
Small caps are back baby
At first, it was deliberate. Then it became inertia. I also forgot the password to my trading account and took it as divine intervention. But markets have a way of dragging you back in - and lately, they've been anything but subtle. Something's stirring in small-cap land - and it's not just the usual background hum.
Just two weeks ago, the United States Department of Defence quietly became the largest shareholder in MP Materials, which owns the Mountain Pass mine in California, the only rare earths operation of scale on US soil. A sometimes canny and mostly sober colleague of mine, Bill McConnell, wrote about it immediately in Bulls N Bears. He was onto it the very day it broke. Others chimed in later, perhaps a tad slow to the party, but that's not their fault. Most people get there eventually.
Then Apple Inc jumped in, slapping another half a billion dollars on the table for equity, taking the total cheque for MP to a cool US$1 billion - all in under a week. MP's share price doubled, adding US$5 billion to its market cap pretty much overnight.
That alone sparked the headlines, but for Dollar Bill, the real leg twitch came shortly after through a combination of events. The ASX 200 and the All Ords smashed record highs last week, the latter sailing through 9000 points for the first time. These weren't polite moves. These were rafter-shaking, hold-my-beer kind of surges.
Also, copper prices punched out a new record peak this month at the same time that silver nudged just under US$40 for the first time in more than a decade. Gold remains stubbornly above the $5000 mark.
Dollar Bill's even overheard a few stuffed suits at the club whispering about a revival in lithium - and for once, they might be onto something. Lithium doyen's Mineral Resources and Pilbara Minerals have both surged more than 50 per cent in the past month. And when the big boys start moving, the minnows tend to follow. Just take a look at lithium junior Galan, which has hiked from about 9c to 14c lately.
Then there are the IPOs, those long-forgotten unicorns, which appear to be sniffing the morning air again. Apart from the odd ETF, 2025 has been a desert for new ASX listings - the driest year in more than a decade. But lately? There's been the sound of hooves… and they're moving.
Since June, eight new floats have landed on the boards, most were modest, sub-$100 million raises, but that's exactly the kind of froth that signals early action. The most recent, Tali Resources, listed on a Friday and tripled by Tuesday.
Then there's the capital raising frenzy. In just the past two months, Dollar Bill has spotted another eight raises
,
and every single one of them was either significantly or substantially oversubscribed. That sort of heat hasn't been seen in a while and it's starting to feel less like a fluke and more like a market waking up hungry.
The standout? West Coast Silver, which set out to raise $3 million and ended up fielding $11 million in bids. Management reluctantly capped it at six. The raise priced at 11c - but when the stock resumed trading, it launched out of the gate at 17c. That sort of leap used to be the stuff of IPO fairy tales. Now it's turning up midweek.
As for Dollar Bill? I had my hand in the jar, already having a few of these puppies tucked away in the back pocket but I slept through the final bid window. Not the first time I've missed the party while dreaming of champagne.
Just this morning, Larvotto Resources lit up the boards with a $60 million raise - done virtually flat to its last traded price. If that's not a bellwether for risk appetite returning to small caps, I don't know what is. There's a scent on the wind, and I'd swear it smells like capital.
Back to the IPOs, June saw more new listings than the previous five months combined and July is already on track to beat that again. If this keeps up, we could soon be watching an honest-to-goodness revival for small caps, not just in listings, but in appetite.
Altogether, it's starting to feel like a genuine inflection point, or the world's most expensive coincidence. Mark Twain said history doesn't repeat, but it often rhymes. Right now? It's humming a very familiar tune.
That's not a dead cat. That's a live wire.
And, while the big end of town may be printing records, the real money, the real movement, looks to be shifting back to the forgotten corner of the exchange – small caps.
Firstly, rare earths. This isn't a fashion play. This is geopolitics at its best… mining boots. It's about who controls the guts of the new economy – electric vehicles, chips, weapons and energy.
So when both Apple and the Pentagon are betting billions on the same strategic metals that Aussie juniors have been betting on for some time, while commodities break records and the ASX roars - that's not background noise. That's the main event.
For Dollar Bill, this isn't just gut feel. Shaw & Partners dubbed 2025 '
the year to feast on ASX small caps,'
citing lower rates, valuation resets and looming earnings upgrades as rocket fuel.
