$83bn discovery throws market into frenzy
Have we accidentally found El Dorado?
It seems Chinese geologists from the Bureau of Hunan Province may have stumbled upon a literal mountain of wealth.
Scientists are already suggesting it might be the largest precious metal deposit ever discovered.
The jackpot is located beneath the Wangu gold field in Pingjiang County.
Initial drilling 2,011 metres beneath the surface has uncovered more than 40 gold veins.
This preliminary detection alone is estimated to hold around 330 tonnes, equivalent to 330,000 kilograms, of gold ore.
It has already been classified as a 'supergiant' gold ore deposit.
3D modelling reveals the deposit could stretch nearly 3,048 metres down, and sitting deep within the Earth at those depths could be a mind-blowing 1,100 tonnes of gold ore.
The estimated value? A staggering $83 billion
To put that into perspective, South Africa's 'South Deep' gold mine, currently one of the world's largest, holds around 1,025 tonnes. This new Chinese discovery could potentially dethrone it and become the largest gold mine on the planet.
Other major players globally are located in Indonesia, Russia, New Guinea, Chile, and the USA.
It's not just the sheer volume either – the quality is reportedly ridiculously high.
The deposit is averaging 138 grams of gold per metric tonne of ore, which experts describe as a valuable rate 'not often found in gold mining.'
According to Chen Rulin, an ore-prospecting expert at China's Hunan Province's Geological Bureau, 'Many drilled rock cores showed visible gold' in samples.
This discovery comes at a crucial time for China. The nation is already the world's top gold producer, accounting for about 10 per cent of global production. However, China is also heavily dependent on gold, using approximately three times more than it mines annually thanks to booming demand for jewellery, tech, and central bank reserves.
As China seeks to protect itself from geopolitical risks - especially ongoing trade tensions and the threat of financial sanctions from the U.S - this breakthrough is expected to reduce the country's reliance on imports and boost its self-sufficiency in a critical resource.
According to the New York Post, this news 'put the world's gold markets on notice.' Following the announcement, gold prices reportedly surged to $130 per gram, as reported by CCN.
Social media lit up with reactions - one user on X commented, 'Oo. That's why GOVT spiked after close,' while another simply said, 'America is mad.'
This jump in gold prices could bring both opportunities and challenges for Australia.
In the short term, higher prices may benefit Aussie gold miners through increased profits.
But over time, global demand for Australian gold could decline - putting pressure on the broader trade relationship between the two countries.
Geologists also believe the nearby geological formations could be part of a much larger, interconnected system.
According to Liu Yongjun, vice head of the bureau, additional gold ore was found during drilling in the peripheral areas surrounding the main discovery site.
This suggests this 'supergiant' find could potentially be just the beginning.
'It will take a while to get down there.' Source: X
'They dug so deep that they came up from the bottom of Fort Knox.' Source: X
Historically, 233,000 tonnes of gold have been mined worldwide, with two-thirds of that mined since 1950.
Unlike many other natural resources, gold is resistant to corrosion, and nearly indestructible - which means that virtually all of the gold ever mined is believed to still exist in some form. Wowser.
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News.com.au
18 hours ago
- News.com.au
Rio stays the course on lithium as it looks to rejuvenate iron ore business
Outgoing Rio Tinto boss Jakob Stausholm says Rio remains committed to its lithium strategy Mining giant just opened newest iron ore operation in WA's Pilbara CEO denies being nudged by board as he says company leaders are aligned on ESG and operational improvements The head of the world's second biggest miner Rio Tinto (ASX:RIO) says its board remains aligned on a counter-cyclical push into lithium as CEO Jakob Stausholm denied speculation that friction with the company's board was behind his decision to resign this year. Stausholm's near five year tenure at Rio followed the destruction of the Juukan Gorge rock cave in the Pilbara under his predecessor JS Jacques, an act that led to Jacques' resignation and steered the $150bn miner on a course to prioritise its ESG commitments. In that time, its new investments have focused in two areas, replacement mines to address declining iron ore quality at its flagship Pilbara operations and M&A to become one of the world's largest lithium producers. The latter has come under the microscope amid Stausholm's surprise exit, with lithium prices crashing to four year lows after Rio's entry as a producer via its $10 billion takeover of Argentine brine producer Allkem. Speaking at the opening of Rio's first of five major replacement iron ore mines due in the next five years – the 25Mtpa Western Range with Chinese steel giant Baowu near Paraburdoo – Stausholm said Rio's board remained aligned on its lithium strategy. "The lithium strategy we are absolutely aligned about in the whole board. This is a next pillar," he said. "Think about it like some visionary people 50-60 years ago said Rio