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Barry FitzGerald: Titan's Ecuadorian gold and copper beasts are getting too big to ignore

Barry FitzGerald: Titan's Ecuadorian gold and copper beasts are getting too big to ignore

News.com.au08-08-2025
'Garimpeiro' columnist Barry FitzGerald has covered the resources industry for 35 years. Now he's sharing the benefits of his experience with Stockhead readers.
It was a cold night and Melainie Leighton was battling a heavy cold. But the Titan Minerals (ASX:TTM) boss had a message to deliver to the crowd at the Melbourne Mining Club's "Cutting Edge'' showcase for junior explorers.
Leighton's message was that there was a disconnect between what Titan has achieved in Ecuador on the gold and copper front since 2020 and the company's market cap of $88 million (34c a share).
"When you think about the gold resources we have established (3.1Moz) and the joint venture we have done (with Gina Rinehart's Hancock Prospecting), clearly there is a fairly large disconnect there,'' Leighton said.
The disconnect is a common lament for junior explorers operating overseas. And as Leighton suggested, in Titan's case it could well reflect a lack of knowledge or appetite by ASX investors for projects in Ecuador or South America more generally.
That could well be the case. But there comes a time when projects reach a scale that become too big to ignore, which is a pathway Garimpeiro reckons Titan's projects are headed down. If the local market doesn't buy in to the story, it could well be a takeover bid that closes the disconnect.
That's because gold and copper development assets of scale are becoming increasingly rare. South America generally and the emerging mining industry in Ecuador have the lion's share of what is available.
It's why BHP and Rio Tinto have gone to South America in recent times to fill their development pipelines with copper/gold and lithium assets. Apart from high level prospectivity, there is the attraction of low energy and labour costs, and the rise of pro-mining sentiment.
What lies beneath? Answer: plenty
In ASX terms, Titan's 3.1Moz gold and 22Moz silver resource at its Dynasty project is a big deal, not that the current market cap reflects that status. The epithermal gold and silver system is set to get bigger, too.
"We have just completed a 10,000m resource growth program at Dynasty and we are now undertaking a 6,000m resource conversion program to feed in to a (project) de-risking study,'' Leighton said. A resource update is planned for late this quarter.
"We know we have got 3.1Moz in the top 400m but what could lie beneath and laterally?''
Leighton answered her own question: "We are looking to grow to 5m oz plus at Dynasty.''
Dynasty also has a copper leg as three large-scale porphyry targets have been identified by Titan which will be tested in time. And regionally, the 100% owned Copper Duke porphyry prospect will be drilled in coming months.
It is the big-time porphyry copper potential of Titan's ground in southern Ecuador that attracted the interest of Hancock Prospecting which is also busy in the north of the country .
A deep-pocketed delve into Andean copper
Titan became a 45c stock in September last year when it signed up Hancock Prospecting subsidiary Hanrine to an earn-in agreement under which Hanrine could spend up to $US120 million to earn an 80% stake in Titan's Linderos copper project.
Linderos is an early stage copper-gold project initially worked up by Titan drilling as a target worthy of a lot more drilling by an incoming party with deeper pockets.
There are various earn-in milestones in the joint venture agreement. Hanrine started drilling in November last year and has already met the stage one and two commitments to take its interest in the project to 30%.
Drilling results to date have been typical Andean porphyry copper type stuff – 398m at 0.24% copper equivalent and 735m at 0.23% copper equivalent. So the scale is there. Now to zero in on better grades.
Hanrine is now in stage 3 of the earn-in agreement which requires it to drill another 15,000m to take its ownership to 51%. Assay results are likely this quarter. So it could be a case of if it's not the gold that fires up investor or a predator's interest in Titan, it could be the copper. Or both.
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The ASX's best undeveloped mines, according to Argonaut
The ASX's best undeveloped mines, according to Argonaut