But let's dig a little deeper and talk numbers - the ones that matter. Not the polished ASX 200 charts they wheel out at charity lunches. I mean the back-row battlers. The drill campaign dreamers. The micro caps.
People bandy about 'small cap' like it means something, but technically it covers ASX stocks ranked from 300 up to 101 - a $1 billion to $6 billion bracket. Not exactly minnows and not small cap but hey, that's the technical explanation.
The real action lives in the ASX 'Emerging Companies Index' which includes those ranked with market caps ranked from number 350 to number 600, generally between $350 million and $1 billion. That's the real sharp end.
And for years now, that's also the end that's been bleeding. From April 2022 to April 2023, the Emerging Companies Index fell 28 per cent. It was flat through April 2024, then down another 10 per cent into April 2025.
Those three years of pain have driven Dollar Bill to the bottle.
Meanwhile, the ASX 200? Down just 2 per cent across the same timeframe. Stats don't lie and these stats highlight the underperformance of small caps against the big board.
But the worm might now finally be turning. Since April, right when Trump detonated his 'Liberation Day' hand grenade with sweeping tariffs, the Emerging Companies Index is up 22.6 per cent. That's better than the ASX 200's own stellar 19.2 per cent rise.
That's not just recovery - that's outperformance.
Dollar Bill says when the market's most bruised corner starts to beat the big boys, it pays to pay attention.
In late 2024, Simon Conn at Investors Mutual was already calling it. A 'valuation disconnect,' he said, tipping rate cuts to trigger a shift back into quality small caps. The Reserve Bank chimed in cutting the cash rate in February and followed up again in May which coincided pretty much bang on with the outperformance in small caps – nice one Simon.
Add to that the roaring commodities market, copper surging, silver going vertical on solar and tech demand - and that soundtrack is getting louder.
Lithium doyen's Pilbara Minerals and Mineral Resources have both hiked about 50 per cent in a little over a month, and there are plenty of reports out there predicting a supply deficit for lithium again in 2026.
Sure, yes, maybe it is all just coincidence. But generally speaking, elephants don't dance without dust, and there's a storm kicking up at the small end of the ASX. Dollar Bill has seen this movie and heard this tune before, and he's already snagged a front-row seat. The Dollar is no prophet, but rest assured — right now the monocle is getting a right proper polish.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au
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News.com.au
9 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Closing Bell: Market weathers tariff gloom to finish in the green
Energy stocks climb as oil ticks up 2pc ASX rallies late to climb 0.08pc Gold stocks slide despite recovering gold price ASX lifts as clouds part for energy sector The ASX was in a decidedly bad mood today, hanging out in negative territory for the majority of the trading session before recovering in the last half hour. The market closed up 0.08%, crossing into positive territory on a last-minute rally in energy stocks. A 2% uptick in oil prices had the sector yoyo-ing through the day before finally settling in the green to provide some much-needed support for the broader market. Woodside Energy (ASX:WDS) lifted 1.57% and Santos (ASX:STO) added 2%. A little further down the pecking order, alternative energy companies were also moving higher. Green hydrogen firm Provaris Energy (ASX:PV1) climbed 4.55%, and natural hydrogen plays HyTerra (ASX:HYT) and Gold Hydrogen (ASX:GHY) added 5.56% and 1.79% each. The real estate sector was the biggest drag, shedding 0.44% with lesser losses in consumer staples, financials and materials. The EU-US trade deal also applied pressure to the gold price overnight, sliding 0.8% to US$3310 an ounce before recovering most of that in today's session. The ASX All Ords Gold index still fell 0.28%, mirroring the larger materials sector despite a small uptick in resource stocks. ASX