Looking Ahead To The Fed Meeting
Chris Temple joins me to wrap up the markets today with a look ahead to the FOMC meeting tomorrow. US markets recovered some of the losses from yesterday but are still a little ways off their highs and seem to be stuck in tug of war range trying to figure out where the next move is. This is also a sign of most investors waiting to see what the new Fed Chairman Powell is going to say at his first live meeting. We discuss the topics we would like to hear commented on… economic data, the yield curve, and potentially any international comments.
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Bitcoin Price Jumps $1K After Carney Tells G20 Crypto Does Not ‘Pose Risk’
By William Suberg – Mar 19, 2018
New Survey Shows Around 26 Mln Americans Own – And 8 Percent Plan To Buy – Cryptocurrencies
By Molly Jane Zuckerman – 16 hours ago
NSA Has Been Tracking Bitcoin Users Since 2013, New Snowden Documents Reveal
Wed, 03/21/2018
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Montana officials singled out a mining company president as an industry “bad actor” on Tuesday, and said the company could have to reimburse taxpayers more than $35 million for past pollution cleanups if it wants to pursue two new mines in the state.
Hecla Mining Inc. and its president, Phillip Baker, Jr., were deemed in violation of a law that targets individuals and companies that abandon polluted sites. The alleged violations were first reported by The Associated Press.
A Hecla executive said the company intends to challenge the allegations.
Baker, who’s been a director at Hecla since 2001, was an executive for Pegasus Gold Corp., which went bankrupt in 1998 and left government agencies with a massive cleanup bill at its Montana mines, Montana Department of Environmental Quality Director Tom Livers told AP.
The Pegasus mines polluted surrounding waterways with cyanide, arsenic and other contaminants, prompting water treatment measures that may need to continue into perpetuity.
If the company doesn’t want to pay for the Pegasus cleanups, Hecla will have to cease mining and exploration activities in Montana, Livers wrote in a violation letter to the company.
The Coeur d’Alene-based company is pursuing development of two large silver and copper mines in northwest Montana that would employ about 300 workers each. They would be constructed beneath the Cabinet Mountains Wilderness, an area of remote, glaciated peaks and valleys that take their name from the area’s box-like rock formations.
At the most polluted of the Pegasus sites, the Zortman-Landusky gold mine in north-central Montana, the state has spent $32 million on cleanup work and continues to spend more than $2 million annually to treat contaminated water flowing from the site, state officials said.
Montana’s bad actor law, first passed in 1989, blocks individuals who don’t clean or pay for the cleanup of old mines from starting new ones.
“We believe the Legislature was clear in its intent to hold individuals and companies accountable for their failure to reclaim mine sites,” Livers said. “We’re deeming Baker a bad actor for his Pegasus connections…By knowingly employing Baker, who violated the bad actor provision, Hecla is in violation.”
Hecla Vice President Luke Russell said the company had no direct relation with Pegasus. Two Hecla subsidiaries, not Baker, were the applicants for the Montana projects, he said.
“It’s a far stretch to say a 126-year-old company is ineligible to mine in Montana for the actions of another company that it has no relation with,” Russell said. “They got it wrong.”
A coalition of environmental groups since October has been pressing Livers’ agency to enforce the bad actor law against Hecla. Bonnie Gestring with Earthworks, one of the groups involved in the effort, said Tuesday’s action was a “victory” for Montana taxpayers.
“It says loud and clear that mining companies don’t get to pocket Montana’s riches while the public is left with the costs,” she said.
Hecla and Baker were given 30 days to declare their intention to resolve the matter by repaying the state’s cleanup expenses or stopping work on Rock Creek and Montanore.
Alternatively, the company would have to prove Baker and any entity under his direction will not conduct mining or exploration activities in the state, according to the violation notice.
Livers acknowledged in an interview that Hecla has a reputation as a responsible company with its cleanup work elsewhere. That includes another former mining site in northwest Montana, the Troy Mine, which closed in 2015.
The bad actor law has only been enforced once before, in 2008, and never against major projects like the ones Hecla is pursuing at the Rock Creek Mine near Noxon and the Montanore Mine near Libby, state officials said.
Federal agencies have spent more than $17 million at Zortman Landusky, but there’s no requirement under Montana’s law for that money to be paid back.
To date the total bill for the site’s cleanup is almost $76 million, Livers said, including $47 million covered by reclamation and water treatment bonds posted by Pegasus.