The Australian

time6 hours ago

  • The Australian

The ASX's best undeveloped mines, according to Argonaut

Argonaut's latest Best Undeveloped Projects list was launched this month Companies listed in the guide have historically done well, with cumulative gains for key picks of 212% over more than a decade Gold, uranium, copper and critical minerals deposits all among the 25-strong list of key picks and special mentions In a world of AI, quants and passive investing, there are smoke signals to be found that active management and stock picking still matters when it comes to choosing outperformers. Look no further than the Best Undeveloped Projects list out of Perth brokers Argonaut, the tome from the Wild West that puts guard rails around which future mines have the best prospects for success. This year's list is now out, presenting 25 projects yet to enter construction that have the potential to become significant mining operations. Of those, 18 make the main list with another seven in the special mentions category. It's impossible to predict the future with perfect accuracy, but recent history suggests the list can be a good guide for value creation. Argonaut has drawn up the list each year since 2014. In that time there have been four down years and seven up years for its key picks, with average growth of 14%. A cumulative investment would have netted 212% for key picks and 94% for special mentions over that period, against just 61% of the ASX 200 and 123% for the small resources index. Last year was a strong one for Argonaut's key picks, notching their third best performance in the past decade with average share prices 38% higher. Special mentions underperformed small resources (10% vs 12%), though that came off a massive 58% run in 2023. The standout performer in 2024's list was New World Resources (ASX:NWC), up 235% after a bidding war resulted in its $243 million cash takeover by Kinterra Capital – the prize its high-grade Antler copper project in Arizona. It would be hard to repeat a success like that, with De Grey Mining also a major mover after its scrip takeover by Northern Star Resources (ASX:NST) to end the speculation over who would eventually get to develop the 11.2Moz Hemi gold project. With that in mind, we felt it was worth a squiz at this year's book to see which projects Argonaut thinks are the real deal this year. The list Before we go onto the list itself, it's worth noting what criteria Argonaut's stock pickers use to determine their top selections, giving a sense of what professional analysts look for when they talk about a standout asset. Geared towards low cost, high margin opportunities, the projects assessed by Argonaut must be development stage, somewhere between a scoping study and pre-commercial production, have an internal rate of return upwards of 25% (large miners typically will develop anything above 15% depending on mine life), profitable through all market conditions and commodity price cycles and highly likely to achieve a project valuation north of $100m within 24 months. To make the list the project owner must also have a valuation of less than $5bn – no boring, index tracking mega caps here. This year's book is a long one. So we'll roll up the key picks here: Argonaut's key picks for best undeveloped projects. Pic: Argonaut Running through the 18 key picks, and you'll be surprised to see gold doesn't totally dominate the ledger – these projects are supposed to work in all commodity cycles after all. Copper gets two nods, courtesy of AIC Mines' (ASX:A1M) Jericho and FireFly Metals' (ASX:FFM) Green Bay. Unloved nickel and resurgent platinum group metals get some love in Centaurus Metals' (ASX:CTM) Jaguar project in Brazil and Chalice Mining's (ASX:CHN) Gonneville in WA. Zinc, rare earths, niobium and rutile all get one mention, with lithium and uranium bagging two a piece. It's not everything, but in a sign of the times, gold assets still make up the largest single portion of the list, with six of the 18 names aiming to develop gold assets. Those include large producers Greatland Resources (ASX:GGP), Perseus Mining (ASX:PRU) and Capricorn Metals (ASX:CMM), who are all looking to build new mines in the coming years at Havieron, near Greatland's Telfer mine, Nyanzaga in Tanzania and Mt Gibson in WA, respectively. But there are small caps on the card also: Magnetic Resources' (ASX:MAU) Lady Julie deposit in WA's Laverton gold district, Predictive Discovery's (ASX:PDI) Bankan in Guinea and WIA Gold's (ASX:WIA) Kokoseb in Cote d'Ivoire are all included, with each shaping as