Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

African Eagle, More Than a Wing and a Prayer

May 12th, 2008 | By Erin Hamilton | Category: Gold Market

The weather has certainly improved! And long may it last. Erin was beginning to wonder if I suffered from seasonal affective disorder. SAD was certainly how I felt until the sun finally came out last week.

Sad too is probably how early stage explorers are feeling in these uncertain times. Raising capital for new projects has become increasingly difficult. Funding from traditional investment sources has all but dried up.

Take London’s Alternative Investment Market (AIM). It is increasingly reluctant to list companies in the early stages of exploration. Miners coming to AIM today tend to be producing, or at the very least close to producing.

That is the golden rule we tend to apply too! But we also recognise that exploration is important. After all, minerals are in short supply and in spite of US slowdown, the commodities bulls reckon demand from Asian economies will rise and rise!

So while producers, or near-producers, are certainly preferable, we’d be crazy to write off all explorers. They might be risky but there is always a chance that they will deliver. Even if share prices have taken a hammering!

African Eagle… soaring to production

In spite of a disappointing slump in the share price since August (it is not alone here!), London and now Johannesburg-quoted African Eagle Resources might be one of those.

African Eagle is a copper, gold and now uranium explorer with interests in Zambia, Tanzania and Mozambique – all countries with relatively stable political and economic regimes and good infrastructure.

Better still, a successful secondary listing on Johannesburg’s Alternative Exchange (AltX) last year means African Eagle’s exploration projects are fully funded for 2008 and 2009. And the plan is to fast track the two most advanced of those to production sooner rather than later.

Continues below


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Around $135 billion in oil is waiting to be shipped from a small African country.

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America and China will have to pay them some serious money before they let a single drop depart…

Own this company now before their share price reflects what they’re actually worth…

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They are the Mkushi Copper Mines in Zambia and the Miyabi Gold project in Tanzania.

Other projects in a relatively advanced state are the Ndola and Mokambo Copper projects in Zambia. Also in Zambia is the Sasara Eagle Eye copper-gold project… It holds a large iron-oxide-copper-gold system as well as uranium rich mineralised targets.

But for the moment, Mkushi and Miyabi look most promising. Production is expected within three to five years. And from our precious metals vantage point, there is plenty of shine on Miyabi!

Randgold takes a shine to African Eagle

Here is why. First of all Miyabi is located in Tanzania in East Africa, where mining is considered to be a key foreign exchange earner and growth sector. Over the past ten years there have been substantial economic and structural reforms here. The result is that Tanzania is now the third biggest gold producer in Africa, with more than 50m ounces of gold reserves and resources. Fair play to them!

Miyabi, a gold bearing corridor of 7km by 2km, is African Eagle’s most advanced gold project. Drilling in this area has to date defined a JORC-compliant resource of 520,000oz of gold. (For the record, JORC is a professional code that is now widely accepted for reporting resources and reserves.)

More reassurance comes from the fact that London and Nasdaq-listed Randgold Resources, one of our favourite junior gold companies, has been involved in the drilling process.

Randgold and African Eagle have entered a joint venture whereby Randgold not only funds but also carries out the pre-feasibility study. So Randgold obviously wants to get it right. Because getting it right means that it could earn a 50% interest in the project.

African Eagle then has the option to co-fund a full feasibility study or dilute its interest to 35% if Randgold funds the full study. So there is everything to play for.

Clearly Randgold brings its drilling expertise to the project. It recently completed 4068m diamond drill programme across the Miyabi Structural Corridor. Why? To better understand the geology and mineralisation of the area.

After all, African Eagle has pointed out that the area, covering just over 500 km², has only been part drilled. And it seems pretty confident that it can expand that resource to 1m oz.

…and TWP Finance gets in on the act too

Now African Eagle’s strategy is clearly one of finding partners with skills and experience, financial support or local knowledge.

But more recently it sold a 4.48% stake to TWP Finance, a subsidiary of consultant engineers TWP Holdings.

TWP has made it quite clear that it intends to up that to a “strategic stake” in African Eagle. Now, TWP Finance positions itself as company that trades mining skills and intellectual property for sweat equity or mineral rights. A company that is committed to “becoming increasingly involved in early stage exploration projects around the globe,” says TWP Finance’s chief exec Dean Cunningham.

It is a risky strategy but one TWP reckons is worth taking. Explorers are finding it increasingly difficult to find capital. But the world says Mr Cunningham needs “these new projects to supply the current commodity and resources boom”.

So TWP brings its small team of financial and mining experts to a project in return for shares. Then it brings its skills base to the party and helps to fast-track key projects.

Risky but potentially rewarding? African Eagle may just be a takeover target for bigger players. At last look the share price was trading at around 8p a share.

Management can’t say loudly enough that it is undervalued.

Neither can Mr Cunningham, who reckons “African Eagle shares are an attractive prospect at present, as they are relatively undervalued despite the high metals prices in the extended commodity cycle”.

Spin if ever I heard it, says Erin. But even she has a twinkle in her eye.

Keep mining,

Erin and Isabel

PS Make sure you don’t miss out on getting all the latest industry news in one daily hit with a brand new free eletter from Fleet Street Publications.


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By Erin Hamilton

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About the Author

Erin writes and edits the popular Miner Diaries free e-letter. She has written for BBC Focus on Africa, the Investor's Chronicle, InterMedia, The Observer, Computing and Computerweek.

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