Auryn/Medinah - 2020 - 1st Half General Discussion

Is it possible that AMNP might be merged into AUMC?

Market cap of AMNP currently is $8million. ( 478.612million shares @.0166 )

Market cap of AUMC currently is $20million ( 70million shares @.29 )

Total combined market cap is $28million

AUMC is 71% of combined companies

70million shares divided by .71 equals 99million AUMC shares combined total outstanding.

AUMC shareholders 70 million shares ( 71% )

AMNP shareholders 29 million shares ( 29% )

And it fits in perfectly with the authorized 100million shares of AUMC. No need to authorize more shares at this time to complete the merger.

Might this be what they have been waiting for?

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Hi mrb,

The dating of the rock has to do with all that was going on 91 million years ago as well as the “subduction” process itself. When the Nazca Plate dove under the S. American Plate, the friction created as well as the increased depth created a “heat engine”. This resulted in “partial crustal melting”. The magma shot upwards towards surface and brought with it whatever metals were contained in those 2 tectonic plates AT THE TIME i.e. 91 million years ago.

The contents of these plates change with time due to the changing “stratigraphy” which is a layering of rocks over other rocks of an older age. If you have pretty much the same underlying rock formations underneath the Andacollo area and the ADL area i.e. the Veta Negra and Lo Prado formations, sharing the same rock chemistry, existing under the same or similar pressures and temperatures and the same subduction process driving all of this then Mother Nature is going to provide similar results. That’s why those 6 geological regions aligned from north to south exist as you cross Chile from west to east. They’re all of different ages because the subduction process took a long time to advance from the coastal areas to the Andes. The further east you go the younger the rock is. The Maricunga gold belt, for example, is well east of the coast and features a lot of gold deposits that are “only” 23 million years old. The porphyry gold deposits there, like the Verde and Pancho, have a certain presentation that is different than the porphyry at the Pegaso Nero.

All of these factors like rock age, rock chemistry, ambient pressure and temperature levels, rate of cooling of the magma, salinity of the hydrothermal fluids, etc. are going to end in a different result FROM WEST TO EAST across Chile due to being of different ages. From north to south though in any one of these areas of “belts” involving different deposit types like the Early Cretaceous Copper Porphyry Belt north of the ADL, things are pretty similar which is wonderful for exploration geologists.

During this “Cretaceous Period”, water was all over the place at surface. That’s why the LDM contains a lot of siltstone up on the mountainside when siltstone forms underwater.

As far as the shareholdings of Maurizio and family, they bought Quijano’s block of 220 million shares or so at somewhere around 1.7 cents. They also bought truckloads between 5 and 10-cents. I’ve been told that their total family and friends shareholdings are somewhere around 600 million Medinah shares. The key for us little guys is that management’s financial goals are closely aligned with ours. They’re not going to screw the Medinah shareholders when Aunt Edna owns Medinah shares but perhaps not AUMC shares. Management has had plenty of time to screw us and they didn’t. When Medinah ever needed cash it was given an interest free loan.

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If you have a minute, listen to this interview with Dan Oliver. I’ve found him to be one of the brightest followers of the junior miners. He will make the case for a junior miner about to become a producer of gold. The “generalist” investors are not in the market right now for gold companies. The majors always move first in a bull market for gold. Then they rapidly become fully priced.

People like Dan and many others that can think outside of the box are out on the prowl for junior producers or about to become junior producers, especially if the project is “scalable”. The share prices of these guys haven’t moved yet but it takes a lot of WORK to comb through the bushes and find these opportunities. As far as one of these candidates whose share price has recently dropped 99.7%, I would think the “supply” of these is next to ZERO. Watch this interview several times if time permits. It’s important to be able to mentally get from A to Z like Dan does and know the linkage between the intervening steps.

https://www.kitco.com/news/2020-06-24/-3-000-gold-price-no-longer-target-it-s-now-10-000-if-Fed-assets-collapse.html

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Good interview with a great message. Too bad the Auryn Resources shown prominently in the background is only a good “free promotion”, even if mistakenly. It will likely get people looking for AURYN RESOURCES. :slightly_smiling_face:
A couple weeks ago on the Other Mining Stocks thread I posted an interview by Michael Oliver that is also excellent, but admittedly really quite boring as he unravels his story.