The state also spent several million dollars on work at Pegasus’ Beal Mountain mine near Anaconda, said Department of Environmental Quality spokeswoman Kristi Ponozzo. That site has been turned over to the U.S. Forest Service, which has estimated additional cleanup costs of more than $40 million.
Details were not immediately available for cleanup costs at a third Pegasus mine — the Basin Creek Mine north of Basin.
___
In order to understand just how bad Hecla Mining (HL) financials are…
3/19/18 – Inca Kola News
““We structured the deal to use our excess cash balance so our shareholders can benefit from the approximately 162,000 gold equivalent ounces a year of production while minimizing dilution.”
“As at year end 2017 HL had $186m in cash so yes, it does have the “liquidity” to shell out $157m to KDX shareholders. However, look a bit further down and….oh, what’s that? $502m in debt? Hmmm, and here’s the payback schedule on that Senior Secured (aka at the front of the queue) obligation:”
2018: $34.8m
2019: $34.8m
2020: $34.8m
2021: 518.107m
“In other words, if HL can conjure up six hundred and twenty million dollars in the next three years, all will be well. That thought brings us to Exhibit B of this post, the net profits at HL over the last ten years….”
“Do the math (and notice how generous your humble scribe is by going for the ten year period and not just the last five years) and you’ll see that HL has generated the sum total of $168.118m in the last ten years. TEN YEARS! What’s more, $151m of that came in just one year. So folks, what do you think the chances are that Hecla makes enough to pay down that debt organically by 2021? Yeah, me too.”
“Thank you for the Monday merriment, Phillips S. Baker.” – Otto
http://incakolanews.blogspot.com/2018/03/in-order-to-understand-just-how-bad.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FN_Vgcc-mik
# minutes that truly describes Hillary’s technique.
(MND) (MNDJF) Mandalay Resources CEO: We Are Looking for a New Acquisition
SmallCapPower – Mar 16, 2018
“In this interview with SmallCapPower at the PDAC 2018 convention, Mandalay Resources Corporation (TSX:MND) President and CEO Mark Sander provides an update on Mandalay’s current operations, talks about production guidance for this year and next, and hints at a potential acquisition as well as the sale of non-core assets in the coming months.”
It is shocking how beaten down MND is here, and while I know they had issues at their Chilean Silver mine (Cerro Bayo) when the lake wall collapsed and flooded their mine last year, they still have 2 producing Gold mines in Sweden and Australia doing over 100,000 ounces per year and they have a nice feasibility stage development project in Chile to bring on line soon.
Does anyone else still follow Mandalay on here?
The value proposition seems very attractive at these levels, despite their rough 2017.
4 Gold Mining Stocks Trading at a Discount to 2019 Cash Flow
March 5, 2018 – $MND Mandalay, $RPM Rye Patch, $BRIO Brio, $ASR Alacer
https://smallcappower.com/top-stories/canadian-gold-mining-companies/
(MND) (MNDJF) Mandalay Resources Corporate Presentation:
(HUM.L) (HUMRF) Hummingbird Resources plc
Positive Ramp-up Update at the Yanfolila Gold Mine
> Production Update
“Completion of plant construction and ore commissioning in 2017, was achieved within both the planned 18-month schedule and the US$88.5 million budgeted capital cost. Since first gold was poured on 19 December 2017, the performance of the plant has steadily improved month by month. In the first 14 days of March, the plant operated at an average of 95% of design throughput and has consistently achieved a gold recovery rate of approximately 96%, which is in excess of design specification.”
“Total gold recovered to 14 March 2018 was 16,804 ounces, of which 11,958 ounces has been poured and 4,846 ounces are currently within circuit inventory.”
http://hummingbirdresources.co.uk/_downloads/Ramp_Up-Update_March_2018_190318.pdf
We’re Getting to the End of it – Peter Schiff
Cambridge House (VIDEO) #InterestRates #Inflation #Currencies #Debt
>>>>>listen to Peter at 7:12 min mark…….
debts bond Jubilee………. 🙂
I think Peter is wrong on Trump in 2020……..
Peter is out of touch with main street……..
G20 leaders say Bitcoin isn’t a Currency, but it could have been worse
Yahoo Finance Video•March 20, 2018
https://finance.yahoo.com/video/g20-leaders-bitcoin-isnt-currency-150313092.html