potential M&A targets. "An improved gold market has fuelled increased exploration across the space, resulting in the emergence of new greenfield and near-mine discoveries," Argonaut said. "We include nine gold projects, with five located in Western Australia and the remainder across the Africa region. "We remain firmly committed to our belief that decarbonisation will play an increasingly important role in the global economy. Future facing metals such as lithium, rare earth elements, copper, niobium and uranium are all represented in our project selections." Special mentions include projects that could progress to Argonaut's main list. Pic: Argonaut Three gold stocks feature on the special mentions, including Brightstar Resources (ASX:BTR) and its soon to be wholly consolidated Sandstone project, where the acquisition of neighbour Aurumin (ASX:AUN) would pump up its inventory from 1.5Moz to 2.4Moz gold. Tim Goyder's Minerals 260 (ASX:MI6) and its ripe to be mined Bullabulling mine near Coolgardie also makes the grade along with Diggers and Dealers best emerging company award winner Turaco Gold (ASX:TCG) and its Afema deposit in Cote d'Ivoire. Rare earths and niobium plays Northern Minerals (ASX:NTU) and Encounter Resources (ASX:ENR) are on the bill, with African uranium opportunities Aura Energy (ASX:AEE) and Bannerman Energy (ASX:BMN) cracking a mention. Projects to watch There's a lot to pore over, but we've decided to take a look through some of the key picks and special mentions for a few that piqued our interest. Aura Energy - Tiris Aura Energy's Tiris is among the most advanced uranium assets on the ASX, with first production expected in 2027. The project lies in the West African country of Mauritania, an off the radar locale for ASX investors which nonetheless is home to major mining operations, especially in gold and iron ore. Tiris would be its first uranium mine, with Argonaut's John Scholtz suggesting its 162Mt at 215ppm resource (76.6Mlb) could underpin production of 1.7Mlbpa at all in sustaining costs of US$37.07/lb. "A DFS on the project was completed in 2021 and has subsequently been updated in 2023 and had a FEED study in 2024 highlighting robust economics. AEE is now focused on funding and is expected to do an FID in the near-term. The project is fully licensed," Scholtz said. "Due to current market conditions delaying an FID, AEE's current target for delivering production is early CY27 rather than their initial estimates in the FEED. Using a 50/50 blend of spot prices and Argonaut forecasts the NPV of Tiris is A$585m." That compares very favourably to Aura's current market cap of $138m. Magnetic Resources - Lady Julie Magnetic's Lady Julie North 4 discovery has grown from 200,000oz to 1.94Moz in just two years, with Argonaut's Patrick Streater predicting another update could take the resource there to 2.25Moz. That would add further value to an asset where a feasibility study in July outlined a nine-year mine life producing 114,000ozpa, including 140,000ozpa between years three to eight. Argonaut has modelled a 10.5 year mine life at 110,000ozpa, with pre-production capex of $375m including working capital, with an initial open pit to be supplemented by an underground from the third year of ops. "MAU presents both as an attractive standalone development project, whilst also being a compelling M&A target for existing producers in the region looking for a large high-grade ore feed," Streater said. The attraction for nearby majors is its locale. Magnetic sits within 15km of both Genesis Minerals' (ASX:GMD) Mt Morgans mill and Gold Fields' Granny Smith, both of which have long been regarded as underfed. When deposits outside Lady Julie are included, the broader Laverton project's resource runs up to 2.32Moz, making it one of the largest undeveloped gold bases in the hot WA Goldfields region. "MAU continues to progress the Lady Julie project down a standalone development route with a sufficient mining inventory now built to cover pre-production capital costs," Streater said. "However, the existing processing infrastructure in the region across various producers makes MAU a compelling M&A target, which could instead be acquired as a bolt-on project for a nearby producer. The LJN4 open pit includes a large high-grade ore reserve of 14.3Mt at 1.6g/t for 726koz, which would be an attractive high-grade feed with scale to supplement existing mill ore feeds or displace lower-grade material." Patriot Battery Metals - Shaakichiuwaanaan Is lithium still sufficiently exciting at spodumene prices of under US$1000/t to