I had to really listen all the way through. Might want to also listen to Bob Moriarty webcasts (Bursting Bubbles and Geopolitics) which were mentioned by HR and CHG on the other thread. It should help in decision making with this and other stocks. Some of these webcasts allowed me to gain in areas I hadn’t been able to express adequately. One needs to understand the concept of money vs currency. Price is one thing, but momentum over long term is more definitive to define trend. Everone knows trend is your friend. Over the years I’ve favored long term investments over short term. Everyone develops their own interests and styles over time. Pardon the intrusion on this thread, but education is important as we all continue to learn. MDMN ( and thus AUMC) is still in my sock drawer, but it is becoming more interesting again all the time.

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If anyone is interested in the history of plate tectonics, there is a 10 episode documentary available on Amazon Prime called “Voyage of the Continents” from 2013. It talks a little about precious metals but has some great graphics showing subduction, etc.

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Chilean winter… time to clean up the house and get ready for exploration activities to resume in the spring. AMNP–>AUMC<–MDMN?

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If Auryn is posturing our properties for sale or JV, NOW is the time! I keep reading that financiers are actually COMPETING to get deals with junior exploration companies.

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THINKING THROUGH THE MEDINAH/AURYN SITUATION

WHAT’S THE OVERALL GAME PLAN ARTICULATED TO DATE?
Maurizio wants AUMC to become a mid-tier gold producer ASAP, he wants to build a MAJOR mining firm and he wants to trade on a loftier trading venue than the current one. He wants to launch a MASSIVE exploration campaign at the ADL involving multiple JVs with mining firms that are specialists in the types of deposits present at the ADL. Due to the prolonged nature of the Medinah/AUMC saga and all of the delays, I think we might forget that Maurizio has outlined his mission statement fairly clearly. Perhaps we just need to refresh it in our minds periodically.

GOAL #1: BECOMING A MID-TIER GOLD PRODUCER
By definition, a mid-tier gold producer produces in between 300,000 and 1 million ounces per year. How could he possibly get to that level of production? Three years ago, the Caren was scheduled to commence production at the rate of 25,000 ounces per year based on an allowable production rate set at 5,000 tonnes per year. Let’s check the math to see if Maurizio is being consistent with his other projections. In terms of grams, 25,000 ounces equates to 777,500 grams of gold production. This is because 1 Troy ounce of gold equates to 31.1 grams. If you divide this by 60,000 tonnes per year allowable production (5,000 tonnes per month multiplied by 12 months), you’ll get an average grade of 13 gpt being mined. This lines up pretty closely with the 15 gpt grade Maurizio has referred to on previous press releases.

Clearly, there is quite a distance in between 25,000 ounces per year and 300,000 ounces per year. The first question that arises is has the 5,000 tonnes per month allowable production rate increased after the completion of the 3 new “ventilation/safety” raises. Maurizio has already told us that the 5,000 tonnes per month allowable production rate is scheduled to scale upwards with time. Recall from a previous press release that Auryn had already put in a new and improved ventilation system into the Larrissa Adit.

In order to scale up production that much, Maurizio is going to need to develop other gold production sites. The Fortuna Mine seems to be the most likely choice but we don’t yet have projected production figures there yet. The last we heard in regards to the Fortuna Mine is that it had been successfully dewatered and they were removing mud/silt from the adit floors. They were also adding timbering for safety reasons. The plan was to resample the adits before deciding on a production plan if the project were deemed to be economic. The historical production grades from 1940 to 1970 were in between 60 and 90 gpt gold. The price of gold at the time was $35 per ounce. ACA Howe’s report already revealed that nobody to date has even scratched the surface on the Fortuna Vein complex.