SMALL CAP LEADERS Today's best performing small cap stocks: Code Name Last % Change Volume Market Cap BEO Beonic Ltd 0.32 49% 219661 $15,235,117 HLX Helix Resources 0.002 33% 2745339 $5,046,291 NAE New Age Exploration 0.004 33% 6000000 $8,117,734 B4P Beforepay Group 2.18 33% 204334 $79,383,074 NOX Noxopharm Limited 0.125 29% 2317923 $28,347,081 SCP Scalare Partners 0.16 28% 293110 $5,229,378 EVG Evion Group NL 0.038 27% 3075443 $13,047,599 HFR Highfield Res Ltd 0.195 26% 625545 $73,481,942 D3E D3 Energy Limited 0.335 24% 565977 $21,458,252 BSA BSA Limited 0.09 23% 15510313 $5,496,919 HCT Holista CollTech Ltd 0.089 22% 1138344 $24,458,551 BDG Black Dragon Gold 0.06 20% 722759 $15,898,303 EE1 Earths Energy Ltd 0.006 20% 100000 $2,649,821 FBR FBR Ltd 0.006 20% 7267046 $28,447,261 SKK Stakk Limited 0.006 20% 83333 $10,375,398 1TT Thrive Tribe Tech 0.0095 19% 791210 $812,691 BM8 Battery Age Minerals 0.07 19% 6584846 $8,956,308 CHM Chimeric Therapeutic 0.0035 17% 4244892 $9,747,370 ENV Enova Mining Limited 0.007 17% 407721 $8,745,600 TON Triton Min Ltd 0.007 17% 607569 $9,410,332 TSL Titanium Sands Ltd 0.007 17% 228039 $14,068,483 GRV Greenvale Energy Ltd 0.051 16% 371924 $23,952,427 AUZ Australian Mines Ltd 0.008 14% 1314681 $11,977,085 AX8 Accelerate Resources 0.008 14% 506793 $5,720,321 BLU Blue Energy Limited 0.008 14% 125000 $12,956,815 In the news… LiDAR-based logistics company Beonic (ASX:BEO) has secured a contract to deploy its passenger flow management technology across seven major international airports in north Africa. BEO reckons the contract is worth about $10.6m over its 2.5-year term, with an option to extend for another three years. The company is already operating in the London Heathrow, JFK Terminal 4, Narita and Abu Dhabi airport hubs. Evion Group's (ASX:EVG) Maniry graphite project has joined an exclusive group of 13 non-EU projects acknowledged by the European Commission's Strategic Projects initiative under the Critical Raw Materials Act. It's a big nod to the project's chops, confirming it as a strategic source of natural graphite at a time when China – the world's number one producer – is throttling international supply. Technical services company BSA (ASX:BSA) delivered $286.8m in revenue for FY2025, a 7% uptick compared to last year. While that's a solid performance by anyone's standards, the company is warning of some serious headwinds on the horizon. BSA was unsuccessful in a new bid on a contract with the NBN, and its smart metering contracts with Intellihub and Bluecurrent are winding down to just about nothing by next year. As those contracts represented 92% of BSA's yearly revenue, the company is aggressively restructuring in an effort to keep the ship afloat, but it's not going to be an easy road. Direct-to-consumer lending firm Beforepay (ASX:B4P) has grown in leaps and bounds this quarter, achieving a 113% increase in quarterly net profit after pulling in $2.4m. Year-on-year revenue is also up 15% to $10.4m and active users have increased 12% to just under 270,000. CEO Jamie Twiss said he "couldn't be happier with this result; it's the perfect way to end a strong financial year.' ASX SMALL CAP LAGGARDS Today's worst performing small cap stocks: Code Name Last % Change Volume Market Cap ECT Env Clean Tech Ltd. 0.2 -3333% 70167018 $12,046,306 DTM Dart Mining NL 0.3 -2500% 9197764 $4,792,222 EDE Eden Inv Ltd 0.15 -2500% 1100500 $8,219,762 SFG Seafarms Group Ltd 0.15 -2500% 400001 $9,673,198 LM1 Leeuwin Metals Ltd 11 -2414% 1202325 $14,616,926 ANR Anatara Ls Ltd 0.7 -2222% 5143866 $1,920,454 GLA Gladiator Resources 0.7 -2222% 1100000 $6,824,671 PRX Prodigy Gold NL 0.2 -2000% 1421349 $15,875,278 QXR Qx Resources Limited 0.4 -2000% 936755 $6,551,644 RDN Raiden Resources Ltd 0.4 -2000% 3275000 $17,254,457 VRC Volt Resources Ltd 0.4 -2000% 1716667 $23,424,247 KZR Kalamazoo Resources 9.1 -1727% 7641683 $24,133,287 1AI Algorae Pharma 0.5 -1667% 2991398 $10,124,368 BYH Bryah Resources Ltd 0.5 -1667% 139990 $6,171,195 TMX Terrain Minerals 0.25 -1667% 3666666 $7,595,443 IFG Infocusgroup Hldltd 1.6 -1579% 3441552 $5,546,844 GRL Godolphin Resources 1.1 -1538% 100000 $5,835,353 RPG Raptis Group Limited 20.5 -1458% 271844 $84,164,365 KOB Kobaresourceslimited 3.6 -1429% 181858 $8,344,207 AKN Auking Mining Ltd 0.6 -1429% 1379280 $4,816,814 ATV Activeportgroupltd 1.2 -1429% 1621803 $9,617,679 FCT Firstwave Cloud Tech 1.5 -1429% 105900 $29,986,577 NES Nelson Resources. 