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Asset sale and options cash fund Dateline US gold project study

Asset sale and options cash fund Dateline US gold project study

West Australian19-05-2025

Dateline Resources has locked in the cash it needs to complete a bankable feasibility study (BFS) on the gold deposit at its flagship Californian Colosseum gold and rare earths project in a move that will be pivotal step in the conversion of its 1.1-million-ounce resource into a revenue-generating mine.
The ASX-listed explorer says it is sitting on a bank balance of $1.95 million, which will soon be boosted to around $2.3 million when the company pockets part of the proceeds from the sale of its non-core Udu copper asset in Fiji. That deal alone will tip in an additional $350,000 into a pot already earmarked to advance Colosseum.
The company says the current cash balance also includes about $1.1 million that has flowed in from existing shareholders exercising their options, with more likely to convert, judging by an uptick in investor enquiries.
With 2.3M in the bank and more cash on the way, Dateline says the influx will see it fully fund the BFS at Colosseum without going back to the market.
A key part of the study has already kicked off, with drill core shipped to Kappes, Cassiday & Associates in Nevada for metallurgical testing. Meanwhile, mine engineering work is being spearheaded by Australian consultancy AMDAD. The results from both teams will feed into a full-scale assessment of project economics later this year.
Colosseum sits in California's highly-prospective Walker Lane Trend, not far from the famed Mountain Pass rare earths mine. Colosseum already hosts a healthy JORC resource of 27.1 million tonnes at 1.26 grams per tonne gold for 1.1 million ounces, with more than two-thirds of that sitting in the measured and indicated categories.
In parallel with the study, Dateline is zeroing in on the project's significant rare earths potential, thanks to geological similarities with the nearby Mountain Pass mine - the only rare earths mine of its kind in the U.S.
Mountain Pass first roared to life in 1952, churning out rare earths at an eye-watering grade of 7 per cent TREO – a figure that would make modern miners green with envy. By the 1960s, it had cemented its place as the world's dominant supplier, keeping global markets well stocked for decades. That reign held firm until the 1990s, when China burst onto the scene and rapidly reshaped the rare earths landscape.
Only three weeks ago, Dateline's share price rocketed nearly 700 per cent higher to 4.7 cents on huge turnover after United States President Donald Trump publicly endorsed the project on his Truth Social platform, hailing it as 'America's second rare earths mine'.
The presidential shout out came hot on the heels of a watershed moment last month triggered by the US Interior Department upholding the company's right to mine the company's historic Californian leases.
The company says its now in the advanced planning stage of a dedicated REE drilling program at Colosseum, headed up by globally renowned REE experts Dr Anthony Mariano and Tony Mariano.
Dateline is also intending to tap into the American capital markets after the company fielded significant enquiries from overseas investors wanting to know how to get in on the action.
Management is aiming to secure a listing on the U.S. OTCQB Venture market by the third quarter this year, giving it access to a larger investor base and greater exposure in the world's biggest economy.
With multiple catalysts from the gold project on the horizon, strong American government backing for the rare earths and strategic U.S. ambitions, Dateline looks to be tackling something much bigger than gold alone at Colosseum – although there seems to be plenty of that.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au

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