Tinto should go into iron ore. "We need to think about the future to the next decade and the next decade. And we are lucky that we have built now a portfolio of outstanding brine resources in Argentina, in Chile. " It's going to complement our – what I would call signature – business here of iron ore for the future." Grade control Under Stausholm, Rio has cleared a number of social licence hurdles in its WA heartland culminating in an agreement this week with the PKKP group, the very Traditional Owner group devastated by the 2020 demolition of Juukan Gorge. It will be a key stakeholder for the US$1.8bn Brockman Syncline 1, the next replacement mine approved for the ~40Mtpa Brockman hub, one of a number of developments that will cost Rio in the order of US$13bn to deliver in the coming years. Western Range is a milestone in that it marks the first new operation delivered by Rio's iron ore division since Juukan Gorge (its Gudai-Darri mine was under construction at the time), and the first to a mine plan co-designed with the TO group, the Yinhawangka People. But Rio's iron ore division has been, quite literally, degrading. 2023 and 2024 marked long time highs for iron ore production at 331.8Mt and 328.6Mt, making Rio the largest exporter of hematite iron ore in the world. But costs have been escalating at a faster rate – on reported numbers at least – than its peers BHP and Fortescue. While BHP and FMG reported C1 cash costs of US$17.50/t and US$19.17/wmt in the first half of FY2025, Rio's unit cash costs came in at US$23/t in CY24. Its 2025 numbers will likely be higher at a guided range of US$23-24.50/t. And while 62% Fe Singapore iron ore futures are sitting at US$95.55/t, Rio's realisation to the benchmark price has been slipping. It notified customers that during the September quarter the spec grade for its Pilbara Blend product will drop. Fastmarkets this week introduced a 61% Fe Index to reflect the lower quality product Pilbara miners are now shipping. It will likely take until the end of this decade, when Rio delivers the higher grade Rhodes Ridge mine, for its grade to recover. Speaking at the Western Range opening, Stausholm denied any rift with new chair Dominic Barton, nor that the miner's focus on ESG under his leadership had clouded its dedication to operating performance. "We are absolutely aligned. It's very important to say we in the management team and the whole board (are) absolutely aligned around the values of Rio Tinto about pursuing the four objectives, about our strategy and the strategic choices and about the assessment of our performance," Stausholm said. "So there is no disalignment. "We are absolutely aligned. It's very important to say we in the management team and the whole board (are) absolutely aligned around the values of Rio Tinto about pursuing the four objectives, about our strategy and the strategic choices and about the assessment of our performance," Stausholm said. "So there is no disalignment. "If you look at my statements at the full year results, I said exactly the same thing because we have under the four objectives, made a lot of progress on rebuilding trust in the company, working towards impeccable ESG credentials, improving how we execute projects. " This project is an example. This project is on time, on schedule. "We still have the potential to do in the best operator, our safe production system is really working. So I said that at the full year, and my chairman repeated that a couple of weeks ago." Steel on top The official opening of Western Range marked a second major development in the relationship between Rio and China's top steel producer Baowu in the Pilbara after the development of Eastern Range in the early 2000s. It followed Rio's landmark first deal with China's Sinosteel at the nearby Channar JV almost 40 years ago. Australia now ships over 900Mt of iron ore a year, the vast bulk of it (around 80%) to China, the world's largest steel producer. But as new, high quality ore sources are developed overseas – notably the high grade 120Mtpa Simandou project in Guinea in which both Rio and Baowu are invested – question marks are hovering over the centrality of the long-established "conveyor belt" between the Pilbara and Beijing to the steel supply chain. FMG chairman Andrew Forrest notably sounded the alarm in recent months over the emergence of new competitors to WA who could eat its golden goose. He is lobbying hard for the establishment of a domestic green iron industry. But Rio remains confident in the role Australian iron ore will play in the future, even in a decarbonising world where green steel technologies – not suited to low and mid-grade ores produced in the Pilbara – could dominate. "It is for us as companies to make sure that the Pilbara ore remains relevant," Stausholm said. "And how do we do that? We do that in partnerships like you see today with Baowu, working on how can we decarbonise the supply chain. " If you find the right solutions and we will, then Pilbara will be the source for many, many decades to come." Stausholm's departure comes as BHP is also rumoured to be looking for a new CEO to replace Mike Henry, and has a number of internal Rio candidates reputedly jostling for position, among them chief commercial officer Bold Baatar and local favourite Simon Trott, who helped open Western Range on Friday and runs the major's iron ore division out of its Perth office.

