Re: Grant of Options Wont take long at all SOLG and Sirius are flying and they dont even have a working Mines or funding Gold is in a new bull market and is going to head northwards over the next 3-4 yearsPatience mate
Re: Grant of Options ..."a great long term buy at these prices"..... How long are you prepared to wait Shuggie? Current debt plus future planned debt will put this company in the hands of the big investors before you get a sighting of a profit. Figures show that what is coming out of the mine is not balancing the books, nor will it for about 4yrs. So how long? 5yrs; 10yrs; 15yrs?
Re: Grant of Options No they don't ---read the news correction - the exercise price is GBP 0.0338 ie .....3.4pence
My bone of contention with respect to the issue of Options to the Board is that the Exercise price is far too low. They need to know that they will have to improve the SP to be rewarded -- not given money for old rope. An Exercise price of 8p would be more realistic. Iclaude, you were right to wave the red flag.
Re: Grant of Options Stop panicking and read it all properly these are a great long term buy at this price.The options represent approximately 0.48% of the company's issued share and have an exercise price of GBP 0.338 per share. Half are exercisable after one year and half after two years. The options can be exercised up to 8 August 2021.
Grant of Options 5.75m shares granted by management to staff and 'friends'. Not good.
Today's Operational Update Second Quarter 2016†is hard to make proper sense of. This is because work at the mine was halted 10 May 2016 due to a cyanide spill into the ecosystem, which is a very serious calamity to befall a junior producer in its early days. I am concerned at the time it took to inform investors of teething troubles at the mine with regard to optimising some very delicate chemical processes. There is never any excuse for keeping investors in the dark. I was concerned at the cost of producing the yellow metal. Centamin can produce it at about $600-800. Why is Aureus' figure at $1253? Where are the consultants with their boots on the ground finding out what is wrong. David Reading should be bought back if necessary. Now there is talk that refinancing may be necessary. This jars a nerve. I don't get it. You're pouring gold and you need to borrow money. Unfortunately, I conclude that Aureus is still not out of the woods. Should the share price depreciate further, investors might dump this stock in favour of gold producers who make their investors rich. The worse thing that Aureus could do right now is to stifle news. If this happens, investors would be advised to cut-and-run.
nanny you best post on lse then people will see your post that a good bb
EX-Aureus CEO David Reading would by now have issued a preliminary statement on the state of play of Aureus, addressing both economic and social issues at the company. If investors feel that the new administration is engaged in some serious cover up, share prices are likely to plunge, and it is not inconceivable for the stock to become worthless.
Laurence, no I didn't. But there appears to be industrial unrest at the plant which should scare investors. This needs to be sorted out with the greatest of urgency. No doubt you saw what happened to Lonmin in South Africa, where the killing of miners led almost to the collapse of the company. The company was only saved by the the fact that debt was measured in Rand, which was so weak, that huge chunks of debt could be almost written off. It is essential, therefore, that mine grievances are sorted out as amicably, fairly and as quickly as possible. It is a mistake to try to fight the workforce, albeit lean, and is bound to have repercussions on gold poured. The Turkish consortium holding 55% of the shares would be well advised to make a statement and comment when they expect the first gold pour.
did you see the news on aue twitter yesterday nanny
The Board at Aureus need to be transparent and timely about the situation at Aureus. There is a duty of care to both Aureus investors and the market as a whole. It never pays to stifle the truth, which will be made known. We expect an immediate and accurate news update.
have they released the hostage at aue this company gets worse
Extracting gold from ore is by no means an easy feat. Aureus Mining may need a little bit more time. So that investors do not lose faith, I wish to highlight how fortunes can be made and lost and made again from the previous quoted journal on the MacArthur-Forrest process. Turn the clock back to the year 1886, Johannesburg, Transvaal. Harrison made the initial gold discovery (paid £0). He sold to Marsden (£10). Marsden sold 3 months later to Hepple (£50). Hepple sold to the Little Treasure Gold Mining Co. for £1500 plus stock (£150). This was sold to the Northey Gold Mining & Exploration Company (£2000 plus £5000 stock). Had Harrison held his original £10 holding, it would have been worth £7,000 in under 11 months. They say patience is a virtue! At the time, they were using mercury to dissolve the gold to form an amalgam, which they would later distil off. (Don't ask how many miners and their families were poisoned irrepairably by mercury vapour in the process, not to mention the complete destruction of local ecology). When, however, mining was conducted at deeper levels, the gold ore proved to be refractory (unable to extract it) to this process. Gold recovery was in some cases halved. Gold stocks crashed. Sir Percy Fitzpatrick even adumbrated, “Grass will grow in the streets of Johannesburg within a year.†Such was their demise that stocks were being sold in bundles of thousands, yet with no buyers. This is where Aureus Mining is at now. Then, or course, the cyanidation process came into being, and those shares, which nobody wanted, became very valuable indeed......... Does this raise morale? I hope it works out!
Whilst we're waiting, I'd like to share this article I found recently: C.E. Fivaz, "Presidential Address: How the MacArthur-Forrest cyanidation process ensured South Africa's golden future," J. S. Afr. Inst. Min. Metall., 1988, vol 188(No 9), pp. 309-318. It is historical in nature, but was a landmark in the extraction of gold, which, although not stated, was instrumental in leading to the |Boer War.