If Maurizio wants Auryn to produce 300,000 ounces of gold per year he probably will have to go into acquisition mode. Maurizio and his wife own somewhere around 73% of the AUMC shares when figuring in their Medinah and Cerro shareholdings. In order to do this in as nondilutive of a fashion as possible, MAURIZIO IS GOING TO NEED TO GET THE SHARE PRICE OF AURYN UP MANY, MANY-FOLD. As an investor, I like it when management owns the lion’s share of the outstanding shares. I also like it when management is highly incentivized to move the share price up.

The Covid-19 scenario has dropped a bombshell into the lap of the Federal Reserve. The economy had to be shut down, there was no other way to fight the virus. The timing was awful because the debt levels of the government and individuals were already through the roof. If the Fed were to allow the value of capital assets to drop down, then our entire corrupt banking system could unwind. In order to prevent this, the Fed has been forced to PRINT A LOT OF MONEY FOR AN EXTENDED AMOUNT OF TIME. This will artificially prop up the value of the capital assets so that an overleveraged banking system can get paid back for the money they have already loaned out.

The need to PRINT A LOT OF MONEY FOR AN EXTENDED AMOUNT OF TIME is going to pressure the value of the dollar downwards and support the price of gold FOR AN EXTENDED AMOUNT OF TIME. About the only beneficiary of Covid-19 is GOLD and the producers or about to become producers of gold. In the current mining sector, a firm either has the ability to produce GOLD now or in the immediate future or it doesn’t. Gold producers have always enjoyed trading at a higher earnings per share multiple as the base metal producers. That gap is probably about to expand markedly because the effect of Covid-19 on the base metal producers tied more directly to the economy is just opposite of the gold producers.

As far as the timing of attempting to build a major out of a junior miner, Ivan Bebek of Auryn Resources (“the other Auryn”) recently told a Kitco interviewer: “If you look at a handful of companies and their share price performances, including ours, everyone’s gone up between 30 and a few hundred percent. And I think that’s the first sign of money coming in,” he said. “I’d like to think it’s 10 times easier to raise money today than it was six months ago. And I think every mining executive would agree with me.” [end quote] Keep in mind also that interest rates are near ZERO for those that qualify for debt financing. Gold projects may all of a sudden qualify for debt financing.

For the most part investors are smart and they can see the writing on the wall. However, they are not necessarily very quick at acting on their convictions. The “generalist” investors have historically been slow in coming around to gold investments. For the most part, statistically speaking, almost nobody has much exposure to gold. Similar to Goal #1 above in regards to desiring to be a mid-tier gold producer, management is going to have to move up the share price markedly in order to do it in as nondilutive of a fashion as possible.

With the mid-tier miners and major miners having shuttered most of their exploration activities, the number of new discoveries, especially GOLD DISCOVERIES, is de minimis. Replacing the amount of ounces a miner produces is not just a good idea, it is existential. The mid-tiers are going to want to take out any new gold producers in order to not only replenish the ounces they produce but also to gain access to the economies of scale afforded to the majors. Nobody, however, can match the dynamic growth profiles of a new gold producer.

One might anticipate some synergies between the incentive to move the share price up during hyper-growth mode and the potential audience looking for investments in gold producers especially those new gold producers whose share price has not moved yet OR WHOSE SHARE PRICE HAS RECENTLY DROPPED BY 99.7%.

GOAL #3: TRADING ON A LOFTIER TRADING VENUE

Yet once again, this goal also coincides with the NEED to move the share price up. Many loftier trading venues come with it the need to keep the share price over “X” amount. A loftier trading venue would also grow the universe of potential investors, especially institutional investors. CREDIBILITY would also be greatly enhanced.