News.com.au
20 hours ago
- News.com.au
Barry FitzGerald: Katanning ticks all the boxes for an Ausgold re-rate
'Garimpeiro' columnist Barry FitzGerald has covered the resources industry for 35 years. Now he's sharing the benefits of his experience with Stockhead readers. After its dramatic rise in the opening months of the year to record levels, the Aussie gold price has settled into a bit of a groove around the $5,200/oz level. Nothing wrong with that. It's a fantastic price and delivers fat margins to even our highest cost gold mines. And it is not to suggest that gold can't take off again and set new highs or fall significantly for that matter. The observation is that for the last six weeks or so the Aussie price has been as steady as it could be in these turbulent times. It means that share prices of ASX-listed gold producers and developers have also gone into a sideways trading pattern. Need to differentiate So more than has been the case in recent times when gold took off to record levels, the producers and developers now need to differentiate themselves from the pack with strong newsflow of the re-rating inducing type. It means that if the gold price continues to trade sideways, the stock involved has a reason to go higher. Alternatively, if the gold price heads south, the damage to the stock could be more limited than it would have been otherwise. Taking all that on board, Garimpeiro had a look at his calendar during the week to find which of the gold producers/developers have re-rating event(s) on the horizon. Ausgold stands out Ausgold (ASX:AUC) stood out for the pending release this month of a definitive feasibility study (DFS) into the development of its Katanning gold project, a three-hour drive from Perth in WA's southwest Yilgarn region. Katanning is one of the biggest undeveloped gold deposits in the country at 3.04 million ounces and has previously been scoped as having the potential to produce 136,000 ounces annually from open-cut ore sources for more than 10 years. All-in sustaining costs were put at $A1,549 and preproduction capital costs weighed in at just under $300m. But those are 2023 figures and things will have changed, including the reserve component of the resource thanks to infill drilling work. Gold prices have increased dramatically since those 2023 figures but so have construction costs. Having said that, the expectation is that the DFS will confirm Katanning as a very robust project with a super quick capex payback capability. Take that and the scale of the project – production in the early years will be higher still because initial higher grade ores - and Ausgold's $240 million market cap at 67c share looks to be on the mean side of things. The company has the lowest resource ounce valuation metric of its peer group for no apparent reason, except perhaps the project has been in the works since 2010 under Ausgold ownership. So the story of the resource growth since, and the pending release of the DFS leading into a development decision by year end, has been overlooked to a large degree by the market on a fatigue basis alone. Katanning momentum Momentum for Katanning is now the order of the day under John Dorward, Ausgold's executive chairman who arrived on the scene in May last year. A can-do sort of guy, Dorward was the former president and CEO of TSX-listed Roxgold, a West African gold group acquired by fellow Canadian Fortuna Silver Mines in an all-scrip deal worth $US884 million in 2021. Two weeks in the job at Ausgold and Dorward put Katanning on the development pathway by pulling in $38 million in equity, including $1m from his own pocket. That is being spent getting to the DFS stage and on a three-pronged strategy of establishing a bigger mining reserve component in the mineral resource estimate, extending the scale of the resource and making regional gold discoveries. Morgans' 94c target Morgans' veteran analyst Chris Brown has a 12-month price target on the stock of 94c. 'Our expectation is that delivery of a DFS broadly confirming or improving on the preliminary feasibility study, and employing a higher gold price, should prove positive for the share price,' Brown said. He also flagged that a final investment decision on a project development – expected by the end of the year - should also prove positive depending on the terms of the project's financing package. ''Our valuation will likely lift with the delivery of the DFS, and again when the final investment decision is taken,'' Brown said. The views, information, or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the columnist and do not represent the views of Stockhead. Stockhead does not provide, endorse or otherwise assume responsibility for any financial product advice contained in this article.


