logo
Australian Billionaires Forrest And Rinehart Turn Iron Ore Into Gold

Australian Billionaires Forrest And Rinehart Turn Iron Ore Into Gold

Forbes07-05-2025

No-one has ever been able to turn lead into gold, as medieval alchemists promised, but two Australian billionaires have found a way to turn iron ore into gold.
Gina Rinehart and Andrew Forrest with fortunes estimated by Forbes at $30.1 billion and $14.8 billion respectively have added gold to their better-known interest in mining iron ore.
Going for gold, iron ore billionaire Andrew Forrest. Photo William West/AFP via Getty Images) AFP via Getty Images
In Rinehart's case the addition of gold is almost accidental with a small lithium exploration company in which she has a 10% interest carving out a gold business with the aim being to catch the record gold price of more than $3380 an ounce.
Delta Lithium, which has been hit by an 80% collapse in the price of the battery metal, is now working on the creation of Ballard Mining which aims to redevelop the Mt Ida goldmine in Western Australia.
The historic mine is located close to Lake Ballard which is home to 51 steel statues made by British artist Antony Gormley and installed in 2003 for a temporary exhibition but have remained as a tourist attraction.
One of the 51 steel figures by Antony Gormley on Lake Ballard, a salt lake, installed in 2003 as a ... More temporary exhibition that stayed, drawing acclaim from visitors and affection from locals, The figures extend around an ironstone mound on the edge of the lake in Western Australia. (Photo by: Auscape/Universal Images Group via Getty Images) Universal Images Group via Getty Images
The addition of the gold asset to a struggling lithium business has revitalised the Delta share price which has risen by 18% over the past month but remains well below its peak during the lithium boom of two years ago.
Forrest is more focused, playing a key role in creating a world class goldmining company based on the big Telfer mine in Western Australia.
Greatland Gold, currently listed on the London Stock Exchange, but planning to relocate to Australia, been a spectacular performer over the past 12-month with its shares rising by 150% to 14.6 pence.
Forrest and his separated wife Nicola, through their company, Wyloo, have an 8.45% interest in Greatland but have indirect interests which could see their stake rise to 21% of Greatland which has a current stock market value of $2.5 billion.
In theory, that means the Forrest duo will have turned a modest initial investment in Greatland into a stake worth more than $500 million.
The complex evolution of Greatland from obscurity into an emerging gold leader has involved a series of deals, capital raisings, and the appointment of leading businesspeople to the company's board.
Greatland Gold director Elizabeth Gaines (Photo by) Getty Images
Greatland's chairman, Mark Barnaba, is a long-time director of Fortescue, the iron ore business controlled by the Forrests. Other directors are Elizabeth Gaines, a former chief executive of Fortescue and Jimmy Wilson, a former head of the iron ore division of the world's biggest mining company BHP.
The key assets in Greatland are the Telfer ore processing plant, unmined areas of the primary orebody and nearby ore deposits being developed to feed the Telfer plant.
Gold, for Rinehart and Forrest, is secondary to their iron ore assets but with the gold price rising and the iron ore price falling it's likely that gold will become of increasing interest.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

These 5 Precious Metals Stock This Week Surged To Even Higher Highs
These 5 Precious Metals Stock This Week Surged To Even Higher Highs