0.3 -1429% 300000 $7,601,747 RKT Rocketdna Ltd. 1.2 -1429% 1189554 $12,817,325 SP3 Specturltd 1.2 -1429% 205778 $4,436,602 IN CASE YOU MISSED IT St George Mining (ASX:SGQ) has delivered a 30kg bulk sample from its Araxá project to a Brazilian government-backed supply chain program. CuFe (ASX:CUF) has unveiled a scoping study highlighting the strong economics of the Orlando open pit cutback within its 55%-owned Tennant Creek copper-gold project in the Northern Territory. Aroa Biosurgery (ASX:ARX) recorded its third consecutive quarter of positive net cash flow since listing on the ASX in July 2020 and has reaffirmed FY26 revenue guidance. DY6 Metals (ASX:DY6) has kicked off a soil sampling program to guide maiden auger drilling at its Central rutile project in Cameroon. Pancontinental Energy (ASX:PCL) has increased both the potential scale and geological chance of successfully finding oil at its PEL 87 project in the Orange Basin offshore Namibia. Loyal Metals (ASX:LLM) is using modern exploration including a high-tech geophysics drone survey to identify new copper-gold targets. Victory Metals (ASX:VTM) has produced a high-value, mixed rare earth oxide at its North Stanmore project in Western Australia. Resolution Minerals (ASX:RML) has enlisted two Trump-affiliated firms to back its Horse Heaven antimony-tungsten project in proposed Nasdaq listing. Trading Halts Astute Metals (ASX:ASE) – cap raise Catalina Resources (ASX:CTN) – exploration results IRIS Metals (ASX:IR1) – cap raise Noviqtech (ASX:NVQ) – quantum computing deal and cap raise Prescient Therapeutics (ASX:PTX) – cap raise Sequoia Financial Group (ASX:SEQ) – price query response Strategic Energy Resources (ASX:SER) – cap raise TechGen Metals (ASX:TG1) – cap raise At Stockhead, we tell it like it is. While HyTerra is a Stockhead advertiser, it did not sponsor this article.

Daily Telegraph
41 minutes ago
- Daily Telegraph
Viva dives and farewell Sir Michael
Don't miss out on the headlines from Stockhead. Followed categories will be added to My News. ASX dips despite energy stocks firing up Viva Energy dives but Liontown, Ramelius, Sandfire shine Jeweller Sir Michael Hill dies The ASX was down 0.25% at Tuesday lunchtime on the eastern seaboard. Markets also softened across Asia, with investors now bracing for a week of crucial economic data, which includes the Fed Reserve decision on Wednesday. Most ASX sectors were bleeding red this morning, and discretionary was the only one offering any resistance. Most energy stocks rose, and you can thank Donald Trump for that. He was back with another geopolitical ultimatum, this time telling Russia it's got 10 to 12 days to pull its troops out of Ukraine or face a 100% tariff wall. Markets didn't exactly like that, but oil sure did. Brent cracked US$70 and WTI surged 2% overnight. Source: Market Index In the large end of town, Woodside Energy Group (ASX:WDS) climbed 1.4% after taking the reins of Bass Strait gas operations from ExxonMobil Australia. The move, it said, gives Woodside control over a massive east coast energy source and could unlock US$60 million in synergies, not to mention the potential to drill four new gas wells. But not all energy names were basking in the oil glow. Viva Energy (ASX:VEA) tumbled 9% after warning that first-half earnings were set to disappoint. The culprits, it said, were weak convenience store sales, a 27% collapse in tobacco revenue (blame new packaging laws and black-market smokes), and refining margins that ran out of puff. Meanwhile, lithium player Liontown Resources (ASX:LTR) fell 3% despite reporting a record $23 million in positive operating cash flow for the June quarter, and $301 million in full-year revenue. LTR confirmed it's still on track to become Australia's first fully underground lithium operation. Still in large caps, Ramelius Resources (ASX:RMS) popped champagne, up 2% after clocking record gold