GOAL #4: TO LAUNCH A MASSIVE EXPLORATION CAMPAIGN UTILIZING JVs WITH “SPECIALISTS” IN THE DEPOSIT TYPES PRESENT AT THE ADL

At the “informational meeting” hosted by Auryn in Las Vegas about 3 years ago, Maurizio admitted that developing the Pegaso Nero Cu-Mo porphyry project at the ADL would be way too big for Auryn to tackle. The CAPEX for projects of that scale is often in the billions of dollars. Maurizio had permission to state that Freeport McMoRan had already signed an NDA with Auryn and was sending a team to the ADL to evaluate the project. Maurizio also mentioned that two other firms, both even larger than Freeport, had shown interest but he did not have permission to use their name. Maurizio has always surrounded himself with the best of the best. If you want to get the job done right you need to start with HUMAN CAPITAL and develop strategic alliances with those more advanced along the learning curve than you are.

From an investor point of view, there has been a dramatic paradigm shift in the mining industry over the last 15 years or so. Mining investors want guaranteed shareholder rewards for incurring the risk they have taken. They no longer want management to take the profits and roll them into new exploration programs designed to block out new MR/MR. The market just doesn’t value ounces in the ground very generously. An ounce of gold in the ground in the DRC has nothing to do with an ounce in the ground in Chile, Canada or the U.S. Investors want share price appreciation but they also want cash dividends that are treated in more of a tax favorable manner. They want share repurchase programs. The CEOs of firms concerned more about MR/MR than shareholder rewards are now gone. Soon we’ll be able to confirm that today’s mining investors want EXPOSURE TO GOLD PRODUCTION more than anything else. People writing about the mining industry will soon be talking in terms of pre- and post-Covid-19 realities. The key now is how incentivized and how capable is management in moving the share price up and/or providing guaranteed shareholder rewards.

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Thanks - and agree with the conclusion that it depends on “how incentivized” management is. Maybe one day we will find out, for better or worse. Let’s just say they do an EXCELLENT job of keeping everything under wraps and not allowing inside information to seep out.

Hi mrb,

No doubt about it, they are indeed EXCELLENT at keeping corporate secrets.

Here’s a portion of Raul’s Curriculum Vitae:

Mr. Del Solar is the founder of One Family Office S.A. He oversees the investment strategy and business development. Mr. Del Solar also specializes in portfolio management, institutional consulting, and offshore trust planning. Mr. Del Solar holds a Bachelors of Business Administration from the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, and an MBA from the Thunderbird School of Global Management in Glendale, Arizona. Mr. Del Solar was born and raised in Lima Peru. He began his 25 year career at Westcor Partners in 1990 and after his MBA held different advisory positions with firms like the The Americas Trust Bank, Prudential Securities and UBS International. Prior to joining One Family Office, Mr. Del Solar served as independent Financial Advisor with Delta Equity and was the President of Brick Investment Advisors. [End CV]

Raul handles the investment funds of gazillionaires. I think we all agree that management is going to very, very incentivized to move the share price. Raul’s CV might address the CAPABILITY issue. I think we tend to forget how tiny this investment forum is in real terms. Could you imagine if a couple of whales came in and started feeding? I do sense some empathy coming out of Raul. He knows how frustrated we are. He openly admitted that management HAS HAD the ability to distribute our AUMC shares since last Dec. 15 but it wasn’t “the appropriate time”. His earlier reply to a shareholder stated that we’d know more “at the appropriate time”. His most recent communique to a shareholder contained this:

“We have spoken to legal counsel and we can proceed with allocation of AUMC shares since December 15,2019, however, we have not done so given we are waiting for work to be completed. As soon as it is possible, I will be updating everybody through our website, please check the news update section. I can only say that any delays on updates with respect to AUMC shares owned by Medinah is with the intention of benefiting the shareholder.”

We didn’t learn much more in the second communique other than “the appropriate time is when certain work is completed”. But he also stated that any perceived delays are with the intent of benefitting the shareholder. My inference is that when he rolls out whatever he is going to roll out, he wants to get the biggest bang for the buck he can for all of us. I think this might tie back in with the incentive to move the share price up prior to any need to raise funds out of the market for these lofty goals of Maurizio. A much higher share price would also give management more strength at the bargaining table when cutting JV deals with any majors. My recommendation would be not to entertain any deals for the early gold production opportunities at least until the production rates have increased and then plateau’d out.