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

These 5 Precious Metals Stock This Week Surged To Even Higher Highs

precious metals Precious metals miners specializing in the extraction of gold and silver from the earth had a good week. These five – four of the NYSE and one on the Nasdaq – blasted to new price highs mid-week before pulling back a bit on Friday. A widely followed gold stocks ETF also showed a new high. Two factors are at work: inflation and fear. That Donald Trump tariffs are basically inflationary have money managers looking for hedges and the classic for that is precious metals. That's one of the reasons for this week's price run-up in silver and silver stocks – now playing catch-up with the yellow metal. Fear is the sense globally that the U. S. may have lost its economic bearings with the tariffs nonsense. So, the dollar keeps dropping and money finds its way into precious metals again. AngloGold Ashanti AngloGold Ashanti daily 6 7 25. The UK-based gold stock on Monday broke above its April high, pulled back, moved to a higher high Thursday and closed lower on Friday. The 50-day moving average continues to trend upward as does the 200-day moving average. The relative strength indicator (RSI, below the price chart) shows a negative divergence from the price action. Market capitalization for AngloGold Ashanti is $23.14 billion. Eldorado Gold Eldorado Gold daily price chart, 6 7 25. The Canadian miner on Monday took out the April high and on Thursday moved slightly higher. The price remains above an up trending 50-day moving average and well above an up trending 200-day moving average. The RSI is diverging from the price direction. Eldorado's market cap is $4.34 billion. SSR Mining SSR Mining daily price chart, 6 7 25. This Russell 2000 component hit a new high Friday. The stock had gapped up Monday morning and the Tuesday selling quickly filled that gap. The price trades above an up trending 50-day moving average and well above an up trending 200-day moving average. The Denver-based miner has a market cap of $2.58 billion. Triple Flag Precious Metals Triple Flag Precious Metals daily price chart, 6 7 25. The relatively low volume Toronto-based miner broke out above the April high on Monday. It continued to a new high on Thursday before selling came in. The stock remains above an up trending 50-day moving average and far above an up trending 200-day moving average. Triple Flag has a market cap of $4.81 billion. Wheaton Precious Metals Wheaton Precious Metals daily price chart, 6 7 25. The April high was taken out with Monday's price action. The new high of above$94 was established Thursday before sellers began to take profits. This is another of the sector with a price above an up trending 50-day moving average and above an uptrending 200-day moving average as well. VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF: VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF daily price chart, 6 7 25. The ETF on Monday broke above the April high, surged to a higher high on Thursday and then dropped again. The price action keeps it above the up trending 50-day moving average and above the up trending 200-day moving average. With 63 holdings, the fund represents a diversified group within the sector. It's watched as an indicator of gold stocks performance as a group. Stats courtesy of Charts courtesy of No artificial intelligence was used in the writing of this post. More analysis and commentary at

Don't See This Crypto as a Risk? ‘You're Dumb,' According to Dave Ramsey
Don't See This Crypto as a Risk? ‘You're Dumb,' According to Dave Ramsey

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Don't See This Crypto as a Risk? ‘You're Dumb,' According to Dave Ramsey

Personal finance expert Dave Ramsey says a sole investment in bitcoin without seeing the risk is a dumb idea. He might not be entirely off the mark, either. Explore More: Check Out: Bitcoin is fundamentally volatile, but less so than many large and popular stocks such as Netflix (NFLX). Bitcoins' realized volatility over a 90-day timeframe averaged 46%, while Netflix averaged 54%. However, while investors this year have been moving from gold to bitcoin, gold remains the better performer year-to-date — up 23.8%, according to Bloomberg — outperforming bitcoin and hitting a new all-time high earlier this year. From 2020 to 2024, bitcoin has been three to nearly four times as volatile as various equity indices, which is especially notable as 'equity indices are typically considered the riskiest part of modern traditional portfolios due to their historical volatility', according to Fidelity. Ramsey said he comes across young people who say they've invested everything they have in bitcoin and they don't have anything else. He equates it to the same deal as gambling in Vegas. 'If you chart bitcoin and you don't see risk, you're dumb,' he said on a recent podcast. 'It's all over the freakin' world and that tells you it's a highly volatile, short-term play and you're trying to ride this thing out.' Read Next: Ramsey added it's got the 'cool factor' because it's related to technology and people want in on it because it's a fad. He advised, however, that you just need to be comfortable with the amount of money you put into bitcoin and its potential loss, saying, 'Just be able to burn the amount of money you put in there, in the middle of the kitchen table, and not miss it.' More From GOBankingRates 10 Unreliable SUVs To Stay Away From Buying This article originally appeared on Don't See This Crypto as a Risk? 'You're Dumb,' According to Dave Ramsey Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Why We're Dodging These 3 Gold CEFs (Even With Gold Soaring)
Why We're Dodging These 3 Gold CEFs (Even With Gold Soaring)