production and free cash flow in the June quarter. The miner produced over 300,000 ounces at top-end guidance and raked in nearly $700 million in free cash. Sandfire Resources (ASX:SFR) also brought the goods: copper equivalent output up 12% in the quarter, despite floods and blackouts. CEO Brendan Harris credited the turnaround to a 'simple strategy' and aggressive deleveraging, slicing net debt by $273 million. SFR's shares climbed 1%. ASX SMALL CAP WINNERS Here are the best-performing ASX small cap stocks for July 29 : Security Description Last % Volume MktCap RAN Range International 0.003 50% 37,086 $1,878,581 BEO Beonic Ltd 0.320 49% 139,421 $15,235,117 BSA BSA Limited 0.105 44% 2,320,025 $5,496,919 NOX Noxopharm Limited 0.130 34% 1,956,239 $28,347,081 HLX Helix Resources 0.002 33% 2,000,000 $5,046,291 D3E D3 Energy Limited 0.340 26% 374,462 $21,458,252 ALR Altairminerals 0.005 25% 15,695,023 $17,186,977 BM8 Battery Age Minerals 0.071 20% 4,593,533 $8,956,308 BDG Black Dragon Gold 0.060 20% 627,674 $15,898,303 DRE Dreadnought Resources 0.012 20% 8,277,526 $50,795,000 FBR FBR Ltd 0.006 20% 3,080,345 $28,447,261 B4P Beforepay Group 1.950 19% 129,871 $79,383,074 AJX Alexium Int Group 0.007 17% 1,757 $9,518,572 RNX Renegade Exploration 0.004 17% 912,500 $3,865,090 TON Triton Min Ltd 0.007 17% 591,070 $9,410,332 AX8 Accelerate Resources 0.008 14% 45,307 $5,720,321 RLG Roolife Group Ltd 0.004 14% 496,262 $5,574,734 RGT Argent Biopharma Ltd 0.089 14% 90,000 $5,630,286 AHL Adrad Hldings 0.750 14% 22,096 $53,660,055 NUC Nuchev Limited 0.180 13% 3,332 $23,467,622 ASQ Australian Silica 0.018 13% 196,523 $4,509,766 ATT Altitude Minerals 0.018 13% 290,000 $2,983,371 ECS ECS Botanics Holding 0.009 13% 349,222 $10,368,397 IS3 I Synergy Group Ltd 0.009 13% 2,734,827 $13,650,399 Beonic (ASX:BEO) has signed a $15.2 million contract to deploy its LiDAR passenger flow tech across seven major airports in North Africa, its largest deal in the region to date. It will kick off with a proof-of-concept at the country's main international airport, then roll out to all seven within 12 months. Beonic's share of the deal is $10.6 million, covering an initial 2.5-year term with a three-year extension option. Helix Resources (ASX:HLX) reckons its White Hills Project in northern Arizona could host a large-scale porphyry-style copper-gold system, based on early results. The site shows signs of two distinct mineralisation events along a belt known for big copper and gold finds. Historic drillholes focused only on gold and missed copper, despite rock chip samples showing grades up to 5.7% copper across a +1km anomaly zone. White Hills spans 23km² over seven tenements, and sits just 1.5 hours from Vegas. Black Dragon Gold (ASX:BDG) has entered the public consultation phase for its Salave Gold Project's PIER application in northern Spain, a key step toward getting the project classed as a Strategic Project under new regional investment laws. The 20-day consultation, running until 25 August, covers the proposed rezoning of farmland to industrial use for Salave's surface infrastructure. It's not the final sign-off, but a crucial legal step before the Agency makes its recommendation to the Asturian Government. Fintech lender Wisr (ASX:WZR) surged past its own guidance with a 154% jump in loan originations to $140 million in Q4. That marks five straight quarters of growth, as demand for personal and vehicle loans climbs. Net losses and late arrears both improved, and CEO Andrew Goodwin credited tech-driven automation for the company's comeback. ASX SMALL CAP LOSERS Here are the worst performing ASX small cap stocks for July 29 : Code Name Price % Change Volume Market Cap AYT Austin Metals Ltd 0.002 -33% 1,004,003 $4,752,574 DTM Dart Mining NL 0.003 -25% 9,197,764 $4,792,222 MRQ Mrg Metals Limited 0.003 -25% 625,000 $10,906,075 SFG Seafarms Group Ltd 0.002 -25% 1 $9,673,198 ANR Anatara Ls Ltd 0.007 -22% 4,393,904 $1,920,454 GGP Greatland Resources 5.440 -21% 5,377,202 $4,621,479,027 LM1 Leeuwin Metals Ltd 0.115 -21% 857,352 $14,616,926 PRX Prodigy Gold NL 0.002 -20% 1,400,849 $15,875,278 KZR Kalamazoo Resources 0.089 -19% 4,839,858 $24,133,287 SLA Solara