Cadiscor And Tiomin To Combine

A map showing the location of Tiomin Resources' 49%-owned Pukaqaqa copper-gold deposit in Peru, one of the assets the company would bring to the table in a proposed merger with Cadiscor Resources.A map showing the location of Tiomin Resources' 49%-owned Pukaqaqa copper-gold deposit in Peru, one of the assets the company would bring to the table in a proposed merger with Cadiscor Resources.

The proposed merger of Cadiscor Resources (CAO-V, CADRF-O) and Tiomin Resources (TIO-T, TMIRF-O) will create a new company that will be well capitalized to become an intermediate gold producer, management at the two companies say.

Under the transaction announced on Feb. 10, existing Tiomin and Cadiscor shareholders will own about 53% and 47% of the new company, respectively.

Tiomin plans to consolidate its 480.8 million shares outstanding (10-for-one) and then combine with Cadiscor, which has 43.3 million shares outstanding, on a one-for-one basis.

Following the merger, the new company, which will be called Cadiscor, will have a total of 91.4 million shares outstanding.

Tiomin has also agreed to lend Cadiscor $7.5 million through a debt facility to immediately refurbish its Sleeping Giant gold mine in northern Quebec and fast-track it back into production.

Sleeping Giant is set to be the new company’s flagship project. A National Instrument 43-101 technical report published in September 2008 estimated the mine’s current reserves could generate a profit of $16 million in the first 16 months of operation at a gold price of C$850 per oz. and an annual production rate of 52,000 oz. per year. (At presstime, gold was trading at about US$942.20 per oz.) Proven and probable reserves at Sleeping Giant stand at 235,300 tonnes grading 9.3 grams gold per tonne for 70,350 oz.

“This strong new company will be well positioned to leverage continued strength in the price of gold in 2009 and we strongly encourage our shareholders to support the transaction,” Robert Jackson, Tiomin’s president and chief executive said in a statement.

If the transaction is approved, the new company would have about $15 million in cash and equivalents and annual production of about 50,000 oz. gold per year when Sleeping Giant moves into production in the third quarter.

Jackson noted that that the new company would have “near-term, profitable gold production, a strong project pipeline, a solid balance sheet and an experienced team of operating managers and directors.”

Michel Bouchard, Cadiscor’s president and chief executive, said that in addition to improving Cadiscor’s financial strength and fast-tracking the Sleeping Giant mine, the business combination would greatly diversify its asset base.

The new company would have a diversified portfolio of copper-gold assets, including Cadiscor’s Discovery project and other gold exploration properties in Quebec, as well as a 49% contributing interest in the Pukaqaqa copper-gold deposit in Peru, a 100% interest in the Kwale titanium minerals sands project in southeastern Kenya and a 17.2% interest in Kivu Gold Corp., which owns gold exploration properties in sub-Saharan Africa.

Cadiscor currently trades at about 31¢ with a 52-week trading range of 13-79¢ per share, while Tiomin trades at about 3¢ per share. Over the last year, Tiomin has traded in a range of 1.5-9¢.

Print

Be the first to comment on "Cadiscor And Tiomin To Combine"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*


By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. To learn more, click more information

Dear user, please be aware that we use cookies to help users navigate our website content and to help us understand how we can improve the user experience. If you have ideas for how we can improve our services, we’d love to hear from you. Click here to email us. By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. Please see our Privacy & Cookie Usage Policy to learn more.

Close