The Advertiser
21 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Australian shares retreat from highs for second time
The Australian share market has slipped after again approaching its best-ever close, fading ahead of key US economic data and a long weekend in most Australian states. The S&P/ASX200 traded a tight range on Friday to finish 23.2 points lower, down 0.27 per cent to 8,515.7, as the broader All Ordinaries slipped 26.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8,741.9. The top 200 gained roughly one per cent for the week but failed to hold above its record close of 8,555.8 for a second straight day, as investors took profits ahead of a trading break on Monday and two potentially volatile US sessions before the next ASX open. With the local bourse so close to its record, some investors were asking if they were looking at a high-water mark, Moomoo market strategist Jessica Amir said. "With US debt concerns getting louder, investors are questioning whether markets could be due for a haircut," she told AAP. "But I think that'll be tested tonight when we get US jobs data, and if it really is weaker than expected then that will smash sentiment." Nine of 11 local sectors finished lower but energy shares offered some relief, up 0.7 per cent as hopes of resumed US-China trade talks pushed oil prices higher. Brent crude prices are up more than 3.5 per cent for the week, to $US64.86 a barrel, after a phone call between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping raised hopes for global growth and crude demand from the world's two largest economies. Financials weighed on the bourse, down 0.4 per cent as investors took profits on the banks. CBA was the big four's worst performer on Friday, fading 0.8 per cent after hitting a fresh peak of $182 on Thursday. Zooming out, the sector was up 1.9 per cent for the week and holding above its record close in February. Liquidity rotation from the banks and glimmers of global trade hopes helped push BHP and Fortescue higher, but it was not enough to stop the materials sector from slipping 0.1 per cent after a 1.4 per cent gain for the week. The brighter trade horizon weighed on critical minerals miners after China's export controls pushed them higher on Thursday, leaving Pilbara Minerals (down 5.2 per cent) and Iluka Resources (down 3.8 per cent) among the top 200's worst performers on Friday. Goldminers were a mixed bag all week, as the precious metal continued to chop within a range, with futures at $US3,384 ($A5,210) an ounce. Cryptocurrency Bitcoin slipped almost five per cent overnight but has recovered some of its losses to trade about $US103,200 ($A158,860), with no fundamental catalyst behind the dip, trading platform OKX's Australian boss Kate Cooper said. "The modest 5.6 per cent dip in the global cryptocurrency market cap today reflects broader market volatility, as participants react to the European Central Bank's downward revision of inflation expectations and reassess growth prospects," she said. Qantas was among the ASX's best-performing large cap stocks, up 3.5 per cent to $10.76 as competitor Virgin Australia confirmed it would relist on the ASX on June 24 with an expected market cap of $2.3 billion. Gold explorer and developer Ora Banda took the wooden spoon, down 14 per cent after a production update failed to shine. The Australian dollar is buying 64.97 US cents, roughly on par with Thursday at 5pm, but at the upper end of its recent range against the greenback. ON THE ASX: * The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index finished Friday 23.2 points lower, down 0.27 per cent to 8,515.7 * The broader All Ordinaries fell 26.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8,741.9 CURRENCY SNAPSHOT: One Australian dollar buys: * 64.97 US cents, from 64.96 US cents on Thursday at 5pm * 93.56 Japanese yen, from 93.03 Japanese yen * 56.81 Euro cents, from 56.93 Euro cents * 47.95 British pence, from 47.95 pence * 107.58 NZ cents, from 107.70 NZ cents The Australian share market has slipped after again approaching its best-ever close, fading ahead of key US economic data and a long weekend in most Australian states. The S&P/ASX200 traded a tight range on Friday to finish 23.2 points lower, down 0.27 per cent to 8,515.7, as the broader All Ordinaries slipped 26.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8,741.9. The top 200 gained roughly one per cent for the week but failed to hold above its record close of 8,555.8 for a second straight day, as investors took profits ahead of a trading break on Monday and two potentially volatile US sessions before the next ASX open. With the local bourse so close to its record, some investors were asking if they were looking at a high-water mark, Moomoo market strategist Jessica Amir said. "With US debt concerns getting louder, investors are questioning whether markets could be due for a haircut," she told AAP. "But I think that'll be tested tonight when we get US jobs data, and if it really is weaker than expected then that will smash sentiment." Nine of 11 local sectors finished lower but energy shares offered some relief, up 0.7 per cent as hopes of resumed US-China trade talks pushed oil prices