Minerals 0.240 -17% 94,426 $16,815,599 TMX Terrain Minerals 0.003 -17% 3,666,666 $7,595,443 IFG Infocusgroup Hldltd 0.016 -16% 1,640,572 $5,546,844 GRL Godolphin Resources 0.011 -15% 100,000 $5,835,353 CHR Charger Metals 0.051 -15% 543,152 $4,645,215 AKN Auking Mining Ltd 0.006 -14% 379,149 $4,816,814 OVT Ovanti Limited 0.006 -14% 1,632,882 $29,920,265 SP3 Specturltd 0.012 -14% 205,778 $4,436,602 TEM Tempest Minerals 0.006 -14% 233,585 $7,712,565 SRL Sunrise 1.040 -13% 313,231 $140,188,562 RTR Rumble Res Limited 0.026 -13% 999,143 $28,527,005 AON Apollo Minerals Ltd 0.007 -13% 625,000 $7,427,655 CTO Citigold Corp Ltd 0.004 -13% 30,000 $12,000,000 VR8 Vanadium Resources 0.032 -13% 3,362,648 $20,314,507 Michael Hill (ASX:MHJ) has announced the passing of its founder and non-executive director, Sir Michael Hill. Sir Michael, who built the brand from a single store in Whangārei into a global jewellery name, was remembered as a visionary and creative force. He began with dreams of being a concert violinist, but turned to jewellery as a teen, making waves in the industry. MHJ shares were down 1%. Last Orders QPM Energy (ASX:QPM) says commissioning work on the Townsville Power Station has continued, with a number of successful extended runs completed at full load for the gas turbine and generator. The company expects to be handed dispatch control under a new agreement over the next few days, from when a new transportation and storage agreement with North Queensland Gas Pipeline will begin as QPM looks towards dispatching the power station for extended periods and taking advantage of near-term market pricing. Firetail Resources (ASX:FTL) has further expanded the discovery potential of its newly acquired Excelsior gold project in Nevada, with interpretation of existing data supporting both an extension of the prospective Buster trend to beyond 5km and the existence one lying parallel. Field mapping and sampling also spotted up more undocumented exploration adits, and Firetail managing director Glenn Poole said the active exploration campaign was delivering important information as the company looks towards getting a rig on the ground and testing the project's enormous potential. New World Resources (ASX:NWC) has entered a binding US$6.5m loan facility agreement with Kinterra to continue advancing its Antler copper project towards development in Arizona. The proceeds are marked to meet state bonding requirements, secure key land parcels, and provide general working capital and payment of costs related to Kinterra's takeover. In Case You Missed It Brazilian Critical Minerals (ASX:BCM) continues to advance its flagship Ema rare earths project in Brazil on multiple fronts as offtake interest grows and BCM works to complete a key bankable feasibility study. Nimy Resources (ASX:NIM) has capped off a gallium-focused drilling campaign with more high-grade returns as the company turns its attention towards a maiden resource. Elevate Uranium (ASX:EL8) has entered a transformative stage in its U-pgrade™ beneficiation process, with the final factory testing and shipment of a pilot plant to Namibia on track for early next month. At Stockhead, we tell it like it is. While QPM Energy, Firetail Resources and New World Resources are Stockhead advertisers, they did not sponsor this article. This article does not constitute financial product advice. You should consider obtaining independent advice before making any financial decisions. Originally published as Lunch Wrap: ASX dips as Viva Energy plunges; RIP Sir Michael Hill, jeweller


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
Kaiser pulls $10M cash flow from Tassie gold venture for Q4