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Thanks for all of this brecciaboy… I put both of your posts from this morning into a cereal bowl and poured milk over them and then spooned them down one tasty bite at a time, and I’m not sure whether my bigger jolt came from your posts or from my strong coffee.

Any chance you could bake up and deliver a tray of these every morning – let’s say around, oh, 9:30-ish?

– madmen

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Yes, I do respect that his hands are tied right now and that above all he must be loyal to his principals. Him saying that we’d “know more” later on seems to indicate that there is indeed SOMETHING to know.

I’m not smart enough about mining, so I don’t know, but I wonder if our guys are maybe in somewhat of a BOX for some reason; for example, if one COMMENCES development of this district in one way or the other, does it thereafter foreclose different approaches? Deep versus surface/open pit? There must be something that is slowing them down. Are they simply pitching the district for one giant JV with three or four companies and one of them has said that if we start producing the Caren then it would spoil the deal? A couple years back we were on the cusp of production, then it is halted for safety reasons, and then we hear NOTHING for a couple of years. If I had made a promise and then was required by governmental authorities to make some safety fixes, I think I’d be resolved to show my shareholders that I am a man of my word (e.g. 25,000 ounces per year, etc.) and would be constantly updating them on this particular issue. Integrity. Admittedly, the safety fixes might have taken some time to complete (finally completed this past December?). But I would have been updating my shareholders all along as to status on the fixes and then most certainly when it was completed. Yet, we hear nothing. My opinion, something else is going on (which our guys are not free to discuss or even disclose) - and I’m just not knowledgeable enough to be able to put together the other possibilities. Considering the investment of our guys into the company to the tune of many millions of shares and at 5-10 cents per share (a few admittedly at about 1.5 cents from Quijano), Hochschild already buying into it, and the number of hectares involved, my bet is it is something very positive. I will definitely be looking forward to the day I no longer have to speculate as to these issues.

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From the first quarter AUMC financial statements. Note 4, Related party transactions:

The Company holds a mining option contract with a related party. During the year ended December 31, 2019, 10,568,309 Chilean Pesos or approximately $13,610 USD was paid by that related party to the Chileangovernment to maintain the mining concessionsmentioned in Note 4. These funds will not be refunded by the Company and are nolongerpayables of the Company and have therefore been excluded from the income statement for the three monthsended March 31, 2020

What is this mining option contract? I assume the related party is Masglas.

Does Masglas have an option to purchase all or some part of the ADL? Seems that they do since the monies paid to the Chilean government to maintain the claims for AUMC are not refundable.

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I think your thoughts might be very prescient. A few years back, one of our neighbors to the north had some underground operations. Later their engineers told management that this project would be more economic if we changed over to bulk mining methodologies via an open pit operation. This cost them a couple of years of delays from SERNAGEOMIN from a permitting point of view because it is dangerous to excavate an open pit over and through existing adits and tunnels.

My ”Doesn’t quite make sense list” currently has on it: Why is Hochschild so quiet? They did a 6 line-kilometer IP/IR study and then the “cone of silence” descended. Were they told to stand down for a bit until the final attack plan was drafted? What did their IP’s reveal? Recall that Hochschild reviewed all of the previous drill cores from the LDM before signing the JV. They also channel sampled the 2 existing adits there BEFORE SIGNING THE JV. The IP results aren’t something that after they came in Hochschild would decide to walk away. No, they’re designed to confirm and add to the adit channel sampling and to prioritize drill targets. Noticed that we did not hear that Hochschild walked but most JVs have a scheduled work commitment wherein the optionee has to do “X” amount of exploration tasks over “Y” timeframe. Recall that Hochschild was going to follow the Sillitoe-designed attack plan and Bustamante over at Hochschild made a comment to the press that “the geology over at the LDM IS PRETTY INTERESTING.