higher. Brent crude prices are up more than 3.5 per cent for the week, to $US64.86 a barrel, after a phone call between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping raised hopes for global growth and crude demand from the world's two largest economies. Financials weighed on the bourse, down 0.4 per cent as investors took profits on the banks. CBA was the big four's worst performer on Friday, fading 0.8 per cent after hitting a fresh peak of $182 on Thursday. Zooming out, the sector was up 1.9 per cent for the week and holding above its record close in February. Liquidity rotation from the banks and glimmers of global trade hopes helped push BHP and Fortescue higher, but it was not enough to stop the materials sector from slipping 0.1 per cent after a 1.4 per cent gain for the week. The brighter trade horizon weighed on critical minerals miners after China's export controls pushed them higher on Thursday, leaving Pilbara Minerals (down 5.2 per cent) and Iluka Resources (down 3.8 per cent) among the top 200's worst performers on Friday. Goldminers were a mixed bag all week, as the precious metal continued to chop within a range, with futures at $US3,384 ($A5,210) an ounce. Cryptocurrency Bitcoin slipped almost five per cent overnight but has recovered some of its losses to trade about $US103,200 ($A158,860), with no fundamental catalyst behind the dip, trading platform OKX's Australian boss Kate Cooper said. "The modest 5.6 per cent dip in the global cryptocurrency market cap today reflects broader market volatility, as participants react to the European Central Bank's downward revision of inflation expectations and reassess growth prospects," she said. Qantas was among the ASX's best-performing large cap stocks, up 3.5 per cent to $10.76 as competitor Virgin Australia confirmed it would relist on the ASX on June 24 with an expected market cap of $2.3 billion. Gold explorer and developer Ora Banda took the wooden spoon, down 14 per cent after a production update failed to shine. The Australian dollar is buying 64.97 US cents, roughly on par with Thursday at 5pm, but at the upper end of its recent range against the greenback. ON THE ASX: * The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index finished Friday 23.2 points lower, down 0.27 per cent to 8,515.7 * The broader All Ordinaries fell 26.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8,741.9 CURRENCY SNAPSHOT: One Australian dollar buys: * 64.97 US cents, from 64.96 US cents on Thursday at 5pm * 93.56 Japanese yen, from 93.03 Japanese yen * 56.81 Euro cents, from 56.93 Euro cents * 47.95 British pence, from 47.95 pence * 107.58 NZ cents, from 107.70 NZ cents The Australian share market has slipped after again approaching its best-ever close, fading ahead of key US economic data and a long weekend in most Australian states. The S&P/ASX200 traded a tight range on Friday to finish 23.2 points lower, down 0.27 per cent to 8,515.7, as the broader All Ordinaries slipped 26.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8,741.9. The top 200 gained roughly one per cent for the week but failed to hold above its record close of 8,555.8 for a second straight day, as investors took profits ahead of a trading break on Monday and two potentially volatile US sessions before the next ASX open. With the local bourse so close to its record, some investors were asking if they were looking at a high-water mark, Moomoo market strategist Jessica Amir said. "With US debt concerns getting louder, investors are questioning whether markets could be due for a haircut," she told AAP. "But I think that'll be tested tonight when we get US jobs data, and if it really is weaker than expected then that will smash sentiment." Nine of 11 local sectors finished lower but energy shares offered some relief, up 0.7 per cent as hopes of resumed US-China trade talks pushed oil prices higher. Brent crude prices are up more than 3.5 per cent for the week, to $US64.86 a barrel, after a phone call between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping raised hopes for global growth and crude demand from the world's two largest economies. Financials weighed on the bourse, down 0.4 per cent as investors took profits on the banks. CBA was the big four's worst performer on Friday, fading 0.8 per cent after hitting a fresh peak of $182 on Thursday. Zooming out, the sector was up 1.9 per cent for the week and holding above its record close in February. Liquidity rotation from the banks and glimmers of global trade hopes helped push BHP and Fortescue higher, but it was not enough to stop the materials sector from slipping 0.1 per cent after a 1.4 per cent gain for the week. The brighter trade horizon weighed on critical minerals miners after China's export controls pushed them higher on Thursday, leaving Pilbara Minerals (down 5.2 per cent) and Iluka Resources (down 3.8 per cent) among the top 200's worst performers on Friday. Goldminers were a mixed bag all week, as the precious metal continued to chop within a range, with futures at $US3,384 ($A5,210) an ounce. Cryptocurrency Bitcoin slipped almost five per cent overnight but has recovered some of its losses to trade about $US103,200 ($A158,860), with