warrant best project inclusion? Argonaut still sees Ken Brinsden's Patriot as "globally significant" as the largest hard rock lithium deposit in North America, running at 141Mt at 1.39% Li2O. It bolstered the investment case last month by reporting the world's largest pollucite hosted caesium deposit also existed on the site, including a high-grade component of 163,000t at 10.25% Cs2O with lithium and tantalum credits. An exploration target of 146-231Mt at 1-1.5% Li2O means converting drill metres to resources could put the project in league with Pilbara Minerals' Pilgangoora, MinRes and Albemarle's Wodgina and the Greenbushes JV in WA for scale. A feasibility study is due at the end of September. Predictive Discovery - Bankan A DFS recently outlined a 12-year operation producing 250,000ozpa at an all in sustaining cost of just US$1057/oz. Hosting a 2.95Moz reserve, Bankan is one of the largest discoveries made in West Africa in recent years, with the grant of an exploration permit viewed by Argonaut's Patrick Streater as a key catalyst for the project, expected to cost US$463m to bring into production by 2028. While wrangling from Guinea's Government over licences at other projects is potentially throwing some storm clouds over the junta-run jurisdiction, the award of the exploration permit could be a trigger for M&A. That seems the logical outcome for PDI, which has Perseus, Lundin and Zijin all on its register as significant shareholders. "We expect the Lundin Group/Zijin to be the most likely owners. Under PDI's current development timeline, assuming PDI brings Bankan into production, the first gold is targeted for early CY28," Streater said. Brightstar Resources - Sandstone Brightstar is already a small scale gold producer, using toll treatment to deliver between 35-40,000ozpa from a string of gold mines across the Menzies and Laverton gold districts. An expansion there, using its own plant infrastructure, could enhance that to 70,000ozpa later this decade. But Alex Rovira's firm's big opportunity to grow into a 200,000ozpa miner lies in the forgotten Sandstone gold field. Over the past two years, the firm has delivered on a plan to consolidate the district – the fourth pillar of the Murchison province alongside the Ramelius Resources dominated Mt Magnet and Westgold controlled Cue and Meekatharra – via aggressive M&A. The latest gambit is its agreed merger with Aurumin, which will take the total inventory to 2.4Moz. FID is due in 2027 with production to start late in 2028 on present ambitions. 100,000m of drilling is planned this financial year. Argonaut's Hayden Bairstow has a spec buy rating and $1.60 valuation on 40c BTR. The broker's 3Mtpa production scenario for Sandstone carries a $200m capex estimate, with average gold production of 105,000ozpa with costs of $3000/oz for the first five years. A PFS and ore reserve are due in 2026. Sovereign Metals - Kasiya Kasiya hosts the world's largest natural rutile resource of 1.8Bt at 1%, with 1.4% natural graphite a co-product kicker. Natural rutile is the world's cleanest and most desirable source of titanium dioxide feedstock, with supplies expecting to head into decline over the course of this decade. Rio Tinto has already read the tea leaves, picking up a 19.9% equity stake in the company, which is expected to deliver a DFS on the Malawi-based project in Q4 2025. "Rio Tinto (Not Covered/No Rating) holds a 19.9% equity stake in SVM and we anticipate they will ultimately pay a market premium to takeover SVM. The DFS expected in 4QFY25 remains as a key catalyst," Argonaut's George Ross said. Argonaut has a $1.691bn NPV attached to the project, slightly below Sovereign's optimised PFS estimate. The number is pre-tax, with the application of a 15% Malawian resource rent tax still uncertain. The project has already attracted the interest of international offtakers, Ross noted. "The project will produce two critical mineral co-products, rutile and graphite, at a low carbon cost. Kasiya's rutile concentrate is considered a premium product with good particle size and low deleterious elements," he said. "Because of its quality, Kasiya's rutile is suitable for use as both a titania feedstock and in the high value welding sector. SVM has entered into non-binding MOUs with three major rutile market participants: Mitsui, Chemours and Hascor." At Stockhead, we tell it like it is. While Sovereign Metals, Brightstar Resources, Aura Energy and Magnetic Resources are Stockhead advertisers, they did not sponsor this article. The broker's opinions are not those of Stockhead.

