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To: John Hunt who wrote (27919)2/9/1999 7:09:00 AM
From: Bill Murphy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116753
 
John,
Very interesting. I just spoke with John Brimelow. He tells me Barrick is having a conference call today. Speculative word is that they are going to say or let it be known that they are rolling over their hedges and not lifting them. If so they will have to go on our sell list- big time.
This gets complicated, but Barrick and Anglogold are the big guns behind the World Gold Council. They have stifled other members that have wanted to bring up the gold leasing issue, etc. Everywhere we turn, this stinks more and more.
Now, their CEO quits for personal reasons.
Perhaps, somebody at Barrick does not like what is going on.
This would not be the first time that a cabal got together to try and drive the little guy out of business.
GATA is going to do its best to take them on. We need all your help.
Thanks,

Bill



To: John Hunt who wrote (27919)2/9/1999 7:11:00 AM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116753
 
<< the resignation.>>

smells "funny", but I'm not laughing.



To: John Hunt who wrote (27919)2/9/1999 5:49:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 116753
 
Focus-Barrick posts profit but strategy under fire
12:30 p.m. Feb 09, 1999 Eastern

By Paul Simao

TORONTO, Feb 9 (Reuters) - Canada's Barrick Gold Corp.

reported a fifth consecutive quarter of robust profits on Tuesday amid
fallout from the surprise resignation of its chief executive and a failed
takeover bid for upstart Argentina Gold Corp.

Speculation Toronto-based Barrick had temporarily lost its footing
swirled in markets shortly after the company failed in its
C$5.00-a-share, or C$160-million, hostile takeover bid for
Vancouver-based Argentina Gold and its prized Veladero gold mine in
northwestern Argentina.

Argentina Gold shareholders rebuffed the offer, which expired late last
night, after a bitter two-month catfight between the two Canadian gold
companies.

News of Barrick's setback sent shares of Argentina Gold plunging
C$0.80 to C$4.49, or 15 percent, in heavy midday trading on the
small but lively Vancouver Stock Exchange.

Barrick saw its stock fall C$1.30 to C$28.80 a share, or 4.3 percent,
on Tuesday on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

''It (Argentina Gold) had a value to us which we were prepared to pay
a reasonable price. We made a final offer and the offer has now
expired,'' Barrick Chief Operating Officer John Carrington said in a
morning conference call on Tuesday.

Barrick, which owns 9.9 percent of Argentina Gold and 40 percent of
Veladero, operates the Pascua gold property six kilometres (3.8 miles)
away and was keen to fold the property into its growing operations in
the remote Andean mountain range on the Chilean-Argentine border.

Uncertainty about Barrick's growth strategy was compounded by the
surprise resignation late Monday afternoon of Paul Melnuk, the man
handpicked last spring to lead the senior gold producer into the next
decade.

Melnuk, who mysteriously resigned as Barrick chief executive and
president for ''personal reasons,'' was a key architect of the takeover
fight for Argentina Gold, which was contested and fought through the
British Columbia Securities Commission.

The timing of the resignation, just hours before the expiry of the
takeover offer and one day before Melnuk was due to chair Barrick's
year-end earnings presentation in Toronto, threw a wrench into the
normally smooth Barrick operation.

''This is a little blip. I think the Melnuk resignation may be partially
related to the Argentina Gold situation. I don't know that, but it seems
like a reasonable conclusion,'' said Douglas Cohen, analyst with
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter in New York.

Barrick Chairman Peter Munk, who worked with Melnuk for more
than a decade and once called the former oilman a miracle worker,
said Barrick would weather the ''regrettable'' resignation.

''Barrick will carry on. There will not be a ripple, there will not be a
change, there will not be an interruption,'' the mercurial Munk told
analysts and media.

Barrick, the second largest gold producer in North America, said it
earned $83 million, or $0.21 a share, in the fourth quarter of 1998,
compared with a profit of $75 million, or $0.20 a share, in the same
period last year.

For the full year, the company reported record earnings of $301
million, or $0.79 a share, against a loss of $123 million, or $0.33 a
share, after special provisions in 1997.

Barrick also said it produced 3.2 million ounces of gold at a cash
operating cost of $160 per ounce in 1998 compared with output of 3
million ounces at $182 an ounce in 1997.

The company predicted it would raise production to 3.6 million ounces
this year at a cash cost of $125 an ounce.

''The 1998 record results are an excellent example of what Barrick is
able to achieve - consistent growth in earnings and cash flow per share,
regardless of the price of gold,'' Munk said.

Gold traded at $286.90 an ounce on Tuesday, down from a 1998 high
of about $315 an ounce.

Barrick's springboard for future growth is now centred on its Pascua
project, which could ultimately become the largest gold mine in South
America, Barrick's Carrington said.

Pascua is expected to begin production in 2002 with annual output of
675,000 ounces of gold and 20 million ounces of silver. Barrick raised
its estimate of Pascua's total reserves to 20 million ounces of gold and
440 million ounces of silver.

The company also said a recent swap of assets in Nevada with
Denver-based Newmont Mining Corp. would enhance exploration
potential and production synergies at Barrick's nearby Goldstrike
property.

($1-$1.49 Canadian)

((Reuters Toronto Bureau (416) 941-8104) or email:
toronto.newsroom+reuters.com))

Copyright 1999 Reuters Limited.