no fundamental catalyst behind the dip, trading platform OKX's Australian boss Kate Cooper said. "The modest 5.6 per cent dip in the global cryptocurrency market cap today reflects broader market volatility, as participants react to the European Central Bank's downward revision of inflation expectations and reassess growth prospects," she said. Qantas was among the ASX's best-performing large cap stocks, up 3.5 per cent to $10.76 as competitor Virgin Australia confirmed it would relist on the ASX on June 24 with an expected market cap of $2.3 billion. Gold explorer and developer Ora Banda took the wooden spoon, down 14 per cent after a production update failed to shine. The Australian dollar is buying 64.97 US cents, roughly on par with Thursday at 5pm, but at the upper end of its recent range against the greenback. ON THE ASX: * The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index finished Friday 23.2 points lower, down 0.27 per cent to 8,515.7 * The broader All Ordinaries fell 26.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8,741.9 CURRENCY SNAPSHOT: One Australian dollar buys: * 64.97 US cents, from 64.96 US cents on Thursday at 5pm * 93.56 Japanese yen, from 93.03 Japanese yen * 56.81 Euro cents, from 56.93 Euro cents * 47.95 British pence, from 47.95 pence * 107.58 NZ cents, from 107.70 NZ cents The Australian share market has slipped after again approaching its best-ever close, fading ahead of key US economic data and a long weekend in most Australian states. The S&P/ASX200 traded a tight range on Friday to finish 23.2 points lower, down 0.27 per cent to 8,515.7, as the broader All Ordinaries slipped 26.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8,741.9. The top 200 gained roughly one per cent for the week but failed to hold above its record close of 8,555.8 for a second straight day, as investors took profits ahead of a trading break on Monday and two potentially volatile US sessions before the next ASX open. With the local bourse so close to its record, some investors were asking if they were looking at a high-water mark, Moomoo market strategist Jessica Amir said. "With US debt concerns getting louder, investors are questioning whether markets could be due for a haircut," she told AAP. "But I think that'll be tested tonight when we get US jobs data, and if it really is weaker than expected then that will smash sentiment." Nine of 11 local sectors finished lower but energy shares offered some relief, up 0.7 per cent as hopes of resumed US-China trade talks pushed oil prices higher. Brent crude prices are up more than 3.5 per cent for the week, to $US64.86 a barrel, after a phone call between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping raised hopes for global growth and crude demand from the world's two largest economies. Financials weighed on the bourse, down 0.4 per cent as investors took profits on the banks. CBA was the big four's worst performer on Friday, fading 0.8 per cent after hitting a fresh peak of $182 on Thursday. Zooming out, the sector was up 1.9 per cent for the week and holding above its record close in February. Liquidity rotation from the banks and glimmers of global trade hopes helped push BHP and Fortescue higher, but it was not enough to stop the materials sector from slipping 0.1 per cent after a 1.4 per cent gain for the week. The brighter trade horizon weighed on critical minerals miners after China's export controls pushed them higher on Thursday, leaving Pilbara Minerals (down 5.2 per cent) and Iluka Resources (down 3.8 per cent) among the top 200's worst performers on Friday. Goldminers were a mixed bag all week, as the precious metal continued to chop within a range, with futures at $US3,384 ($A5,210) an ounce. Cryptocurrency Bitcoin slipped almost five per cent overnight but has recovered some of its losses to trade about $US103,200 ($A158,860), with no fundamental catalyst behind the dip, trading platform OKX's Australian boss Kate Cooper said. "The modest 5.6 per cent dip in the global cryptocurrency market cap today reflects broader market volatility, as participants react to the European Central Bank's downward revision of inflation expectations and reassess growth prospects," she said. Qantas was among the ASX's best-performing large cap stocks, up 3.5 per cent to $10.76 as competitor Virgin Australia confirmed it would relist on the ASX on June 24 with an expected market cap of $2.3 billion. Gold explorer and developer Ora Banda took the wooden spoon, down 14 per cent after a production update failed to shine. The Australian dollar is buying 64.97 US cents, roughly on par with Thursday at 5pm, but at the upper end of its recent range against the greenback. ON THE ASX: * The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index finished Friday 23.2 points lower, down 0.27 per cent to 8,515.7 * The broader All Ordinaries fell 26.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8,741.9 CURRENCY SNAPSHOT: One Australian dollar buys: * 64.97 US cents, from 64.96 US cents on Thursday at 5pm * 93.56 Japanese yen, from 93.03 Japanese yen * 56.81 Euro cents, from 56.93 Euro cents * 47.95 British pence, from 47.95 pence * 107.58 NZ cents, from 107.70 NZ cents