Jimmy Recard comes out on top after tough battle in Group 3 Vain Stakes at Caulfield
Jimmy Recard comes out on top after tough battle in Group 3 Vain Stakes at Caulfield

News.com.au

time14 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Jimmy Recard comes out on top after tough battle in Group 3 Vain Stakes at Caulfield

'J.R., Jimmy Recard. Raise your glass for the king of the bar.' Art again proved prophetic after Jimmy Recard 's latest win in Saturday's Group 3 Vain Stakes (1100m) at Caulfield. Jimmy Recard, named after a 2008 song by Perth hip hop artist Drapht, gave his large band of owners a third opportunity to celebrate a win when he denied Tycoon Star in a physical finish to the Vain Stakes. Tycoon Star looked set to post a first-up win when he got into the clear early in the straight but laid in over the last 200m while Jamie Melham drove Jimmy Recard along the inside section of the track. Tycoon Star bumped Jimmy Recard but the Ciaron Maher -trained colt had a half-head to spare on the line, posting his third win in four starts. 'I just think he's improving every time he runs,' Maher said of the Bennett Racing-syndicated three-year-old. 'We had notions of taking him for a stakes race in Adelaide but we thought we'd reset for the spring. 'He's certainly started the spring the right way.' JIMMY RECARD! What a battle down the straight in the Vain Stakes! The colts were all over the place but its Jimmy who prevailed â­� @jamieleemelham @cmaherracing @RacingBennett â€' 7HorseRacing ðŸ�Ž (@7horseracing) August 16, 2025 Maher combined with Bennett Racing to race Southport Tycoon, who won two Group 1 races before heading to stand at Widden Stud. Maher hoped Jimmy Recard could improve sufficiently to follow Southport Tycoon to stud. 'I was at the stallion parades for Southport Tycoon yesterday when Widden were introducing him. Hopefully this can be the next one,' Maher said. 'He's certainly a very well-bred colt and he's a great type. 'He's got a bright future.' Tycoon Star's jockey Mark Zahra said the Lindsay Park-trained colt had his opportunity to win at his first start since the Group 1 Golden Slipper. 'He was going to win but he was first-up and the winner's come along the fence where nothing has come all day,' Zahra said. 'He was strong enough to the line but I think he had his chance, he's still green though.' â– â– â– â– â– 'Angry' mare makes trainers happy with Regal Roller success Pop Award completed her reformation from problem child to black-type performer when she prevailed in Saturday's Listed Regal Roller Stakes at Caulfield. Co-trainer Lyn Tolson described Pop Award as 'an angry horse' when she first arrived at the stable she shares with daughter Leonie Proctor after proving too much of a handful for a couple of horse breakers. 'She could strike at you and go at you better than any stallion,' Tolson said of Pop Award earlier in the week. POP AWARD ðŸ'¥ Five on the trot, from maiden grade to a Group 3! What a story for the Tolson/Proctor/Cartwright clan ðŸ'– â€' 7HorseRacing ðŸ�Ž (@7horseracing) August 16, 2025 However, Pop Award had proven herself to punters with four straight wins before she stepped up Listed level for the first time in the Regal Roller Stakes. Last year's winner Arkansaw Kid ($3.10 fav) looked set to sweep past Pop Award ($5) halfway down the straight but the mare's fitness advantage and 6kg weight pull helped her hold a length on her rival on the line. Tolson said winning the Regal Roller Stakes was a great birthday present for her grandson, Proctor's son Matthew Cartwright. 'We rolled the dice today and we thought, 'oh god, are we going a little bit too high?' as this is only her seventh run,' she said. 'We thought that it was only going to get harder and if we throw her in the deep end now, we could always come back (in class) if we have to. 'She definitely stood up.' The Grahame Begg-trained Royal Insignia ($7.50) also made an encouraging start to his spring campaign with his solid third with jockey Jordan Childs in the saddle.

