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Dateline boss throws $1M cash at US gold-rare earths play

Dateline boss throws $1M cash at US gold-rare earths play

West Australian25-06-2025
In what appears to be a major confidence booster for Dateline Resources' Californian gold and rare earths project, managing director Stephen Baghdadi has dug deep into his pocket, tipping $1.06 million of fresh cash into the ASX-listed explorer's coffers.
After exercising more than 53 million options, Baghdadi's new investment has lifted his stake in Dateline to a hefty 396.9 million shares and gives the boss a commanding 12.85 per cent slice of the company. It also injects immediate capital into the company's exploration war chest.
Including the new cash and commitments from additional option exercisers, the company's bank balance has swelled to almost $9 million - a sizable wad of money for a junior explorer with a single, high-impact asset.
As the company gears up to chase gold and critical minerals at the previously producing Colosseum gold mine in the Walker Lane trend, one of America's most mineral-rich corridors, Baghdadi's cash splash suggests he sees serious upside on the horizon.
Dateline Resources managing director Stephen Baghdadi said:
'Exercising these options was an easy decision because I have great confidence in Dateline's long-term future. Our project is a high-quality asset with tremendous upside. Increasing my stake in the company underscores my commitment to our long-term vision and growth.'
Colosseum currently hosts a JORC-compliant resource of 1.1 million ounces of gold at a healthy 1.26 grams per tonne (g/t). With mining studies already underway, the project is shaping up as a potential company-maker. More than two-thirds of the resource sits in the measured and indicated categories, offering a solid foundation for development.
Last month, Dateline upped its gold price assumption for the project from US$2200 to US$2900 (A$4450) per ounce as part of its ongoing bankable feasibility study. The change lifted Colosseum's net present value by 134 per cent to US$550 million (A$850M) and almost halved the payback timeline from three years to an impressive 17 months.
The company is eyeing a total gold haul of 635,000 ounces over an 8.3-year mine life with annual average production of 71,000 ounces at a solid 1.3g/t. Notably, the operation is expected to recover 92 per cent of the gold.
Operating costs are projected at just US$1182 (A$1818) per ounce, with all-in sustaining costs of US$1490 (A$2292), both comfortably below Dateline's revised gold price outlook.
However, the real kicker may lie beneath the gold.
The company believes the Colosseum site could also host a rare earths deposit similar to the world-famous Mountain Pass mine, 10 kilometres down the road.
Production at the carbonatite-hosted Mountain Pass mine kicked off in 1952, at an extraordinary grade of 7 per cent total rare earths. The mine was the world's dominant supplier of rare earths from the 1960s through to the 1990s and shares the same geological setting as Colosseum.
Preparations are well advanced to test the theory with targeted rare earths drilling as part of an upcoming exploration program.
The company is also zeroing in on hidden breccia pipes that appear to line up with Colosseum to the south.
Recent field mapping and rock chip sampling of felsite outcrops - a key volcanic feature often linked to gold deposits - revealed the geochemical fingerprints of a much larger mineralised system. The samples returned strong hits of pathfinder elements such as antimony, bismuth and tellurium, all hallmarks of an intrusion-related gold system.
With Baghdadi tipping in more than $1 million of his own cash, punters are likely to have a good reason to take a closer look. Senior management making such bold cash commitments can often signal future success.
As the global spotlight intensifies on gold and critical minerals, Baghdadi's timing appears near perfect.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au
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