 5 metres. So far the company has identified seven veins that stretch over a cumulative strike length of six kilometres. Most of the mineralization occurs within an area of 1.5 km by 2.6 km.

The most attractive vein identified so far is El Tajo, which trends northeast and is traceable for 700 metres at surface. (There are two underground workings on the El Tajo vein.) The northwest trending La Colorada vein is traceable for 300 metres at surface; and the northwest trending La Florida vein is traceable for 400 metres at surface. Other veins at Coyote include El Tajo Norte, San Rafael, Valenciana and Bocancha.

Christina McCarthy, a geologist and mining specialist at Euro Pacific Canada in Toronto who has made two visits to the Coyote property already this year, says that while Argentum is still an early-stage company with a small market capitalization — a tough place to be in the current market — the upside is that the project is located in a silver district with historic production of both silver and gold. “The El Tajo vein alone may have the potential for about 30 million oz. silver,” she pens in an email, adding that the project has “exceptional infrastructure with well-built roads, access to water and high-voltage power running through the property — a tremendous upside.”

Travelers can reach Coyote by travelling 180 km east from the beach resort town of Puerto Vallarta, or 140 km southwest (a three-and-a-half hour drive) from Guadalajara, the capital of Jalisco.

Argentum Silver launched the second phase of its drill program at Coyote in September. The $500,000 program includes step-out drilling to test the extent of the high-grade mineralization on the El Tajo vein as well as orientation drilling on the La Colorada vein. Sixteen holes are planned for a total drill program of 2,000 metres, with a possibility for more holes based on early results.

McIntyre jokes that he was advised by some not to keep drilling this year given the current financial climate, but that remarks like that only encouraged him to follow his own instincts. “I came out here to do this program based on the fact that everyone told us to save our capital and don’t do anything,” he says with a grin. “As soon as they said that, I said: ‘Let’s do something.’ That is kind of an indicator that the market has bottomed and now they’re just living on fear. And so as markets are turning and commodity prices go up, we’ll have something to talk about.”

McIntyre plans to have Argentum end the year with $2 million in the bank and likes to describe the company’s pace as measured. “We’re not running, we’re walking, and we’re walking methodically,” he says. “We’ve got a plan and the plan is to keep moving forward without blowing our brains out and expecting that these results will send the stock to $1 and that we’ll be able to finance. That’s not reality. Reality is to tell the story and walk the stock up and in my opinion the stock market doesn’t lie. You are at a price because that’s what the market bears and that’s what you’re worth. Will we need capital? I think we’ll probably need to look in 2013 for cash or a strategic partner.”

By many accounts that probably won’t be too difficult if Argentum continues to get the kinds of results it received during its initial drill campaign. “The first drill program had some sexy numbers and this program will be a little more focused on showing continuity and grade and also scouting around in some other areas that could develop later,” says Paul Cowley, the company’s senior geological consultant and Vice President Exploration at Huakan International Mining in Vancouver. “The project is early stage but showing really good possibilities of a bigger system that collectively could really mean something.”

Andrew Thomson, chief executive of Soltoro who joined Argentum’s board in September, says the Coyote project “is demonstrating what we would consider to be a small Mexican mine,” and notes that the secret is just to build more tonnage to be able to attract more serious investment.

“It’s quite a big system in that there’s six kilometres of veining,” he says. “It is an area where the prospectors and previous owners really worked only the surface material and it hasn’t been drilled below the water table.”

Not only does Coyote exhibit high silver grades, Thomson continues, but it also has a nice gold credit and quite nice base metal credits. “Where this is unique is we’re dealing with kilo-material silver — almost a gram gold and 2-3% lead-zinc — so it could be a very robust system in the sense that these are the sorts of equivalencies that actually make sense, as opposed to some of the lower grade equivalencies that we’ve been seeing in the marketplace.”

Soltoro owns about 15% of Argentum’s 46 million shares outstanding.

When asked what he thinks the end-game might be for Coyote, McIntyre says he wants to keep the company’s options open but is a firm believer that if the project turns out to be a marketable asset it could be sold. On the other hand, if the project doesn’t get big enough fast enough, it could be worthwhile for Argentum to launch a small mining operation there of between 100 and 150 tonnes a day.

“I’ve got the spreadsheets out to see what it would look like in terms of capex,” he explains. “If we can keep it under $10 million, what would our internal rate of return be? ...You don’t want to go to bed with someone who handcuffs you financially or exploration-wise and we want to make sure we have a partner that takes advantage of this potential asset.”

In the meantime McIntyre is scouting for more ground in the area with the help of Don Miguel, a seventy-year-old local prospector who has been prospecting in the region since he was fourteen.

“He commands an amazing amount of respect and we use him as a bird dog,” McIntyre says. “I put him on full-time because he is a huge asset to us.”

In addition to acquiring 100% of the Coyote project from Soltoro in August, Argentum also picked up 100% of Soltoro’s Victoria project, 120 km east of Puerto Vallarta and 140 km southwest of Guadalajara, where it is currently mapping and sampling to evaluate drill targets. Victoria is home to the historic Lupita mine and Argentum is weighing the idea of opening up a new adit that would give its geologists underground access.

Soltoro has a 3% net smelter return royalty (NSR) on both the Coyote and Victoria properties.

Outside Jalisco, Argentum purchased 100% stakes in the Lachiguiri and Silacayoapan properties in the Mexican state of Oaxaca from Arco Resources Corp. (ARR-V) in May.

The Vancouver-based junior’s institutional shareholders include Pinetree Capital (28%), Sprott Asset Management (18%) and Mackie Research (10%