Note that the deposit style that Hochschild is going after is a “Lacustrine sediment hosted stratabound copper deposit”. There is a very well-defined “belt” of these deposits that extends north of and south of the ADL. To the north is the El Soldado mega mine operated by 4 majors: Anglo American, Codelco, Mitsubishi and Mitsui. To the immediate south of us is the Lo Aguirre Mine. THERE THE ENGINEERS DECIDED THAT AN OPEN PIT ATTACK WAS THE PROPER WAY TO GO.

At the eastern ADL plateau there is a large confluence of epithermal veins near the Merlin 3 Vein and some of the various Fortuna Veins. Management already told us that this might be open pittable.

My “Doesn’t quite make sense” list also includes: what the heck happened over at the Pegaso Nero? The hyperspectral imaging satellite survey revealed “about a dozen” intrusives over a 7 Km stretch aligned in a SW to NE orientation across the southern downslope off of the plateau. OK, I get it, it’s big. The ridge crest sampling along the westernmost extent of this swath revealed high grade moly and copper OVER A 3.6 KM NORTH TO SOUTH ORIENTED SWATH. OK, the westernmost intrusive of the “about a dozen” is loaded and VERY BIG.

There are about 6 ridge crests descending down from the plateau in this 7 Km swath. Management told us they were going to head east and explore the other ridge crests. Then crickets! If the easternmost of those ridge crests had similar results over similar distance then the inference (subject to being verified by drilling) would be the existence of a 7 Km by 3.6 Km MASSIVE RECTANGLE of goodies. Type 21 A (Singer/Cox classification) Cu-Mo porphyry deposits, the largest subdivision of these elephantine deposits known as “porphyries”, are almost always open-pitted.

Note that the original attack plan at the Caren was to produce from 3 different “production adits” simultaneously, while drifting a “crosscut exploration adit” from west to east under the plateau. You don’t want to do the crosscut adit if an open pit is a possibility. The baseline environmental study is already done. It was done by IAL Ambiental.

Other “list” components include how to value Medinah’s $40 to $50 million tax loss carryforward. Junior explorers do nothing but raise and spend money, A LOT OF MONEY IN THE CASE OF SUCCESSFUL FUND RAISERS. This is a huge bonus for those lucky enough to go into production. From what I can glean, these assets are transferable to other companies in the same business especially if they’re working on the same project. One of Raul’s communications contained the phrase “a full legal opinion” was being waited on. When I read that I immediately thought that the “full” phraseology might have referred to the AUMC share distribution as well as the fate of the tax loss carryforwards but I do not know this to be a fact.

For me, this entire scenario has been a gigantic exercise in TRUST YOUR GUT. I did not trust my gut when it came to Aurelian’s Fruta del Norte deposit and I got “Masuched”!

Here’s a link to Don Singer’s masterpiece on pretty much every porphyry deposit on the planet:

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Hi Z,

My gut is that this is a “poison pill” to fend off any hostile takeover attempts. The payment for this “option” might have been Masglas/AHC picking up the tab on expenses up to a certain amount. I think this because we had not heard about this until recently and if it was designed to protect shareholders from a hostile attack then I don’t think management would be forced to disclose its exact contents for obvious reasons. Maurizio’s ownership position would also be a pretty solid “poison pill”. One of my paranoias is that somebody is going to try to steal this thing. Maurizio certainly doesn’t want to sell shares at this level in order to pay bills. He owns his own law firm and I sense that he’s pretty up to speed on these legal matters.

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Thanks Doc. Appreciate your insight.

As you mentioned, with Maurizio and his wife having ultimate control it would be hard/impossible for a theft.

Since one of the big unkowns is the money behind Masglas, might it be possible that they have put themselves in a position of right of first refusal as regards the ADL. If the mountain plays out the way we think they get the first shot at it.

I agree with you that if this is a real option then it probably would have had to be disclosed at least on AUMC side since they are public.

Lots of questions. Hopefully lots of answers soon!