Forbes

time5 hours ago

  • Forbes

Why We're Dodging These 3 Gold CEFs (Even With Gold Soaring)

A lump of gold on a stone floor getty Here's a surprise from a die-hard closed-end fund (CEF) fan like me: Sometimes CEFs aren't your best bet. I'll admit, that's tough for me to say—especially when the average CEF yields a historically high 9.1%. (CEF yields are usually around 8.5%). That high yield partly reflects the fact that many CEFs are trading at steep discounts to their net asset value (NAV). Translation: The fund is trading for less than what its underlying portfolio is worth. That, in turn, has resulted in lower prices among some CEFs, along with higher yields (as yields and prices move in opposite directions). All of this simply means that CEFs are generally out of favor right now, which is an opportunity for us. But not every CEF is ripe for buying. We especially want to avoid the three top performers among CEFs with market caps over $200 million: ASA Gold and Precious Metals (ASA), the Sprott Physical Gold Trust (PHYS) and the Sprott Physical Gold and Silver Trust (CEF). The fact that these funds have booked strong runs this year shouldn't come as a surprise: They're all gold funds, and gold has taken off due to rising economic uncertainty (the usual fuel for the yellow metal). Even so, as you can see, there are some clear differences in performance here, and those are worth unpacking. Gold Funds Ycharts Above we see that the Sprott Physical Gold and Silver Trust—with the somewhat confusing 'CEF' ticker, not to be confused with CEFs in general (in purple)—and PHYS (in blue) have similar returns to the benchmark SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) ETF (in green), at around 25%. Then there's ASA (in orange), which has more than doubled even the best of these three other funds. There is some logic at work here. For starters, PHYS and GLD really should track each other, since they both devote almost 100% of their portfolios to physical gold (both own gold bars that are locked up in vaults), and both have similar expense ratios (0.4% for GLD, 0.41% for PHYS). The lower performance of 'CEF' is also not surprising, given that the fund also holds silver, and the 'poor man's gold' hasn't done as well as its yellow counterpart this year. ASA, however, is the clear outperformer. That's thanks in part to its ownership of several gold-mining stocks. Its largest position, G Mining Ventures Inc., a Canadian firm that explores for precious metals, has nearly doubled year to date. ASA's fast short-term gain is, of course, great, but it's unlikely to last. Here's why. Note that, if we go back to 2010, the year the last of these funds, PHYS, launched, we see that GLD (again in green) outran all three of the CEFs. This shows that CEFs were poor options in the case of gold. Moreover, ASA (again in orange) was actually the worst performer, returning just 53% over 15 years, and being in the red for most of that time. ASA Underperforms Ycharts In terms of key takeaways, there are a few here. First, if you want to hold gold, this is a rare case where an ETF, not a CEF, is the better choice. Second, gold is not a great play for income, given that the highest yielder among these funds is ASA, with a puny 0.2%. Third, gold itself is a poor play for the long term, no matter how you invest in it. To see why, all we need to do is splice the S&P 500's performance (in pink below) into that last chart. Gold Underperforms Ycharts It doesn't get much clearer than that! This, however, is where the good news ends for ETF investors. Because when it comes to investing in stocks (or pretty well any other asset class, for that matter), you're far better off with CEFs. Let's take a look at the Adams Diversified Equity Fund (ADX), a CEF we've held in my CEF Insider service since its earliest days: We bought ADX in July 2017, just a few months after CEF Insider's launch. Here's how the fund—current yield: 9% (and in orange below)—has done since, as compared to the S&P 500 index fund SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY), in purple, with dividends reinvested: ADX Outperforms Ycharts This chart says it all: CEFs like ADX can crush the S&P 500 and pay us generously while doing so. Plus they give us access to top-notch management and upside-generating discounts to NAV, too. Those are strengths no index fund can match. Michael Foster is the Lead Research Analyst for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, click here for our latest report 'Indestructible Income: 5 Bargain Funds with Steady 10% Dividends.' Disclosure: none

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store