Undervalued Melbourne suburbs set for major property boom
Undervalued Melbourne suburbs set for major property boom

News.com.au

time18 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Undervalued Melbourne suburbs set for major property boom

Melbourne is 'tremendously undervalued' and overdue for a boom, with new research showing which suburbs could be set for some of the biggest jumps. Experts are tipping this year's third Reserve Bank rate cut could finally be the one to turn the city's housing fortunes around, and areas like St Kilda East, Noble Park and Doreen are poised to get the best boost. The analysis from SuburbData tracked demand-to-supply ratios, price gaps with neighbouring suburbs, as well as the difference between house and unit prices to pinpoint postcodes primed for the next growth spurt. St Kilda East leads the pack, with typical house values a staggering $348,000 cheaper than nearby bayside postcodes. Noble Park and Doreen are also trading at steep discounts compared to their neighbours, despite strong transport, shopping and schooling options. SuburbData director Jeremy Sheppard said knowing where value lay in Melbourne's market was critical. 'Melbourne is tremendously undervalued … homes have become such an enormous investment … families need to be cannier about where they buy,' Mr Sheppard said. He added that undervalued suburbs were often those priced below neighbouring areas without clear geographic disadvantages, where growth had been lacklustre while nearby markets surged, and where buyer demand was now starting to outweigh supply. 'When buyers find better value for money in a market, that's when you get a feeding frenzy,' Mr Sheppard said. 'It may take a while till you get any growth on your investment in an overvalued suburb … buying at the peak of a fast moving market could even mean, in extreme cases, that prices soon fall.' Prominent Bayside real estate director Gary Peer said the median price in St Kilda East was 'heavily influenced by apartment sales'. 'St Kilda East is absolutely prolific when it comes to apartments, historically it's been a hotspot for investors,' Mr Peer said. 'But over the past few years, many investors have exited the market for a variety of reasons. 'The rapid rise in interest rates was a big one — though we're now starting to get some relief. Land tax has also bitten hard.' The Gary Peer Real Estate boss said the result of that investor exodus has been a shift in the buyer pool, and coupled with high numbers of sales it had led to softer price growth in the suburb. 'Compared to five years ago, prices in St Kilda East haven't climbed the way we might have expected,' Mr Peer said 'In some cases they've stayed flat or even gone backwards — and that's rare in Melbourne.' He noted that the suburb was still a 'premier address' and 'as affordable as St Kilda East is likely to be for years'. Whitefox chief executive and The Block judge Marty Fox said the relative affordability, especially the six-figure gap between St Kilda East and neighbouring areas, wouldn't last long. 'Historically, these kinds of disparities don't survive long once buyers start connecting the dots on lifestyle, transport, and amenity,' Mr Fox said. 'Once demand tips, you can see 10-15 per cent lifts inside a year, especially if there's a catalyst like infrastructure upgrades, a rate cut, or just the media finally catching on.' Melbourne's fundamentals are also likely to help drive prices up in undervalued areas. 'You've got population growth back at pace, rental supply at record lows, and construction costs pushing replacement values higher,' Mr Fox said. 'The gap between what buyers think property is worth and what it should be worth is the widest I've seen in years, and that's an opportunity for those who aren't scared to act before the crowd catches on.' Tuesday's interest rate cut, while important, was not the only factor in a boost to home values. 'Cheaper money acts like lighter fluid on buyer intent, but the spark will be confidence,' Mr Fox said. Areas where home values are significantly cheaper than neighbouring suburbs St Kilda East $1.2m – $348,000 cheaper Box Hill North $1.4m – $135,000 cheaper Doreen $788,000 – $49,000 cheaper Noble Park $794,000 – $42,000 cheaper Kings Park $682,000 – $39,000 cheaper St Albans $721,000 – $34,000 cheaper Deer Park $653,000 – $35,000 cheaper Officer $756,000 – $32,000 cheaper Westmeadows $765,000 – $6000 cheaper Mickleham $714,000 – $2000 cheaper

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