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Masglas website states they are the controlling owner of AUMC yet the OTC website ownership section for AUMC does not indicate Masglas at all. Auryn Holdings control the 5,000 preferred shares with 1,000 to 1 voting rights. Maurizio and wife are the only other two significant shareholders besides MDMN.

???

???

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Yep, my gut is driving the bus for me too. I know what it looks like when a company is swirling down the bankruptcy drain, and this just doesn’t fit.

Thanks very much for the constant guidance - I wouldn’t know a fraction of what I know about this without you around.

Can you imagine an investment world where you could make decisions based on what management/Maurizio wants? He wants to become a mid-tier gold producer. I want to live on a yacht and be fed grapes. I can’t tell you which outcome is more likely but I can tell you that Maurizio has been desperately looking for financing on many different projects just like 1000’s of other, undercapitalized companies/individuals have during this challenging period for the precious metals.

I would argue this was one of the worst bear markets in history. Until recently. The market is considerably better which means the cost of capital has become “cheaper” but is still very limited to those projects with undefined resources.

If gold trades at $5000oz everything is going to come into play. The question you need to ask yourself: am I better investing in a late stage development/early stage producer which will go up 10-20x with $5000 gold or should I speculate on an investment with no visibility re: dilution. In other words, if you own 1% of MDMN now what will that percentage be post financing? I have no idea which makes the decision pretty easy.

I will definitely be buying the book “Anatomy of a 30-bagger” but I’ll be skipping to the chapter that discusses losing 97% of one’s investment, and then getting a 30-bagger, to break even on a 20 year investment. This would be the chapter that most of us could probably find both relevant and informative.

It’s always fun to speculate and even average down but, as even BB admits, it probably makes sense to understand what you own before throwing good money after bad. There are a ton of stocks to play with, that actually go up with the price of gold, if you are generally bullish on precious metals.

All IMHO.

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In my opinion, DILUTION is not a dirty word. In this industry, a junior explorer wants to be that proverbial 1-in-1,000 junior that makes a discovery which is going to need funding to put into production. Of course, it’s going to involve DILUTION. Post-financing, an investor is typically going to own a smaller percentage of a MUCH MORE VALUABLE entity. Similarly, in a JV situation, the shareholders are going to have their ownership percentage in the overall property (not share structure) be DILUTED in exchange for money spent by the major and the gaining of the expertise of the major.

There is no corporate event in the genesis of a mining company which PREDICTABLY increases VALUE more than putting a mineral discovery into production and joining that 1-in-1,000 club. In essence, the GOAL of a junior explorer is to sacrifice the DILUTION associated with going into production in exchange for a much larger percentage increase in VALUE. The flip side of that coin is that the DILUTION associated with raising money to go explore for a deposit and take on those incredibly distant odds is often NOT good DILUTION.

My investment thesis in this sector, which has been evolving through the years, is WAIT for a junior to irrefutably PROVE the bona fides of any perceived DISCOVERY. How do you do that? You wait for the junior to put it into production. Any financier that agrees to do the funding is going to be a lot smarter than you or I. Let the financier do your due diligence. The SWEET SPOT in any investment is getting in right before any jump in VALUE occurs. In this particular sector, the biggest jump in VALUE occurs right as the lucky explorers go into production.

Maurizio is the largest shareholder in Medinah, Cerro, Masglas, AUMC and Auryn Holding Corp. This is the ideal when the financial goals of management align tightly with that of the small shareholders. He would be the biggest victim of any untoward DILUTION.

IS MAURIZIO REALLY ABOUT TO SCREW THE MEDINAH SHAREHOLDERS AS HAS BEEN SUGGESTED ON THIS FORUM?

Maurizio has had all of the opportunity in the world to screw the Medinah shareholders but he chose not to. Why would he start now when his percentage ownership in AUMC is somewhere around 73% when he chose not to screw Medinah when his ownership percentage was only 10 to 20%? Don’t confuse the DILUTION associated with raising funds to go into production with the DILUTION associated with raising funds to go explore.

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