Kaiser Reef Ltd has pulled more than $10.1m in free cashflow after accounting for all its expenses during the quarter, comprising production, staff and administration costs across its two gold operations, bolstering its bank balance to a stellar $24.7m at the end of June. The company has significantly boosted revenue since assuming control of its recently purchased Henty gold mine in Tasmania, raking in an impressive $25.177 million for the June quarter. Kaiser placed its hands firmly on the wheel at Henty on May 15, steering the operation to produce solid results for the balance of the quarter, after nabbing the profitable underground gold mine in western Tasmania from ASX-listed goldie Catalyst Metals. Management locked-in the transformational acquisition by agreeing to pay Catalyst $15M in cash and $16.6M in shares, handing Catalyst a maximum 19.99 per cent stake in Kaiser. Kaiser will further pay Catalyst 50 ounces of gold per month capped at 3000 ounces and a 0.5 per cent royalty on gold produced from the Darwin Target Zone, after being in control of the operation for six months. The company produced 4069 ounces of gold at Henty from May 15 – June 30, generating revenue of $21.205m from the Tassie mine, against operating costs of just $10.147m, indicating the potential for future profitable operations at the site. All-in sustaining costs totalled $2951 per ounce of Tassie gold. Its Maldon plant produced 756 gold ounces from mining at its existing A1 gold mine 120km east-northeast of Melbourne. Kaiser plans to pump out more than 30,000 ounces of gold a year from Henty, 30 kilometres north of Queenstown, as it aims to reach its stated goal of a total 50,000 ounces a year from its Tasmanian and Victorian operations. Management has plans to strip the underground floor at Henty to allow access for larger trucks in a bid to boost haul loads, carting more ore out of the portal and boosting the size of work areas. A second twin-boom jumbo rig has returned to site to increase its push forward with the underground development of the mine. In a move in line with the current life-of-mine plan, management decided to increase the potential for a further 12,800 ounces of gold with its decision to re-locate its underground explosives magazine, with the move now well advanced. The company appears to have nabbed an enviable asset in Henty in the reciprocal deal with 19.99 per cent stakeholder Catalyst, providing both companies with an opportunity to lift production ounces due to the two firms forging of an agreement for a 50/50 joint venture (JV) at Kaiser's Maldon processing plant. The JV allows for Catalyst to co-develop the plant, which is strategically placed between Victoria's gold-rich regions around Bendigo and Ballarat. Increasing the capacity of the Maldon plant could fire up both firms' processing plans, allowing Kaiser to feed gold-bearing ore from its existing A1 gold mine. Meanwhile, Catalyst could push material into the plant from its Four Eagles project north of Bendigo, which has 70,000 ounces gold at a stunning 26g/t in its Boyd's Dam project. Kaiser now has a five-year mine plan for Henty, based on a current mineral resource of 4.1m tonnes at 3.4 grams per tonne (g/t) gold for 449,000 ounces. This is supported by current ore reserves of 1.2mt going 4g/t for 154,000 ounces gold. The mine has proven to be a viable gold operation with historical production of 1.4M ounces at a rock-solid 8.9g/t gold. Kaiser will benefit greatly from Catalyst recently investing in drill platforms, tailings facilities and underground fleet equipment before the sale took place. Kaiser believes Henty also has tremendous scope for near-mine exploration and development success too, aided by some significant infrastructure, including underground and surface workshops, an administration complex and a coveted 300,000-tonne-per-annum carbon-in-leach processing plant. The plant is fully permitted to 2030. The mine comes with the twin benefits of hydro-generated grid power and renewed tailings storage capacity. Kaiser bankrolled the deal to pick up Henty with a successful $30M share placement, in addition to a $10M funding package from Auramet International, which has $2m remaining in undrawn funds. Combined with its stash of cash in the bank, it is well-placed for working capital. Kaiser's decision to move with speed on the Henty project offers a compelling opportunity to continue generating significant cash flow. The company will no doubt be looking to continue pumping out the as much of the precious yellow metal as it can at today's sky-high price of A$5087 per golden ounce. Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: